Ἱερὰ Δάκρυα. Ecclesiae Anglicanae Suspiria. THE TEARS, SIGHS, COMPLAINTS, AND PRAYERS OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND: Setting forth Her former Constitution, compared with Her present Condition; ALSO The visible Causes, and probable Cures, of Her Distempers. In IV. BOOKS. By JOHN GAUDEN, D.D. of Bocking in Essex. Jer. 8.28. Is there no Balm in Gilead? is there no Physician there? Why then is not the health of the Daughter of my people recovered? DEPRESSA RESURGO printer's or publisher's device LONDON, Printed by J. G. for R. ROYSTON, at the Angel in Ivy-lane, 1659. ECCLESIA ANGLICANA PROTEGE PASCE DUX MEA IN TENEBRAS ET GAUDIUM IN MEROREM VT PELLICANA IN DESERTO Proprio vos sanguine pasco Nunquam CHRISTO Charior quam sub Cruce gemens Illustrissimis ANGLICANAE GENTIS Nobilibus, Omniúmque Ordinum Generosis & ingenuis, Qui Natales Eruditione, Eruditionem Virtute, Virtutem Fide, Fidem Moribus Verè Christianis (Sanctitate Suavitatéque conspicuis) Vel exaequarunt vel exuperarunt, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omnibus, Religionis Christianae, Tam à Romanistarum Faece & Scabie quam Fanaticorum Spumâ & Rabie Reformatae, Professoribus, (Hoc est, verbo vitâque vindicibus) Haec ECCLESIAE ANGLICANAE, MATRIS, Olim Florentissimae, nunc Afflictissimae, (Lugentis, Languentis, Suspirantis, Et tantum non Expirantis) Lacrymas, Suspiria, Planctus, Preces, Summa cum Reverentia, Debitáque Observantia, Pro Charitate & Sympathia Quâ decuit Humillimum in Christo Servum, D. D. D. J. G. THE CONTENTS. The Preface or Address. p. 1 BOOK I. Setting forth the present Distresses of the Church of England. CHAP. I. THE Name and Thing: the Title and Truth of the Church of England asserted. p. 23 II. Primitive Piety and Prudence utterly against Schismatic dividing or mincing of Churches into small bodies or parcels. p. 35 III. The present afflictions of the Church of England no argument against Her National and well-Reformed Constitution. p. 46 IU. The Church of England's Complaint. p. 51 V. The cruel and unjust enmity of some against the Church of England. p. 60 VI The causeless malice and ingratitude of the Church of England's enemies. p. 64 VII. Of the excellent Constitution of the Church of England, and her undeserved calamities. p. 68 VIII. A furt●●●● scrutiny and discovery of the Church of England's miseries and enemies. p. 73 CHAP. IX. A general Vindication of the Church of England's former excellent Constitution, although it be now afflicted. p. 76 X. Mr. Hooker's Defense of the Church of England unanswered, and unanswerable. p. 83 XI. The excellent Constitution of the Church of England, as to its Doctrinals. p. 86 XII. The Devotionals of the Church of England asserted. p. 87 XIII. The Ceremonies of the Church of England no meritorious cause of Her miseries. p. 96 XIV. A second Objection against the Church of England from Church-mens personal failings. p. 114 Book II. Searching the Causes and Occasions of the Church of England's Decays. CHAP. I. HOW far they conveniently may not, and how far they may be searched into. p. 137 II. Inordinate Liberty in religious affairs the chief cause of miseries in the Church of England. p. 139 CHAP. III. What Christian liberty is desirable and tolerable among people. p. 143 IU. Of Plebeian rudeness and licentiousness in Religion, if left to themselves. p. 150 V. Instances of abused Liberty in the vulgar neglect of reading the Scriptures. p. 153 VI Vulgar neglect and scorn of Ancient Forms of wholesome words, in the Decalogue, Creed, and Lords-Prayer. p. 156 VII. The Innovations, Usurpations and Vastations made by some upon the Order, Office and Authority of the Evangelical Ministry. p. 159 VIII. The pretensions of Intruders to excuse their wants. p. 167 IX. Of Ministerial sufficiencies, real or pretended. p. 171 X. What caution Christians ought to use, as to those Ministers with whom they intrust the care of their souls. p. 175 XI. Of late new models for making Ministers of the Gospel. p. 181 XII. The false and foolish pretensions urged against the Ministry of England. p. 188 XIII. An impartial balancing of the old and new Ministers. p. 190 XIV. A charitable plea for the ancient Clergy of the Church of England, against the ingratitude and indifferency of some men. p. 193 CHAP. XV. The best of the new Teachers compared with the Ministers of England. p. 195 XVI. A farther sifting of these new Teachers. p. 197 XVII. The modesty, gravity, sanctity and solidity of true Ministers, etc. p. 200 XVIII. The designs & ends of fanatic Libertines fatal to the Reformed Religion. p. 202 XIX. An humble and earnest expostulation in the behalf of the people and Church of England. p. 204 XX. The rudeness & irreverence expressed by some in religious duties, as a part of their Liberty. p. 211 XXI. The sad exchange people make of their old Religion for new Raptures. p. 212 XXII. The foul mistakes & abuses of Christian liberty in vulgar spirits. p. 214 XXIII. A further discovery of mischiefs from abused liberty in Religion. p. 217 XXIV. The contagion of abused or mistaken Liberty spread among Ministers, to the dividing, debasing and destroying of them. p. 221 XXV. Unavoidable contentions among Ministers of different ordinations. p. 224 XXVI. The folly and factions of Ministers evidently seen and punished in their common calamities. p. 233 CHAP. XXVII. The great diminutions of all sorts of Ministers in England as to all civil respects. p. 235 XXVIII. The sordid envy and grudging against Ministers Tithes and Glebes. p. 240 XXIX. Minister's condition not to be envied, but pitied. p. 243 XXX. Experimental instances how petulant some people are to their Ministers. p. 245 XXXI. The personal sufferings of Ministers, after all their pains, merits and troubles. p. 248 XXXII. Discouragements to ingenuous men to be made Ministers in England in aftertimes. p. 254 XXXIII. A worthy Ministry not expectable, unless there be a worthy usage and entertainment. p. 257 BOOK III. Setting forth the Evil Consequences felt or feared from the Distractions of Religion in England. CHAP. I. DEcays in Godliness as to the former generation of Christians. p. 261 II. ● Decays of godliness as to the new brood and later offspring of meaner Christians. p. 267 III. The evil consequences infesting Christians of better quality. p. 270 CHAP. IV. Profaneness the fruit of unsetledness in Religion. p. 273 V. Ministers molested by endless & vexatious disputes. p. 275 VI The endless bicker with Anabaptists, etc. now in England. p. 278 VII. The perverse dispute of Anabaptists against Infant-baptism. p. 281 VIII. The weakness of Anabaptists grounds against Infant-Baptism. p. 283 IX. The Catholic strength for Infant-Baptism. p. 286 X. Of right reasoning from Scripture. p. 289 XI. Of the Church's Catholic custom and testimony. p. 291 XII. The sin of presumptuous delaying and denying baptism to Infants. p. 295 XIII. The dangerous effects & principles of Anabaptism. p. 297 XIV. The Romish advantages by the divisions and deformities of the Church of England. p. 300 XV. The wide and just distances between the Reformed and Romanists. p. 305 XVI. Irreconcilable differences between Reformed Truths and Romish Errors, which are manifest and obstinate. p. 308 CHAP. XVII. Necessary separation and distance from Rome, without uncharitableness. p. 313 XVIII. Two grand Obstructions of all Christian accommodation in these Western Churches. p. 317 XIX. The equity and charity of severe and sacrilegious Reforming. p. 322 XX. The excuses and pleas for sacrilegious excesses answered. p. 325 XXI. Sacrilege a great pest to Religion, and stop to Reformation. p. 327 XXII. The insatiableness of sacrilegious spirits unrepressed. p. 335 XXIII. Pleas for sacrilege answered. p. 338 XXIV. The Romanists discouragements as to the Reformed Religion by Sacrilege. p. 343 XXV. A plea for Paul's, and other Churches in England. p. 348 XXVI. Of pious munificence becoming Christians. p. 353 XXVII. The main hindrances and unlikelihood of a conjunction between Protestants and Romanists. p. 355 XXVIII. Roman interests advanced by the petty factions of super-Reformers of Religion. p. 362 XXIX. The danger of divided parties in Religion as to the civil interests of England. p. 370 BOOK IV. Setting forth the Sighs & Prayers of the Church of England in order to its Healing and Recovery. CHAP. I. THE design & method of this fourth Book. p. 389 II. The difficulty of repairing a decayed Church. p. 393 III. Grand motives to a public restitution and fixation of the Reformed Religion. p. 400 IU. Sense of true Honour calls for the establishment of Religion. p. 411 V. The hopeful possibility of restoring true Religion to unity and setledness in England. p. 422 VI Of means to recompose the differences of Religion in England. p. 427 VII. Of the late Associations projected by some Ministers. p. 436 VIII. Of civil Assistance from Laymen to restore this Church & Religion. p. 442 IX. A scrutiny of what is good or bad in all parties. p. 447 X. The reconciling of the real interests of Episcopacy, Presbytery and Independency. p. 452 XI. True Episcopacy stated and represented to its Antagonists. p. 458 CHAP. XII. Objections against Episcopacy discussed. p. 468 XIII. Earnestly exhorting Ministers of all sides to an happy composure and union. p. 479. XIV. Humbly exhorting Magistrates to assist in so good a work. p. 485 XV. Councils or Synods the proper means to restore lapsed Religion. p. 492 XVI. The method of restoring a settled Church and united Ministry. p. 502 XVII. Of the well-being of the Clergy or Ministry. 1. In point of maintenance and support. p. 518 XVIII. Of meet order, Government and subordination among the Clergy. p. 527 XIX. Several Pleas in behalf of Episcopacy. p. 539 A first Plea, from the Catholic Antiquity of Episcopacy. p. 540 XX. A second Plea for Episcopacy, from its Evangelical temper as to civil subjection. p. 556 CHAP. XXI. A third, Episcopacy most suitable to the genius & temper of the English. p. 581 XXII. A fourth plea for Episcopacy, from their true piety and orderly policy. p. 600 XXIII. A Review of our late English Bishops. p. 616 XXIV. Bishop Usher, Primate of Armagh, an unanswerable vindication of Prelacy, not Popish, but pious. p. 639 XXV. Commending this Church of England, with the Reformed Religion, to the piety and wisdom of all persons of honour and honesty. p. 651 XXVI. A further Caution against Sacrilege, upon the occasion of D. B his case lately published about purchasing of Bishop's lands. p. 665 XXVII. Further commending the unity, honour and support of the Religion and Ministry of this Church. p. 685 The Catalogue of the Bishops in England and Wales. 693 The Emblem of the Trees explained: in which is briefly set forth the History and Chronology of Episcopacy, Presbytery, and Independency, as pretenders to Church-government; their first planting, growing and spreading in the Christian world. p. 22. Revel. 3.2. Be watchful, and strengthen the things that remain, which are ready to die. Lam. 1.22. My sighs are many, and my heart is faint. Synes. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Ferreus est, non fidelis, non Christianus, sed crudelis, quem MATRIS Lacrymae non molliunt, Suspiria non movent, Planctus non mordent, Preces non vincunt, Vulnera non cruciant. J. G. Ecclesiae Anglicanae Suspiria: THE SIGHS OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND, Humbly presented to my Honoured and Beloved Countrymen: Persons of true Honour, Piety, and Prudence; Who have a just Gratitude, Love and Pity for HERALD I Am not so ignorant of YOU (Honoured and worthy Gentlemen) or of myself, The Preface or Address. as to think, That you need be put in mind by Me, (or any private Monitor) of that Justice, Moderation, and Prudence, which you owe to your Country; in reference to those Civil Interests of Peace, Plenty, Safety, Honour, Liberty, Settlement, and the like: Which, I know, do usually fall under the first cares and counsels of men; (Momentary concernments giving us poor Mortals quicker summons and resentments, than those that are eternal: These being the objects of our Faith afar off; Those of our senses nearer hand:) For the just establishing and prudent managing of which, if God's Providence either hath, or ever shall, give YOU any opportunity, worthy of YOUR abilities and integrity, I have no more to do or say (as to any of these secular accounts) save only to crave, in all humility, of the Supreme Wisdom, and Mighty Counsellor, Isa. 58.12. That he would make you Repairers of those Breaches, relievers of those burdens, and dispellers of those fears, which we owe, not so much to the impotence, or violence of other men's passions, as, each of us, to our own sins and personal impieties: Those importune solicitors of God's Judgements; which by a strange vicissitude, and unexpected retaliation of vengeance, do testify to our faces, against the crying iniquities of all estates in these British Nations: Which have provoked the just Judge of Heaven and Earth, to punish some of us, by sore adversities; Tunc severissimè punit Deus, quum poenalis nutritur impunitas. Aug. Hos. 4.17. Isa. 1.5. others by severe impunities; justly letting us alone, and smiting us no more: Our Sins then becoming God's greatest grievances, when they are less ours (as to Contrition, Confession and Reformation) than they should be; And possibly would be, if we felt their burdens in our afflictions. Hence they also grow at last our greatest penalties and infelicities; even then, when Prosperity betrays us most to Impenitency; setting us farthest from Amendment and Remorse; our earthy hearts (usually) most hardening, when we enjoy the warmest beams of that Sun, which Providence makes to shine upon good and bad, Mat. 5.45. the just and unjust. As for those pecuniary and politic pressures, which most men fancy to be their greatest grievances, (having a quicker sense of what pincheth their purses, than what wounds or pierceth their consciences) I have learned a●ter twice seven years' experience, to be a Christian Stoic; Not utterly stupid, and improvident; but yet, not so impertinent, as to complain of any common charge, or burden; which seems necessary to the present Polity, under which I may have leave to live a godly and peaceable life; 1 Tim. 2.2. much less, so discontent, as not to be thankful to God and man, for any moderate blessings I enjoy; The least of which, Gen. 32.10. I may say with Jacob, is beyond my greatest deserts. I am of opinion, That, No price is too dear to purchase civil peace, except only that, which pawns, or sells the peace of a good conscience for it; That the Liberty, Vide Tert. Apol. cap. 30, 31, 32. & 39 and security of a private Christian, under any Government and Governors, to whom God hath subjected him, is, First to pray, 1 Tim. 2.3. Next to pay, Rom. 13.6. I am no stranger to the domestic defeats of humane policies, pretensions, protestations, presumptions, which have by their frustrations not only confuted the light and vulgar confidences of some men and their parties; But they have even non-plussed and confounded the most pregnant hopes, and assured expectations of many, both too credulous, and too presumptuous Christians: Who, looking too much upon the (supposed) meritorious virtues of some men, and the enormous vices (as they thought) of others, have allowed less freedom to the wonderful operations of God, Rom. 11.33, 34. and the intricacies of Divine Providence, than is fit to attend the Abyss of Sovereign power, and the Majesty of Infinite Wisdom. In which only, a wise man, and good Christian, (who lives by Faith, not Sense) may safely rest, Hab. 2.4. and glory, even then, when he is most posed, Jer. 9.23. and lest understands the riddles of God's ways, or the depths of his unsearchable judgements; whose, fathoming and unfoldings are reserved to make up the eternal admirations and beatitudes of patient and humble Christians in another world. I know we live in a querulous Age; where few men are so modest, as not to think, they deserve larger enjoyments and better preferments than they enjoy; Or so content, as not to think, they suffer more pressures than they have deserved. You might (no doubt) have many importune monitors, and would have infinite earnest Suppliants (if YOU were in place, and Petitions were in fashion) from every County and Corporation in ENGLAND; Where the mere vulgarity (like Swine) are prone to cry out more, for a little bite by the ear, than for all the sordidness of sin, and irreligious faedities, into which they shamefully fall; and in which they securely wallow, if left to themselves, by the cruel indulgence of their betters and superiors: The out-cries and complaints of the Commonalty, in civil regards, if you should every way effectually satisfy; (which is no easy matter; It being as equally hard to please, as it is base, to flatter, the populacy) And yet should leave the concernments of their souls, as to the true Christian and Reformed profession of Religion, to that loose, licentious, and languishing posture, whereto some men's distempers and indifferencies already have, and farther seek to reduce this Nation, as to any settled doctrine, uniform profession; Catholic order, and national combination, best becoming this, as all such famous and ample Churches of Christ; Certainly Your secular agitations, compliances and successes would as little commend your fidelity, and discretion, much less your Christian zeal and charity, as those cures would do the skill of any Physicians, who should take care to mend the clothes, or heal the scratches of their raving and distracted Patients; without any regard to their fevers and frenzies, which are their greatest maladies, and (uncured) will be their greatest miseries. I presume you well understand, That true Religion is the chiefest ingredient, not only to make up men's spiritual and eternal peace; but even their civil and temporal tranquillity: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is. Pela. eth. l. 3. ep. 249. Jer. 6.14. Job 13.4. That no men can be good Patriots, who are not good Christians; That men heal but slightly (as Physicians of no value) the hurts of the daughters of their people, if they do not apply seasonable and sovereign medicines to those (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) pestilent distempers, which disaffect the heads and hearts of men in matters of Religion; whose Body is Truth, whose Soul is Love; Its Beauty is Good Order; Its Health is Peace with God and good men. The indication, crisis or judgement of its maladies are to be made, not only by that total defect, or absumption of Religion, which is naturally incident to the profaner sort of men: but many times it hath dangerous symptoms and effects arising from Pleurisies of piety; from Surfeits of Sanctity; from the too hot Livers, and over-boylings of Religion; even in those, that are (as Solomon calls them) righteous overmuch; Eccles. 7.16. of too high and plethoric constitutions in Piety: For (as a wise and witty man once said) The heads, even of God's children, are as prone to breed nits and lice, as other men's. Infinite odd opinions, like the itch, and scabs, or boils of Egypt, arise from the rankness and luxuriancie of some men's crude and indigested godliness. The best and most generous Vines, even of Gods own planting, Isa. 1.5. will soon run out by their luxuriancie, not only to sourness, but even to barrenness, as to good grapes, unless they be carefully pruned, and orderly bound up, by those holy severities of Christian discipline, order, government and communion, which are necessary to every Church, especially those that are grown to so large a size, to so numerous an extent as that of England. Christian Counselors and Statesmen (such as YOU either are, or may be) will then prosper most in their politic counsels and designs, when they suffer not Policy to overly Piety; when secular projects are neither the sole, nor principal objects of their endeavours: But primarily, and impartially seek the kingdom of God and his righteousness; Mat. 6.33. Not putting that in the rear (to be brought up in the fag end of a Civil war, when both Church and State are sore and circumcised) which should have been in the Van, or front of all Parliamentary counsels and proceedings: Nor setting men's heels above their heads; Or (which is more deformed) preferring their Bodies and Estates before their Souls and Consciences. Which preposterous methods do oft make, not only Parliaments of State, but even Church-Councils, and Assemblies (as Greg: Nazianzen complains) to become Nehustan, Jer. 22.28. broken idols, and despised vessels; while Christian men act more like cunning and pragmatic Politicians, than charitable and sober Christians; Passionately intending humane designs; and Divine only with partialities, and factious byassing. In such cases, who can wonder, if their results and conclusions be as wretched and ridiculous, as their premises are unworthy of wise men, and ingenuous Christians? Who should never so remember they are Men, as to forget they are Christians; Related in Sacred and Religious, as well as Civil and Natural bands; not only to one another, as Men, as Brethren; but also to one God, their Father; one Saviour, their Elder Brother; one holy Church, both as Catholic and national, their common Mother. I cannot but observe the solicitous counsels, the sequacious compliances, the vigilant cares, the resolute endeavours of my Countrymen, to preserve the civil unity, and ancient polity of this Nation: Not to suffer any part of this Commonwealth to be dismembered; or under pretence of either natural Liberty, or a secular Independency, to dissociate, sever and withdraw itself from that grand community, and national subordination, which is justly esteemed, by all wise men, and therefore exacted by wise Governors, as most necessary for the safety, peace, strength and honour of the Nation. And can it (I beseech YOU) be thought by any wise and honest men, to be less safe, honourable and necessary for the people of England, (who were all heretofore professedly Christians and baptised) to live in an Ecclesiastical unity, in a Catholic order, in a national, religious polity? Is there no weakness, deformity, or danger to be observed, feared and avoided, in all these break, dividing, shatterings, schisms, separatings, sidings, strifes, envies, animosities, contempts, cruelties, factions & furies, (whence grow confusion, and every evil work, as S. James tells us, Jam. 3.16.) with all which this Church, and so the whole Nation, is now much overgrown, as to matters of Religion, past all private help and recovery; Requiring no less public care, united counsels, and authoritative endeavours, to compose and heal these Ecclesiastic or Church-distempers, than those civil disjointings and disaffections do, under which this State hath long laboured, and which are yet scarce fully healed; After so many cuttings and lance, blisterings and bloodletting; which I do not think proper remedies for such religious maladies as are not yet ulcerated to immoralities. 'Tis true indeed (as Optatus speaks) That each particular Church's welfare is much concerned in that of the Civil State or Commonwealth where it is embarked: Non est Respublica in Ecclesiâ, sed Ecclesia in Republicâ. Optat. l. 3. Yet it is as true, Reipublicae Christiana constitutio ea quae est in Deum pietate praecipuè nititur; multaque inter Ecclesiam & Rempublicam cognatio intercedere solet; ex se invicem pendent, & utraque prosperis alterius successibus incrementa sumit. Tom. 1. Concil. Bin. which the Emperor Theodosius said to S. Cyril, That the happiness of these doth no less depend upon the purity of Religion, and peace of the Church, in which they are so bound up, as jacob's soul was in Benjamins, that they live and die together. As some of your Forefathers and Countrymen have (in my memory) found it, so will YOU and your Posterity, That it is no piece of Good husbandry so to look to your own sieled houses, Hag. 1.4. as to neglect the Temple of God; yea, that part of the Body of Christ, Eph. 1.23. which is (at least was) in this Nation, under the glorious name and title of The Church of England; Sometimes famous and flourishing, now grievously wounded and wasted, torn and mangled, disjointed and divided, having many years suffered the Strappado in England, as to the Christian and Reformed Religion. In which behalf, as the freedom of my present public Address to YOU (my Honoured and beloved Countrymen) ariseth from the highest and best motives in the world, so I hope it confines itself to that Sphere, which is most proper for Me, as a Minister of the Gospel; Not only a Professor with You, but duly ordained to be a Preacher among You, of that Christian reformed Religion, which hath been wisely established, and mightily prospered in the Church of England. In whose honour and happiness, (which chiefly depend upon the continuation and restauration of the true Christian and Reformed Religion) since I know You are, as good Christians and honest Englishmen, most highly concerned, both as to your persons and your posterity; I presume, it will not be either unsuitable to Me, or unacceptable to You, That I here endeavour, with all Christian freedom and faithfulness, to present to your serious consideration, First, The present distresses of the Church of England: Secondly, The causes or occasions of them: Thirdly, The evil and dangerous consequences of them: Fourthly, The probable remedies, and preventions of them; So far as God hath enabled me to understand and express them. Whose gracious assistance in the first place I most humbly implore; Next, I crave the pardon, prayers and acceptance of all wise and worthy persons. Their pardon, for my boldness and defects; Their prayers, for God's gracious direction; Their acceptance of my honest endeavours; which I chiefly devote (after the Divine glory) to your service, under the most endearing notions of my Countrymen, and Fellow-Christians. Whose judicious affections, tender compassions, prudent counsels, and conscientious endeavours, attended with discreet zeal, Anhelantium animarum sudores sunt piae lachrymae. fervent prayers, and unfeigned tears, (which are as the sweat of industrious and devout souls in their holy labours and agonies) if I may be so far blest, as to excite in YOU, proportionable to the Majesty, sanctity, and concernment of this great Subject, set before you, under the name of The distressed Church of England, I make no doubt, but I shall (by God's help) be an happy instrument, at once to procure some peace and rest; at least some ease and relief to Her, while she may (however) see herself pitied by so many worthy persons: which is no small comfort to any in affliction: And (possibly) I may be some means to stave off, abate or defeat the restless agitations and unreasonable expectations of Her most implacable enemies both at home and abroad: Who (as the Dragon that gaped upon the woman in the Revelation) have already swallowed up (whilst it is yet quick and alive) this Reformed, Rev. 12.3. and sometime united Church of England, in their malice and presumptions; between Rome and Babylon; Superstition and Separation; Papal tyranny, and Popular Anarchy. Hoping, on all sides, to make their advantages, not only by this Church's sufferings, but by the want of sympathy in her children: Whose silence and restiveness, in behalf of this Church, and its Reformed Religion, must needs prove their sin before God, and their shame before all wise and good men, in this, and after-Ages; when they shall see, how infinitely this generation of Englishmen, and Christians, come short of that duty they owed to their God, their Saviour, their country, their own souls, and the good of their posterity; which are all included in the welfare of this Church; to which they are nearly related, in a double regard, natural and spiritual, civil and religious, as they were born and baptised in Her. And here, because I know infinite prejudices, sinister suspicions, and undeserved jealousies, are prone (like Flies in summer) to light upon every thing that is public, and sold (as it were) in the Shambles; I crave leave to present YOU, and all men, in this Porch, or Preface, with a true Prospect of my own Integrity, as void of private passions and interests; a qualification necessary for those that will meddle with Religious concernments. This my present importunity, and public Address to YOU (my worthy and honoured Countrymen) is, not to give vent to any private discontent, forced by any such pressures, Eccl. 7.7. as (Solomon tells us) are capable to make a wise man mad; nor is it to take, or seek revenge upon any, that hath offered injury or insolency against me in particular. As for private petulancies and indignities, I thank God, through his mercy, and my own Integrity, (though I am not wholly without them, yet) I am as much above them, as Armour of Proof is above the stings of wasps or hornets. As for my public station, or fruitions, I must ever with all grateful humility to God, and ingenuity to men, acknowledge the great experiences I have had of God's gracious providence, and man's generous indulgence, (Notwithstanding that I have freely declared my dissent in some things, wherein I thought myself in a high nature concerned). Hence I esteem it both just and comely for Me, to use the like candour, equanimity, and moderation to all others, who fairly differ from me in things Civil or Sacred; Against whose persons, estates, places, and preferments, I profess to you I have no private picque; no envy, no malice, no animosity. Nor am I much moved by the various opinions, and different persuasions of any person or party, in matters of Religion, if their opinions have any thing in them that seems so dark and dubious, as makes their dissentings venial; or, if the persons be so modestly scrupulous, as they appear both conscientious and charitable; if they be not grossly blasphemous, manifestly erroneous, rudely immoral, palpably injurious, or impudently foolish and fanatic; if they be not of a deep and scarlet die, as to evil speaking and evil doing. Of which tincture I confess some men's spirits, opinions, principles and practices seem to be; who have, and still do, very inordinately endeavour to divide and destroy, to condemn and contemn, to dishonour and impoverish, to dissipate and desolate this Reformed Church of England; which was, in all wise and sober men's judgements, too precious, too polished, and too ponderous (or burdensome) a stone, Zach. 12.3. for any private hands to take up, and cast (as the Angel did that millstone, which was the emblem of Babylon's fall) into such a sea of blood, Rev. 18.21. such an abyss of confusion, as some men seem to aim at: Who think, that Christ cannot sit on his Throne, nor they on his right and left hand, judging the tribes of England, while any learned, ordained, orderly Clergy, or any orthodox, uniform, united, Reformed, and National Church remains in England. I confess I admire that providence of God, and prudence of man, which keeps these mad men in any Bedlam; which is able to put some chains upon their fury, and restraints upon their folly. To whose persons though I am generally a stranger, yet so far a Christian friend, that I wish them the blessings of heaven and earth, of this moment and of eternity; such graces, as may prepare them for glory: That doing justice, showing mercy, and walking humbly, they may rest with God at last. Although they have a long time, breathed out threatenings against, and sought to make havoc of the whole Church of England, and the Majesty of it; yet (as the Father of the Prodigal) I rather pity than despise them, in the rags and husks which they have chosen: I should be glad to be any means to bring them home to their Father's house, and their Mother's bosom: I should joy to see them in their right minds, and clothed with modesty and meekness, with shamefastness and sobriety; notwithstanding some of them may feed on the Churches ancient patrimony, and cloth themselves with the pieces they have torn from their Mother's garments. My aim is not at any man's being sequestered, proscribed, undone, imprisoned, persecuted, starved or oppressed. I design no benefit by any Birds feathers; and therefore desire not they should be plucked so bare, as some Eagles and Doves (excellent Bishops and Presbyters too) have been in England, with whose spoils some have well feathered their (heretofore) hard and uneasy nests; while those poor (but precious) men have (some of them) scarce wherewithal to cover their nakedness, or where to hide their heads. But if such robbers and destroyers of this Church and its Clergy, be the only true Israelites and people of God; and if We (the sons and servants of the Church of England) be the only Egyptians, (which is a point I desire to search;) we may with the more patience bear their spoiling us of our jewels, our honours, estates and liberties; especially if they have an extraordinary mandate and call from God to strip us, and destroy this whole Reformed Church; which some do strongly pretend and fancy. Nor is this pretence more than needs; For I am sure, they have no ordinary call or command so to do; either from the word of God, or the good Laws of this or any ancient Christian Church or Nation. But by way of reprisal, I desire not to take from them a shoe latchet; Gen. 14.25. Though some of them aim to make all the Bishops and true Ministers of this Reformed Church to go barefooted with their families; and would fain sell many an excellent Preacher, for a pair of shoes. Amos 2.6. As for any public and popular advantages to be obtained by my thus scribbling; I am not so fatuous as to fancy, That the Name of the Church of England (which is always inscribed on my papers, as well as on my heart) is in so much favour either in City or Country, what ever it may be in Court. I know, that Religious unity and national harmony in England, as a Church, may seem useless, if not dangerous in point of policy, until there be a greater firmness and stability in civil affairs. All Ladders must have two sides, besides several staves; and scaffolds must have many stays, while they are used in the building; though they be all afterward removed, when the Palace of Power, and Temple of Peace are finished. As for lesser projects, and those opiniasters which make up plebeian parties, I know my lines to be diametral against them. It were a blind and impotent ambition in Me, or any man of my Coat, Jer. 45.5. to seek great things for themselves, when they cannot but see how great a gulf there (now) is between any professed Minister of the Church of England, and Abraham's bosom: The favours to be expected either from the Populacy, or the Powers. Alas, we poor and despised Clergy, must not (now) aim at any earthly heaven; or return to that terrestrial Paradise which our forefathers enjoyed, out of which the Angels, with flaming swords, have driven us. It is well, if we escape hell and Purgatory, or keep ourselves in Limbo Patrum: Primitive Poverty, with Liberty. The pulse of the times beats very weakly, as to any double honour of profit or preferment for men of my profession and persuasion. Indeed it is no time (as Elisha told Gehazi) for the ruinous and divided Clergy of the Church of England, to seek or receive vineyards and olive-yards, talents of silver, 2 King. 5.26. and changes of raiment. 'Tis a very great mercy that we have our lives for a prey, Jer. 39.18. (as Jeremy told Baruch) That any of us may sit still under those poor vines and small figtrees, which the storm and hail of the times have shrewdly battered. 'Tis well if we can get any decent employment, or any competent maintenance; for we have enemies that grudge us both these: Though I trust, the all-sufficient God, through the favour of good men, will ever give us competency, and contentedness. A Scholar will carry one to heaven, as well as a Barge; And one may ride on an Ass to Jerusalem, as well as in a triumphant Chariot. Ambitious vanities are never seasonable or comely for any humble Christians, and least for the Ministers of Christ, (who ought to be crucified to the world, and the world to them, Gal. 6.14.) especially at my years, and in my condition. 'Tis honour and grandeur enough for Me, if I may (next the advance of God's glory) promote Your, and my Country's common good, which, I must tell you, doth not a little depend upon the good order, unity and government; the honour, peace and safety of the Reformed Religion, duly established in this Church and Nation of England: Of whose festered scratches, and deep wounds, since I cannot but have a great sense, both of Grief and Shame; and toward whose healing, since I am (indeed) very ambitious to drop one drop of sovereign balsam before I die; I have here endeavoured to seek Your face, Jer. 8.22. and to recommend Her distress to Your compassions. It is for Her sake, and for Yours in Her, that I again adventure (for truly it is an adventure, and no small one in this age) thus to appear in public, possibly with more forwardness and zeal, than prudence and discretion, in some men's censure; Who (it may be) have not so much charity or courage in them, as to own an afflicted friend, an impoverished father, or a distressed mother. Yet to justify my discretion, this may be said, That nothing seems to me (in Policy as well as Piety) more rationally and religiously necessary, than a public tender regard to the state of the Reformed Religion in this Church and Nation. To me, noblemans, and Gentlemen, Citizens, and Yeomen, all sorts in their private and public capacity, seem, if not to want, yet to expect something in this kind from some of us Ministers of the Church of England, which might handsomely excite to honest industry, those sparks of piety and generosity which heretofore flamed in their Forefathers liberal breasts, toward this Church of England, as Christian, and as Reformed. Nor are they (I presume) quite extinct in yours, who now succeed them; whom I do not arrogantly instruct, as if I thought you ignorant; but humbly provoke to do what you know, when opportunity shall answer your abilities and good will. Not, but that I have (also) pleasing speculations (many times) of that silent safety and secure latency, in which I see others, my betters or equals, hug themselves. I know there are men (otherways of good worth and parts) who dare not speak one good word, either of, or for, the best Bishops, the best Presbyters, or the best national Church in the world, (as this of England was.) These (over-bred, and too much Gentlemen) may consider, That a good man may be more wary than wise, more fearful than faithful, more cautious than conscientious. The Prophet Jeremy resolved, Jerem. 20.9. by reason of the danger and ingratitude of the Jews, to speak no more to them in the name of the Lord: but the word of God was as fire in his breast, he could not hold his peace, and keep peace in his soul. I could as easily wrap myself up in silence and privacy, as some others do, if I did not fear sins of omission, as well as commission; which was the jealousy a most learned and godly person had of himself, lately dying; who yet had been an earnest intercessor for the relief of many distressed Ministers in England. I would also covet the reputation of a wise man, Amos 5.13. by keeping silence in an evil time, if I had not many and great stimulations, while my life is declining, and my death approaching, to give what further constant and comely proofs I may, to this and after-ages, of my zeal for God, of my love to my Saviour, of my communion with his Catholic Church, of my particular respect to this noble part of it, The Church of England; and in this, of my due observance to my Reverend Fathers, and beloved brethren, the godly Bishops, and orderly Presbyters of this Church; yea and last, of my charitable ambition to heap coals of fire (not scorching and consuming, Rom. 12.20. but melting and refining) even upon the heads of those, who still profess to be remorseless enemies to my calling, and to the whole Church of England: who seem to me, as if they sought totally to debase the Clergy of England, yea utterly to destroy the ancient Catholic order and government, succession and authority of the Evangelicall Ministry in this Reformed Church; while they endeavour to remove able, ordained and autoritative Teachers into corners; and to obtrude I know not what volunteers, Jerem. 30.20. new and exotic intruders into that holy function. These will, certainly, (in a few years) make the Sun go down upon England at noonday; Amos 8. ●. bringing upon this Nation the shadows of the night, Superstition, ignorance, profaneness, irreligion and confusion; leading Posterity to Popery, by the way of popularity, poverty, parity, despiciency, and Anarchy, falling upon the Ministry, and the Reformed Religion of this Church. In which blackness of darkness (debasings and disorders) the Seers of this people will in time grow blind; the guides unguided; the teachers will be untaught; the Pastor's unbred; the flock unfed, by a mushroom and novel Ministry, multiforme, miserable, mechanic Grows-up, neither duly ordained, nor decently maintained, nor much deserving either of them; being crest-faln in themselves, and contemptible to others. I cannot be satisfied in Reason or Religion, in honour or conscience, in policy or piety, how it can be happy for You, your Posterity, and this whole Nation, to live after a vagrant, loose and indifferent way of Christian administrations and profession, according to every man's private fancy, choice and humour, without any such national settling and combination, such public Ecclesiastical union, as hath in all Ages and Nations best edified and fortified, counselled and corrected, excited and increased both gifts and graces in a most comely and most Christian order; with such harmony, unity, majesty, and authority, as best becomes the Disciples and Churches of Christ. I confess I am ashamed to see and hear any Gentlemen of honour, or other persons of commendable qualities, of good estates, of ingenuous parts and breeding, poorly and meanly to forsake the waters of Siloah, and to follow the brooks of Teman; to discountenance at least (if not quite discard) their learned, grave, godly, and experienced Ministers, who are of the true metal and stamp too, which a Minister of the Gospel ought to be, (that is, really enabled, and duly ordained or authorized to that great work.) And this most what not out of any serious advice and conscientious choice, becoming Christians in so great a concernment; but rather out of easiness, levity, curiosity, popularity, or some pitiful compliances with novel upstarts, and rude intruders into that Sacred office. Among whom, if they do save their purses, (which is by some deserters of their lawful Ministers much looked after) yet I am afraid they too much venture their souls, I am sure they lose much of their credit both in present, and after-ages, among learned, godly, and wise men. Nor do I believe, that in point of conscience, they have hitherto found any great improvement of piety in themselves, their families, children and servants. Yea, I cannot but think, they must be very sensible of those many breaches, flaws and leakings, which daily grow, as upon their Country, so upon their Parishes and Families, by the extravagancies of their children, strangeness of their acquaintance, and irreligiousness of their servants, besides the factiousness of their neighbours, and coldness of their very kindred: who all affect (according as they are cunning, proud, or simple) the name of LIBERTY in Religion; that is, (in some men's sense) neither much to fear God, nor to reverence Man. However I wonder, that any persons of great worth and prudence, can with indifferency see the public, national interests of Religion sinking, (which are the greatest jewels, ornaments and honour of any Nation) so as themselves may but have liberty to swim or paddle in what new pond, puddle or plash of Religion, they list to fancy. 'Tis strange to me, that any persons of steady and sober brains, should not easily foresee, that these strange vertigoes, these tempests, and continual toss of Religion, will in a short time, if they have not already, make the whole Nation quite giddy, and as it were sea-sick, even to a vomiting up of its Reformation. But if there be (indeed) a Liberty indulged to every one, for the picking and choosing what way of worship, Religion, Church and Ministry best likes them; sure, it will be the greatest honour, and noblest freedom of all true English Christians, to own and adhere to that, solidly, soberly Reformed Religion, which was duly settled in this Church of England, by better heads, and (I think) as honest hearts, as any, either brochers or abetters of novelties, can justly pretend to: who (as I conceive) come vastly short, in all their variations, and new inventions, of that scriptural verity, Catholic antiquity, yea and of that Parliamentary authority and majesty, which had once happily reform and established Religion in this Church of England, by the full counsel and free consent of all Estates, Princes and People, Clergy and Laity. What is of late by Novellers pretended of an Apostolic rudeness, plainness, illiterateness, and simplicity, which ought to be in Ministers of the Gospel, is ridiculous, unless these new Teachers could show us their special gifts and extraordinary inspirations, better than yet they have done; which were indeed miraculously bestowed upon the Primitive Planters and Preachers; but very superfluous in a Church so full, and blest with the ordinary endowments of pious literature, and all good learning, both Humane and Divine, as England was. How childish an affectation were it in the Gentry of England, to forbear to ride on good horses, because Christ once road upon an ass? Joh. 12.15. (showing, that the greatest triumph of all Christians, is humility, lowliness, and meekness.) How silly were it in them to expect, that Asses should always be able to instruct them, Numb. 22.28. because Balaams' ass did once with great justice, and a prodigious gravity, rebuke his master's madness? Much less should Gentlemen of worth and breeding, be such silly sots and children, as to fancy, that every jingling hobby-horse will be sufficient to carry them to heaven. No, the ministry of your souls is a far greater work, requiring greater ability, and better authority; to convince men of their sins, to encounter their lusts, to moderate their passions, to purge out their corruptions, to break and soften their hearts, to terrify and appease their consciences, to prepare them for God, to graft them by true faith into a crucified God and Saviour, to wean them from the world, to win them to goodness, to pull them out of hell, and the devils snares, to bring them to heaven, and into the arms of Christ. All which are the great works of true, able, and authoritative Ministers, requiring othergates workmen, than are (now) in many places much in fashion among common people; though not so in favour with the wiser and better sort of Christians in England, as to prefer these men's new and various fancies, before the wise constitutions, the ancient customs, the Catholic and Religious Orders of the Church of England, established by their pious and prosperous Progenitors. All the world at home and abroad sees, that after all the many changes, and troublesome essays of new-modelling the civil state of this Nation; yet true reason of State, and public peace do command, yea enforce us to justify the wisdom of our Forefathers, by bringing back matters of Sovereignty, power and government, to the former platform and polity, as to reality; only changing a few formalities. Truly this makes me not despair, but, when all new fangles of Religion, and popular models of Churches have been tried in vain, and are found (as they will be) both impertinent and incompetent for the happy state of Reformed Religion in this Church and Nation, we may (by God's blessing) return to those pristine and primitive forms of sound doctrine, uniform order and government, which were never taken up by any private inventions here or elsewhere, but were of Catholic observation; and so (no doubt) of Apostolic direction, and divine institution. Which, if all men should silently forsake, and (in so doing) reproach not only the Church of England, but the very first Catholic and Apostolic Churches; yet let me cease to live, when I cease to sympathise with them in their unjust reproaches, and with Her in her great distresses: and 'tis fit my tongue should cleave to my mouth, when I forbear, or am afraid to pray for the peace, and happy restitution of our Jerusalem: ay, Ps. 122.6. who have seen Her in such order, beauty, peace, plenty, honour, prosperity, and piety: I, who have received in her bosom and tuition so many and great mercies, not only temporal, but (I hope) spiritual and eternal: I, who desire my posterity, kindred, friends, and country, may never have other God or Saviour, than what was owned and worshipped in the Church of England; no other Scriptures and Gospel, than what have here been excellently preached, and comfortably believed; no other Sacraments, than such as were here duly administered, and devoutly received; no other Liturgy, or prayers and holy offices, than such as were here both publicly proposed, and privately used; no better Bishops & Presbyters, pastors and guides of their souls, both for learned abilities & exemplary life, than such as I have known frequent and flourishing in the Church of England; I pray God they may but have as good; for better Ministers, and better means of salvation, as they shall not need them, so they cannot have them without miracles, of which God is no prodigal. I should greatly sin, if I should not daily sigh and weep over the Church of England; if I should not pour our my soul to the God and Father of Mercies for Her; since she is now counted, by many, (as Jeremy complains) an out-cast and forsaken; whom no man (in comparison) seeketh after; her bruise is almost incurable, and her wound is very grievous: There are few to plead her cause; she hath no healing medicines; her lovers have forgotten her, since God hath wounded her with the wounds of enemies, and with the chastisements of cruel ones: who in her dust and captivity require of her to sing the songs of Zion; commanding her to call her ruins, Reformations, and to account their persecutions, her perfections. It is time (then) for all that have any regard to the Church of England, to cry mightily both to God and man, to give them no rest, till they return to be gracious to this much afflicted, Isa. 62.7. impoverished, despised, divided, disordered Church: It is high time for all honest English Christians to pity her ruins, to favour her dust, to speak comfortably to her, Isa. 40.1, 2. to put an end to her warfare, to bind up her wounds, to make up her breaches, to repair her losses, Job 42.11. as Jobs friends did his, with their kind and munificent compassions: that Posterity may not read in the sad ruins, divisions and desolations of this famous and reformed Church of England, pristine liberality, and modern sordidness; the bounty, beauty and order of former times; the deformity, sacrilege and confusion of these later. Who can consider without shame and regret, how much more generous, and large-hearted even those Ages were, which had some rust and dimness of superstition growing upon their Religion, than these are, in which the English world is filled and confounded with the noise and shows of brightnings and reformations; in which by new & most preposterous methods some of our late unlucky Architects, or Antivitruvian Builders, have endeavoured with their axes and hammers to break down more good Church-work in twice seven years, Psal▪ 74.6. than the best master-builders can hope to repair in seventy seven: I do not mean (only) as to the material and mechanic fabrics of goodly Churches, (which in many places lie sordidly wasted, & shamefully desolated) but as to that which was the rational, political, moral; the prudential, and truly pious structure of this well-reformed Church of England? of whose ruins I shall give you afterward a more particular account. But it is now time for me (in order to work upon your affections) to give over such tedious Prefacing, and to present You with as true and lively a prospect as I can, of Her sad posture: There being more pathetic power in your hearing or seeing one of her own sighs and tears (O what is there in her wounds!) than in the greatest seas of any man's oratory, to stir up in You those filial compassions which most become You, to so deserving, and now so distressed a Mother, as is this Church of England. The goodly CEDAR of Apostolic & Catholic EPISCOPACY, co●●… with the modern Shoots & Slips of divided NOVELTIES, in the Church. ΔΕΝΔΡΟΛΟΓΙΑ. The Emblem of the Trees explained. In which is briefly set forth the History and Chronology of Episcopacy, Presbytery and Independency, as pretenders to Church-government: their first planting, growing and spreading in the Christian World. THe design of this Figure or Emblem is to instruct Christians of the meanest capacities, who have less abilities or leisure to read large Discourses, touching the due Order, Way and Method of Church-union and Communion: which Subject is now multiplied to so many parties and opinions, that ordinary people (as in a Wood, or Maze and Labyrinth) are unable to disentangle themselves of those perplexed contentions and confusions, which have of late so miserably divided and almost destroyed the Harmony and Happiness of the Church of England, upon the disputes, not so much about saving Faith and holy Life, as those of a Churches right constitution in its Divine Original, Apostolic Derivation, Catholic Succession, Regular Subordination, and Brotherly Communion. First, most people, learned and unlearned, were heretofore prepossessed with the Catholic use and approbation of Episcopacy, as (ubique, semper & ab omnibus) ever and only used in this and all other Churches, from the first planting of Christianity. After this, many weaker Christians came to be dispossessed of their former persuasions, by the violent obtrusions of such a Presbytery as challengeth Church-government, not in common with Bishops, but wholly without them. This foreign plant, not taking any deep root in this English soil, was soon starved and much supplanted by the Insinuations of a newer way called Independency. At last many, heretofore well-meaning Christians, finding such great Authorities, even from Christ, pretended on all sides, for these diversities of Bishops, Presbyters and People, (each challenging the right of Church-government, Rule and Jurisdiction, as principally due to them, and from Christ immediately committed to them) have by long, perplexed and sharp disputes been brought to such doubtings as have betrayed them to strange indifferencies, as to all Ecclesiastical Society and Order, (which is the very band of Christian Religion) so far that they care for no Church, no Christian Communion, no settled Government, no sober Religion. By this Figure, Type or Scheme, every one may easily see in one view their rise, growth and proportions, what in the beginning was, what ever since for above 1500. years hath been, and what in right reason ought to be the authoritative and constant Order, Polity and Government of every particular Church, as a part of the universal: if we regard either Scripture-direction, or Christ's institution, or Apostolical prescription, or universal practice of all Churches in all Ages and places, till of later days, wherein the factious Ambitions of (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) abortive and divided Novelties have, either in too indulgent or in troublesome times, strangely warped from, or contested against uniform Antiquity, either usurping upon, or denying those just Interests, which ought to be preserved jointly in every well-ordered Church to Bishops, to Presbyters, and to faithful people; who as Members of one Body, and Branches of one Tree or Root, aught to be but one in an Ecclesiastical harmony, though they have different uses and offices for the common good. The Catholic Church of Christ, which all true Christians believe to be (Sponsa unica & dilecta) the Spouse and Body of Christ, one and entire, as united to him the Head of all by one Faith, so to one another as Members by one Spirit, one Baptism, one Bread and one Cup, which are visible symbols or signs of that invisible Communion in Truth, in Love & Charity, which every true Christian hath with Jesus Christ, and all true Believers in all the world; This Catholic, one and uniform Ch. is here set forth under the similitude of one, fair, strait, well-grown, Psal. 80.9, 10, 11. fruitful, flourishing, & uniform Tree, as the Cedar of the Lord, full of sap, rooted in Christ, from whom it derives the spirit, life and radical moisture of Grace, by such outward means and Ministers as the Lord hath appointed to be workers together with him, 1 Cor. 12.28. Eph. 4.11, 12. as some Apostles, some Prophets, some Evangelists, some Pastors and Teachers, for planting, propagating, watering, pruning, fencing and preserving this goodly Tree in its several Branches, which have spread forth to several parts of the world, but were never quite parted or separated from either Christ or one another, but grounded in Christ, Eph. 4.15. they have always grown up in him to such an holy Harmony, without any Schismatical slipping, breaking off, or moral dividing from one another; every small twig, every bigger branch, every mainer arm of it, either for private Christians, or public Congregations, or Episcopal Combinations, still holding that mutual Communion which became them, both to Christ and his Church in general, also to each other in particular, according to the several Places, Duties, Stations and Proportions wherein the God of Order and Peace had set them, under the Authority, Power and Episcopacy of his Son Jesus Christ, 1 Pet. 2. ●5. as Lord of all, the King, Priest and Prophet, the chief Bishop and great Shepherd, the principal Teacher, Pastor and Ruler of his Church. From our Lord Jesus Christ (whose love to Mankind intended to enlarge the branches of his Church beyond the Jews, The beginning of Episcopacy Ann● Christi 30. even to all Nations under Heaven) this small and tender Plant was afterward, as a fruitful Vine and flourishing Tree, carefully husbanded and orderly extended by such workmen as the Lord was pleased to choose and appoint for this holy care and culture; whom he endued with the spirit of power, both for Authority, when he solemnly breathed on them, Joh. 20.20, 21. Acts 2.2. and for Ability, when he powerfully sent the Spirit upon them, enabling them not only with such ordinary gifts as were necessary for all true Ministers, and such ordinary authority as was fit to govern the Churches they gathered, but also with such extraordinary and miraculous endowments, as were meet for the Apostles to carry on the first plantations of the Gospel to all the world without any Interpreter, beyond all contradiction; the doctrine they taught of Jesus Christ being confirmed to be the Will and Wisdom of God, by the concurrence of his Omnipotency in infallible signs and wonders. By these twelve Apostles (when their number was completed, and the Apostasy of Judas made up by the choice of Mathias, Acts 1.26. to succeed and supply his Episcopal charge and Office for the teaching and ruling of the Church, (to whom, as a supernumerary help and great additional, St. Paul was afterward joined) by these, I say) as by so many chief Pastors or Ecumenical Bishops, (who had the general care and joint oversight or Episcopacy of the Catholic Church, both Jews and Gentiles) was this Tree mightily advanced in a few years, both in bigness and breadth, in strength and extension; so that the Gospel, according to Christ's command, was preached, more or less, to every Nation under Heaven: and as the beams of the Sun are seen, so the Evangelical sound of the Apostles was heard in all Lands, Mat. 28.19. Rom. 16. ●6. so loud and audibly, Rom. 10.18. that every Nation might have applied themselves to listen and seek after the Lord, and have heard and found him in the voice of his glorious Gospel, if they would have followed that news which they heard of, according to the curiosity after novelties which is in the nature of man. The news of which, so good and so great, was every where reported to be, as foretold by so many Prophets long before, so attested and confirmed by so many Eye witnesses, who not only spoke to every Nation in their several tongues, but also wrought great miracles in every place where they came, Gal. 2.7. according to those several lots or portions which they had taken by the Lord's appointment▪ or by mutual consent, as their particular Bishoprics or Dioceses, for the more orderly carrying on of the work: some staying at Jerusalem, Gal. 1.18. as St. James the Elder, and the other James surnamed the Just, where they were slain; others dispersed themselves, as St. Peter who went to Antioch, Alexandria and Rome, there planting eminent Churches, & appointing Bishops over them, as Euodius at Antioch, Mark at Alexandria, Clemens and Linus at Rome; one for the Circumcision, the other for the Uncircumcision, (which Churches ever after, even before, the Nicene Council, had the eminence of Patriarchal seats, as afterward Jerusalem and Constantinople had.) The Histories of the Church, either Sacred or Ecclesiastical, are not punctual or exact in setting forth the several Countries to which the Apostles divided themselves, or where they most resided, and at last ended their days: nor is it material, it being sufficiently clear, that, as they did not at first so confine themselves to one place or Country, as to exclude any other Apostles from coming thither; so they went, some one or more of them, to all chief parts, to Syria, Arabia, Persia, India, Ethiopia, Armenia, Scythia, Asia the Less and Greater, all Greece, Illyricum, Italy, Spain, France, Germany, Cyprus, Britanny, Africa, and all the rest of the grand parts of the then-known World, Continents and Islands, where, at last, they either fixed in their old age, (as St. John did at Ephesus) or were martyred; leaving, besides the Monuments of their preaching and miracles, their Apostolical Seats supplied by an orderly Subordination and authoritative Succession of such Bishops and Presbyters, Pastors and Teachers, able and faithful men, as they had Commission to ordain, and did authorise for their successors in that holy Ministry, spirit and power of Christ, which was to continue to the end of the World, for the further planting, propagating and preserving the Church of Christ, by such Doctrine, Government and Discipline, as they, for the main rules and ends, clearly by word and practise delivered to them, which was then, as their Faith, Baptism and Hope, Cum nobis totus orbis comm●rcio ferm●turum in unâ communionis soci●tate concordat. Optat. l. 2. Rami erroris p●●te●ti de m●ndacio, non de radice ve●itatis. Id. but one among all Churches in the all world: single Christians, private Families of them, small Congregations, little Villages, greater Cities, ample Territories, large Provinces, great and small Churches (as to their several distributions for conveniency of actual converse and communicating in holy Mysteries) had still but one and the same Polity, Order, Discipline, Ministry, Government and Communion; no Variety, no Difformity, no Deformity in Doctrine or Discipline, among any Orthodox Christians, but every one observed that Place, Office, Duty and Proportion, wherein God, by the Apostles and their successors, had set him or them, in relation to the whole Church, as well as to that particular part or Congregation of it, to which he was more locally and personally joined, yet mentally, spiritually, charitably, cordially and consentiently he still adhered to the Catholic Conformity and Unity, according to that holy Polity and Oeconomy which the Spirit of Christ in the Apostles first and for ever established, so far as the nature of times and God's providence would permit; that as there was but one God, and one Lord Jesus Christ, so there might be but one Church, one chaste Virgin, as the Spouse of Christ, in all places. The completing of Ecclesiastical Combinations or great Churches by the Apostles. For these holy Husbandmen and chief Labourers in Christ's Vineyard, the twelve or thirteen Apostles, did not think it sufficient to teach, to catechise, to convert, to baptise, to confirm, to communicate, to admonish, to excommunicate here and there several Christians and their families, as single Slips and Off-sets of Christianity, which might grow apart by themselves; but their aim was, with preaching Verity to plant Unity, and with true Faith to graft fraternal Charity, which conjoined them to and with Christ and all Christians in the world. Joh. 13.14, 15 and 15.12. This being a most visible mark of Christ's Disciples, also a special means for mutual assistance and comfort amidst the many persecutions which Christians would meet with, sufficient utterly to discourage them, if, when they were scattered from each other, they were presently without any joint harmony, & greater combination and ampler communion of Saints: by which means, wherever Christians fled from one place to another, if they met with Christians, they were sure of hospitable friends, bringing, as they ever did, letters of communication or commendation from their Bishops; which presently made their way to such a kind reception and communion in all holy duties, as that station permitted, as Catechumen, or Penitents, or Eucharistical Communicants, in which they stood wherever they had lived. Therefore as the Apostolical wisdom, so all their successors, diligently gathered single believers and private families of Christians into greater Congregations; these they led on to larger combinations, which comprehended the Christians of many Villages, Towns, Cities and Territories, according as the Spirit of Christ directed them, for the greater conveniency and benefit of both Ministers and people, who scattered in small bodies or parcels, must needs be both more cold and more feeble, but so united in grand Societies, they would be both warmer, stronger and safer, and besides more eminent and conspicuous in the eyes of all the world. Such, beyond all doubt, were those Apostolical and famous Churches, distinguished by the Spirit of God according to the chief Cities, which were the centre of their Religious addresses for Church-Order, Authority and Communion; as the Church of Jerusalem, Antioch, Rome, Ephesus, Corinth, Sardis, Smyrna, Colosse, with many more: whose Cities being most-what Metropolitan or Mother-cities, as to secular power and distribution of civil justice, they were chosen as meetest for the principal residency of Religious Order, Polity and Authority; wherein (as was meet) the blessed Apostles did, during their lives, preside as Bishops, either in their persons, or by those faithful Apostolic men whom they (as St. Paul did Timothy, Titus, Archippus & others) appointed as Rulers or Bishops under them, for the carrying on of the service of Christ & his Church, partly by the common duty and office Ministerial, which was to preach, baptise, & celebrate other holy Mysteries in an orderly way, even in lesser Congregations, yea to private Families and single persons, The Succession of Episcopacy. as occasion required (which was the work of Bishops and Presbyters in common) and partly to manage that presidential power and Episcopal Authority over both Presbyters and people, (united in larger combinations and Churches) as might best preserve the Purity, Unity and Honour of the Church and Christian Religion in doctrine and discipline, also derive by way of right Ordination, after the pattern given to Timothy and Titus, 1 Tim. 3.2: Tit. 1.5. and others, a continued succession of an holy and authoritative Ministry, by such an eminent power of Order as was specially delivered to the chief Apostles, and by them to their principal successors as Bishops in those great, Apostolical and complete Churches, where, as Christians increased, many Presbyters were ordained by the chief Pastor or Bishop, to be both Counsellors and Assistants to him in that Evangelical work of teaching and governing the Church committed to him: First, as appointed immediately by the chief Apostles while they lived; and after, as chosen by the surviving Presbyters in every precinct or Diocese, to succeed so far in that Apostolical eminency and presidential authority, as was necessary for the Churches constant Order and good Government, according to that precedent Charter and Commission which all Churches had received from the Apostles, and they from Christ, not as a temporary Ordinance, but such as for the main end and method the Lord would have continued till his coming again, by a succession of ordinary Bishops, who are a lesser or second sort of Apostles, in many things short of their gifts, yet having the same ordinary power to ordain Presbyters and Deacons, to appoint them their offices and places in the Church's Ministry, and to see they execute the same as is meet for the edifying of the Church in Truth and Love, to rebuke and reject them in case of failing and obstinacy. As the Church daily thus increased, spreading its boughs even to the utmost seas, still its Polity or Government, as the bark or rind of the Tree, enlarged with the body or bulk, being most necessary for the preserving both of lesser and greater branches, to knit and bind all together, to convey the sap and juice to every part, and to the whole. This once peeled, or broken, or cut, wounds the tree, weakens, and oft kills that part which is so injured: Trees may as well thrive without their bark and bodies, live without their skins, as Churches without settled and united Government. Therefore that all true Christians might still keep a Catholic Correspondence, Subordination and holy Communion, between the whole and every branch or member, they had not only Deacons above the people, but Presbyters above Deacons, and Bishops above Presbyters: yea and as the borders and numbers of the Church so increased, that not only Presbyters but Bishops grew many, and so fit to be put into some method and order, they had Archbishops or metropolitans above ordinary Bishops, and Patriarches above Archbishops or metropolitans, and a general Council above all; thus still drawing nearer to a centre of union and mutual intelligence. So that first three, afterward five Patriarches had the general Episcopacy, Superintendency and Inspection over all the Christian world. Nor were these Bishops Metropolitans and Patriarches, any ambitious affectations or forcible intrusions of pride or tyranny upon the Churches of Christ, but by a wise and general consent on all sides, The primitive care of the Union and Communion of all Churches. Christian Bishops did so cast themselves into comely ranks of Subordination, after the Apostolical pattern, as might most suit to the good order, correspondence and unanimity of all Christians, as but one Church; there being in the first 300. years of sore persecution, no other motives to these eminent places and regular orders in the Church, of Bishops, Archbishops, Metropolitans, Primates and Patriarches, but only those of Labours and Cares, of Sufferings and Martyrdoms, which still pressed most upon the Precedents and chief Governors or Bishops of the Churches: as was evident in the glorious marks of the Lord Jesus to be seen on the Faces, Hands, and other parts of the Bodies of those venerable Bishops (318) which met at the first great gaudy-day of the Church in the Council of Nice, which all made but one Episcopacy, and were Representers as well as Precedents or Rulers of but one Catholic Church. After which time, by the favour of Christian Emperors, the Church's Polity and Government, being carried on by the same Apostolical power and Episcopal spirit, was highly promoted, even to secular Dignities and Estates; Bishops being not only every where unfeignedly venerated by all sorts of Christians, as chief Pastors and spiritual Fathers succeeding to the chief Apostles by an uninterrupted and undoubted succession, of which every Church had pregnant Records and Memorials, but they were invested in such civil honours as make them Peers to the Senators, Nobles or Patricians of the Empire: which was more to their pomp and lustre, but not more to their Episcopal authority, and that filial respect which was paid to Bishops by all good Christians, even then when they and their Clergy had nothing to live upon but (the dona Matronarum & oblationes Communicantium) the contributions and offerings of devout people. In this fair and sun-shine-weather, The withering, decay and falling of some branches. as secular Peace and Plenty increased to the Church, so Christianity spread very far, as to the Fashion, Profession and Form of it, in branches and leaves, but grew (among many) less fruitful in the real effects of Piety and Charity: many now thronged into Christ's Church, Mark 5.30. but fewer touched him with the hand of Faith, so as to heal their infirmities. Yea, as in the very first times under the Apostolical Episcopacy, the Simonians, Nicolaitans, Gnostics, Corinthians and others, afterward, (during the still-persecuting Ages) the Marcionites, Carpocratians, Valentinians, Montanists, and others; so in the most prosperous times, the Manichees, Novatians, Donatists, Arrians and Pelagians, with divers others, became as branches either miserably split and slivered by their own schismatic and separate humours, or quite wholly broken off by blasphemous Apostasies, and the just sentences of Excommunication, from that one Catholic Church and the unanimous Bishops of its communion: for whom one Bishop did rightly excommunicate by the lesser or greater censure, all Bishops, Presbyters and Christians in all the world did the same virtually. Hence many lesser and greater branches, even some Bishops with their whole Presbyters and Churches, grew sometimes scare and withered, twice dead and pulled up by the roots, by Error and Obstinacy, by voluntary Desertion and Ecclesiastic Abdication, as many Arrian and Donatist Bishop●. Yet still by the correspondence and care of the excellently learned, resolute and unanimous Bishops of the fourth, fifth and sixth Centuries, with their orderly Presbyters and faithful Flocks, the Church ceased not to flourish, for the most part, in Verity and Unity, in Piety and Charity, as well as in civil Peace, Plenty and Honour; the holy and good Bishops every where still clearing the moss and cankers which grew upon this fair Tree: they pruned the Excrescencies and superfluities both of Jewish presumptions and Heathenish superstitions, all and every one being prudently intent, as far as times and the manners of men would bear, to preserve his lot part or Diocese committed to him by consent of the people, by the choice of his Presbyters, and by the comprecation or consecration of his colleagues the Neighbour-bishops, so as became the relation they had to the whole Church, after the grand patterns and models received from the blessed Apostles; who first, as Bishops of equal size and authority, yet as men using an orderly precedency, sprang from that one Root Christ Jesus, and by their united Ministry spread abroad the Church far and near. 'Tis true, the primitive severity and rigour of Christian discipline much abated in times of greater peace and plenty: many primitive signs of Christian love and communion, The laxation of Ecclesiastical discipline. as the Holy Kiss, their Love-feasts, their Oblations, their Hospitality to all Christian strangers, and the like, were crowded out by the Wantonness, Factiousness, Hypocrisy, Luxury and Avarice of some Christians, besides Church-mens Ambition and Heretical Fury; none of whom would endure the sharp yoke of primitive Pennances, Abstentions, Castigations, and many ways of Mortification, by Watching, Sackcloth, Fasting, Prostrating, Weeping, Confessing, etc. At length Mahometan poison and power cruelly pressed upon the divided and debauched Eastern Churches: after this the Papal policy and power by insensible degrees in ignorant and turbulent Ages so prevailed upon the blindness and credulity of these Western Churches, (who were much wasted also with wars in Spain, Italy, Franee, and here in Britanny, by domestic Rebellions and barbarous Invasions,) that the face of this goodly Tree was much battered and altered from the primitive floridnesse and fruitfulness; the Roman Church and its Bishop or Patriarch being, like an Hydropic body, swollen by secular Pride and Usurpation so much beyond its pristine comeliness and honour, that in stead of an holy and humble Apostolic Bishop of the same Order and Authority with his other brethren, he must be owned in a superecclesiastical, and a superepiscopal, and a superimperial height, as Lord, and Sovereign, and Prince, above that is called God in Church and State. Yet still, while this Papal branch presumed thus to grow beyond its proportions, to the over-dropping and dwindling of all other parts of the Church, its form or fashion, as a Tree in its winter or less-thrifty state, remained even under those sad seasons of Papal perturbations and presumptions; God never suffering the Church to be quite deformed, much less hewn down, because it was never so barren, even in those days, but it brought forth some tolerable Bishops, Presbyters and other Christians, yea many of them very commendable ones. Neither Papal Foxes nor Mahometan Wild Boars had ever power to lay it quite waste, or overthrow it both root and branch, as to its saving foundations, or its orderly constitutions, or its authoritative successions in Bishops, Presbyters and Deacons: still holy Mysteries and holy Orders, the holy Ministry and holy Scriptures, holy Examples, holy Doctrines, holy Duties and holy Lives were continued in such order and by such conduct, as easily represented the primitive pattern and Apostolic figure of this Tree, though with many accressions and some deformities, which time, and ignorance, and superstition, or humane policy and secular pride, had affixed to some main Branches of it in these Western parts of the Church; yet the ancient Lineaments and true Model were very visible in Christian People, Christian Deacons, Christian Presbyters, and Christian Bishops, directed into several stations, as Helps for the more orderly carrying on of the Church's Government in grand and national combinations. In this posture stood the state of the Catholic Church, The state of Episcopacy under the Papacy. as in all other places where the Vastations of Saracens and Turks had left any miserable Remnants of Christian Churches, so most eminently in this Western world, which the Providence of God had not yet wholly delivered over to Gog or Magog: none of these Churches were without their Deacons, Presbyters and Bishops, until that great Reparation rather than Alteration of Christian Religion began in these Western Churches about the Year 1520. which was justly called a blessed Reformation in many respects, as to clearing the corruptions of Doctrine and Manners which had been contracted every where, which by learned and godly men, Bishops and other Ministers, were notably discovered, and by some Christian Princes or States happily amended with great order and by due authority, as in other places, so no where with more Wisdom, Justice and Moderation than in England. Where (as in most of the Churches protesting against the Roman deformities, especially those of the Lutheran denomination) the ancient Orders and Authority both of Bishops and Presbyters were preserved, as is evident in the Augustane confession; which finds no fault with, but highly approves the Government of the Church by Bishops under Episcopacy, provided Bishops would join in a just Reformation of those gross abuses which were the Churches intolerable grievances, as well as the dishonour of Christian Religion and Christian Bishops, whose deserved Honours, Estates and Eminencies in Authority they saw no cause to envy, grudge or diminish. So far were these first Reformers from hewing down Episcopacy, as if it cumbered the ground, that they only digged about it, and mended it, that it might bring forth good fruit, as it did in England and elsewhere. The beginning of the Presbyterian-government Anno 1541. While the Western Church's Reformation was yet but crude, and in motion by Luther's means, there arose Mr. John Calvin about the Year 1541. a man of good Learning, acute Wit, copious Eloquence, great Industry, quick Passions, sharp Pen, of reputed Piety, and of no less Policy. Him the people of Geneva thought the fittest man in the world to settle their distracted Church and State, after they had, with the wont arts of tumultuating and discontented people, forced Eustace their Bishop and Prince to fly from his Palace and City, his Bishopric and his Signiory, because he would not presently gratify them with such a Reformation as they imperiously demanded rather than modestly desired. Mr. calvin's grounds for Presbytery were not against Episcopacy. Mr. Calvin (as Mr. R. Hooker hath excellently set it forth) undertook with much difficulty and after many indignities (worthy of popular levity, fury and petulancy) put upon him, to settle their Church-affairs, together with the civil State, in such order as he thought, not most Scriptural, primitive and Catholic, but most prudential, plausible and probable in humane reason and honest policy, to take and hold the tumultuating inconstancy of that people, so to bring them to something of civil and religious order; acting herein, not upon any Wiclefian or the after- Presbyterian and Antiepiscopal Principles, as imagining either Episcopacy to be unlawful, or sole Presbytery to be necessary as of Divine Institution; neither of which were his judgement, as is sufficiently and vehemently declared by his passionate approbation of reformed Bishops, and his esteeming so honourably of regular Episcopacy, that he passeth all Anathemas or curses on those that are against them: so far was Calvin from laying the Axe to the root of this Tree, which, with Christianity, had ever, as he confessed, born Episcopacy. But he rather went upon Erastian principles and politic grounds, looking, it seems, upon the Government of the Church (as he did upon the Lordsday, which is not elder, nor more authentic or Catholic as to the Church's use and observation, than Episcopacy) to be in their nature mutable, (as of Ecclesiastic, yet Divine prescription) according as Times, Occasions and Minds of men might fall out. He well knew, being a learned man, and oft confesseth in his Writings, the primitive blessing and universal authority of presidential Episcopacy in all Churches: yet he neither thought it, nor any form of Government (any more than clothes) to be essential to the substance and body or any Church or of the Christian Religion, but variable to several forms and polities, as prudence might invite, or necessity require: so that he never set up any sovereign and unepiscopal Presbytery as an Idol or Moloch, to which not only the children, but the Fathers of the Churches, even very godly and reformed Bishops, were all sacrificed. He thought it did not misbecome his policy and prudence to serve the times and humours of the Citizens, so far as to seem to vary the outward mode of their and all other Churches ancient government; provided, he served the Lord and that people in settling such a government as might preserve the Christian Reformed Religion among them in true Doctrine and good Manners, which was the main work which Calvin seemed to mind most. To have reconciled the City and their former Bishop was a matter impossible, unless he or they had changed their minds in Religion: Mr. calvin's difficulties in settling the Church-government of Geneva. to have persuaded them to elect a new Prince and Bishop of their own profession and opinion, had been very imprudent, considering either the fair offers they made to himself, of being, not titularly indeed, but virtually and really, both the Prince and Prelate, or remembering that strong fancy of Liberty which had now so filled and intoxicated all sorts of Citizens. In the last place, to have set up himself in the pomp and formalities of a Bishop and a Prince, had been an act of too much Impudence and Envy for a person of his Ingenuity, Policy and Dexterity in public managements: it sufficed his design, so far to gratify both the Populacy with seeming Liberty, and the Optimacy with some civil and Magistratick Authority, all of them with such reformed purity in Religion, as most pleased them, and yet to keep up himself and his colleagues of the Ministry to such an height of Ecclesiastical Influence and Church-power, as made them far from being either slaves to the Vulgar, or cyphers to the Government: for all cases, civil and criminal as well as religious, were one way or other reducible, and so responsible, either by way of comprimising, or upon scandal, or repentance, or satisfaction, to the cognizance and consistory of him and his colleagues, himself being as the Caesar, they as his Bibuli. In effect, his Wisdom, Reputation, Eloquence and Courage set him up in Geneva and other places to so high an eminency of respect and authority, as he equalled, yea exceeded, most Bishops: however his pomp, train and pension were but small (after the usual bounty expectable from any State or City that list to make their Reformations of Religion complete by robbing the Church and Clergy of their ancient Lands and Revenues) which doubtless in that City had been so great and princely, as upon the confiscation of them to their Town-box or Exchequer, they might well have allowed Mr. Calvin, their great Reformer and chief Pastor, and his Associates, a Salary much beyond an hundred pounds per ann. with a little provision of Corn. But he wisely dissembled this Indignity, finding that, as Riches, Pomp and Luxury had undone former Bishops, so a voluntary kind of Poverty and Austerity would now best conciliate to him and his colleagues a greater Reverence and Authority: nor was it considerable to have a gay or rich scabbard, provided they had sharp and well- metall'd swords: their Ambition was rather to intend God's work in reforming Religion of its Leprosy with Elisha, than in taking man's rewards with Gehazi. In this Presbyterian Prelacy or Prelatic Presbytery, which seemed to bow Church-government to the ground, and make it, like a Bramble, take root at the nether end, Mr. Calvin lived and died at Geneva, never either rigid for a parity of Presbytery as of any Divine Institution, nor against a comely eminency of Episcopacy, which he owned as a very commendable, useful, venerable, ancient and universal Order of Church- polity and Government, where it was paternal, not imperious, as an elder Brother among brethren, not as a Master among servants. Such Bishops presiding as Fathers among Presbyters, yet gravely and kindly advising with them, and assisted by them in all the grand and joint concernments of the Church's welfare, these he never wrote, nor said, nor thought, nor dreamt to have any thing in them Papal, Antichristian, Intolerable or Abominable to God or good men, as some hotter and weaker spirits afterward declaimed. Episcopacy and so Presbytery had indeed (as other holy Mysteries, Orders and Customs of the Church) suffered very much smut, soil, darkness and dishonour by the Tyrannies, Fedities, Luxuries, Sotteries and Insolences of some Bishops and other Churchmen under the Papal prevalency; but Reformed Episcopacy, which in many Churches continued with reformed Doctrine, never received the least blame or blemish from Mr. calvin's Tongue, Pen or Judgement, no nor from any of his colleagues and successors in Geneva, who were learned men and of sober minds. The growth of the Presbyterian way of Church-government. But from the reputation of Mr. calvin's name, this new and rather necessitated than elected project of Church-government and Discipline, under the name of a Presbyterian parity or Consistorian conclave, grew to be looked upon with very favourable eyes by other free Cities, petty States and Princes, as their Interest lead them; each crying it up, together with the reformed Doctrine, to such an height, as if the new paper and packthread in which Mr. Calv. had wrapped those old, yet good spices, were of equal value with them. Several Interests advanced the business, shows of Liberty with the people, parity of Empire and power with the ordinary Preachers, and hope of gain by confiscation of Church-lands and Bishops Revenues, with some States and Princes, as in the Palatinate, Hassia, and other parts of Germany, so in Scotland, with some Suitzer Cantons and Hans-towns: the zeal for Reformation which was very plausible, the zeal for Imitation after the copy of so renowned a person which was very popular, and the zeal of Confiscation, where so opulent and profitable a booty would fall into some men's purses and Coffers, all these together carried many men with full sails to Presbytery, and with a strong tide against Episcopacy, by whose spoils many hoping to be enriched, they rather chose to ruin than reform it, that extirpating might justify their stripping of it, which had more Revenues, but not more deformities, than Presbytery had under Episcopacy. To make this Transport of some men good, which not only deserted, but defamed, despised, and in some places destroyed the Ancient, Catholic and Apostolic state of the Church's polity of old by Episcopacy, hereby varying even from the Lutheran Moderators and Superintendents, (which were reform and qualified Bishops) as well as from all the present Roman, Greek, Armenian, Abyssine, and all other ancient Churches in the world, to their great and insuperable scandal, yea and from some eminently reformed Churches, as England and Ireland were, in which Episcopacy was still continued, as the Honour, Centre and Fixation of all Ecclesiastical Order, Unity and Authority; to avoid the odium and envy of this scandal, all plausible ways were taken by the great Admirers and Adorers of the new Geneva-platform, to set further glosses and titles upon this new Presbyterian-government and discipline, finding that the water-colours of Prudence, Necessity, Policy and Conveniency, which Mr. Calvin had used, would not hold long; especially where Episcopacy now kept its pristine power and possession in so many famous reformed Churches and States, as Denmark, Sweden, Saxony, Brandenburg and others, besides England, which outshined them all. All these so asserted the honour of true and reformed Episcopacy, that all sober men saw Prelacy was no more of kin to Popery, than Regality is to Tyranny, or Magistracy to Oppression, or Presbytery to Popularity, or natural Heat to a Fever, or Wine to Drunkenness, or Good cheer to Gluttony, or Good order to Insolency, or due Subordination to Slavery. 'Tis true, great Indulgencies and soft Censures were carried by those Churches which were Episcopal, Whence the former brotherly correspondency between Episcopal and Presbyterian Churches. toward such of their reformed Brethren who were not opinionatively but practically Presbyterial, pleading for themselves not choice so much as force and urgency of their present Affairs and Condition, considering either the pressures even to Persecution which some were under, or people's impatiencies, or Princes sacrilegious aims: all which made their deviation from the confessed Catholic and primitive pattern of Episcopacy so long venial as their Judgements were right and their Charity candid toward Episcopacy, either approving of it, or deploring their want of it, or wishing for it as the best Government, where it might be enjoyed with the Reformed Religion. While Presbytery continued thus humble and poor in spirit, it was esteemed honest and excusable upon Christian charity, pleading not pervicacy but necessity; not a schismatic Faction or Usurpation against Episcopacy, but an humble submission to a condition which, as Peter Moulin owns, was far short of the happiness they desired under good Bishops. But this equable and charitable temper was too lukewarm and cold for some hotter Zelots for the Presbyterian way; they did not like that their new platform (which they called the pattern in the Mount) should thus take any quarter from Bishops any where, but rather be in a capacity to give no quarter to any Bishops or any presidential Episcopacy. From private and amicable contests, which began at Franckfort, and so by degrees were fomented in other Cities, between some reformed Divines, it grew to higher flames of contention than those between Paul and Silas: at length it rose to a Rivalry, to Reproaches, Menacing, Feuds, Despites and bitter Animosities between such as adhered to ancient Episcopacy, and those that admired the new-sprung plant of Presbytery. To dig about, to muck and mend this last, the Learning, Wit and Credit of Mr. Mr. Beza's Patrociny of Presbytery beyond Mr. calvin's principles. Beza contributed not a little, who first of any man openly inscribed Presbytery with a Title looking very like to Divine, as Christ's true and only Discipline; in which yet he was not so punctual and peremptory as many that followed him in his supposed Opinion, but came far short of his real Learning, which still forbade him to deny primitive, paternal and reformed Episcopacy its due Honour, Use and Place in the Church of Christ, or to demand the extirpation of it where it was settled and reform, which he deprecates as an intolerable arrogancy in him or any man. To which moderation if his Judgement and Conscience had not led him, yet he was shrewdly driven by the notable charges of learned Saravia, a man of veterane courage, of a steady judgement and unpopular spirit, who pressed upon his Unepiscopal, much more against his Antiepiscopal Presbytery so strongly, that he forced his Antagonist to stoop and subscribe to Primitive and Catholic Episcopacy, yea, and to acknowledge Bishops, even from the Apostles days, to have been the (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ● Precedents or chief Rulers among Presbyters in all Churches. Mr. Beza's Essays, not so much to have undermined Episcopacy, as to have fixed or earthed his Presbytery better, being thus notably countermined, yet upon his very breaking the earth, and promising, at least pretending, to spring some rich Mine of Scripture and Antiquity, to prove, if not the sole, yet at least the concurrent Divine right of Presbytery, on both sides of it, both as to its preaching & ruling Elders, as stamped with the mark of Christ and his Apostles, (besides his and others terrifying the world, as if Popery had begun with Prelacy, and Antichrist had sucked the breasts of Episcopacy) it is not imaginable what industrious Pioners and Soldiers followed these charms, this alarm for Presbytery against Episcopacy; who sifting every name of Bishop, Presbyter, Elder, Evangelist, Messenger, Apostle, Prophet, Pastor, Teacher, Ruler, Governments, Helps, etc. in Scripture and Antiquity, found or fancied upon all of them something that made very much, if not only, for Presbytery, and very much, if not wholly, against Episcopacy, so far that they would not allow so much as the twelve or thirteen prime Apostles any Episcopal Presidency, Eminency or Authority above the seventy Disciples, or any Presbyters whom they ordained, much less any Bishop after them, above the youngest, meanest and pettiest Presbyter; rather suspecting, yea aspersing all Antiquity, even in the primitive and purest times, for Ignorance and Error, or Falsity and Ambition, in following the Catholic custom of Episcopacy, after the great Apostolical pattern (which was (in them) given to all Churches by the Spirit of Christ, and after continued by the Apostles own appointment) than any way admitting any Innovation, Flaw or Defect to be in their new-formed Presbytery. Heats unhappily growing great, and Eruptions many, The heats about Church-government among some reformed. from the Aetna or Vesuvius of men's passions, the sulphur and ashes at last came from Geneva, Franckfort and Edinburgh, over to England: where at first they only fell upon the square Caps and Rochets of our excellent, reformed and reforming Bishops; but at last they flew in their very Faces and Eyes, without any respect to their Age, Learning, Piety, Sanctity, and Martyrly Constancy, besides the honourable places they still held, both in Church and State, according to our Laws. For the Undertakers for the Cause (as they called it) of Jesus Christ, first picking at the outworks of Ceremonies, next at the spiriritual Courts or Jurisdictions of Bishops, after that at the excellent Liturgy, at last they laid amain at the whole Body as well as the Branches of Episcopacy, going much further than ever their first Founders of Presbytery abroad, or the modester Non-conformists at home ever designed or desired. Thus a bolder Generation of men (stopping their ears against all the charms of Scripture, Antiquity, Universality, Prudence, personal Merits, public Blessings, and all proportions of Government and Polity, only urging a peremptory necessity and a self-inforcing novelty) perfected that in a dreadful War, which was neither begun, nor promoted, nor desired by the chief Magistrate, nor by his chief Council in its pristine fullness and freedom, nor ever before was acted in any reformed Church whatsoever against their reformed Bishops. After much bustling and bloodshed in perilous times, The first planting of Presbytery in England to supplant Episcopacy. this crooked and low shrub of Presbytery, which having never much thriven or grown handsomely in Scotland or in any other Kingdom, (where it had been happily and handsomely grafted by King James with a renewed and well-reformed Episcopacy) this bitten, mangled and misshapen, was brought over on the swords point, and wrapped up in the cover of a Covenant (as Plants in Mats) to be set in this good soil of England, after sweeting Smectymnuus and the industrious Assembly with many Heads, Hands, Tongues and Pens, had digged and prepared the ground for it, by gaining the minds of some well-affected Members in the two Houses, and others in other places. The terrible equipage of Presbytery at fi●st. About the Year 1649. (the Fasces Imperiales, and the Sacrae Secures) the Holy Rods and Imperial Axes of Presbytery were displayed to England, in their Ruling and Teaching Elders, in their High and Mighty Consistories, Parochial, Classical, Provincial, National, Ecumenical: for the Presbyterian power was in all the world to prevail against Episcopacy, as daniel's He-goat did against the Ram, casting him to the ground, and stamping upon him. Every Presbyter, young and old, ripe and raw, was to have not only a sword in his mouth, but a switch of correption in his hand; which, lest he should use too rashly and sharply, he was to be pinioned and surrounded with certain Lay-Elders, each of them furnished also with a Rod of Disciplinarian or ruling power equal to the Minister. All this dreadful dispensation of Presbyterian discipline was pontifically and punctually set out by many discourses, to the no small wonder of all wise men, who knew the disproportions to all Government generally, which were both in younger Ministers and in most Laymen of plain parts and plebeian breeding, such as in most places these herds of ruling Elders must be, into whom the spirit of Government must presently enter. And no less terrible was this paradox and parado of Presbyterian Discipline and Severity even to Common-people, yea and to the most of the ablest Gentry and Nobility, except some few, whose itch and ambition of a Lay-elderships place had possibly biased them to smile upon their persons and their now▪ Presbytery, to which they were invited solemnly to be Gossips. The activity of Presbytery. Thus armed and marshaled in its Ranks and Regiments, Presbytery began to hasten its March in its might, furiously enough, setting up its Conventions, Ordinations, Jurisdictions, trying the metal and temper of its Censures by Ebaptizations, Correptions, Abstentions, Excommunications and new Examinations even of ancient Christians, old and eminent Disciples to whom they had formerly given the Sacrament twenty times: some of which they sought to win by fair speeches; some people they persuaded, others they menaced and scared to submit to their new Sceptre. Daily Intelligences and brotherly Correspondencies were zealously kept every where, very quick and warm among the Presbyterian Fraternity. Bishop's never so aged, learned, unblameable, venerable and meritorious for their Labours and good Examples, were as Underlings and conquered Vassals, not so much as pitied, but despised and trampled under foot, exautorated and vilified by every young stripling that had got the switch of Presbytery in his hand, which he saw now was beyond the Bishop's Keys or Crosier. The dwindling and withering of Presbytery in England. Presbytery thus driving at Jehu's rate for some time, some of its wheels or pins, like Pharaohs, began to drop off, which forced it to drive more heavily than its natural genius can well bear, (being spirited, like Ezekiel's wheels, with so many young Preachers of very active fancy and eager to rule.) After all this digging and delving this rare plant of Presbytery soon dwindled, either as having no great depth of good earth, or as not planted by so lucky an hand as it should have been in so public and grand a concern as Government is in any Church or State, or as watered so much with Christian and Reformed blood. In fine, its very Bark grew straight and hidebound, its soft branches and sudden shoots grew weak and withering, its junctures loose and infirm, its top too heavy for its body, and its bulk for its roots; as an Epidemic terror at first, so now a nauceous scorn befell most people, some laughing at, others despising these new Undertakers to govern all sorts of Christians great and small in England, without the leave of the chief Governor in Church and State, to whom they had sworn to be subject, as to the supreme Governor in Church and State. In a few years the breach which these Trojans had made in the walls of their own City, this Church of England, to bring in this wooden Horse of Presbytery, so weakened their own defence, both for maintenance and authority, that when they thought Town and Country and City had been their own, they saw themselves much forsaken, as by Prince and Peers, so by the people generally, yea and by some of their greatest Masters, who listed not to write upon Presbytery (Jugum Christi or Sceptrum Crucifixi) the Yoke or Sceptre of Jesus Christ. After this damp and coldness had fatally come upon most men, who were now as willing not to be governed at all by any Presbyters, as Presbyters were unwilling to be governed by their lawful Bishops; no Agitating, no Stickling, no Preaching, no Praying, no Fasting, no Printing, no repeated Crambes of Christ's Discipline, of Elders and Elderships, of Helps and Governments, of the Necessity of the Divine right, of the Aaron's Rod of Presbytery, which had been kept hid (it seems) in the Ark of the Covenant for 1600. years, no splendid Names of Mr. Calvin, Mr. Beza, Mr. Farel, Mr. Knox, Mr. Cartwright, Mr. Baines, Mr. Brightman, Mrs. Smectymnuus; no urging the Covenant, the Votes, the temporary Ordinances, of two Houses; no engine was capable to buoy up Presbytery, which was either leaky, as built of green timber in haste, or overloaden beyond its bulk and capacity. Many sober and good Christians, bred up under Episcopal prudence and gravity, had already felt, and others feared the Pertness and Impertinency, the Arrogancy and Emptiness, the Juvenility and Incompetency, the Rusticity and Insolency of some ruling and teaching Elders too. Sober men disdained, till they saw better reason from God and Man, to put their necks thus into a new Noose, and their hands under the Girdles of their either Equals or Inferiors: no ingenuous man or woman thought that High-shoes and the Sceptre of Government, yea of Church-government, yea of Christ's Government, could well agree together. So that the decoy and fallacy, the sophistry and shooing-horn of bringing in Lay-elders by Divine right, with some show of Common-peoples' having an influence in the new Church-government, was soon discovered and despised; it being most apparent, that Ministers must be very silly Scholars and less Politicians, not to over-bear by flourishes of Words and Wit, or shows of Reason, Learning and Religion all his Lay-elders o● ruling partners; so that he would (upon the point) enjoy the sole government of his parochial Principality or petty-Episcopacy, which would make the little-fingers of Presbytery in time heavier than the loins of Episcopacy ever were, by so much as many poor men's Oppressions and young men's Follies are like to be more ponderous than one rich and aged persons power. The soft and gentle rise or springing up of Independency, An. 1641. At this stand and maze, some Ministers and people (who could not for shame return to Episcopacy, not yet well persist in promoting Presbytery, which they saw a lost game) very notably betook themselves to a new Invention of Independency; of which the first five famous Planters and Commencers in England, were men, as of prudential parts, so of good esteem for their piety where they were known, and some of them were reputed for their learning. These (Quinqueviri) with very modest Applications and humble Insinuations first begged leave and liberty, not only to descent from Presbytery, (with more brotherly tenderness than that had done from Episcopacy) but to attend the further completing of that Churchway, which they called Congregational or bodying of Christians, of which they already had some general light and model in their heads, as most- scriptural, though least discernible in any tract or practice of former Churches. Independency supplants both Presbytery and Episcopacy. Their grand postulate or principle was (as Jacob) very smooth, popular and pleasing, probable enough to gain Disciples in a more gentle way than Presbytery had done, which was red and rough handed like Esau, the Independent planters owning people to be the first and chief Receivers and Dispenser's of all Church-power. Both of them agree and resolve, having shaken hands for fashion-sake as brethren, utterly to leave their aged Father and old stock Episcopacy, which they thought (like Isaac) now blind, superannuated, doting and quite spent, having no more blessing for them. These, as young and lusty striplings, for a while socially apply to shift for themselves, without interfering each with other: the one, as eldest, hoped to live by Hunting, by using arms and force to compel people to bring them provision; the other, as yet of a milder nature, gently applies (in a more furtive way) to gather Churches, like little flocks of sheep, from any Fold whence they listed to stray, to feed them by their own will, and to rule them according to their own pleasure, because by their own power and popular commission, making the flock to be above the Shepherd, and the ruled above the Rulers in an absolute, complete and supreme power under Christ, being immediately authorized from him to choose and to depose, to make and to reject, to reprove and to remove their Officers to Presbyters, Elders, Pastors or Bishops as their menial servants, and Christ's Messengers as their dependent and manual Ministers, elected and ordained as well as nourished and maintained by them. The body of the people thus congregated or congregating themselves being the measure of all Church-power to itself, and to all its members great and small, neither appealing to others, nor requiring others appeals to them, neither ambitious to Rule over others, nor enduring to be Ruled by others; but wrapping up itself in small volumes, every Church carries (like a snail) its shell and all it hath with it; not troubling poor people with tedious and long journeys, with vexatious citations and appeals from one Classis or Court to another; which were, they say, the burdens attending both Episcopacy and Presbytery, which last mended (as they truly tell the world) them atter very little, in point of people's Ease, Quiet and Liberty, after it had so quarrelled with Episcopacy, and with many sleights as well as violence wrested the staff out of its hands: Presbytery seeming like the plant called Touch me not, which flies in the face, and breaks in the fingers of those that press it; but Independency, as the sensible plant, rather yielding to, then resisting any hand that is applied to it. This later and softer plant no sooner (almost) began to be set on foot in England about the year 1650. but it soon gained much ground of Presbytery, which had been an old bitten shrub, ill rooted, and never very flourishing or fruitful, and less apt to be now at last transplanted: But Independency, as a new slip or full-shoot, springs up apace, spreads its roots and branches without any noise, erects its Churches as fast as Presbytery could its Consistories, out of the ruins of Presbyterians Parishes, as well as of Bishop's Dioceses. Independency hath no great line or out-work to maintain, and so can do it with fewer numbers and less noise: it desired only in Peace to enjoy itself; affecting no forced ambition or unvoluntary Rule over others as did Presbytery: it professeth to aim at nothing, but a nearer and greater strictness of Sanctity, Unity and Charity among Christians in their Churchway than it thought could well be had among the larger combinations of Presbyterian or Episcopal Churches, which they think are not easily managed without much labour and toil, besides offence and complaint; because they urge many things as of duty, and by constraint, when this is only by every one's free will and consent. Nothing is more soft and supple than Independency in its first render branches and blossoms; nor is it other than a little Embryo of Episcopacy in a little Parish or Diocese: For Bishops, Presbyters and People, did of old and at first so nearly correspond, as Fathers, Brethren and Sons of a Family, when they were but few, and scarce made up one great Congregation in a City; where one Minister at first was both Pastor and Teacher, Bishop and Presbyter, who, as Christians increased, ordained them Presbyters, to carry on the work, and yet to keep a filial Correspondency with him and respect to him, as became them. The pomp and solemnity of Independent Episcopacy is less, but the Power and Authority Ecclesiastical is, though broken and abrupt, yet full as great and absolute as to all Church-uses and intents as ever Bishops challenged. How far this willow will grow an oak, more rough and robust, as it grows Elder, Bigger, Higher and Stronger, no man knows. I presume it cannot have better beginnings of Order, Unity, Purity, Piety, Charity, Meekness and Wisdom, than Episcopacy had in its first Institution; which is owned by all learned men to be at least Apostolical, both as to the enlarged Churches, made up of many Congregations, and the enlarged Authority of one Bishop placed by the Apostles over many Presbyters and Congregations, so gathered by them into one Ecclesiastic Society or Combination, as those Primitive Churches were in the Scripture. Nor can it have more specious and modest beginnings for Purity and Sanctity, than some former sects have professed, such as were the Novatians and Donatists; of which St. Cyprian and Optatus, with St. Austin and others, give us liberal accounts; whose proceedings did not answer their beginnings, either in Modesty, Charity or Equity, but from rending from, they fell to reviling and ruining all Churches but their own. From the rise and advantages which these two new, and now almost parallel, plants in England, Presbytery and Independency, neither of which are yet any way grown up comparable to the Procerity, Height and Goodliness which Episcopacy had, and yet hath, as in many Churches of Christ, so in many English men's minds, (notwithstanding that both of them, as notable suckers, strive all they can to draw away all sap and succour from the old root of Episcopacy, that it may quite wither and be extirpated every where, as it hath been lately with Swords and Pickaxes terribly lopped and almost quite stubbed up in England;) The advantages that other parties make by Presbyterian and Independent stickling against Episcopacy, and Ecclesiastic unity. From these two (I say) which have so much pleased either some Ministers or People with shows of Novelty, Liberty, and share of Authority, other Parties, Sects and Factions have begun to set up their scaling ladders, and (for a time) staying one of their feet either on the standards of Presbytery or Independency, they fall amain with their hatchets to hack and hew down the remains of all Episcopal order and Communion in Churches, to cut off the battered, stripped and bare branches of that Ancient and goodly Tree, which contained once the Catholic Church under its boughs and shade. Thus these petty planters begin their new plantations, that every one set up new Churches and Pastors after their own Hearts, Opinions and Fancies, making use of what sear, barren and Schismatic slips or abscissions they are able to break or cut off, aiming still to plant (as they say) further off from the root and bulk of Episcopacy (as a notable character of more perfect Reformation) than either Presbytery or Independency seem to have done, who sometime profess they can comply with something in Episcopacy. Hence, first Erastians' or Politicians begin to resolve all Churches into States, all Ministry into Magistracy; making no other origine of Church-power than that of the Commonwealth, nor of any Ministers, Bishops or Presbyters Authority than of a Justice, or a Captain, or a Constable. After this Anabaptists, Quakers, Enthusiasts, Seekers, Ranters, all sorts of Fanatic Errors and lazy Libertines, pursue their several designs and interests under the notions of some newfound Church Sprigs and better plantations, filling all places in England like a wood or thicket with Bushes and Briers, and Thorns of Separations, Abscissions, Raptures, Ruptures, Novelties, Varieties, Contentions, Contradictions, Inordinations, Reordinations, Deordinations, and Inordinations, no Ordinations scarce owning any Church or Christians which are not just of their way and form, as Optatus tells us the Donatist Bishop Parmenian and his party did. All of them agreeing with Presbytery and Independency in this one thing (however differing in others, as in the matter of Tithes, which these are reconciled to) that they are enemies against all Diocesan Ruling Episcopacy, quarrelling even the Honesty and Credit of Primitive Churches on that account, despising all the Fathers, and all the Councils and Canons of all Churches, as levened with Episcopacy. The reason in all of them is one and the same; because true Episcopacy was a notable curb, and restraint, and remedy, equally against all Schisms and Innovations in the Church of Christ, as St. Hierom tells us. And further, by its venerable Authority, so Famous, so Ancient, so Universal, so Primitive, so truly Apostolic, it infinitely and intolerably upbraids all their Novelties and Extravagancies: besides they are conscious that they shall hardly ever (one for a hundred) either equalise or exceed in many Ages the useful and excellent Abilities, Gifts, Graces and Miracles, or the Benefits and Blessings, which by and under regular and holy Episcopacy the Lord was pleased to bestow (if ever any were bestowed) on his Church in all the world, who never (till of later years) knew any thing of other Church-governments, besides that of Episcopacy, any more than they saw new Suns or new Moons in the Heavens. It may be these Parelii or Paraselenes, these Meteors, Comets and blazing Stars, that now appear in despite of primitive Episcopacy, will not be so long lasting, nor so benign to this or any Church as that was; though they seem to emulate, yea and strive to eclipse, nay quite to extinguish the shining of those ancient lights to which they owe their best light of sound Knowledge and Religion, Episcopacy joined with an orderly Presbytery. Mean time what Inconveniencies, yea Mischiefs and Miseries have or may attend these Fractions, Diversities, Divisions and Confusions upon the account of religious forms and Church-ambitions in this and other Churches, between both Ministers and other sorts of Christians, what spoil and havoc they may be tempted in time to make upon one another, while they seek either to overdrop or to destroy each other, as they have done (beyond all moderation and mercy) upon Episcopacy, how little hopes there is that any, or many, or all of them can ever thrive and ascend to any height, not of secular glory, but of Christian proficiency in Truth and Love, comparable to the pristine or modern Beauty, Fruitfulness, Usefulnesse and Goodliness of a right Episcopacy in England or any other Church, is left to the sober judgement and prudent presages of all wise and worthy Christians that list to be spectators and Readers; before whose eyes this Scheme is with Truth and Love plainly and impartially set forth, as to the historic and politic Description of these several and unproportionable Figures, which are lively Emblems of the Catholic and ancient Unity and Uniformity under Episcopacy, compared to modern Diminutions, Divisions and Deformities, as to Ecclesiastical Polity, Order, and Government, since Presbytery was planted in blood, and Independency self-sown of late years in England; whose Honour, as a Church Christian and Reformed, will then be most advanced, together with its civil Peace, when both Presbytery and Independency, as to the just Interests of godly Ministers and people, are reingrafted or re-incorporated with those of primitive Episcopacy, which is, beyond all dispute, and ever was, in the best and worst times, the best Conservator, as of Bishops Apostolic Authority and Succession, so of Presbyters worthy privileges, and of all faithful people's comely advantages, so far as they are jointly concerned in Ordination or Approbation of Ministers, in Consecration and Communication, in holy Mysteries, in mutual Counsels, Supports and Assistances both private and public. The just balancing or even twisting of which three together, makes Christian Churches and States at once ample, honourable and happy, both in Order and Unity, in Strength and Beauty, in Unanimity and Uniformity, which are the best constitution and complexion of any Church that desires to thrive in Piety and Charity, in Truth and Love; which the wise and blessed God in mercy restore to us. BOOK I. SETTING FORTH THE Present DISTRESSES OF THE CHURCH of ENGLAND. CHAP. I. LEst any one should stumble at the very threshold of my Discourse, and by their too much prejudice, The Name and Thing: the Title and Truth of the Church of England asserted▪ coyness and easiness, to take offence from Names, should frustrate my whole design of doing them good, by forbearing to read what I write upon such a subject; I am at first, as briefly and plainly as I can, to assert the Name of the Church of Engl. Which Title is (certainly) the crown of our Country, the honour of our Nation; the highest, holiest, and happiest band of our society; the surest foundation of our peace with God and men; which under this name, and in this relation, becomes sacred as well as civil, religious as well as rational. It was a very sad and bad exchange, if this Nation then began to be no Ch. of Christ when it began to be a Commonwealth; if it ceased at once to be an earthly, & heavenly kingdom: which last, as the Emperor Theodosius said, was the greater honour of the two. We eat, and drink, and sleep, we beget our like, we die, or kill and devour one another, as beasts▪ we build and plant, we buy and sell, we rule and obey, as mere men: But we believe, and worship the true God; we profess the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ; we are partakers of the gifts and graces of the blessed spirit; we have an holy communion with that adorable Trinity, and with one another in love and charity, as Christians, that is, visible members of Christ our Head, and of his Church, which is his mystical body; our noblest life, sweetest society, Eph. 3.30. and divinest fraternity is, as we are Christians, that is, Emulators of the holy Angels, Imitators of God, children and servants in the family of Christ, candidates of heaven, expectants of happiness, partakers of grace, and daily preparing for eternal glory. All which are the dispensations, capacities, and privileges of that nation and people only, which are and own themselves the Church of Christ. A title of so much honour, and real advantages, that in earnest, no Nation or people once called and converted to be Christians, and by public vote or profession owning themselves to be such, should ever be patient to be robbed, or under any specious pretences and novel fallacies deprived of it, since the Empire of the whole world, and the riches of both Indies are not equivalent to this honour, Hos. 1.10. for a people to be called God's people which were not his; and for a Nation which sat in darkness and in the shadow of death, to be professedly and really the household of faith, the Church of Christ, as this of Engl. was heretofore owned to be, by the solemn and public profession of its Kings and Princes, its Nobles and Peers, its Parliaments and Synods, its Magistrates and Ministers, by the consent, suffrages, and submissions of all estates and degrees of people, ever since its first conversion; who never thought it any impropriety or barbarity of speech, (much less any disgrace) to call themselves, according to their joint and declared profession of the name and faith of Christ, The church of England. Which Title I use, according to the good old style and general phrase of all learned, godly and wise men, both at home and abroad, Ancient and Modern. With which Inscription, that excellent Bishop Jewel set forth his just and accurate Apology, full of honest learning, potent reasonings, and unfeigned Antiquity, besides Scripture-demonstrations: which got It and this Church so great an applause, both at home and abroad, that all Reformed Churches and Divines admired it, both this Church and that Book. The more learned and modest Romanists either found they had not abilities to confute it, or not confidence enough to despise it; nor did any Non-conformists than boggle at this Title of The Church of England, when they found it convenient to enjoy the benefit of Her shadow and protection, however in some things they then quarrelled at Her garb and fashion. If any of these be now grown so wilfully ignorant, that they need to be informed in this point, they may please to know, That the Name of the Church of Engl. is more ancient, more honourable, and every way as proper, as the new style and title of the Commonwealth of England. Which denomination imports, not the agreement of all private men's aims, desires, and interests in all civil things (any more than the other doth all men's agreement in every opinion and point of Religion:) But it denotes the declared profession of far the major part, which is esteemed as the whole; whose consent is declared in the Laws and public constitutions. So by the name of the Church of Engl. it is not imported or employed, that we judge every particular person in this Nation to be inwardly a good Christian, or a * Rom. 2.28. Asserimus, Ecclesiam visibi●ē in S Scriptura descriptam, non tantum fuisse parochialem, seu particularem; sed esse etiam Ecclesiam quandam Nationalem, unius gentis aut regni; quae constatex diversis & multis Eccles●is Parochialibus uno regimine Ecclesiastico junctis, mutua communione & societate Ecclesiastica visibili inter se devinctis. Apollonius Consid. c. 3. Ass. 2. true Israelite, that is, really sanctified, or spiritually a member of Christ, and his mystical body, the Church Catholic, invisible: No, we are not so rude understanders, or uncriticall speakers. But we plainly and charitably mean that part of mankind in this Polity or Nation, which having been called, baptised, and instructed, by lawful Ministers in the mysteries and duties of the Gospel, maketh a joint and public profession of the Christian faith and reformed Religion, in the name, and as the sense of the whole Nation; as it is grounded upon the holy Scriptures, guided also and administered by that uniform order, due authority, and holy Ministry, for worship and government, which, according to the mind of Christ, the pattern of the Apostles, and the practice of all Primitive Churches, hath been lawfully established by the wisdom and consent of all estates in this Nation, in order to God's glory, the public peace, and the common good of men's souls. I know there are some supercilious censors and supercriticall critics, who cavil at, disown, disgrace and deny this glorious Name of the Church of England: allowing God no Title to any such national Church, nor any Nation such a relation to God, since that of the Jews was dissolved; nor do they much approve the Name, or believe the Article of the Catholic Church. The truth and property of both which titles and expressions I know there is no need for me largely to vindicate, among judicious, sober and well- catechised Christians, Suam utilitatem potius considerantes, quam unitatem Ecclesiae, etc. Iren. l. 4. c. 62. who do not drive on any design by the fractions, parcellings and confusions of national Churches, as those seem to do, who are still affectedly ignorant (for this subject hath been fully handled and cleared by many late excellent pens in England, besides the ancient and foreign writers) that the name of Church of Christ, next to the highest sense, which denotes all that holy and successional society in heaven and earth, who are or shall be gathered into one, as the mystical invisible body of Christ, that is purchased, sanctified and saved by him, which is never at one intuition visible in this world; this is also, in a lower sense, not more usually than aptly, applied to express that whole visible company of Christian Professors upon earth, whose historical faith, declared profession, and avowed obedience to the Gospel of Christ, like a great body or goodly tree, in its several extensive parts and branches, stretcheth forth itself throughout the whole world. This collectively taken, as derived from one root, or bulk, is called the visible Catholic militant Church of Christ, being to particular Churches, not as a genus to the species, but as an integral or whole to the parts of it. Besides these, the name of the Church of Christ serves to express any one of those more noble parts, or eminent branches belonging to that Catholic visible Church; which being similary, or partaking of the same nature by the common faith, have yet their convenient limits, distinctions, and confinements, as to nearer society and local communion, for their better order, unity, peace and safety, either in particular Cities or Countries, Provinces or Nations; each of which, holding communion of faith and charity with the Catholic Church, were in that respect anciently called Catholic Churches: so were their Synods and Bishops called Catholic, (long before the Bishop or Church of Rome monopolised that name) as that of Smyrna is styled in its commendatory Letter, Damasus of Rome, Aurelius of Carthage, Calinicus of Pelusium, are called Bishops of the Catholic Churches in those Cities, by Eusebius, Socrates, Sozomen, etc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Euseb. l. 4. Hist. c. 16. touching their holy Bishop and Martyr Polycarpus. I deny not but the name of the Church of Christ, is in Scripture, and in common use may be applied, in the lowest, and least proper or complete sense, to particular congregations, and small families, Rom. 16.5. Col. 4.15. 1 Cor. 16.19. especially where others met to serve the Lord: which may in some sense (as Noah's family in the Ark) be called Cities, Commonwealths, Kingdoms, Ubi tres Ecclesia est, licèt laici. Tertul. Ecclesiae entitativae, non organicae: materialite●, non formaliter ecclesiae. Nations, as well as Churches; being the Substrata, Seminaries and Nurseries of both: yet this in a defective, improper and diminutive sense only, as apart from, or compared to those larger combinations and ampler Communions, which all reason, besides the express wisdom of Christ's Spirit, and the practice of the blessed Apostles followed by all the Primitive Churches, invites all Christians in any nation or polity unto, for mutual peace, good order, safety and edification, both as to Doctrine, Worship, Discipline, and Government; far beyond what can be enjoyed or expected in smaller parcels, or separated societies: whose mere local advantages, by neighbourhood or nearness of dwelling, and actual meeting together in one place, make them not any whit more a Church of Christ, Paroeciarum in quibus convenitur numerus accidentaria res est, nihil ad ecclesiae particularis essentiam pertinens; quae uni Presbyterio subjuncta, sacros conventus pluribus locis aut uno potest agitare. Bucer. de gubern. eccls p. 10. Corpus sumus de conscientia religionis, & disciplina unitate, & spei foedere. Tertull. Apol. c. 39 or in and of a Church, than it makes them men or citizens; but only gives them some conveniences for the exercise of some of those duties and privileges, which they enjoy, not as Members of that single Congregation, but as Branches of the Catholic Church of Christ; to which Mystical Body they were admitted, when they were baptised, and to whose head, Jesus Christ, they are related and united, so far as they are believers either in profession or in power: Being further capable to enjoy all those benefits and advantages necessary for the public Peace, Order, Government and well-being of a Church; All which Christ intended it, and which are not to be had in the small parcels of Christians, but in the joint authority of larger combinations. Such sober Christians as live above capricious niceties, captious sophistries, and popular affectation of novel forms and terms, do well understand, That, as little slips grow great trees, and small families multiply to populous Cities and Nations, whose strength, honour, safety and happiness consists, not in their living apart, reserved and severed from one another in their private houses, or parishes and Townships; but in their joint counsels, large Fraternities, and solemn Combinations, under the same public Laws and Governors; without which they cannot attain or enjoy Peace and Safety, the noblest fruits and highest ends of humane Societies and civil Polities; whose Dangers, Mischiefs and Miseries are such, as cannot be avoided or resisted, save only by united Counsels and Assistances, to which just appeals and addresses may be made, for redress of such mischiefs as small parties cannot avoid or remedy: In like manner Christians have in all ages grown up, from the first Apostolical Plantations of Christianity, which were in particular persons and private families, to such holy Associations, Charitable Combinations, and regular Subordinations, as reached not only to the first Families, or less Congregations and Neighbourhoods (which, as I said, may be called Churches in their Infancy, Youth, and Minority;) but they grew up, spread and increased, by the spirit of Prudence, Peace, Order, Love and Unity, even to great Cities, large Provinces and whole Nations. To all which more public and extensive relations, Christians finding themselves obliged by the ties, not only of their common faith and love, but of their own wants and mutual necessities for Order, Safety and Peace; they ever esteemed themselves so far bound in duty to every relation, both greater and lesser, as the general good, and more public concernments of those Churches of Christ did require of them; which were ever esteemed as (Ecclesiae adultae) Churches in their full growth, beauty, harmony, procerity, vigour and completeness, both as to the good to be enjoyed, and the evils to be avoided, by all Christians, not only in their private, but public and politic capacity. 'Tis happy indeed, when one Sinner, or one Family, one Village or Congregation, give their names to Christ; at which the Angels in Heaven rejoice: But how much more august must their joy be, Luke 15.10. how much more magnificent must the glory of Christ, and the renown of his blessed name be, when whole Cities, Countries and Nations willingly a 2 Cor. 8.5. give themselves, and b Zach. 2.11. be joined to the Lord, and to his Ministers, or Ambassadors? This carries more proportion as to the merit of Christ's Sufferings, price of his Blood, and power of his Spirit; so to the accomplishment of those many clear and munificent promises, foretold with so great pomp and majesty by the Prophets, of Gods c Ps. 72.11, 17. All nations shall serve him. Isa. 52.10, 15. c. 66.20.65.1. He shall sprinkle many nations. Zach. 2.11. And many nations shall be joined to the Lord in that day, & shall be my people. Isa. 55.5. Thou shalt call a nation whom thou knowest not, and nations which knew not thee shall run unto thee. Mat. 21.43 Ro. 10.19. giving in the Nations, with the glory and fullness of their multitudes, to Christ, for his Inheritance; so far that many and mighty Kings and Queens should be nursing Fathers and Mothers to the Churches of Christ: which should be not only diffused and scattered according to the latitude and extent of their civil Dominions; but piously owned, prudently governed, and orderly preserved by their princely and paternal care, in their several distributions, and orderly jurisdictions, according as all true prudence and polity, Ecclesiastical as well as Civil, doth require of wise and good men. Namely, to such a grandeur, beauty, comeliness and safety, as was and is infinitely beyond any of those modern Models and petty Inventions, which seek to slip goodly Boughs into small Twigs or Branches; to reduce ancient Churches, of long growth, of tall and manly stature, to their pueriles, their long coats and cradles. Such famous and flourishing Churches (for instance) were those in the Apostles times and long after, which received their denomination or distinction from those great ●●ties of Jerusalem, Antioch, Ephesus, Philippi, Thessalonica, Corinth, Rome, and the like Mother-Cities: According to whose latitude and extensions, in point of civil distinction and proconsulary jurisdiction, the union and communion of Christians there first converted, and form into several Churches, did extend, by the holy and happy d Ecclesia in Episcopo & clero, & in omnibus stantibus est constituta. Cyp. ep. 27. Radi● Christianae societatis per sedes Apostolorum & successiones Episcoporum certâ per orbem propagatione diffunditur. Aug. ep. 42. Association of their respective Bishops, Presbyters, Deacons, and people, into one Ecclesiastical polity: whose orderly and united influence contained in it, not only some one particular Congregation, whose number might fitly meet in one place to worship God; but it comprised all Christians and Congregations in that city, how numerous soever, yea, and extended, not only to the walls of that city, but to the suburbican distributions, yea, to their several Territories and Provinces appertaining to them: in which, although there were (no doubt) many thousands of Christians, who were divided into several Congregations, according to the nearness of their dwellings, and conveniencies of their meetings in one place to serve the Lord; yet were they still but one Church, as to that Polity, Order, Authority, Government, Inspection and Subordination which was among them; which cast and comprehended them by a native kind of right, and spiritual descent, as children to fathers, under the care, rule and guidance of that Apostle or Apostolic Teacher, who first taught and converted them; a 1 Tim. 1.3. I besought thee to abide still at Ephesus, that thou mightest charge, etc. Tit. 1.5. For this cause I left thee in Crete. which Apostle afterward committed them, together with his own ordinary Authority over them, to his Vicegerents, Suffragans, or Successors in that chief city, who residing there, was called the Angel, b 2 Phil. 25. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2 Cor. 8.23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Apostle, Bishop, President, or Father of that Church, even by the Apostles themselves, and by the Spirit of Christ, c Rev. 2. & 3. ch. See the Primate of Armagh's discourse of the Lydian or Proconsular Asia. writing to the seven Churches of Asia, Ephesus, Sardis, Pergamus, Thyatira, Smyrna, Philadelphia and Laodicea. All which were ever reckoned by Pliny, Strabo, Stephanus and others, as chief Cities, or Proconsulary Residencies; to which many other Villages and Towns, yea some lesser Cities and Countries, were subordinate and united; as first, in civil dependence and jurisdiction, so afterward in Ecclesiastical Communion and Subjection. So that it is most evident, by Scripture-dialect, by the wisdom of Christ's Spirit, by the Apostolic prudence, and the subsequent practices of all famous Churches, (as at Alexandria, Constantinople, Carthage, and many other instances) that the completeness and perfection of Church-polity, order, union, power, and authority, was never thought to be seated or circumscribed in every particular congregation of Christians, as they were locally divided in their lesser conventions, which would make all Churches as small twigs, both feeble in themselves, and despicable to others; but it was placed in those great branches, those strong and extensive boughs, which had in them the united power or authority, not only of many Christians, but of many congregations, in which were many godly people, many grave Deacons, many venerable Presbyters, and one eminent Bishop, or Father, Ecclesiae salus in summi sacerdotis dignitate pendet, cui si non exors quaedam & ab omnibus eminens detur potestas, tot in Eccles●is efficientur schismata quot sacerdotes. Hier. advers. Lucis. Quia principali successione absistunt. Iren. l. 3. c. 40. who continued in that presidential authority, to water, propagate, increase, preserve, and ●overn, in order, peace and unity, those Churches which the Apostles had so planted, fixed and established in their several polities and limits, as to Ecclesiastical union, order and jurisdiction; In which the chief Pastor, President, or Bishop so presided in the place, power, and spirit of the Apostle, (yea, and of Jesus Christ) that no private Christian, no Deacon, no Presbyter, yea, no particular congregation might, as Ignatius and other Ancients tell us (regularly) do any thing, in public doctrine, discipline, worship, or ministration, without his respective authority, consent, and allowance. Yea all good Christians did ever make great conscience of dividing from the principal succession, seat and Pastor, who was the centre and conservator of that Church-union and government, which was first settled by the Apostles in Primitive Churches, and imitated by all others, which grew up after them. Primitive Christians ever esteeming it as the sin of schism, Neque enim aliunde Haereses obortae sunt, aut nata schismata, quàminde, quod sacerdoti Dei non obtemperatur; nec unus in Ecclesia ad tempus sacerdos, & ad tempus judex, vice Christi cogitatur. Cyp. ep. 55. the work of the flesh, a fruit of pride and factious arrogancy, for any Christian, or any company of Christians, to dissolve, to divide from, and so to destroy that great bond of Christian communion, and subordination, into which, by the wisdom of the Apostles, the providence of God did at first, and ever after, cast his Church, in its several parts, throughout all the world, for their greater safety, strength, comfort, counsel, honour, peace and stability, which are then most like to be enjoyed, when Religious power and the Church's authority run not in small and shallow rivulets, which are contemptible, and soon exhausted; but in great rivers, with fair and goodly streams; in the united counsels, and combined strength of many learned, wise, grave and godly men. Nor may it be thought, in any probability of reason, that when the Spirit of Christ wrote by Saint John to the seven Churches in the lesser Asia, which was about ninety years after the birth of Christ, and above fifty after his Ascension; or when the Apostle Saint Paul wrote to the Churches eminent in other great Cities, that there were (then) no Christians, or no congregations and assemblies of them in the other cities, towns or villages of those large countries and spacious territories; or that those Christians were not at all considered by the Spirit of Christ, or the Apostle, as to their further confirmation, instruction, regulation, order and government: No, but all those Christians and congregations, in those respective limits, territories, or towns, belonging to such a principal city or renowned Metropolis, were comprehended and included in the dedication or direction given to the Angel, or Bishop and chief overseer (under, or after the Apostle) of that whole Church which was contained in that Precinct or Province. Which method and form of uniting, constituting and governing such ampliated and completed Churches, was Primitive and Apostolical: whence it also grew Catholic in all Nations and Churches without exception: no Christians or Congregations (till these last and worst times) ever seeing any cause to think themselves wiser than the Apostles, or the Spirit of Christ; nor ever either finding, or feigning, or forcing any necessity, to alter that constitution, order and subordination, by any unwarrantable break, Schisms, Separations; which are the ready way to weaken and waste the Churches of Christ in their order, safety and majesty, by unbinding and dissolving what was once and ever well combined, breaking the staff of Beauty and Bands; of Unity, Defence and Stability. Certainly, as no Reason, so much less Religion, doth persuade any men to shrink themselves from their manly stature and full growth, to become dwarves and children again: who but children, madmen or fools would rend a goodly and fair garment into many beggarly shreds and tatters, which are good for nothing but to trim up Babies? How savage a cruelty is it in any (as Medea did her children) to cut a fair, strong, and well-compacted body into several limbs, bits and mammocks? which thus divided, are both deformed and dead. It argues no less a fierce and ferine nature in any men, to ravel and scatter themselves from all civil fraternities and social combinations (which strongly twist the joint interest of mankind together) merely out of a lust to return to their dens and acorns: or out of a fancy to enjoy such liberty as exposeth men, by their own infirmities and others malice, both to necessities, wants and injuries. Who, but mutinous and mischievous mariners, will cast their wise Pilots and skilful Master's overboard, or shipwreck and cut in pieces a fair and goodly Ship, in which many men being sociably & strongly embarked, they were able to encounter with, and overcome the roughest seas and storms; merely out of a cruel wantonness and dangerous singularity, which covets to have each man a rafter or plank by themselves; or out of a vain hope, to make many little skiffs and cock-boats, in which to expose themselves, first to be (ludibrium ventorum) the scorn of every blast, tossed to and fro with every wind; next, (after a little dalliance with death, and dancing over the mouth of destruction) to be overwhelmed and quite sunk by such decumane billows as those small vessels have no proportion to resist? Alike madness and folly would it be in the Soldiers of an Army, to scatter themselves into several troops and companies of fifties and hundreds, that should be absolute of themselves, under no General or Commander in chief, as to joint discipline: united they may be strong and invincible, divided they will be weak and despicable. The Polity, Wisdom, Stability, Authority and Majesty of those ancient, ample, and Apostolic Churches was such of old, that all good Christians had infinite comfort, relief, safety and support in their communion with them: if any injury were done by any private Minister or particular Bishop to one or many Christians, remedy was to be had by appeal to such whose judgement was most impartial, and whose authority as well as wisdom was least to be doubted or disputed by any sober Christian. Such as were imprudently erroneous, or impudently turbulent, Innovators of true doctrine, forsakers of Christian Communion, disturbers of Peace, or despisers of Discipline, either they were soon cured and recovered by wholesome applications, from the authoritative hands and charitable hearts of many, not only Christians, but Congregations, and their united Presbyters, with the joint consent of their respective Bishops, so far as the evil and contagion had spread in particular persons, Congregations or Churches: or in case of obstinacy, they were not only silenced and infinitely discountenanced, by the notable censures and just reproaches of many; but they were (at last) as it it were with the thunderbolts of heaven, so smitten, bruised, astonished and disanimated by the dreadful anathemas, which from the concurrent spirit of those great Churches and Synods were solemnly denounced in the name of Christ, by the chief Pastors or Bishops succeeding in the authority and place of the Apostles, that every good Christian feared and trembled; they wept and prayed for such sinner's repentance; Summum futuri judicii praejudicium. Tert. Apol. c. 39 and in case of desperate contumacy or incorrigibleness, they gave them over to the Devil, as certainly, as if the sentence of God's eternal doom had passed upon them. This, this was the pristine polity, unity, beauty, majesty and terror of the Churches of Christ in their ample and Apostolical combinations; when each of those Churches were (as sometimes in England) fair as the Moon, bright as the Sun, beautiful as the tower of Tirzah, comely as Jerusalem, a city of God, at unity in itself, also terrible as an army with Banners: for so they are prophesied, of and described, Cant. 6.4, 1●. under the name of the Spouse of Christ. Can any Christian, that is not utterly fanatic and wild with his Enthusiastic fancies, ever expect such harmony, weight, lustre, authority and efficacy from any of those petty Conventicles and pigmy Churches, into which some men seek first by Independent principles and practices to mince all Episcopal and National Churches; next, by Presbyterian policies, to mould and soldier them up again (as Medea did Jasons-limbs) either to partial Associations, or to parochial Consistories, or little popular Conventicles; where either Piety, or Prudence, or Learning, or Gravity, (besides authentic and due authority) yea Civility, and all good manners (many times) are prone to be very much wanting; or if they be there in some few, yet a thousand to one but they are quite overborn, routed, silenced, over-voted and cried down by the plebeian confidences of those many, whose ignorance and rudeness delights in nothing more, than either to smother and crowd to death by numbers, or to assassinate by downright clamours and brutish violence, any thing that looks like sober Reason, holy Order, just Restraint and due Authority; all which the vulgar esteem as their implacable enemies, and intolerable burdens. So little do those men seem masters of true Reason, pious Policy, Christian Prudence, or sociable Charity, who advise, endeavour, or encourage to divide, and consequently to destroy, Episcopal, Metropolitical and national Churches, by dissolving the noble frames, the ancient and harmonious junctures of them, only to make up small Independent bodies, or Presbyterian Classes, & Parochial Consistories, as the sole and supreme Tribunals or ultimate Judicatories, beyond any remedy or appeal, in Church-affairs; which is much like the digging down of Mount Lebanon, with a design to make it into many fine molehills: In which a few poor, yet pragmatic Christians (like so many ants) may busy themselves solely and absolutely about themselves; as arrogating to themselves (though but two or three, or seven at most) the perfect name, complete nature, entire power, and highest emphasis of a Church of Christ, to all uses, ends and purposes, without any regard to any other higher authority, or to any greater and completer Society, further than they list to advise or associate with them for a time, as occasion serves, and till some new invention offers itself. Mean time they are not ashamed, or concerned, as to that rude and ingrateful violation of those duties which they owe, and those relations which they ought to bear as Christians, Qui non participant Spiritum, neque à mamillis matris autriuntur in vitam, neque percipiunt de corpore Christi procedentem nitidissimum ●●ntem, etc. putidam bibu●t aquam, etc. Ir●n. l. 3. c. 40. by the right of an holy propagation, spiritual descent, and ecclesiastical derivation of their baptism, faith and religion, to that Church which was their Mother, and to those chief Pastors or Shepherds which were their spiritual a 1 Cor. 4.15. Summus sacerdos qui est Episcopus. Tert. de bap. c. 17. Fathers, by an Apostolic title, designation and succession, both in place, order and power. Which spiritual relation certainly imports no less duty, love, thanks, reverence and submission, than those of natural and civil relations do: since the blessing is at least equal, if not far beyond, to those that value their souls or their Saviour; who will not easily abdicate their ghostly parents, or renounce their spiritual Fathers, though they should see many infirmities, and some frowardness in them. I shall not need to instance in the many defects, inconveniences, disorders, and mischiefs incident to these (Ecclesiolae, and Congregatiunculae) little Churchlets and scattered Conventicles: Tot in Ecclesiis effic●ētur schismata, quot sacerdotes, nisi Episcopo exors quaedam & ab omnibus eminens detur potestas. Hieron. adv. Lucif. which cannot but be (as S. Jerome observes) the Seminaries of Schism, Nurseries of Faction, strife and emulation; since the Sire of them seems to be Ignorance and Weakness, or pride and arrogancy; as the Dam of them usually is faction, private ends and popularity: Nor will their Issue fail to multiply and swarm in a few years, with gross ignorance and rudeness, with all manner of errors and heresies, accompanied with vulgar petulancy, atheism, irreligion, anarchy, confusion, and barbarity, which (like vermin) will devour both themselves, and those completer Churches, from whose communion, order, light, strength, discipline, integrity, and safety, they have withdrawn themselves, by needless divisions, to the weakening, shaking, subverting and endangering of the faith, charity, and salvation of many thousands of poor souls: the strength, beauty, honour, safety, and comfort of particular congregations, Judicabit Dominus eos qui schismata operantur, qui sunt immanes, non habentes Dei dilectionem, suamque utilitatem potius considerantes quam unitatem Ecclesiae, propter modicas & quaslibet causas magnum & gloriosum Christi corpus conscindunt & dividunt, & quantum in ipsis est interficiunt, pacem loquentes & bellum operantes, veri liquantes eulicem, & camelum deglutientes. Nulla enim ab eis tanta potest sieri correptio, quanta est schismatis pernicies. Iren. l. 4. c. 62. as of private Christians and families, consisting in that orderly conjuncture, as parts with the whole body politic, which may best preserve both It and themselves: there being not only more virtue in the whole than in any part; but more vigour in each part, while it is continuous to the whole, than when it is divided. Which as all Reason and Religion, so most sad experience in the Church of England, sufficiently assures us. For, however private Christians have indeed some power, as to counsel, admonish, reprove, comfort, pray for, and by charitable offices to help and edify one another; C●imus in coetum & congregationem, ut ad Deum quasi manu f●cta pr●ca●ionibus ambiamus ora●●es. Tertul. Apol. c 39 also private congregations have yet more advantages, being many in their number, to join in public duties, to comprobate and execute Ecclesiastical censures; further, each single Minister, or lawful Presbyter, hath yet greater authority in his place and office, to administer holy things, by preaching, baptising, consecrating, binding, losing, exhorting, rebuking; likewise every Bishop hath still an higher order and authority, regularly to ordain, to confirm, to examine, to censure, to rebuke, to suspend, Ecclesias vocat Tertullianus etiam eas, quae ordinis consessum non habebant: ubi quisque sacerdos erat sibi; quorum erat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. At excommunicare non commune est; sed proprium coetus habentis ordinem. Grot. Appen. de Antichrist. to absolve, to excommunicate any private Presbyter or other Christians under his inspection: Yet, where the Bishop is assisted with the desires, consent, and approbation of many Christian congregations, also with the joint assistance of many learned and godly Presbyters, yea and with the united suffrages and authority of many Bishops, (as in cases of great and general concernment in matters of doctrine, censure, and discipline is requisite;) O how ponderous, how solemn, how celebrious, how powerful, how Apostolic, how divine, must the majesty and authority of such transactions be in any Church, thus combined, established and fortified, against both secret contagions and violent incursions of any mischiefs, which easily grow too hard for private Christians and petty Congregations; yea many times for particular Presbyters and single Bishops! Nor can the remedy expectable from these in their solitary capacities and small proportions, either cure or encounter the pregnancy and potency of those maladies which many times infest the flock of Christ; as was evident in those Epidemic pests of Arianism, Nestorianisme, Donatism, Pelagianisme, and others: which malignities required not only the influence and authority of a few private Presbyters with their Congregations, or of particular Bishops and their Churches; but of Provincial Synods and national Churches, yea of the Catholic Church, as much as could be, united in those General Councils, which were as grand Ecclesiastical Parliaments, by their majority, deputation, inspection and authority, representing all Churches in all the World; that so the salve might still be wisely commensurate to the sore. The danger of a divided Church being no less than that of of a divided State or Kingdom, which our Saviour tells us cannot stand; Mar. 3.24. it must not be imagined that Christ hath left his Church destitute of defence and help in such cases of distraction. These grand combinations of Christian people, Si duo unanimes tantum possunt, quid si unanimitas apud omnes esset? quid si secundum pacem quam Dominus nobis dedit, universis fratribus conveniret? Cyp. ep. 8. Presbyters and Bishops, convening (as occasion required) not only to serve God in the piety of his daily worship, but for the right ordering and guiding of themselves and others in such public concernments as Christian polity and gubernative prudence required; these made Christian primitive Churches appear in their Synodical, Provincial, national and Ecumenical Assemblies, as the fairest sides and goodliest prospects of the Temple and city of God were wont to do, to the joy or amazement of all Spectators, so grand, so stately, so august, so amiable, so venerable, so formidable, that no man could with any modesty despise them, or with any ingenuity refuse their sense and sentence. Whereas Schismatical scraps and scambling separations of Christians, either in their persons or parties, as disjoined and Independent from these Primitive polities and Catholic integrations of Churches, make their scattered fractions & unsociable societies appear not only to the scornful world, and to perverse minds, but to all sober Christians and rational men, like so many poor Cottages, or like the late ruined pieces of our cathedrals; like a flock of Sheep or Pigeons, scattered by Wolves or Kites; or like the parts of a Lamb, or Kid, which a Lion or Bear hath torn; without that Grandeur, Majesty, Authority and Efficacy, which ought to accompany Ecclesiastical judicatures and Christian Churches. In which pitiful posture, so feeble, so desolate, so despicable, if the wisdom of our blessed God and Saviour had intended to have always kept his multiplied Church and numerous people, which were to beas the Stars of the Firmament, Gen. 26.4. that they should ever be like the small parties of wild Arabs and wandering Scythians; certainly, those Primitive and purest Churches, nominally distinguished and locally defined by the Word of God, the Spirit of Christ, and the Pens of the Apostles, would never have grown, by an happy diffusion and holy coalescency, to such great and goodly combinations, such vast, yet comely statures and extensions; to so large combinations and harmonious subordinations, as contained great Cities, Provinces, and whole Country's: For such Churches those are which are signally described and punctually circumscribed in the New Testament, as well as in all other records of the Primitive Churches. Which fair and firm models of Churches, comprehending many Christian people, Deacons, Presbyters and Congregations under one chief Pastor, Bishop, Angel, or Apostolic precedent (who was as the nave of the wheel, the centre of Union, the anchor of Fixation) I make no doubt but the Spirit of Christ in the Apostles (which so framed and settled them) did intend to have them so preserved, as much as morally, prudentially and providentially they could be; yea rather to have them ampliated and enlarged (as time, 2 Sam. 10.4. use, and the Church's occasions required) than curtailed (like the garments of David's messengers) or pared and divided into small shreds and shave. The reason is evident: because the life and spirit, the truth and charity, the honour and vigour of Christian Religion and Church-polity (like Wine) are better preserved in great quantities, than in small parcels; in Tuns, than in Terces. Christian people, Presbyters, Congregations and Bishops, like live-coals, united, glow to a more generous fervour; scattered, they cool and extinguish themselves: unless in cases of persecuted Churches, where Martyrly fervencies are kept high and intense by the Antiperistasis of persecution; the most heroic love and ambition of suffering and dying for Christ and his Church, then uniting Christians spirits most, when their persons are most scattered. BOOK I. CHAP. II. THe Primitive Piety and Charity so perfectly abhorred all fractures and crumbling of Churches, Primitive Piety and Prudence utterly against Schismatic dividing or mincing of Churches into small bodies or parcels. that we see they kept for many hundred of years, as Ignatius, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Clemens Alexandrinus, Cyprian, Eusebius, and all Ancient both Fathers and Historians tell us, their respective Combinations, Fraternities, and Subordinations to their Bishops, Patriarches, and mother-Churches; according to those (Sedes principales, a Age jam qui voles exercere curiositatem in negotio salutis tuae, percurre ecclesias Apostolicas, apud quas ipsae adhuc Cathedrae Apostolorum suis locis praesidentur; apud quas ipsae Authentic● literae recitantur. Tert. de praes. c. 30. Ecclesia, ab ipso Christo inchoata, per Apostolos provecta, certâ successionum serie usque ad haec tempora toto terrarum orbe dilatata. Aug. l. 28. cont. Faust. Cathedrae Apostolicae, or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) limits or boundaries, which were laid out and distinguished, either by the b Act. 1.17, 20 Apostles first lots and Episcopal portions, or by their chief residencies, and settled inspections governed either by themselves, or their Vicegerents and Successors, most of them Primitive Martyrs and Confessors: which was done even till the famous Council of Nice, which in the point of distinguishing Churches, and keeping their several Dioceses or bounds, took care to preserve to after-ages and successions of the Church, those (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) ancient customs, measures, or dimensions; some of which, begun by the Apostles, and carried on by their Successors, had passed through and endured the c Episcopi per omnes provincias & singulas urbes ordinati sunt, in aetate antiqui, in fide integri, in pressurâ probati, in persecutione proscripti, etc. Cypr. ep. 52. hottest persecutions, without ever being so melted and dissolved, as to run into any such new moulds and fashions, as this last Century, in these Western Churches, and these last seventeen years in the Church of England have produced; to such (frustula) fragments, chips and fractions, as look more like factious confederacies, and furtive subductions of yesterday, than like those Primitive combinations, and that ancient and ample Communion of Christians and Churches. The endeavour of many People and Preachers too being (now) like that of Plagiaries, to entice and steal children from the care of their mothers, and the custody of their fathers, to d Hoc negotium est illis, non ethnicos convertendi, sed nostros evertendi: Ita fit ut ruinas facilius operentur stantium aedificiorum, quam extructiones jacentium ruinarum. Tert. de praes. ad. Hae. ruin (as Tertullian speaks) rather than to edify themselves or the Churches of Christ, to that full measure, and complete stature, which the love of Christ, and the wisdom of his Apostles, first designed and assigned to the Church of Christ, in its several limits and distributions. In order to preserve which Unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace, Eph. 4.3. not only as to private veracity and charity, but as to public polity and harmony, for strength and safety, we find the Primitive Bishops and Presbyters forewarned by S. Paul of grievous Wolves, Acts 20.28, 29, 30. who first divide, then devour: such as should be authors and fautors of Hereresies and Schisms too; affecting to lead Disciples after them, apart from the Church's settled order and communion. The Roman Christians are commanded to mark with the black brand of schismatic pride, those that caused divisions among them, Rom. 16.17. not only as to private differences in judgement, opinion and affection (which are of less danger, and easily healed among Christians, where the health and soundness of the whole, as to public order and entireness, is preserved; which (as the native Balsam) easily heals green wounds in any part of the body; 1 Cor. 1.10.3.3. ) But the Apostles caution, as to the Corinthians, seems chiefly against those that divided the public polity, and unity of the Church of Corinth; which having many Christians, many Congregations, and many Preachers in the city and country adjacent, was united by one Church-communion, under some one Apostle, or such a Vicegerent as (in the Apostles absence) was over them in the Lord: To break which holy Subordination, Harmony and Integrality, the simplicity or subtlety of some factious spirits made use of those Names which were most eminent in that Church, as Planters, Waterers, or Weeders of it, such as Paul, Apollo's, Cephas were; seeking by factious sidings and adhering to those principal Teachers, to withdraw themselves into several Churches or Bodies, from that grand Communion and Subordination, which they received first from the Apostle converting them; next, from that chief Pastor or Bishop, which had the rule, inspection, and authority over them by his appointment. Which practices in the Churches of Christ were ever esteemed the fruits of a 1 Cor. 3.3. carnal, not Christian minds; of such as had more b Sophistae magis verborum, quam discipuli veritatis. Irenaeus. subtlety than sanctity in them. As the Apostles, so their Primitive successors ever looked upon the mincing and mangling of Churches, as the reproach, pest, poison and deformity of Religion, being diametrally opposite to those holy customs (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) which c Qui à principali absistunt successione, quocunque loco colliguntur, suspectos habere oportet, ut vel haereticos & malae sententiae, vel scindentes, & elatos, & sibi placentes; omnes isti decidunt à veritate, sophistae magis verborum esse volentes, quam discipuli veritatis. Irenae. l. 4. c. 43. & lib. 3. c. 40. Jampridem per omnes provincias & per singulas urbes ordinati sunt Episcopi, in aetate antiqui, in fide integri, ●n pressura probati, in persecutione proscripti. Cypr. ep. 52. Irenaeus, Tertullian, Cyprian, and, sixty years after him, the great Council of Nice, so command and recommend, as Ancient, Primitive and Apostolic. For they were not such children, as to fancy those to be ancient customs and usages in the Catholic Church, which were not older than their own beards, or the Gibeonites bread and bottles; which a late Writer of Schism seems to suspect of those renowned Fathers, who were not above three descents from some of the Apostles. Some Bishops in the Council of Nice might very easily know Irenaeus, as d Iren. l. 5. c. 33. Irenaeus vir Apostolicorum temporum, Papiae discipulus, Polycarpi amicus, & Episcopus ecclesiae Lugdun. Hieron. Catalogue. he tells us he did Papias and Polycarpus, who both knew St. John: so that the traditions and customs so evident by matter of fact to all the world, could neither be dark nor dubious; nor justly called Ancient then, if not Primitive. The greatest glory, and most conspicuous character of the first famous Churches was (as Ignatius tells us) for Christians to love one another, to be of one mind and one heart; for their lesser Congregations to be subject to their several Presbyters or Preachers; for their People and Presbyters to be meekly subordinate to their respective Bishops; for their Bishops to correspond with one another (and all Christians by them) in their joint Councils, and public Conventions; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 2 Cor. 3.1. also by their (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) commendatory letters and testimonials, which presently admitted every good Christian to communion with any part of the true Church, or any congregation in all the world, upon the testimony and account of their Baptismal covenant, and orderly conversation, or profession of the same faith, once delivered to the Saints; and that one hope, or common salvation, Judas 3. by which they stood related to the whole Church as one Body, Eph. 4.4. and to Christ Jesus as the only Head of it; without any new imposition or exaction of any other explicit covenants, and formal professions, or private engagements, to any one Congregation or Preacher: which must be renewed so oft as a Christian changeth his abode, and may (for aught I see) as well be required by every private Family, before they will pray, or eat, or drink with any stranger-Christian, as by every particular Congregation which listeth to call itself a Church, and so fancies itself to be absolute, sovereign, independent, without any communion with, or subordination to those greater Ecclesiastical polities, which in the primitive style and esteem were called and counted the only regular, politic, organised and completed Churches; the privileges and benefits of whose communion every Christian was in charity presumed capable of, and so allowed to enjoy, who having been duly baptised, instructed and confirmed in Christian mysteries, did continue to profess the same by word and deed; neither justly excommunicated out of that particular Church, to which he was orderly joined, nor excommunicating himself by voluntary Schism, declared abscession, separation, or Apostasy. To such Christians as thus profess the true faith, and keep that comely order, communion and subordination, which is publicly professed and maintained in their respective national Churches, and the several parts & lesser Congregations contained in them (to which private Christians are (more immediately) for order sake related) there is no doubt, but a just right and claim belongs, according to their several aptitudes and capacities (as younger or elder, catechised or fuller instructed, novices or veterane and old Disciples) to partake (in due order) of any ordinance and institution given by Christ to his Catholic Church, as a mark and privilege of his Disciples. Nor can it seem less than a petulant and partial, if not a proud, Schismatical and sacrilegious practice, for any Minister or people to deny or rob any such approved Christian professor of the comfort of partaking such Christian rights as he duly requires, merely because he will not gratify such a Minister, or such a little Congregation, in a new exotic way of bodying, that is formally covenanting & verbally engaging with them & to them, beyond the baptismal bond & vow: Thereby owning first a greater right and privilege to be received by him from such covenanting with them, than he had before as a Christian baptised, and in Catholic communion with Christ and his Church; next, he must own an absolute, sovereign, and entire Church-power among them, to the prejudice, division, and discarding of those higher relations, by which he stands united and subordinate to the Church of Christ in order to higher ends and uses, under greater notions and denominations; as they are distinguished into several bounds and orders both for Episcopal inspection, and national correspondency, or communion; which are of far greater virtue, and more public concernment and benefit, than that congregating or meeting together, Corpus sumus de conscientia religionis, & disciplinae unitate, & spei foedere. Tert. Apol. c. 39 which is (only) local, and only follows the aptitude of a Christians residency or particular station in one place. Undoubtedly, the grand ecclesiastical relations and sacred general bands of Christianity in a Eph. 4.4, 5, 6. one Body, one Spirit, one Faith, one Baptism, one Lord and Father of all, etc. are of a far higher and nobler nature, than those which arise merely from cohabitation, or personal convention; which are very variable, humane and uncertain; whereas the other are fixed, divine and immutable, except through men's own default, by Infidelity, Apostasy, and Immorality: Christian people owing to their Bishops or chief Governors (as subjects do to their Princes) a duty of love, Heb. 13.17. reverence and subjection; also of due acknowledgement and holy obedience, although they never see their faces, nor meet them in any particular place; as thousands of Christians never did at all, Col. 2.1. Acts 20.38. or not for a long time, and never any more, after the Apostle S. Paul's departure from them; who yet were subject to his orders and mandates, instructions and traditions, according to the mind and spirit of Christ, declared by his own Epistles, or such other Messengers and Apostles, Bishops and Governors, whom the Apostle sent to them and set over them; as he did Timothy among the Ephesians, Titus among the Cretians, Epaphroditus among the Philippians, Archippus among the Colossians. Sicut Smyrnaeorum ecclesia habens Polycarpum à Johanne constitutum refert; sicut Romamanorum Clementem à Petro ordinatum edit; perinde utique & caeterae exhibent (ecclesiae) quos ab Apostolis in Episcopatu constitutos Apostolici seminis traduces habent. Tert. de Praes. c. 32. These, and such like, with, under, and after the Apostles, as eminent Pastors, Bishops and Governors of such Churches and Christians, as were contained in one great city, and its Territory or Province (which were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) did take care, that every Christian, every Congregation, every Presbyter or Preacher in those precincts, should both do their duties, b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Clem. ep. ad Corinth. 1. p. 53. keep their stations, preserve the private and public order and unity, enjoy the privileges of safety, peace and assistance, as parts or members of that Polity or Ecclesiastical Body, which still stood further related, and so was subordinate to the Counsel, Communion, and conjoined Authority of those integral and main or nobler parts, which made up the Catholic visible Church, and sometimes convened in general Councils. Of all which rights, blessings, privileges, and advantages, both for direction and protection, which are best preserved in, and vigorously derived from these ample combinations of Churches, which are commended by the Apostolical wisdom and spirit (which was Christ's) for any Christian or Congregation needlessly to deprive themselves, or to withdraw & divide others from them, must needs be, First, their Infelicity, exposing and betraying solitary Christians and small separate parties of them, to many dangerous temptations and disadvantages, of weakness, contempt, subdivision, animosities among themselves; also injuries and indignities from others; and at last, dissipations and utter desolations, still dividing to Atoms, and mouldering themselves to nothing. All which, like continued ploughs and harrows, make long and fruitless furrows of deformity upon the backs and faces of such Congregations and such Christians, who foolishly forsake or refuse those remedies and assistances which arise from the larger combinations of Churches: which are easily had, when as whole Cities, Provinces and Nations profess the faith of Christ, and resolve to assert it. Next, it is their great sin, called in Scripture by the odious name of Schism, Concision, Sedition, Separation, withdrawing from, Gal. 5.20. 1 Cor. 12.25. Phil. 3.2. Heb. 10.25. forsaking and dividing of the Church's unity; judged by the Apostle to be the works of the Flesh and of the Devil, when they arise from, and are carried on by wilful weakness, ignorance, pride, arrogancy, popularity, levity, animosity, despite, study of revenge, covetousness, ambition, uncharitableness, or any other base lust, unholy distemper, inordinate passion, sinister interest, and secular design, under never so specious pretensions, of Church- Reformation, of setting up Christ in greater power and purity: which I am sure is not yet done in Old England, nor like ever to be effected by such strange methods of new churching men and women; which begins the first step with spurning at the mother that bred them, and the fathers that begat and nourished them; laying the first stone of their new building in the ruin of that Churches both Superstructures and Foundations, out of which Quarry they were hewn, and to whose Fabric they were once orderly and handsomely conjoined for many years, as many thousands of good Christians still are, whom they endeavour to scare and seduce, with all the scandals they can cast before them upon this Church of England. Which they having once learned boldly to reproach and abase, they must make good their words with deeds; that their schism may not savour of malice or ambition, but conscience and Religion. Hence m●●y have fallen to tear themselves quite off from any communion with, or relation to the Church of England, and from all resemblance, in the point of polity, with any other ancient, or modern, and reformed Churches of any renown; making not only rents in them, and objections against them, but total ruptures and abscissions from them, and the Catholic form of all Churches, no less than from this of England; not modestly forbearing the use of some things, in which at present they are less satisfied, but haughtily forsaking, yea wholly disdaining communion and subordination in any things or Ecclesiastical order and holy ministration. And all this credulous Christians must needs do with the more confidence, when they are furnished by potent Orators with such Apologies, as may either silence their own consciences, when they accuse them; or plead, as they think, their excuse before God's tribunal, when they shall be there charged for the scandals, defamations, discouragements deformities, divisions and vastations, made or occasioned by them in such a Christian, Reformed and united Church, as England sometime was. It is not amiss to hear the ground of their plea; which is with as much reason, 1 Cor. 12.15. as if the hand or foot should think themselves not to be of the body, because in a fit and humour they so say and fancy. I find the tenor of their Apology runs thus: I am by many men of seeming gravity, learning and piety, accused of the sin of Schism; but very unjustly, because very falsely. I did not, I do not make any division or rent in the Church of England, which is properly and critically the sin of Schism; but I have totally chopped & quite lopped myself off from it, by Abscission or rupture: I never troubled myself to reform or abstain from what I thought offensive and amiss in the old, but I have wholly erected a new Church: I was not as a wedge to cleave a little, but as a saw to cut all quite in sunder, past all closing with any such society, as the (reputed) national Church of England was, which I do not so much as account to be any Church, but rather a Chaos or colluvies of titular Christians; out of whose mass I have by a new percolation of Independency extracted some such pure materials, as are formable into a new and true Churchway. Yet have I not made any formal Schism: for my work was not to rend the coat, or scratch the skin of Christ's Spouse, but to break her very bones, Magnum & gloriosum Christi corpus conscindunt & dividunt, & quantum in ipsis est interficiunt. Irenae. l. 4. c. 62. and quite dismember that so diseased and deformed body, which pretended to be a national Church, in its several overgrown Limbs or Dioceses; on each of which I saw a Bishop or Prelate sitting and presiding, which I took to be a mark of the Beast, and denoting a limb of Antichrist; which I know should have no place or influence in any true Church or body of Christ. So that to become a perfect Christian, I became a perfect Separatist; I hung by no string, sinew, ligature, skin or fiber, to the so-cryed-up Church of England: no, I aimed not to divide it, but destroy it; my design was, not to weaken its integrity and unity, but to nullify and abolish its very name and being, its polity, ministry, p●●r, and Ecclesiastical authority; if (at least) these amounted to any thing more than the Chimaera, fancy and mere fiction of a Church. However, I chose rather to deprive myself of all the good in it, than to bear with what seemed evil. I did not carry myself to that Church (in which after a superstitious fashion I was (indeed) Baptised and educated a Christian) as became a son to his sick mother; much less as a servant to Christ's Spouse, which might have her faintings: But I counted her (when I came to misunderstand her and myself) as a deadly enemy; I treated her as an Adulteress, I proclaimed her a putid Strumpet; I withdrew from her as from a dead and noisome carcase, which had long lain dead and buried in the old grave of Episcopacy these thirteen or fourteen hundred years, even from her very nativity: therefore I condemned and abhorred Her with all her Scriptures and Sacraments, her Bishops and Preachers, her Tithes and Universities, her Books and Learning, her Fathers and Histories, her Languages and Sciences, her seeming Gifts and specious Graces, her Religion and Reformation. Notwithstanding the show of all these, I abhorred Her as a Synagogue of Satan, a den of Thiefs, a cage of unclean birds, a very Babylon, 1 Pet. 5.13. worse than that Church was from which Peter wrote his first Epistle; I called Her sacred things execrable; I counted her Ministers no better than the Magicians of Egypt, and Baal's Priests. Her ministrations as Magic enchantments; Her Sacraments insignificant; neither sanctified, nor sanctifying. So far am I from being a poor and sneaking Schismatic which (like a viper) secretly gnaws the bowels where it is bred and lodged; That out of an higher spirit of Zeal and Reformation, I have (like Saturn or Time) quite devoured the old, and wholly begat a new Church; notwithstanding that I saw heretofore many seeming notes of a true and reformed Church in England; many specious fruits of Christ's holy Spirit, in many formal good words and works of his seemingly gracious servants, in Doctrine, Faith and Manners: by which temptations I sometimes had been a great Zealot and eager Professor, having an high esteem both of the Ministers and Ministrations of the Church of England. But afterward (a new light breaking in upon me) I first began to scruple some things in the Church of England; after, to suspect more, at last I was jealous of all things (but my own heart.) From jealousy I soon fell to enmity, from enmity to a divorce; from being divorced to prostitute the name, honour, peace and patrimony of that Church to the most insolent spoilers, profaners and persecutors; from cavilling I fell to calumniating, then to condemning; at last to contemning all its professed Christianity, and noised Reformation, as mere nullities, uncapable to invest any man in the privileges, honour and happiness of a true Christian Church, or holy Society. Thus boggling cruelly at the too great authority and revenues of Bishops; scared also with some ceremonial shadows, and no less frighted with the late Presbyterian rigour and severity, I was so driven by I know not what impulse, (but I am prone to believe well of it, because I have got well by it) that I (at last) fled from the very substance, show and name of the Church of England; choosing rather to be a rank Separate, a mere Quaker, an arrant Seeker, or nothing at all of an old-fashioned Christian, than to continue in any visible communion with so corrupt, so false, so lewd, so no Church: by which highflown resolution all this while (I thank God) I am become no Schismatic; because neither being nor owning (and therefore not being because not owning) myself as any member of that Church; from which I rather chose boldly to separate, than poorly to schismatise in it. Having a while wandered alone (as Let when he fled out of Sodom; Isa. 65 5. ) and standing by myself, as holier than others, finding none meet to join with me in Church-fellowship; but growing weary, and a little ashamed of my solitude, (neither hearing, nor praying, nor receiving with any Christians for many months, nay years,) at last I had an impulse to preach and prophesy, that so I might erect and create a pure and perfect Church after my own heart, and call it after my own name. In which though I began but with a little handful, whom I gleaned (mostwhat) out of the Presbyterian late harvest, (which proved too big for their barns, Mat. 18.20. and so was never yet well inned;) yet we (two or three) met together in Christ's name, though upon our own heads, and by our own authority, expecting, yea challenging his promise to be in the midst of us, with all that plenitude of his spirit, with those clear illuminations and assurances, with that divine power and supreme Church-authority, which next and immediately under Christ we judge to be in and among us, as the first subject capable of it, and is by us to be dispensed to what Pastors, Members and Officers we list to choose. Being thus happily agreed as men, we further covenanted as Saints, to live together in this Church-fellowship: we organised our body with all Church-Officers; some of us ordained ourselves to be Ministers of the Gospel, others of us begat our Fathers, and form our Pastors; we equally exercised Church-discipline upon one another, so long as we could hold together: some indeed went out from us, because they were not of us; the remaining faithful Members of Christ's little flock still cemented themselves, and kept together as a a So Tertul. of the Marcionite Churches: Habent ecclesias, sed suas, tam praeposteras quam adulteras: Quarum si censum requiras, sacilius Apostaticum invenias quam Apostolicum; Marcione scilicet conditore, vel aliquo de Marcionis examine: faciunt favos & vespae, faciunt ecclesias & Marcionitae. Li. 4. c. 5. adv. Martion. Church, where was prophesying, and dipping, and breaking of bread, and excommunicating, and all manner of censuring and discipline; to far better uses and effects than ever were in that spurious, as well as spacious and overgrown, Church of England. All this I have ordered and done by a power of Christian liberty, with my Church or Body, without any check or control from any above us; in a way (indeed) new and strange to the world, but more pure, free and perfect, than ever was used, or known in this of England, or any other pretended Reform Church; which were all grossly deformed: yea, we are gone beyond any of those famous Primitive Churches, which were by some called pure; but I find them leavened with the mystery of iniquity, universally governed by Bishops our bitter enemies, and Presbyters our not very fast friends. The Lands of Bishops are now happily sold, and some of us have bought a good part of them: the Livings, Tithes and Places of Presbyters we now gape for, and crowd into; yet are we neither guilty of sacrilege nor schism, (the two Prelatic scare-crows, or Episcopal bugbears,) because nothing could be sacred which was never consecrated or devoted to the true God in a right way; as nothing could be, which was given to maintain Episcopacy with, and Presbytery; a mere Idol, which we, and so God (no doubt) perfectly abhors, however it got footing so early in all Churches, and immediately perked up in the place of the Apostles. This seems to be the summary sense of that pious Apology, lately offered in behalf of all through-paced Separates, and perfect Apostates from the order and constitution of the Church of England: where either these men extremely dissemble; or they first learned Christ, and became Christians, at least in profession, many years, being baptised and instructed, confirmed and communicated, in this Church: from which being now totally divided, they thus (most ingeniously) seek to wipe off the shame, ingratitude, levity, sin & suspicion of Schism, by their owning no true Church at all in England, and declaring plenary Separation, or Independency; fancying, that he is less unblamable who quite burns up his neighbour's coat, than he that only singeth it; and he that flayeth off one's skin, is less insolent and injurious than he that only scratcheth it; as if every Schism were not a partial Separation, and every Separation a plenary Schism. How justifiable the ground of such a plea is, I leave to wiser men, to their own more cool and impartial spirits, Judicabit Dominus eos qui schismata operantur, non habentes dilectionem, suamque utilitatem potius considerantes quam unitatem ecclesiae. Iren. l. 4. c. 62. and to the great judge of all hearts; whose Word hath much deceived his Church in all ages, if his prohibition be not against Separation, Apostasy, and total forsaking of the Church's communion, both in Discipline and Doctrine, in Polity and Verity, as well as against Schism. The difference is not much between S. Paul's censure of Schism and division as a 1 Cor. 3.3. carnal, and a work of the flesh, Gal. 5.20. and that of S. Judas, against such as b Judas 19 separate, as being sensual, and not having the Spirit; especially where such communion is offered and required by a Church, Christian, and Reform, as is no way against the Word of God, the Apostles example, and the Primitive Catholic practice of all Churches: such I believe (and hope to prove) that of the Church of England was and is, as to those main essentials of Religion which constitute a true Church both in the being and well-being. But I needed not (and therefore I crave your pardon, worthy Gentlemen) have spent so much breath to blow up and break the late thin bladders or light bubbles, these new Corpusculas of separate Churches, compared to the Catholic eminency, unity and solidity of the Church of England, and others of like size. An easy foot will serve to beat down such new-sprung Mushrooms, of late perked up in this English soil (through the licentiousness of times, and luxuriancy of men's humours) since it hath been watered with Humane and Christian blood: whose ambition seems to be, not only to divide and share, but wholly to possess and engross this good land; or else to leave desolate that field out of which they are sprung, which bore far better fruits than now it doth, long before their name was heard of, under the new titles or style of bodied and congregated, associated or independented and new-fangled Churches: Who have now the confidence to cry down the Church of England in its late visible polity, harmony, order and unity, as a mere name and notion, an insignificant Idea, and empty imagination, as if it were neither (bonum nor jucundum) good nor pleasant for Brethren in Christ to dwell together in unity, or for men in one nation to be Christians in one Church; Psal. 133.1. as if bonds of civil polity reached farther than Ecclesiastic. Some are so vain and vulgar, as to boast, that all Church-fellowship in England is no better than floten milk, when once they have taken off the cream of some Saintly professors, which they think worthy to make up and coagulate into their new and small- bodied Churches; which are carried on by some with so high an hand and brow, that a young master of that sect hath been heard to say, not more magisterially than uncharitably, he would sooner renounce his Baptism, than own the Church of England to be a true Church. And this, notwithstanding that it is evident, these new Rabbis have added nothing new and true to the Doctrine of the Church of England; nor yet to the divine Worship, and holy Ministrations or Duties used and professed in it, with as much solemnity, judgement and sincerity, I believe, as they can pretend to, without blushing, on man's part; and with infinite more spiritual blessings and proficiency, in all graces, so far as yet appears, on God's part. Nor have they ever shown any cause why It should be denied the name, honour, privilege and comfort of a true Church of Christ, both in its principal parts, and in the whole visible community or polity; afflicted (indeed) at present, but sometime famous and flourishing, as in favour both with God and good men: nor did it ever recede from its love, or apostatise, by any public act or vote, from such a profession of Christian and Reformed Religion, as gives her a good Title to be, and to be called a true Church of Christ, in spite of men and Devils. If any still list to quarrel at the name of a national Church, the same schismatical sophisters may as well slight all those proportions and expressions used in all the grand Combinations and visible Constitutions of such ancient Churches, throughout all descents of Christian Religion; which never doubted to cast themselves into, and continue in such Ecclesiastical forms, and parallel distributions, as they found laid out by the blessed Apostles, and the Spirit of Christ; which (without doubt) most eminently guided those Primitive Churches. When these new projectors have answered the Scripture style, and the Apostolic patterns and pens followed by all antiquity, which call and account all those Christians conjoined in one Church's communion (in point of Ecclesiastical polity, subordination, chief power and jurisdiction) who (yet) were dispersed in many places, and so distinguished (no doubt) into many congregations, as to the duties of ordinary worship throughout their Cities & respective Provinces, which, I am sure were many of them far larger than any one Diocese or Province in England, yea, and (possibly) not much less than all England; as Ephesus, Ignat ep. ad Romanos. Crete, Jerusalem, Antioch, whose province was all Syria (as Ignatius tells us) so Corinth, Philippi, Laodicea, Rome, etc. with their Suburbs, Territories and Provinces, The Urbicarian Region in which the Praesectus urbis did exercise his jurisdiction, extended to 100 miles about the city, in which there were 69 Bishops under the Bishop of Rome. Vid. Prim. of Arm. the orig. of Metropolitans. which extended as far as their proconsulary jurisdictions reached; in one of which, that learned and pious, but fanciful interpreter, Mr. Brightman, doubted not to find a prophetic Type, representing the national Church of England, with much more aptitude than his other Satiric correspondencies were applied: When the wit and artifices of Independent brethren (if they allow me that relation) have shrunk those great and famous Churches (so distinguished and nominated by the Scripture line and record) into little handfuls, such as one man's lungs can reach, at one time, in one place; when the Presbyterian brethren (who have cast off, yea cast out their Fathers the Bishops) can manifest that the several Congregations of Christians in those Parishes, Classes, or Associations which they fancy, had as many Bishops properly so called, and fully impowered, as there were Presbyters or Preachers; when by their joint skill and force they can evince out of any Ecclesiastical Records, or scriptural, that there was not some one eminent person (as the Apostle, Angel, Bishop and Precedent, or chief Governor among them, over all those people and Presbyters) who lived within such large Scripture-combinations as Churches, (such as was Timothy in Ephesus, Titil in Crete, S. Acts 21.18. James the Just in Jerusalem) either succeeding the Apostles after death, or supplying their places during their absence from particular Churches, who in their several lots, portions, Act. 1.20. or Episcopal charges and divisions, had (while they lived) the chief inspection, rule, authority and jurisdiction: When (I say) these grand difficulties are cleared and removed, as scales from our eyes who still honour the Church of England; then we shall be willing and able to turn the other lessening end of the Optic glass, and to look upon the great and goodly Church of England as fit to be shrunk into decimo sexto volumes, or to be divided into small pamphleting Congregations, and bound up in Calf's leather: which heretofore, by an happy deception of sight, appeared to us at home, and to all the Christian world abroad, as a Church in folio; as a fair Book of royal paper written with the finger of God and Apostolic characters, well bound up and nobly adorned▪ as an holy Nation, 1 Pet. 2.9. a royal Priesthood, publicly owning itself to be God's people, taught by the Word of God, sprinkled with the blood of the Son of God, that immaculate Lamb slain for us, and partaker of that holy Passeover, which gives us of Christ's flesh to eat, & his blood to drink. All which Christian profession, privileges, & practise of this Nation, are (I conceive) sufficient without vanity or falsity to denominate and distinguish it, with the glorious Title of the Church of England; which was the thing I had to prove against the peevish Schismatics, envious Sceptics, and rude Separatists of these times. CHAP. III. The present afflictions of the Church of England no argument against Her national and well-Reformed Constitution. NOr may the Church of England's present afflictions eclipse or diminish its true glory in this point, any more than Jobs misery did lessen his innocency; nor may they abate your value, love and honour to Her, who are her loyal children, because she needs your pity. 'Tis true, it hath sadly suffered the late dreadful tempest which came from the a Jer. 1.14. Ab aquilone exardescent mala super omnes habitatores terrae: Septentrionalis regio, officina hominum, Gentibus Australibus infesta; unde in proverbium exiit, Omne malum ab Aquilone. Hiero. North (which hath ever been, as the magazine of men, so the fatal scourge of the Southern parts of the world: hoping to mend their condition by changing their climate, they never wanted occasions to quarrel and invade. Thence the Assyrians invaded Syria, Palestina and Egypt; the Goths and Vandals swarmed into Italy and afric; the Gauls into Greece; the Normans into France; the Picts, Saxons and Danes into England; the barbarous Scythians and Tartars into Asia.) This Hyperborean impression hath (indeed) beyond any Civil War that ever was in this nation, grievously peeled, barked, shattered and defaced the Church of England, as to its pristine strength, peace, unity, order, beauty, riches, sanctity and glory, (when b Isa. 49.23. Kings were its nursing Fathers, and Queens its nursing Mothers:) yet is its condition such, as makes it not so much the object of your despiciency or despair, as of your, & all good men's compassion, prayers, and real endeavours for Her relief. Her calamitous state is not like that of the object of David's pity, 1 Sam. 30.13. the sick servant of the Amalekite, from innate distempers; but as his, Luke 10.33. whom the good Samaritan found stripped, wounded, and half dead, an object capable to stir up the bowels of any good Christian; while her enemies, who have sought to cast her down to the ground, Psal. 74.4. who sometime roar in her Sanctuaries, and hope to set up their banners for ensigns of an absolute victory, do contemn her as a dead carcase, and have long ago cast her off as an unclean thing, fit to be abhorred of God and man. Yet this is the Church (most worthy Gentlemen) which hath been, Gal. 4.26. and is the mother of us all. To this, you and your forefathers, for many ages, have owed (under God) your Baptism, your Christian institution, your holy communion with Christ and his Catholic Church; to this you owe your virtues, your graces, your faith, your charity, your hopes, your evidences and preparations for Heaven, your Christian privileges, characters and seals, by which you are distinguished from Heathens and Aliens, as much as their natural reason, morality and humanity distinguisheth them from Beasts. This is the Church, this the Mother, which some children of Belial would teach you, by most preposterous ways of piety and rude reformation, to divide, to debase, to despise, to destroy: this (now) craves your compassion: Nor do I doubt, but you are infinitely sensible how much it hath deserved (as it extremely wants) your filial gratitude, relief, comfort and countenance, as testimonies of your love and duty, better becoming you than anything you can do under heaven, most worthy of your most generous piety. Nor may your Christian charity, holy courage and ingenuity be discouraged, because you every where find so many of your and mine unhappy countrymen rejoicing to see the Church of England brought to so broken and infirm, so poor and despicable, so mean and miserable a condition, as she now appears and deplores herself in. Psal. 35.16. I know there are on every side of her busy mockers, who gnash upon her with their teeth (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) evil-speakers, false accusers, Zach. 1.15. bold calumniators, delighters in her destruction. These have helped forward her affliction, when the hand of God was against her, as Edom did against Judah in the day of Zions calamity; these cry, down with her, Psal. 137.7. down with her even to the ground; now she is fallen let her rise up no more; raze the very foundations of her, let not one stone be left upon another; no Bishops, no Presbyters, no Catholic Succession, no right Ordination, no true Ministers, no Baptism, no Confirmation, no Consecration, no Liturgy, no Polity, no Church; let her destruction be like that of Sodom, and her desolation like that of Gomorrah, that there may be room enough for Ijim and Ohjim, for Owls and Dragons, Isa. 34.4. for rough and deformed Satyrs to dwell in the ruins of her palaces and Sanctuaries, her Pulpits and Temples. There are (I know) too many such proud scorners, who laugh and triumph at what your and all sober minds deplore, both at home and abroad, with infinite grief and astonishment: through whose pious hearts a very sword daily pierceth, when they behold, how the Church of England is fallen from being the beauty of the Western world, and chief among all, both Christian and Reformed Churches, to be like Babylon, full of licentiousness, divisions, confusions, and many abominations, both as to men's practices and opinions; some of which are so petulant, so fanatic, so putrid, so impudent, so blasphemous, so inordinate, so unbeseeming the gravity of men, or sanctity of Christians, that the ancient Heretics and Schismatics (of all ages, sorts and sizes) would be ashamed, if they could revive, to see themselves so outvyed in ignorance, despite, malice, monstrosity, impiety, impudence. The Gnostics, Valentinians, Cataphrygians, Marcionites, Montanists, Manichees, Novatians, Arians, Aerians, Circumcelians, were tender-foreheaded, and simple-spirited people compared to those high-crested and Scraphick Sophisters, who study to shake and subvert, to defile and destroy all that was sacred or settled in the Church of England. At whose sad aspect proud and merciless men, who (as one said sharply of them) have guts, but no bowels, mingle their scornful smiles with your, mine, and other men's unfeigned tears: they triumph in her rubbish, and dance in her dust; they count her ashes their beauty, her waters of Meribah and Marah (strife and bitterness) to be their wine and refreshing; they cry up their rendings of her to be rare Reformations, their rags and patches to be new Robes for Christ's Spouse; which they pretend to have been dead and stark naked till the rough touches of some later Prophets happily revived her, and till their cruel charities revested her; they call the dissolutions of all Ecclesiastic orders of Primitive Government, & of true ministerial authority, precious liberties; what sober men count defections from the ancient Catholic & Apostolic pattern, they boast of as perfections; what plainhearted Christians esteem as decay of the Reformed Religion, and ill omens and presages of its ruin, these Seraphicks affirm to be edifying and repair of that structure, which since the Apostles times, they pretend, was always decaying and dropping down to Apostasy, being overladen with the fair roof or covering of Episcopacy; of which burden some blessed Reformers seek totally to have lightened this Church, as they have done some Cathedrals of their Leads, that they may leave this Church and the Reformed Religion, as without any roof and defence against the injuries of foul weather, so without any band or coping, to keep the walls and sides together. What others call Extirpations, these magnify as rare Plantations; in which they fell down Cedars and set up Shrubs; they root up Vines, and plant Brambles; rejecting venerable Bishops and orderly Presbyters (who are of the Primitive Stock and Apostolic descent) that they may bring in a novel brood of Heteroclite Teachers, equivocal Pastors, and new-moulded Ministers, whose late Origine (without all doubt) ariseth no higher (at best) than Geneva or Frankfort, or Amsteldam, or Arneheim, or New England; some are such popular pieces, so much (terrae filii) of obscure rise, of base and mean extraction, that they have no name of men or place to render them remarkable; being like Mushrooms, perking up in every molehill, and in a moment making themselves the Ministers of Jesus Christ. To whose strange and novel productions in Old England, the late civil distractions (finding, it seems, much prepared matter) gave not only life and activity, but so great petulancy and insolency, that many do not only change their former profession, and utterly abdicate their Church-standing and communion in England; but (as mere changelings) they prefer the saddest Succubaes' and Empusa's, the most fanatic apparitions of modern fancies in their poor and pitiful Conventicles, before the Church of England; as some children do the Queen of Fairies before their genuine Mothers; instead of whose sound Doctrine, sacred Order, and Catholic Councils, they betake themselves each to their private dotages and rave, to mere nonsense and blasphemies; which some cry up, as strong reasonings, high raptures, extatick illuminations, to which all men must subscribe, though no wise man know what they mean: Such confidence some men have, that Christians in England have lost, not only their Religion but their Reason; upon whom they hope so rudely and grossly to impose their most childish novelties and frivolous follies, that, as Erasmus speaks of some monkish corrupters or interpolators of S. Jeroms works, who had made it harder for him to find out what that acute and learned Father wrote, than ever it was for him to write his excellent works: so in England, what was formerly plain and easy, sound and wholesome, orderly and Catholic as to true Religion, both in Faith, Manners, Ministry and Government; the modern Novelties, Whimsies, Factions, Intricacies and Extravagancies of some men, have made not only perplexed, confused, but contemptible and ridiculous. Yet these are the trash and husks which some mens nauseous & wanton palates in this age do prefer and choose, rather than that wholesome food and sincere milk of God's word, with which the Reformed Church of England always entertained her children, until an highminded and stiffnecked generation of rank appetites, like Jews, growing sick of quails, and surfeited of manna, longed for the garlic and onions of Egypt; legendary visions, fabulous revelations, and fanatic inspirations. Which Egyptian diet hath of late (by a just anger of Heaven upon men's ingrateful murmurings, and wanton longings) brought many in England to those high calentures and distempers in Religion, that like frantic people, they fly in the faces of their Fathers, and tear the very flesh of their Mother. Though civil troubles and State-furies seem much allayed, yet these Clero-masticks and Church-destroyers still maintain a most implacable war against the Church of England; thinking, yea professing, some of them, that they shall do God good service, utterly to destroy it, with all its assistants and adherents. In order to which design they have sought every where to vilify, and set at nought, to crown with thorns and crucify, or at best to counterfeit and disguise the merit, worth and majesty of all the sacred Solemnities and Rites, the Peace and Polity, the Ministry and Ministrations of the Church of England: yea, and fancying they have a liberty to mock them first, and after to nail them to the Cross; Good God how have they buffeted them! how importunely do they obtrude upon them, amidst their many Agonies, gall and vinegar to drink! what cruel contempts, what virulent pamphlets, what scandalous and scurrilous petitions do they frequently vent against all Churches and Churchmen relating to, or depending upon the Church of England! some of them ripping up (by a Neronean cruelty) the womb that bore them; others cutting off (by a more than Amazonian barbarity) the breasts that gave them suck. Nor do they despair to pierce (at last) this bleeding Church to the very heart; if ever the power of the sword come into such hands, as are professed enemies to all other Reformed Churches, as well as this of England: whose languishing, but living, fate they now behold as with great pleasure, so with no small impatience; while they see that, notwithstanding all their sedulous and industrious machinations against learning and Religion, against the Church and Universities of England, against Ministers and their maintenance, yet there is still some life and spirit, some liberty and hope left, through the mercy of God, and the moderation of some men in power, for those Christians that have the courage and conscience to own the Reformed Church of England as their Mother, and the Reformed Clergy as their spiritual Fathers. Whose just Honour and Interests as I must never desert while I live, because I think them linked with those of God's Glory, my Redeemers Honour, the Catholic Churches veracity, the peace of my conscience, and my country's happiness, both as to the present age and to posterity; so I have thought it my duty, in her deplorable condition, and in the despondency of many men's spirits, to apply the cordial of this confection, mingled with her tears, and with her sighs, presented to you (my most honoured Countrymen:) by the help of which you may both fortify your own honest minds, and oppose that diffusive venom, which you cannot but daily meet in some men's restless malice, who neither know how to speak well of the Church of England, nor how to hold their peace. By the example of your judicious favour and generous compassion, I doubt not to excite like affections of courage and constancy, in all worthy Protestants & honest-hearted English, whose duty it is, amidst the pertinacy of all other parties and factions (who like Burrs hang together) to hold fast that holy and reformed profession, which is truly Christian, ancient, and Catholic; thereby justifying that mercy and truth, that grace and peace of God, which was plentifully manifested and faithfully dispensed to the people of this land, by the piety and wisdom of the Church of England; notwithstanding that the Lord seems now to hide his face from Her: the want of whose favour, which her great and sore afflictions have seemed to cloud, is far beyond the triumphs of her enemies, or the coldness of her friends, the oppositions of many, the withdrawings of some, and the indifferencies of others, who have all contributed to her miseries; but none of them have yet convinced her (that ever I could see) of any sin or error, as to ignorance or iniquity, superstition or irreligion, dangerous defect or excess. If the Church of England had as many Mouths as she hath Wounds, as many Tongues as Maims, as many hearty Mourners as she hath cruel Destroyer's; if there were as many that durst pity and relieve her, as there are that dare spoil and ruin her; these would fill, not England only, but all the Christian world with the bitterness of her Complaints, as a learned and pious * See Mr. R●y his Gemitus plebis, or Mournful complaint in behalf of the poor people of England, printed 1656. Minister for his part hath lately done. If the Church of England had many such pious Orators, whose potent and pathetic eloquence were more proportionable to her calamities, than the narrowness of my heart and tenuity of my pen are like to be: certainly heaven and earth would be moved with compassion; flints would melt, and rocks be mollified with commiseration; the upper and the nether millstones, partial Presbytery, and popular Independency, between whom she hath been so ground to powder, that Papists, and Anabaptists, and Familists, and Quakers, and Seekers, and Ranters, with all the rabble of her proud and spiteful enemies, hope to fill their sacks with her grist; those (I say) might possibly repent (if they have not much mended their fortunes by this Church's ruins) of their occasioning her so long and sharp a warfare, so many and sad Tragedies, while by infinite jealousies, grievous reproaches, and unjust scandals cast upon their and your Mother (this Reformed Church of England) they have made her implacable enemies, the Papists and others, to blaspheme her for a mere Adulteress all this while; to condemn all her Children as a Bastard brood of illegitimate Christians, from the first Reformation to this day. Her most desperate deserters of late (in order to take away their own reproach, & to expiate (as they imagine) the sin and shame of their former profession) have laboured first to destroy the eldest brethren and chiefest sons in this Church; next, to cast out and exautorate the principal Stewards and dispensers of holy things: after this they have endeavoured to rob her both of her dower and patrimony; hoping at last to famish the whole Family, when there shall be neither nursing father's nor nursing mothers in this Church, neither milk left for Babes, nor stronger meat for the elder ones, neither plain catechising nor profitable preaching, neither ordaining Bishops nor ordained Presbyters. CHAP. IU. SUch as have ears to hear, The Church of England's Complaint. and charity to lay to heart, may with me hear the Church of England thus lamenting and bemoaning Herself, while she sits upon the ground, covered with ashes, clothed with sackcloth, besmeared with blood, drowned in tears, and almost buried with her own ruins. O all you that pass by me, stand and see, Lam. 1. ●2. if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow, if it hath been done to any Christian & Reformed Church under Heaven as it hath to me, in the day wherein the Lord hath afflicted me with his fierce anger. My Wounds, my Wastes, my Ruins, my Deformities, my Desolations are not by the barbarous inundations of Goths and Vandals, not by the rude invasions of Saracens and Turks, not by the severe Inquisitions and cruel persecutions of Papists; I do not owe my miseries to the incursions of Foreigners, to a nation of a strange Language, of professed Enmity, of different Interests and Religion. They are not professed nero's, Domitian's, Diocletians and Julian's, Heathen Princes and Persecutors, that have done me this despite; Psal. 55.12. for then (perhaps) I and my children could have born it, with a like heroic patience and Christian courage, Erat ante in operibus fratrum candida ecclesia; nunc facta est in cruore Martyrum purpurea: Floribus ejus nec rosae desunt nec lilia. Certant nunc singuli ad utriusque honoris amplissimam dignitatem, ut accipiant coronas, vel de opere candidas, vel de passione purpureas. Cyp. ep. 9 as those did their Primitive Persecutions: the splendour and constancy of whose Martyrdoms contributed more than all their preaching, to the honour, advantage and propagation of the Christian Religion; when Churches and Christians being happily united in love, and only persecuted by professed enemies, they knew in what posture of defence to cast themselves, so as to suffer and die, becoming Christians. But I (alas) am ambiguously wounded by those that are of my own house, family and profession: Such as have been washed at my baptismal fountain of living water, such as have freely and fully tasted of my Sacramental Bread and Wine, feasting at my Table, which is the Lords; Isa. 1.2. these, these have lifted up the heel against me: Such as have been bred and born by me, taught and brought up in the same true Christian Faith and reformed Profession; by these am I hated and despised, by these am I stripped and wounded, by these am I torn and mangled, by these am I impoverished and debased below any Church, Christian or Reformed; by these am I scorned and abhorred, by these am I made an hissing and astonishment to all that see me, by these am I made a derision and mocking-stock to my enemies round about me, by these am I in danger to be quite devoured and destroyed, who envy me so much breath and life, as serves me to complain of my calamities. Isa. 1.2. Hear O heavens, and give ear O earth, be not ye also cruel or uncompassionate: since one of you cannot but behold the deformity of my Sufferings, the other cannot but feel the burden of my complaints; one of you is blasted with my Sighs, the other is bedewed with my Tears. Be not ye also accessary to my injuries by concealing them, or guilty of my Blood by covering it; which cries aloud against my ungrateful, my unnatural, my rebellious children. Those that came forth of my own bowels, these have risen up against me; to whom I liberally afforded milk when they were babes, and stronger meat, as they were able to bear it; for whom I provided the sacred Oracles of God in a language they best understood: I furnished them with such forms of wholesome devotion, agreeable to the mind and Word of God, as might best suit the common necessities of all, and the capacities of the meanest: I concealed no part of God's sacred Counsel from them, nor detained any necessary saving Truth out of any principle of unrighteous policy: I neither denied, nor diminished, nor deformed any Ordinance of Christ to them: I coloured no errors with shows of truth, nor disguised any Truth with fallacious sophistries: I set forth to them, with all plainness and freedom, the blessed fullness and excellencies of my Lord Jesus Christ, in such a manner and measure as I received from his Word and Spirit; for I learned not those manifestations of Divine love from any other Church, Pristine or Modern, so much as the special dispensations and discoveries of God's Graces and Gifts to me, in which few equalled, none seemed to exceed me, in all the world. From this great and pure fountain of all perfection and comfort (the sweetness, merit, and fullness of my Saviour) I recommended to my children every Grace, every Virtue, every holy Duty, every necessary Precept, every precious Promise, every imitable Example: and this was done with all the advantages of good Learning, of sound Knowledge, of most potent and pathetic eloquence; which at once was able to inform the weakest capacity, to satisfy any sober curiosity, and to silence the subtlest adversary. To this purpose, that the great work of saving their souls might be effectually carried on, with order, power and authority, I furnished them not with precarious praters, bold intruders, or pitiful pieces of Plebeian oratory (in whom ignorance and impudence, inability and inauthoritativeness contend which shall be greatest;) but I provided and prepared for them, with much study and industry, with many prayers and tears, with long education and diligent care, excellent Bishops, orderly Presbyters, able and authoritative Ministers, workmen that needed not be ashamed; 2 Tim. 2.15. of a lawful ordination and right descent, of a mediate divine mission after the Apostolic line and Catholic succession, after the form of an uninterrupted and authentic commission, duly and truly exemplified in the consecration of Bishops, and ordination of Presbyters and Deacons, through all ages of the Church, agreeable to that original Institution, which was from Christ Jesus the great High Priest, the unerring Prophet, Heb. 5.10. the sovereign King of his Church, the chief Preacher of Righteousness, and Bishop of our souls, who instituted first his twelve Apostles, 1 Pet. 2.25. Luke 6.13. Luke 10.1. afterward the seventy Disciples; whose commission was not so large, nor their mission so solemn, as that of the twelve, whose Episcopacy and number was to be completed, Act. 1.21.2.1. and upon whom the promised power from on high specially came in the miraculous and ministerial gifts of the Holy Ghost. After this pattern (which was ever followed by all Churches in all the world) I supplied those under my care with such a succession of Bishops and Ministers of holy things, as for solid learning, for powerful preaching, for devout and discreet praying, for reverend celebrating, for acute disputing, for exact writing, for wise governing, and holy living, were no where exeeded in all the Christian world, and hardly equalled in any age since the Apostles times; whose ministerial sufficiencies and successes were sometime highly magnified, and almost deified, by many of those that now would stone them, and destroy me, by a late transport of malice, as much unexpected, as undeserved, by me; which looks more like a fascination and fury, than any thing of true Zeal and sober Reformation. For no men of any weight or worth for parts and piety, for judgement and ingenuity, for conscience and integrity, have (hitherto) convinced me, or those men that were my prime servants, sons and supports, of any Heresy or Idolatry, of any Superstition or Apostasy, of any just scandal or notable defect. What some have urged for my not exercising a more severe and strict Discipline, after the manner of some ancient Primitive Churches, it is not imputable to any unwillingness in those worthy Bishops and Presbyters whom I employed, but to the general wantonness or refractoriness of all sorts of people in that point, who were so far from enduring a stricter discipline to be set up, that many grudged at any Ecclesiastic authority, exercised over them, though it were established by their own public consent and laws. If any of my Bishops, Presbyters, or people, failed to do the duties which I required, or rather Christ commanded them; it was to be reckoned as the fruit of men's private temptations and personal infirmities, but not of my constitutions or directions; which were so pious and perspicuous, that people could not justly plead invincible ignorance, to excuse their immoralities and impieties, which indeed they owed to their own negligences or corruptions. Yea, where the seeds of Religion were thinnest sown, and thrived least in some parts of this nation, it was not so much from the want of labourers, as from the labourer's wants: the poverty of many places, and barrenness of the soil was such, that either impropriations, or sacrilege, or both, had not left for any competent workman a competent maintenance; both my Dower and Patrimony, Glebes and Tithes, being almost wholly alienated, by hard laws and evil customs, from my use and enjoyment; that holy Portion (which is Gods) being oft perverted to feed Hinds and Dogs and Horses, which was originally devoted to feed such Shepherds as might feed my flock in every place: Nor could, in those cases, either my prayers or tears, the sordid necessities of many poor Ministers, or the cries of poor people's famished souls, ever yet move the civil State effectually to restore, or remit, or to make other necessary supplies for Pastors and people's good. Yet, even in this distress (which befell too many places much against my will) my care and endeavour was so to keep up the life, health, and soundness of the true Reformed Christian Religion, that people every where had what was necessary, wholesome and decent for their souls good; though possibly they had not (nor was it needful) the same plenty, variety, dainties and superfluity, in a constant way, Numb. 11.20. (which some places did so long enjoy) until (as with the Jews) the Manna and Quails (Sunday Sermons and weekday Lectures) came out of their nostrils: while the heavenly food was rolling in their curious palates, and wanton jaws, the wrath of God broke forth upon them and upon me (as upon Moses) for their sakes; Deut. 4 21. who was indeed as jealous of their surfeitings of holy things, as of the others famishing; both being contrary to my care and desire: which were (God knows) first to preserve the Foundation of necessary and saving Truth among them; next, to add the beauty of holiness to humility, to join decency to sincerity, to maintain the power of godliness, with the wholesome forms of it; that so Truth and Peace, Order and Unity, the leaves and the fruits of the tree of life might grow together, Rev. 22.2. for the nutriment, muniment and ornament of piety. Nor do I doubt to plead and affirm before God's Tribunal, That if those people, who seemed to far hardliest (though the greatest complainers against my treatment of them were such as enjoyed most, and fared deliciously every day, wantonness being more querulous than want,) if they had made so good use as they might, and aught to have done, of that holy light and rule which was duly held forth to them in the plain parts of Scripture every year read to them, in the Sacraments duly administered among them, in the Articles, Creeds, Homilies, Catechise and Liturgy, with which they were, or might have been well acquainted; they might even in these (so much nauseated and despised means, sufficient (I fear) to damn those who despised Salvation by them) have found as plain and easy, as sure and compendious a way to heaven, through Faith, Repentance, Humility, Charity, holy Obedience to God and Man, as they are likely now to do, after they have stirred up so great a dust and smoke as hath put out poor people's eyes, leading them into endless mazes and confusions, under the name and noise of a better Reformation and safer Religions. In this posture of peace and plenty, of piety and prosperity, as to Christian and Reformed Religion, had the God and Father of my Lord Jesus Christ, the Founder of his Church, once settled me (out of his abundant mercy to the people of England) by the patience and prayers, by the preaching and writing of godly Bishops and other Ministers, who were not only Gods painful Labourers, but his faithful Martyrs and Confessors some of them: whose great worth drew the favour of pious Princes to me, who were my nursing fathers; and the love of peaceable Parliaments, who were my faithful friends: insomuch, that for one hundred years (next preceding my miseries) I had no cause to envy any Christian or Reformed Church that ever was or is in all the world; nor had any sober Christian just cause to complain of me, much less thus to murmur, mutiny and fight against me, for no other cause but this, That I would not suffer them rudely to bite off those full and fair breasts, which they had so long sucked, ingratefully deforming those conduits of plenty, order and peace, which they had so long enjoyed, both in Word and Sacraments, in Ministrations and Ministers. Yet, behold how I am fallen, suddenly, shamefully, ingratefully, indignly, and almost desperately; my doctrine not duly examined, but rashly condemned; my Tenets not confuted, but blasphemed by my various adversaries; my public service and solemn worship of God sharply indeed corrected, even to blood, but no whit improved or amended, yea infinitely impaired and neglected; my holy Sacraments (those two great Seals of a Christians Charter and God's Covenant, those fair marks and badges of Christian profession, the two poles and pillars on which all mysterious and spiritual comforts, temporal and eternal joys do constantly turn) these are (most what) rarely used, in many places either totally disused, or grossly abused, by the execrable consecrations of unwashed, unholy, unordained hands. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Many of my Oratories, Temples and Churches (Houses so called, because dedicated to the service of the Lord and his Church) are by some men first profaned with all the sordidness of men and beasts; next, they are suffered to ruin of themselves, while they are robbed of what should repair them; and at last (that Sacrilege may be the better husband) they are threatened to be sold, and utterly demolished. The Sanctity of Christian marriages, which were wont to be solemnised by prayers, instructions, benedictions, by mutual, solemn and sacred stipulations, according to the Word of God and Ecclesiastic practice, is sought to be reduced by some to new ways, either very brutal, and merely natural, or, at best, but civil and politic. The infants of Christians (who were ever esteemed as the lambs of Christ's flock) are partially, carelessly, disorderly, many of them dubiously, yea not at all baptised; neither sprinkled nor washed, nor marked with any note of Christ's blood, to distinguish them from the herd of Heathens, the brats of Aliens, Jews, Pagans, Mahometans. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The sacred, dreadful and venerable Symbols of the Lords Supper, (which I had happily purged from all rust and rubbish of Superstition) in many places have been supinely neglected for many years; in others strangely consecrated, irreverently celebrated, partially distributed, denied to many worthy and desirous Christians: as if those were not Catholic signs and seals of the truth of the Gospel, the Covenant of Grace, & those common rights or privileges which belong to every one that professeth to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and keeps communion with his Church; but only marks to discriminate sides and parties in Religion, to divide Christians into uncharitable factions. 1 Cor. 15.18. As for my Dead, for they are still mine, (as they sleep in Jesus, and are Gods deposita) these are, in many places, put into their grave, with no other solemnity than a silent procession, and a demure perambulation; as if all that attended were as dumb as the corpse, and the dead buried the dead; without any difference expressed between those bodies that are charitably presumed to have been Temples of the holy Ghost, 1 Cor. 6.19. that are candidates of Heaven, and expectants of a blessed Resurrection, and the bodies of mere infidels or miscreants; being now treated in many places like the carcases of beasts, Jer. 22.19. or the burial of an Ass, for whom men do usually as much as this comes to, namely, the covering their corpse with earth, to avoid the noisomeness and offence of them, without any further hopes of them. And all this late supercilious novelty, and neglect of dead Christians, is grounded upon a strange scrupulosity of some, either silly or superstitious men, who pretend to boggle at my office, which was more for the living than the dead; not merely humane and natural, but Christian and spiritual: See B. Ushers answer to the Jesuits praying for the dead. which they count as a kind of Necromancy, or strange superstition to the dead; while I only made the dead an occasion of godly instruction and Christian hope, of comfort, warning, and lawful devotion to the living, which how they should offend any sober Christian, I could never yet be convinced; and I am sure came far short of those commemorations, yea comprecations for the dead, which were anciently used without offence in the Primitive Churches. All other offices of piety and charity, for the sick and well, the young and old, the penitent or impenitent, prescribed by me, are (now) either wholly laid aside, or performed in so various and exotic forms, as common people cannot easily understand them; their very novelty, obscurity and affected variety, makes some Minister's prayers a kind of Latin Service to the simple common people. Lastly, my whole frame and polity Ecclesiastical, all my ancient constitution, order and communion, as a national Church of Christ (in which brethren did happily dwell together in unity) all is by some men not only quite forsaken and abandoned on their parts; Psal. 153.1. but they seek utterly to rout and destroy me, by defaming and discouraging those that most love, approve and obey me; as if there had nothing been settled in me with any piety or prudence, reason or discretion, by the wisdom of their forefathers, who were sometimes esteemed blest Reformers by most of these modern Renegers, Separates and Apostates. How justly they have done me this despite, I appeal to the just and impartial Judge, before whom I can thus far with truth and comfort assert my innocency; that as to the foundations of Faith, and rule of Holiness, I have only adhered to his blessed Word, as it hath been delivered to me by the most credible testimony of the Catholic Church in the books of Canonical Scripture, truly so called. Nor did I ever teach for Doctrines the Traditions of men, which some have blasphemed. As for the circumstantial and ceremonial parts of Religion, I used in Them modestly, cautiously and charitably, that liberty and power, for order and decency, which, I conceive, God's indulgence, 1 Cor. 14.40. 1 Cor. 14.33. who is not the author of confusion, but of peace, allowed me, no less than any of those Primitive or later Churches, whose best examples I sought to follow. If any of my children had discovered something in me less agreeable to that beauty, order and gravity, which had been desirable by them in a Christian and Reformed Church; if any matter of real uncomeliness had been espied in me, (as what Church is there upon earth so fair, but (as the Moon) it may have some spots, wanings and eclipses? what state of Christians so complete, Rev. 2.14. that God may not have a few things against them?) yet it had been their duty, with the veil of Christian love and pity, modestly to have covered, silently concealed, and dutifully reform, what was indeed amiss; and not (like so many Chams) to have exposed such a parent, such a mother, Gen. 9.22. to the petulancy and derision both of her enemies abroad, and the plebs at home, who are as prone as ever the Jews were, to worship any new Calves they fancy to set up, and to cast off Moses and Aaron, that God and those Governors, who had done such wonders among them. If while men slept, the enemy sowed some tares there where my Saviour had plentifully sowed good seed, Mat. 13.25. was I presently to be trampled under the feet of the beasts of the people, or quite to be rooted up, burnt and consumed, because some tares appeared? if my garments were in time a little spotted and sullied, yet was my honour still unblemished, and the sanctity of my profession, as Christian and Reformed, unviolated; nor did my garments deserve thus to be rinced in the blood of my Children: if the ceremonious lace and fringe of my coat were a little unripped, or torn with time, yet there was no cause to rend it quite off, or tear my coat in pieces: if my garb and fashion seemed somewhat more grave, Catholic and ancient, than agreed with some men's singular and novellizing fancies, yet did I not deserve to be stripped and stigmatised, to be thus exposed to shame and nakedness; much less to have my Flesh thus torn, my Eyes pulled out, my Throat cut, and my Skin to be flayed off; which are the merciful endeavours of some of my reforming, that is ruining, enemies. If some weak or unwise servants (whom I trusted with the management of my affairs) discharged their duties less piously or prudently than I expected or exacted of them, as Church-governors & Ministers; if the licentiousness of others was impatient to be governed so strictly as they should have been (most men abhorring true Christian Discipline even then when they most clamoured for it, intending extravagancies when they pretended severities;) yet was I not on the sudden to have been wholly deprived of all Church-government and order, once duly established, until such time as my new Discipliners and wise Masters had found out some fitter way for me, than that Catholic fabric, form and fashion, which all Churches ever had and enjoyed from the Apostles times and constitutions. Certainly the failings of Church-governors ought not to have been so severely avenged upon the Church-government itself; nor are any men's maladministrations to be laid to the charge of those good laws and constitutions which are settled in either Church or State. Epist. to Co●. Galat. Rev. 2. & 3. ch. The very Apostolic Churches are oft blamed, yea and threatened, for their early degenerations, without any reproach to their first institution, which certainly was holy and good. It savours too much of humane passion, to pervert divine order, under pretence of Reforming humane disorders. Which in me were never so predominant, as to remove me from that posture of Christian piety, honour, order and integrity, wherein I stood firm and conspicuous in all the world, as a Christian and well-Reformed Church: hated indeed, and many times opposed by my foreign adversaries of the Papal interest and persuasion; but they despaired ever to prevail against me, unless they first divided my children within me, and armed my own bowels by homebred and strange animosities against me. These by infinite artifices and undiscerned stratagems, have by them been heightened of late to such factious petulancies and furies, as to add scorns to the others thorns, contempt to the others crosses, gall to my vinegar, scurrility to my agonies. As if I could not be miserable enough, to satisfy the malice of my enemies abroad, unless I were made a scorn to my children, and a shame to my friends both at home and abroad; leaving me few that dare pity me, fewer that can plead for me, and fewest that are able and willing to relieve me. My spiteful persecutors are so cruel, that they are impatient to see any sympathise with me, threatening those my children, that dare (yet) own me for a true Church, or their Mother; the very name of which they seek to deprive me of, hoping to make me quite forgotten, who was sometime so renowned among the most celebrated Churches of the world. Alas, among some Furies it is not safe for sober Christians to speak one good word of me, or for me; they cannot endure any should pray for me, no nor weep for me: Tears are offensive, and Charity itself is scandalous to my implacable enemies, who labour to be my cruel and total oppressors. To this dreadful height hath the Lord been pleased to afflict me, with my children, in the day of his fierce wrath; in which He hath given me ashes for bread, and mingled my drink with weeping; filling me with blackness instead of beauty, with war for peace, with faction for union, with confusion for order, with impudent patricides and ungrateful matricides, instead of modest, thankful and tenderhearted children. Behold He hath smitten me into the place of Dragons, Psal. 44.19. and given me a cup of deadly wine to drink: But it is the Lord, let him do as seemeth good in his sight. If my prayers and sighs and tears cannot, yet (possibly) the exorbitant and implacable malice of my enemies (who in the end will not appear God's friends) may provoke him to remember his tender mercies, which have been ever of old, and to repent him, as a Father, of the evil he hath suffered to be brought upon me, by those that delight not in His justice, Micah 7.8. but in their own sacrilegious advantages. It may be he will return to be gracious as in former times, and not shut up his loving kindness wholly from me, Psal. 136. since his (oft-repeated) mercy endureth for ever: yea, it is because his compassions fail not, that I am not utterly consumed. Though thou kill me, yet will I trust in thee, O Lord; who hast wounded me very sore: yet heal me, O my father, and I shall be healed; save me, Job 13.15. Jer. 17.14, 17. and I shall be saved: for thou art my praise. O be not thou a terror to me, who art my hope in the day of evil. CHAP. V. The cruel and unjust enmity of some against the Church of England. THus may the Church of England be heard, in every Closet and in every Congregation, where devout souls either retire or meet, sighing out its Sorrows, and deploring its great Miseries, sufficient to move the compassions of all those who have any filial and grateful respect to Her; upon whose welfare, as to the unity, peace and prosperity of the true Christian and Reformed Religion, all sober Englishmen may easily foresee, that their own and their posterity happiness, spiritual, temporal and eternal (under God) doth chiefly depend. It is the infinite grief of all good Patriots and true Protestants, to see this sometime so famous and flourishing Church of England in danger to be eaten up, not by a Sea-monster, like Andromeda, or by that overgrown Leviathan of Rome, which takes his pastime in great waters, and rules over many Nations, People and Languages; but by small vermin, by a company (for the most part) of creeping and corroding Sectaries, homebred and home-fed: like that a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Suet. in vita Tib. Neronis. Erat ei in oblectamentis serpens Draco, quem quum consumptum à formicis invenisset, monitus est ut vim multitudinis caveret. tame Lizard or Dragon (as Suetonius calls it) which Tiberius Nero kept at Capri, which was eaten up with ants or pismires, to the emperor's great grief and astonishment, as an unhappy presage of his own fate by the fury of the multitude; or like the Lions in Mesopotamia, who are destroyed by gnats; their importunity being such in those paludious places, that the Lions by rubbing their eyes, grow blind, and so are drowned, as Ammianus Marcellinus reports in his History of Julian's wars. Pruritus disputandi scabies Ecclesiae. If nothing else, yet (as Sir Henry Wotton glories in his sentence) the very itching & scratching of Christians eyes, the scrupulous doubtings, the vexatious dispute and endless janglings about Religion in England, both as Christian and as Reformed, already hath, and daily will, bring down such a Rheum and blood-shottennesse into men's eyes, that (unless some sovereign eyesalve be timely applied) the most people will in a few years be only fit to play at blind-man-buff in Religion, taking what heresy or fancy comes next to hand, and changing it the next day; rather groping at all adventure in the dark, than clearly discerning and conscientiously choosing the weighty matters of Religion, which are hardly discovered when the blind lead the blind; Mat. 15.14. and ●s hardly either embraced, when once practising is turned into prating, and the power of godliness into pragmatic pomp or popular contempt. Such is the sad and shameful fate of the Church of England now like to be, which heretofore never wanted (nor yet doth) such champions as durst undertake her defence against any who bring arguments, not arms; strong reasons, and not long swords; Scripture-demonstrations, and not sceptical declamations; pious Antiquity, and not partial Novelty. But now It hath not the honour to be opposed or overcome by any such Antagonists, whose learning, wit and eloquence (speciously managed) would lessen the disgrace; but She is in danger to be overborn by such petty parties, such obscure animals, such mechanic pieces, and (for the most part) such illiterate wretches, that it is not only a grief, but a shame, to see so comely a Matron crowded, and as it were stifled to death, by a company of Scolds and Shrews, a generation of men and women extremely unbred, of passionate, rude, spiteful, and plebeian spirits; many of them the very abjects of mankind, viler than the earth, as Job speaks, Job 30.8. whose manners are much base than their fortunes (which embase no good man) who owe most of their stickling activities to their worldly necessities, and (conscious to their want of real worth and abilities) they seek to revenge their gross defects, either by their sacrilegious flatteries of others, or by a rustical fierceness of their own against the Church of England: as if flails, and fans, and shovels, and spades, were the fittest instruments to thrash and purge such a Church, or to discuss and ventilate the weighty matters of Religion, as to a sober Christian Reformation. O happy England, who art (of late) blessed with so cheap, so easy, so inspired, so rare Reformers; who get more skill in one day's confidence, in one nights dreaming, or one hours quaking, than modest Scholars, either Divines or other Gentlemen, can obtain in twice seven years' study! O how fruitful is Faction, how spreading is Schism, when they are fitted with soil and season! These new-bred Creepers, which are now so numerous and noxious in England, are (generally) but the spawn or fly-blowings of those elder Sects and Factions, which a long time have been buzzing and breeding in the bosom of the Church of England, under the name of Disciplinarians: whose first Authors long ago made some Essays for their desired Innovations, by modester, indeed, yet very popular ways of remonstrances and supplications; well knowing that it is ever welcome to the vulgar, to see any fault found with their betters, or any project of subjecting their superiors under any more Plebeian rigours and severities. The next and worse abettors (pejor aetas) tried how far they might by scurrilous pamphlets, railing & reviling, like Rabshakeh, unravel the cords of all government, both the majesty of the Civil, and the authority of the Ecclesiastic. After such biting Petitions and Satiric Pasquil's, (worthy of such Martonists) came open menacings of Princes and Parliaments, Priests and People too, as Mr. R. Hooker observes in his Preface to his Ecclesiastical polity. At last, words came to be turned into swords: many both at home and abroad having evil will at the Zion of England, making their advantages of our unhappy differences in civil affairs, and taking fire from those flames, have sought by the licentiousness, riot and rudeness of infinite Sects and Factions, as by so many trains and barrels of gunpowder, utterly to blow up the whole frame and constitution of the Church of England. Which unchristian practices and cruel designs, that they might the better justify or palliate to their credulous followers, they every where, as boldly as falsely, affirm, that both in the matter constituted, and the form constituting a true Church in ordinances, duties, privileges, members, ministrations, Ministry, communion, and all comforts necessary for Christians, there were few things in the Church of England tolerable, most were unblamable, and many most abominable to their more sanctified senses: yea some men clamour that there was nothing sound or constitutive of a Church of Christ, but the whole head was sick, Isa. 1.5. and the whole heart faint; that not only Schism is commendable, but absolute Separation is as necessary from the Church of England, as the going of God's people out of Babylon. These are the poisons with which some Serpents have sought to infect the minds of common people, and to envenom even the better sort with their biting and bitter invectives, against the purity and peace of the Church of England. O venerable censors! O severe Aristarchusses, of a more than Catonian gravity! to whose ploughs, and looms, and distaffs, and clubs, and hammers, 'tis meet (as to so many sacred sceptres) this later English and Christian world should no less submit their souls than the Jews and Gentiles, Greeks and Barbarians, Romans and Scythians, did to the nets and fishhooks of the Apostles; who were authorized with miraculous gifts, and assisted by the special power of the holy Spirit of Christ, to plant, settle, and reform and purge Christian Churches. To whose holy Doctrine and Divine Institutions, delivered in the Old and New Testament, and followed by all the Primitive Catholic Churches, notwithstanding that the Church of England did in its first Reformation diligently and exactly conform itself; if we may believe the integrity of those Reformers who had the courage and constancy to be Martyrs, whose learning, worth & piety hath been confirmed by the testimony of so many wise & religious Princes, by the approbation & sanction of so many honourable and unanimous Houses of Parliament, by the suffrages of so many learned and reverend Convocations, by the applauses of so many Sister-reformed Churches; if we may believe the preaching, living and dying of so many hundred excellent Bishops and Presbyters, or the prayers, praises and proficiencies of so many thousands of other good Christians; or (lastly) if we may believe the wonderful blessings and special graces of a merciful God, attesting to the verity, sanctity and integrity of this Church-Reformation and Christian Constitution for many happy years: Yet against all these, some peevish Momusses, some spiteful Caco-zelots, some evil-eyed Zoilusses, some insolent and causeless Enemies of the Church of England, have not so much modesty as to conceal their malice, or to smother their insolent folly, and intolerable arrogancy, which dares to put the ignorance, giddiness, emptiness, vulgarity, rashness, precipitancy and sinisternesse of their silly censures, into the balance of Religion, contrary to the renowned learning, piety, gravity, grace and majesty of all those who have had so great favour, love, respect and honour for the Church of England. Whom her spiteful and envious adversaries now presume to follow with nothing but Contumelies and anathemas, with pillagings and spoilings, with rail and revile, with waste and ruin, to the excessive joy of Her. Papal enemies, whose deeply-designed policies have a long time desired and hoped to see that woeful day befall the Church of England, in which her Bishops might beg, her Presbyters be starved, her Ministry contemned, her Liturgy ejected, her Unity dissolved and broken, her Ancient and Primitive Government abolished, her undoubted ordination and succession of Ministers interrupted, her whole Christian Frame and national Constitution (which was (for the main) truly Catholic, Primitive and Apostolic) destroyed, dissipated, desolated. What invincible Armadas could not achieve, what monstrous Powderplots could not accomplish, what wily Jesuits and other subtle Sophisters despaired to attain (having been oft defeated and repelled by the learned care and vigilant puissance of wise Princes, sober Parliaments, reverend Bishops, and other able Ministers of the Church of England) that the weakness, wantonness and wickedness of some of our own petty Sectaries, Schismatic Agitators, & super●reforming Reformers, is likely to bring to pass; whom the most admired and devout Lord Primate of Armagh (a great Prophet of God, and Pillar of the Reformed Religion) sometime told me, he esteemed no other than Factors for Popery, and Engines for Roman designs, by divisions and domestic confusions of Religion, to bring in Popish Superstition and Tyranny. Indeed a prudent Conjecturer may in this case easily make a true Prophet: For the Roman Eagle (a watchful, powerful and voracious bird) can never fail (at last) to seize on these parts of Christendom for her prey, where she shall see Ignorance prevail against Knowledge, Barbarity against Learning, Division against Unity, Confusion against Order, People against their Priests, Novelty against Antiquity, Anarchy against Catholic Authority, and infinite deformities ushered in, under the title of special Reformations. That cunning Conclave (which overlooks the Christian world as the greatest constellation of policy in the West) knows full well, that such feverish distempers in any Church or Christian State, as now afflict the Church of England, will not fail (if they long continue) to bring it to such an hectic consumption as will quite destroy its former healthful constitution, and prepare it for those Italian Empirics, who will come then to be in request with common people, when they find no good to be got by the best-reputed Physicians, the most specious Reformers: when these are at their wits ends, so differing in their judgements and practice, that they know not what to do, by reason of the madness, impatiency and petulancy of people; those foreign Mountebanks will always promise men help and cure at an easy rate; for they require no more of the most desperate patients, than to credit their receipts, to be confident of, and reconciled to the skill and artifice of the Church of Rome their Mother, and the Pope their Father. CHAP. VI The causeless malice and ingratitude of the Church of England's enemies. I Cannot believe, that any of you (who are persons of Learning, Honour, and Integrity, lovers of your Country and the Reformed Religion) can be wholly strangers to the sad and dangerous condition of the Church of England. Nor can you (if rightly set forth to you) be unaffected with it; (unless your designs and fortunes are to be advanced by the rents and ruins of this Church of England.) In which (as the Lord liveth, before whom we all stand) distempers are risen▪ not only to Divisions, but Distractions; not only to Injuries, but Insolences; not only to Obloquys, but Oppressions; not only to Schisms, but Abscissions; not only to Factions, but Confusions; not only to Lapses, but Apostasies; not only to rude Deformities, but they tend to absolute Nullities, as to any Christian Harmony, Fraternity, Order, Beauty, Unity, Strength, Safety, and public settling of that Reformed Religion which was once professed in the Church of England: And this by reason of the Envies, Despites, Rudenesses, Animosities, Seditions, Strifes, Separations, Rail, Reproaches, Contumelies, Blasphemies, and profane Novelties, every where pregnant and predominant among vulgar spirits, and odiously cast upon all things that you and your forefathers esteemed as religious and sacred in this Church of England. Ezek. 47.4. The torrent of rebukes and troubles (like Ezekiels waters) is now risen, not only to the ankles and knees, but to the loins and neck; growing too rapid and deep for the common people to wade over, or venture into: nor are they safe for any to engage upon, but those who (as S. Christopher is represented in the Legendary Emblem) are heightened by their own integrity, and supported by God's heroic Spirit: for it is a black and dangerous, a red and dead Sea, upon which he adventures, who will now seriously assert the Church of England; whose troubled state is more stormy than those waters were on which S. Peter ventured to walk, or wherein our blessed Saviour slept; with whose Disciples we may well cry out, Master, save us, we perish. Mat. 8.25. What tongue, what pen can sufficiently set forth the rudenesses, outrages, barbarities, despites, diminutions and indignities, which some have offered in their speeches and writings, in their pamphlets and petitions, in their restless agitations and implacable malice, against all that was established in the Church of England, contrary to that duty of Charity they owed, and that profession of Communion they sometimes professed; being possessed (now) with so fierce a spirit, that they have broken all cords and bands of Humanity, Civility, Charity and Piety, both private and public? I shall not need to mind you or any of them of their many oaths and subscriptions, of those Protestations, Vows and Covenants which many of these (now deserters and destroyers of the Church of England) so easily and eagerly swallowed: by which last threefold cord, most of them (I believe) tied themselves to maintain the Protestant Religion, as it was established in the Church of England. If any of them were so wise and cautious as to avoid such politic gins (which how far they intended well to Church or State God only knows; this to be sure all sober Christians see, that they have little advanced the state of the Reformed Religion in England:) yet still they must know, that themselves, and all that are good Christians, and honest English, are bound by far higher and nobler bonds of their baptismal Vow and Covenant to their God and Saviour; from whence do necessarily flow those of Christian gratitude, duty, love and charity, obliging every good Christian to pray for and preserve the welfare of this Church, and that Reformed Religion which was once happily established in it; in which the glory of our God, the honour of our Saviour, the good of our Country, and the salvation of many thousand souls, are highly concerned. Against all which, for any man, upon small or no account, rashly, proudly, spitefully, out of envy, covetousness, ambition, or any other depraved lust and passion, to offend (especially where so great light of Divine Truth and Grace, such a presence and pregnancy of God's a Ubi ecclesia, ibi & Spiritus; & ubi Spiritus Dei, illic ecclesia, & omnis gratia. Iren. l. 3. c. 40. Spirit clearly shines, as doth in the Church of England, to the very dazzling of the eyes of these Adversaries) must needs be such a complicated and resolved wickedness, a sin of so enormous and transcendent a nature, that Irenaeus counts it a b Judicabit eos (Deus) qui schismata operantur, qui sunt immanes; suam utilitatem potius considerantes, qu●m unitatem ecclesiae— propter modicas causas magnum & gloriosum Christi corpus conscindunt, & dividunt, & quantum in ipsis est interficiunt. Irenae. l. 4. c. 62. mangling or killing of Christ again: and in earnest, it seems scarce pardonable, because 'tis scarce a repentable sin, or repairable malice; therefore hardly to be repent of, because few can plead (with S. Paul) they c 1 Tim. 1.13. do it ignorantly, and so hope to obtain mercy, being wilful persecutors and vastators of such an excellent and illustrious Church as this of England was, before these spoilers thus came upon it to make havoc of it. In which Church, if those holy Means and Divine Graces which accompany salvation were not professed and enjoyed, for my part, I despair any where to find the way of Truth and Peace, of holiness and happiness. I know nothing truly excellent and necessary in any Church, ancient or later, which this Church of England did not enjoy; yea I find, many things which seem less convenient or more superfluous in others, we were happily freed from. Nor can I yet discover any material defect in the Church of England, as to Christians outward polity, inward tranquillity, and eternal felicity. Nothing either pious or peaceful, moral or mysterious, ritual or spiritual, orderly or comely, that may contribute to the good of men's souls, but was plentifully to be enjoyed in the Church of England; whose rare accomplishments and prosperity (both inward and outward) were (I believe) the greatest eyesore and grievance in the world, both to evil men and devils; when they saw that Truth and Holiness, those Graces and Virtues, those spiritual gifts and comforts, which were here entertained with excellent learning, noble encouragements, ingenuous honours, peaceable serenity, and munificent plenty: in all which the Reformed Church of England so flourished many years by Gods and man's indulgence, that nothing (in truth) was wanting to the perpetuity of its prosperity, but moderation, humility and charity: these would (on all sides) have kept out luxury and laziness, pride and envy; the usual moths and worms which breed in all things that are full and fair, opulent and prosperous. Which humane defects (justly unblamable on man's part, and punishable on Gods) may no way be imputed to the Church of England, (which afforded so great advantages of welldoing & well-being to all good Christians) but to us poor mortals, who were prone to abuse so great Indulgences of God and man: so uncharitable, unthankful and unreasonable are those malcontents, who blame the fullness of the breast, or the sweetness of that milk & honey, of which they have eat and drank too much; who either from other men's failings and infirmities, or from their own corrupt fancies and conceits, do take occasion to blast and blaspheme all that was Reform, sacred and settled, as to Religion, in the Church of England; so filling all places with their dust and clamours against this Church, that the levity and easiness of many people have quite forsaken it, running, like those that are scared with Earthquakes, out of their houses, cities and temples, to heaths, woods and wildernesses. Some out of a sequacious easiness and vulgar baseness (studying to comply with their leaders interests and their own advantages) affect to appear to the world, not only neglective and indifferent, but scorners and high opposers of all that ever the Church of England pretended to, as to the Truth, Reformation, Wisdom, Spirit, Power, or Grace of Religion; neither caring what they condemn, nor much minding upon what grounds they do it. Others taking advantage of the levity, looseness, covetousness, sacrilege, arrogancy, injuriousness and madness of some that heretofore professed special purity and strictness in Religion, do resolve (as those Heathens of old, who excused their own thefts and wantonnesses, by the lubricities and pranks of their Gods) fully to gratify their own licentious & native inclinations, how inordinate soever, utterly casting off and abhorring all outward form and profession, as well as all inward power and persuasion of godliness; counting all Religious duties to be no better than consecrated rattles, which Politicians put into the hands of the common people, to please and compose their childish frowardness. The ground and rise of all which is, from those many scandals which loose and unsettled tempers take from those endless strifes and janglings; the continued disorders and deformities, the poverty and contempt, the maims and wounds, the cruelty and uncharitableness, with which some highflown Reformers have of late treated the Church of England, and those that have most constantly adhered to it. What man or woman, capable of such profound, serious and grave thoughts as become Christian Religion, whose lusts or interests have not quite decocted all Humanity as well as Piety, can behold, Job 2.13. without seven day's silence and astonishment (like Job's friends) the rueful and dismal spectacle of the Church of England? which is like Job or Lazarus, living indeed, but almost buried in its Sores and Sorrows; not only lying, but even dying on its dunghill; like the sometime lovely and beautiful Daughter of Zion, now grovelling in the dust, Lam. 1. deserving another tenderhearted Jeremy, Jer. 9.1. who might write the book of England's Lamentations with his Tears, since the History of her Fall and Ruin is written in blood: Her own brood (like the young Pelicans) feeding upon her without any pity or remorse, growing daily fiercer after they have once tasted of her flesh, and more resolute (as Absalon) by the rapes they have rudely made upon a Matron, lately so comely, chaste and honourable, whom Her destroyers dare now to count and call the filth and offscouring of all Churches; crying down Her holy habitations and conventions, as cages and flocks of unclean birds; Her holy Ministrations, as impious and odious; Her holy Bishops and Ministers, as Antichristian usurpers and impostors; Her whole Constitution, as Babylonish and abominable, worthy of nothing but their curses and comminations. CHAP. VII. Of the excellent constitution of the Ch. of Engl. and her undeserved calamities. HAth * Jer. 2.11. any Nation changed Her Gods, though they are no Gods? saith the Prophet, expostulating with the inconstant and Apostatising Jews, who had despised the Word, forsaken the Law, and broken the everlasting covenant of God, made with their forefathers. What people (that owns a God, or a Saviour, or a Soul immortal, or any Divine Veneration, under the name of their Religion) was ever patient to hear their, and their forefather's God blasphemed? or to see that Religion (wherein, to the best of their understanding, they agreed and professed publicly to serve and worship their God) vulgarly baffled and contemned? Was ever any part of mankind so stupidly barbarous, as to behold, without just grief and resentment, their Oracles and Scriptures vilified and abused? their solemn Prayers and Liturgies torn and burnt? Ad injuriam Deorum spectat rerum sacrarum irreverentia. Isid. è Varrone. their Temples profaned and ruined? their holy Services scorned and abhorred? their Priests and Ministers of holy Mysteries impoverished and contemned? In matters of Religion, the light of nature hath taught every Nation to be commendably zealous and piously pertinacious, esteeming this their highest honour, to be very tender of any diminution, dishonour, or indignity offered to their Religion; which reflects upon the majesty of their God, whom every Nation may in charity be presumed to serve in such a way, as they think to be most acceptable to their God; every man being convinced, that he ought to pay the highest respects to that Deity which he adores: Deos peregrinos ne colunto. Lex 12. Tab. from which to be easily moved, by vulgar clamours and inconstancy (without grand and weighty demonstrations, convincing a man of his own error, and his Country's mistake) or, contrary to the dictates of conscience, for any man shamefully to flatter, or silently to comply with any such designs as appear first reproaching their Religion, next robbing their God, and at last destructive to all public Piety, is certainly a temper so base, so brutish, so ignoble, so servile, so sordid, so devilish, that it is worse than professed or avowed a Non tam Atheus est qui Deos non agnoscit, quam qui agnitos contemnit. Sen. Atheism: for he sins less that owns no God, than he that mocks him, or so treats him, as the world may see he neither loves nor fears Him. And can it I beseech you (O noble Christians, and worthy Gentlemen) become the piety, wisdom and honour of this so ancient and renowned Nation of England, to behold with coldness and indifferency (like Gallio) the scambling and prostitutions, the levelling and abasing, the scorns and calumnies so petulantly and prodigally cast, by mechanic and plebeian spirits (for the most part) or by mercenary insolency, upon that Christian and Reformed Religion, which hath so long flourished among you and your forefathers, and which was first settled among you, not slightly nor superficially; not by the preposterous policies, passions and interests of our Princes; not by the pusillanimity or partiality of overawed Parliaments; nor yet by the superstitious easiness or tumultuary headiness of the common people; but upon learned, public and serious examination of every thing that was settled and owned as any point or part of our Religion? There was godly, grave, mature and impartial counsel of most learned Divines used; there was the full and free Parliamentary consent of all estates and degrees in this nation; there was a strict and due regard had to the Word of God, and the mind of Christ, as to doctrine and duties, to the faith and fundamentals of Religion, without any regard to any such antique customs or traditions, as seemed contrary to that rule. As for the rituals and prudentials, the circumstantiating and decorating of Religion, great regard was had in them to the usages of pure and Primitive Antiquity, so as became modest, wise, and humble Christians; who (seeing nothing in the ancient Churches Rites and Ceremonies contrary to God's Word, or beyond the liberty allowed them and all Churches in point of order and decency) did discreetly and ingenuously study such compliance with them, as showed the least desire of novellizing, or needless varying from, and the greatest care of conforming to sober and venerable Antiquity. Against all which sacred suffrages and ecclesiastical attestations for the true Christian and Reformed Religion once settled in the Church of England, now at last to oppose either popular giddiness and desire of novelties, or any secular policies and worldly designs, or any brutish power, that is neither rational nor religious, but merely arbitrary and imperious, altering and abolishing, as the populacy listeth, matters of Religion (which are the highest concernments of any nation, and so require the most public counsels, impartial debates, and serious consent of all estates;) by such pitiful principles, and the like unconscientious biasses, for a Nation to be swayed in, or swerved from the great and weighty matters of Religion, once well established, is (certainly) a perfect indication of present baseness, also an infallible presage of future unhappiness. Which I beseech God to divert from this Nation of England, by your prayers and tears, by your counsel and courage, by your moderation and discretion; who are too knowing to be ignorant, and too ingenuous to be unsensible of your duty to God and your own souls, of your respect and deserved gratitude to your Country, and to this Church of England; which was heretofore loved by its children, applauded by its friends, reverenced by its neighbours, dreaded and envied by its enemies: and this not only for that long peace and prosperity it enjoyed (which alone are no signs of God's approbation) but chiefly (as * Spiritus Sanctus, Arrha incorruptelae, & confirmatio fidei nostrae, & scala ascensionis ad Deum: ubi enim Spiritus Dei, illic ecclesia, etc. Iren. l. 3. c. 40. Irenaeus observes) for those rare spiritual gifts, ministerial, devotional and practical, which were evidently to be seen in Her; those pious proficiencies, those spiritual influences, which preachers & people found in their own hearts; those gracious examples and frequent good works which they set forth to others; those heavenly experiences they enjoyed in themselves; those charitable simplicities they exercised to each other; their numerous conventions, their fervent devotions, their reverend attentions, their unanimous communions, their cheerful Amens; those blessed hopes and unspeakable comforts which thousands enjoyed, both living and dying, in the obedience to, and communion with the Church of England. 1 Cor. 9.2. 2 Cor. 3.2. All these holy fruits and blessed effects, as most certain seals and letters testimonial, were (I conceive) most pregnant evidences and valid demonstrations of true Religion, and of a true Church, so happily settled by the joint consent and public piety of this Nation, that it was not in reason or conscience, in modesty or ingenuity, to be suddenly changed, much less rashly deserted, and rudely abandoned, chiefly upon the giddiness of common people, or by the boisterousness of common soldiers; whose buff-coats and armour cannot be thought by any wise and worthy Soldiers, to be like Aaron's breastplate, the place from which Priests and people are to expect the constant oracles of Urim and Thummim, Exod. 28.30. Light and Reformation. Such of that profession as are truly Militant Christians, that is, humbly wise, and justly valiant (as I hope many Soldiers may be) will think it enough for them, modestly to learn, and generously to defend, as Constantine the Great said to the Nicene Bishops, not imperiously to dictate, or boldly to innovate matters of Religion in such a Church and Nation as England, which was, I am sure, and I think still is, furnished with many able Divines, many Evangelicall Priests and Ministers of the Lord, Mal. 2.7. whose lips preserve saving knowledge, who have (many a one of them) more learning and well-studied Divinity in them, than a whole Regiment, nay, than an whole Army of ordinary Soldiers; whose weapons are not proper for a spiritual warfare, nor apt (as David's hands) either to build or repair a Church, otherways than as Labourers, who may possibly assist the true Ministers, who are, and aught to be, the Master-builders of God's house; whose skill is, not to destroy men's bodies, but to save their souls; not to kill, but to make alive. It must ever be affirmed to God's glory (because without any vanity or flattery) that the Church of England (for this last golden century) came not behind the very best Reformed Churches, nor any other that profess Christianity in any part of the world: which is not my particular testimony (who may seem partial, because I unfeignedly profess myself a son and servant of it;) but it is and hath been the joint suffrage of all eminent Divines in all foreign Reformed Churches, who have written and spoken of the Church of England, ever since its settled Reformation, not with commendation only, but admiration; especially those who, coveting to partake of the gifts and labours of English Divines, have taken the pains to learn our hard and untoward language. Yea, I may farther with truth and modesty affirm, that (saving the extraordinary gifts of Tongues, Miracles and Martyrdoms) the Church of England, since its settled Reformation under Queen Elizabeth of blessed memory, came not much short of the Primitive Churches in the first and second Centuries. Which had (at least some of them, as I shall after show) rather more than fewer ceremonies, partly Judaic, partly Christian; yea, far greater errors and abuses were found among some of them, than were generally among any professors in communion with the Church of England: witness those touching the Resurrection of the body, and in the celebrating of the Lords Supper, among the Corinthians. The first some denied; the other many received covetously, 1 Cor. 15: 1 Cor. 11. uncharitably, drunkenly, disorderly, undecently in the Church of Corinth. Besides the scandalous fact of the incestuous person, 1 Cor. 5. with which they were not so offended as became Christians; they were also full of factions and a 1 Cor. 1.11.3.3. carnal divisions; going b 1 Cor. 6.1. to law one with another before Infidels; undervaluing the blessed Apostle S. Paul, and other faithful labourers; c 2 Cor. 10.11, 12. ch. preferring false Apostles and deceitful workers, with no less folly than ingratitude; challenging in many things disorderly and uncomely liberties, which amounted to cloaks of malice, and a licentiousness tending to confusion. These and other corruptions were among Christians of an Apostolical Church, newly planted, carefully watered, and excellently constituted. Nor are there less remarkable faults found by the Spirit of God in six of the seven Asian Churches, mentioned in the second and third Chapters of the Revelation, while yet they were under Apostolical inspection. For the Devil, who is a great rambler, but no loiterer, began betimes to sow his tares in God's field, by false Apostles, unruly walkers, deceitful workers, mere hucksters of Religion, Judas 18, 19 schismatic Spirits, proud Impostors, sensual Separatists, wanton Jezebels, curious and cowardly Gnostics, with all the evil brood of Nicolaitans, Rev. 2.20. Simonians, Cerinthians, and other crafty Hypocrites, brochers of lies, patrons of lewdness, extremely earthly and sensual; yet vaunters (in proud swelling words) of spiritual and heavenly gifts; 2 Pet. 2.19. Tit. 1.10, 11. but more covetous of filthy lucre, and sedulous to serve their own bellies, than zealous to serve the Lord, or to save souls. In all which instances of diseases, growing even upon any of those Primitive Churches, however Christians are commanded to repent and do their first works, to keep themselves pure from contagion, private or epidemic; yet are they no where put upon the pernicious methods of reproaching, rending and separating from the very frame and constitution of their respective Churches, as they were holy Polities, Constitutions or Communions, settled by the Apostles, in decent subordinations and convenient limits of Ecclesiastical order, government, authority and jurisdiction; without which all humane societies, civil or sacred, run to mere Chaosses and heaps of confusion. Which as the God of order and peace perfectly abhors, 1 Cor. 14.33. so he no where by any Divine precept, or approved example, recommends any such practices to christian's (under the name, notion, or intention of reforming abuses crept into any Churches) presently to rend, revile, contemn, divide, destroy and make desolate the whole order, polity, frame and constitution of them, which is very Christian and very commendable. If the grand example of Divine Mercy was ready to spare Sodom upon Abraham's charitable intercession, Gen 18.32. in case ten righteous persons had been found in that city; Jer. 5.4. and Jerusalem, in case one man could have been found there, who executed judgement and sought the truth; how little are those men imitators of God's clemency, or Abraham's pity, who have studied, and still endeavour by all acts of power and policy, utterly to destroy such a Church as England was, in which many thousands of good Christians may undoubtedly be found, who are constant adherers to the Faith, grateful lovers of the Piety, and most pathetic deplorers of the miseries of the Church of England? Whose excellent Christian state and Reformed constitution deserved much better treatment from those (at least) who were her children, carefully bred, born, and brought up by her; however (now) they appear, many of them, better fed than taught, more puffed up with the surfeits of undigested Knowledge, than increased in humble, sound, saving and practical Understanding. Whence (then) the present lapses, depressions, diminutions and feared desolations, are come upon and befallen this Church of England, (which threaten you, O worthy Gentlemen, and your posterity, no less than they afflict the despised, divided and dejected Clergy) is a disquisition most worthy of your serious inquiry; that discerning the causes, which cannot be good, with the consequences, which must needs be bad, you may endeavour, with all Christian prudence and good conscience, to advance those counsels and remedies which become wise men, good Christians and truehearted English: (which Christian counsels and pious endeavours, in order to the settling of Religion in this Nation, Pag. 16. his Highness professed in his Speech at the dissolving of the last Parliamentary convention, to have expected from them.) Nothing becomes any men or Nation worse, than to own no settled Religion, as the public rule, measure and standard of people's piety, except only this (which is one of the basest pieces of policy that ever came out of the Devil's skull) to profess Religion, yea the Christian and Reformed, with such a looseness and latitude, as may expose it, with its prime Teachers and Professors, to vulgar indifferencies and insolences, yea to be profaned, blasphemed, baffled, beggared, scorned, contemned, according to the dictates, lusts, disorders and levitieses of popular humours and the vilest of men. The first is the temper of sots and beasts, who own no God: the second of Machiavillians and Hypocrites, who fear no God. It was a good rule of the Roman policy and Heathenish piety, Dii aut non habentor, aut rite colantu●. Either pretend not to the Gods, or treat them as becometh Gods. CHAP. VIII. THe outside or visible effects of the Church of England's troubles and distempers are as manifest as Miriams', A further scrutiny and discovery of the Church of England's miseries and enemies. Uzziahs' and Gehazies leprosies on their foreheads, both in respect of secular contestations, and Ecclesiastical contradictions: in both which this Church and Nation have been at once so involved, that our miseries are not only the more complicated, cumulated and increased; but they are the less curable, because less compliable with any impartial way of public Christian counsels; men's hearts being so many ways extremely divided and differently biased, not only upon civil, but even Religious differences, in which the meanest and shortest-spirited men do ever affect to appear most cruelly zealous, and most uncharitably pertinacious. The Rivalry and competition for Sovereign power between Princes or Peers, which in former ages for many years, and in various vicissitudes of civil wars, afflicted this English nation, were (yet) so far tolerable, as men still preserved the unity of their persuasions and affections touching Religion, amidst those deadly feuds and different adherencies in respect of civil affairs, with which they were distracted: which politic contests were capable of an end, either by the extinction of one party, or the uniting of both; as it came to pass in Henry the seventh's days, who laid the foundation for uniting the Families of York and Lancaster, also the Kingdoms of England and Scotland. But (alas) our late distractions, like fire from Hell, have seized not only our Barns and Stables, our Dwellings and Mansions, but our Temples and Churches, our Hearts and Souls. Religion, The Christian Religion, the Reformed Religion, this staff of national beauty and social bands is broken in sunder. Zach. 11.10. Religion (both as Christian and Reformed) this is torn and mangled, this is deformed and unchristened. Religion, whose obligations are most strict and sacred, whose breaches are most wide and incurable, this is wounded, this is ulcerated, this is gangrened. Religion, whose balsam is most sovereign to close and reconcile a sinner with an offended God, which professeth to worship God and Man united in one blessed Redeemer and Mediator Jesus Christ, this is fallen out with itself, and woefully divided. Religion, whose aim is to unite first God and man in one band of eternal love, next, 2 Cor. 5.20. all Christian professors in charitable compliance one with another, as members of the same body, and belonging to one head; this, this is the poniard, 1 Cor. 12.18. this the sword, this the spear, by which we are (in England) armed and animated one against another. Not only our heads in policies, and our hands in power, but our hearts in piety are divided. Most men in England fancy they cannot be truly godly, or justly hope to be saved, unless they damn and destroy each other, not only upon civil, but religious accounts. The silver cord of religious love is ravelled and broken; Rev. 15.6. the golden girdle and perfect rule of Evangelicall charity is not only much worn and warped, but quite pulled and snapped in sunder● we war and fight, kill and slay, we by't and devour, we persecute and oppress each other, James 3.14. not only upon humane, secular and momentary, but upon divine, spiritual and eternal pretensions. So that to find out either our distempers or our cures in England, we must search deeper than the skin and superficies of things▪ the poison is profoundly imbibed, the malignity deeply diffused, rising in its source from, and reaching in its effects to the very hearts of men: the venom and spite is hidden in the most retired cells and inaccessible recesses of men's souls: the malice and mischief are fled for their refuge or asylum to God's Sanctuary, to the very spirits and consciences of Christians; which should be the receptacles of most sacred influences, the very Holy of Holyes, the Heaven of Heavens in the reasonable soul, in which the Oracles of God, the special presence and manifestations of his Spirit, are most lively to be heard, seen, felt and enjoyed: These are either grossly darkened and defiled, 1 Tim. 4.2. or garnished with false lights, or swept with the Devil's broo●, lies wrapped up in hypocrisy, and strong delusions guilded over with godly pretensions. Here I find the greatest enemies and destroyers of the Church of England are very far from confessing or repenting of any folly, pride, levity, ignorance, lukewarmness, laziness, deadness, hypocrisy, malice, presumption, rebellion, covetousness, ambition, sacrilege, profaneness, coldness, Atheism, Apostasy, uncharitableness, disorderly walking, disobedience, or unthankfulness to God or man; all which (possibly) may be in their own hearts and hands, and so must needs have as great an ingrediency in our public calamities, as any men's sins in the nation. They rather employ all their wits and skill, their artifices and oratory, 1 John 3.12. to anatomize the Church of England, to dissect every part of its constitution; to observe, not only the practic pulse and outward breathe of its Ministers and Professors, but the very inward fibres and temper of its heart, as to all its holy mysteries, religious ministrations and ecclesiastic constitutions. Upon the pretended inspection of which, as the vitals & noble parts of Religion, they daily proclaim to the credulous vulgar, & other amazed spectators (as the astonished Augurs & Soothsayers were wont of old) that in these they discern all the portentous omens of our afflictions, all the prodigious causes and effects of our public troubles and miseries: in these they evidently see tokens of an angry God, of a provoked justice, of an armed power from Heaven, which hath begun not to chastise as a Father, but to consume as an Enemy; n●● to reform as a Friend, but to destroy and desolate as an Avenger, this lukewarm, this Laodicean Church of Engl. with all the Antichristian pomp, pride and tyranny, the superstition and abomination of its whole frame and constitution. In this point or centre of the Church of England's ill-reformed, nay utterly deformed and desperate state, it is, that these severe Censors fixed the foot of their compasses, fetching in all Bishops and Presbyters, all Preachers and Professors, all Duties and Devotions, all Ministrations and Ministers, all Liturgies and Ceremonies, within the wide circle and black line of their censorious severity, condemning all but themselves and their own way or parties; who are called and counted by some of them (in a most Pharisaic pride and uncharitableness) the only Saints, the called, Elect, and precious of God. All such as are dissenters from them they have set already at Christ's left hand, fancying it a great part of piety, magisterially to judge, and authoritatively to condemn all the members of the Church of England, both severally and jointly (though never so holy, learned, wise and good) more upon popular prejudices and sinister presumptions, than upon any just trial and serious examination; which (alas) few of these censorious Adversaries and supercilious Destroyer's of the Church of England are able to reach in any proportion, either for parts or prudence, learning or experience, Reason or Religion; being (for the most part) like Mushrooms, of crude, indigested and dangerous composition, who (yet) think themselves capable to compare with the highest Cedars of Lebanon, and fancy they are able to over-top the fairest and fruitfullest trees that ever grew upon the mountains of God in this Church and Nation. Alas, they puff at all that ever was accounted pious or prudent, learned or religious, gracious or godly, comely or comfortable, holy or happy, in the Church of England; looking upon it with scorn and triumph, as David did upon Goliath, when he was dejected, grovelling and dead: an object fit for these worthies to set their feet upon, and by the sharp sword of their zeal utterly to destroy, that neither head nor tail, root nor branch of the Church of England may remain. CHAP. IX. A general Vindication of the Church of England's former excellent Constitution, although it be now afflicted. BUt here, (as Michael the Archangel did) so must I crave leave to contend with these men about this * Judas 9 body of Moses, this carcase (almost) this Skeleton (as they esteem it) of the Church of England; which heretofore was thought to have conversed with God in the holy mountain of vision; whose face was heretofore, not only well-favoured, but it so shined, that these feeble spectators, the now blind, blear-eyed, or blood-shotten despisers and destroyers of it, were not then able to behold its glory without envy and regret. Though the Lord may seem to have slain Her with Her children, yet I cannot but believe and profess, that the salvation of God hath been both manifested to, and received by thousands, in the former order, way and dispensations of the Church of England; that no Christians need, few ever enjoyed more means of grace and glory, than were piously and prudently dispensed in the Church of England. While I live I must deny, what is clamorously and injustly calumniated, fiercely, but falsely, alleged, to justify some men's advantageous Schisms, profitable Separations, and gainful Innovations; that our public afflictions and miseries have sprung, as to their inward and meritorious cause, from the evil and unsound constitution of the Church of England, as it was once publicly reform and established in this Nation. This Calumny I can no more grant, than, that holy Job's sores grew from some unwholesome air or diet he used, or from the unhealthful temper of his body; or that Satan's malice was to be justified by Job's want of any right to claim, or eloquence to assert his Innocency, as to his practice before man; and his Integrity, as to his purpose and sincerity before God, amidst his bitter losses and calamities: which were so passionately aggravated by the unjust censures and misinterpretations of his mistaken friends, because they did not wisely consider the paradoxes of God's providences, and depths of divine judgements, Rom. 11.33. which many times inflict upon whole Churches, as well as upon private Christians, by the malice of men and Devils, many sharp and sore afflictions; Flagellat nos Deus, & erudit nos. Dolour medicinalis est, non poenalis. Aug. de pec. mer. & remis. c. 34. Disciplina Patris, non I●a judicis; amor corrigentis, non furor conterentis. Greg. m. not always for penary chastisements, but oft for trial of graces, exercise of patience, and exemplary improvements in all Christian virtues, which usually grow blunt, dull, and rusty, through long plenty, peace and prosperity, and so need sometimes the merciful files and furnaces of God's inflictions, man's persecutions, and Devils temptations; which are rather purgative than consumptive to good Christians, and oft preparative for greater splendours, both of inward mercy, and even outward prosperity: of which the Church of England hath not yet any cause to despair, because it hath a good cause and a good God. It is not more necessary than comely, for the Body and Members of Christ to be conform to Christ their Head in bearing his cross, and partaking of his agonies; Rev. 3.10. upon whom the hour of temptation (foretold) is still to come, as it did upon the Primitive Churches and Christians (with some lucid intervals) for three hundred years. There may be as good an omen or prognostic in the scorns and contumelies cast upon any Church of Christ by its persecutors, as there was in the dirt of the streets cast upon Vespasian by the command of Cajus Caesar, Cai. Caesar succensens ei ob curam verrendis viis non adhibitam, luto jussit oppleri, congesto per milites in praetextae sinum. Non defuerunt qui interpretarentur, proculcatam quandoque Rempublicam in gremium ejus tanquam in tutelam deventuram. Suet. vit. Fl. Vesp. as a punishment for his not keeping the streets cleaner (of which he was then chief Scavenger or Surveyor;) it was (as Suetonius tells us in the life of Vespasian) thought by the wise men to portend, that he should one day receive into his bosom and protection, both the oppressed city of Rome and the wasted Empire: which accordingly came to pass. Affliction is part of God's good husbandry, and is for the Church's mendment no less, than compost or manure is for the Earth's. Hence the Christian Oracles bid us to rejoice with exceeding great joy, when we fall into divers temptations of trial, Jam. 1.2. when we suffer for righteousness sake: Matth. 5.12. the spirit of Glory (as God's presence to Moses) is oftener seen in the bush or shrub (which burns, Exod. 3.2. but consumes not) than in the Oak or Cedar; in the low and mean estate of his Church, as well as in the more pompous and flourishing. S. Acts 7.55. Stephen had a clearer vision of Christ in Heaven, when the cloud of stones was showering about his ears, than ever he enjoyed in his more peaceable profession. The Lily is not less fair, nor the Rose less fragrant, when they grow among the thorns. Affliction, Cant. 2.2▪ like God's physic, hath that in healthfulness which it wants in pleasantness. Particular parts of any Church may have caustics and corrosives applied to them, when God, as a wise and wary Physician, intends both their cure, and the preservation of the whole, which may be still sound and entire as to the vital, more noble and principal parts. I well know, that it is not meet for the Church of England, or the most deserving Member of it, to dispute with Divine Justice; nor is it either safe or wise, to contest with his Omniscient and Almighty power: but rather to lay our hands upon our hearts, to put our mouths in the dust, and to abhor our very righteousness, than to quarrel with God's judgements, which are always just, though they are deep and dark, past our finding out. I think it an high presumption in the saucy Critics of these times, who pretend to read the hand-writing upon the wall, and to have such skill in sacred Palmistry, as to know the mind of God by the operation of his hands; conceiting (both vainly and wickedly) That God is such an one as themselves, delighted with the spoils and deformities, Psal. 50.21. the plunder and confusion of Churches: they boldly interpret the meaning of all the troubles in England, to be no other than this, God's anger against Bishops and Ceremonies, against Steeple-houses and Common Prayer, against Ordination and Ministry, against the whole Polity and Constitution of the Church of England; which they believe were so offensive and nauseous to God, that he was forced to spew them out of his mouth; justifying by this great argument of God's providence (as their chief shield and defence) all their Schisms and Separations, their Rapines and Sacrileges, their Reproaches and Blasphemies, their Insolences and Injuries, committed and intended both against this Church in general, and against many most worthy and eminent Churchmen in it. I do not, I dare not vindicate the Church of England before the most holy God (whose pure eyes behold folly in his Saints, and darkness in his Angels) as to the people in it, Job 4.18. either Preachers or Professors, the Governors or governed, the Shepherds or the Flock. This is sure, Isa. 5. that, where God had planted this Church, as a pleasant Vine on a fruitful hill, where he had watered it with his Word, as with the dew of Heaven, fenced it by his special power and providence, as with a wall, expecting it should bring forth good grapes, and good store; there his contrary dealing with this his Vineyard, taking away the hedge, breaking down the wall thereof, suffering it to be eaten up and trodden down, to lie thus fa● waist, without its just pruning, weeding and digging, to be overgrown with briers and thorns, commanding the clouds that they rain little or nothing upon it, etc. These sad dispensations and desolating experiments sufficiently proclaim God's controversy with the Land, and complaint against this Church, that when he looked his vineyard should bring forth good grapes, behold it brought forth wild grapes in so great a proportion, that there was no remedy, but God must be avenged on so unfruitful, so ungrateful a Nation, which was second to none in temporal and spiritual mercies, which are now become the aggravations of its sins and miseries; it being condemned to punish itself by its own hands, not for that it wanted the means of true Religion, (for what could the Lord have done more for his vineyard?) but for not using them, yea, for wantonly abusing those liberal advantages it enjoyed, equal to, if not beyond any Church or Nation under heaven. Thus before the Bar and Tribunal of Divine Justice, it is meet that we all, as men and Christians, confess our personal prevarications, and cry out bitterly, Woe unto us, Lam. 5. for we have sinned against the Lord. Yet as to man's judgement, looking upon the Church of England not in the concrete or subject matter, as consisting of many Preachers and Professors, in many things possibly much depraved and deformed, but considering it in the abstract, in the reformed form and state of it, in its former pious and prudent Constitution; I must profess to You (my honoured countrymen) and to all the World, that in the greatest maturity of my judgement, and integrity of my conscience, as most redeemed now from juvenile fervours, popular fallacies, vulgar partialities and secular flatteries; yea, apart from the sense of my private obligations to the Church of England (which are great and many, I owing to it my Baptism and Education as a Christian, my office and ordination as a Minister) all these laid aside, and looking only upon the consideration of its Religion, as grounded upon Scriptures in the main, and guided by the prudence of Primitive Antiquity, I must profess, that I cannot understand how the Church of England hath deserved to fall under those great reproaches, oppressions and miseries, which the weakness, wantonness and wickedness of some men hath sought to heap upon Her; whose causeless malice and excessive passions against the Church of England are (I think) by a fatal blindness, and most heavy judgement of God upon some men, made the sorest punishers of their own and other men's sins; their former unprofitableness, ingratitude, despite, disorderliness, and undutifulness against so venerable a Matron, so good a Mother as the Church of England was; at least it desired and offered itself to be so, even to Her most ungracious and unthrifty children, whom neither piping nor weeping, prosperity or adversity, Mat. 11.17. she could ever move or affect with such conformities to Her, or compassions for Her, as she deserved of them. I do here declare to the present age, and to all posterity, (if any thing of my writing be worthy to survive me) that since I was capable to move in so serious a search and weighty a disquisition as that of Religion is, as my greatest design hath been, and still is, through God's grace, to find out, and to persevere in such a profession of the Christian Religion, as hath most of Truth and Order, of Power and Peace, of Sanctity and Solemnity, of Divine Verity and Catholic Antiquity, of true Charity and Martyr-like Constancy in it; being farthest from Ignorance, Error, Superstition, Partiality, Vulgarity, Faction, Confusion, Injustice, Immorality, Hypocrisy, Sacrilege, Cruelty, Inconstancy; so I cannot (apart from all prejudices and prepossessions) find in any other Church or Churchway, ancient or modern, either more of the good I desire, or less of the evil I endeavour to avoid, than I have, a long time, discerned, and daily do more and more, since the contentions and winnowings of these times have put it and me upon a stricter scrutiny in the frame and form, the constitution and settled dispensations of the Church of England. No where diviner Mysteries, or abler Ministers; no where sounder doctrinals, holier Morals, warmer Devotionals, apt Rituals, comelier Ceremonials: all which (together) by a meet and happy concurrence of piety and prudence, brought forth such Spirituals and Graces (both in their habits, exercises and comforts) as are the quintessence and life, the soul and seal of true Religion; those more immediate and special influxes of Gods holy Spirit upon the soul; those joint operations of the blessed Trinity, for the justification, sanctification and salvation of Sinners: in all these I never found (by my reading and experience, nor do I know where to seek) for any thing beyond, or every way equal to what was graciously dispensed in the Church of England. Upon which grounds (appearing to me and all the unpassionate Christian World most certain) no man can wonder if I so much magnify and prefer the Church of England, that in the communion of its Doctrine, Worship, Ministry and Order, I choose to live; in the communion of its Faith, Hope and Charity, I desire to die. Let my soul be numbered among those Martyrs and Confessors, those renowned Bishops and orderly Presbyters, those holy Preachers and humble Professors, whose labours, lives and deaths, whose words, works and sufferings, helped to plant and propagate, to reform, settle and preserve, to so great a conspicuity of piety, grace and glory, the Catholic Church of Christ, in all ages and places, and particularly this part of it, which we call the Church of England. I am so far from envying or admiring any novel pretenders, who boast of their folly, and glory in their shame, in their endeavours to destroy and devour this Church; that I rather pity their childish fondnesses, their plebeian petulancies, their insolent activities, their unlearned levitieses, their ingrateful vanities, who have demolished much, and edified nothing, either better, or any way so good, as what they have sought to pull down, as to the order, honour, tranquillity, beauty and integrality of a Christian Church. So little am I shaken or removed from my esteem, love and honour to the Church of England, that I am mightily confirmed in them, by all the poor objections made against it, by the unreasonable indignities cast upon it, which are as dirt to a Diamond, but the further test and trial of its real worth and splendour: nor do I conceive, that by those afflictions which are come upon us, God pleads against the Church of Engl. but rather for Her, against the lewd manners of her ungracious and ungrateful children, for whose wickedness He makes so fruitful a Mother to grow barren, so fair an House to become desolate, so flourishing a Church to decay and wither. It is no news, where the lives and manners of Christians are much depraved from the holy rule of Christ evidently set forth among them, to see famous Churches, like the Moon in the wane or eclipse, clothed with sackcloth, and turned into blood; to see Order subverted, Unity dissolved, Joel 2.31. Peace perverted, Beauty deformed, Holy things profaned. It is no news to read of holy Prophets, blessed Apostles, orthodox Bishops, and godly Presbyters ill treated, and despitefully used by Heathens, Heb. 11.37. Mat. 5.44. Acts 14.5. Joh. ep. 3.10. Heretics, Schismatics. No men (but ignorant and unlettered) can wonder at Bibles and other holy Books burned; at Church-lands alienated, the houses demolished, and the Preachers silenced, banished, destroyed. All Church-histories tell us, it was many times so, even among the Primitive Churches, even then when their pious and Apostolic constitution was (no doubt) at best; it was most violently and desperately so just before the Churches enjoyed the greatest prosperity, & longest tranquillity; the blackest darkness usually going immediately before the welcomest break of day: as was remarkable in the serenity of Constantine the Great's time, succeeding the dreadful storm of Diocletians persecution; which was looked upon and intended as an utter extirpation of Christian Religion. Which distressed estate of the Primitive Churches of Christ, Euseb. Hist. Eccl. l. 8. c. 1. in all the Roman world, Eusebius Bishop of Caesaria (who lived in those worst days) describes with so much pious oratory, and so parallel in many things to the temper of our times, that I cannot but present you (my honoured countrymen) with the prospect of them, because the fury and darkness of that tempest reached even to the than British Churches in England; under which many Bishops and Presbyters, Noblemen and Gentlemen perished; and among others that famous Martyr S. Alban, who, as Bede tells us in his History, l. 1. rather then he would deliver or discover a pious Presbyter, whom he had hid in his house, by whom he was either converted or much confirmed in the Christian Faith, chose to offer himself in the Priest's habit to the Inquisitors, and owning himself for a Christian, though yet unbaptised, he died for that profession. Hereby the world may see how much poor mortals are prone to mistake in their calculations of God's judgements upon any Church, both as to their own sins and other men's sufferings, where the greatest sufferers are commonly the least sinners, and the greatest inflicters are the least Saints. Having in the former seven Books (says Eusebius) set forth that holy succession of Bishops which followed the Apostles in all the famous Primitive Churches, in their several limits and proportions, Successiones Episcoporum qui Apostolos sunt secuti. under the various seasons and storms of times; the Churches had (now) in the Roman Empire so great liberty, serenity and quiet, Under the Emperor Aurelian, anno Christi 270, etc. that Bishops in many places were much honoured even by the civil Magistrates; the Temples and Oratories of Christians were every where full and frequented; new Churches were every day erected, more goodly, costly and capacious: nor could the malice of men or Devils hinder the growing prosperity of the Churches every where, while God was pleased to shine upon them with his favour. Afterward, Res nost●ae nimia libertate in mollitiem & segnitiem degenerarunt. Euseb. ib. Tanquam armis & telis. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. too great liberty and ease degenerated to luxury and idleness: these betrayed Christian Bishops, Presbyters and people to mutual emulations and contentions; these soured to hatred and malice; these broke out to fury and faction; Christians persecuting each other with words and reproaches, as with arms and weapons: murmurings and seditions of governed and governor's, justling against each other, grew frequent, arising from desperate hypocrisies and dissemble. At last, being generally less sensible of their sins, than their sides and factions, and less intent to the honour of the Church and its holy Canons, than to their private passions and ambitions, the wrath of God overtook them all. Then (saith that Historian) as Jeremy complains, did the Lord bring darkness upon the beauty of the daughter of Zion; then did He cast down to the ground the glory of Israel; He remembered no more the place of his footstool in the day of his wrath; then did he profane the habitation of his honour in the dust, and made Her a reproach to all her enemies, etc. then were Churches commanded to be pulled down to the ground, holy Books and Bibles to be burnt; the Bishops and Pastors, some banished, others imprisoned, tortured and killed; all silenced, impoverished, disgraced, abhorred by the Emperor with his followers and flatterers; Christians were forbidden all holy meetings and duties, commanded and forced to sacrifice to popular Idols, and plebeian Gods, upon pain of death and torture; seventeen thousand Christians slain in one month; an utter extirpation of Bishops, Presbyters, Professors, Churches, and Christianity itself, designed, enjoined and publicly solemnised by a triumphant pillar erected in Spain, with this Inscription, An Imperial monument of honour merited by the Emperor's * Diocletiano Caes. Aug. superstitione Christiana ubique deleta, & cultu Deorum propagato. Diocletian & Galerius, for their extirpating Christian superstition, & restoring the worship of the Gods. Temporum atrocitas Scriptorum eloquentiam superabat. No pen (saith Eusebius) could equal the atrocity of those times against the Church of Christ. Yet even then the gracious spirit of sincere Christians (as the Ark in the deluge) rose highest toward heaven: then godly Bishops and Presbyters were (as another Historian writes) more ambitious of Martyrdom, Tunc avidiùs Martyria gloriosis mortibus, quam nunc Episcopatus pravis affectibus quaerebantur. Sulpit. Sever. Eccl. Hist. de Diocl. pers. than now Presbyters are of being all made Bishops: then were Christians more than conquerors, and true Christianity most triumphant, when it seemed most depressed, despised, and almost destroyed; as Sulpitius Severus writes of the same times, in his short, but elegant History. Thus Eusebius and others describe that horrid storm and black night, which was relieved by the blessed daystar of Constantine the Great appearing. In which dismal times, learned men do not quarrel at the profession and state of Religion, but at the irreligion and scandal of Christians lives: the fault and provocation was not from the Faith, Doctrine, Liturgy, Order and Government then established in the Churches of Christ, but from the degenerous, depraved and ungoverned passions of men: as they all blamed these last, whenever they appeared, Euseb. l. 7. c. 28. so they constantly asserted the other; as was evident in the Synod of Antioch, in which (a little before Diocletians time) the heresy of Paulus Sam●satenus, denying the Divinity of Christ, was condemned by all, being confuted by Malchion, a learned man, & an accurate Disputant: The * Haeres●ôs author ●b Antiochena, & Ecclesia Catholica quae sub coelo est universa, separatus est & excommunicatus. Ib. Euseb. Author or Heresiarch was excommunicated, not only from the Church of Antioch, but also from the Catholic Church, and separated from all Christian communion throughout the world, by a just and unanimous severity. Holy men then rightly judged, that the meritorious cause of all those sore calamities arose, not from the frame of Christian Churches, which was holy, uniform, and Apostolic as yet; but from the wantonness and wickedness of Christian professors, neglecting so great means of salvation, and abusing such Halcyon days as had been sometime afforded them. Which censure I may without rashness or uncharitableness pass, as to the present distresses incumbent upon the Church of England; whose holy, wise, honourable and happy Reformation must ever be vindicated, as much as in me lies, against all such gainsayers, as make no scruple to condemn, as all the generations of God's children in former ages, so those especially who worthily settled and valiantly maintained the Christian reformed Religion in the Church of England, as against all Heathenish and Heretical profaneness, so against the more puissant and superstitious Papists; also against the more peevish, but then more feeble Schismatics. CHAP. X. IT were as impertinent a work for me in these times, Mr. Hooker's defence of the Church of England unanswered, and unanswerable. to insist upon every particular in the frame of the Church of England, or to cry up every small lineament in Her, for most rare and incomparable; as it is unreasonable and spiteful in those, that deny Her to have had any one handsome feature in Her, or any thing grave, comely, Christianlike, or Church-like in her main constitution and complexion. Mr. Richard Hooker (one of the ablest Pens and best Spirits that ever England employed or enjoyed) hath (besides many other worthy men) abundantly examined every feature and dress of the Church of England, asserting it by calm, clear and unanswerable demonstrations of Reason and Scripture, to have been very far from having any thing unchristian or uncomely, deformed or intolerable, which her (then) enemy's declaimed, and now have proclaimed; whose wrathful menaces the meekness and wisdom of that good man foresaw, and in his Epistle foretold, would be very fierce and cruel, if once they got power answerable to their prejudices, superstitions and passions against the Church of England; which he fully proved to differ no more from the Primitive temper and prudence, than was either lawful, convenient, or necessary in the variation of times and occasions. The excellent endeavours of that rarely-learned and godly Divine (so full of the spirit and wisdom of Christ) one would have thought might have been sufficient for ever to have kept up the peace, order and honour of the Church of England; also to have silenced the pratings and petulancies of her adversaries. But (alas) few of those plebeian spirits and weaker capacities (to whose error, anger and activity the Church of England now chiefly owes her miseries, tears and fears) were ever able to understand, or bear away the weight, strength and profoundness of that most ample man's reasonings, and his eloquent writings. Others of them, that were more able, were so cunning and partial for the interest of their cause and faction, as (commonly) to decry for obscure, or to suspect as dangerous, because prejudicial to their interest, or to bury in silence, as their enemy, that rare piece of Mr. hooker's Ecclesiastical Polity, which many of them had seldom either the courage or the honesty to read; none of them the power ever to reply, or the hardiness so much as to endeavour a just confutation of his mighty demonstrations. Yea, I have been credibly informed, that some of the then-dissenters from the Church of England had the good (or rather evil) fortune, utterly to suppress those (now defective, but by him promised and performed) books touching the vindication of the Church of England in its Ordination, Jurisdiction and Government, by the way of Ancient, Catholic, Primitive and Apostolic Episcopacy. Which one word (Episcopacy) hath of late years cost more blood and treasure in Scotland and England, than all the enemies of Bishops and of this Church had in their veins, or were worth, 20. years ago: whose importune clamours of old, and endeavours of late to extirpate Primitive, Catholic and Apostolical Episcopacy out of this Church, and to introduce by head and shoulders the exotic novelties and vanities of humane invention, have brought themselves and this whole Church to so various and divided a posture, as makes no settled or uniform Church-government at all; by a popular precipitancy ruining an ancient and goodly Fabric (whose temporary decays or defects might easily and wisely have been amended) before they had agreed of a new model, or seriously considered either their skill or their authority to erect a new one, if they could find out a better, which hitherto they have not done, nor will they, I believe, ever be able to do; as destitute in this point of any just commission, direction, power, or precedent either from God or man. I am sure the Supreme power of regulating all Ecclesiastical affairs, was, under God, by the laws of England invested in the Chief Magistrate, and Governors of this Church; without and against whose judgements, consents and consciences, no innovations were to be carried on, nor indeed begun in this Church: whose events or successes hitherto have been only worthy of such tumultuary beginnings; the effects of them being full of dissolution & confusion to all, of injurious afflictions to many worthy men, besides penal and perpetual divisions among the Innovators themselves; who varying in this, as in other things, from the whole ancient Church's constitution, no less than from this of England, are likely to differ among themselves even till Doomsday, unless they return, under some new name, and disguised notion of moderators and superintendents, to what they have rashly deserted, the true pattern in the Mount, that paternal, Primitive and Catholic Episcopacy, which was the centre and crown of the Church's unity, peace, order and honour, which imports no more (after all this clamour and terror) than one grave and worthy Presbyter duly chosen in the several Dioceses & limits, to be the chief Ecclesiastic Overseer and Governor, succeeding in the managing of that Ecclesiastical power and authority, which, without an Apostolic Precedent or Bishop properly so called, Presbyters alone in parity or equality never did enjoy, and so never ought to exercise in the Churches of Christ, as to ordination and jurisdiction, no more than Bishops regularly may without the counsel and assistance of Presbyters. Which ancient Order, & eminent Authority of Primitive Episcopacy, if neither right Reason, nor the Word of God, either in the Old or New Testament, did clearly set forth to us as best; if neither Apostles at first, nor the Primitive Fathers after them; if neither Church-history, nor Catholic custom, nor Primitive Antiquity, nor the approbation of the best Reformed Churches and Divines; if all these did not commend it, as they evidently do (to my best understanding:) yet the late mad and sad extravagancies in Religion do highly recommend it; yea, the great want of it in England shows the great use, necessity and excellency of it, especially if advanced to its greatest improvement of counsel, order and authority. I may add the votes of all sober and impartial Christians, even now in England, who are grown so wise by their woes, as generally to wish for such Episcopacy, whose restitution would be more welcome to the wiser and better sort of Christians in this nation, than ever the removal of it was, or the medleys of Presbytery and Independency is like to be. Nor do I believe that the restauration of a right Episcopacy would be unacceptable to many of the soberest men even of those two parties, if any expedient could be found, to salve and redeem the reputations of some lay-leaders and popular Primates of those sides; whose credits lie much at pawn with the people, upon this very score, as having been by them rashly biased against all Episcopacy: the abusing of which Apostolic order on one side, and the abolishing of it on the other side, were, I think, two of the greatest Engines the Devil used to batter the Church of Christ withal; pride and parity, insolency and Anarchy, being equally pernicious to Church-polity and Christian piety. The overboyling of some men's passions (which the Scotch Thistles (being set on fire under them) chiefly occasioned) having now almost quenched themselves, by bringing infinite fedities and deformities upon the whole face of the Christian Reformed Religion in this Church, as well as otherwhere; these sad events may save me the labour of further asserting (in this place) the use and honour of Catholic Episcopacy in the Churches of Christ, which is already done, Hieraspistes pag. 259. Answer to the 5. Cavil against the Church of England. See M. hooker's Preface to his Eccl. Pol. p. 19 See Bish. Hall, Dr. Hammond, Dr. Taylor, Bochartus, etc. B. Andrews to P.M. as by my own, so many abler pens (as it was also done by Mr. Hooker) sufficiently proving, that the Church of England deserved not, upon the account of its retaining the Catholic and Apostolic order of Episcopacy, to have suffered these many calamities which have ensued since the Schisms and Apostasy of many from this Church, and from that Primitive Government: other than which was not so much as known or thought of in the Catholic Church of Christ for 1500 years; nor then when the Church of England began its wise and happy Reformation, which did not indeed abolish, but reform and continue (as became its wisdom) that Ancient and Apostolic government of the Church, which was primitively planted in these British Churches, as in all others throughout the world, long before the Bishop of Rome had any influence or authority among them, being highly blessed of God, and honoured of all good men; nor hath yet any cause appeared why it should be blasted, or accursed, or scared by Smectymnuan terrors. CHAP. XI. The excellent constitution of the Church of England, as to its doctrinals. AS for the Doctrinals of Christian Religion, this Church of England ever had so high an approbation from the best Reformed Churches, and so harmonious a consent with the most Orthodox and Primitive Churches, that it must be extreme ignorance or impudence (on this part) to esteem the present miseries of this Church as merited by Her, wherein it was indeed most exact and complete; as wholly consonant to the Word of God, so nothing dissonant from the sense and practise of the ancient and purest Churches. Yea, I find that the bitterest enemies of the Church of England, do in This least show their teeth or claws (except only in the point of Infant-Baptism;) not for want of ill will, (for nothing more pincheth them then the Doctrine of the Church of England, which was according to godliness; teaching all men, that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, they should live righteously, soberly and godlily in this present world:) but for want, as of just cause, so of skill and ability; most of them being such as have no great stock of knowledge, learning or judgement, nor very capable (on this side) to assault the Church of England, whose strength and shield is the invincible Word of God rightly understood. Therefore the cunning Adversaries and Vastators of the Church of England drive a lesser trade, of small cavelling and bite rather, as the serpent, at the heel than head; not much engaging themselves in any grand controversies of Divinity, which are (generally) above the reach of their capacities: whose feeble assaults the Church of England hath no cause to fear, against the Doctrine set forth in Her 39 Articles, Her Catechism, Her Liturgy and Her Homilies; since She hath so many years mightily maintained this post of her Doctrine against the Learning, Power and Policy of the Roman party, who are veterane Soldiers and mighty Troopers, weightily armed; in comparison of whose puissance these light-armed Schismatics and small Skirmishers are like Potguns to Canons, or Pigmies to Giants; seeking to deface the Pinnacles and Ornamentalls of Religion, but not capable to shake the foundations of it, as it was happily established and duly professed in the Church of England. CHAP. XII. NOr have they had either more cause for, The Devotionalls of the Ch. of Engl. asserted. or better success in their dispute against the Devotionals of the Church of England in its public worshipping of God, by Confessions, Prayers, Praises, Psalmodies, Rom. 12.1. and other holy Oblations of rational and Evangelicall Services offered up to God by the joint devotion of this Church: the subject and holy matter of which ever was, & is, too hard for their biting; therefore most of them contented themselves to bark at the manner of performing them; chiefly quarrelling at that prescript form or Liturgy used in this Church, under the title of the Book of Common-prayer. Which very Title, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Ign. ep. ad. Magnes. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Just. M. Apol. 2. Communis oratio voce Diaconi indicitur. Aug. ep. 119. ad Januar. though agreeable to the style and mind of Antiquity, as Ignatius, Justin Martyr, and S. Austin use it, yet (perhaps) might in time something abate, as to our English Dialect, the reverence of common people toward it, which probably might have been raised and preserved to an higher veneration, if some Title more august, solemn and sacred, had been affixed to it; as, The holy Liturgy, or, The form of Gods public worship, or, Divine service, etc. For ordinary people easily in time undervalue as trivial, even in a religious satiety, any thing which they are wont to call and use as common, which ought to be kept up by all prudent means, to all due majesty, sanctity, solemnity, veneration, not only in the use, but in the very name and familiar appellation. As to the substance and matter of this Book, The matter of the English Liturgy. the wisdom of the Church of Engl. had first exactly adjusted it to the sense of God's word; nothing being there expressed, as the mind of the Church, which was not thought agreeable to the mind of God's spirit in the Scriptures: nor do I know any part of it, to which a judicious Christian might not in faith say Amen, taking the expressions of it in that pious and benign sense, which the Church intended, and the words may well bear. Next, all the parts of it were so fitted (both as to the language, and the things contained in it) to ordinary people's capacities, as well as all men's necessities, that none had cause to complain of it, as hard to be understood, nor any to disdain it, as too flat and easy. Indeed, the whole composure of the English Liturgy was (in my judgement) so holy, so wholesome, so handsome, so complete, so discreet, so devout, that I cannot but esteem it equal at least to (yea I am prone (with Gilbertus the Germane) much to prefer it before) any one Liturgy or public form of serving God, used in any Church, ancient or later, in Eastern or Western, Greek or Latin, Romish or Reform, that ever I saw. Let any sober Christian, that is able, compare the Liturgy of England, with those now extant; as the Armenian, the Constantinopolitan, ascribed to S. chrysostom; the Greek Euchology, used at this day; that anciently ascribed to S. James; those used by the Syrian and Egyptick Churches, under the names of S. Basil or Gregory Nazianz. that of S. Cyril, of which he gives a large account in his Catechism; the Gregorian or Roman Liturgy; the Musarabick Liturgy of Spain, composed by Isidore Hispalensis; the Officium Ambrosianum, by S. Ambrose; that of Alcuinus in England, which Bede mentions; the Dutch, French, Suevick, Danish, any of the Lutheran or Calvinian Liturgies: he will find nothing excellent in any of them, but is in this of England: many things which are less clear or necessary in them, are better expressed, or wisely omitted here. As for the English Liturgies symbolising with the Popish Missal, as some have odiously and falsely calumniated; it doth no more, than our Communion or Lords Supper celebrated in England, doth with the Mass at Rome; or our doctrine about the Eucharist, doth with theirs about Transubstantiation, or our humble veneration of our God and Saviour in that mystery, doth with their strange Gesticulations and Superstitions. In all which particulars, how much the Church of Enland differed both in Doctrine and Devotion from that of Rome, no man that is intelligent and honest can either deny or dissemble. I am sure we differ as much as English doth from Latin, Truth from Error, true Antiquity from Novelty, Completeness from Defect, Sanctity from Sacrilege, the giving of the Cup to the people from the denying of it; as much as the holy use of things doth from the superstitious abuse of them; as much as Divine Faith doth from Humane Fancy, or Scripture-plainnesse and proportions from Scholastic subtleties and inventions. That the Church of England retained many things pious and proper to several occasions, which the Roman Devotionalls had received and retained from the ancient Liturgies, is no more blamable, than that we use and preserve those Scriptures, Sacraments, and other holy Services, which the Church of Rome doth now profess to celebrate and use. The wisdom of the Church of England did freely and justly assert to its use, and to God's glory, whatever upon due trial it found to have the stamp of God's Truth and Grace, or the Church's Wisdom and Charity upon it, as what it thought most fit for this Churches present benefit; finding no cause peevishly to refuse any Good, because it had been mixed with some evil: but trying all things, 1 Thes. 5 21. it held fast that which it judged good, as it is commanded; never thinking that the usurpations of Error ought to be made any obstructions to Truth; or that Humane inventions are any prejudice to Divine institutions. It knew, that though the holy vessels of the Temple had been captive at Babylon, Dan. 5.3. and there profaned by Belshazzar; yet they might well be restored again, and consecrated by Ezra to the service of God. Ezra 1.7. Some men (possibly) as conscientious, others, as curious and captious, quarrelled perpetually at the Liturgy of the Church of England; some at the whole form as prescribed, others at some particular phrases and expressions, as less proper and emphatic. It is now an hundred years old, and able to speak for itself; justly alleging first the great joy, & devotion, the piety & thanks with which it was first received as an wholesome form of Prayer, easy to be understood by English Christians; next, the great good it at first did, & ever since hath done for many years to many poor silly souls, who otherways had been left in great blindness and barrenness of devotion. Further, it pleads, that it never intended to offend any good Christian, since it studied in all things to be consonant to God's holy will and word: that as its order, premeditatedness, and constancy of devotion, was never forbidden or dissallowed by God, or any good men, Jews of old, or Christians of later times, but rather approved, exemplified and commanded in all their public services, both of prayers, praises and benedictions; so late experience abundantly teacheth, how much the advantages of true Reformed Religion were generally carried on more happily by the public and private use of that Liturgy, than hath been of late years by the rejecting of it, as many have done, and introducing in its stead nothing but their own crude and extemporary prayers; which being much unpremeditated are many times so confused, so flat, so flashy, so affected, so preposterous, so improper, so indiscreet, so incomplete, that they grow ofttimes ridiculous, sometimes profane babble and battologies, Matth. 6.7. condemned by our Saviour, when those men affect in public extemporary prayers, who have neither invention for the variety, nor judgement for the solidity, nor discretion for that gravity, fitness and decency which are necessary in all our prayers, especially when public and social. For some to pretend special and immediate inspirations, and divine dictates in their prayers, is so impudent an imposturage, that they may as well obtrude all they pray and preach for new Oracles of God, and grounds of infallible verity; for such are the Dictates of God's Spirit, not mixed with any thing of our own abilities. The verbal dislikes which some had against the words and phrases of the Liturgy are easily salved, if men will but consider the usual significancy of them at that time when the pious and prudent composers of it applied them to express their conceptions to common people. Words, as all things sublunary, have their varyings and alterations, even as to the benignity and property of their sense. They are pitiful feeble Christians that stumble at such straws, for want of so much candour and discretion in their devotions, as must be allowed in ordinary usage and civility to the changeableness of all Languages; which occasions so many new translations of the Bible, as to the emendation of some words, which time at length makes less proper, significant, or comely. It argues, the enemies of the Liturgy had no great fault to find with the matter of it, in that they so carped at the words and manner of it; which (considering the speech and oratory of those plainer times) was not only good and grave, but very apt and significant, full of holy and pathetic expressions, such as were most fit, as to inform all people's understandings, so to excite their attentions, and quicken their united devotions. Indeed, the rejection of this Liturgy, as to public use, hath deprived multitudes of poor people of an excellent help, both to prayer and all other duties of piety, as well private as public; without any valid grounds of Reason or Religion alleged by any, that I have seen, to justify their so doing. I believe the greatest fault (in earnest) that the more lazy, wanton and nauseating tempers of most men and women found in it was, its length and solemnity, which they thought tedious, as taking up too much of their time; yet sure not so much as did any way exclude the exercise of Ministers either praying or preaching gifts; of which some were jealous. But a more soft and delicate generation of Christians of later years is sprung up, which hath found out a more easy and compendious way of Devotion, which serves their turns, and must be (now) obtruded upon all others: for instead of so many Psalms, Chapters, Commandments, Creeds, Collects, Litanies, Epistles and Gospels, constant and occasional Prayers, which in the Liturgy of the Church of England were prescribed, men now make up their orisons in smaller cocks, and bind up their devotions in far lesser volumes than the Ancients used; contenting themselves (for the most part) either with long Prayers and Sermons of their own invention & composure, without reading any part of the holy Scripture, or with such as are not now so prolix & tedious, as the fashion sometime was, when weak men first affected publicly to exercise and show their rare faculty that way; which (truly) after the rate of some men's performing, is so very vulgar, empty and easy, that if a wise, learned and grave man could, yet for shame he would not so far expose Prayer and Preaching to vulgar irreverence, as some men have done, by seeking to outdo the Devotionalls of the Church of England. So that the pride and perfunctoriness of those popular affectations being now much discovered, the graver sort even of Antiliturgicall Preachers and people too, either confine themselves to a more constant method and form of prayer; or they vary so little, so cunningly and so easily, that the best of their prayers in their greatest latitude for matter and variety, is not beyond what may be paralleled in the English Liturgy, and was to be fully enjoyed by its help and constancy. Whose cold entertainment in Scotland, and disorderly rejection by some in England, as they did at once highly justify the Papists for their former Recusancy, & gratify their future designs by reproaching the Church of England, yea openly condemning here all our reformed Predecessors, for serving God so amiss, that it is not now either longer tolerable or excusable in any Reason or Religion, Conscience or Prudence: so with unpassionate Christians all this doth not lessen the sacred dignity and real worth of the English Liturgy, which is, and ever will be famous at home and abroad, among sober, wise, and impartial Christians, who know how to serve God (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) in all manner of prayer and supplication, Ephes. 6.18. disdaining no way, in which God hath testified his good pleasure, that we should or may serve him, as questionless He hath in this of public and prescribed forms both of Prayer and Praises and Benedictions; else neither of old to the Jews, nor after to the Christians, would the wisdom of God by Moses, David, and other of the Prophets, or John Baptist the great Prophet, or our Lord Jesus himself, Matth. 6.9. have so taught the Church or Disciples, to have prayed to, or praised and blessed God after such manners, or in such set and solemn forms of words, as are evidently recorded in Scripture. Which Divine warrants, as the ancient Christians in all Churches generally owned and followed, as sufficient authority for their set Liturgies; according to which Constantine the Great, as Eusebius tells us in his life, l. 4. c. 19 prescribed to his Christian Soldiers one solemn form of Latin Service; yea our late Anti-liturgists thought set forms of prayer might do well at sea, though not at land: So the Church of England is not therefore to be blamed, because some men's peevishness or petulancy hath pleased themselves in disgracing as well as disusing that holy and good way, rather answering, I fear, the wantonness of their own and other people's hearts, than any way seriously considering the sad inconveniences following the want of such wholesome forms, to be frequently inculcated upon common people's understandings, the better to inure their memories, and to work upon their affections; whom new and unwonted petitions rather lose and confound, than so inform and affect, as prayer should do; few capacities among plain people going so fast as another man's tongue, where usually a fresh petition crowds out the former, before ever poor dull people have leisure to understand what it meant, or can in judgement and faith say Amen. It is not worth my answering, what some allege against the Liturgy, that many godly people were weary of it, that they could now go alone, and so might well cast away their wooden legs, stilts or crutches. Yet by way of answer I may truly affirm, that this was not, nor ever will be, the happiness of all or most Christian people in this nation, or elsewhere, to go upon their own legs, without any stay or staff; which might well help the weaker, and I am sure could not hurt or hinder the stronger, who may upon the same pretensions refuse the benefit of any one Ministers most extemporary prayer, which to the hearers hath the same aspect of a crutch or staff, no less than that set form which by many is composed and proposed to the congregation. As for the humours of common people, they are an ill compass to steer by in concernments of Church or State. It is no wonder to see wontedness breed weariness, and weariness wantonness, & wantonness loathing of the most holy duties, and heavenly dainties (as of Manna to the Jews) unless the hearts of men be always humbly devout, and sincerely fervent: and such can (I am sure) daily follow wont wholesome forms with new fervours, and give a fresh Amen to known & oft-repeated petitions, as well as a fiduciary assent to such precepts and promises as they have heard or read from God's Word a thousand times. Without which sacred flames of constant zeal and successive devotion upon men's hearts (as the holy fire, Leu. 6.13. which was never to go out upon God's altar) not only the extemporary varieties of men's own inventions will prove perfunctory and superficial, but even Scripture itself, and the Oracles of God, will grow to be mere Crambe; yea, the repeated Celebration of the most divine and adorable mysteries of the blessed Sacraments, which Christ instituted as constant solemn Services in his Church, will prove nauseous burdens, and hypocritical loads to the dull and indevout spirits of men: whom if they be such in their hearts and tempers, no variety or novelty will quicken there niauseous and lazy hypocrisy; if they be not such, no constancy or wontedness will dull their sincere fervency, and holy fragrancy of their affections. The late ramblings, barrenness and confusion of some men's sad and extemporary rhapsodies, their rude and rustical devotions, are, especially in solemn and Sacramental Celebrations, observed by many wise Christians to be such, since the Cadet or younger Brother of the Directory, (if it deserves the honour of that name, which to many seems but as a byblow, the illegitimate issue of partial spirits, Apostatising from their former conformity to the Church of England, in that point of its Liturgy) since, I say, it crowded, or as Jacob, supplanted its elder brother, out of the house of God (though itself be now little used and less regarded, even by its first patrons and sticklers) that it makes them and me highly admire and more magnify the wisdom of the Church of England, in first composing, after perfecting and prescribing that excellent Liturgy to common people, which contained the very quintessence of all that we find used by the ancient piety and charity of Churches, agreeable to God's Word, which is the only pattern, pillar and support for Christians prayers, both public and private. Nor did the Church of England ever intent (as I conceive) by Her Liturgy, so to stint and confine any discreet and able Minister, or private Christian, but they might further pour out their souls to God in prayers and praises, publicly and privately, so as occasion required, and good order permitted: Ignatius ad Magnes. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Ne forte aliquid contra fidem vel per ignorantiam vel per minus studium sit compositum. Concil. Milevit. c. 12. only it judged (as I do, with pious Antiquity, and all the most learned Reformers, particularly Mr. a Liturgi ac publicas vehementer probo, ut certius constet omnium inter se consensus, & ut obviam eatur desultoriae quorundum levitati qui novitates affectant. Calv. ep. ad Prot. Ang. Calvin) that it is a great and real concernment in every true and Orthodox Church, that care be taken to settle and preserve wholesome forms and solemn Devotionalls, for the public celebrating of Prayers, Praises, holy Duties, Christian Mysteries, Sacraments and Ordinations; next to the care of propounding and establishing sound Doctrine, or true Confessions and Articles of Faith. Which care of all Christians good in that behalf, first induced the Ancient and Primitive Churches, as b Ab ipsis Apostolorum temporibus. Aug. de bono pers. c. 13. S. Austin and others tell us, next to their laying of Scripture-grounds in their Creeds and Confessions, to enlarge and fix their Liturgies and Devotions; finding that fanatic Error and Levity would seem an Euchite as well as an Eristick, Vid. Canon. 103. Cod. Can. Afric. Eccl. in the fourth Century. De precibus quae debent fieri ad altar, quae à sapientioribus collecti● sunt dicentur. They condemned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉▪ Zonar. in Conc. Carthag. Can. 117. Pr●yant as well as Predicant, a Devotionist as well as a Disputant, insinuating itself with no less cunning under a Votary's Cowle than in a Doctor's Chair, in Prayers, Sacraments, and Euchologies, as well as in Preachings, Disputations and Writings. This I am sure, The Liturgy of the Church of England was so useful, so well advised, so savoury, so complete, so suitable, so solemn and so significant a form of public Worshipping God, so highly approved by wise and worthy men, at home and abroad, as composed by the special assistance of the holy Spirit of God in the judgement of the first Heroes and Martyrs of this Reformed Church, so reverently used by many even less conformable (in some things ceremonial) to the Church of England, that (beyond all question) it deserved a longer question, a more calm debate, a more serene, serious and impartial trial, before it should have been so utterly abdicated or expulsed out of the Church, as Hagar was out of Abraham's family. I humbly conceive that neither Recusants should have had so great a gratification to their refractoriness, nor this so famous, flourishing and well- Reform Church should have had so great a slur & aspersion cast upon its Princes, its Parliaments, its Bishops, its Presbyters, & all its faithful people: as if they had hitherto served God so far superstitiously, irreligiously and unworthily, that the very Book itself, containing the method, form, matter and words of their public service of God, must be first vilified and scorned by the vulgar insolency; next utterly abrogated and quite ejected out of this Church, by such as passionately undertook to abett and patronise the present humours and distempered fits of popular surfeitings and inconstancy, lately risen up, not only against their own former approbation and practice, but against the piety, wisdom and gravity of this Nation, and all other settled Churches in the world. Yea further, the partiality and immoderation of some men seems in this most excessive; that, to show their implacable despite against the Liturgy of the Church of England, they cannot endure, nor would, if they had power, permit any Christians to use it, though they find it (as our Marian Martyrs did) very beneficial to their souls comfort, and therefore earnestly desire, highly value, and duly use it. So imperious Dictator's would some men be over other men's liberties and consciences, even in Religion, who are rigid asserters of their own, impatient to be imposed upon by others; and yet most insolently ambitious to impose upon other men, how far they may, or may not serve God in a religious way and manner, fancying, that nothing can please God which doth not please them. What some men have preached and printed against the English Liturgy, and all set forms of Prayers, never so good and fit, as if they were stintings and damping of God's Spirit, etc. I must confess I understand rather the jeer and contemptuousness of their words, than the wit, reason, or Religion of them: for certainly the same may be said against all Scriptures, Psalms, Sermons, preached or printed; against Ministers own Prayers, and any other proposed helps for the advancing of knowledge or devotion in men's hearts. And however some of these despisers of the day of small things, Z●ch 4.10. Luke 18.11. may say with the Pharisee, God, I thank thee that I am not as other men, who need take to themselves the help of their own or other men's prepared meditations and words to pray or praise God; yet no Charity will permit, that all others should be deprived of such public helps as they find best for them, yea and necessary, if we duly regard, not the pretended or real strength of some, but the general weakness in which the plebs or common sort of Christians are, and ever will be, as to matter of true devotion; whose infirmity may not only well endure a well-composed Liturgy (as one said he could do good music) but, in earnest, they extremely want it: and it may prove, I fear, not only a great uncharitableness, but a cruelty, besides imprudence, utterly to deprive the most of Christians of so meet and necessary an help; since nothing yet is found among them, or offered to them, that can or doth any way recompense the want of such forms of serving God, which were at least as good, and most-what far better than any private abilities can afford them. Hence it is that poor countrypeople are grown of late years more loose and unsettled, so ignorant and idle, so rambling and irreligious, beyond what formerly they were, when (at least) they were enjoined to attend the wholesome Liturgy of the Church of England, which offered plainly to them, as I conceive, all things necessary to entertain any humble, charitable and devout Christians, in their public services of God; nor could it but be very helpful to them in their private devotions. For my own particular, it may be (by God's assistance) I may as little need this Liturgy, or any other prescribed form, as any of those Ministers or other Christians that are most contemners and deserters of the Church of England in that point, and most gloriers in their own rare gift or fluency in prayer: yet I must profess, that as I ever highly valued the Liturgy of the Church of England, and most, since it came most to be despised by some, neglected by others, & considered by myself; so I cannot but unfeignedly justify the Church of England's great piety, prudence and charity in that particular; looking upon such well-composed forms, in public, solemn and constant Ministrations of the Church, to be (in many regards) before those of any private man's either serious composing or sudden invention, not only as to the majesty, solemnity, exactness, unanimity and fullness of them, also as to the suitableness of them both to all holy public occasions, and to the common people's necessities, as well as capacities; but even in regard of that which is most spiritual in prayer, judicious fervour and fiduciary assent, where the understanding rightly moves the will, and the will readily follows the understanding; the devout soul well knowing what it should desire of God, and earnestly desiring in faith what it knows God allows. It cannot be thought that the Spirit of the most wise God is seen in the unpremeditated rashness of men's praying, or such preaching, more than in what is well advised, and deliberately prepared. Which in Liturgies was and is, in my judgement, an excellent means (and so the charitable wisdom of the Church of England judged it) as to settle people in the true faith, so to keep them in it with peace and unity, by a uniform Way of instruction and devotion too; which was easy to be understood by the simplest people, and unanimously both composed and approved by the wisest and best in this Church. Nor could it but be in that, as in all other respects, well pleasing to God, who certainly doth not change with every new opinion, fancy and humour of men, be they never so zealous and seemingly devout. So that to conclude, as to this particular, the Liturgy of the Church of England, I freely profess, that I do in no sort believe, that either God hath afflicted Her for composing, enjoining and using It; or that she hath hereby deserved any of those rude indignities, reproaches and injuries cast upon Her and It. The greatest fault and only blame as I conceive, in this part, lies upon men's own hearts, which were grown so squeamish, so cold, so coy, so formal, so indevout in the use of the Liturgy, as a part of God's service: which faults and defects in themselves ought not to have been by them imputed to, or revenged so severely upon the book and composure itself, or upon the Church composing and commending it to its Children. But the insolences of some rude Reformers, contemning, tearing, burning and abolishing the Liturgy of this Church, must be venial; since there are those that use the very book of God, or holy Bible, no better, call it an Idol, and condemning it to be destroyed: possibly more because it is in English, than because it is God's Book; which if locked up in an unknown tongue, would less discover and brand with sin their wicked practices and policies, than now it doth. The same grand interest that is most against the English Liturgy, is also against our English Bibles: both of them were great eyesores to the Papists, and are now no less to many factious Separatists, who are the Jackals or Providores for those Lions. CHAP. XIII. The Ceremonies of the Ch. of England no meritorious cause of Her miseries. THere are (yet) two grand Objections which stick in some men's stomaches, never (they say) to be digested by them, which have driven them utterly to cast off, and shamefully to spew out of their mouths the Church of England, abhorring the whole frame and constitution of it, both name and thing. The first is the enjoining and using of some Ceremonies in Religion, which some esteem as so many Magic Spells or Charms, superstitious Observations, humane Inventions, rags of Rome, will-worship, vain Oblations, brats of Babylon, marks of the Beast, brands of Antichrist; fitter for Heathenish Idolatries, or Jewish Superstitions, than for the simplicity of the Gospel, where the service of God must be in Spirit and in Truth, not in fleshly shadows; in power, not in form, etc. These and the like Rhetorical flowers are oft used to gratify men's wits and passions, rather than their reason and conscience, in the point of Ceremonies, when they are resolved not to poise in their hands, but to trample under their feet, every thing they list to dislike; notwithstanding all the counterpoise and weight which they could not but see was laid upon them by the choice wisdom and approbation of this whole Church and Nation; in which we may without vanity presume there were many men as godly and judicious as any of their opposers. I will not descend to the particular nature and use of each of them: This work hath been sufficiently done by many of my predecessors. I confess I am not so zealous for those, or any other Ceremonies (which may be spared without diminishing the substance of Christian Religion) as to forget that forbearance and charity which I owe to Christians, who may be weak & conscientiously scrupulous: nor yet am I so against these, or any other innocent Ceremonies recommended in any Church, by the joint consent of all parties, and by due authority, as for their sakes to withdraw my humble subjection to, and charitable communion with this or any other Christian Church in the world, that is otherwise sound in the Faith. I do not so affect embroideries in Religion, as to have its garments too gay and heavy, with the Church of Rome: nor yet do I so affect a plainness, as to abhor all decency: Multa toleramus quae non probomus Aug. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Dionys. Alex. ad Novat. ep. lest of all am I of that curiosity or coyness in Religion, as I will rather rend my garments in pieces, and go stark naked, than wear such an one as may have possibly some spots or patches, which might be spared, if they could handsomely be removed, but are better suffered, than to have rude hands tear and cut them out as they list, to the perturbation and injury of the whole Church. As to the general nature of Ceremonies used in the Church of England, it may suffice, at present, in order to vindicate this Church, to declare in its behalf, First, that the Ceremonies enjoined and used in the Church of England were esteemed, See Dr. Burges his Book of the Ceremonies, and what K. James declared touching them, as the sense of this Church. and oft so declared to be in the sense of the Church, and its chief Governors, not at all of the essence or necessary substance of any religious duty, no more than the clothes of their opposers were of their constitution, or their hair was of their heads; yet both clothes and hair are very comely and convenient in the social living both of men and Christians together, where neither nakedness (I think) nor baldness would become them. Secondly, It doth no where appear that our blessed God is so Anticeremoniall a God as some men have vehemently fancied and clamoured, rather than proved. This I am sure, the God of heaven, whom we worshipped in England, did institute many Ceremonies in the ancient religious services required of the Jewish Church; which certainly God would not have done, if all Ceremonies had been so utterly Antipathetical against the Divine nature, or contrary to that spiritual sincere worship, which he anciently required (beyond all doubt) of the Jew as well as the Christian, Isa. 1.11, 12, etc. Mic. 6.7, etc. Isa. 58.5, etc. as all the Prophet's witness. Nor do we find that God hath any where forbidden any decent Rites, holy Customs, or convenient Ceremonies, to any Christians, in order to advance the decency and order of his service, or Christians mutual edification and joint devotion under the Gospel; except only such as were like the shadows of the night or morning, which went before the rising of Jesus Christ the Sun of Righteousness, Mal. 4.2. importing Christ's not being yet come in the flesh, or implying the mystery of man's Redemption not yet completed by the Messias: such as were Circumcision, Gal. 5.15. which was to last no longer in force than the promised seed of Abraham came, in whom all nations should be blessed; and the Covenant of God should be declared to the Gentiles as well as Jews, under another sign or seal, which is Baptism. The Mosaic Rites and Ceremonies, as the Sacrifices, the Passeover, the High Priest, and other legal Types, as foregoing shadows, justly vanished when the substance came▪ but those subsequent shadows, Evangelicall Ceremonies and Signs, which follow, attend upon, and betoken the Suns being now risen, and present with his Church, these in point of outward order and decency, also of inward significancy and edification, may well consist with the Evangelicall worship of God in Spirit and Truth, however it be not founded on them, or confined to them, as to the inward judgement and conscience of the worshippers. We see our blessed Saviour, as he conformed to the Judaic Ceremonies, both of Divine and Ecclesiastic Institution, as in his sitting at the Passeover, and celebrating the Encaenia or Feasts of Dedication, till his work was finished; so He from the Jewish use adopted or instituted some new Evangelicall Ceremonies, to be used in a most solemn manner, as Sacraments, or holy Mysteries in his Church under the Gospel, for visible Signs, Memorials and Seals of his Love and Grace to us; by which his Christian people may be instructed, comforted and confirmed in Faith and Charity, both to God and to one another. Yea our blessed Saviour hath, by his Spirit guiding the pens and practices of the Apostles, sufficiently manifested (as S. Austin observes) that grand Charter and Commission of Liberty and Authority, 1 Cor. 14.33. & 40. Quod neque contra fidem neque contra bonos mores injungitur, indisserenter est habendum, & pro eorum inter quos vivitur societate servandum ●st. Aug. ad Januar. ep. 15. In rebus de quibus nihil certi statuit Scrip. divina, mos populi Dei, vel instituta majorum pro l●ge tenenda. Aug. ep. 36. given to his Church and the governor's of it, for the choice and use of such decent Customs, Rites and Ceremonies, as may agree with godly manners and the truth of the Gospel, best serving for the order, decency, peace and edification of his Church in its several states, parts and dispersions: not as annexing Ceremonies to the nature of the duties, or humane inventions to the Essence of Divine Institutions (which the Church of England never did, but oft declared the contrary;) nor yet binding the judgement and consciences of those that used them, to any such persuasion; nor yet invading hereby, or prejudicing the liberties of other Churches, or any Christians in their respective subordinations: but allowing other Churches the like liberty, and investing its own members in the use and enjoyment of that Christian liberty (as to those particulars) which the Church hath chosen and appointed in the name of all its parts and adherents, for their social order, for the solemnity, decency and mutual edification of Christians. Which was all that the Church of England intended in its Ceremonies, agreeable to that indulgence and authority given by Christ to It, as well as to any Church. Nor have these enemies to the Church of England upon this account of its Ceremonies, ever proved, that Christ hath repealed this grant, or denied it to this Church more than any others, or that this Church hath yet abused its liberty, or that themselves have any special warrant given them to enter their private dissent, and put in a public prohibition against the whole Church; as if it might do nothing in the externals, ornamentalls and circumstantials of Religion, without ask leave of such supercilious censors and imperious dictator's, who scorn to make the consent of the Church in things of an indifferent and undefined nature, to be their rule and law, as to outward observance, unity and conformity; & yet arrogate so much to themselves, as they would make their private opinion and dissent to be a bar and negative to the whole Church. For as the Liturgy, so the Ceremonies used and enjoined in the Church of England, were not the private and novel inventions of any late Bishops, or other Members of the Church of England; much less of any Popes, or Papists, as some have imagined: but they were of very ancient choice and primitive use in the Church of Christ, whose judgement and example the Church of England always followed by the consent of all estates in this Nation and Church, represented in lawful Parliaments and Convocations: and this they did then, when with a Martyr-like zeal and courage they put themselves into the happy state of a well-reformed Church, paring off many superfluities or noveller fancies, and only retaining a few such ceremonies as they saw had upon them the noblest marks of best Antiquity & Decency. Nor may any man, without discovering great folly and injustice, find fault with those members of the Church of England, who used those retained and enjoined Ceremonies, agreeable to their judgements, and in obedience to a public lawful command, in which their own vote and consent was personally or virtually included: so that He must by condemning such as were conformable, either condemn himself, and all others who were authors of this public appointment, or else he must prefer his own private judgement before them all. The first is fatuous Levity, the second is immodest Arrogancy. I allow as much as these men demand (and so oft impertinently decantate against the Ceremonies of the Church of England) as to that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that spiritual and inward worship of God in the rational faculties of men's souls, which the Church of England chiefly intended, and vehemently required, beyond any outward Ceremonies, of all true and sincere worshippers of God: but withal It judged, and so do I, that the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the outward man, which ought to be conform to the heart, and (being most conspicuous to others) ought also to be most exemplary and significant in those visible acts which necessarily accompany the religious, visible and social service of God; that this ought not to be rude, slovenly, negligent, confused, irreverent or uncomely, by affecting various singularities and inconformities to others, which occasion scandals, strifes, factions, divisions, animosities, disorders and confusions in particular Churches or Congregations: for avoiding of which, every private Christians spirit ought in Reason and Religion to be subject to the public prophetic Spirit of the Church in its joint counsels, 1 Cor. 14.32. consents and determinations; against which a man cannot bring any pregnant demonstration of right reason and morality, or of Faith and Scripture-revelation, as S. Austin in his Epistle to Januarius observes; having learned, as he tells us, that principle of calmness, moderation, humility and Charity, from S. Ambrose, as an oracle from Heaven. These considerations moved the Primitive Churches of the first and second Centuries, in their several grand combinations▪ and ampler distributions, even amidst their Martyrdoms and sharp persecutions (while they had no leisure to be superstitious or superfluous in things of Religion, but only were intent to Piety, Just. M. Apol. 1. & 2. Tert. de Bapt. & de Coran. Mil. & alibi. Clem. Alex. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 4. Clem. Alex. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Devotion and Charity;) these moved them to use and retain, as they had received them from the Apostles and their successors, some Ceremonies, yea many more than were used in the Reformed Church of England: which appears in Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Clem. Alexandrinus, and others. Who tell us of the holy kiss and love-feasts; of Water added to the Wine in the Lord's Supper; of Oil, Milk, Honey, a white garment used in Baptism; of Christians not washing a week after they were baptised; of constant fasts on Wednesdays and Fridays; of frequent signations with the Cross, both in religious and civil motions, as Indications of their courage and constancy in professing Christ crucified. I might add their solemn stations and vigils, their adorations and prostrations toward the East; besides their strict zeal in observing Easter, or the time of Christ's Resurrection; also their Quadragesimal or Lemen fast, preparatory to it; their not kneeling between Easter and Whitsuntide, nor upon any Lord's day on which they were forbidden to fast, before and at the Nicene Council: besides, their severe forms of exercising Discipline, and enjoining Penances to such as were scandalous offenders; Quaest. ad Orthod. Res. 115. of Christian station in prayer. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. So Res. 118. of Christians worshipping toward the East; which customs they had from those that taught them to pray. Tertull. Apol. c. 16. Hence the suspicion of Christians worshipping the Sun; quod innotu●dit nos ad orientis regionem precari. the great respect & observance which Christian people paid to their Bishops and Presbyters, yea to their Deacons in many things, who all joined in an high reverence and submission to their Bishops or chief governor's in the Church; in order to which duties concerning the Church's order and peace, most Councils of the Church spent much of their time, care and pains, next to the keeping of Faith entire and sound. If the Ceremonies of the Church of England had been many more in that kind than they were, yet since they were in their general nature allowed by God, and left by him to the prudent choice and use of this, Graviter peccant qui propter indifferentes ceremonias turbant ecclesias, damnant alios, etiam principes & magistratus. Haeccine pietas quam jactamus? haeccine charitas quam debemus fratribus & plebi? Zanc. de Redem. as other particular Churches; certainly, as learned Zanchy and other reformed Divines observe, they ought not by sober Christians to have been put into the balance of their Religion so far, as for their sakes to overthrow the peace and whole state of such an happy and reformed Church as this was, bringing infinite greater mischiefs upon Religion & the whole Church, by violently removing such ceremonies as neither impaired the faith, nor depraved the manners of good Christians than ever could be feared by the sober use of them; which did not so much as occasion any scandal or inconvenience to those that had knowing, humble, meek and quiet spirits, rightly discerning the nature of such things, and that liberty granted to themselves of submitting in them to the determination of the Church: nor can it be other than weakness of judgement, or want of charity, or a sign of schismatical and unquiet spirits, that list to be contentious (rising either from ignorance, or superstition, or pride and petulancy) for private persons in such cases peevishly to sacrifice to their private passions and persuasions, the public peace and prosperity of the Church, which ought to be so sacred (as the learned and pious Bishop of Alexandria, Euseb. hist. l. 6. ●. 44. Dionysius, wrote to the zealous and factious Presbyter Novatus) that it is not to be violated upon less accounts than those for which one would choose to suffer Martyrdom: there may be, as Saint Paul confesseth, Phil. 3.6. a zeal in them, and yet they persecute the Church of Christ. After that Divine justice hath further punished and manifested the supercilious folly and inquietude of some men, Times may come, in which sober Christians would be glad to enjoy such a state of reformed Religion in England, as they sometimes happily enjoyed, and despised under these so tedious and terrible burdens of ceremonies, as some complained, who are greatly wronged, if they have not since charged their consciences with far greater pressures than any Ceremonies can be imagined; the least wilful and presumptuous immorality being heavier than a thousand such formalities, as much as millstones are beyond feathers, and talents of lead more ponderous than the largest shadows. Experience hath already taught us, that the authentic ceremonies of the Church of England were either up hindrances at all, or far less, as to the advance of piety, holiness and charity, than the taking away of them, and the consequences have been; especially in such a fashion, as instead of ripping off the lace, hath torn the whole garment into rags; and pretending to shave the superfluous hair, hath almost cut the throat of the reformed Religion, as to its unity, order, stability and constancy, either in doctrine or duty. Sure it was far better to have the holy, complete and reverend Sacrament of the Lords Supper administered and received by humble, devout and prepared Christians, meekly kneeling upon their knees, than to have none at all celebrated for twice seven years; both Ministers and people willingly excommunicating themselves, and starving one another as to that holy refection. It was much better and more Christianlike, Caro signatur ut anima muniatur. Tert. de Res. car. to have infants baptised with the ancient sign of the cross (as a token of their constant profession of the Faith of Christ crucified) than to have them left wholly unbaptised, and so betrayed to the Anabaptistick agitators, who boldly nullify that Sacrament, when they see others either vilify and wholly reject it as to infants, or dispense with so great partiality, as if every petty Preacher were a Lord and Judge, not a Servant and Minister of the Church of Christ. It was better to have some things less necessary, yea inconvenient, that looked like order, decency and harmony in the Church, than daily to run thus to endless faction, ataxy, confusion, and irreligion. chrysostom speaking to Presbyters of Antioch, tells them, this is not their chief glory and crown, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Hom. 83. in Mat. Vid. Hieron. in Ezek. c. 44. & adv. Pelag. lib. 1. Quod Episcopi, Presbyteri & Diaconi in administratione sacrificiorum candida veste processerint. Better that Bishops and Presbyters, and Deacons officiate, after the ancient manner in Eastern and Western Churches, in white garments (under which form a Acts 1.10. Rev. 4.4 & 15.6. Angels, who are ministering spirits, are represented to us, and b Mat. 17.2. Christ himself in his transfiguration) duly administering holy things to the people of God, than to have no true Ministers, no divine or due ministrations at all, as is now in many places of England and Wales; where either Churches and people are desolate▪ or pitiful intruders, neither truly able, nor duly ordained, dare to officiate in their motley and py-bald habits, as they list; superciliously affecting such odd and antic fashions, as they most fancy to please themselves, or amuse the people with, over whom they seek to have an absolute dominion. If those few ceremonies appointed and accustomed to be used in the Church of England were not herbs of grace, or of the most fragrant and cordial sorts of flowers; yet (certainly) they were never found to be so noxious and unsavoury weeds as some pretend: the squeamishness of some people was no argument of any thing pestilent or baneful in them. There are noses that have Antipathies against Roses, and some will faint at any sweet smell. If a few modest christians could less bear the scent or sight of them, for my part, I could willingly indulge them such a connivance and toleration, as might consist with the public peace, order, and rules of charity: but I can never approve the counterscuffle of those, who for their private disgusting of one sauce or dish, rudely overthrow an orderly feast and well-furnished table; who upon the suspicion of weeds, root up all the good plants in a garden; who jealous of briers and thorns, destroy the vines and figtrees. Ceremonies, if they bear no great or fair fruit, yet they may, Sensi saepe, dolens & gemens, multas infirmorum perturbationes fieri per quorundam fratrum obstinationem, vel superstitiosam timiditatem, qui in rebus hujusmodi— tam litigiosas excitant quaestiones, ut nisi quod ipsi faciunt nihil rectum existiment. Aug. ep. 118. as hedges, be both a fence and ornament to Religion, which truly for my part I esteemed them, and so used them; nor did they grow so offensive as now they have proved, until over-valuing on the one side, and under-valuing on the other side, pertinacy and obstinacy (as S. Austin expresseth his sense and sorrow) like a pair of alternative bellows, kindled such flames of animosity, as instead of bearing and forbearing one another in love, sought to consume each other in those heats and flames, which would not have risen, had both sides more intended the substance, and less the ceremonies of Religion. There were infinite more obligations to Christian union by the true faith they jointly professed, than there were occasions of dividing by the ceremonies about which they differed. But one sharp knife will easily cut in sunder many strong cords, if it be in a mad or indiscreet man's hand. Although Ceremonies of man's invention be no more to be made rivals to Religion, than Hagar was to Sarah, or Ishmael to Isaac; yet it is hard to cast them out, (having been sons or servants to the Church's family) with scorn, unless they be found to grow too petulant, either jeering or justling pure Religion, of whose genuine substance indeed they are not; yet they may (as hair is to women and men too) be given It for an ornament: nor do they deserve to be suspected for superstitious, much less irreligious, until Christians make more of them then they deserve, or the Church intended; either so much contending for them or against them, as taketh them off from intending those main things wherein the grace and kingdom of God doth consist. Rom. 14.17. It doth not become the children of God, either so to please themselves with toys and bagatelloes, as to neglect their meat; or so to wrangle about them, as to forget either the mutual love they owe as brethren, or the duty they owe to their parents. But those little scratches, which some Anticeremoniall men's itching fingers heretofore made upon the Church of England's beautiful face, would never, I believe, have so far festered and deformed all things of Religion in this Church, if some men had not mixed of late some things of a more venomous nature and malignant design, in order to gratify the despite of those rude Demagorasses of Rome, who have most ill will and evil eyes against the beauty of this Parthenia, the Church of England. I know the common refuge of many, who eagerly opposed the Church of England in this point of its Ceremonies, was, when they could not answer those arguments which learned and godly men brought to justify the lawful nature of the things in themselves, also for the Churches undoubted liberty and power in choosing and using them lawfully; they than flew to that popular and plausible argument, which is in itself very fallacious, arguing a mind rather servile to men's persons, and enslaved to their opinions, than enjoying the freedom of its own reason and judgement: Namely, that some learned and many godly men did greatly scruple those ceremonies, being so scandalised with them, that they either never used them, or with very great regret; others bitterly inveighed against them, petitioning God and man for the removal of them. Thus do most men plead, who were but copyholders' under the chief Lords of this Faction against the Ceremonies of the Church of England. Ans. I do not unwillingly grant (as having been no stranger to some of them) that many of those who were no great friends to the Ceremonies, were yet learned, grave and godly men, such as they are reputed to be by those who pretend to be their followers, and have rather outgone them in the rigour of nonconformity, than kept pace with them in that moderation, gravity and charity, which those men seemed to have: who were not therefore sworn enemies against the Church of England, because they were no great friends to Ceremonies; yea, I am persuaded there were few of them (who truly deserved in former ages the names of godly and wise men) who would not have born ten times more such Ceremonies with patience, rather than have occasioned so great troubles and confusions to this Reformed Church, which they highly honoured and stoutly asserted against those, who under pretence of straining at gnats, intended (it seems) to swallow down Camels; and under colour of battering a few Ceremonies, aimed at last to overthrow the whole frame of so famous and flourishing a Church; which hath now suffered more from some men's malice or immoderation, than ever it can hope to recover by the wisdom or godliness of any of that Anticeremoniall party. But grant it, that some of their patrons and predecessors, who opposed Ceremonies, were good and godly men; yet still they were but men, subject to like passions as others were: Their hearts to God-ward (I hope) were sincere as to the inside of their Religion; but they might (as is usual even in good men) be much warped as to the rind or outside of their Religion, both in their judgement and practice of things, by their native tempers and complexions, as they were either melancholic, dark and scrupulous, or choleric, hot and bold, or more phlegmatic, dull and easy, or more sanguine, popular and pompous: for through the tincture of these glasses most men behold even religious forms, either as more or less agreeable to their Genius and temper: nor are they seldom less biased and swayed by the prepossessions and prejudices of their education, by custom, conversation, reputation, expectation, admiration of men's persons, addition to particular parties, private relations and interests: all which (though matters of no rational or moral weight, yet) have a strong secret tide and influence upon men's minds and professions, especially in cases disputable in matters of Religion, that are of a sceptical, dubious & indifferent nature, wherein most men are prone to be so superstitious, as to imagine that to be most pleasing or displeasing to God, which is so to themselves. Many things are by some practised, because they ever did so; and by many omitted, because they never did use them: men fly from positive superstition, with a strong rebound to negative superstition. Nor is it less superstition, I conceive, for men to think it a point of Religion to forbear or remove such things, than it is in others, to think it necessary to retain and observe them, upon a religious necessity: which last was not the judgement of the Church of England, as to any Ecclesiastical ceremonies; which were not held to be of necessity, but only of decency. The opposers of them (indeed) pressed an absolute necessity of duty and conscience to remove them. Who then were in this point superstitious persons, is no hard matter to judge. If the reputation of men's parts and piety, of their devotions and austerities of life, signified much in the outward Rites and Ceremonies of Religion, to make them good or bad, lawful or unlawful; certainly by those marks the Romish party will be able to produce many instances of exemplary sanctity, severity, and austerity in outward abstinences or observances, by which to maintain the concurrent errors and grosser superstitions of their Religion. Persons of applauded piety are many times, like smooth and ponderous wedges, the Devils fittest engines to cleave the Church in sunder; the weight of their example presents all things to the minds of weak and sequacious Christians, as great importances of Religion. So Origen and Tertullian became the great scandals and temptations of the Christian world, Vincent. Lirin. cap. 23.24. Tentatio est populi error magistri; & tantò major tentatio, quantò ipse est doctior qui errat. by the greatness of their parts, piety and reputation, as Vincentius Lirinensis observes: nor had Novatus, Donatus, Pelagius, and others of old, done so much mischief in the Church, if they had been men either obscure for their parts, or infamous for their morals. It is not only to be considered, how able men are in any settled Church, but how peaceable, how humble, how far removed from private passions, secular designs, worldly discontents, popular and pragmatic humours; all which do oft leaven men (otherwise of commendable parts and piety) especially in their younger days, when they are most prone to have good conceits and confidences of themselves. Once on wing in their own fancy, and mounted by the breath of vulgar esteem, they are loath to light, and afraid to fall, when their fame and credit are thus at stake (besides the glimmering of some oblique interests of profit or preferment, which lie within their eye and reach.) Elder years do morosely resolve to maintain what once they have adopted under the name of stricter piety and purer Religion. Few men know how to revert or recant, when once engaged in a party or difference which carries any mark or ensign of a special way of Religion. Reputation is the bearded hook, which holds most men faster than conscience to their sides, even after they perceive how delusory the artificial bait was, which first invited them to entangle themselves. I have known some Ministers of worth and ability, who in all things material agreed to the doctrine and worship of the Church of Engl. yet in point of nonconformity to some Ceremony, rather chose (being once engaged before they had so well examined all things) to live a scrambling, vagrant, and almost mendicant life, from one good house to another (by which means some of them sucked no small benefit) rather than they would take any settled living in the Church of England; in which obstinacy they persisted to their dying day: although they grew very calm and cool as to their first heats; and perceiving in time the weakness of their own and others motives, they durst not in their maturer years persuade any others, no not their own sons, which were Ministers in the Church of England, to be non-conformists, only they were ashamed to be retrograde in their reputation, though they were got well forward in their better judgements. Yea, even as to the poll and number of names (which I think to be but the number of the Beast, if we only tell noses, and not consider reasons) who knows not but the conformable part both of Ministers and people in England, were, for many years, twenty to one beyond the Non-conformists? nor did they more exceed them in number, than they equalled them every way in learning, piety, gravity, in all good words and works; yea in many things of public and more generous charity they far exceeded them: the one were, for the most part, getting and scraping for their private advantages; the other were much more hospitable, munificent and charitable. The first and second generation of Non-conformists were more excusable, and more modest in their dissentings: for, coming newly out of not only the dungeon of Papal superstition and darkness to a marvellous light of Reformation, they were jealous of any cloud or shadow which they suspected as threatening to eclipse that light; but coming also out of the fiery furnace of Romish persecution, they were jealous of every thing that had once past the Pope's fingers, lest it might be too hot for them. These good and warm men (to whose martyrly courage much might be indulged) while yet Reformation was an Embryo (in the formation and birth) were in time much worn out; men afterward began more coolly to consider the nature of the things, no less than their own fears or other mens prejudices, especially after they saw those things three times solemnly determined and settled by the public wisdom and authority both of this Church and State. The few remains of the old stock of pious dissenters (which in my time I have known) were grown so calm and moderate, as to the Ceremonies of the Church of England, that I never found they persuaded others against them. As for Liturgy and Episcopacy, I am sure they justly asserted them, as to the main, as wishing only some small sweetening of the first, as to a few darker expressions; and the softening of the other, as to some more equable regulations: which were as far from extirpation of either of them, as wiping the eyes is from pulling them out, and washing the hands from cutting them off. Yea, I know by long experience, that when the graver and more learned sort of Non-conformists perceived how mightily the Reformed Religion grew and prospered in England, amidst the Liturgy, Bishops and Ceremonies, against which some fiercer spirits had so excessively inveighed; when they saw what buds and leaves, blossoms and ripe fruit Aaron's rod brought forth, what eminent gifts and graces God was pleased to dispense by Bishops and Presbyters, that were piously conformable to the Church of England, they wholly laid aside their former heats and youthful eagernesses; which sometimes fed high, and were kept warm by the hopes and flatteries of those who expected that party should long agone have prevailed; yea many of them, now aged, both repent of and recanted their more juvenile and indiscreet fervours, advising others, now beginners, to conform to the good orders, and to study the peace of the Church of England, which they saw so blessed of God, as none in the world exceeded Her. Nor did I ever hear of any sober Christian, or truly godly Minister, who (being in other things prudent, unblameable and sincere) did ever suffer any penitential strokes, or checks of conscience, either upon his deathbed or before, merely upon the account of their having been conformable to, and keeping communion with the Church of England; nor did they ever find or complain of Ceremonies, Liturgy, or Episcopacy, as any damps to their real graces, or to their holy communion with God's blessed Spirit. At last, both good Ministers and people generally submitted themselves in all peaceableness, for many years, to the order and uniformity of the Church of England; until the late Northern Earthquake scared many by a Panic fear from their former steadfastness in practices and judgements, which had been taken up by many Ministers, not suddenly and easily, but after serious and mature deliberations: against which nothing new hath as yet been alleged to alter their minds, only old rusty arguments have been wrapped up in new furbished arms; & the strongest sword, it seems, makes the best proofs and impressions on some men's consciences, even in matters of Religion. Which (vertigo) excusable giddiness in the vulgar, but shameful inconstancy in some men of parts and learning, is no news to wise men; since (as the most renowned * Praef●t. ad exercit. in Ann. Baron. Inter caetera mortalitatis incommod● illud cens●n●ū, quod ad perniciosa & minùs hon●sta ultro populi accurrunt; ad bona & salutaria rarus & lentus vel bonorum consensus. Isaac Casaubon observes) the native mutability of men's minds is such, That they precipitantly run by shoals and troops upon changes, which are for the worst; but scarce one man of a thousand is to be won by the sense of his own and other men's miseries, or by the most importune and strongest reasons in the world, to retract his popular transports; or to revert to the better, by holy and happy Apostasies. Changes to the worse, like sicknesses, are easy and sudden; recoveries to the better, like health, are slow and difficult. Irregular zeal and popular tumults, like storms and tempests, easily drive men from their anchors into dangerous seas; but they seldom bring them back into safe harbours. The first is the work of the many, but not the wise; the second of the wise, who are but few, and who, during the paroxysm or first impression of vulgar violence, must a little yield themselves either to be carried away, or oppressed by the rage and precipitancy of such mutations, which divers sober men (no doubt) have rather suffered of late years than approved here in England, who humbly pray to recover that happy port or station, wherein the Reformed Religion was once, like a well-built, well-ballasted, and richly laden ship, safely anchored in the Church of England; where the ceremonies were but as the waste clothes, flags and streamers; no part indeed of its precious lading, but yet not uncomely ornaments, much less such dangerous burdens or blemishes, as merited the utter sinking and over-setting of so fair a vessel: which seems to have been the delight of some men; though I do not think it was or is according to the desire of the most sober & modest Non-conformists, no more than it was or is agreeable to the mind of the chief Magistrate, nor of the best Nobility, the wisest Gentry; the learnedst Clergy, or the better sort of Commons, if they were left to their free votes and untumultuated suffrages. Certainly all pious and prudent persons, who ever owned the Church of England, having now more leisure and clearer light to discern things, than when the clouds and storms first began, cannot but continually deplore their own credulity, some men's cruelty, and most men's inconstancy in religion, which have left this Church in so broken and calamitous a condition, while some oppose Her, many forsake Her, and few assert Her. Especially when they find, as they do every where, by experience, that those eager agitators against the Church of England, upon the old account of Ceremonies, Liturgy and Episcopacy, do yet, as grand Masters and most authentic Dictator's, take to themselves and their respective parties a most plenipotentiary power, to teach, ordain, rule, oversee, guide, correct and excommunicate such as they can get into their severals, divided or new-erected Churches, whose divine authority, power and jurisdiction in things Ecclesiastic, they cry up for absolute, Supreme, Divine. Thus they make, or at least fancy themselves, mutually Kings and Priests in the majesty and sovereignty of all Ecclesiastic jurisdiction, amidst their small conventicles, who wholly deny any such authority to the Grandeur, number & magnificence of the Church of England; that is the joint consent, united influence, and combined interest of all good Christians in this Nation, who publicly agreed with one mind and in one manner to serve the Lord. Yet in the manner of their Communion, ministrations or worship, who sees not, that every one of these new Master's affects to be author of his own Liturgy, persuading people to pray to and praise God, to consecrate and celebrate holy mysteries, rather after such a form as they shall either suddenly conceive, or more soberly provide; either keeping for the main to the same matter, method and tenor of devotion, which was in the Church of England, or, with great artifice, varying so much, as it may be thought to be new and unpremeditated, yea and inspired too, rather than from any ordinary gift or common habit acquired? which sober Christians know full well to be neither an hard nor a rare matter for any men to attain, who have quick inventions, moderate judgements, and voluble tongues. Lastly, even in the point of Ceremonies, (which they have clamoured for dangerous, and rendered so odious in the Church of England) even these men that are so impatient to be concluded under any ceremonies upon public order and injunction, yet many of them use two ceremonies for one, after their own fancies and inventions; not only by those emphatic looks, dreadful eagernesses, vehement loudnesses, long and extatick silences, antic actions, odd and theatrick postures, which they peculiarly choose to personate in, hereby setting off (as they think) with the greater grace and gusto, their religious performances before the people: but further, they require of their Disciples, and all that will be their followers, some things of a ceremonial nature, besides words and phrases, as special marks and discriminations both of admission to, and communion with their Churches or parties; who may commonly be known by those omissions, no less than by those expressions which they affect to use. 'Tis Religion with some, not to give the title of Saint to any but their own party; never to use the Lords prayer, Creed or ten Commandments. They have also special times and gestures, yea & vestures too, observed by them in their holy duties: some choose to sit, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Luk. 22, 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Mat. 26.20. others to stand at the Lords Supper; neither of which was the posture of Christ or his Apostles, which was a leaning or recumbency: some take it after their own suppers, others before: some familiarly hand the elements one to another: most of them use such words in consecration and distribution, as they like best, or as come first to their lips; sometimes such rude expressions (which I have known by some that were no little Idols of the vulgar) that truly no wise man or good Christian could approve them. There are that abhor to appear as Ministers of the Church of England, by wearing any gown, or so much as black clothes, in their officiating: many of them, rather than wear a black cap (which is most grave and comely, in case they need one) choose to put on a white cap, though they need none, appearing as if they went to execution when they go to preaching: some love to preach in cuerpo, casting off their cloaks, as if they went like boys to wrestling, when they go to preaching. How ill would these men take it, if any of those that are lovers and esteemers of the Ch. of Engl. should so severely circumcise their devotions, as not to suffer them to use any of those new forms, exotic fashions, or affected Ceremonies, which they have thus chosen to themselves, as the discriminations of their factions, the decencies of their profession, and the solemnities, no doubt, of their devotions? how angry would they be, to hear any men crying down all their fine new modes (which no doubt themselves think very demure and Saintly) as very undecent and superstitious, as superfluous and scandalous, as unnecessary, yea impious, because not expressly commanded by Christ, not punctually practised by the Apostles, nor any other holy men in any Church? To many of whom the strange and affected carriages of some new men in their duties and devotions, would certainly seem very ridiculous and indiscreet, if not worse, while they are such imperious and severe censurers of a few Ceremonies, thought fit to be used by the wisdom of the Church of England. Whatever these men can plead for those ceremonious customs and observations, used by them in their religious performances, which have no other signature or note upon them but only their own fancy, choice and use, that, I am sure, and much more, may any sober Christian plead in behalf of the Ceremonies chosen by, and used in the Church of England, as seemed fittest and best for the common good. There is a necessity of decency, reverence, order and convenience, for the adorning of religious duties, that are social and exemplary, related not only to God, but to men in outward profession, quickening thereby and encouraging ourselves, winning and alluring others, yea instructing and edifying all sorts in some degree; like the flourishings of capital letters, which make them not more significant, but more remarkable. These are no less lawful and necessary than discretion is to devotion, or prudence is to piety; though they are not of the highest and most absolute necessity, which constitutes what these adorn, gives being to what these only beautify, gives the inward and essential form to what these add only outward and visible forms to: Ceremonies making religious duties not more pious, but more conspicuous; not more sacred, but more solemn; not more spiritual and holy, but more visible and imitable. In all which things of a circumstantial and ceremonial nature (for Ceremonies seem no other but modified or limited circumstances, such as are time, place, gesture, vesture, posture, action, etc. all which in the general do attend (as shadows do gross bodies in the Sunshine) all the outward actions of men, either natural, civil, or religious in this life of mortality) if any men may lawfully use, as these enemies to the Church of England now do, what their private fancy, skill and will, list to set up in opposition to, and derogation from the custom, wisdom, and public consent of such a Church as England was. Certainly wise and godly men may with much more modesty, safety and discretion, follow the joint advice and direction of so famous a Church, to whom, and to its followers, some of these new Reformers will not now allow so much liberty as to follow their own judgement, and the Church's appointment too, in matters of Religion, either for substance or ceremony; which liberty they always boldly demanded, and lately challenged to themselves and their adherents, as a right or privilege belonging to them, not only as men, but as Christians; which yet by their good will no Christians should enjoy besides themselves, and such as receive the Laws of Religion from their lips. It is possible indeed for one man to be in some things, at some time and occasion, wiser than many men, (for truth doth not always go in crowds, never in rabble's) as one Layman seemed in the great Council of Nice: Socr. Eccl. Hist. l. 1. c. 5. Ruff. l. 1. c. 3. hist. Unus ex confessoribus, simplicissimae naturae vir, & nihil aliud sciens nisi Jes. Christum & hunc crucifixum. who was, as Socrates, Ruffinus and Nicephorus tell us, a very plain and simple man; yet he relieved those Fathers, when they were shrewdly perplexed by a subtle sophister in the point of Christ's Divinity, and the most adorable Trinity; whose disputative insolency that one plain man (as David against Goliath) did so rebuke, not by subtlety of his reasonings, but by the majesty of his faith and confession, that the Philosopher confessed himself evicted, convicted, converted. Such a solitary rock of Christian constancy was that one great Athanasius, (deservedly master of an immortal name) because in the sea and inundation of Arian perfidy, and the Apostasy of most, He, He persisted a constant professor, a courageous Confessor, a patient Martyr by his sufferings for so great a truth; which is of greater price than all Christians temporal lives: better all men die, as to their mortality, than Christ be deprived of the honour of his Divinity; which is the life of a believers faith, and hope for eternal life, by the meritorious excellency and infinite goodness of the blessed Jesus, both God and man. Notwithstanding these instances in cases of great concernment (which had the Scriptures testimony, & the consent of all the ancient Churches, to buoy up their undertakers against all the oppositions of men or devils;) yet in things of a less nature, which being indifferent in their kind, are best determinable by public prudence, it argues (as S. Aug. ep. 118. c. 5. Austin speaks, (insolentissimam insaniam) no small pride and arrogancy (which is the mother of folly and faction) for any one man, or some few men, whom all order and polity hath made inferior to others, either as their betters, or as the rulers and representatives of the whole Society, to prefer their own private opinions and judgements before the well-advised results and solemn sanctions of those that are far more in number, and every way as eminent for piety, prudence and integrity, besides the advantage they have of more public influence and just authority. Such indeed were the first Reformers and Constituters of the Church of England, both as to its fundamentals, and what they thought ornamentals, or ceremonies; who, I believe, had much more religious reason for what they then approved and appointed, both as to piety and policy, than we at this distance of times, and different state of things can well discern. I am sure they were masters of as much learning, and as great searchers of divine verities, as any of those new masters, who now so much blame them, and pert upon them; yea and, I believe, they had much more of true zeal and meekness, of humility and charity, attending their learned counsels and pious endeavours, than will be (at last) found in those men, who are so far from suffering as martyrs for Christ and his Church, that they seek to make this Church one of the greatest sufferers and martyrs that ever was of any Christian and Reformed Church. Those forenamed gifts and graces, which sowed (by God's blessing) those good seeds of Piety and Peace, whence a long and plentiful harvest of Blessings, spiritual and temporal, did grow, and was reaped for many years in England, by us and our forefathers; those, I believe, will carry the honest and humble Conformists sooner and nearer to heaven, than the pride, passion and petulancy of these is like to do, who now seem the most supercilious and triumphant Non-conformists against the Church of England: to some of whose violences, immoderations and imprudencies, (that I name not sacrileges, profanenesses and cruelties) the Church of England and its Children (next their sins) do now owe so much of their miseries, dangers and undo; for which I doubt not but in the day of impartial doom, they will find, that God's thoughts were not as their thoughts, nor his ways as their ways. To the jealousy and contempt which some men expressed against the Ceremonies of the Church of England, they added their perpetual quarrelling with those Festival solemnities which were appointed to be annually observed in a religious way to God's glory, and Christians improvement, by fasting or feasting, by prayer, preaching and communicating: which uses and ends being sufficient to justify all things that any Church particularly appoints or observes, agreeable to the general tenor of God's Word; yet some men's divinity hath been always bend to condemn and discountenance, even the solemn and special memorial of Christ's Nativity, Passion, Resurrection, Ascension, and sending of the holy Ghost, which celebrate no other mysteries or memorial than those, which the grand Articles of Christian faith do teach us. The wisdom and piety of the Church having, in all ages, written in Dominical or great Letters those most remarkable Histories of our Saviour's transactions on earth, in order to our Redemption; which certainly are never more observed by common people, than when they are set forth in such Holidays, and are kept with more than ordinary solemnity and festivity, or joy, such as becomes sober Christians: for which we have not only the ancient Churches general practice, but Gods own command and precedent among the Jews, to prevent forgetting or slighting of God's signal mercies. Against all which some men are so envious among Christians, that they will not endure either Ministers or neighbour-Christians to benefit their own and others souls, by preaching upon any of those special days, or occasions and subjects. They can allow State Fasts, Civil Festivals, and Commonwealth's Thanksgivings, upon petty and inconsiderable accounts (comparatively) but by no means upon such as are purely Christian, either for mortification or gratulation: in which they are so peevishly partial, that they superciliously fancy, their not observing such a day to be a service to the Lord; but they have not so much charity, as to grant that another's observing such a day is an observing it to the Lord; Rome 14.6. which affirmative the blessed Apostle allows no less than the others negative: whose uncharitableness seems in this, not only superstitious as to their own liberty, but injurious against another's, while they count them Jewish and ceremonious in observing those days, which all the world knows do not look forward to Christ as yet to come, but backward, as to Christ already come, both in the Flesh and in the Spirit; having, as to his meritorious part, finished the glorious work of our Redemption, which ought to be had in everlasting remembrance; Psal. 105.5. and left such a ministerial authority in his Church, as aught to preserve the memorial of his Incarnation, Passion, Resurrection and Ascension, until his coming again, by all such means, both ordinary and extraordinary, which may with most piety and prudence best attain that great end. Which the ancient and Primitive Churches undoubtedly did; among whom so early and eager a controversy rose, as to the punctual day of Christ's Resurrection: nor have the modern and best reformed Churches failed in these grand celebrations, to conform, as the Ch. of Engl. did, to pious Antiquity, finding no reason or Religion why they should in such lawful and laudable customs affect to vary from the Catholic pattern, so conform to the word and will of God. From which private Christians would not so easily descent, if they did not too much lean to their own understandings, Prov. 3.5. Isa. 5.21. and so fall under that woe, of being wise in their own conceits: which biasses easily betray weak and wilful men, to count good evil, and evil good; to think their own refractoriness to be Religion, and other men's honest devotion to be but superstition: of which I confess I never thought either this Church or any other to be in the least degree guilty, while they did observe such holy memorial, with public celebrity, as were appointed to the honour of God, and to the imitation of those graces which were remarkable in the eminentest servants of God, renowned in the Gospel; such as are the blessed Virgin and Mother of our Lord, as also his prime Apostles, by whose means the light of the Gospel shone through all the world. Nor do we find our Saviour himself withdrawing in such cases his conformity to the Church's practice, John 10.22. 1 Mac. 4.56. in those Encaenia or Feasts of dedication, which were thankful and joyful memorial of the restauration of that material Temple which was to be demolished; whereas these holiday-celebrations used in this Church, have respect to such things as are never to be forgotten, abolished, or changed, while the world continues, and Christ hath any Church upon earth; which I believe he will have to the end of the world, according to his promised assistance to all his faithful Ministers, who continue in the fellowship and succession, both for doctrine and authority, of the blessed Apostles. But I have done with these long and unhappy debates about the sacred Festivals, and other Ceremonies authorized by the Church of England; on which some flesh-flies (mistaking them for galls and sores, when they were but decent variations of beautiful colours in its garment) have so importunely fastened, especially in the hotter season of these late dog-days, that they have very much flye-blown the reformed Religion, and endangered not only the putrefaction, but the utter corruption of the whole state of this Church of England: whose quarrel and right in these things I should not have thus far revived or vindicated, if I had not thought it necessary by this salt of sound speech, to repress those further putrifying principles, which upon this account are daily suggested to simple and well-meaning people, against the whole frame and constitution of the Church of England. Whose public commands and settled constitutions as I always approved and obeyed, but most readily, since I best understood them in their late fiery trial; because I have found them, in great and weighty matters, serious, solid, scriptural; in lesser things, moderate, discreet and charitable: so I never had either heart or hand, tongue or pen, to assert any thing that was by private or particular men's fancies brought in, either to a peevish nonconformity, or to a pragmatic super-conformity. Though I willingly allow many of my calling to be much wiser and better than myself; yet I cannot look upon them as wiser than the whole Church of England, which saw with many more eyes, both forward and backward, than any one Bishop or Presbyter can do: whose real Innovations in later times, beyond what either the letter or usage of this Church (which best interprets Its meaning) did enjoin and authorise, I am no way concerned to maintain; nor was I ever discontent to have them both gainsaid and removed, as insolences mis-becoming any Churchman, never so wise or great, to impose upon the Majesty of so famous a Church as England was; which never needed any other additions, innovations or decorations, either in Doctrine, or Discipline, or Worship, than those which Itself had soberly chosen as a wise Mother and grave Matron, which justly disdains to be made gayer or finer by such ribbons, feathers and toys, as any of her Children shall list to pin upon her. It had better become, in my judgement, the learning, gravity and discretion of those men, who most admired and obtruded their own supernumerary and unwonted ceremonies, to have confined themselves to the Churches known Injunctions and Customs: for it were endless, if every man, never so good, should be gratified in his Church-projects and religious inventions; which became the great pest and oppression of the Western Churches; when the Bishops of Rome, by their own encroachments and other Bishop's connivance, undertook to innovate or regulate all things in all Churches, which should have been ordered either by general Councils, or by the Synods of particular Churches, as was most convenient for them. Nor in England could ever prudent men with reason have do●ed on any of their novelties, when they plainly saw that even those few sparks of ancient Ceremonies, with which the Church of England contented herself, (and which neither made nor marred Religion, being rather spangles than spots on the Church's garments) even these (I say) have a long time been made, beyond their merit, not only occasions for some to rail, others to scorn, a third sort to blaspheme the purity and honour of the Church of England; but also to schismatize in Her, and separate wholly from Her. Yea from the later obtrusions of some men's either renovations of things antiquated, or innovations of Ceremonies never enjoined by the Church, those dreadful conflagrations have grown, which have almost quite consumed Her; the quenching of which deserves (as it needs) not only these drops of my pen, but of all your tears and prayers (most worthy Gentlemen) who find yourselves (as I am) very much concerned for the honour and happiness of this Church, which was in all points prudently reform, and excellently constituted. CHAP. XIV. Second Obj. against the Church of Engl. from Church-mens personal failings. A Second grand Objection, very popular and plausible, which the enemies of the Church of England have made great use of to decry and destroy, if possible, the whole frame & constitution of It, is taken from the private infirmities, personal failings, & maladministrations, which some men have either suspected or really observed in some of the Clergy, either Archbishops, Bishops, or Presbyters of the Church of England: against whom it is objected, that either they were not so warm and voluble Preachers, as those men do most fancy; or possibly less learned and industrious then was fit for Ministers; or not so prudent, it may be, and compassionate toward weaker Christians, as became those that were stronger in the faith; Rom. 14. or lastly, not so morally strict & unblamable in their lives, as indeed all Ministers of the Gospel ought to be at all times. Hence the Adversaries of the Church of England do conclude that both head and heart were sick, that there was no sound part, Isa. 1.5, 6. that all was full of bruises and putrified sores, that in the Church of England nothing could be found worthy of a true Church, a true Minister, or a true Christian. My answer is, That all the modest Clergy in England desire to be so humble, so ingenuous & so impartial, as not to forget their own infirmities, while they complain of others injuries. For myself, being conscious how little removed I am from fall, as a m●n and Minister, I shall willingly confess, and strive to amend, what any man's charity shall with truth convince me of and for others, my Fathers and Brethren, I presume I have (because I humbly crave) their leaves to give God the glory of his own justice, of other men's malice, and of our own failings. My design is not to reproach any man in particular, but to excite myself, with all other Ministers, to such repentance & amendment as God requires, the better world expects, the malice of our enemies exacts, our own safety and this Churches distresses command of us. The Clergy of England of all degrees have endured too many sufferings (beyond any other rank or order of men) to fancy they have not had many sins. Not to own our distempers, after the long application of so rough physic, were indeed to tax the wisest and gentlest Physician, not of severity, but cruelty and superfluity: whereas the father of our souls never chastiseth his children so much for his own pleasure, as indeed for their profit. Heb. 12.5, 6, etc. God's judgements are in this very merciful, and his severities the fruits of his loving kindness, that he chooseth rather to punish us than forsake us; and to afflict us by his own justice, than to betray us to the cruel flatteries of our own lusts, which would prove ours and his greatest enemies too, if we were left to ourselves. The smart eyesalve which the Clergy of England have endured of late years, may well clear our sight so far, at least, as to discern and confess those faults which heretofore (it may be) we over-looked, or slighted, or excused, upon the common score of humane infirmity; which indulgence may better be allowed to any men, than to Ministers of the Gospel, especially if persons of eminency and conspicuity. Of all Clergymen, beyond all other men, the world justly expects (and so doth God) sobriety, gravity, exactness, 1 Tim. 4.12. even in their younger years, as S. Paul doth of Timothy; how much more in their maturity and age? Little sins in them (if publicated) grow great by their scandal and contagion: O how ponderous, how immense, how flagitious are the presumptions, the vicious habits, the wilful, open, obstinate and constant deformities of Ministers! Psal. 130.3. In all which (if the just God should be extreme to mark what hath been amiss among us, both young and old, great and small, who is able to abide it? Before the Lord who hath done it, we must, with old Eli and holy Job, put our mouths in the dust, and smother our sense in silence. Nevertheless, we are, and ever must be, pertinacious even to the death (with holy and afflicted Job) to maintain, not only the innocency, but also the merit of the Clergy or Ministry of England (as to the greater and better part of them) in respect of the people of this Nation in all degrees. Although (as David did, when Shimei reproached and cursed him bitterly, 2 Sam 16. disdainfully and injustly) we cannot but be sensible & complain of some men's excessive malice & immoderation against us▪ ye● we cannot but make an humble submission to, with an agnition and justification of that divine wrath & justice which seems to be gone out against us: before the Almighty we desire to be either silent, or confitent, or suppliant, as becomes those that are justly ashamed, and truly penitent. 'tis fit we hide, and abhor ourselves in dust and ashes, before his presence, who only can pity and repair us, by turning the causeless curses of men into a blessing, making the sacrilegious impoverishing and indignities, the ingrateful abasings and insolences of some unreasonable and violent men, an occasion of his gracious favour, and all good men's compassions toward the afflicted Clergy and Church of England: for where Churchmen are miserable, the Church cannot be happy; where the Clergy are distressed, the Laity cannot be prosperous. We are so far willing to gratify the malice of our bitter adversaries, (to whom no music is so pleasing, as any evil report brought upon the Ministers of England) as with S. Austin to make our confession to God, that we may be more vile in our own eyes before the Lord, and cover ourselves with that cloak of confusion which God hath suffered some men to cast upon us, after they have stripped us of those ancient Honours and Ornaments, with which we were by the piety, gratitude and munificence of former times happily invested, not more to our own, than the whole nations great renown in all the world. Without all peradventure, the most holy and allseeing God, who walketh in the midst of the golden Candlesticks, Rev. 2.1. whose pure eyes are most intent upon the Ministers of his Church, hath found out the iniquity of his servants, Gen. 44.16. the Bishops and other Ministers of the Church of England, not only in our persons, but in our professions; not only in our morals, but in our ministrations: Who being solemnly consecrated, and duly set apart to the service of God & his Church, 2 Cor. 5.19, 20 in the name, place, power and authority of Jesus Christ, and drawing near to his special presence, with Moses in the Mount, with Aaron in the Holy of Holies, in those glorious manifestations of God in Christ to his Church, by public ordinances and spiritual influences; Numb. 20.12. yet have not so sanctified the name of the Lord our God by our hearts and lives, by our doctrine and duties, as we ought to have done. Many of us doing the work of God (which is a great work, of eternal concernment to our own and other men's souls) either so unpreparedly, negligently and irreverently, or so partially, popularly and passionately, or so formally, pompously and superciliously, that our very officiating have been offences to God and man, our oblations vain, Isa. 1 13. Eccles. 5.1, 2. our prayers the sacrifices of fools, our pains in preaching (how much more our idleness?) hath been no better than the foolishness of preaching in good earnest. Some of us have been prone to place the highest pitch of our Ministerial care, exactness and duty in ceremonious conformities, which alone are mere chaff, miserable, empty formalities; neglecting the substance, life and soul of Christian Religion, which consists in righteousness and true holiness, while we too much intended the mere shadow, shell and outside of it: others have so eagerly doted upon their stickling against what was duly and decently established in this Church, as to the outward circumstances and ceremonies, the decent manner and form of social Religion, that they feared not (as far as in them lay) to make havoc of the power of Religion, together with the peace, unity, order, and very being of this famous Church. Many of us so over-preached our people's capacities, that the generality of our auditors, after many years preaching, were very little edified, nothing amended, being kept at too high a rack, both of affected Oratory and abstruse Divinity, for want of plain catechising, and charitable condescending to them: others in a supine and slovenly negligence, have sunk so much below the just gravity, solidity and majesty of true preaching, that the meanest sort of illiterate people have undertaken to vie with them, and to match them: infinite swarms of mechanic rivals rose up into desks and pulpits, when once they saw such pitiful preaching serve the turn, which consisted not in study, meditation and reading, but in a bold look, a confident spirit, and a voluble tongue; so that neither such preaching nor praying seemed many degrees removed from mere vulgar prating, from trivial extemporary chat. 'Tis true, few Bishops, few Presbyters among us, but may confess, that either in our accesses to that great and terrible work, unfit and unfurnished in great part, or in our converse and exercises in it, with less mortified affections and less exemplary actions, either by our ambitions, or our envies, or our covetousness, or our impatience, by our looseness, or luxury, or laziness, or vulgarity; we have too much abased the dignity of our calling, and the honour of our profession: whence justly and necessarily follows the darkening and eclipse of our credit, esteem and reputation among the people; when they see their Physicians themselves infected, their Surgeons ulcerous, their Antidotes poisonous, their Ministers helping to fill up the measure of the sins of the people, doing wickedly in a land of uprightness: Isa. 26.10▪ while justice was done to them, while all favour showed them, in plenty, peace, dignities, honours, while the fruits of Gods and man's indulgence were bestowed upon them and continued to them; then for Clergymen and Pastors to wax wanton, to feed themselves, Ezek. 34.2. and to neglect the flock which was purchased with the precious blood of Christ. Who can wonder if the wrath of God break out against us, when (as the sons of Aaron and Eli) the Priests of the Lord adventure to approach the glory of God with strange fire, with dead and unreasonable, Leu. 10.1. Rom. 12.1, 2. instead of living and acceptable sacrifices? Who of us can doubt or complain, that we bear the iniquity of our holy things, Exod. 28.38. while the anger of the Lord is thus gone out against us, and presseth sore upon us in the saddest ways of temporal calamities; loading us at once with poverty, reproach and contempt, cast upon us by popular fury and plebeian despite, which knows no bounds of justice, moderation, pity or charity, much less of any reparation and restitution; which possibly might have been hoped from the magnificence of Princes and great men, when once their anger had been assuaged, and their displeasure pacified against the distressed and despised Clergy? But vulgar fury, like the fire of hell, is consumptive and unquenchable, when once it hath leave to rebel and rage against their betters, especially such as have been their Governors and Teachers, the reprovers or restrainers of their ruder lusts and follies: nothing is more insolent, precipitant, boisterous, brutish, implacable, inexorable, Numb. 16. irreparable. 'Tis like that divine vengeance which was executed by the earth's opening its mouth (as it did upon Korah and his complices) scaring all, and threatening to swallow up the whole Congregation of the Lord, as it doth at this day; still gaping upon the whole Clergy, and the remnant of this Church of England, which yet hath escaped: Jerem. 15.19. the bayardly blindness of common people being such, that they are neither able nor willing to discern between what is precious and what is vile, to distinguish between the use and abuse of things, between persons and their functions, between divine Authority and humane Infirmity, between the essential constitution of things, and their accidental corruptions. The headiness of such Reformers would seek to put out the seeing eyes of all Bishops and Ministers, because of the weakness or wantonness of some. Nor do these popular flames know at length how to spare their own Idols and Teraphims (their Lar and Penates) those Household and familiar Gods, whom they formerly most dearly embraced, adored and doted upon, but now they have cast them to the Moles and Bats. Isa. 2.20. For it is very observable in these times, that the plebeian rudeness, coldness, mutability, licentiousness, petulancy and ingratitude of some men, hath vented itself against no sort of Ministers more spitefully and insolently, than those who heretofore were their great favourites and darlings, because they soothed them up many times, contrary to their own private judgements, and the Churches public appointments, either in a weak and wavering nonconformity, or in a wilful and wanton refractoriness, even to a despising, calumniating and separating humour, against the whole Church of England. 'Tis evident, many Ministers have found those their keenest persecutors, of whom themselves were sometimes the greatest flatterers, and compliers; slightly healing or lightly skinning over those raw sores of nonconformity, even to a greater pain and festering (as now it hath proved) which they should have seriously searched & throughly healed, by sound demonstrations asserting at once both their own judgements, and the Church's wisdom, in the pious use of its power and liberty. All which Ministers did then shamefully betray, Ezek. 13.11. when they daubed with untempered mortar, complying for their private interests and advantages, both with this Churches injunctions, and Its enemies oppositions: which shuffling, at last, put the common people into such a confusion and uncertainty of mind, that they knew not what to choose or refuse, whom to believe or follow, what to preserve, or what not to destroy; severely punishing even the authors, occasioners and abettors of their irresolutions; resolving at last to be destructive of all things that had any mark of the Church of England's wisdom and authority upon them: not content to prune off superfluous suckers, they concluded to lay their rude axes to the root as well as branches of this Church. Yea, while the Clergy or Ministers of England do justly and humbly, in the freedom and integrity of their souls, thus make their penitent agnitions to the Divine Justice, (every one seeing his own sins in his and the Church's sufferings, and best knowing the plague of his own heart) while they are, with Daniel, Dan 9 humbly prostrate before the majesty of God and the throne of his grace; some people are of such impotent malice, that they make them the more the footstool for their pride and insolency, thereby to exalt themselves the more against us. I would have such monsters of cruelty and uncharitableness to know, that however the Clergy of England do shrink to nothing before God, condemning all their own righteousness, Phil. 3.9. Luke 17.10. and themselves as unprofitable servants, that they may be found clothed with the righteousness of Christ; yet as to the exorbitancies of some men's malice, revenge, passion, covetousness, cruelty and ingratitude, which hath vented itself beyond all bounds of Christian charity, modesty and equity, against the whole frame of the Church of England, against all its Ministry and Ministers, as well Presbyters as Bishops, great and small, good and bad, one and all, no man can hinder me or them from this just plea for ourselves, in the words of soberness and truth. Acts 26.2.5. First, whatsoever the Clergy of England (either as Bishops or inferior Ministers) did enjoy and act according to the laws established, and agreeable to their own consciences, they are, in those things, not to be blamed in the least kind by any sober and wife man's censure: yet even for these chiefly it is, that some subtle and silly people do most bitterly inveigh against them, and in them against this whole Church and Nation; which must either be guilty with the Clergy, or the Clergy must be free and unblameable with the Parliaments and▪ whole people of the land, who chose, and by law imposed such orders upon themselves and their Ministers. Secondly, for the Clergies private failings and personal infirmities, either immoral or indiscreet, to which, as frail men, they may be subject; in these they desire to be the first accusers, and severest censurers of themselves: which ingenuity is sufficient to silence the malice of the worst, to satisfy the justice of the best, and to merit the pity as well as pardon of all charitable Christians, who are not strangers to their own excess or defects. Thirdly, Beyond these (which are but personal and occasional, & so venial failings) the Clergy of England do defy, and challenge their severest adversaries, to charge and convince any considerable number of them, either in private parties and conventions, or in more public Synods and Convocations, of having at any time conspired to broach or abet any Heresy or false Doctrine, any gross Error, Schism or Apostasy, any Immorality or Exorbitancy, contrary to Truth, Faith, and good manners. That liberty which some of the Clergy conceived might honestly be indulged to such people as were tired and exhausted with hard labour in the six days, for their civil and sober recreation on the Lord's day, or Christian Sabbath, thereby to counterpoise those Jewish severities which they saw some men began to urge and obtrude upon Christians, both as to the change and rest of that day; (which quarrel is not yet dead in England) this (I am prone in charity to believe) neither arose from any root of immorality in the advisers, nor intended any fruits of impiety in the publishers, who were not ignorant how far in such a Toleration they did conform to the judgement, and practise too, of some foreign reformed Churches, and to the chief instruments of their Reformation, who neither did nor do (even in Geneva) abhor, avoid, or forbid modest, honest and seasonable recreations to servants and labouring people on the Lord's day. Although, for my part, I confess, I approve rather, according to the Doctrine of the Church of England, in the Homily of the time and place of prayer, that holy & strict observance generally used by the most cautious Christians in England, which yet doth allow such ingenuous relaxations of mind, and motions on that day, as are neither impious nor scanlous, being at once far removed from Judaic rigours, and from Heathenish riots; which medium was the sense and practise too of the best and most of the Clergy in England, as to that one point of the Christian Sabbath, or Lords day, which Justin Martyr calls Sunday, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, so sharply objected against some of them. So then, as to any real enormities of opinions, or scandalous practices in Religion, the Clergy of England (taken in their polity and integrality) neither are, nor ever were guilty (since the Reformation) either in Doctrine, Worship, Discipline, or Manners: which justification is as clear as the noon-day's light, if not ourselves, nor our homebred enemies, but the Reformed Churches abroad, or the ancient and Primitive Churches might be our Judges. None but Papists and Separatists, or Anabaptists and Schismatics, have ever condemned or suspected the Church or Clergy of England of any corruption in Doctrine, of any flaw in the Foundation, of any fraud in holy Institutions, of any allowed licentiousness in our Conversations, of any undecency in our Devotions, of any superstition in our religious Administrations; in all which, according to the directions of God's Word, by the assistance of God's holy Spirit, through faith in the merits and mediation of the Son of God our only Saviour Jesus Christ, we worshipped the only true God, who is blessed for ever. As to the point of Church-Discipline, wherein some men were so clamorous and importune, as if there had been no health in this Church, because it did not take their physic, which it needed not; as the laws had not enjoined all those ancient severities and strictnesses of penances, because neither the temper of the times nor men's spirits would bear them; so the wise Bishops, and discreet Ministers under them, did so manage this point of Church-discipline for many years, by their care and vigilancy, their good doctrine and exemplary lives, their fatherly monitions and charitable corrections (as far as the laws gave them leave) that they happily attained to the real use and best end of all Church-discipline, which is the Church's peace and preservation in purity and honour, in sincerity and conspicuity of true Religion: whose interests might (possibly) have been carried higher, as to the point of Discipline, if the Clergy of England had been furnished with such a latitude of power as Primitive Bishops and Presbyters both enjoyed and exercised; which the softness and delicacy of this Age would hardly endure, especially when once the passions, novelties & ambitions of men were carried on, under the pretexts of Reformation and new Discipline; in which some men resolved never to be satisfied, till all things fell under the tuition and gubernation of their own factions: unless all Church-power be in some men's hands, no Church-government is worth a button. Not but that the remissness of some Church-governors', and the rigours of others (according to their private tempers, judgements and passions) might (sometime) by their excesses or defects (possibly) displease more calm and moderate men; as warping too much on either hand, from that medium and rectitude of charity, discretion, legality and constancy, which the Canons of the Church intended, Its constitution, health and peace required, especially in the peevishness and touchiness of those times, when many Philistines and dalilah's lay in wait to betray and destroy the Church of England. Yet amidst these seeming exorbitances of some Churchmen, it may with truth be affirmed, and is by all experience confirmed, that the state of Christian and Reformed Religion, for doctrine, manners and government, for piety, charity and proficiency, was far better, both in England and in Wales, than it now is, or is ever like to be, under those sad effects to which some men's fury, faction and confusion seek to reduce this Church. So then the maladministrations truly charged upon some Church-governors' heretofore, had not so bad an influence upon this Church and the Reformed Religion, as the later want of able and fit Governors, after the ancient way of Church-government, hath now produced every where. For the defects and inordinacies of some private Ministers (which can be no wonder, where there were above ten thousand of them) I neither approve nor patronise them in the least kind; only I plead in behalf of the whole order and function, as it stood in this Church's constitution, that a few Ministers faults ought not, in any justice or reason, to be odiously charged upon the whole Church or their profession, no more than the fall of some Angels is imputable to the whole Angelic nature. Nor do I see any reason why the infirmities or deformities of some Clergymen (and those not many in comparison) should be more a stain and reproach to their calling, than other men's misdemeanours are to their either civil or military professions: in which though there ever will be some Cheats and Pettifoggers, others Quacks and Mountebanks, a third cowards and traitors; yet these do not diminish the just honour and use of learned Lawyers, discreet Physicians, or gallant Soldiers, whose employments are then liberal and ingenuous, when they are honest and useful to the Commonwealth. It were a madness to quarrel with all Candles, and put them out, because some are small, others want snuffing, a third sort burn dimly, and have (as we say) Thiefs in them: the fogs and vapours rising from the earth, and oft darkening the Sun's light, are no diminution to its native lustre, which is the greatest visible blessing in the world, as a good Bishop and Ministry is in the Church: nor may the miscarriages of some Bishops and Presbyters in the Church of England be cast as reproaches, or made disparagements to their holy orders, much less to the whole Church; especially when we consider that the defects and faults of some Clergymen in England were mightily recompensed, yea, and over-balanced by that learning, piety, industry and virtue, which was generally competent, and in many of them so eminent, that I believe the whole world did not exceed them, and few in any Church did match them; yea many, both Bishops and other Ministers, who seemed less plausible or popular in their preaching, were yet not less sound in their doctrine, potent in their writing, prudent in their governing, and exemplary in their godly lives, having that in height and depth, which others had in breadth and length. Who but persons of egregious ignorance or profligate impudence, without wit, modesty, or conscience, can or dare deny, what (blessed be God) is and ever will be most evident to all the world, that ever since the happy Reformation of the Church of England, there have been, and still are (though their number seems now much diminished by death, and other disorders, without any due recruiting) such Clergymen (both Bishops and Presbyters) who for all worth, divine and humane, will be had (as they deserve) in everlasting and honourable remembrance? After-ages, more remote from partiality, passion and faction, will better know how to value them by the want of them, than this Age hath done, which did sometime enjoy them, and still might, if having had so liberal experience of their other Christian virtues and Ministerial abilities, in preaching, praying, writing and living, it had not sought further to satisfy its curiosity, by trying the patience and perseverance of many grave and good Ministers; to which purpose the most heavy log-end of Christ's Cross is laid upon many of them, (not only supplicia, but ludibria) silence, prisons and poverty, which have befallen some of them, but undeserved shame, with popular contempt; and this from their own countrymen, and from many of their own converts: these now press upon their persons and profession too, threatening an utter extinction of their ancient order, authority and succession in this Church and Nation, if their enemies might have their wills upon them; which (God be thanked) they have not yet obtained to the latitude of their malice, though it hath reached very far, God help us. I know that the present sufferings of Bishops and other Ministers (as chief members of the Church of England) have been, and still are, in many men's eyes, the greatest signs and indications of their sins; vulgar justice ever judging those men criminous whom they see calamitous: like dogs in a country village, which are ready to fly upon any strange one, not for any offence he gives them, but because they see some curs have begun not only to bark at him, but to bite and worry him. The plebs or common people are first injurious, and then censorious; Prosperity and Power are their great Idols; they easily trample upon those Gods whose hands and feet are off; they conclude them unworthy of any Resurrection, who are once cast down and buried by them. Nothing is more common with the community of people, Psal. 73.15. than to condemn the generation of God's children, who have generally been rather passive than pragmatical. Holy Polycarp is called for, as an Atheist, to be sacrificed in the fire of vulgar zeal; S. Paul not fit to live; Acts 22.22. Christ himself worthy to be crucified, if the rabble may have their vote; Curiosum genus ad cognoscendam vitam alienam, desidiosum ad corrigendam suam. Aug. conf. l. 10. c. 3. the chief part of whose innocency consists in finding fault with others that are vastly better than themselves. I believe that if the Bishops and Ministers of this Church had been stoned by none but such as had a John 8.7. not faults and infirmities equal to, nay exceeding theirs, they had to this day been untouched. To whose score and account this (now) is added, that they must needs be great sinners, since they are so great sufferers; they cannot but be murderers, on whose hands people see such vipers hanging. Acts 28.4. Thus carnal and sensual Christians are prone to judge, Ind incipit beatitudo judicio divino, ubi aerumna aestimatur humana. Amb. off. l. 1. c. 16. who are strangers to the cross of Christ; not understanding that the afflictions of Christians are mysterious, as well as then faith, and their Sufferings as well as their Sacraments; that God doth, as our heavenly b Heb. 12.5. Father, many times love most where he most rebukes; that they have oft most of his heart, from whom he most hides his face as to temporal prosperity, and on whom his hand lies heaviest as to visible chastisements; which if they mend us, they argue not enmity, but love. Nequaquam dolenda est afflictio infirmitatum, quam intelligimus esse matrem virtutum. Salvian. It is no token, that because he punisheth our faults, therefore he hates our persons, much less our calling and profession: the c Psal. 23. rod and staff of God lying upon us, or lifted up against us, is not to drive us from him, but, as a Shepherd's crook, to draw us nearer to him; nor is it with any design to scare us from our duties, or to make us desert our station, or to force us to renounce our Ordination to his holy service (as some have shamefully done) but as with goads to excite us the more to persist in our office steadfastly, and to discharge our Ministry the more diligently: so that it is but a plebeian and fanatic fancy from hence to imagine, that the God of order is now (after 1600. years) grown out of love with Primitive and Apostolic Episcopacy, or with regular and orderly Presbytery in his Church, because he afflicts both Bishops and Presbyters; or that Jesus Christ, the Ancient of days, the Alpha and Omega of immutable wisdom, now designs to set up a mere novelty of parity and popularity in his Church, which tend experimentally, and so most apparently, to the fedity, nullity and Anarchy of Religion in this and all other Churches; whose constitution may be commendable, although the execution of things may be unblamable and punishable upon the merit of personal defaults, not Ecclesiastical defects. No Chaldean, no Magician, no Soothsayer, no ginger, no Enchanter can spell any such meaning, as to God's displeasure against the frame and constitution of the Church of England, Dan. 5. out of that hand-writing which seems to be directed against the Clergy and Ministers of England. 'Tis true, every one ventures to read and interpret it as they list, to flatter their own parties, opinions, passions and interests: so did the Philosophers, the Heathens, the Atheists, the Idolaters, the Scoffers, the Julian's, the Apostates, the Heretics, the Schismatics of old, grossly mistake the meaning of those hot and sharp persecutions, which oft befell the Primitive Christians and Orthodox professors of faith in Christ crucified, concluding they deserved true Crosses, who so much gloried in the Cross of Christ; not knowing what Theriak God makes out of those Serpents that sting us, nor what Antidotes he extracts out of those deadly poisons which destroy us. The royal Title over Christ's head was never more deserved than when he was hanging upon the Cross; for on that, as a King on his Throne, he most conquered, and after triumphed over both his and his Church's greatest enemies: nor were his sufferings the least of his solemnities and glories, his Father being never better pleased with him than when he cried out, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? I am persuaded in like sort, that the great afflictions now incumbent upon the Clergy and Church of Engl. do no way signify, that It or they are forsaken of God, any more than Christ then was; nor do they import any dislike that the God of peace and order hath against the respective office and subordination of Presbytery, or the ordination and eminent gubernation of Bishops, as they were designed and established in the Church of England, according to the Primitive and Catholic pattern: for both these God hath heretofore highly and signally approved; if employing, blessing and prospering of them in his Church, if accepting so many holy sacrifices and services from them, be as much a sign of Gods approving their function, as his now afflicting them is a sign of his reproving their faults. But the plain sense of our sufferings is, (as * Dominus probari familiam suam voluit; & quia traditam nobis divinitus disciplinam pax longa corruperat, ac●ntem fidem, & pae●e dixerim dormientem, censura coel●stis erexit. Cypr. de lapsis. S. Cyprian observes) The Lord punisheth us, that he may bring us to repentance for our sins, both personal and professionall; for those disorders by which we blemished or profaned our holy orders. 'Tis not the government in itself, but our own mis-governments, that have offended God: he aims not to consume that primitive and pure gold that is in this Church, but to refine us from that dross we had as men contracted. Nor do I doubt but God intends to improve us to his service in better times; of which we may not despair, if we find ourselves amended by those bitter potions which in bad times, and by evil men, a good God administers to us for our health. How glorious will both godly Bishops and orderly Presbyters in England appear to this Church, and to all the world, when, coming out of this fiery furnace, they shall shine brighter than ever they did, with the love of Christ, and of his Church, both as to the care of those private charges and public inspections committed to them in excellent order, and administered by due authority, when neither pride nor envy, pomp nor popularity, neither the upper nor the lower springs of ambition (rising from Prince or people) shall distract the counsels, or divide the hearts, or cross the endeavours of venerable Bishops, and worthy Presbyters, and pious people, from that Christian subordination, unanimity and conjunction, which best becomes them as men and Christians; which Ignatius so highly commends, and which is so necessary, both as to counsel and order, government and proficiency, for the good of all sorts of Christians in any Church? Mean time it is no small mercy that exacts from some Ministers, and enables them to give public experiments of true Christian courage, patience, magnanimity and constancy, which are our highest conformity to Christ; by which the world may see, that the honour of true Christian Bishops and Ministers doth consist as much (or more) in their sufferings, as in their speaking and doing well; in their losses, 1 Cor 4 8, 9, etc. as well as in their enjoyments of all things. Then will Princes, Parliaments and People, think us most worthy to enjoy the ancient estates, honours, liberties, privileges and immunities, which the pristine piety, charity, munificence and gratitude of your and their forefathers bestowed upon the Clergy, and devoted to God, when they shall see that, without these, we are not only willing, but zealous to serve God, and solicitous to save their souls, as the greatest reward and wages of our work: nor will the incumbent distresses upon the worthy Clergy of England much abate the love and value of them, with those that are worthy of them: certainly, as men's sins should be esteemed their greatest afflictions, so no men's sufferings are to be counted their sins. If any Ministers have justly suffered, as unable, and so intruders; as incorrigible, and so unworthy; having had the justice of being accused by two or three witnesses, 1 Tim 5.19. Tit. 3.10. and the charity of receiving two or three admonitions, before they were suspended, silenced, sequestered and ejected, giving no hopes of their being amended; yet even the grossest defects and immoralities of such Clergymen (who are indeed the shame and reproach of their profession) may not be imputed to, or revenged upon the whole calling and Church; considering that the Church of England, by her good Laws, wholesome Canons, and wise Constitutions, did strictly require, not only the best minds and abilities, but the best manners and examples, both from Bishops and Presbyters, agreeable to those respective duties and instructions set before and charged upon them at their ordination, which they were not only to know, but to do; not only to believe, but to live: that so the Ministers of this Church might appear not only the best of civil men, but the best of Christians; who ought to be holy men, and the holiest of holy men, as specially consecrated to the service of Christ and his Church. It was by the Church intended, that Churchmen should be the most savoury salt in themselves, and careful seasoners of others: if some proved unsavoury, yet I am sure it is most unseasonable and unseasoned rashness to cast all Bishops and Presbyters, yea the whole order and oeconomy of the Ministry and Church of England, upon the dunghill of vulgar contempt; among whom (beyond all dispute) were so many most accomplished Preachers, and excellent Practisers of true Christianity, whose breath was so good, that their lungs could not be bad. But if there had been a visible and general Apostasy in many, or the most part, yea in all the Bishops and Ministers of England, from their duty; yet (I conceive) this is no argument to destroy that holy order and Evangelicall function, from whose declared rules and injunctions in the Church they had degenerated: for neither the infirmities nor the presumptions of men ought to annul that office, or abolish that authority which is Divine: Christ's commission which is given to the Church, must not be voided or canceled by reason of any Ministers omissions. Sacred institutions (such as the Ministry and government of Christ's Church are) ought to continue, notwithstanding the intervening of man's ignorance, error, profaneness, or Idolatry. The plagues and leprosies arising from men's persons, and adhering to them, are not imputable to that place, power, station and authority which they have in the Church. Men may be unworthy of their holy function, but the function itself is not made unworthy; no more than Aaron's joining with the people in making the golden calf, Exod. 32.25. did disparage the sacred dignity of that Priestly office, to which he was by the Lord designed. 1 Sam. 2.12. The enormous folly of Eli's sons did not make the sacrifices they offered of none effect, nor yet nullify the honour and office of that Priesthood wherewith they were duly invested. Judas his being an Hypocrite, a Thief, a Traitor and a Devil, yet did not abrogate that Apostolical office and Episcopal authority which he had received from Christ equally with the other Apostles, Act. 1.17, & 20. until by open Apostasy he fell into open rebellion, desperation and perdition. Which gross and open Apostasy, either from Christ or his Gospel, from the Christian faith or their Ministerial office and ordination, cannot with any truth or forehead be charged upon the Clergy or Ch. of England, who (for the main) both in the consecration of Bishops and ordination of Presbyters, in the administration of holy duties, & execution of their offices, generally, and for the main, kept to the Ancient, Primitive and Apostolic customs of all the Churches of Christ since the Apostles days: so that whatever blame, charge, or reproach is cast upon the Clergy or Church of England, must equally lie upon all Christian Churches, since the first complete and settled constitution of any Church. I know the mouths of some men, like moths, and their tongues, like worms, are prone to corrode by infinite scruples, scandals and reproaches, all the beauty of the Church of England, with all the merit and honour of its Clergy: but (blessed be God) we stand or fall with the Catholic Church of Christ, with the whole order, race and Apostolic succession of Christian Bishops and Presbyters: we more fear the rudeness and heaviness of men's hands, than the sharpness of their wits, or weight of their arguments, which are as spiteful, and yet as vain, as the vipers biting of the file; when from some Ministers personal failings, they fasten their venomous teeth upon the whole state and constitution of the Church of England. In whose behalf I am neither afraid nor ashamed to appeal to you (my most honoured countrymen) as the nearest and best Judges in the world of this matter: First, as to the Church of England in its godly care and Christian constitution, whether you do believe, or really find, that in any thing it hath been wanting which is necessary for the good of your souls: Next, as to the Bishops and Ministers of England, whether (abating personal infirmities) they have not generally been, ever since the Reformation, both able and faithful in the work of the Lord; whether (as Mr. Scio eversionem Papismi, & reformationem Ecclesiae Anglicanae, post Deum & reges, deberi praecipuè Episcoporum Doctrinae & industriae. Pet. du Moulin. ep. 3. ad episc. Wint. Peter du Moulin confesseth) you and your forefathers do not chiefly owe to them both the beginning and continuance of the Reformed as well as Christian Religion, next under the mercy of God, and the care of your pious Princes; whether the tenuity or weakness of some Ministers, who had less abilities, and perhaps too little encouragements, were not abundantly supplied by the eminent sufficiencies of many others: and if every Diocese had not an excellent Bishop at all times, or every Parish enjoyed not a very able Preacher; yet I am sure neither of the two Provinces in England, nor any one County ever wanted, since the Reformation, either excellent Bishops or excellent Preachers in them, to a far greater store than was to be enjoyed in Primitive times, when Dioceses were larger, and petty Parishes not at all in the Church of Christ. So then I may justly quere, whether one odious century of Ministers, (branded (some of them) for scandalous, because they were more exactly conform to the Laws and Customs established in the Church of England) were a just ground to reproach the whole Clergy, or to abolish the order, function and succession, both of Bishops and Presbyters, which some men aim at (officious compilers of that uncomely Cent●▪) Whether they might not with as much truth and more reason have enumerated the scandalous livings of England, as so many not convicted but supposed scandalous Ministers; many of whose maintenance was worse than their manners, and more unworthy of their profession: Whether any thing truly objectable against any Bishop or Minister of England (as scandalously weak, wicked and unworthy) may not with as much more truth be objected against their severest enemies. No man in England, not grossly ignorant, or passionately impotent, can deny what I here affirm and proclaim to all the world, That the Clergy of England, both Governors and governed (taking them in their integrality or unity, as they were esteemed a third estate in the Body politic, or as an Ecclesiastical fraternity and corporation) have been not only tolerable, but commendable, yea admirable instruments of God's glory, and the good of men's souls, in this Church and Nation: That as they did at first in the morning of the Reformation, so ever since, during the heat and burden of the day, they have with great learning and godly zeal, with Christian courage, constancy, integrity and wisdom, every way asserted, vindicated and maintained the truth, purity and power, also the peace, order and honour of Christian and Reformed Religion, against Atheists and Infidels, against the superstitions of the Romanists on one side, and the factions of the Schismatics on the other. Nehem. 4.17. Nor have they only built with the trowel, but fought also with the sword of the Word. What Giantly error, what Papal Goliath hath ever appeared defying this Reformed Church, whom some excellent Bishops, and other learned Divines who were Episcopal, have not encountered, prostrated, confounded and beheaded? the spoils and trophies of them are still extant in their works, as eternal monuments of the incomparable prowess, worth and merit of the English Clergy. What wholesome, saving and necessary truth did they ever wilfully deprive You of? In what holy institution and ordinance of Jesus Christ have they ever conspired to defraud or diminish you? In what holy work or duty have they come short of any? In what excellent doctrine, gift, grace, or virtue have they been so defective, as not to give your forefathers, yourselves, and all the world, most illustrious proofs and generous examples? To which testimony no ingenuous, knowing, and conscientious Christian can deny his assent, if he hath ever made use of their excellent lives or labours; to which (as I formerly touched) God himself hath set to the broad seal, and great witness of his own Spirit, upon the hearts and consciences of many thousands, both still living, and long ago dead. These, at the grand Assize, or day of God's righteous judgement, will (I am confident) highly justify before men and Angels the Church of England, and its Clergy or Ministry, as blessed means of their salvation: these will convince the gainsayers, enemies, blasphemers and destroyers of this Church, and its Ministry, of their envy, partiality, blindness, unthankfulness, and malice; also of their unreasonable lusts and injurious passions: for nothing but such black and hellish clouds, could ever hinder men, after an hundred years' experience, from seeing, owning, esteeming and enjoying so great and glorious a light of grace and mercy, truth and peace, as hath shined in the Church of England, ever since the Reformation, while the golden Candlesticks were unbroken, the beautiful order and proportion of their branches unconfounded, the burning lamps of Bishops and Presbyters in them either not wholly extinguished, or not snuffed so close as might put them quite out, in respect of that pristine beauty and lustre, love and honour, which they formerly enjoyed and deserved in this as all well-composed Christian Churches. What wise and gracious Christian (comparing, as the builders of the later Temple, former times with these) doth not with sadness of soul see and confess, that the general state of this Church, the visible face of the Christian Reformed Religion, the tempers of men's hearts, and the pra●●ses of their lives, were heretofore, both as to truth, order and peace, to piety, morality and charity, incomparably beyond what now they commonly are, or are like to be, while so much emulation, faction and confusion prevail among us, which are the dry nurses of ignorance, Atheism and irreligion? Blessed be God, in former times, while worthy Bishops presided, and discreet Presbyters assisted them in the great work of teaching and governing the Church of God in Eng. O what beauty, what order, what harmony, what unity, what gravity, what solidity, what candour, what charity, what sobriety, what sanctity, what sincerity, what improvements, what perseverance, what correspondency, what constancy was there generally to be seen among Christian Pastors, and true Professors under their potent Ministry and prudent inspection! Who is able to express or conceive (unless he had some experience of those blessed times and tempers) what sound and judicious knowledge, what fruitful faith, what hearty love, what discreet zeal, what severe repentings, what fervent prayers, what earnest sighs, what godly sorrows, what unfeigned tears, what just terrors, what unspeakable comforts, what well-grounded hopes, what spiritual joys, what heavenly meditations, what holy conversations, what humble softnesses, what diligent assurances, what longing desires, what unwearied endeavours, what patient expectations, what tender compassions, what meekness of obedience, what conscientious submissions were observable in the general frame of good Christians carriage, as to God and their Saviour, so to their Superiors, both Civil & Ecclesiastical, in order to their own souls and their neighbours good? And all this blessedness was enjoyed while some mendid pitifully complain, that a few Ceremonies pinched their consciences; that a white garment dazzled their eyes; that the ancient & transient sign of the Cross crucified both the Sacrament and their senses; that kneeling at the Communion bowed down their souls even to the ground; that the devout Liturgy loaded their spirits; that grave & godly Bishops pressed Church-order and Discipline too hard upon them. Yet then (even then) it was, that Learning flourished, Knowledge multiplied, Graces abounded, excellent preaching thrived, Sacraments were duly administered and most devoutly received, the fruits of God's Spirit were every way mightily diffused, Justice and common honesty were practised, hospitable kindness exercised, Christian charity maintained, plain-heartedness and good works abounded; without any such crafts and policies, such frauds and factions, such jealousies and distances, such malice and animosities, such rudeness and disorders, such insolences and hypocrisies, such indignities and diminutions, as are now of later years generally cast upon the Reformed Religion, and those Preachers of it that adhere to the constitution and communion of the Church of England; who are implacably maligned by those men, who in persecuting and oppressing them and this Church, do boast as if they had done God very good service, and highly advanced the interests of Jesus Christ. Which Themselves will then begin to doubt and disbelieve, when the heat of their passions is allayed, when their popular fallacies and froths are vanished, when their secular designs are frustrated, when their high metal is abated, when their strength begins to fail them, when their sectators, flatterers, feeders and abettors are scattered from them, when the tide of successes is come to its ebb, when the terrors of death are upon them, when their consciences shall give them a true and impartial prospect of their actions and passions, when they shall see how little holy fire there was amidst so great a smoke, how much dross and trash hath been their superstructures, how much their pragmatic spirits have ruined, how little they have edified, as to any thing of true, serious, solid and useful Religion, beyond what was formerly enjoyed to a satiety in England, while they make it their masterpiece of piety and reformation, utterly to debase the Clergy, to divide Christian people, and to demolish the whole frame of the Church of England. The great day of burning and refining will best discover and determine what the hearts and works, the purposes and practices of such men have been. Mean time, that I may not be deceived in my own persuasions or prejudices (who possibly may be partial to my mother the Church of England,) I crave the favour of your upright judgement, as wise Gentlemen and worthy Christians; who, remotest from all designs and discontents, have most impartially observed the rise and progress, the variations and depravations, the folly and fury, the divisions and confusions of some men's spirits and practices in England (who have earnestly sought, and still do, to obtrude their fanciful, deformed and many-formed Reformations upon this Church, as much, God knows, against Her will, as a loathsome potion is against the stomach of an healthful patient.) Do you, O my noble Countrymen (bona fide) (apart from fears and flatteries, which are below persons of true honour and piety) do you in earnest find the temper and constitution of Religion, as Christian or Reformed, either its inward power, or its outward polity, any way bettered and advanced in this Nation, as to the visible form of it, in essentials or ornamentals, in Doctrine or Discipline, in faith or good works, in profession or reputation, in order or peace, in solidity or decency, in authority or charity? Do you find it in your own present comforts and enjoyments, or in your hopes of after-blessings upon your posterity? If I had the opportunity to see your faces (O honoured Gentlemen and beloved Countrymen) I should (no doubt) easily discover by the clouds and dejections of your looks, what your thoughts, fears, griefs and sympathies are, in the behalf of the Reformed Religion, and the present state of the Church of England. While some of Her destroyers walk with haughty looks, triumphant spirits, and threatening eyes; You are full of tears, sighs and sorrows, to see the Church of England (sometimes so amiable, venerable and formidable, for the beauty, authority and majesty of Christian and Reformed Religion in it) so much now divided, impaired, debased, deformed, and in danger to be destroyed. And this, after so many public protestations, so many specious pretensions, so many pious precipitations, so many Parliamentary heats and votes, Ordinances and Acts, to maintain the true Religion, established in the Church of England. After all which, little other effects appear, save only these: the hypocrisy, formality, coldness and unprofitableness of some Christians, have been punished by the rudeness, rashness, fancifulness and uncharitableness of others; who neglecting cordially to advance the great and joint interests of God's glory, this Church's peace, their own and others souls good, have rather raised, fomented small factions, and carried on the poor concernments of different and divided parties, in order to their own private profit and sinister advantages. Hence, hence these luxations, distortions, dislocations, weaknesses, deformities, and almost dissolutions, which have befallen the Church of England, and the Reformed Religion, once happily established, professed and prospering in it; which pejorations, as to the piety, peace and honour of this Nation, no man that hath eyes to see, and a heart to be sensible of, can behold, without sad and serious deploring: While he sees, not only the outward order, polity and harmony of Religion worsted, torn and shattered; but the inward bands of Christian love and charity so ravelled, broken and cut asunder, that almost all people in all places, in Cities, in Parishes, in Families, in Churches, are full of bitter feuds, envies, enmities, animosities and Antipathies. Christians of different principles and parties do not love the presence or aspect of each other; they look with jealous, supercilious, contemptuous, evil eyes upon one another; they do not willingly meet in one place, nor correspond in civil affairs. As for religious unity and mutual society, they perfectly abhor (as needles touched with the different poles of the loadstone) any communion with one another in any sacred duties and Christian mysteries: they thunder out anathemas against each other: they have different Churches or Bodies, different Ministers and Bishops, different designs & interests, different spirits and principles; each studying as much to depress and destroy their rivals and dissenters, as to advance their own sides and parties; which dream much more of swords and pistels, of fights and victories, of blood and vastation, whereby to set up that Empire and dominion which each affects in their new ways of Religion, than of humility, obedience, charity, and other Christian graces. The Evangelicall exhortations of Christ and his blessed Apostles to all Christians, John 13.34. to love one another, to live in peace, to be of one heart and one mind in the Lord, 1 Cor. 1.10. to speak the same things, to walk worthy of their holy calling, Eph. 4.3. Coloss. 3.13. to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace, to be gentle, meek, courteous, tenderly affected, forbearing, forgiving one another; these holy charms, these pious and pathetic conjure, these divine prayings, and charitable beseechings, are much forgotten. Those Scriptures which join faith and repentance, zeal and meekness, righteousness and true holiness, piety and charity, patience and perseverance together, are practically interpreted, as if they were mere Apocrypha, unfit rules, blunt tools, weak engines, to carry on the great designs that some pretend for Christ and His Saints; who take their model for a new Jerusalem, more out of the dark descriptions of the Apocalypse, than out of the clear revelations of all the Gospels and Epistles. So that Christian & Reformed Religion being very much resolved into fancy and faction, there must necessarily follow great abating, not only of Christian charity, but even of morality; infinite degenerating, as of men's passions and affections, so of their actions, from Christian sincerity to hypocrisy, from common equity and humanity, to mutual insolences, animosities, cruelties. Plead to some men Scriptures or Statutes, laws of God or man; they reply, Providences, Power, Successes: urge the commandments of the second Table, the holy Precepts, the humble, meek and orderly examples of Saints in Old or New Testament; there are that retort new lights, inward dictates, spiritual liberty, special impulses, extraordinary cases. In which they hold, as once a person of very supercilious gravity, also of versute and vertigenous policy, (a true Protestant Preacher, who had passed through all shapes, Episcopal, Presbyterian, Independent, and is now ready for the metamorphosis of a Lutheran Superintendency;) he told me as his opinion, That it is in many cases lawful for Moses to do what Pharaoh may not; and for the Israelites to do what the Egyptians (as men) might not do: that there are (after the Gnostick principles, Iren. l. 3. c. 15. which Irenaeus tells us of) Gospel-liberties, which holy men may sometimes take upon heroic motions, and extraordinary impulsions upon their spirits & fancies, which those that are yet under legal bondages and restraints may not venture upon, nor are capable of, because they (are psychici, not pneumatici, they) may have principles of law and reason, but have not the privy seal or warrant of God's Spirit dictating or moving within them. This was answered to me by that sage Dictator, whose answers have more of the Heathen oracles ambiguity, than of divine infallibility; when I sillily urged those fixed rules of justice, and unflexible bounds of equity and charity, of righteousness and true holiness, which I (simply) conceived were impartially given in the written Word of God to all mankind, and specially to all Christians, to whom that Word is now delivered, and owned by them, as only able to make the man of God perfect to every good word and work. Certainly it was ever esteemed strange Divinity among Orthodox Christians, to hold, that there are some special indulgences and providential temporary dispensations given to some sort of Christians above others, to act at some times and conjunctures, in such ways as themselves must needs confess to he, by the clear letter of the Law and word of God, injurious, unjustifiable and unwarrantable, that is, in plain terms, unlawful, wicked and abominable: which evils ought not in any case to be done that good may come thereby, no more than Lot's daughters might lie with their father, to prevent their barrenness, or the defect of posterity. Hence have followed those strange rapes, which some men's lusts have endeavoured to commit upon the Christian and Reformed Religion, against the known laws both of God and man: hence those presumptuous sins, those enormous impieties, for which no Apology, but made and affected necessity, is alleged, which none but God Almighty can convince, confute and revenge: hence those convulsions, faintings, swoonings and die, which are befallen the Church of England, and its holy profession, the Reformed Religion; which heretofore was a pure and unspotted Virgin, free from the great offence, constant to her principles and duties both to God and man, always victorious by her patience. This seems now besmeared all over with blood; this is sick, deformed and ashamed of herself: so many sanguinary and sacrilegious spirits pretend to court and engross her; such foul spots are found upon Her, which are not the spots of God's children, & which no nitre, no soap, no fullers earth, no palliations or pretensions of humane wit, policy, or necessity, can wash away, or make clean, till He plead Her cause, & take away Her reproach, whose love induced him to shed his own precious blood for his Church; a noble, eminent, uniform and beautiful part of which, I must ever own the Church of England to have been. Of whose former holy and healthful constitution I am daily the more assured, by those modern eruptions and corruptions, defections and infections, errors and extravagancies, blasphemies and impudicities, which have so fiercely assaulted and grievously wasted the Truths, the Morals, the Sanctities, the Solemnities, the Mysteries and Ministrations, the Government and Authority, the whole Order and Constitution of the Church of England: clearly evincing to me, that this Church was heretofore not only tolerably, but most commendably reform, and happily established upon the pillars of piety and prudence, verity and unity, purity and charity. Nor do I doubt but the blessed Apostle S. Paul, with all those Primitive planters and Reformers of Churches, would have given the right hand of fellowship to the Christian Bishops, Presbyters, and people of this Church of England, cheerfully communicating with us in all holy things, blessing God, Col. 2.5. and greatly rejoicing to have beheld that power and peace, that steadfastness and proficiency, that beauty, order and unity, which was so admirably settled, and happily preserved many years in this Church, by the joint consent and suffrage of the Nation; Princes, Parliaments and People cheerfully giving up their names to Christ, 2 Cor. 8.5. and willingly yielding themselves to the Lord, and to his Ministers. Nor do I believe those Primitive and large-hearted Christians, Acts 4.34. who brought the price of their estates, and laid it down at the Apostles feet, testifying their esteem of all things but as loss and dung in comparison of the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ, that these would have ever repined or envied at the riches, plenty, civil honours, peace and prosperity, wherewith the Governors and Ministers of Christ's Church were here endowed. No, those first-fruits of the Gospel had too good hearts to have evil eyes, because the eyes of Princes, Matth. 20.15. Peers and people had been good to the Clergy, investing them with that double honour, which the Spirit of God thinks them worthy of, 1 Tim. 5.17. while they rule well, and labour in the Word and Doctrine; so as the godly Bishops and Presbyters of the Church of England did abundantly, Phil. 2.16. since the Reformation: nor was their labour of love in vain in the Lord. What was really amiss or remiss in any Ministers, as to their minds or manners, (as some Erratas we find even in those Pastors and Churches which were of the Apostolical print, the very first & best Edition) certainly there wanted not sufficient authority and wisdom, skill or will, in the Governors of Church and State, to have reform all things in such a way of Christian moderation, as should have gratified no men's envies, revenges, ambitions, covetousness, and the like inordinate passions; but have kept all within those bounds of piety, justice, charity and discretion, which would have satisfied all wise and honest men's desires and consciences. Such an Apostolical spirit and method of Reformation, as would have cleared the rust, and not consumed the metal, sodered up the flaws, but not battered down the whole frame of so goodly a Church; this spirit might have mended all things really amiss in England, at a far easier and cheaper rate, Luke 9.54. than either calling for fire from heaven, or calling in the Scots to quench our intestine flames with oil. To purge the English floor from all chaff, there was no need to raise up such fierce winds, as the Devil did when he overthrew the whole house, and oppressed all Jobs children with the rubbish and ruin both of superstructures and foundations. Job. 1.19. No work requires more wary, wise, and tender hearts and hands too, than Church-work, or that which men call Reformation of Religion, which easily degenerates to high deformities, if bunglers, that are rash, rude, deformed and unskilful, undertake it. Nothing is more obvious, than for Empirics to bring down high and plethoric constitutions to convulsions and consumptions, by too much letting blood, and other excessive evacuations: those are sad purgations of Churches, which with threatening some malignant humours, do carry away the very life, spirit, and soul of Religion, the whole order, beauty, unity and being of a Church, especially so large, so famous, so reform, so flourishing an one as the Ch. of Engl. was; which some men's ignorance, malice and excess hath a long time aimed at, impatient not to forsake, yea and quite destroy both It and all its true Ministers, to whose learning and labours they owe whatever spiritual gifts, Christian graces, privileges or comforts they can with truth pretend to. All which, I believe, they have not much bettered or increased since their rude Separations and violent Apostasies, by which they have showed themselves so excessively and unthankfully exasperated against the Fathers that begat them, and the Mother that bore them; more like a generation of vipers, full of poisonous passions, Mat. 3.7. which swell the soul to proud and factious distempers, than like truly humble, meek and regenerate Christians, who cannot be either so unholy, or so unthankful, as to requite with shame, despite and wounds, 2 Tim. 3.2. the womb that bore them, and the breasts that gave them suck; not feeding them with fabulous Legends, superstitious inventions, or mere humane Traditions, but with the sincere milk of God's word, 1 Pet. 2.2 as it was contained in the holy Scriptures, which were the only constant fountain from whence the Church of England drew and derived both its Doctrinals and its Devotionals, its Ministry and Ministrations. Of which truth, having such a cloud of witnesses, so many pregnant and undeniable demonstrations before God and the world, before good Angels and Devils, before men's own consciences in this Church, and before all other reformed Churches round about: I suppose these are sufficient Testimonies in the judgement of You (O my worthy Countrymen) and of all other sober Christians, to vindicate the Church of England, that it never deserved, either of Princes, Parliaments, or People, so great exhausting and abasing, as some men have sought to inflict upon Her. Over which no tongue is so eloquent, no pen so pathetic, as to be able sufficiently to express, eye no so melting, as to weep enough, no heart so soft and diffusive of its sorrows, as worthily to lament, when they consider that wantonness of wickedness, that petulant importunity, that superfluity of malice, that unsatisfied cruelty of some men, who have endeavoured to cast whole cartload of injust reproaches, vulgar injuries, and shameful indignities upon the whole Church of England, seeking to bury with the burial of an Ass, either in the dunghill of Papal pride and tyranny, or popular contempt and Anarchy, all its former renown and glory, its very name and being, together with the office, order, authority, distinction and succession of its Ancient, Apostolic, and Evangelical ministry, which hath been the savour of life unto life, 2 Cor. 2.15. the mighty power of God to the conversion and salvation of many thousand souls in the Church of England. Whose sore Calamities and just Complaints having thus far presented to Your consideration and compassion; it is now time for me to inquire after the causes and occasions of its troubles, miseries, confusions, and feared vastations; in order to find out the best methods and medicines for Her timely cure and happy recovery, if God and man have yet any favour or compassion for Her. The end of the first Book. BOOK II. SEARCHING THE CAUSES AND OCCASIONS OF THE Church of England's decays. CHAP. I. BUt it is now time (most honoured and worthy Countrymen) after so large and just, so sore and true a complaint in behalf of the Church of England and the Reformed Religion, (heretofore wisely established & unanimously professed in this Nation) to look after the rise and original, the Causes and Occasions of our Decays and Distempers, of our Maladies and Miseries, which by way of prevention or negation I have (in the former Book) demonstrated to be no way imputable to the former frame, state or constitution of the Church of England; but they must receive their source from some other fountain. The search and discovery of which is necessary, in order to a serious cure: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Hip. Non sanant, sed mutan● morbos. Fernel. for rash and conjectural applications to sick patients are prone (as learned Physicians observe) to commute their maladies, or to run them out of one disease into another, but not to cure any; turning Dropsies into Jaundice, and Fevers into Consumptions. The greatest commendation of Physicians (next their skill to discern) is, to use such freedom in their discoveries, and such fidelity in their applyings, as may least flatter or conceal the disease. In this disquisition or inquiry after the Causes and Occasions of our Ecclesiastic distempers, I will not by an unwelcome scrutiny, or uncharitable curiosity, search into those more secret springs and hidden impulsives, Mat. 15.19. which proceed (as our Blessed Saviour tells us) out of men's hearts, into their lives and actions; such as are wrathful revenges, unchristian envies, sacrilegious covet, impotent ambitions, hypocritical policies, 2 Tim 4.3. 1 Tim. 6.4, 5. censorious vanities, pragmatic impatiencies, an itch after novelties; men's over-valuing of themselves, and undervaluing of others; a secret delight in mean and vulgar spirits, to see their betters leveled, exauctorated, impoverished, abased, contemned; a general want of wisdom, meekness, humility and charity; a plebeian petulancy and wanton satiety (even as to holy things) arising from peace, plenty, and constancy of enjoying them. Ephes. 6.12. These spiritual wickednesses, which are usually predominant in the high places of men's souls, Revel. 2.24. being (Arcana Diaboli, the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 & stratagemata Satanae) the secret engines, depths and stratagems used by the Devil, to undermine the hearts of Christians, to loosen the foundations of Churches, and to overthrow the best settled Religion; being lest visible and discoverable, for they are commonly covered, as mines, with the smooth surfaces and turfs of zeal, sanctity, reformation, scrupulosity, conscience, etc. these I must leave to that great day, Revel. 2.23. which will try men's works and hearts too, when men shall be approved and rewarded, not according to their Pharisaic boastings, popular complyings, and specious pretensions, but according to their righteous actions and honest intentions. Only this I may without presumption or uncharitableness judge, as to the distempers of our times, and the ruinous state of the Church of England; that many men, who have been very busy in new brewing and embroiling all things of Religion, would never have so bestirred themselves to divide, dissipate and destroy the peace and polity of this Church, if they had not been formerly offended and exasperated, either by want of their desired preferment, which S. Austin observes of Aerius, Doluisse fertur A●rius, quod quum ●sset Presbyter, Episcopus non potuit ordinari. Aug. de Hae. es. the great and only stickler of old against Bishops, or by some Animadversion, which they called persecution; although it were no more than an exacting of legal conformity, and either sworn or promised subjection, as to Canonical obedience. Many men would have been quiet, if they had not hoped to gain by rifling their Mother, and robbing their Fathers. Some at the first motions might (perhaps) have good meanings and desires, as Eve had to grow wiser; but they were soon corrupted by eating the forbidden fruit, by the unlawfulness of those means, and extravagancy of those methods they used to accomplish them. But God and men's own consciences will in due time judge between these men and the Church of England, whether they did either intend or act wisely or worthily, justly or charitably, gratefully or ingenuously. This I am sure if they have the comfort of sincerity, as to their intent, they have the horror of unsuccessfulness to humble them, as to the sad events which have followed preposterous piety. CHAP. II. THe chiefest apparent cause, Inordinate liberty in religious affairs the chief cause of miseries in the Church of Engl. and most pregnant outward occasion of our Ecclesiastic mischiefs and miseries (as I humbly conceive) ariseth from that inordinate liberty and immodest freedom, which of later years, all sorts of people have challenged to themselves in matters of Religion, presuming on such a Toleration and Indulgence, as encourageth them to choose and adhere to what doctrine, opinion, party, persuasion, fancy or faction they list, under the name of their Religion, their Church fellowship and communion: nor are people to be blanked or scared from any thing which they list to call their Religion, unless it have upon it the mark of Popery, Prelacy, or Blasphemy; of which terrible names, I think, the common people are very incompetent judges, nor do they well know what is meant by them, as the only forbidden fruit: every party in England being prone to charge each other with something which they call Blasphemy, and to suspect mutually either the affecting of Prelacy, or the inclining to Popery, in ways that seem arrogant and imperious in themselves, also insolent and injurious to others; each aspiring so to set up their particular way, as to give law to others, not only proposing, but prescribing such Doctrine, Discipline, Worship, Government and Ministry as they list to set up, according to what they gather or guests out of Scripture, whereof every private man, and woman too, as S. Jerom tells of the Luciferian heretics, flatter themselves, that they are meet and competent judges, since they find themselves no way directed by any Catholic interpretation, nor limited and circumscribed by any joint wisdom and public profession of this Church and Nation; which heretofore was established and set forth in such a public confession of their faith, such Articles and Canons, rules and boundaries of Religion, as served for the orderly and unanimous carrying on and preserving Christian Doctrine, Discipline, Worship, Ministry, or Government. This wide door once opened, and still kept open by the crowding and impetuosity of a people so full of fancy and fury, spirit and animosity, so wilful and surly, as the English generally are; besides that they are naturally lovers, and extremely fond, as children, of new fashions, as in all things, so in Religion itself; it is not (I say) imaginable (as at the pulling up of a great sluice, or opening of a floodgate) what (vortices & voragines opinionum) floods and torrents of opinions, what precipitant rushings and impetuous whirlings, both in mind and manners, have every where carried a heady and headstrong people quite headlong in Religion: not only to venial novelties, softer whimsies and lesser extravagances in Religion, which are very uncomely, though not very pernicious; but also to rank blasphemies, to gross immoralities, to rude licentiousness, to insolent scandals, to endless janglings, to proud usurpations, to an utter irreligion, to a total distracting, confounding and subverting of the Church of Engl. All this, under the notion of enjoying whatever liberty they list to take to themselves, under the name and colour of Religion: which anciently imported an holy Obligation of Christians to God, and to each other, carried on by a Catholic confession, an unanimous profession, an uniform tradition, an holy ordination and orderly subjection; but now, they say, it is to be learned and reform, not by the old ways of pious education, and Ecclesiastic instruction, not from the Bishops or Ministers of this or any national Church; but either by the new ways of every private spirit's interpreting of Scriptures, or by those new lights of some special inspirations, which, they say, are daily held forth by themselves and others of their several factions, or according to the various policies of Laymen, and those pragmatic sanctions which serve the prevalent interests of parties. This, this is the project, so cried up by some men, for propagating the Gospel, and advancing the Kingdom of Jesus Christ, so rare, so new, so untried, so unheard-of in any Christian Church, ancient or later, that it is no wonder, if neither the Church of England, nor its learned Clergy, nor its dutiful children, can either approve, admire, or follow such dubious and dangerous methods, or labyrinths rather of Religion, any more than they can canonize for Saints those vagrants and fanatics of old, who were justly stigmatised for damnable heretics, or desperate schismatics, for their deserting that Catholic faith, tradition, order and communion of the Churches of Christ, which were clearly expressed in their Creeds and Canons, founded upon Scripture, and conform to Apostolic example. The Gnostics, Cerinthians, Valentinians, Carpocratians, Circumcellians, Montanists, Manichees, Novatians, Donatists, Arians, and others, were esteemed by the Primitive Churches as Foxes and Wolves, creatures of a wild and ferine nature, impatient of the kindest restraints, not enduring to be kept in any folds, or bounds of Christ's flock, which ever had an holy, authentic and authoritative succession of ordained Bishops and Presbyters, as its Pastors and Teachers; also it had its safe and known limits for Religion, in faith and manners, Doctrine and Discipline, for order and government, both in lesser Congregations and larger Combinations. The true Christian liberty anciently enjoyed by Primitive Christians and Churches, was fullest of verity, charity, unity, modesty, humility, sanctity, sobriety, harmonious subordination, and holy subjection, according to the stations in which God had placed every part or member in those bodies; they were the farthest that could be from Schism, Separation, mutiny, novelty, ambition, rebellion, while every one kept the true temper, order and decorum of a Christian. Certainly, if either particular Congregations, or private Christians liberty had consisted in being exposed or betrayed, as Sheep without their Shepherds, to all manner of extravagancies incident to vulgar petulancy and humane infirmity; those Primitive Churches and ancient Fathers, those godly Bishops and blessed Martyrs, those pious Emperors and Christian Princes of old, might have spared a great deal of care, cost, pains and time, which were spent in their several Councils and Synods, Parliaments, Diets and Conventions; whose design was not to make new, but to renew those Scripture-Canons and Apostolical constitutions, which were necessary to preserve the faith once delivered to the Saints, and to assert, Judas 2. not only the common salvation, but also that Catholic succession, communion and order of Churches transmitted from the Apostles: in which endeavour the piety and wisdom, the care and charity of ancient Councils, expressed in their many Canons made for the keeping of the unity of the Spirits truth in the bond of peace among Christians, were so far (in my judgement) from being mere heaps of hay, straw and stubble, burying and overlaying the foundations of Christian soundness and simplicity (which seems to be the late censure of one, whom I am as sorry to see in a posture of difference from the Church of England, as any person of these times, because I esteem his learning and abilities above most that have appeared adversaries to, or dissenters from Her) that I rather judge with Mr. Calvin (a person far more learned, judicious and impartial in this case)▪ They were, for the most part, Tametsi illorum temporum Episcopi multos Canones ediderunt, quibus plus videntur exprimere quam sacris literis expressum sit; eâ tamen cautione totam suam oeconomiā composuerunt ad unicam illam verbi divini normam, ut facile videas nihil ferè habuisse hac in parte à verbo Dei alienum. Cal. Inst. l. 4. c. 4. sect. 1. very sober, wise and suitable superstructures, little deviating from, & no way demolishing any of those grand foundations of Faith, Holiness, or Charity, which were laid by Christ and his blessed Apostles, which ever continued the same, and were so owned by their pious successors, however they used that liberty and authority in lesser matters, which was given them by the Scriptures, and derived to them by their Apostolic mission or succession, for the prudent accommodating of such things as concerned the outward polity, uniformity, order and peace of the Church, or for those decent celebrations and solemnities of Religion, which were most agreeable to the several geniu'ses, and civil rites of people, and the mutable temper of times; all which who so neglects to consider, will never rightly judge of the several counsels, customs and constitutions of either ancient or later Churches. The best of whose piety and prudence the Reformed Church of England chose to follow, as exactly as it could, first in Her decerning, declaring, determining, translating and communicating to her children those Canonical Books of holy Scripture; also in the owning, professing, and propounding to them those Ancient, Catholic and received Creeds, which are as the summaries and boundaries of Christian Faith, containing those articles which are necessary to be believed by all: after this it used those discreet limits and rules which it thought fittest to keep the visible profession of Christian Religion in due order and decency, according as occasion required, and the state of this particular Church would bear. Nor was the Church of England in any of these things ever blamed or blamable, by any well-reformed Church; nor by any men that impartially professed Christianity: among whom I cannot reckon either the politic Papist, or the peevish Separatist; much less those later rude rabble's of libertines and fanatics, who abhor all things in any Church or way of Religion, which they suspect to be contrary to their loose principles, and these must be conform to their several secular ends and interests; which truly in England are now neither small, nor poor, nor modest, but grand, high, and aspiring, extremely inconsistent with those public principles and ends of good order, polity, peace and unity, which formerly were established and maintained in the Church of England, as they ought to be in all well-ordered Churches: whose work and design was, not loosely to tolerate different public professions of Religion in the same nation or community, according as every man lists; but seriously and impartially to constitute and authorise some one way, grounded upon God's Word, and guided by the best examples, as the public standard of Religion, for Doctrine, Duties, Worship, Devotion, Discipline. Which methods of Piety and Charity were ever highly commended, and cheerfully followed by the wisest and best Christian Magistrates in all ages; and possibly they had been ere this recovered and renewed here in England, if the beast of the people, getting the bridle of liberty between its teeth, had not so far run away with some riders, who had too much pampered it, that it is no easy matter (not to be done by sudden checks, or short turns) to reduce that heady and headstrong animal to the right postures of religious managing: besides, that wise men are taught by experience, that nothing so soon tames the madness of people, as their own fierceness and extravagancy; Schismaticos semper inter initia fervere; incrementa vero capere non posse, nec augere quod illicite coeperint, sed statim cum prava sua aemulatione deficere. Cypr. ep. 52. which at length, as S. Cyprian observes, tires them, by taking away their breath, and vainly exhausting their ferocient spirits. Time and patience oft facilitate those cures in Church and State, which violent and unseasonable applications would but more inflame and exasperate. I do not doubt but the greatest patrons for the people's liberty in matters of Religion, will in time (if they do not already) see how great a charity it is to put merciful restraints of religious order and government upon them, which are no less necessary than those sharper curbs and yokes of civil coertions. No wise Statesman will think it fit, in honesty or safety, to permit common people to do whatever seems good in their own eyes, as if there were no King or supreme Magistrate in Israel: nor can any good Christian think it fit, Judges 21.25. that in Religion every man should be left to profess and patronise what he listeth, as if there were no Christ, as King, and chief Bishop of our souls, or as if he had not left us clear and settled foundations for faith; also evident principles, besides patterns of Christian prudence, and Church-polity, for order and office, discipline and duty, direction and correction, subordination and union. What these measures and proportions have been, both as to the judgement and practice of the universal Church, from the very Apostolical times, and their Primitive successors, till this last century, is so plain, both in Scripture and other Ecclesiastic records, that I wonder how men of any learning can be so ignorant, or men of any honesty can be so partial, as by their doubting and disputing, to divide the minds of Christian people, and by rude innovations to raise so unhappy factions, as have at this day overspread this Church and Nation like a leprosy, which is a foul disease, though it may seem white as snow, blanched over with the shows of liberty, but betraying men to the basest servitude of their own lusts, and other men's corruptions as well as errors. CHAP. III. I Know and allow that just plea, What Christian liberty is desirable and tolerable among people. which is made by learned and godly men, for Christians mutual bearing with, and forbearing one another, in cases of private and modest differings, either in opinions or practices: yea, as S. Ambrose, S. Austin, S. Jerome, and others observe, there is a great latitude of Charity to be exercised among particular Churches, in their different methods, and outward forms of holy ministrations, according as their several polities are locally distinguished by Cities, Countries, or Nations. I willingly yield to all men, much more to all Christians, that liberty natural, civil and religious, which may consist with Scripture-precept and right reason, with grounds of morality and society; which is as much as I desire to use or enjoy myself, in point of private opinion, or public profession. I have other where observed out of Tertullian, that Religion is not to be forced, but persuaded. I admire the Princely and Christian temper of Constantine the Great, Euseb▪ in vita Const. M. who professed he would not have men cudgeled, but convinced to be Christians; that Religion was a matter of choice, not of constraint; that no tyranny, no rape, no force is more detestable, than that which is committed upon men's consciences, when once they come to be masters of so much reason, as to choose for themselves, and to hold forth those principles upon which they state their Religion. This indeed was the sense of that great and good Emperor: But then withal, he professed not to meddle, by any Imperatorian or Senatorian power, with matters of Religion, either to alter and innovate, or to dispute and decide them, but left them to the piety and prudence of those holy and famous Bishops, which were chief Pastors of the Church; whose unanimous doctrine and uniform practice had carried on Christian Religion amidst all persecutions with so great splendour, uniformity, authority and majesty, that few Christians were so impudent as to doubt, much less contradict, and openly descent from their religious harmony, public order and profession, which was grounded on Scripture-precepts, and guided by Apostolical patterns. Yet amidst those primitive exactnesses, to preserve the public peace and unity of Churches, nothing was more nourished and practised, than that meekness of wisdom, which every where sought to instruct men, not to destroy them for their private differences in Religion, when they were accompanied with humility, modesty and charity, not carried on with insolence and injury, to immorality and public perturbation; in all which men show malice and pride, mixed with, and souring their opinions, which easily and insensibly carry men's hearts from dissentings to emulations, from emulations to anger, Rom. 14.3. from anger to enmity, from enmity to despiciency, from despising to damning one another. Private persuasions, like sticks, when they come to vehement rubbings or agitations, conceive heat, and kindle to passionate flames; whereas in a calm and Christian temper, who so differs from me, is in charity to be interpreted, as desirous either to learn of me, or to instruct me better: and therefore such an one deserves to be treated, 2 Thes. 3.15. not as an enemy, but as a brother; not tetrically, morosely, injuriously, but candidly, charitably, christianly. Yet because experience teacheth us, that the ignorance, infirmity and incapacity of most people is such, that they cannot easily find out of themselves the Truths of God, which are the grounds of true Religion; yea, some are so lazy and indifferent, as to neglect all means which might help them; yea, and many are either so peevish or proud, as they are impatient not to be singular, or not to lead Disciples after them in Religion (the highest ambition being that of Heretics, Acts 20.30. which seeks to domineer over men's souls and consciences:) for these and other weighty reasons, both in civil and religious regards, Christian Religion ought not in any Christian Church-polity or Nation to be left so loose and dissolute, as to have no hedge or wall to the vineyard, no limits or restraints set to the petulancy of those, who under the name of liberty, study to be malicious, licentious, abhorring any thing solid, strict, or settled in Religion, either as to themselves or others; counting all those as enemies to their factious designs and interests, who enjoin them to live in any godly order. Hence these Ecumenical censors and universal critics as boldly and easily reproach, revile, contemn, injure as they please, all those Christians and Churches too, who humbly conform to that profession of Religion, though never so Christian and Reformed, which is once established in any Nation or Church, by public consent and sanction, upon the most mature deliberation and impartial advice, in order to God's glory, and the common good of that society. If these dissolute fancies of Christian liberty should be followed or indulged to people by such Magistrates and Ministers as own that Religion, certainly no society of men would be more unsociable, more sordid, more shameful, or more miserable. Common people will be starved or poisoned, if they be left to feed themselves; they will be as so many ragged regiments, if they be left, as the Israelites, to pick up Religion, like straw, where they can find it. Therefore all piety, policy and charity commands, that in every Nation professing the faith of Jesus Christ as the only true Religion, there should be, as there was in Engl. some such wise and grand establishment, as should be the public measure or standard of Religion, both as to Doctrine, Worship & Government. This in all uprightness ought to be set before people: not only propounded and commended to them, but so far commanded and enjoined by authority, as none should neglect it, or vary from it without giving account; much less should any man publicly scorn and contemn it, or the Ministers and dispensers of it, by writing, speech, or action, to the scandal of the whole Church and Nation, yea to the scandal of the very name of Jesus Christ and his holy Institution, which ought to be (as Tertullian rarely expresseth it) received with godly fear and reverence, Ubi metus in Deum, ibi gravitas modesta, & diligentia attonita, & cura solicita, & adlectio explorata, & communicatio deliberata, & promotio emerita, & subjectio religiosa, & apparitio devota, & processio modesta, & ecclesia unita, & Dei omnia. Tert. de praes. c. 43. entertained with solicitous diligence, maintained with honourable munificence, contained within the bounds of charitable union and humble subjection; such as no way permits any private fancy, upon any pretensions whatsoever, rudely and publicly to oppose or despise it. But, because it is possible that some truths of Religion may be unseen, and so omitted by the most public diligence; and some may afterward be discovered by private industry and devotion, which ought not to be prejudged, smothered or concealed, if they have the character of Gods will revealed in his written Word, whose true meaning is the fixed measure and unalterable rule of all true Religion: to prevent the suppressing or detaining of any Truth, which may be really offered to any Church or Christians, beyond what is publicly owned and established; also to avoid the petulant and insolent obtruding whatever novelty any man's fancy listeth to set up upon his own private account, variating from, or contrary to the public establishment; nothing were more necessary and happy, than to have in every national Church (which hath agreed with one heart, one mind, one spirit, and one mouth to serve the Lord Jesus) according to the pattern of primitive piety and wisdom, persons of eminent learning, piety, prudence and integrity, publicly chosen and appointed to be the constant Conservators of Religion; whose office it should be, to try and examine all new opinions publicly propounded: no man should print or preach any thing different from the public standard and establishment of Religion, until he had first humbly propounded to that venerable council in writing his opinion, together with his reasons, why he adds to, or differs from the public profession. If these grand Conservators of Religion, who ought to be the choicest persons in the Church and Nation, both for ability, gravity and honesty, do (at their solemn and set meetings once or twice every year) allow the propounders reasons and opinions, he may then publicate his judgement by preaching, disputing, writing or printing: But if they do not, he shall then keep his opinion to himself, in the bounds of private conference only, for his better satisfaction; but in no way publicate it, to the scandal or perturbation of what is settled in Religion. Here every man may enjoy his ingenuous liberty, as to private dissenting, without any blame or penalty, which he shall incur and undergo, in case he do so broach any thing without leave, as a rude Innovator and proud disturber. Private and modest dissentings among Christians safely may, and charitably aught to be born with all Christian meekness and wisdom: but certainly it would be the very pest and gangrene of all true Religion, also the moth and canker of all civil as well as Ecclesiastic peace, to tolerate every man's ignorance, rudeness and pragmaticalness, to innovate and act what they please in Religion. Though Christians may be otherways sound and hearty, yet they may have an itch of novelty, popularity, vainglory. It would make mad work in Religion, if every man, under the notion of Christian liberty, should be permitted not only to scratch himself as he listeth, but to infect others by every pestilent contagion, yea to make what riotous havoc he pleaseth of the public peace and order. It were a miserable childishness in any nation professing Christianity, 2 Tim. 3.7. Ephes. 4.14. to be ever learning, and never coming to the knowledge of saving and necessary truths; to be still tossed to and fro with winds of doctrine, and never cast anchor upon sure and safe grounds; which are easily found, if men aimed at piety as well as policy, and regarded Christ's interest or his Churches, more than their own private and secular advantages: which was once happily done, by God's blessing, in the Church of England, to so great an exactness and completeness of Religion, that nothing for necessity, decency, or majesty, was to be added or desired by sober Christians; nor could much be added for conveniency. When Religion is thus settled by public counsel, consent and sanction, it ought in all reason and conscience to be preserved in ways of honour, peace and safety, more carefully than those banks are, which, by keeping out the seas inundations, preserve our pastures and cattle from drowning: else every Polity and Nation pretending to be Christian, proclaim to all the world, that they think Religion to be no better than matters of sceptical dispute, and variable opinion, having nothing in it clear or certain, as to any divine truth, or infallible Revelation. Of which, since their ignorance and weakness, or passion and partiality (to which every private man is subject) makes them less capable either to search or judge, to dispute or determine; the wisdom of God hath always either established, or exemplarily directed his Church to use and enjoy some such constant Conservators of Religion, besides the occasional Reformers and restorers of it; which were of old the Prophets extraordinarily sent, besides those that were ordinarily brought up in the schools of the Prophets, which were the nurseries of those learned and wise men, who made up the Sanhedrim or grand Council among the Jews, consisting of seventy men, who were for piety, parts and place, chief Fathers, Doctors and Rabbis in the Church of the Jews, and the great Conservators of their Law and Religion. Answerably we read in the Primitive Churches and times, this care and power was by the wisdom of Christ fixed, and by all good Christians owned, in the Apostles and Elders; to whom, Acts 15. in case of any dispute or difference in Religion, address was made, not only to hear their counsel and judgement, but to submit to their decisions and decrees; which bound every man to preach no other doctrine, different from, much less contrary to, what that venerable consistory both taught and summarily delivered to the Churches of Christ, 1 Tim. 1.3. viz. wholesome forms, and short summaries of sound doctrine, as well as in their more diffused writings, 2 Tim. 1.13. occasionally sent to particular Churches, and divinely delivered to the use, care and custody of the Catholic Church. Agreeable to these holy precedents, every Christian Church in after-ages had (within their several distributions, or dioceses, distinguished by their Cities or Provinces) their Synods or Ecclesiastical Councils, for all those emergencies or concernments of Religion which arose within their limits and combinations: proportionably they had more extensive Conventions and general Councils in cases of grand concernment, for the comprimising of all differences in Religion, and conservation of the Churches both purity and peace. These methods of prudent piety and pious prudence, as they were of divine Institution, so they ought to be perpetual in the Church of Christ, as being the only means left for the conservation and reformation of Religion. 'Tis true, in the dimness of after-ages, when the decay of Primitive zeal, love, sanctity and sincerity, had too much prevailed over these Western Churches, the Bishops of Rome, taking the advantage of the higher ground, whereon the fame of that City was raised, not only for being the Metropolis of the Roman Empire, but for being a prime Church of Apostolical plantation, and high renown for the Faith and martyrly constancy of its first Bishops; these, Rom. 1.8. with no great difficulty, as with great art and policy, contrary to the judgement and practice of Antiquity for the first 600. years, sought to fix the Standard of Religion in the Pope's chair, and to make his breast the great Conservator of Religion: certainly a very easy, compendious, and happy way to keep up the peace and honour of Christian Religion and Churches, if the Bishop of Rome could, in the noon-day-light of these, time's either convince the world of his special gift of Infallibility, or make good his claim of being sole and supreme Judge of all controversies in Religion, above any other Pastors and Bishops, yea and above a general Council. This late prodigious pillar, or huge Colosse of the Pope's infallible, sole and supreme power, hath, as of old, so of late years, not only been much weakened by many Churches, Greek and Latin, dissenting, but by some it hath been quite overthrown, demolished and broken in pieces, as an arrogant abuse and intolerable tyranny, contrary to all rules of Scripture and reason, never challenged by the first famous and holy Bishops of that Church, nor owned in after-ages (when Popes began to usurp upon other Bishops and Churches) by the most learned and godly men of those times. This justice being done to the honour and liberty of the Churches of Christ, and their respective Bishops or Pastors, against the Papal obtrusion of his sole judicature: yet no Reformed Church, of any repute, hath been so transported by just indignation against the Papal usurpations, as to expose themselves and their Religion to the various breach and giddy brains of the vulgar; but every one hath both confined and settled their profession by some public profession, as the standard of Religion; also they have some such Conservators of Religion, either ordinary or extraordinary, as do take care that the established Religion suffer no injury or detriment. This authority or power seems now much wanting in England, though it be very necessary, in my judgement, which should so preserve the public stability of true Religion, as not to invade any good man's private liberty, which ought not to be too severely kerbed; yet not so indulged, as to injure the common welfare, contrary to all rules of reason, justice and charity. These Conservators of Religion should not exact of private Christians any explicit conformity or subscription, under penalty of any mulct or prison, much less with the terror of fire and faggot, which was the zealotry of Papal tyranny: only they should take care that people be duly taught that Religion which is settled; that none be a public Preacher, that is a declared dissenter or opposer of it; that no man do broach any novelty without their approbation; that no man do petulantly blaspheme, oppose, scorn or perturb that constitution of Religion which is publicly settled, as supposed to be the best; that no man abuse the name of Christian liberty to the public injury. All sober and wise Christians do see and feel, by late sad experience, that liberty, in the vulgar sense and notion, is but a golden Calf, which licentious minds set up to themselves under that specious name; as the Israelites did their abominable Idol, under the popular title and acclamation of These are thy Gods, Exod. 32 4 O Israel. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Clem. Alex. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 7. If common people be indulged in what freedom they will challenge to themselves, wise men will soon find, that their Christian liberty is no better than an Image of jealousy, a Teraphim, a Tamuz, or Adonis, offensive to the God of reason, order, law and government; destructive to humane society; dishonourable to the name of Christ, and that holy profession which was so renowned of old, as Christian, that is, the most regular, meek, harmless, strict, peaceable and charitable Religion in the world: whose divided and deformed aspect, even now in England, if (as Clem. Alex. observes in his time) a prudent Heathen, or moral Turk, or sober Jew, or grave Philosopher, should behold, as to the effect of some men's principles and practices, who glory much in their Christian liberty, would they not conclude, that Christ their Master was the Author, and Christion profession the favourer of all manner of Licentiousness? Which is not more a dehonestation of the Doctrine, Spirit, Disciples and Mystery of Christ Jesus, than an infinite damp and hindrance to the propagation and spreading of the Gospel in the world: yea, it is the highway, through the justice of God upon the wanton wickedness and hypocritical profaneness of such Christians, utterly to extirpate the power, peace, comfort, yea and profession of Christian Religion. The Mahometan power and poison had never spread so over those famous Asian, African, and Eastern Churches, if Heretical and Schismatical liberty had not first battered the strength, and corrupted the health of Christianity. Hence those inundations of barbarity, those incursions of foreign enemies, following those intestine wars and confusions, by which the wise and just God hath in all ages punished the folly and presumption of petulant and licentious Christians, who first dare to think, then to speak, at last to act, what they fancy and affect, instead of what God commands, and the Catholic Church hath observed in all ages. These popular provocations of God, which are full of impudent impiety, commonly are revenged by dreadful and durable judgements, long and lasting miseries. For the pertinacious mischiefs of Heresy and Schism once prevailing upon any Church & Nation, are, like frenzy or madness, rarely cured, without loss of much blood; besides the iron goads and sharp harrows of mutual depredations and oppressions, which are used between parties and factions, once in religious respects engaged against each other. 'Tis not expectable that Christians thus tearing and massacring each other, should recover their wits, till sharp and successive afflictions have showed them how unholy and unthankful they are, without natural and spiritual affections, who dare at once despise their Fathers, reproach their Mother, and devour their Brethren; who being baptised, instructed, communicated and converted (as they pretend) to the same Lord Jesus Christ, and to his holy profession, by the Ministry of such a Church as England was (so Christian, so Reform) yet by a voluntary separation and desperate defection (as (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) self-condemned) dare to execute such bold and rash censures of excommunication, both upon themselves and others, 'tis 3.11, as a sober Christian should greatly tremble to undergo, if the sacred authority of such a Church, by its Bishops, Ministers, and other Members, should jointly pass such a censure upon them, as their own pride, passion, superstition, and licentious humours daily dare to do. May they not justly fear, lest God should satisfy them with their own delusions, and ratify that judgement which they have uncharitably chosen, of being ever separated from his Church, and from himself? might not God justly despise and reject them, who have despised and rejected such means, such Ministers, such Ministrations, as some have done, and still do, in the Church of England? Luke 20.16. If the dust of his Ministers feet will rise up in judgement against ingrateful refusers; Mat. 10.14. how much sorer punishment may they expect, who are the insolent abusers of such messengers of peace, and cruel vastators of such a Church as England was, before it felt the sad effects of this Christian liberty, which common people are prone not more to magnify, than to mistake and misuse? CHAP. IU. Of Plebeian rudeness and licentiousness in Religion, if left to themselves. WHo doubts, but if the plebs or populacy, in any Nation or Church, be left to themselves, to cut out Religion & Liberty into what thongs they list, they will soon be not only unshod, ungirt & unblessed, but so quite naked and unclothed, as to any Christian grace or virtue, gravity or decency, truth or sanctity, that their shame and nakedness will soon appear in all manner of fedity, deformity, error and ignorance, insolence and confusion? They have little studied the vulgar genius, who do not find by all reading and experience, that the common temper of people is rude and perverse, light and licentious, petulant and insolent, Non rationibus convincuntur, quia non intelligunt; nec autoritatibus corriguntur, quia non recipiunt; nec flectuntur suasionibus, quia subversi sunt. Bern. in Can. s. 66. as S. Bernard well expresseth it. They are not convincible with reason, because incapable; they despise good examples, because they love not to imitate them; they are too proud and peevish to be sweetly won and persuaded to goodness; they are mad and impatient to be kerbed. Yea, they are undone, and perish eternally, if they be betrayed to themselves; if God and good men be not better to them than they deserve, desire, or design for themselves, either in things civil or sacred; if there be not, by just and honest policies, such holy restraints and wholesome severities put upon them, Imperiti, animosi, & propter inopiā consil●i iracu●di. Fermil. ap. Cyp. as are not their chains, but their girdles; not their bannacles, but their bridles. Alas, what wise Magistrate or Minister is there, who doth not find by daily experience, that if you will but save people's purses, they are not very solicitous how to save their souls? most of them think Taxes and Tithes far greater burdens, than all their sins and trespasses; not much valuing their sanctification or salvation, so as they enjoy that rustic, thrifty and unmannerly liberty, which they naturally affect, against their teachers and betters. What immense sums of money have of late years been spent upon military and secular accounts? If the hundredth part had been desired of them, in order to have procured a competent maintenance for an able Preacher in every parish (without which there is little hope ever to enjoy competent Ministers) O what an outcry would have been made? what an oppression would it have seemed to the common people, beyond ship-money, yea, beyond the bricks and bondage of Egypt, as if their very life-blood and the marrow of their bones had been taken from them? so much doth the beast and natural man over-weigh the Christian, in the most of men and women. The freest, easiest, and cheapest Religion is thought the best among them: what is most grateful, is most godly: then they fancy themselves most happy, when least obliged to be holy; and then most zealously religious, when they may be most securely licentious. The more factious and pragmatic spirits among them do think that all Polity and Religion, things civil and sacred, must needs be shipwreckt and utterly miscarry, unless they have an oar in the boat, Nisi quod ipsi faciunt, nihil r●ctum existimant. Aug. ep. ad Janua. unless they put their hand to the helm of all government. It doth not suffice their busy heads and hands to trim the sails, as common Mariners, when commanded, but they must be at the steerage; not considering what ballast of judgement, what anchor of constancy, what compass of sound knowledge, both divine and humane, is necessary for those who undertake to be Pilots and guides of States and Churches. The rude plebs, like mutinous mariners, are prone so to affect liberty, as to endanger their own and other men's safety: they are like Porpuices, pleased with storms, especially of their own raising: they joy in the toss of Religion, and hope for a prey by the wrecks both of well-built Churches and well-setled States: they fancy it a precious liberty to swim in a wide sea, though they be drowned at last, or swallowed up by sharks: they triumph to see other poor souls dancing upon the waves of the dead sea, to be overwhelmed with ignorance, idleness, Atheism, profaneness, perdition; which is the usual, and almost unavoidable, fate of those giddy-headed, & mad-brained people, who being happily embarked, and orderly guided in any well-setled Church, do either put their ablest Pilots under hatches, or cast them overboard; which hath been of late years the religious ambition of many thousands, in order (forsooth) to recover and enjoy their imaginary Christian liberties, which soon make common people the sad objects of wise men's grief and pity, rather than of their joy or envy. For, like wand'ring sheep, they naturally affect an erroneous and dangerous freedom from their shepherds and their folds, that they may be free for foxes, wolves and dogs: yea, some of them, by a strange metamorphosis, that they may seem Christ's sheep, turn wolves, seizing upon and destroying their own shepherds: which the true flock of Christ never did, either in the most persecuted, or the most peaceful times of the Church; but were ever subject, with all humility and charity, to those godly Bishops and Presbyters, Heb. 13.17. which were by Apostolical succession and Divine authority over them in the Lord; whom they were so far from stripping, robbing, or devouring, that both Christian Princes and faithful people endowed them with most grateful and munificent expressions of their loves and esteem, even in primitive and necessitous times, as a due and deserved honour to men of learning, piety and gravity, who watched over their souls, being both well enabled, and duly ordained to be their rulers and guides to heaven. But now, who sees not by the sad experience of the Church of England, how the plebs or common people, yea all persons of plebeian spirits, of base and narrow minds, (who are the greatest sticklers for those enormous and pernicious liberties) who sees not how much they would be pleased to set up Jeroboams calves, 2 Chr. 11.15. if they may have liberty to choose the meanest of the people to be their Priests, or some scabbed and straggling sheep to be their shepherds; 1 King. 13.33. if they may make some of their mechanic comrades to be their Pastors and Ministers, 2 Chron 19 9 examined and ordained by their silly selves? O how willing are they (poor wretches) in their thirst for novelty, Theophylact in 2 Tim. 4.3. Heaping up teachers, etc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. liberty and variety, as Theophylact observes, to suffer any pitiful piece of prating impudence, who walketh in the spirit of falsehood, to impose upon them so far as to be their Preacher and Prophet, if he will but prophesy to them of liberty and sovereignty, of sacred and civil Independency, * Mich. 2.11. of corn, wine, and strong drink, of good bargains and purchases to be gained out of the ruins of the Church, and the spoils of Churchmen? O how little regret would it be to such sacrilegious Libertines, to have no Christian Sabbath, or Lords days, as well as no Holidays, or solemn memorial of Evangelical mercies? How contented would they be with no preaching, no praying, no Sermons, no Sacraments, no Scriptures, no Presbyters, (as well as no Bishops,) with no Ministers or holy Ministrations, with no Church, no Saviour, no God, further than they list to fancy them in the freedom of some sudden flashes and extemporary heats? There are that would still be as glad to see the poor remainder of Church-lands and Revenues, all Tithes and Glebes, quite alienated and confiscated, as those men were, who got good estates by the former ruins of Monasteries, or the later spoilings of Bishops and Cathedrals: nothing is sacred, nothing sacrilegious to the all-craving, & all-devouring maw of vulgar covetousness and licentiousness. O how glorious a liberty would it be in some men's eyes, to pay no Tithes to any Minister! much more precious liberty would it be to purchase them, and by good pennyworths to patch up their private fortunes. Nothing (in very deed) is less valuable to the shameless, sordid, and dissolute spirits of some people, than their souls eternal state, or the service of their God and Saviour; whom not seeing, they are not very solicitous to seek or to serve, further than may consist with their profit, ease and liberty. They rather choose to go blindfold, wand'ring and dancing to hell, in the licentious frolicks of their fanciful Religions, than to live under those holy orders and wholesome restraints, which in all Ages preserved the unity and honour of true Christian Religion, both by sober Discipline and sound Doctrine. In the later of these the Clergy of England most eminently abounded; and in the former of them they were not so much negligent (which some complain) as too much checked and kerbed: few men being so good Christians, as to be patient of that severe Discipline which was used in the Primitive Churches; which if any Bishop or Minister should have revived, how would the rabble of Libertines cry out, Depart from us, we will none of your ways, Job 22.13. neither Discipline nor Doctrine, neither your Ministrations nor Ministry, Psal. 2.3. neither Bishops nor Presbyters; let us break these Priestly bonds in sunder, and cast these Christian cords from us: our liberty is, to lead our tame teachers by their noses, to pull our asinine Preachers by their luculent ears, to rule our precarious Rulers: if they pretend to have or use any Ecclesiastical authority, so as to cross our liberties, to curb our consciences, or to bridle our extravagancies; we look upon them as men come to torment us before our time, Mat. 8.29. who seek to lead us away captive, to deprive us of our dear God Mammon, (as Micah cried out after the Danites) or of our great Goddess Liberty, Acts 19.28. according to the jealousy which Demetrius and the Ephesine rabble had for their Diana, against the Apostles. This is the Idea of that petulant, profane and fanatic liberty, which vulgar people most fancy and affect; for the enjoying of which, they have made so many horrid clamours, and ventured upon so many dangerous confusions, both to their own and other men's souls, in matter of Religion. CHAP. V. I Shall not need by particular instances further to demonstrate to You (my honoured Countrymen) what your own observation daily proclaims, Instances of abused Liberty in the vulgar neglect of reading the Scriptures. namely, the strange pranks, cabrioles, or freaks, which the vulgar wantonness hath played of late years, under the colour and confidence of liberty in Religion (provided they profess no other Popery or Prelacy than what is in their own ambitious hearts & insolent manners.) Nor is this petulancy only exercised in the smaller circumstances, or disputable matters of Religion, but even in the very main foundations; such as have been established of old in all the generations and successions of the Churches of Christ, both as to good doctrine and orderly conversation. First, if you consider the (Magna Charta) grand charter of your souls, the holy Scriptures. Those lively oracles, Acts 7 38. 2 Tim. 3.16. which were given by inspiration and direction of God's Spirit, which beyond all books in the world have been most desperately persecuted, and most divinely preserved, having in them the clearest characters of divine Truth, love, mercy, wisdom, power, majesty and glory, the impressions and manifestations of greatest goodness, grace, both in morals & mysteries, in the prophecies and their accomplishment, in the admirable harmony of prescience & performance, of Prophets & Apostles, setting forth the blessed Messias, as the prefigured Sacrifice, the promised Saviour, the desire of the world; those Books which have been delivered to us by the most credible testimony in the world, the uniform consent of the pillar and ground of Truth, 1 Tim. 2.13. the Catholic Church of God, Gal. 1.8. which the Apostle S. Paul prefers before that of an Angel from Heaven; that divine Record, which hath been confirmed to us by so many miracles, sealed by the faith and confession, the repentance and conversion, the doctrine and example, the gracious lives and glorious deaths of so many holy Confessors and Martyrs in all ages, besides an innumerable company of other humble professors, who have been perfected, sanctified and saved by that word of life, dwelling richly in them in all wisdom. Co●. 3.16. Yet, even in this grand concernment of Religion, the holy Scriptures, (whose two Testaments are as the two poles on which all morality and Christianity turn, the two hinges on which all our piety and felicity depend) much negligence, indifferency and coldness, is of late used by many, 2 Tim. 4.3. not only people, but their heaps of Preachers, under the notion and imagination of their Christian liberty, that is, seldom or never seriously to read, either privately or publicly, any part of the holy Scripture, unless it be a short Text or Theme, for fashion sake, which (like a broken morsel) they list to chew a while in their mouths: Nehem. 8.3, 8. but the solemn, attentive, grave, devout, and distinct reading of Psalms or Chapters, or any other set portion of the holy Scriptures, old or new (to which S. chrysostom, S. Jerome, S. Austin, and the other ancient Fathers, both Greek and Latin, so oft and so earnestly exhorted all Christians) this they esteem as a poor and puerile business, only fit for children at school, not for Christians at Church; unless it be attended with some exposition or gloss upon it, though never so superficial, simple and extemporary; which is like painting over well-polished marble; being more prone to wrest, darken and pervert, than rightly to explain, clear or interpret the Scriptures, which of themselves are in most places easy to be understood: obscure places are rather more perplexed than expounded, when they are undertaken by persons not very learned, Just. M. Apo. 2. or not well prepared for that work; which was the employment anciently (as Justin Martyr tells us) chiefly of the (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) the Bishop or Precedent then present, whose office was far above the (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or) Readers, who having done his duty, the other, as Pastor of the flock, either opened or applied such parts of the Scripture as he thought best to insist upon. Yet there are (now) many such supercilious and nauseous Christians, who utterly despise the bare reading or reciting of the Word of God to the Congregation, as if no beauty were on it, no life or power in it, no good or virtue to be gotten by it, unless the breath of a poor man further inspire it, unless a poor worm, like a snail, flightly passing over it, set a slimy varnish upon it: as if the saving truth, and self-shining light of God's Word, in the precepts, examples, promises, prophecies and histories, were not most clear and easy of itself, as to all things necessary to be believed, obeyed, or hoped; Psal. 19.7, 8. as if honest and pure-hearted Christians could not easily perceive the mind of God in the Scriptures, unless they used always such extemporary spectacles, as some men glory to put upon their own or their auditor's noses. Certainly such new masters in our Israel forget how much they symbolise with the Papists in this fancy, while denying or disdaining all reading of Scriptures in public, unless some expound them, though never so sorrily, slovenly and suddenly, they must by consequence highly discourage, yea, and utterly forbid common people the reading of any portion of them privately in their closerts or families, where they can have no other expositors but themselves, and it may be are not themselves so confident, as to undertake the work of expounding the hard and obscurer places; as for other places which are more necessary and easy, sure they explain themselves sufficiently to every humble, diligent, and attentive reader or hearer: the blessed use and effects of which if these supercilious Rabbis had found in themselves, while the Word of God is publicly, distinctly and solemnly read in the Church to them, doubtlessly they would not have so much disused, despised and decried this godly custom in the Church of England, of emphatic reading the Word of God in the audience of Christian Congregations. O rare and unheard of Christian Liberty, which dares to cast so great a slighting and despiciency upon the public reading of the Scriptures, which are the Church's chiefest Jewel, so esteemed and used by Jews and Gentiles, full of its own sacred, innate and divine lustre; then indeed most spendid and illustrious, when handsomely set, that is, Mal. 2.7. when the Priests lips preserve the knowledge of them, and duly impart them to Christian people, both by discreet reading and preaching, that is, explaining and applying them! CHAP. VI Vulgar neglect and scorn of ancient forms of wholesome words, in the Decalogue, Creed, and Lords Prayer. Rom. 6.17. 2 Tim▪ 1.13. AFter these vulgar slight and depreciating, cast upon the public reading of the Word of God by some novellers, I shall in vain set forth to You what is less strange (yet very strange and new in the Church of Christ) that is, the supercilious contempt and total rejection of all those ancient venerable forms of sound words and wholesome doctrine, either literally contained and expressly commanded in the Scripture, such as are the Ten Commandments and Lords Prayer; or evidently grounded, and anciently deduced out of the Scriptures, such as are the Apostles Creed, with other ancient Symbols and Doxologies, which were bounds and marks of all Christians unity and soundness in the faith, generally used by all pristine and modern Churches of any renown, who mixed with their public Services of God these great pillars and chief foundations of piety, these constant rules, standards and measures of Religion, by which they took the scantlings or proportions of all their duties and devotions, of their sins and repentance, of their faith and hope: hence the humble confession of their sins, the sincere agnition of their duties, the earnest deprecations of divine vengeance, the fervent supplications for mercy and pardon, the hearty invocations for grace, the solemn consecration of the sacramental elements, the due celebration of holy mysteries, the high Doxologies or exaltations of the glorious Trinity, the joint testifications of Christians mutual charity, harmony and communion: All these (I say) were carried on and consummated in the Churches public worship, which was excellently improved, heightened and adorned, by the use and recitation of those Summaries of Religion amidst the congregations of Christians, to which they assented with a loud and cheerful Amen. Yet, which of them is there (now) that is not openly, not only disused, but disdained, disgraced and disparaged by some men, as nauseous cram, which their souls abhor? so far as they from reverend attending, or hearing, when any Minister reciteth them, that they scarce have any patience, or can keep within those looks and postures of civility which become them: yea, they endure not to have their children taught them, as the first rudiments of Religion, the seminaries of faith, and nurseries of devotion; which being rightly planted, and duly watered by catechising, may in time (by God's blessing) bring forth the ripe fruits of wisdom and holiness, of faith and obedience, both to power and order, to an uniformity and constancy of Godliness. Totius Evangelii breviari●m. Tert. de Orat. Dom. So Cyp●. Coelestis doctrinae compendium, fidelium harmonia, in toto orbe celebratum Amen. And Ruffin. in Symb. Iren. l. 2. c. 9 l. 3. c. 3. It is called Apostolorum traditio, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Amphiloch. Hieron. ep. 16. Chrys. in Symb. The ancient Christian writers, as Irenaeus, Tertullian, Cyprian, Ruffinus, Jerome, Austin, and others, sufficiently tell us, That these compendious forms of duty, faith and devotion, the Decalogue, Creed, Lords Prayer and Doxologies, were highly valued, and solemnly used in Christian Conventions, as the gracious condescendings of our God, and Saviour, to the weakest memories and meanest capacities: some of them being of their express and immediate dictating: according to which pattern, the blessed Apostles, and the Churches of Christ after them, took care that both those, and other forms like to them, should be used among Christians; that so by frequent repeating and inculcating those excellent summaries of Faith and Catholic principles of Religion, all sorts of Christian people, Heb. 6.1. young and old, learned and idiots, might be either catechised or confirmed in the very same things, to be believed, prayed for, and practised, in order to their own and others salvation. Which great work can never be safely built upon Seraphic sublimities and Scholastic subtleties; much less upon imaginary raptures, childish novelties, idle dreams, and futile whimsies, which of late do seek (very impiously) to justle out of all Church's use, and out of all Christians memories, those wholesome solidities, and holy summaries, which have in them both the warmth of Christian love, and the light of Divine truth; in comparison of which, all novel affectations are dark and cold, dull and confused, silly and insipid. Yet what sober Christian doth not see, that of late years this popular liberty in England is risen to such a nauseating, niceness and curiosity of Religion, as hath not only infected the simpler sort of common people with an abhorrence of all those useful and venerable forms, which the prudence & piety of this or any Church commended to them in their public celebrations; but (to the great encouragement and advance of ignorance, Atheism and profaneness, uncharitableness and insolence among the vulgar) many persons of very considerable parts and good quality, are shrewdly leavened with these Novellismes and Libertinismes? Yea (which is worst of all) many Ministers, especially of the Presbyterian and Independent parties, yea and some of the ancient order and Catholic conformity of the Church of England, even these (as S. Gal. 2.14. Peter was overawed to a dissimulation, misbecoming the freedom and dignity of so great an Apostle, by too great fears, and compliances with the circumcised Jews) have been so carried down this stream of plebeian prejudice, and popular indifferency, more than liberty, to say or silence, to do or omit what they list, that they have not only much neglected all the devotional set forms of this Church's prescription (which, in my judgement, merited a far better fate and handsomer dismission, than they found from many men's hands) but some have wilfully disused, and so discountenanced, even all those sacred forms which have either Divine, or Apostolic, or Catholic characters of honour, antiquity and Religion upon them. How miserably are many public Preachers either afraid or ashamed, solemnly to recite so much as once every Lord's day the ten Commandments, or the Apostles Creed, or any other of those ancient Symbols? yea, when is it, that some Ministers dare use either so much courage or conscience, as to use the Lords Prayer, either by itself, or in the conclusion of their own voluminous supplications before or after their Sermons? in which neither much regard is had to the method, nor the matter of the Lords Prayer, which they pretend is the use of it; but it is made to stand, like a mere cipher, silent and insignificant, while men love to multiply the innumerable Logarithmes of their own crude inventions and incomposed devotions: when as that Prayer which the wisdom of our Lord Jesus twice taught his Disciples upon several occasions, Matth. 6.9. Luke 11.2. and in them all his Church, both in a doctrinal and devotional way, as a method, matter and form of Prayer, is in itself, and ever was so esteemed and used by all good Christians, not only as the foundation, measure and proportion, but also as the confirmation, completion, crown and consummation of all our prayers and praises to God. Instead of which, and wholly exclusive of it, how many poor-spirited Preachers, of late, more to gratify and humour some silly and self-willed people, than to satisfy their own consciences, yea, highly to the scandal of many worthy Christians, and the dishonour of the Reformed profession, are become not only strangers, but almost enemies to that, and all other holy forms of Religion, contenting themselves with their own private composures, or their more sudden conceptions, in all public celebrations and solemn worship; not having so much modesty and humility, as to consider, what is most evident to wise men, that no private man's sufficiencies in point of public prayer and celebrious duties can be such, for method, comprehensiveness, clearness, weight, solidity, sanctity and majesty, as may compare, much less dispense with, and neglect, yea utterly reject, those sacred summaries and solemn forms, which have been divinely instituted: whose foolishness is wiser than the wisdom of men, and whose shortness is beyond the amplest prolixity and largest spinnings of humane lungs and invention; Quanto facilius audiamur, dum prece quam filius docuit apud patrem loquimur? Quanto officacius ●mpetramus quod petimus in Christi nomine, si petamus ipsius oratione? Cyp. de Orat. Dom. Quantum substringitur verbis, tantum diffunditur sensibus. Tert. in Orat. Dom. there being more spirit in one drop of Christ's Prayer (as in cordial and hot waters) than in whole seas of vulgar effusions; which, at best, having much in them very flashy, insipid and confused, had need to have, at last, the sacred infusion of Christ's prayer added to them, to give them and us that sanctity, spirit, life, completeness, comfort, and fiduciary assurance of acceptance, which all good men desire in their service of God. Certainly they seem much to overvalue their own prayers, who wholly disuse or despise the Lords: nor do I see how a Minister of Christ can comfortably discharge his duty to the flock of Christ, if while he professeth to preach that Gospel which Christ hath taught, he industriously omits the use of that prayer which Christ hath not only commended, but enjoined and commanded, as an Evangelicall institution. Which shameful compliance of many Ministers with vulgar levity and licentiousness, seems to me so far from really advancing their own honour, or the true interests of the Christian and Reformed Religion, that (in earnest) they have by these and the like mean deserting of their own judgements & duties, very much exposed themselves, and the Reformed Christian Religion, to the insolences and contempts of the meanest people, which as easily crowd and prevail upon them, as waters do against crazy and yielding banks, when once they see Ministers so stoop and debase themselves to the dictates and censures, the fears and frowns, the fancies and humours of giddy and inconstant people, who naturally affect such liberty or looseness in Religion, as may have least show of divine Ligation and Authority; but only such, as being of men's own choice and invention, they may as easily reject, as others obtrude. The very Directory and its ordinances, which gave the supersedeas or quietus est to the Liturgy of the Church of England, doth not yet seem to intend any such severity, as wholly to silence, sequester & eject the Lords Prayer, ten Commandments, or the Apostles Creed, out of children's Catechisms, Ministers mouths, or Christians public profession and devotion; in which they seem to me to appear a rich and invaluable Jewels, giving the greatest lustre, price and honour to their religious Solemnities. CHAP. VII. I Have already showed you (O worthy Gentlemen) one great and evil instance of that inordinate liberty, The innovations, usurpations and vastations made by some upon the order, office and authority of the Evangelicall Ministry. which some people have challenged of late to themselves in England, to the great dishonour and detriment of the Christian Reformed Religion; besides the disgrace and indignity cast upon this sometime famous and flourishing Church, while they have endeavoured to abolish all those holy Summaries and wholesome Forms, which are the best and meetest preservers of true Faith, holy Obedience, and mutual Charity among the community of Christian people. Nor are these the only extravagancies of vulgar licentiousness, (whose inordinate and squalid torrent, like an inundation of waters, knows not how to set any bounds of modesty, reason, or conscience to itself;) but they have farther adventured, as a rare frolic of popular freedom, to invade and usurp upon, to confound and contemn, to divide and destroy the office, honour, authority, the succession and derivation, yea, the source and original of that sacred Priesthood, or Evangelical Ministry and mission, which was ever so highly esteemed, reverenced and maintained among all true Christians; as well knowing that Its rise and institution was divine, from our Lord Jesus Christ, as sent of God his Father, who alone had authority to give the Word and Spirit, the Mission and Commission, Joh. 15.21, 22. the Gifts and Powers that are properly ministerial. Which, as the blessed Apostles first received immediately from Christ, so they duly and carefully derived them to their Successors, after such a method and manner as the Primitive and Catholic Churches, in all places and ages, both perfectly knew, and (without question) exactly followed, in their consecrating of Bishops and ordaining of Presbyters, with Deacons, as the only ordinary Ministers of Christ's Church; whose ministerial authority never was any way derived from, depending upon, or obnoxious to the humour, fancy, insolency, and licentiousness of the common people. To which miserable captivity and debasement, as the aaronical or Levitical Priesthood was no way subjected, so much less ought the Melchisedekian, Christian, and Evangelicall Priesthood, which is no less sovereign and sacred, nor less necessary and honourable in the Church of God. So that those licentious intrusions, which some people now affect in this point of the Ministry, cannot be less offensive to God's Spirit, than they are directly contrary to those holy rules of power and order prescribed in the New Testament; which both the Apostles and their successors, both Bishops and Presbyters, together with all faithful people, precisely observed in all those grand Combinations and Ecclesiastical Communions, whereto the Church of Christ was distributed in all nations: where, if sometime the people's choice and suffrage were tolerable, as to the person whom they desired and nominated for their Bishop or Presbyter; yet it was never imaginable, that either Bishop or Presbyter was sufficiently consecrated and ordained, that is, invested with the power, office and authority ministerial, merely by this nomination and election of the people; which indulgence, in time, grew to such disorder, as was intolerable in the Church: much less was any esteemed a Minister of Christ only because he obtruded himself upon that service. The late licentious variations, innovations, invasions, corruptions and interruptions, even in this grand point of the Evangelicall office and Ministry in England, have, partly by the common people's arrogancy, giddiness, madness and ingratitude, and not a little by some Preachers own levity, fondness, flattery and meanness of spirit, not only much abated, and abased to a very low ebb, that double honour which is due; 1 Tim. 5.17. but they have poured forth deluges of scorn, contempt, division, confusion, poverty, and almost nullity▪ not only upon the persons of many worthy Ministers, but upon the very order and office, the function and profession; whose sacred power and authority, the pride, petulancy, envy, revenge, cruelty and covetousness of some people, have sought, not only to arrogate and usurp as they list, but totally to innovate, enervate, and at last extirpate. For nothing new in this point can be true, nothing variable can be venerable: that only being authentic, which is ancient and uniform; that only authoritative, which is Primitive, Catholic and Apostolic, both in the copy and original, in the first commission and the exemplification. I confess I formerly have been, and still am, infinitely grieved to hear, and ashamed to report what enormous liberties many men have of late years taken to themselves in this point of being Ministers of the Gospel; what contradictions of sinners, what cruel mockings, & sawing asunder; what buffet, strippings, crucifyings, and killings all the day long, the Ancient and Catholic Ministry of this & all Churches hath lately endured in England, since the wicked wantonness of some men hath taken pleasure to be as thorns in the eyes, & goads in the sides of the Ch. of England, and Its Ministers, be they never so able, successful and deserving: whom to calumniate; contemn, impoverish and destroy in their persons, credits, estates, liberties, yea, and lives, hath seemed (like Mordecai to Hamans' malice and wrath) so small a sacrifice to the fierceness and indignation of some men, that they have aimed at the utter extirpation of the Nation, the nullifying, cashiering and exautorating of their whole office and function; either owning no Ministers in any divine office, place and power, or obtruding such strange moulds and models of their own invention, as are not more novel and unwonted, than ridiculous and preposterous; like Monsters, having neither matter nor form proportionate to Ministers. Against whose petulant and too prevalent poison, I have formerly sought to apply some Antidote; not more smart and severe, than charitable and conscientious: aiming (as now I do) neither to flatter nor exasperate any; but in all Christian integrity and sincerity, to discharge my duty to God and my neighbour, to this Church and to my Country. Nor was it indeed then, or is it now other than high time to answer that folly, to repel and obstruct (if possible) that Epidemic mischief, which (on this side) greatly threatens both Church & State, Faith and good manners, all things civil as well as sacred. What wise and honest-hearted Christian (that hath any care of posterity, or prospect for the future) doth not daily find as an holy impatience, so an infinite despondency rising in his soul, while he sees so many weak shoulders, such unwashen hands, such unprepared feet, such rash heads, and such divided hearts, not only disown, cast off, contemn and abhor all Ministry and Ministers in the Church of England; but they are publicly intruding themselves upon all holy duties, all sacred Offices, all solemn Mysteries, all divine Ministrations, after what fashion they list, both in their admission and execution? In many places, either pitiful silly wretches, or more subtle and crafty fellows, have become the mighty Rivals, the supercilious Censors, yea, the open menacers & opposers, no less than secret underminers, of the most learned and renowned, the most reverend, able and faithful, both Bishops and Presbyters, in England. All that ever these Worthies have done in former ages, or still do never so commendably in their religious services of God and this Church, is superciliously and scurrilously cried down by some men (under the presumption and protection of their ignorant and impudent Liberties) as no better than formal and superficial, carnal and unspiritual, as unchristian, yea, Antichristian. All their and our catechisings, preachings, prayings, baptisings, consecrating; their instructing of babes, their confirming of the weak, their resolvings of the dubious, their terrifying and binding over to judgement unbelieving and impenitent sinners, their censuring and admonishing of the scandalous, their excommunicating the contumacious, their losing the penitent, their comforting the afflicted, their binding up the brokenhearted; all the exercise and operations of their spiritual power, yea, their very ordination and holy orders, their gifts and graces, their abilities and authority, either from God or this Church; all these are either baffled and disparaged, or invaded, usurped by some rude Novellers, with equal insolency and insufficiency, being for the most part by so much the more impudent, by how much they are grossly ignorant. Yea, some of them, the better to colour over their lazy and illiterate licentiousness (to which they are now degenerated) have such audacious brows, and seared consciences, as after they have pretended to have tasted how gracious the Lord was, 1 Pet. 2.3. Heb. 6.4, 5. in the orderly and holy dispensations of heavenly gifts by the Ministry of the Church of Engl. yet they now glory to cast off all her ministrations, to separate from her communion, and all due subjection to any of her Ministers, vapouring much of their own and other men's gifts, of extraordinary callings, of odd rave and rantings, of new seekings and quake, of rare dippings and dream, of their extemporary prophesyings, and inspired (yet confused) prayings, of extraordinary unctions and inward illuminations; the grounds and fruits of which strange pretensions I have been a long time diligently curious to observe in the speech, writings and actions of these pretenders. And I must profess, that either I am wholly a stranger to right reason as well as true Religion, to the Word and Spirit of God, principles and practices of all godly men and women in former ages; or I am utterly uncapable to discern any of these, either rational or religious, orderly or honest expressions in any instances or degrees proportionable, or indeed comparable to (much less beyond) what was most clearly observable (as the Sun's light at noonday) in the Sermons, Prayers, Writings, Lives and Actions of those Ministers, and other excellent Christians, who heretofore held, and still do, an holy communion with the Clergy and Church of England. Beyond whose sober light and solid discoveries of true Religion, these new Masters (who will needs be Ministers) have yet offered to me no other but such strange stuff, such rambling rhapsodies, such crude incoherences, such chemical chimaeras, such Chaos-like confusions, such Seraphic whimsies, such Socinian subtleties, such Behmemick bombast, such profound nonsense, such blasphemous raptures, big as Behemoth, Job 40▪ & 41. 2 Pet. 2.18. and disdainful as Leviathan, proud swelling words of vanity, as no sober Christian hath leisure to intend, or need to understand, if he had capacity; which he is not likely to have, since I am confident they pass their authors own understanding: not that there is any thing in them that flows from the higher springs of grace, or the profounder depths of divine mysteries; Col. 2.18. but they are mere puffings up of proud and fleshly minds, intruding themselves into things they have not seen, who delight in this froth of idleness, these lyings and vapourings of hypocrisy, 1 Tim. 4 2. which never did of old (in the Gnostics, Montanists, Manichees, or others of the like bran with these men) in the least degree advance the majesty or authority of Christian Religion, or the credit and comfort of Christian Preachers or Professors; however they served for a time the bellies and interests of such popular Parasites, more than Preachers of the Gospel, or Ministers of Jesus Christ. Pure Religion and undefiled before God and the Father was of old, James 1.27. still is, and ever will be in the minds and mouths of true Ministers (when these Hucksters and Mountebanks, these deceitful workers are buried in infamy and obscurity with those their rotten predecessors) a rich magazine of heavenly wisdom, a Treasury of sound knowledge, a store-house of pregnant and ponderous Truths, bringing men to a good understanding of God, themselves, and their neighbours, free from the rust and scurf of childish easiness and popular petulancy, planted by holy and humble industry, watered by prayers and patience, beautified with all manner of useful virtues and moralities, dispensed to others with authority, industry and perspicuity, entertained in men's own hearts with honesty and charity; not studying to be admired of men, but approved of God; not affecting to stupefy auditors with strange difficulties and curiosities, but to edify them with saving Truths, and sound Doctrine, in words easy to be understood; five of which S. 1 Cor. 14.9. Paul preferred before ten thousand in an unknown tongue, or unintelligible gibberish, so much affected by these new-minted Ministers. That primitive, plain, and profitable way of preaching, praying and writing, was the commendable method of those excellent, ordained, and orderly Ministers of the Church of England, who were furnished both with ability and authority for so great and sacred a work, whose notions were more in the fruitful valleys of practical piety, than in the barren heights of useless sublimities. Then was it that the sweet and fruitful dews of heaven crowned those true Ministers labours with all spiritual proficiencies and heavenly blessings: then was the Church of England, and thousands of pious souls in it, like gideon's fleece, full of holy distillations, or like the garden of Eden, liberally watered with the rivers of God; I mean the faithful endeavours of able, honest, and Orthodox Ministers, both Bishops and Presbyters, duly ordained and divinely authorized for that service: then was the time common people had less of curiosity and liberty, but more of piety and charity; they were more kept to their bounds and enclosures, but enjoyed far better pastures than they now find in the ramblings and extravagances of those commons, where they have chosen to enjoy their Pastors and Preachers after their own heart. Nor is this insolency of people any wonder (though it be a great grief) to sober Christians, when they consider how far this gangrene of abused liberty hath spread among men and women too: the meanest and most mechanic He or She (as Tertullian observes of some bolder Heretics and Schismatics in his days) dare, De praes. ad Har. contrary to all Primitive pattern, and Scriptural precept, to preach, to baptise, to consecrate, to censure, to excommunicate; scorning and opposing all things that are not branded with their schismatical marks, their novel badges, and factious discriminations. Wherewith so soon as any silly men or women come once to be dubbed and signalised, their first vow and adventure is against the whole frame and constitution of the Church of England, but specially against the orderly, ancient, and Catholic Ministry of it; which is the rind or bark of Religion, by which the sap, life, and nourishment of it is preserved and conveyed from the root Christ Jesus, to the several branches of his Church in every place. This, this must by all means be peeled round, stripped off, and cast away, under pretence of Christian liberty; and a better, because freer, course of deriving Chirstian Religion to people's ears and hearts, by another Ministry than that Ancient, Apostolic, Catholic and Primitive way of an orderly ordained Ministry, which consisted of Bishops, Presbyters & Deacons, be brought in. Against the constitution & succession of all these, as corrupt, adulterous, Popish, Babylonish, spurious and superstitious, in England, whole troops of plebeian spirits have been, and still are, engaged, whose fierce onsets and encounters were at first begun, and are still carried on with as great resolution and error, as his that assaulted a Windmill instead of a Giant. The great alarm given by their chief leaders, is, First, to rail bitterly against the whole Clergy, and all sacred orders used in the Church of England: thence they proceed to wipe off their Baptism, as vain and invalid; to vomit up their Lord's Supper, as nauseous and superstitious; to read their Creeds backward, to an unbelief of all things have been preached: next, they cancel the Decalogue, as a Judaic phylactery, a legal prescription: lastly, they learn to account and call the Lords Prayer a kind of spell and conjuration, being perfect enemies to any thing that looks like a Liturgy, or set form of prayer and devotion. After this, with stiff necks and haughty looks, they scornfully defy all ancient ordination, all Catholic succession, all Apostolic commission derived to any Bishops and Presbyters, as Ministers of Christ, altering and annulling, as much as in them lies, all the order, descent and power of the Evangelicall Ministry, both in this and all other Christian Churches since the Apostles days; the right of resumption and redemption of which they challenge to themselves, according as their several fancies list to make themselves or others Ministers, or to have none at all; which is the highest pitch of their Christian liberty, counting all Ministers to be but their curbs and manacles. Having thus commenced Masters of misrule, their next work is to tu●n the garden of God, any settled Church, as this of Engl. was, into ruinous heaps, or a very dunghill; to expel the Priests of the Lord out of his Temple; to make Churches of Stables, and Stables of Churches; to bring in the lips of bleating calves there, where the calves of learned, devout, and eloquent lips were wont to be offered. It is not liberty enough for them to separate from the Church of England, and apostatise from those Ministers that baptised them, unless they utterly destroy them both; setting up instead of one National and renowned, one uniform and flourishing Church, in which were truth and order, unity and beauty, strength and safety, all Christian gifts and graces, every good word and work to admiration, innumerable little swarms in several Conventicles, with Ministers strangely multiform, mutable and misshapen: in which novel confederacies, both Preachers and people rather catch and hang together by chance, like burrs, in confused knots, than grow like Olive-branches, or the kernels of Pomegranates, with order and comeliness, from the same root Christ Jesus, after the methods of those ancient Churches, which were the prime and exemplary branches whereto after-successions should conform themselves. As these factious people are, so must their new Priests and Ministers be. Grave and godly Bishops, with their learned Presbyters, must be set aside, as broken vessels, that they may set up, by popular and plebeian suffrages, some miserable mechanics, some antic engines, some pitiful praters and parasites of the vulgar, who have had no higher breeding or degree in Church or State, than that of poor tradesmen, (for the better bred and more ingenuous sort of men abhor such impudence and usurpation:) their shop hath been their school, their hammers, or shuttles, or needles have been their books. At last, coachmen, footmen, ostlers and grooms despair not to become Preachers, by a rare and sudden metamorphosis, coming from the office of rubbing horses heels, to take care of men's souls, as some Farriers in time turn Physicians. It matters not how sordid, how silly, how slovenly, how mercenary, how illiterate they are, provided they have cunning enough to pretend a call, impudence enough to display their ignorance, and hypocrisy enough, by much talk of God's grace in them, to supply the real wants of all competent ability, as well as authority, to be Ministers of the Gospel. Yet these, these (O my noble Countrymen) are in many places rude intruders, insolent usurpers, doughty undertakers, to discharge the duty of Evangelicall Ministers: in any one of these you must seek, and may find, as they pretend, a Bishop, a Presbyter, and a Deacon; all Evangelicall power, Ecclesiastical offices, and Ministerial authority: these are the new-invented Machine's or Engines (which the Church of England, and all others, since the Apostles times, were not so happy as to know or use) which must set up the decayed Kingdom of Jesus Christ: these must propagate the glorious Gospel; these must exalt Christ crucified; these must consecrate for you holy Elements; these must administer to you the blessed Sacraments; these must exercise all Church-power and Divine authority over your consciences: whereas for my part I do not think that the best of these new Masters and Ministers can have from their own fancies or people's forwardness so much authority (because they have none, either from God, or the Church of Christ, or the laws of this Land) as would make them petty Constables or Bom-baylies, a Lay-elder or an Apparitor. This I am sure, that in the purest and a Dandi baptismi jus habet summus sacerdos qui est Episcopus; dehinc Presbyteri & Diaconi. Tert. de bap. c. 17. Tert. exh. ad Cast. c. 7. Differentiam inter ordinem & plebem constituit ecclesiae autoritas & honour per ordinis consessum sanctificatus à Deo, ubi ecclesiast●ci ordinis est consessus & offered & tinguit sacerdos qui est ibi solus. Eucharistiae Sacramentum non de aliorum manu quam praesidentium sumimus. Tert. coro. mil. c. 3. Cyp. ep. 35. in illa verba, Quemadmodum misit me pater, etc. John 20.21. unde intelligimus, non nisi in ecclesia praepositis, ac in Evangelica lege & Dominica ordinatione fundatis, licere baptisare, aut remissionem peccatorum dare. primitive times, as Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Tertullian, S. Cyprian, and others assure us, the holy mysteries of Christian Religion, the power of the Keys, the sacrating of Sacraments, the pastoral ruling and preaching, as of office, duty and necessity, to any part of Christ's flock, was esteemed the peculiar and proper work of Bishops and Presbyters in their order and degree, as the true and only Pastors and Teachers that succeeded the twelve Apostles and the seventy Disciples in their ordinary Ministry; nor were men branded for other (how able soever) than insolent and execrable usurpers, who did adventure to officiate unordained, that is, not duly authorised as Ministers. Such intruders b Tertul. de praes. ad Haer. cap. 41. Tertullian notes both some men and women to have been in his time, who were leavened with Schism and Heresy: so c Epiphan. Haeres. 89. Aug. de Haer. c. 27. Epiphanius and S. Austin tell us of the Quintilliani, Pepuziani, and Colliridiani, who were confounders of the Ministerial order. Facinus multis mortis generibus multandun Socr. hist. l. 1. c. 20. Niceph. l. 8. c. 49. Sozomen, Socrates, Nicephorus, and other Church-historians sharply censure one Ischyras, or Ischyrion, who unordained pretended to be a Presbyter, and so to officiate; calling him a detestable person, and worthy of more than one death: whom Athanasius finding about to consecrate (or rather desecrate) the Eucharist, he in an holy and heroic zeal, Athanasius Ischyram vel Ischy●ionem sacris mysticis operantem, facto flagrante deprehendens, mensam sacram evertit, calicem confregit, impiam tem●ra●ii hominis audaciam inhibuit. Aetes' nostra multos vidit Ischyras, Athanasia nullum. Langius in Niceph. locum. as Christ in the Temple, broke the Communion Cup, overthrew the Table, and repressed his insolent impiety, counting him as another Judas Iscariot, a traitor to Christ and the Church. Yet in the place of the Ministers of the Church of England, I beseech you how few Athanasiusses, how many Ischyrasses may you now see, challenging to themselves the care of men's souls, as Ministers of Christ, undertaking the managery of men's eternal interests, confident to interpret Scriptures, to resolve doubts, to decide controversies, to satisfy men's consciences, to keep up the truth, power and majesty of Christian Religion, by new, undue, and exotic ways, against the torrent and impetuous force of ignorance, Atheism, profaneness, error, malice and madness of men and Devils? For all which grand designs of God's glory and the Churches good, those men are as fit agitators as Phaeton was to drive Phoebus his Chariot; and truly with like success they will do it: for instead of enlightening the world, these Incendiaries will set all on fire, as far as they meet with any combustible matter: in which sad conflagrations begun and blown up by them in this Church of England, some of them are so vain as to glory, calling them the spiritual day of judgement, an invisible doomsday, a coming of Christ in the spirit of burning and refining, to purge his Church. For this purpose they say the Sun must be turned into darkness, and the Moon into blood; government of Church and State must be subverted: nor do they (according to their several fancies and interests) fail to presage and expect a glorious Resurrection to their parties, which they hope shall reign with Christ, if not a thousand years, yet as long as they can prevail, so as to get power, and preserve those liberties they have ravished to themselves. CHAP. VIII. NOr are these novel undertakers ever more ridiculous, The pretensions of Intruders to excuse their wants. Apostolos in perversum aemulantur. Tert. de praes. l. 30. than when they sow pillows under their own rustic arms and others elbows, excusing, yea abetting their illiterate rudeness, and idiotick confidence, with the primitive plainness and simplicity of the Apostles, when Christ first chose them, who were Fishermen, Tent-makers, or the like. Which is truly, but very impertinently alleged, as any parallel case with these impotent and pragmatic intruders; unless they could manifest to the world (which they never yet did, nor ever will) such miraculous endowments, such power and anointing from above, as came upon the Apostles, which in one moment was able to furnish them with more sufficiency and authority, than all study and industry can ever do any of us; which are the now ordinary means appointed and blessed by God, succeeding in the place of miraculous gifts, where Churches are once fully planted, and Christianity settled. To all which the constant testimony of an uninterrupted Ministry and holy succession of ordained Bishops and Presbyters, from the very Apostles, as they from Christ, is a more pregnant witness and conviction, than any new miracles could be, much more than any such pitiful accounts can be, as these wonders of ignorance and arrogancy can give to the world, of any extraordinary matters they say or do, either as Ministers or Christians. The best of some of whose lives would deform (I fear) the golden legend, which seems to be written by a man of a brazen forehead, a leaden wit, and an iron heart. We (the despised Clergy of England) do profess to use, and pray God to bless our long preparative studies, meditations, writings, readings; also our immediate care & concomitant labours in this kind, habitually to fit us for that dreadful work, and for every actual discharge of it. We find these methods practised by the most famous lights of the Church, recommended by S. Paul to Timothy, 1 Tim. 4.13, 14, 15, 16. though a person in some things extraordinarily gifted, that he should attend didiligently to those exercises, that his profiting might appear. We do not now expect fire from heaven with Elias, to come down upon our sacrifices; but we are glad to take the ordinary coals of God's altar, which may, by his Word and Spirit going along with our pains and prayers, both enlighten our minds and kindle our hearts, so as to make us burning and shining lights in God's house, which is his Church. Truly those proud and poor wretches, who know no coals, but those of their own chimney-corners, may possibly have a few embers on their hearths, or in their potsherds; they may, like dark lanterns, have a bit of a farthing-candle in them, that shines with a little dim and dubious light on one side only; as in the smattering of some plain primer-knowledge, which they have gathered either by superficial reading the Scriptures, or by hearing some Sermons heretofore from the able Ministers of England, or by gleaning a little out of the plainest of their writings: but 'tis most apparent, that on three sides of them, (that is, for Grammatical skill, historical knowledge, and polemical learning) they are so horridly black and dark, that they seem fitter implements to bring in such ignorance, irreverence, Atheism, superstition and confusion, as shall quite put out the Christian and Reformed Religion in this nation, (reducing all to pristine darkness, deformity and barbarity) than probable ever to be either propagators, purgators, or preservers of it; which had long ago been overrun with the rank weeds of Idolatry, Heresy, Schism and Apostasy in all the world, if God had not in the place of primitive miracles supplied the Church with such Ministers, both Bishops and Presbyters, whose admirable learning, undaunted courage, indisputable authority, uniform order, and constant succession, was beyond any miracle; which did at once both wonderfully attest and mightily preserve the sanctity, mystery and majesty of Christian Religion, from the subtlety of persecutors, the sophistry of Philosophers, the contumacy of Schismatics, and contumelies of Heretics; being too hard (by God's assistance) for the malice of men, and the wiles of Satan. All which are then (under several new notions and disguises) probable to prevail over this or any Christian Church, when such liberty shall be used by vulgar spirits and inordinate minds, as shall not only diminish and abate, Si constat id verius quod prius, id prius quod & ab initio, id ab initio quod ab Apostolis; pariter utique constabit id esse ab Apostolis traditum quod apud Eccles●as Apostolorum fuerit sacrosanctum. Tertull. adv. Marci. l. 4. c. 5. but quite in time destroy and vacate the divine reverence and inviolable sanctity of religious mysteries and holy ministrations; which will inevitably follow, where the Catholic order and divine authority of Ministers derived through all ages, is not only questioned and disputed, but denied, despised, variated, prostituted, usurped, by whosoever list to make himself a Minister in any new way; which cannot be true if new, nor authentic if it be exotic, unwonted in the Church of Christ, either broken off, or different from that primitive commission and constant exemplification, or Catholic succession, which was owned and observed in Bishops and Presbyters throughout all the Christian world. For my part, I abhor all intrusion and obtrusion of dangerous Novelties, both from Papists and Separatists, either in Doctrine, Discipline, or Government of the Church: and those I account dangerous, yea detestable Novelties, which not upon any plea of ignorance or necessity, but merely out of wantonness and wilfulness, seek to alter the sacred streams and currents of Ecclesiastical power, authority and order, from those fountains where Christ first broached it, and those conduits by which the Apostles derived it; which unquestionably was by Bishops and Presbyters. I know, that the sacred office and Angelic function of the Evangelicall Ministry, as it is from my Lord Jesus Christ, and is in his name and stead; so it ought to be managed, reverenced, esteemed, 2 Cor 5. ●0. transmitted, and undertaken among all true Christians, Tota in Apostolos potestas Dominici transfertu●. Hilar. in Mat. c. 10. as a visible supply of Christ's absence in body; as an authoritative embassy or delegation from Him; as a sacred dispensation of that Ministry to his Church, by chosen and duly ordained men; setting forth his History, his Precepts, Promises, Sacraments, and other holy Institutions, together with the Ministrations and Gifts of his holy Spirit, by which he promised to his Apostles, Mat. 28.20. to be with them to the end of the world, in that holy work wherein he employed them and their lawful successors, Verse 19 to be his witnesses among all nations whither he should send them. So that every true Minister (as with the ancients Mr. Chrys. in Joh. 20.21. Calvin observes) in his proper place and order (as Bishop or Presbyter) is first a Prophet, to teach and instruct in the truths of God, that part of Christ's Church over which he is constituted: next, he is as a Ruler, Heb. 13.17. Shepherd, and Governor over them in the Lord, Quia Christus visibili praesentia inter nos non habitat, hominum ministerium adhibe●, quasi vica●iam operam; non ad eos jus suum transferendo, sed ut per manus ipsorum suum ipse opus ●g●t. Cal. Inst. l. 4. c. 3. sect. 1. to feed and guide them in that holy order and discipline, which becomes the lesser and the greater, the single and social parts of Christ's flock, according as they are under their several care and inspection: lastly, every true Minister is in his proper station to perform in Christ's stead those offices of his Evangelicall Priesthood, which he hath assigned to be dispensed for his Churches good; as the solemn consecration and celebration of that Eucharistical memorial of the great oblation of Christ to his Father upon the Cross, for the redemption of the world, by which all mankind is put into a conditional capacity of salvation, and upon their true faith and repentance, Christ's body and blood, with all his meritorious benefits, are evidently set forth, signally confirmed, and personally exhibited, in that great Sacrament and most venerable mystery, to every worthy Receiver. He is further to offer up upon the altar of Christ's merits the spiritual sacrifices of the Church, in prayers, Rom. 12.1. Heb. 13.10. 1 Pet. 2.5. Heb. 13.15. praises, thanksgivings, alms and charities. Besides this, there is in the true Pastor or Minister of the Church of Christ, according to their proportion and degree, their line and measure (as Bishops and Presbyters) a power of mission and propagation, Acts 14.23. 1 Tim. 3. & 5.22. Ti. 1.5. in order to maintain that holy succession of an Evangelicall Priesthood which Christ Jesus hath appointed; and which the Apostles, with their successors, the Bishops and Pastors of the Church, in all the world, have to this day continued, without any interruption, or any variation, as to the main, of the power and practise of Ordination. So then, as these three offices are eminently in Christ, as the great Prophet, Prince and Priest of his Church; to all which he was consecrated by the mission of his Father, by his own Bloodshed and Passion, also by the anointing of his eternal Spirit, which filled him with all divine Graces, ministerial Gifts, and miraculous Power, necessary for so great a work: so the Lord Christ being absent in body, but present in his power and Spirit, had derived and committed the outward ministerial execution of these his offices, to chosen and ordained men, Act. 20.28. 2 Cor. 6.1. 2 Cor. 4.7. as overseers and workers together with Christ, of themselves but earthen vessels, yet the fittest instruments for the present dispensations of his Gospel and grace, which yet are to be carried on, according to the first appearance of Christ in the flesh, in such darkness, weakness, 1 Cor. 2 3. and meanness, as may most set forth the present excellency of God's gracious power, and set off the future manifestations of his glory to his Church; which even in this inferiority and obscurity of the Gospel, hath yet, as three that bear witness to its truth in heaven, the wisdom of the Father contriving, the love of the Son effecting, and the power of the holy Ghost applying Evangelical mercies to poor sinners; 1 John 5.7, 8. so it hath three that bear witness on earth to that glorious truth and mystery of the Gospel, the water of Baptism, which sprinkles to Regeneration, the blood of the Lords Supper, which feeds and refreshes believers, also the Spirit of ministerial Power and Authority, which hath been, and still is, from Christ continued in all true Christian Churches. As the first three are one in an essential unity of divine nature, so these later three (as S. John tells us) agree in one, that is, in one Sovereign author Jesus Christ, and in one sacred order and office of Church-Ministry, or Evangelical dispensations, successively derived from the Apostles, Elders and Deacons, by a power and commission peculiar to those who are duly ordained to be Christ's Deputies, Lieutenants, and Vicegerents in his Church, for those holy offices and divine ministrations; whereto they are severally appointed in an higher or lower degree, as Apostles or Elders, as Bishops or Presbyters, 1 Tim. 3.13. Ephes. 4.11. as Pastors or Teachers; either over-seeing, as Rulers and Guides, or attending, as Deacons and Servitors. CHAP. IX. IN reference to which sacred & grand employments, St. Of Ministerial sufficiencies, real or pretended. 2 Cor. 2.16. Paul's modesty and humility asked with trembling that unanswerable question, Who is sufficient for these things? Whereas now in Engl. there are such insolent intruders, who act as ask quite contrary, Who is not sufficient for these things? as if forwardness, boldness and confidence were all the sufficiency required in a Minister of the Gospel: in which plebeian and pretended sufficiencies as these novel intruders do most abound; so I am sure there were really never more blunt and leaden tools in any age applied to Church-work, than many, if not most of them, are: they come indeed with their beetles and wedges, their swords and staves, their axes and hammers, Psal. 74 6. to beat down all the carved work of God's house, rather than to prepare or polish the least stone or corner of that sacred building. Who being not a little conscious to themselves, that they are grossly defective in all those real abilities of good learning, sound knowledge, sober judgement, orderly method, grave utterance, and weighty eloquence, which all wise and sober Christians expect should appear in every true Minister of the Church of Christ, in such a competent measure & evident manner, as they may be able comfortably to discern them, and usefully to enjoy them; these crafty Intruders do first cry down all those real and visible abilities, as merely natural, humane, carnal, as enemies to the Cross, Grace, and Spirit of Christ: for (as the apes in the fable) these deceitful workers having no tails themselves, they would fain persuade all other creatures which have that ornament, to cut them off, as burdens and superfluous. After this rude essay of craft and malice in vain attempted against the fruits of learned industry, wherein the Ministers of the Church of England have, and still do, so vastly exceed these Mushroom Ministers of the last and worst editions, they cunningly fly to the pretensions of special callings, extraordinary inspirations, illuminations, and graces ministerial; which (they well know) are not easily to be discerned by any other but a man's self, even there where they may possibly be real. Who knows not that as to the point of inward Graces, they are far more easily pretended and voiced, than discerned and enjoyed in one's self? much less can they be so proved and manifested to others, as to satisfy their conscience in the points of another's power and their own duty. I am sure, neither gifts nor graces ministerial are by wise and sober Christians to be much supposed or expected there, where men evidently silly and weak, mean and vain, ignorant and arrogant, dare yet to disdain all that ancient order and uniform succession of the Evangelicall Ministry, which hath been visible in all Churches (as in this of England) for 1500. years: and to salve their credit, or gain reputation as Teachers, they bring for the satisfaction of their own and other men's conscience, in point of that office, duty, and power ministerial, which they challenge and undertake, no other signature and character of their commission and investiture into that office, save only what themselves pretend to be within them, of secret impulses, which being to man's judgement undiscernible, are utterly insignificant; nor ought they to bear any sway in the Church of Christ, where the power ministerial was first declared by miraculous gifts and endowments, also by evident signs & wonders, sufficient to confirm its first commission, and to authorise its after-succession, from those only with whom it was deposited, to be transmitted by them and their successors to the Churches of Christ in all ages, by such gifts and ordinary endowments as might be first duly tried and approved in men, before they were ordained to be Ministers in the Church of Christ. But these Heteroclite Teachers, for the further corroboration of their dubious title and claim to the office of the Ministry, are content to accept of some appointment from that power which is merely military, or civil and magistratick: which powers in Primitive Churches for 300. years were so far from making any Minister either Bishop, or Presbyter, or Deacon in the Church of Christ, that they sought by all means to persecute and destroy the whole profession of Christianity: It was Constantine the Great's saying to the Nicene Bishops, Vos intra ecclesiam, ego extra ecclesiam à Deo episcopus constitutus sum. Euseb. vit. Const. l. 4. c. 24. yea, when the Empire became Christian, as in Great's time, neither He, nor any Christian Emperor, Prince or Magistrate after him, was ever so impertinent as to imagine, that because they could derive civil and military power to others, they had also power to make Christian Ministers, or to invest them with the Ecclesiastical power of holy orders; nor did they think they had any thing more to do with the Clergy by way of authority, save only to take care for their due and comfortable discharge of that Ministry, to which they were by another principle and power ordained, according as the peace, honour and order of the Church required, which so conformed to the State and Common-weal, that all Ministers were humbly subject to the Sceptres of Princes, in the several places and stations Ecclesiastical to which they were applied. The Clergy owe to Princes the civil endowments of honour and revenue, given to them as the temporal reward of their spiritual work: but they are not the sources of their orders, nor can their broad seal confer that power of the holy Spirit, which only makes a Minister of Jesus Christ; not by way of graces or gifts, so much as by way of mission and authority, flowing only from the Spirit of Christ, as the chief Pastor, Bishop and Minister of his Church. Others of these new-modelled Ministers, in a way not more preposterous than ridiculous, seek to deduce their ministerial power from mere plebeian suffrages, from vulgar examinations, approbations and elections; which commonly are factiously begun, foolishly carried on, and schismatically concluded; having not less weakness, but less madness, or possibly a little more seeming order, civility, or tameness, than those whose who pretend no other warrant or authority for their being Ministers, but what is to be had from their own blindness and boldness, their proud conceit and flattering confidence of themselves, which emboldens them by a self-ordination, to take this holy power to themselves, beyond what Aaron, or the true Prophets, Exod. 28.1 Heb. 4.4 5 Mat. 3.14 or the Apostles, or Christ himself (as man) did, who were not self-sent or ordained, but chosen and appointed, solemnly consecrated and inaugurated to their office and Ministry, either by clear prophecies accomplished, or visible miracles wrought in the sight of the people, or by some such other signal token, ordinary or extraordinary, by word or work, as God was pleased to use for the manifestation of his will, and for the satisfaction of his Church, as to those persons which were to minister to the Lord, and to whom his Church was conscientiously to submit as to the Lord. Agreeably to which holy pattern, and as a full answer to all those clamours, envies and despites, which the enemies, rivals and extirpaters of the ancient Clergy and Ecclesiastic order in England can pretend, the true Ministers (Bishops and Presbyters) of this Christian and Reformed Church do challenge, use and maintain no other power, privilege, or authority Ecclesiastical, than what they have duly and constantly received in the way of holy orders from their predecessors hands, who have descended from the very Apostles days. Nor are they such Monopolizers, or appropriators of this power and office ministerial to their own persons, or to such only as are formal Academics, professed Scholars, and University Graduates, as not willingly to admit into that holy Order and Fraternity, by the right and Catholic way of due ordination, not only any worthy Gentlemen, of competent parts, pious affections, and orderly lives, whose hearts God shall move to so holy an ambition, to desire so good a work; but even those that are of plebeian proportions, 1 Tim. 3.1. of meaner parts, and less improved erudition, provided they be found, upon due trial, to have acquired such competent abilities, by God's blessing upon their private industry and studious piety, as may render them meet for any place or work in Christ's husbandry, 1 Cor. 3.6. where one may sow, another may water, a third may weed, a fourth may fence the Church and Vineyard, 1 Cor. 12.4, 5. according to the several gifts and dispensations ministered by the same Spirit and power of Christ, which ought to be dispensed and carried on, not in an arbitrary, rude and precarious usurpation and intrusion, but in an authoritative, orderly, and decent derivation & succession, for the honour, profit & peace of the Church of Christ. Certainly no worthy Minister or sober Christian can so undervalue and debase those Evangelicall offices of Christ, which are exercised by his ordained Ministers, as to think that every self-flatterer and obtruder is presently to officiate, without any due examination, approbation and ordination from those with whom that commission and power hath been ever deposited in a regular and visible succession from Christ the great exemplar or Original; Plane Episcopi non de Dei voluntate fiunt, qui contra dispositionem (Domini) & traditionem (ecclesiae) fiunt. Cyp. ep. 55. which visible order, mission and delegation is as necessary for the outward unity, authority, solemnity and majesty of Christ's militant Church and Ministry upon earth, as the workings of his blessed Spirit are for the inward operation and efficacy of true grace in men's hearts. So that as no private and good Christian hath any cause to complain in this part of the Bishops and Ministers of the Church of England, who in dispensing of holy orders, or ministerial power, acted after the Catholic pattern of Primitive Churches, no less than the particular constitutions of this Church, allowed by all estates and degrees of men; no more have any secular Powers, or civil Magisrates, who are or shall be professors of true Christian Religion, any cause to be jealous of the ancient Bishops and Ministers of the Church; nor shall they need either out of conscience, or reasons of state, to pervert and innovate that pristine course and regular succession of ministerial authority: yea, as worthy Christians and wise Governors, they ought, both in piety and policy, in honour and conscience, to be no less exact in preserving this sacred order and divine authority from alteration, invasion and usurpation, than they are for their own civil power, and secular jurisdiction; which the renowned patterns of Christian Potentates, Constantine, Theodosius, and other great and godly Princes, were so far from arrogating to their imperial power, that they humbly submitted themselves to the order and power Ecclesiastical in the things of Christ, highly esteeming and venerating that Apostolic race of Bishops and Presbyters in the Church, as the great Luminaries of the world, the constant witnesses of Christ's life and death, the celebraters of his mysterious sufferings, grace and glory, the ministerial Fathers and confirmers of Christians faith, as terrestrial Angels, as Gods gracious Ambassadors for pardon and peace, as Christ's special commissioners appointed for to carry on the great work of saving men's souls. Just and generous Princes, if they be truly Christian, cannot be so partial, as to forbid any man, under the high●st pain and penalty of high treason and death itself, to challenge to himself any part of their civil or military power, without a due commission derived either from themselves immediately, or from those to whom they have deputed power for such ends and purposes; which order they permit no man to violate or usurp, however conceitedly or really able he may seem to be to himself or others for the managing of such power; and yet permit such persons as are for the most part heady and highminded, insolent and disorderly, to intrude themselves, by a mere usurpation, upon that sacred office, authority and Ministry, which is Christ's, without any due and solemn derivation of this power, in such a way as hath ever been Apostolic, Primitive, Catholic, and only authentic in the Churches of Christ. Certainly, the rude innovation and usurpation upon this office and honour merits above any boldness (as Nilus in Balsamon expresseth it) that black brand of the last and perilous times, Pag. 1164. when men shall be emphatically Traitors, not only to men, but to Christ; 2 Tim. 3.4. not only to commonweals, but to Churches; disobedient to parents, not only natural and politic, but also spiritual and ecclesiastic; violating and betraying, not only the visible peace, order, uniformity, and successive authority of the Church, but the invisible comforts, quiet and grace of poor people's souls: who must needs be at a great loss, in a very sad and shameful case, as to their Religion, where their spiritual leaders and shepherds are usurpers, intruders, clamberers, not coming into the sheep-fold by the door of right ordination, John. 10.1. but climbing some other way, as thiefs and robbers; when their titular and intruding Pastors prove either grievous wolves, or miserable asses, Act. 20.29. as they commonly are found to be, who are not admitted by due ordination, but crowd into the Ministry by rude and novel obtrusions; so domineering over the flock of Christ, over whom not the holy Ghost, by an ordinary derived power and authority, Acts 20.28. but their own unruly spirits have made them, not so much overseers of others, as either stark blind, or grossly over-seen in themselves. CHAP. X. THe sense of this High Treason against Christ, What caution Christians ought to use, as to those Ministers with whom they intrust the care of their souls. and of those sinful disorders which men bring on themselves & the Church of Christ, by their intrusion, usurpation upon this ministerial power and office, makes me here seriously suggest to You (my honoured and beloved Countrymen) this religious caution, That it very much concerns you, for your own and your posterities souls good, to be very wary not to be imposed upon, and abused by vulgar pretensions of zeal and Christian liberty in this point of the Ministry; but to be vigilant with whom you intrust, as Ministers, your own, your children's, or any other people's souls, where you are Patrons of Livings. And since your own prudent abilities for learning, piety and experience, are so modest, as not rashly to adventure upon this sacred office, charge and ministration; how infinitely ought you to be ashamed and regretted, to see them usurped many times by the dogs of your flocks, by your hinds and footmen, your grooms and serving-men, by threshers, weavers and cobblers, by tailors, tinkers and tapsters, any mean and mechanic people, whose parts and spirits are only fit for those trades to which their breeding and necessities have confined them? Not that I despise or reproach these honest, though mean, employments; but I highly blame their insolence, and other men's patience, to see these usurp upon the dignity of the Ministry. Certainly such proud & poor wretches may to some men possibly seem fittest Ministers in a disordered State, and decaying Church, as factors for Satan and Antichrist, setters for Ignorance and Superstition, turning Faith into Faction: but they will never prove (after that fashion of preparing and admitting) either able, or faithful, or fruitful Ministers of Christ or his Church; seeming themselves, and making others despisers of Christ, with the blasphemous Jews, while they so look upon him and treat him, as under the notion of the Carpenter's son, Mat. 13.55. as their equal or inferior in some handicraft, forgetting his divine glory and majesty, as the onely-begotten son of God, John 1.14. Mat. 28.18. to whom all power is given in heaven and earth; who hath executed this power most visibly in sending forth his Ministers to teach and baptise all nations, out of which to gather, and govern his Church in his name. They rudely slight Christ's ministerial authority, in such as are truly excellent and duly ordained Ministers, that they may proudly challenge it to themselves, without any reason or Scripture, law or order, command or example, either from Christ or his Church. Revelat. 2.2. These men, who say they are Apostles, Prophets and Preachers, and are not, will be in the end (and already are) found liars against God and their own souls, deceitful workers, false Apostles, 2 Cor. 11.13. Mock-ministers, Pseudo-pastors, disorderly walkers, authors of infinite scandal and confusion, of scorn and contempt to Christian and Reformed Religion, both here and elsewhere: many of them serving their bellies, and gratifying their carnal lusts and momentary wants, Rom. 16.18. much more than designing to advance the glory of God, the Kingdom of Christ, or the eternal good of men's souls; which are not to be carried on, save in God's way, that is, by fit abilities, and with due authority: both are required as necessary for a true Minister; the first (though real) is not sufficient without the second. For as the mere outward material action cannot be a divine, sacramental, or ministerial transaction, more than every kill of an Ox was a sacrificing; so nor are mere natural or personal abilities sufficient to acquire any office or authority, much less this of the Ministry (which is divine, or none) any more than every able Butcher was presently enabled to be a Priest. Any man's ability fully to understand, or handsomely to relate the mind of his Prince, makes him not presently an Ambassador or Minister of State, unless there be a commission, or letters of credence to authorise the person. The blessed Apostle S. Paul, who was extraordinarily converted, called, and sent of God, as a Christian, & a Minister or Apostle, yet we see did not take upon him the exercise or office, till first Ananias had by God's special command laid his hands on him, Acts. 9.17. and he became endowed with the ministerial gift or power of the holy Ghost: which were afterward (in like sort) solemnly confirmed and increased by the express command of God, when Paul and Barnabas were separated, and sent upon special service, with fasting, prayer, and laying on of the hands of some Prophets and Teachers in Antioch, Acts 11.26. where the Apostle had formerly preached in the Church a whole year among much people. This same Apostle oft blames (and bids Christians beware of) false Apostles, not only false in their doctrine, 2 Cor. 11.13. but in their ordination and mission; as the Prophets of the Lord did of old the false Prophets, Jer. 23.21. whom God had not sent, yet they ran. The Spirit of Christ commends the Angel of the Church of Ephesus (where, Rev. 2.2. as Irenaeus and others tell us, S. John lived long, and left the most pregnant examples of Ecclesiastical order, Episcopal power, and Ministerial succession) for trying those that said they were Apostles and were not; for finding, esteeming, and declaring them as liars, no way listening and adhering to, or communicating with them, as being Falsaries and Impostors, enemies at once to the truth, order and peace of Christ's Church. For 'tis seldom that a bastardly generation of Preachers doth not bring forth some false and base doctrines: for it is observable in this, as in civil Histories, that Bastards in nature, and so in office, are commonly most daring and adventurous spirits. Certainly the late illegitimate Ministers, or spurious Preachers of new and strange originals in England, have in less than fifteen years brought more monsters of opinions and factions in Religion, than have arose in so many hundred years before in any one Church. I know some Christians are prone to gratify their curiosity (as those do who sometime go to see monsters) in making some trial and essay of these pretended Preachers, that once knowing their ignorance and insolence, they may upon juster grounds ever after abhor them. If this be tolerable for some persons of able and sober judgements, yet it is no better than a snare and dangerous temptation for others that are weak and unstable: nor may the venture be oft made by the more steady Christians, lest they seem thereby to countenance and encourage so great a confusion, innovation, usurpation and scandal in the Church of Christ; besides the abetting of that high profanation of holy duties and mysteries, which ought not to be transacted, but in the name, power and authority of our God and Saviour. Certainly good Christians ought not at any hand to communicate with such usurping intruders in any sacramental action; nor ought they to own any thing more of a Minister of Jesus Christ in them, than they would of a King or Magistrate in a Stage-player. Doubtless, as no good Christian, so lest of all those that profess to be Ministers of Christ, aught to live as sons of Belial, disorderly, refractory, unruly, after the arbitrary, rude and presumptuous dictates of their own wills. The spirit of true Ministers and Prophets will be subject, as it ought, to that rule, order and custom, 1 Cor. 14 32. which in all ages hath been the canon, measure and commission of all Evangelical Ministers and Pastors of Christ's Church. As natural and moral endowments are no plea to invest any man into any office, military or civil; much less into any power and authority Ecclesiastical. The pretences of new and extraordinary calls, of missions immediate from God, are not in any reason expectable, nor in Christian Religion credible, where the ordinary power and commission was continued, and might duly be had, as it was, and yet is in the Church of England: Ravens must not be hoped for to feed us, where Providence gives us opportunity to get our bread by honest industry. Where then there are so many intruders and deceivers gone out, as Ministers of the Gospel, it is a matter of conscience as well as necessary prudence in all good Christians, to be cautious and inquisitive, whom they allow and follow as Ministers; to be first satisfied in that question which the Jews rationally asked of Christ, By what power or authority dost thou these things? Mat. 21.23. No discreet person in civil affairs will obey any warrant or order, which hath no other authority than a private and pragmatic activity: and can it be piety or prudence in Christians, to be deluded by any pretenders in the great concernments of their souls; to have no more of Sacraments, or any other holy duties, than the mere sensible shell and husk of them? for the spiritual life and power of them is no where to be had but from such dispensers of them, as have the authority and power, Mat. 7.29. He taught them as one having authority. 1 Cor. 4.19. Not the speech, but the power. the mission and commission of Christ rightly derived to them: which was evident first in Christ, after in his holy Apostles and their lawful successors. Certainly the cheat and falsity of such mock-Ministers and Pseudo-pastors, is of far greater danger and detriment than those of spurious and supposititious children, or of embased coin, and counterfeit money. Some people have been so wicked, as to change their own children, & steal others from their parents; but it was never heard that children of any discretion were so foolish and unnatural, as to abdicate their true Fathers and genuine mothers, that they might adopt false parents, and superinduce upon themselves the Empire of bastardly progenitors. The mischief & abuse is not less in Churches than in Commonweals, in Christian Congregations than in families. Due respect of paternal care and filial love, such as ought to be between Pastor and People, can never be mutually expected, where the relation is either supposititious, or presumptuous, or merely imaginary, or at best but arbitrary, which is inconsistent with humane, much more with divine Authority; the measure of which is not the pleasure of man, but the will of God, whose will is asserted by his power. For my part, I firmly conclude, that as no true Christians may admit of any Gospel, or Sacraments, or holy Institutions, other than such as have been already once delivered to the Catholic Church, J●de 3. M●s iste semper in ecclesia vigure, ut qu● quisque s●●●● religi●si●r, ò prompt●us novellis adinventionibus contraires. Vin. Li●. adv. haer. c. 9 and preserved by her fidelity, against which the preaching of an * Gal. 1.8. Angel from heaven is not to be received or believed, but accursed; so nor may any Church or good Christians either broach, invent, or admit any new ministerial power, order, mission, or authority, beside or beyond that which the Church of England and the Catholic Church of Christ hath received, and transmitted in a constant succession. That sacred ordination which began in Christ, and flowed from him as the effect of his Melchisedechian, Evangelicall and eternal Priesthood, must never be interrupted, innovated, or essentially altered, no not under any pretence or removing or reforming what corrupions may (possibly) be contracted by time and humane infirmities, which are but accidental (as diseases to the body) to Catholic prescriptions founded upon divine institutions. Fields once sown with good corn must not be rooted up or fired, Mat. 13.30. because tares may be sown by the enemy while men slept; Trees that are full of moss & missletow through age, yet bearing good fruit, ought not to be cut down, but pruned and cleared. The decays or dilapidations of the Temple before Hezekiah and Josiah repaired it, were no excuse for people's neglect to frequent it, (much less were they justified) and to sacrifice other where than there only, as the place which the Lord had chosen to put his name there; 2 Chron 29.5. Sanctify the house of the Lord, and carry fo●th the filthiness out of the holy place. nor did those pious Princes set that house of God on fire, because it was decayed, but duly repaired it with great cost and care. And such indeed was the excellent piety and prudence of the Church of England, such wisdom and moderation it observed, as in all other things, so in this of the ministerial order and office: What injuries it (as other holy things) had suffered in the darkness of times, by the dulness of Presbyters, the negligence of Bishops, or insolence of Popes, it wisely reform; not abrogating the authority, or breaking the Catholic succession of Bishops and Presbyters in this, as in all Churches; not broaching a new fountain; not obstructing (as Philistines) the wells their fathers had digged; not diverting the ancient course and conduits of the waters of life: but cleansing the fountains, and continuing the streams of primitive holy orders, in the constant descents, degrees and offices of Bishops, Presbyters and Deacons. They did not raise up new Ministers, like Mushrooms, out of every molehill, no● force them (like Musk-melons) out of the hot beds of popular zeal and novellizing faction, without any regard to the ancient stock and root of Ecclesiastical power and Ministerial authority; from which (as Irenaeus, Tertullian, S. Cyprian, and all the ancients clearly tell us) Bishops and Presbyters were ever derived, Surculi & propagines Apostolorum fidei traduces. Tert. de praes. c. 32. as slips and off-sets of the twelve Apostles and seventy Disciples. No time ever did, or ever shall render that Primitive plant and root of Evangelicall Ministry so dry, dead and barren, that they may or aught to be quite stubbed up, or new ones set in their room. No, they are only to be pruned and trimmed, that so they may be worthy of that honour which indeed they have, to be by an uninterrupted succession derived and descended from the blessed Apostles, whom Christ first planted by his own hands; nor may any man's presumption undertake to pull up that holy plantation, as those design to do, who endeavour to destroy the derivation and succession of the power Ministerial. The truth, sanctity and validity of which, as to the Ministry of the Church of England (by its Bishops and Presbyters) hath been fully and clearly asserted by able pens, against both Papists on the one side, and novelists on the other. The one confining all Episcopal and Ministerial power to one head and origin, the Bishop of Rome, as if there had not been twelve fountains and foundations of prime Apostles, but only one, S. Peter, appointed by our Lord Jesus Christ; the other lewdly scattering that sacred office and divine authority, even among vulgar and plebeian hands, that every man may scramble for it as he list, according as he fancies that his abilities and liberty in these times may extend. The putrid and pernicious effects of which, in their present usurpations, divisions, confusions, debasements, & discouragements upon the Clergy and Church of England, as I shall afterward in the third Book more fully set them forth; so I cannot hear but justly condemn those partial, unreasonable and irreligious principles, from whence so pragmatic an itch, or thirst of novelty, in so grand a concernment of Religion, must needs arise; that fond men should be so eager to stop up the ancient fountains of living waters, which they digged not, Jer. 2.13. that they might dig to themselves broken Cisterns, which can hold little or no water. And this they delight to do, not only against those daily instances, which miserable and manifest experience gives them of the sad and decayed condition of the Christian and Reformed Religion in this Ch. of Engl. since these new Ministers have intruded and divided; but contrary also to all those pregnant testimonies & undeniable demonstrations, which both our pious forefathers in Engl. and all other Christian Churches in all ages have afforded us in the practices and writings of the Fathers, & testimonies of all Church-historians, who with one mouth every where unanimously tell us, what was the Apostolic, ancient, true, and only beginning of the Ministerial order, what the holy and happy way of its descent, derivation and succession, by duly consecrated Bishops and ordained Presbyters. Contrary to all which plain and perpetual remonstrances (for nothing is in them dubious or dark) I am amazed (I confess) to see, not the giddy and heady vulgar ungratefully engaged, who are always like tinder, ready to take fire at any sparks of innovations, diminutions, and extirpations especially of their laws and governor's; but I find some men of worth, yea and Ministers of good learning, and seeming ingenuity, either so overawed by the vulgar, or over-biassed by their own private interests, inclinations and passions, that after so much light of Scripture and antiquity, shining both in the divine Originals, and the Ecclesiastic copies of Ministerial order and succession, after their own former solemn approbations and subscriptions, after their late experience of the sad consequences already too much felt in this Church, as fruits of those innovations and usurpations made upon that unity, power and authority of the Evangelicall Ministry: yet I grieve, and am ashamed to see that such men should still pitifully comply with, consent to, yea and promote those dangerous alterations, and desperate extirpations which are designed by the enemies of this Church; whose aim is to baffle and deprive this Reformed Church in so main a point and hinge of Religion, as the ancient sacred orders, the constant Ecclesiastical methods of the Evangelicall Ministry must needs be which, what they ever have been in this and all Catholic Churches, no man of moderate learning, humble piety, and honest principles, can be ignorant of. CHAP. XI. THose new, unwonted, and exotic fashions, Of late new models for making Ministers of the Gospel. which some men have studied of late to introduce or encourage in England, as to this point of Ministerial office and power, besides that they are all of them new, some of them monstrous to this and all ancient Churches, they plainly savour more of humane faction than of Christian faith; else they would not, they could not in any conscience or charity be so mischievously bend, and malapertly spiteful against those worthy Bishops, and other excellent Ministers, who still adhere to the Ancient and Catholic order of the Church of England; nor yet could they be so misshapen, multiform, and many-headed in themselves, changing every day almost (as Proteus) by an innate principle of mutability, which follows the fancies and interests of new and present projectors, but not the judgement and grave example of our ancient and impartial predecessors. And however some of these new ways, not of successive procreating, but new creating Ministers, may seem first brewed by domestic discontents, next broached by a foreign sword, at length fostered by a partial and overawed Assembly, at last fomented for a season by scattered and divided houses, Parliaments, in very broken, touchy and bloody times, (when every new thing was made trial of, which might (as toys and babbles) best please the peevish and petulant parties of people in England;) however others have further challenged to themselves a particular liberty and arbitrary authority, such as best likes them, in this point of the Ministry (which no man of any wisdom, piety, or gravity can allow, under any pretensions of gifts or graces ministerial in any man:) Yet all these novel inventions, whatever title they pretend from God or man, from policy or necessity, may not in any reason or Religion, in any honour or conscience, in any piety or prudence, be put into the balance with (much less be thought fit to outvie) that clear primitive pattern, that Catholic constant succession, that Apostolic and divine prescription; which do (all) preponderate for the Ministry of the Church of England, in the true scale of regular and authentic ordination of Ministers, who are never so completely and indisputably invested with that power, as when by the imposition of hands solemnly done by Episcopal Precedents, and Presbyterian Assistants; who after due examination, and serious monition, and fervent supplication, do in prescript words commit that ministerial power, spirit, and authority of Christ, which ought to be rightly imparted to those that undertake Evangelical ministrations in Christ's name, to any part of his Church, if they desire to avoid the sin and scandal of being intruders, traitors, usurpers, and counterfeiters of Christ's ministerial dignity and authority. Secular or civil powers, which are but the products of the sword, and managed chiefly by the policy and arm of flesh, may (indeed) confer what honour, office and authority they please on any man in civil things; yea they may and aught in conscience to take care of, and regulate the exercise of Ecclesiastical power in reference to God's glory, and the public good both of Church and State: but they cannot (as from themselves) by any natural, moral, or civil capacity, confer holy orders, or bestow Ministerial authority on any man; much less may they (or as Christian Magistrates will they) make a new broad Seal of Christianity, or commence any new way of ministerial authority; nor may they in conscience cancel or abrogate the good old way, no nor yet alter in any material part the Catholic way of its right derivation and succession, which was by the hands of those who had first received that holy deposition; which certainly is of as much higher nature, orb and sphere, beyond any natural, moral, or secular power, as the celestial light of sun and stars is above that which is from candles, or that holy fire on God's altar was above that which is but culinary. All good Christians agree, that its original is in Christ, its commission from Christ, its first delegation to the twelve Apostles and the seventy Disciples: from the Apostles we read its transmission to others in the Apostolical Acts and Epistles. How it was afterward continued, and by what means derived to an uninterrupted Catholic succession in all Churches for 1500 years, is not indeed to be learned, & so not decided by Scripture; whose records (except the Apocalypse) extend not above 28 or 30 years after Christ's ascension: but being a thing now of late so hotly disputed in this and some other Churches, there is no rational satisfaction to be had (as to matter of fact) but by the after-histories of the Church; which I am sure give all the seeing world in this point so clear, so perfect, so full a light, and so uniform a testimony, that no learned, impartial, and conscientious Christian can desire more; nor can they but acquiesce in these, unless they dare to doubt and deny the veracity and fidelity of all authors that have given us account of any Ecclesiastical Catholic affairs and customs since the Apostles times: in all which no one point or practice hath less doubt or dispute, less variation or diversity, than this of Ecclesiastical order,, both as to the Ministry and government of the Church. What the ignorant vulgar (who are the bran and courser sort of people) may endlessly fancy and affect, or what others of better parts, but as base passions, may cunningly pretend, I know not; the better to bring in their new modelings of Ministers and Churches: but I am sure it will very ill become you (O noble Gentlemen) who are the best and finest flower, the beauty and honour, the strength and stability of this English Nation, who are the choice and chiefest sons of the Church of England, it ill becomes you to suspect all those burning and shining lights, both Bishops and Presbyters, Christiani veteres, & recentes ab Apostolorum & Apostolicorum virorum disciplina, ●orum praescripta & intelligebant melius, & p●rfectius ●molebant. Grot. de jur. bell. & pac. l. 4. c. 4. sect. 5. Fathers and Historians, single and social, in their Closets and in their Councils, even in the first innocent ages, when the Church was most pure and persecuted; as if they had all been either grossly ignorant of, or supinely negligent in following the mind of Christ, and methods of the blessed Apostles, as to these great affairs of the Church; which were openly, uniformly & universally both preached and practised by the Apostles, also delivered to and received by their successors, as in other things, so most indisputably in this which so much concerned not only the right ordering and well-being and polity of the estate of the Church militant, but it's very being and Essence, in Doctrine, Ministry, Duties, Discipline and Government. Can it (I beseech you) without great uncharitableness and pervicacy (unworthy of any ingenuous soul) be imagined, that from the beginning, during the life of some Apostles and their scholars, the whole Church, and the most eminent persons in it, Ministers, Martyrs and Confessors, did all conspire to delude themselves, and to deceive all posterity, in so clear, great, and sacred concernments, as those of the Church's Ministry and Polity were ever esteemed? The incomparable and unanswerable Mr. Rich: Hooker (who is not to be read without admiration, nor named without veneration) long ago urged this Absurdity against the then more modest Sticklers for their Disciplinarian Innovations in the Ministry and Polity of the Church of England. Mr. R. hooker's pref. to his Ec. pol. pag. 16. Sure (saith he) it were a very strange thing, that such a Discipline (meaning the Presbyterian) as ye speak of, should be taught by Christ and his Apostles in the Word of God, and no Church hath ever found it out, nor received it till this present time: or chose, that the Government (of the Church) against which you bend yourselves, should be observed every where through all generations and ages of the Christian world, and no Church ever perceive it to be against the word of God. We require you to find out but one Church upon the face of the earth, that hath been ordered by your Discipline, or that hath not been ordered by ours, that is, Episcopal government (for ordination and jurisdiction) since the times that the blessed Apostles were conversant upon earth. This unanswered challenge did that excellent person heretofore make, in order to prevent (if possible) these innovations and mischiefs which are now grassant in England, to the hazard of quite overthrowing all that ancient Order, Ministry, succession and Government, which had been conserved in this Church, conform to all parts of the Catholic Church. If your other employments and studies have hindered you from being so well acquainted with the authentic works, and authoritative testimonies of the ancientest writers of Church-affairs, as those grand Authors deserve, and your ingenuity cannot but desire; yet far be it from your prudence, piety and charity, to derogate from the honour and credit of your own Countrymen, who have in the Histories of England (both Civil and Ecclesiastical, Venerable Bede, Hist. Eccl. The Primate of Armagh, his De primordi●s eccls B●tan. Sir. H. Spelman. B. Godwin, & others. to which you cannot well be strangers) sufficiently showed from the original of these British Churches, what Ministry and Orders they had. If you are yet strangers to those eldest ages, times and authors of your own, and so cannot maturely ground your judgements upon their testimony; yet what think you of the learning, piety, honesty and courage of those later, and real, and renowned Reformers of this Church, whether Clergy or Laymen, who lived in your father's memories, whose blood and ashes, as Martyrs and Confessors, against Papal innovations and corruptions, is still warm and precious? These did not lay new foundations of a Christian Church, a true Religion, or an authentic Ministry here in England; but they only repaired the decays of the old, and lightened them of those either erroneous or dangerous superstructures, with which long ignorance and superstition had over-laded them, and not so much built upon them, as almost quite buried them. These Heroes, these worthy men (I say) who were worthy of the name of Christians, Englishmen and Reformers, did not ever design, or go about to broach new fountains, nor to cut new channels, nor to lay new pipes, by which to convey the Ecclesiastical order and Ministerial authority here in England; but they cleansed the foulness, they removed the obstructions, they sodered the ruptures of the former Catholic way, which was very good, as well as very old: yet not the antiquity, but the veracity and divinity of it, attested both by Scriptures and by the Catholic usage of all Churches, made those blessed Reformers (now an hundred years ago) cheerfully subscribe to that polity, Ministry, and authority Ecclesiastical, which they mended, but changed not: these they recommended to all estates in this nation; by whose Parliamentary votes and sanction they were established, as the best means to preserve this Church both Christian and Reformed. After these famous Fathers of England's happy Reformation, whose judgement is manifest in the point of ministerial power and holy order, to be carried on by Bishops and Presbyters, can you suspect that their later successors, in office and judgement, I mean all those learned, grave and godly Ministers of England, whom your eyes have seen, and your ears have heard heretofore with great respect, love and admiration, dispensing the word of God and holy mysteries to you; who till the divisions and deformities of these last and worst days, have baptised, instructed and guided, both you and your hopeful posterity in the way to heaven and happiness, in truth and peace, in faith and repentance, in humility and holiness, in all graces, virtues and good works, powerfully set forth to you by their excellent Sermons and fervent Prayers, by the blessed Sacraments and worthy Examples they have communicated to you; can you (I say) suspect that all these, together with the Bishops and Presbyters of the Catholic Church, the East and West, the old and new, the Greeks and Latins, the Roman and Reformed, that all these have conspired to err so great, so universal, so constant an error themselves, and to misguide you, me, and all the Christian world, in such ways of receiving and conferring Ecclesiastic order, Evangelicall Ministry, & Church-government, as were unchristian, yea Antichristian, divers from Christ's mind, yea contrary to it, offensive to the godly, & odious to God himself, as some men have lewdly declamed? whose tongues I judge to be no slander, since they appear persons of so little conscience, and less forehead; either grossly ignorant of the practice and platform of Antiquity, or most uncharitably impudent, in branding so many thousands of godly Bishops and other gracious Ministers, both in England and all other places (who were justly famous in their generations for their learning and piety) as if they were either so many blind guides, or so many bold intruders, mere usurpers, jugglers, impostors & hypocrites; as if, to gratify their own private ambitions, they had from the very beginning, in the sight and in despite of S. John and other Apostolic Pastors, perverted the way of Christ, as to that Ministerial power & Church-order which he had appointed, setting up of their own heads a paternal presidency or Episcopal eminency, instead of these newly discovered ways of either a Presbyterian parity, or a popular Independency, by which Presbyters and people in common challenge to themselves the sole possession, dispensation and managery of all Ecclesiastical office, power and authority: inventions so pragmatic, so turbulent, so contrariant to one another, as well as to the ancient orders of the Church, that we in England were happily unacquainted with them till of late years, as were all other Churches in the world, till this last century; who cannot be thought in all former ages to have wanted such Pastors and Teachers, such Rulers and Governors as were after Gods own heart, to carry on his great work of saving souls, in the preserving and propagating of his Church by the Ministers of it. If the great cloud of ancient and Catholic witnesses, who ever owned all Ecclesiastic power to be magisterially (indeed) and primarily in Christ, but ministerially and secondarily in the Apostles and their successors, as to all Church-ministration, ordination and jurisdiction; which power resided chiefly in Bishops, and from them was regularly derived to Presbyters: if these (I say) can fall under your hard censure, as either deceived, or deceivers, yet truly their error in this point may be the more venial, because the case was not so much as once doubted or disputed for three hundred years, in those best and first ages of the Church. It will be more charity in their censurers, to suspect they wanted ability to see the light of Christ's mind and the Apostles examples, than honesty to follow them. But for myself, and other Ministers, my Fathers and Brethren of the Church of England, who after so high contests about the Ministry of the Church, both as to ordination and jurisdiction (in which we have examined all Scriptures, and rifled all Antiquity) if we do still (bona fide) humbly, honestly and conscientiously choose to follow what seems to us Christian, Catholic and uniform antiquity, rather than any partial and divided ways of novelty; I hope we are excusable to you, if not commendable; how ignorant or obstinate soever we seem to others, who think we ought to be confounded, if we will not be converted (or rather perverted) by them. But if you do indeed judge, that after so clear demonstrations and potent convictions from Scripture and Antiquity, which either Geneva, or Edinburgh, or Amsterdam, or New-England have alleged, we do still persist in our Primitive opinions and Catholic Errors, touching the office, power and derivation of the Evangelicall Ministry and Authority, such as was established in this Church of England, merely out of either passion, pertinacy and obstinacy, or for private interests, sinister ends, and secular policies; if you can think us so base and false, such sots and beasts, so unworthy of the names of Ministers, Christians, Englishmen, or men; if this be your sense of us, truly you and the whole State shall do but an act of high Justice, speedily to cast us all out, as well Presbyters as Bishops, for unsavoury salt; to expose us yet more upon the dunghill of vulgar contempt and worldly poverty, which some Satiric tongues and pens have earnestly importuned, and petulantly endeavoured, against all the ancient Ministers and orderly Clergy of England, under the name of Prelaticks and Episcopal. If the bitter and bold invectives of spiteful Papists and fierce Separatists, of rash Presbyterians and rude Independents, of Erastians' and Anabaptists, if these have been or can be made good to you against the Ministry and ordination of the Church of England, against all its Bishops and Presbyters, both in office and exercise; as if we had not, either before or since the Reformation, any due ministerial office or authority, no true ordination or succession, little of ministerial gifts, and less of graces, no sound doctrine faithfully preached, no Sacraments rightly consecrated, no holy mysteries lawfully celebrated, no Church-discipline dispensed, no right government constituted, no true Ministry, or authoritative Ministers any way deserving either love or honour from you and your posterity: If all your and our faith, repentance, charity, and other graces, be in vain; if your Christian peace and hopes be all but imaginary; if neither we are made true Ministers of Christ, nor you true Members or Disciples of Christ; if all your and your forefather's piety, devotion, charity, Christianity, hath been only a fantastic pageantry, a mummery and mockery of Religion, Christianity and Reformation; if hitherto you have only been deluded and abused in so high concernments of your consciences and souls to eternity: truly 'tis but high time for you and your new Commonweal, to offer up the wretched remnant of those Bishops and Presbyters (who have yet survived the calamities and contempts of these times, and who yet retain their former judgement, ministerial office, and holy orders, conformably to the Church of England) to be an acceptable Sacrifice, a welcome Holocaust, or much longed-for Burnt-offering, to the malice of their adversaries and persecutors, both Gog and Magog: first to the more secret, but implacable despite of Papists, who have infinitely longed, and no less rejoice to see poverty, obscurity, silence, scorn, division, confusion, extirpation, to be the portion of the English Clergy, whom they heretofore either envied or dreaded, beyond the Ministry of any Christian or Reformed Church in all the world: next, you shall in so doing highly gratify the bitter and bolder enmity, the fouler-mouthed fury of all other sharp-tongued, brazenfaced and heavy-handed Schismatics, who have a long time grudged at the Clergy of England, envying both Bishops and Presbyters their honours, liberties, livelihoods and lives, prompted hereto partly by their own pride, covetousness, and other discontented lusts, and partly by Jesuitick arts and Papal policies, whose joint aims are (at this day) to extirpate the whole race (root and branch) of the Reformed, Catholic, Christian Church and Ministry in England. They conspire nothing more, than that they may serve both the Bishops and Presbyters of England, as Elias and Jehu did Baal's Priests: 2 Kings 10.22. for this is the sense some men have of us; and this is the sentence they have passed, and seek to execute upon us, as upon so many Cretians, not Christians, as if we were only liars, evil beasts, and slow-bellies, either imperious masters or unprofitable servants to the Church; that so these new Masters may on all sides freely enjoy those superstitious and fanatic liberties, which they have designed for their divided parties, who despaired to prevail in England, until they had brought the English Clergy to undergo all manner of indignities and injuries. CHAP. XII. The false and foolish pretensions urged against the Ministry of Engl. ALl which Tragedies that the people of England might behold and bear with the greater patience and stupidity, they must by popular orators be persuaded, 1. That all Bishops, or presidential Fathers and Overseers among the Clergy, such as the Apostles and their immediate Successors first were, are Antichristian; truly so are Fathers in families, Magistrates in cities, and Chieftains in armies. 2. That the ordaining of Presbyters by Bishops is merely Popish; so is the celebrating of Baptism, or the Lord's Supper, or the Lord's day. 3. That Christ's Ministry appropriated to one order of men, is a monopoly, or a taking too much upon men's selves, when others of the congregation may be as holy and able; so is all order, office and authority, civil and military, a mere monopoly, when others may be as able and wise as the best Magistrates and Commanders. 4. That all humane Learning is not only superfluous, but pernicious in the Ministers of the Gospel; so is all skill, industry and ability in all other workmen. 5. That Minister's maintenance by Tithes, Glebe-lands, and other oblations, is Jewish; so is all justice and gratitude in paying labourers their wages. 6. That the distinction of Clergy and Laity is arrogant and supercilious; so are the titles of Master and Scholar, Teacher and Disciple, Priest and People, Minister and ministered. 7. That it was proud and insolent for any Clergymen to be invested with honour, to be styled and respected as Lords. Truly, if it be no dishonour to any temporal Lord to become a Minister or Christ's glorious Gospel, nor doth he thereby lose his civil Lordship and dignity; no more is it misbecoming learned, grave and venerable Ministers of the Gospel, the chief Fathers and governor's of the Church, to be adorned with honours, and to enjoy, as the favours of Christian Princes and States, both the Titles and Revenues of their temporal Baronies and Lordships, which they might (for aught I could ever see) as well deserve and use as any other Lords, who had their Lordships by birth, by purchase, or by favour: nor did Honour less become Ecclesiastic Rulers, than it doth those military Commanders, who, I see, can endure themselves to be called & treated as Lords. I confess (under favour) I do not understand how Church-government should be less capable of degrees and distinction in Governors, than those which are civil or military, since order and subordination must be in them all: nor do I more understand how such chief Governors of the Church-militant, as Bishops were, and aught to be, might not as well both merit and manage such honours and estates, as any men, who by far less abilities or pains do get to be Major-generals, or Colonels and chief Commanders in an Army over poor Soldiers. Sure the saving of souls is every way as hard and honourable a work, as the kill of men's bodies, which is the worst of a soldier's work; or as the saving of men's temporal lives and estates, which is the best of that employment: nor is it less of true valour, vigilance and resolution in learned and good Scholars, to fight with, and overcome the ignorance, errors and barbarity of mankind, than it is fortitude in good soldiers to suppress the rapines and injustice of men's extravagant actions. But these, and such like, are the envious cobwebs, the thin and ridiculous sophistries formerly used by some men of evil eyes and worse hearts, out of principles full of ignorance, or envy, or covetousness, or licentiousness, or Atheism, whereby to persuade silly people to follow these novel, easy, and more thrifty methods of saving souls, which some swelling Libertines propound, who have the confidence earnestly to invite this noble Nation to commit the whole managery of Christian Religion, and of their souls eternal salvation, to such new, cheap, and bold undertakers, who adventure to minister in Christ's name, without any such character, commission or conscience of divine authority, P●esb●t●●is q●i s●nt in E●cl●sia obau li●e op●●t●t, qui succession●m habent ab Apostolis, & come succession's charisma veritatis. Iren. l. 3. c 40. & l. 4. c. 43. Vid. T●rt. de praes. adv. Haer. c. 20. & 32. etc. which (as Irenaeus and all the Ancients tell us) were ever in a solemn, visible and orderly manner derived by the hands of Bishops to the Presbyters, or lawful Ministers of the Church, as from Christ and the Apostles, in an undoubted and uninterrupted succession; of which Tertullian gives so excellent an account in his Book of prescription against Heretics. Their ostentations of natural liberty, of civil indulgence, of rational abilities, of special gifts and undiscernible graces, or (which is most incredible) of extraordinary calls from God; All, or any of these (if they were really true) yet will not be allowed as a justifiable ground for any man's usurpation or intrusion into any office military or civil, without a visible commission derived from the supreme power in both: much less are they sufficient pleas for any man to officiate in the Ministry Ecclesiastical, Vid. Auberti Miraei. Notitian Episc. & politiae Ecclesiasticae per omnes Ecclesias. whose Supreme Authority is confessedly in Christ; and the derivation or deduction of it in all ages is so visible, constant and uniform, that no man honestly learned can be ignorant where it resided, or how it was derived. Certainly it never was dispensed by the hands or power of Emperors, Kings, Protectors, Princes, or any civil Magistrates; whose duty (I conceive) if they will act as Christians, is not to alter or innovate this sacred authority and method used by Christ, the Apostles and the Catholic Church, but to preserve it as sacred and inviolable: much less was it left to the spontaneous confidence, the passionate suffrages, and confused petulancies of common people, who are the great and infallible prostrators of all Religion, virtue, honour, order, peace, civility and humanity, if left to themselves; but it was divinely settled by Christ in the Apostles, and by the Apostles in their successors, the ordained Bishops and Presbyters of the Catholic Church, in its several branches and combinations; who ever have been, and aught to be (under Christ) the great Conservators, the only complete and regular Distributers of this holy ministerial power, as they have been to this day, in this and all other orderly Churches of Christ, without any controversy or contradiction, without dispute or doubt, till of later years. CHAP. XIII. An impartial balancing of the old and new Minister. THe late licentious Invasions made upon this Church of England, the Reformed Religion, the Ministerial Order, Office, and Succession established in it, through all ages since the Nation was Christian, were yet something tolerable & justifiable, if those Ministers who profess to be of the ordination and communion of the Ch. of Engl. either wanted ability or industry, skill or will to serve God, and to deserve well of you (O worthy Gentlemen) and all their Countrymen: or if you and the rest of the nation were already better provided, in order to your souls good, by any new generation of Preachers, better learned, more rarely gifted, more spiritually extracted, or more regularly consecrated and duly ordained; if these new-minted Ministers, these self-intruding Teachers, did afford you weightier Sermons, warmer Prayers, more solemn Sacraments, more sacred Examples, more useful writings; if they brought you (with all this bustling and parado) a better God, 2 Cor. 11.4. a better Saviour, a better Gospel, better Scriptures, or a better Spirit than those were, which the excellent Bishops, and other Ministers of the Church of England, set before you and this nation, many ways, for many years, with mighty successes (while they were countenanced, encouraged, and ingenuously treated;) if the advantages of Religion, as Christian and Reformed, or of your and your posterities souls, were either real or probable, by these new intruders, we might well bear with your and the common people's pious inconstancy, when it should tend to the improvement and happiness of your souls. But these great and good interests of your souls, for my part, as I have not yet found any where in any new ways, so I do not think that any wise and honest-hearted Christian can by any one instance prove, that those Libertines (who are Levellers of the Ministerial duty and dignity) either have been hitherto able, or will ever be probable to advance them in the least kind or degree, beyond, or equal, or any way comparable to what the former Clergy of England have done, and are still both able and willing to do. As for these new Rabbis, you shall have commonly their best at first: 2 Tim 3 6. by soft, and (as they think) saintly insinuations, they first creep into houses, next into bosoms, at last into pulpits. The small and light bundle of the gifts they have picked up, are soon set on fire by the least sparks of popular desire and applause; then (as squibs or granadoes) they fly off amain, with more extravagant motion, panic terror, thick smoke, foul stench and vapour, than with any great or good execution done against Sin, or Satan, or the World. After a few godly prefacing about the Spirit, Grace, Christ and the new Covenant, together with some gallantries, or light skirmishings with some starveling errors and useless sins, you shall know the utmost of their sufficiencies; which is, with egregious impudence, to scorn what they cannot attain, that is, all good learning, and the manners of their betters. When they have loudly rattled at, more than confuted, any thing which they list to call an Error, when they have huddled together, wrested & distorted a great many places of Scripture, 2 Pet 3.16. without any regard to the Grammatical and genuine sense of the words, or to the propriety of phrases, or to the main scope of the place, or to the clear Analogy of faith; after all these flourishings, you shall see the bottom and dregs of their hearts poured forth in vile and uncomely rail, scurrilous and odious rantings against all Bishops and Ministers, against the whole Hierarchy, Ministry and Church of England. At last, with equal vociferation and emptiness, without any principles of reason, or grounds of Religion, without proof or plausibility, with more lungs than brains, they cry up their own new lights, their rare discoveries, their excellent Reformations, and pure Ordinances of Jesus Christ: all which are as much beyond all former dispensations and ministrations in this or any Church, as the deceits of Mountebanks excel all that Fernelius, Galen, or Hypocrates, could ever use or invent; especially when these are (in a new Paracelsian way) applied and dispensed, not by the old Empirics, the Papal and Episcopal Clergy, but by new-called and ordained Preachers, by specially-inspired Prophets, by precious men, extraordinarily qualified, and sent, either by the inward and unknown impulses of God's Spirit, or by the call and election of some godly select people; who casting off all ancient Christian Communion with this national or the Catholic Church, do first body themselves to a new way of Church-fellowship, than they assume to themselves some Brother and Member (as they can agree) to be their spiritual Pastor, him they invest by their bare suffrages with all ministerial power and authority, as from Jesus Christ himself. Such a kind of confused noise do these land-floods, these popular torrents, these turbulent Teachers make, where once they have found a vent and course for their liberty, to break through all bounds of law and order, being indeed very muddy, shallow, fatuous and feeble in all things, divine and humane, for the most part; only they have a strong high conceit of themselves, and a perfect Antipathy against those Ministers in the Church of England, to whom they owe all they have of Knowledge and Religion which is worth owning. Do but look near to their new doctrines and opinions, and you will easily see how loose, how false, how futile, how fanatic they are: look to their speech and writing, how rude, how improper, how incoherent, how insignificant, how full of barbarismes, soloecismes and absurdities: mark their whole form of preaching, how raw, how rambling, how immethodical, how incongruous, how obscure, impertinent: consider their Prayers, how are they farced with odd expressions, with forced, affected, confused, dull, dead and insipid repetitions: weigh their lives and actions; how pragmatic, licentious, injurious, sacrilegious, spiteful, uncharitable, pernicious, scandalous are they to many sober and quiet men, and specially to such as they have most cause to suspect to be much their betters, and their most accurate censurers. Last of all, look to all their novel principles, and you shall see how various, versatile, ambiguous, temporising and dangerous they are; while much of their Divinity depends upon diurnals; their Religion is most-what calculated by the Almanac or Ephemeris of their hopes and fears, their interests and lusts, their prevalences and advantages, measured not by Scriptures, but by Providences. These distempers evidently appearing (as they daily do in your new Teachers) must not you and all sober Christians confess, that these Comets, Judas 13. these blazing and wand'ring stars, mostly made up of gross, vulgar and earthy exhalations, full of portentous malignity to this Reformed Church, are infinitely short of that benign light, and that divine, sweet and heavenly influence, which heretofore shined from the fixed stars of this Church, which were in the right hand of Christ, Rev. 3.1. the godly Bishops and other Ministers, to the great honour and unspeakable happiness of this Nation, to the flourishing of the Christian and Reformed Religion; when men knew what it was to have and to honour God's Ministers, and to be good Christians, that is, judicious, humble, honest, charitable, orderly and constant in the true Religion? CHAP. XIV. BUt suppose (in very deed) it were true, that you, A charitable plea for the ancient Clergy of the Ch. of England, against the ingratitude and indifferency of some men. Ordo Episcoporum ita per successiones ab initio decurrens, ut primus in qualibet Ecclesia Episcopus aliquem ex Apostolis, aut Apostolocis vi●is, habuit autorem & antecessorem. Tert. de praes. adv. Haer. c. 32. the Nobility, Gentry, and Commons of England, did find an irreparable decay and dotage now grown upon the ancient Clergy; and that you might now be cheaper and better served by these new-sprung Gourds which are but of yesterday, like Mushrooms, the sons of a night: yet since the ancient race and stock of Apostolic Bishops and Presbyters, is not only of so venerable an age as 1600 years in the Catholic and this Church of Christ (which is a great plea of priority, honour and prepossession, against any novel intruders and pretenders;) since they and their predecessors, both before and since the Reformation, even from the first plantation of Christianity in this Island, have done their best to deserve well of you and your forefathers, who, this last century especially, in your own memory, greatly rejoiced in the lustre of these * Joh. 5.35. burning and shining lights, justly and gratefully esteeming the learned ability, industry and piety of the English Clergy, a great crown, honour and rejoicing to this Nation; since they have thus far premerited of you in their former age, strength and vigour; truly it must needs be, not more their grief and misery, than your shame and eternal dishonour, if you should use your ancient Clergy and Ministers, as you would your old dogs and harrassed horses, casting them off to seek new masters, or turning them into the high ways, to graze upon what alms they can pick up among their timorous and ungrateful friends, or their supercilious and disdainful enemies. Surely it were but charity and humanity in you, to provide rather some Almshouses and Hospitals for your cast and decayed Ministers, as well as you do for your veterane and unserviceable Soldiers, who have in their time and station been valiant, faithful and orderly; that at least the prouder Jesuits, and the less charitable Papists (besides other pestilent enemies of the peace and piety of England) may not too much triumph, to see so many, so venerable Bishops, and other worthy Ministers of this Reformed and sometimes flourishing Church of England, either begging or starving: which if it be not (as I fear it is) I am sure it would be the sad fate of many of them, if God did not stir up some merciful Obadiahs to relieve them; not that they want ability or industry, but either such liberty, or such opportunity as their adversaries presume to enjoy. But against all this that I plead of Justice and Mercy for the English Clergy, Object. some mealy-mouthed and hen-hearted men are prone secretly to object; Alas! there is now no hope to recover the pristine honour (either as to reputation, reverence, or revenue) of the Ministry of England, neither to Bishops nor Presbyters. Alas! they have been, and still are, so vulgarly slighted and abased. We see these new Teachers have most-what got the upper hand; they are brisk and bold young men, who have disgraced, displaced, and baffled many of the old stock; they have decried, affronted and overawed in a manner all of them: the new-fashioned Ministers ride on the fore-horse, and are fancied by many wary and wise men to be most useful, advantageous and conform to the present state of civil interests and affairs; so that men are prone to think they had better rest satisfied with these new Preachers upon any account, if they be but tolerable speakers and livers, rather than go about to restore, much less to prefer the former Ministers and Ministry, which grow daily more antiquated and exautorated, both as to their persons and pretensions, among the common sort of people: besides many others, who are their friends, yet look upon the very names of Bishop and Presbyter, of ordination and succession, as terms extremely unpopular, unpleasing, and growing out of fashion in England. Answ. Well, much good may these new Ministers do to these new-fashioned Christians, these wary men and their posterity. 'Tis well however, Phil. 1.16, & 18. if Christ be preached; whether of envy or good will, whether in truth or in pretence only. Yet I cannot forbear (in an honest and Christian freedom) to offer this to the judgement of you and other Gentlemen, who are of more noble minds, and more prudent spirits: Do but foresee and consider, I beseech you, what pitiful Ministelloes, what pigmy Presbyters, what plebeian Preachers this Nation in after-ages is like to have, if the Ministers of the glorious Gospel of J. 1 Tim. 1.11. Christ your Saviour must ever grow up, & live under such vulgar scambling, contempts, insolences, obloquys, molestations, intrusions, confusions, which are, and ever will be as so many nipping frosts and horrid discouragements, to all able, ingenious, grave and godly men; when they shall see, under the pretence of Novelty and Christian liberty, not only themselves very much impoverished, kerbed, despised, and depressed, as to that order, dignity, office and authority which they claim and exercise upon grounds Divine, Catholic and Ecclesiastical; but they shall further behold all sacred, solemn and venerable mysteries, as well as offices of the Evangelicall Ministry and Christian Religion, exposed to such plebeian insolences, such petulant extravagancies, such fanatic fancies, such fulsome affectations, such empty pretensions, such uncharitable janglings, such miserable manglings, and such proud usurpations, under any notions and pretensions which common people please to call their Christian Liberties. CHAP. XV. WHich are indeed little else than novel vanities, The best of the new Teachers compared with the Ministers of England. opposing pious Antiquity; weakness vaunting itself against strength; ignorance, darkness and confusion boasting against sound knowledge; true light, and holy order; folly crying itself up for wisdom; the rapes and stuprations of Religion styling themselves rare Reformations: melancholy rave are cried up for divine Revelations; schismatic conventicles voted for the only pure and organised Churches of Christ; being bodies (as Tertullian accurately observes) so homogeneous, Tert. de praes. c. 41. & 42. Quis catechumenus, quis fidelis, incertum ●st; pariter audiunt, pariter orant, etc. similary and inorganick, that it is hard to discern which is the head or tail, hand or foot, Pastor or people: like earthworms they crawl with either end forward; all are Prophets & inspired, all grow Seers, Teachers, Elders and Rulers of the Church. If they can but light on some new notions, some strange fancies, some odd and unwonted expressions, they are presently set forth for rare and spiritful discoveries; when (indeed) they are but old and rotten errors, protrite and putid opinions of the ancient Gnostics, or Valentinians, or Manichees, or Montanists, or Circumcellians, or Donatists, who affected either to invent poetic fancies, job 38.2. or to darken and bury plain and wholesome Truths, by words without understanding. And such are, for aught that ever I could discern, those Seraphic, Anabaptistick, & Familistick Hyperboles, 2 Pet. 2.18. those proud swelling words of vanity and novelty, with which those men use to deceive the simple and credulous sort of people, who are set up by them as the great rivals and Antagonists of the Ancient, Catholic and Apostolic Ministers of Christ, and Vastators of the whole frame of the Church of England. Can you (O worthy Gentlemen) or any sober Christians, who are not strangers to the prayings, preachings and writings heretofore brought forth by the worthy Ministers, Bishops and Presbyters of the Church of England; can you think, that either the godly Ministers, or the Christian people in England were ignorant of, or strangers to those spiritual influences, those inward powers and secret experiences of Religion, till these new Pedlars of piety began to open their packs, or till these rare Rabbis turned their shops into Synagogues, and their Conventicles into the only true spiritualised Churches of Christ? Did we never know before these new Illuminates and Spiritaties rose up, what belonged to the humble seeking, the happy finding, and holy acquaintance with God, by the union and communion of God's Spirit, working and witnessing with ours? Rom. 8.16. Had we neither the root nor the fruit of true Religion till these new planters sprung up? Were we utterly strangers to Faith, Repentance, Charity and good works, or to that joy, love, peace, blessed hopes, sweet satisfactions, evident sealings, sincere sanctifyings, and undoubted assuring of the holy Ghost, which are wrought by, and conform to the Word of God; first casting the Christian into that holy mould, and then filling him with such comforts as are unspeakable and glorious; Maxima gratia est minime sui ostentatrix. Bern. whose nature is rather to be humbly enjoyed, modestly owned, and tenderly treated in a gracious soul, than vulgarly discovered, and vapouringly ostentated in a rude and vainglorious fashion? The brightest lustre of God's Jewels is rarely shown, and hardly seen, being most glorious within: the richest wares are least set upon the stalls or shop-boords. Psal. 25.14. Prov. 3.32. Cant. 1.2. These (Arcana, magnalia, sublimia Dei) secrets of the Lord, these whisper of the blessed Spirit, these (oscula Christi) kisses of Christ as S. Bernard calls them, these (aromata gratiae) perfumes of his soft breath, these glowings of grace in the heart, these holy fervours and heavenly raptures, of humble, devout, meditative, fervent souls, who the more they believe, the more they love, and the more they love, the better they live, more humanely and more divinely, more justly, more charitably and more orderly; these real pregustations of glory, and anticipations of heaven, blessed be God, were long ago known, and experimentally set forth in the Prayers, Sermons, writings and actions of thousands of good Christians, both Ministers and others, long before these novel and exotic masters began to lisp out the Soboloths of fine phrases; before they dared to assault, and not only cry, but beat down this and all National Churches, all Clergy of the ancient and right order, all Universities and Nurseries of good learning together, all Tithes, all Liturgies, all studied Sermons and premeditated prayers, all wholesome forms and sober compendiums of religious duties and devotion; as if all these were merely carnal, literal, formal and superficial, natural and papal, mere husks and shells, the rind and outside of Religion. Yea, we had the comfort, and God the glory of his grace in the Ch. of Eng. long before either Anabaptists, or Familists, or Seekers, or Quakers, or Ranters, or any other spawn of Libertinism and Independency, of Schism and Separation, had amused the silly vulgar (as * Incidi in homines superbe delirantes, carnales nimis & sequaces; in quorum ore laquei Diaboli, & viscum confectum commistione syllabarum, nominis tui (i. e. Dei) & Jesus Christi, & paracle●i, Spiritus Sancti: haec enim nomina non recedebant de ore eorum; sed sono tenus & strepitu linguarum; caecerum cor inane veri. Dicebant veritas veritas mihi; sed nusquam erat in iis, qui falsò loquebantur. Aug. conf. l. 3. c. 6. de Manicheis. S. Austin tells us, by his own experience, the subtle, but sordid, Manichees were wont to do) with their new motions and strange expressions of being Godded with God, Christed with Christ, Spirited with the Spirit, and the like affectations; which are either barbarities and simplicities, or blasphemies, insolences and impossibilities of speaking: for no sober Christian ever did or in Religion ought, or in true reasoning can understand, that by a believers being a 2 Pet. 1.4. partaker of a diviner nature through Christ, he is presently Deified, that is, personally invested, and plenarily possessed with all the infinite Attributes, essence and glory of God, which are incomprehensible by any finite understanding, and personally incommunicable to any creature, excepting Christ Jesus, the (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Immanuel) God Incarnate, who only may without b Phil. 2. robbery be equal with God, esteemed, called, and adored as God. So that they can religiously mean no more by all this pomp of their words, than what was long ago far better understood, and expressed in more humble, wholesome and intelligible words; also better enjoyed by sober, meek, just and quiet-spirited Christians, who well knew the glorious privileges of every gracious and sincere Christian, which is to see the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ; 2 Cor. 4.6. to whom being related by faith, they are in some sense united to God. As the eye that sees the sun's light and glory by its beams, is in some sense truly enlightened by it, united to it, & partaker of it; not as to the vastness of its Globe, essential glory, which is far too big and too bright for the eyes small capacity, but as to its pleasing influences: in like manner, the Christian that is illuminate and regenerate by Baptism, instructed by the Word of God, and sanctified by the Spirit of God, is so drawn to Christ, by the sweet attractions of the cords of his love, and engrafted in him, that he is not now his own, but Christ's; 1 Cor. 6.19. not enslaved to his own sinful and depraved nature, but endued with the new powers and principles of an holy and heavenly nature, which is truly and soberly that divine nature of which S. Peter speaks; which while we behold by true faith and obedience, 2 Cor. 3.18. we are changed into the same image from Glory to Glory. CHAP. XVI. IF then a wise and serious Christian, A farther sifting of these new Teachers. who is not so idle or impudent as to play with Religion, to trifle in holy things, or to mock with God; if such an one will lose so much time as to sift all that these new master's vent, that these vapouring Prophets say or write, as rare and precious, spiritual and heavenly, beyond all the fleshly forms, learned ignorance, and literal darkness, under which, they say, we other Christians and Ministers in England have lain long, and laboured all night in vain; if he will do himself and them so much right, as to winnow away the chaff of their affected language, their bombast terms, their insolent expressions; drive them from the refuge and confidence they have in the silliness of their Auditors, the easiness of their Disciples, and the sequaciousnesse of their followers (who most admire, when they least understand:) this done, he shall find, that either nothing remains that is wholesome and good in their swollen heaps of new notions and expressions (which are many times the gildings of some of their pills, the palliations of their poisonous opinions, the daring-glasses or decoys to bring men into the snares of their dangerous or damnable doctrines;) or (at best) all this froth and swelling, this noise and rattling of their Novellizing, is reducible into a few drops, a little proportion of plain, easy and well-known truth; which neither needs nor desires such Gnostick disguises, such vapourings and vamping of uncouth language, such muddy, rather than mysterious, clouds of words; which rather signify a cracked brain, a fanatic spirit, or an affected hypocrite (who either knows not, or cares not what they say or do) than any such blessed broaching of rarities, as they set forth their pageantries of new-drest Divinity to be, with the emphasis of Gospel-truths, precious sparks, spiritual manifestations, rare discoveries, unheard of emanations, the Saints anointing, the uncarnating of a Christian, the pryings of God's children into their father's glory, their rising and reigning with Christ, their deification with God. Dogmatum torm●nta, & terriculamenta verborum. Hier. With these and such like, either torments of opinions, or terriculaments of expressions, do these new sort of Preachers seek, not to edify in the most holy faith, but to scare and terrify their silly sectators out of their sober senses and mother-wits; by which (God knows) they are only capable, as babes, of milk (things and words easy to be understood) but not of such hard and strong meat as these men proffer them, which are indeed stones rather than bread, and many times serpents more than fishes; dry and bare bones, or rotten and noisome carrion, rather than savoury and wholesome nourishments of sound and Christian Doctrine. But if any of these rare Master-cooks of Christianity, whose art is to new dress and disguise old Divinity, when they have first learned themselves, than taught others to despise those plain and practic methods of Faith and Repentance, of Piety and Charity, which were wont to be commended to good Christians, by the learned, orderly and excellent Ministers of the Church of England; if these mysterious Mountebanks do by chance hit upon some new notions and odd expressions, either by reading some of the Speculatists of the Roman party, as Harpius, Nubergensis, Thomas de Kempis, Martin d' Espilla, Teresa, or the like; if they can spell out Theologia Germanica, or con by heart the religious Rhodomontadoes of H. N. if they can (as Heraclitus his ass) feed upon the tall thistles of Jacob Behmen, Vanhelmont, or some such piece of Familistick nonsense, and Seraphic curiosity; if they have naturally a chimerick fancy, a stroke of Evans or Gostelowes crowing brains; if in many odd rave they perchance light upon something that seems truish and newish, gay and glistering in Religion, beyond what was heretofore known by themselves, or usual to the common people, because neglected and despised by grave and sober Ministers: Yet (still) all this their glory and invention amounts commonly to no more than the Devils setting Christ on the pinnacle of the Temple, Matth. 3. not to exalt him, but to tempt him: the end and aim is, that from the precipice of pride and presumption he may cast them down and destroy them. After much bigness, they bring forth (perhaps) some Scholastic subtlety, some Sceptic nicety, or Seraphic sublimity, which only serves to puff up, but not at all to feed either themselves or their windy Disciples: much after the rate that Origen did, when he decayed or doted, when from a learned Catechist at Alexandria, from a grave and admired interpreter of Scripture, he turned Chemist in Divinity, & Allegorist in Religion; for leaving the fruitful valleys and plain paths of necessary Christian verities, he fancied nothing but highflying curiosities, and far-fetched fancies: Nobis post Christum curiositate opus non est, nec revelatione post Evangelium. De praes. of which (as Tertullian speaks) good Christians have no need, and so no desire, since the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ is sufficiently and plainly revealed to them in the Scripture: although even Tertullian himself (as a man of an enormous wit and transcendent fancy, Hoc prius credimus, ultra scripturas n●hil esse quod credamus. Id. Rom. 1●. 3. too big for itself) was hardly able afterward to keep within those sober bounds which sometime he prescribed to others, after the good rule of S. Paul (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) to be soberly wise, or wise with sobriety; but He, even He turned Enthusiast, and driven by envy, disdain and anger, beyond the bounds of Reason and Religion, he forsook the Catholic Communion of the Church (not in Doctrine so much as Discipline) to comply with some fanatics, who fitted his sharp and melancholy humour, which was prone to severities of conversation and ecstasies of speculation. Not only great wits, as Origen and Tertullian, so Nestorius and Apollinaris, etc. but lesser ones, as Montanus, and Manes, and Arius, whom Saint Jerome calls Daemonium meridianum, are many times prone to adventure on the brinks of hell; their itch and petulancy are not satisfied, Lascivienti ingenio nihil periculosius aut bonis moribus aut sanae religioni. Eras. till their bold fancies and heterodox opinions have an haut-goust of blasphemy; till they so far advance upon the suburbs of error, heresy, and damnable Doctrine, that they can hardly be fetched off by any salvoes of cunning sophistries, with pretended inspirations, or nice and subtle distinctions, which are like high-tasted sauces made with garlic or onions, purposely applied to tainted meats, Ut cadavera, sic haereticorum dogmata, quò magis pu●ida, eò magis inflata, suaque tabe tum scunt. to make their putidness less perceptible, or more passable with grosser palates. As dead carcases, so are the corrupt minds and doctrines of men, the more putrid, by how much the more swelled in the pomp of words. Take their raptures, rarities and novelties of our new Masters at their best, they have ever much more in the show than substance of Religion; like Herons and Ostriches, they are more in the wing and feather than in the body and substance: they are such precious discoveries as are justly nauseous to a gracious spirit, and of which a good Christian may safely be ignorant. If any simple souls do perchance light on any of their jingling notions, and be taken with their new-sounding Divinity, like the noise of tinkling Cymbals, or bagpipes, or Jews-trumps, compared to that grave Church-music which was made of the ancient harmony of Catholic Doctrine; yet I see no cause for either the authors or followers of those novel niceties, to be puffed up, & swollen so excessively in themselves, Tolerabilius est Deo quempiam cum ignorantia in humilitate jacere, quam cum elatione alta sapere. Greg. Moral. nor yet to despise (as they do) all those grave Divines and godly Christians, whose rack is not so high, but their manger may be as full; who can be content with manna, though they have no quails wherewith to gratify their wanton appetites. Truly I could never yet esteem these vapouring Seraphicks, these new Gnostics, to be other than a kind of Gipsy-Christians, or a race of Circulators, Tumblers and Jugglers in the Church, who have more of little apish tricks and feats, than of solid ability, industry, or honesty: they impose upon the vulgar by a kind of legerdemain, by a juggling and canting way in Religion: much shifting up and down, much capering and vaulting they use, but they advance not at all in any virtue, grace, or knowledge. They are a sort of (funambulones) dancers upon the ropes in Religion, whose affected height and daring curiosity in their notions and motions, doth not countervail the danger of their audacity, or the impertinency of their activity; nor have they any cause to despise those who walk more lowlily and soberly on the firm ground, less indeed to vulgar admiration, but more to their own safety and others benefit. S. Paul seriously represseth the vanity of knowledge falsely so called, 2 Tim. 2.20. when men intrude themselves into things they understand not, Col. 2.18. being puffed up (as those primitive Gnostics) in their fleshly minds, 2 Cor. 11.10. not holding the Truths as they are in Jesus, nor content with the simplicity of the Gospel, 2 Cor. 11.3. as it hath been delivered, received, understood, believed and practised by the Catholic Church of Christ: this check the Apostle gave to humane curiosities and Satanick subtleties, even then, when special gifts and revelations were at the highest tide. CHAP. XVII. The modesty, gravity, sanctity and solidity of true Ministers, etc. Sanctam inscientiam & doctan ignorantiam. Praestat per Deum nescire, quia non revelaverit, quam per hominem scire, quia ipse praesumpserit. Tert. de An. cap. 1. THe better learned and more humble Ministers of the Church of England, (both Bishops and Presbyters) ever professed, with S. Austin and the renowned Ancients, an holy nescience, or modest ignorance in many things; no less becoming the best Christians, the acutest Scholars, and profoundest Divines, than their (otherways) vast knowledge and accurate diligence to search the Scriptures, and find out things * Deut. 29.29. Si propter ●os solos Christus mortuus est qui certa intelligentia possunt ista (sublimia) discernere, penè frustra in ●cclesiae laboramus. Aug. ep. 102. revealed by God which belong to the Church. The modesty and gravity of their learning commends the vastness and variety of it; as dark shadows and deep grounds set off the lustre of fair pictures to the greater height. They were not ashamed to subscribe to Saint * Rom. 11.33. Neque qui valde potens est in dicendo ex ecclesiae praeectis alia ab his dicet; neque qui debilis est in dicendo hanc traditionem imminuet. Iren. l. 1. cap. 3. de Symbol. Paul's (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) unfathomable depth, the divine Abyss of unsearchable wisdom and knowledge: they were not curious to pry into things above them, or to stretch their wits and fancies beyond that line and measure of truth, which God had set forth to his Church in his written Word, and in those Catholic summaries thence extracted, as the rule of Christian Faith, Manners and Devotion, whereto the spirits of all good Christians, great and small, learned and idiots, were willingly confined of old (as Irenaeus tells us:) they never boasted of raptures, revelations, new lights, visions, inspirations, special missions and secret impulses from God's Spirit, beyond or contrary to God's Word, and the good order of his Church, thereby to exercise their supposed liberties and presumptuous abilities; that is, indeed, to satisfy their lusts, disorders and extravagances in things civil and sacred, to discover their immodesties and impudicities, like the Cainites, Ophites, Judaites and Adamites, to gratify their luxuries and injuries, their sacrileges and oppressions, their cruelties against man, and blasphemies against God, their separations, divisions and desolations intended against this Church. The godly Pastors and people of Christ's flock never professed any such impudent piety, or pious impudence, because they were evidently contrary to sound Doctrine and holy Discipline, beyond and against the sacred precepts and excellent patterns of true Ministers, sincere Saints, and upright Christians, whose everlasting limits are the holy Scriptures, sufficient to make the man of God and Minister of Christ perfect to salvation. They were not (like children) taken with any of these odd maskings and mummeries of the Devil, who is an old master of these arts, in false Prophets and false Apostles, with their followers; whose craft ever sought to advance their credits against the Orthodox Bishops, Presbyters, and professors of true Religion, by such ostentations of novelties and unheard of curiosities in Religion, which never, of old or late, made any man more honest, holy, humble, or heavenly: they never advanced Christians comforts, solitary or social, living or dying; but kept both their Masters and Disciples in perpetual inquietudes, perplexities and presumptions, which usually ended in villainies, outrages and despairs. Nor will these new Masters late discoveries prove much better (whereof they boast with so insolent and loud an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) for all their rarities are but dead carcases, which are become mummy by being long dried in the sands, or wrapped up in cerecloths; they are not less dead, though they seem less putrified, to those whose simplicity or curiosity tempts them thus to rake into the skulls and sepulchers of old Heretics & idle Ecstaticks, such as the very primitive times were infinitely pestered withal: but, blessed be God, they were all long ago either extinct of themselves, and gone down to the pit, or crucified, dead, buried, and descended into hell, by the just censures, Anathemaes and condemnations passed against them by the godly Bishops and Ministers of the Church in those ages. Nor have these Spectres ever much appeared in this Church of England till these later years, in which, by the ruins and rendings of this Church, they have gained a rotten kind of resurrection; not to their glory, but to their renewed shame and eternal infamy, I trust, in God's due time, when once the honour of the true Christian and Reformed Religion (once happily settled and professed in the Church of England) shall be again worthily asserted and reestablished by your piety and prudence (my noble and religious Countrymen) who have been, and I hope ever will be, the chief professors and constant Patrons of it, under your God and your pious Governors. Your prudence and piety, your justice and generosity is best able to see through all those transports, which are so transparent, those specious pretences, those artificial mists and vapours, which are used by some novel Teachers to abuse the common people; that engaging them into eternal parties, animosities and factions, they may more easily, by many mouths and hands, not only cry, but utterly pull down this Reformed Church of England, in its sound Doctrine, wholesome Discipline, Catholic Ministry, sacred Order, solemn Worship, and Apostolic Government. All which must now be represented to the world by these new Remonstrants, as poor and pitiful, carnal and common, mere empty forms and beggarly elements, fit to be cast out with scorn, as reaching no further than Christ in the letter, Jesus in the flesh, Truth in the outward court, Religion in the story or legend: but (they say) the Ministers and other Christians of Old England are not come within the veil, to the Spirit and Mystery; they have not that light within, which far outshines the paper-lanthern of God's word without them. CHAP. XVIII. The designs & ends of fanatic Libertines fatal to the Reformed Religion. THese, and such like, are the uncouth expressions used to usher in, under the names of liberty, curiosity, sublimity, nothing but ignorance, idleness, Atheism, barbarity, irreligion, and utter confusion in this Church: or, at best, (as I shall afterward more fully demonstrate) they are but vancourriers or agitators for Romish superstitions and Papal usurpations; the end of all this gibberish is, Venient Romani. Put all these fine fancies and affected phrases together, with all those strange phantasms in Religion, which of late have haunted this Church, like so many unquiet vermin, or unclean spirits; truly they spell nothing but, first, popular extravagances, which are the embasings and embroyling of all true and Reformed Religion; next, they portend Popish interests and policies prevailing against this Church and State, whose future advantages are cunningly, but notably, wrapped up in these plebeian furies and fondnesses, as grocery wares are in brown paper. Be confident, the spirit of Rome (which is very vigilant and active) doth then move most potently upon the face of our English waters, when there is to be seen nothing but a sea of confusion, a mere Chaos of the Christian and Reformed Religion. Which feared deluge, and (by wise men foreseen) devastation of the Reformed Religion (once wisely established, honourably maintained, and mightily prospered in the Church of England) is already much spread and prevalent among many people, under the plea and colour of I know not what liberty, to own any or no Minister, any or no Religion, any, none, or many Churches in England. The visible decays and debasings of the true and Reformed Religion in England, as to piety, equity, unity and charity, as to the authority of its Ministry and solemnity of its Ministrations, are so palpable, both in the outward peace and profession, also in the inward warmth and persuasion, that it is high time for all sober and wise men, that love God, Religion and their Country, mightily to importune the mercies of God, that breathing upon us with a spirit of meekness and wisdom, truth and love, humility and honesty, he would (at length) assuage that deluge of contempt and confusion, the troubled and bitter waters of wrath and contention, which have overwhelmed the highest mountains of this Church; over-topping by their salt waves and aspersions, the gravest, wisest, most learned and religious, both Preachers and professors, of the Reformed Religion in this Church and Nation. Which licentious insolences have made all sober Christians so sick, weary and ashamed of them, that they cannot but be infinitely grieved to see and foresee the low ebb, to which the Reformed Religion, in its purity and power, must in time fall in England, while the pristine dignity and authority of the Evangelicall Ministry is so invaded, baffled and despised; while the authentic derivation, and Catholic succession of that holy power, is so interrupted, innovated, divided, destroyed; while the reverence of primitive customs and examples is so slighted, abated, by fanatic innovators; while the cords of Christian harmony and Church-polity are so loosened and ravelled on every side; while the just honour and encouragements of learning and learned men are so much damped and exhausted; while the Ecclesiastic Glory of this Nation, which was its chiefest (in being and owning itself as a true and Reformed Church of Christ) is so much eclipsed, to the great reproach of this present age, and the infinite hazard of posterity; which will hardly ever recover the honour, order, beauty and unity of Christian and Reformed Religion formerly enjoyed in this Church and Nation, when once the Jewels of it, the learned, ordained, orderly and authoritative Ministers of the Gospel, with all their Ministry and Ministrations, come to be either trampled under feet by Schismatical fury, or invaded and usurped by vulgar insolency; which in time will rake them all up, and bury them in the dunghill of Romish superstitions and Papal usurpations. CHAP. XIX. An humble & earnest expostulation in the behalf of the people and Church of England. HOw far in humane policy or reason of State this popular liberty (or rather insolency, usurpation, and anarchy in Religion) is to be indulged, I know not, as not pretending to any of those depths of secular wisdom, which will be found shallow at last, if God's glory and the good of men's souls be not in the bottom of them. But thus far I conceive I may (after so many years sad experience, which all sober Christians have had of the retrogradations of the Reformed Religion in England) appeal, as to you, who are the most generous and judicious persons in this Nation, so to all prudent and well-advised persons, of all sizes and conditions, who are capable to weigh the true interests and future concernments of their Country and Posterity, both as to Piety and Peace, Honour and Happiness, by way of an humble and earnest expostulation. Hath not (I beseech you) this English world, Prince and peasant, Pastors and people, great and small, had enough, both in cities and in villages, of these late Hashshes, Olives, and Queckshoes of Religion; in the mixture and dressing of which every foul hand must have a finger? Do you not perceive a different face of Christian and Reformed Religion, from what was heretofore in England, when it had less experience of vulgar licentiousness, but more true Christian liberty; when, in my memory & most of yours, Engl. was so full and flourishing, with excellent Christians of all sorts, young and old, plain and polite, learned and illiterate, noble and ignoble, in the Nobility, Gentry, Yeomanry and Peasantry, whose settled & judicious piety was the fruit of the labours, cares, counsels and inspection of those learned, grave and godly Ministers, both Bishops and Presbyters, with whom you were blessed? Have not all of you had enough, and too much of these new flashes, these fluttering squibs, these erratic Planets, these wandering Stars, these pretenders to rarities, novelties, superfluities, super-reformings, raptures, revelations, and Enthusiasms in Religion? To all which you may easily see, that a fanciful invention, a melancholy pride, a popular itching, a profane spirit, a loose temper, and a glib tongue, are very prone to betray men (being as sufficient to furnish them in those trades, as a little stock will go far to make up a pedlars pack:) yet have they so great confidence of themselves, as if they exceeded not only all former Christians, all Ministers, all Councils, all Churches, but even all holy Scriptures themselves, whose darkness or incompleteness must (as some men say) be cleared and supplied by their special illuminations: an old artifice of the Devil, most used by those men, and in those times, which being most destitute of true reason, good learning and Religion, did most vapour of their visions and revelations, their traditions and superstitions: witness those Cimmerian Centuries, or blinder ages of these Western Churches, in which there were as many visions, revelations and miracles daily obtruded on the credulous vulgar, as there were Monasteries and Nunneries, which in stead of Seminaries and Nurseries became dark dungeons, wherein Christian Religion and Devotion were for many ages sadly confined, and almost smothered with superstition, idleness and luxury. Have we not had enough & too much of vulgar playings with piety, of triflings with Christian and Reformed Religion, of baffling, abusing and abasing the Christian Ministry, of buffet of Christ, of mockings of God, by impudent pratings and insolent intrudings, by confused rhapsodies and shuffling sanctities, by endless janglings and refined blasphemies, vented in some men's writings, preachings, prayings, & practisings; so far from the light, weight and height, the sobriety, sanctity and majesty of true Religion, that they are (mostwhat) void of ordinary reason and common sense, of equity and modesty, of humanity and civility; being little else but the froth of futile and fanatic spirits, who blind poor people to enlighten them, captivate them to make them free, and ruin them, under pretence of building them after new ways and models of Religion, sanctity, salvation? Have we not had enough of passionate transports, popular zelotries, anarchical furies, deformed reformings, and desperate hypocrisies; by which some men have, like very foul chimneys, not only taken fire themselves, according as their own lusts kindled them, but they have sought to set this whole house of God, the Reformed Church of England, on fire, under pretence (forsooth) of cleansing the soil and soot of it; which appear now to have been more in their own hearts, than any where else? Have we not had enough of insolent rail, bitter calumnies, odious indignities, and endless divisions, brought upon this Reformed Church of England, upon its Apostolic Ministry, and all its Evangelical Ministrations, as invalid, superstitious, Popish, Antichristian, abominable? Besides the tragic depressions and undo of many sober Ministers, in their persons, credits and estates, who were justly esteemed by good Christians for very pious, painful and peaceable men; yet have the storms of times not only fallen heavily upon them, during the paroxysm of our civil wars, but even since that tempest hath been allayed, many poor Ministers (beyond all other men) have been afflicted with the strifes of tongues, with schismatical despites, with opinionative and disputative (besides operative) persecutions, so far, that many a grave and godly Minister hath not known whither to fly, not so much for employment, as for his safety, or quiet; that he might in any corner or cottage of the land be free from the molestations of those importune wasps, those ill-natured Factionists, who are his eternal Antagonists; who first separating from him, at length they preach (or prate) against him, Ep. Joh. 3.10. against his office, orders and function, counting themselves as a new swarm of Teachers sent of God, to be to the former stock of Preachers like the hornets sent against the Canaanites, Exod. 23.28. that driving all the ancient, orthodox, duly ordained, and well-learned Ministers out of the employment and communion of the Church, this Canaan of England, this good land, this famous Church, may wholly be in their possession. Have we not had enough and too much of petulant practices, scurrilous expressions, and blasphemous insolences, cast even upon that God, that Saviour, that holy Spirit, that blessed Trinity, whom we adore and admire; besides the neglects, contempts and profanations cast upon our Sacraments, our Sermons, our Prayers? I need not to add and repeat the diminutions and indignities under which many worthy Ministers, both Bishops and Presbyters, do lie, together with that whole Evangelical order and office, which planted, preserved and reform this Church of England. How many have questioned, others derided, a third sort divided from, and not a few have utterly denied, and (as much as in them lies) destroyed them all? Hence many are grown to esteem all our Religion, all our Reformation, all Christian duties, all Worship and Devotion, no better than mere politic frauds, specious fables, popular fallacies, cunning captivities, witty mockeries and delusions of the people. Yea, that nothing might be wanting which malice can invent or act, there are some so fierce and cunning enemies of the Church of England, that (to bring our Reformation into further defiance and disgrace among Papists, Atheists and profane livers) they dare to impute even their most putid errors, their most extravagant fancies, their most factious and flagitious practices, either to reforming principles, or to God's Spirit and divine impulses. O what astonishment, what stupor, what a lethargy, what a dumbness, what searedness, what deadness must needs possess the spirit of any Nation (so Christian, so Reform, so knowing and enlightened as the people of England sometime was) to hear with patience, yea with silence, yea with connivance, yea with smiles and seeming approbation, such insolences, such extravagancies imputed to their Religion, yea to their Reformation, nay to the Spirit of their God and Saviour, horrid and black enormities, which deserve to be expiated with tears of blood, as Gregory Nazianzen speaks of some abuses of Religion in his times. O blessed God, stir up such a pious shame, sorrow and abhorrence in the generality of the people, that these fedities may not become the sins of the nation. Have we not had enough and too much of sceptical disputes and unedifying contests, of unhealing questions and uncharitable quarrelings, of bitter strifes and bloody contradictions, of evil eyes and envious emulations, prevailing like gangrenes or cancerous distempers, even among those that profess to be godly, and contend for the superiority of Sanctity? By all which (as S. Post Nicenam Synodum, nihil aliud quam fidem scribimus, dum in verbis pugna est, dum de novitatibus quaestio est, dum de ambiguis querela est; dum alter alteri Anathema esse coep●t, propè jam nemo est Christi. Eò processum est, ut nihil sanctum, nihil inviolabile perseveret; invicem mordentes penè absumpti sumus. Hilar. vita. Hilary passionately complains, after the Arian fury had poisoned the Church in his times) not only unkind distances, but mutual defyances and damnings, the Christian Reformed Religion, sometime settled, uniform, and flourishing with verity, charity, decency, divine authority and public majesty in the Church of England, is now made * Annuas atque menstruas de Deo fides decernimus. Hilar. an annual, menstrual and diurnal Faith or Religion, as S. Hilary aptly deplores. All things are either so snarled and entangled by infinite doubts and scruples, or so wiredrawn by popular and petty disputes, or so broken in sunder by factious divisions, or so horrid, by reciprocal Anathemaes, like thunderbolts, cast on all sides in each others faces, that the common sort of people know not what to make of Christian or Reformed Religion, nor to what Ministers or Ministry to apply themselves with comfort and conscience. The solid mass of pure gold, which was the highest riches and honour of this nation, the true and invaluable treasure of your souls (while Religion, as Christian and Reformed, was carefully preserved as a precious and holy depositum;) this well-refined gold is now so dim and embased with dross, or so malleated and beaten thin by perverse disputations, that most men use Religion only as leaf-gold, to tip their tongues, or gild over the superficies of their conversation withal, or to set off (as S. Austin observed of old in the crafty Manichees and others, both Heretics and Schismatics, Insanas & sacrilegas fabulas suas Christiani nominis pallio velare contendunt. Aug. cont. Fau. l. 22. c. 15. of his time) with the show and lustre of Christian Religion, all the new fancies, projects, policies and opinions of several parties, which are presently by their authors and abettors cried up as the pure Ordinances of Jesus Christ, the perfect mind of the Spirit, the true meaning of the Scripture, Gospel-truths, hidden treasures, Evangelic rarities: yea, that nothing might be thought to have been Christian, Catholic, clear and constant, settled and indisputable, as to Religion, in this or any other Church of any other frame and fashion; some men have sought, not only to shake and batter, but to demolish and utterly overthrow, the whole house of wisdom, beating down all the grand and goodly pillars, on the one side, of faith, repentance, charity, good works; on the other side, of Scriptures, Ministry, Worship, and Sacramental Mysteries, as to the validity, authority, majesty, sanctity, solemnity, and saving efficacy of them all: Upon which the Catholic Church was every where anciently built, even then, when it was by the hands of the Apostles & their successors (the Primitive Bishops & Presbyters, Martyrs & Confessors) hewn out of the rock of heathenish barbarity & idolatry, polished by heavy & sharp persecutions, fixed by the solidity and patience, honoured by the charity and constancy of Christian people: even all these solid supports of Religion are sought by some men to be either sawn in sunder, or to be cut into chips and shave, by their infinite scrupulosities, by their importune longing after novelties, by their affectations of Schisms, and separations, and usurpations. Alas! how many poor souls, rather weak than wicked, of easy heads, yet honest hearts, have (in these later years, since the vertigo of Religion befell this Nation) ravelled out their time and ended their days in Obs and Sols, in cavilling and contending, in shifting their sides and parties, in seeking and shaking, in ranting and raving, in quarrelling and jangling about their Religion? What new models of Churches, what new methods of worshipping God, what new forms for Ministry and Ministers have distracted and distorted them, while they have been picking and choosing what way they could best fancy, and with most advantages follow? Thus poor mortals (who have infinite sins to be pardoned, and infinite wants to be supplied, who have precious and immortal souls to be saved, by the happy improvement of their short uncertain moment) are by a pragmatic vanity, continually itching and scratching, while they should be cleansing and healing; sceptically and miserably disputing and doubting, while they are decaying and dying, while they should, in all piety and prudence, by sound faith and serious repentance, be doing that great work which is evidently set forth in the Word of God, and faithfully delivered unto them by the Ministers of his Church. Behold the terrors of death prevent them; Eternity presseth upon them, before they are resolved what side to take, when to begin, where to fix, what to hold fast: the flower of age passeth, grey hairs are here and there, giddiness in their heads, stupor in their minds, hardness in their hearts, searedness in their conscience, a Manichean dotage and delirancy seizeth upon them, before ever they are resolved whether the Scriptures be the true, only and sufficient revelation of the Word and will of God; whether it be their duty to live righteously, soberly and holily in this present world toward all men; whether this Church of England, and all the Churches of Christ in all ages, have not till now cheated them and all the world; whether there be any Ministers in the Church of England that are duly set over Christian people in the Lord, to whom they owe double honour; whether they may not in some cases follow their own fallacious fancies, and other men's flattering suggestions, rather than the Scriptures plain and pregnant precepts, in order to carry on the covetous, ambitious, factious, fanatic and novel designs of such as call themselves godly; whether they may not in some junctures of times and things (when opportunity suits with their lusts and worldly interests) dispense with Gods revealed will in his word, that they may fulfil his secret will, hinted, as they suppose, by his providences; whether in order to advance the glory of God, men may not sometimes break his express commands, presuming that then they please God best, when they most please or profit themselves, as the only people of God. These strange scrupulosities, or extravagancies (rather) in Religion, do ordinarily not only entangle, but debauch the minds of common people, when once they please themselves with inordinate liberties and ramblings in Religion, which fill their heads and hearts with such snarlings and intrigues, as resemble those deformed knots of burrs which colts get upon their manes and tails, when they run loose upon heaths or commons; they are easily got on, but very hardly shaken off, or cleared: men's interests, lusts and passions, once leavening their Religion, and blinding no less than biassing their judgements, it is not imaginable what sport the Devil makes with them, and with what compasses and fetches of godliness he plays his game by them. Have we not enough and too much hitherto in England, of verbal sanctity and titular Saints; not after the Catholic Christian account, which was scriptural and orderly, unblamable and charitable, most imitable and honourable in an uniform and constant holiness, full of equity and charity, purity and sincerity; but upon new notions, names and factions? We have sects of self-canonizing Saints, as well as self-ordaining Ministers: every petty Schismatic, every solitary Seeker, every extatick Quaker, every Independent Noveller, every Presbyterian temporiser, each of these have learned of late to tip their tongues, & crown the heads of their parties with these precious names; (which are the ambition of Angels, the beauties of heaven, and glory of God himself.) And this they do not in a way of charitable communion and Christian emulation, as allowing others with them an interest in that honour, which I have the charity to believe some of the soberest in most of those sects may deserve; but peculiarly and exclusively, as if none that had, or still have communion with the Church of Engl. either as Bishops, or Presbyters, or people, ever had, or have any right or claim to be called or esteemed Saints: yea, some of the most noisome weeds of late grown up in the garden of this Church, the most vile, polluted and profane wretches, affect to style themselves the only herbs of grace; hereby causing the silly people to mistake hemlock for parsley, and to gather hen-bane for hearts-ease. Thus while either with great superstition many men scruple, or with great pride they disdain to give the name & honour of Saints, to those holy men and women, whom the judgement of the Catholic Church, or the Scripture-Records, have ever counted and called Saints; yet they very superciliously and Pharisaically arrogate, nay some monopolise these Titles to themselves and their comrades, as absolutely and magisterially, as Popes have done that of His Holiness, though they be never so black and abominable, as some Popes, even by Roman writers, are reported to have been, in the darkness and degeneracy of times, very monsters of men, and prodigies of all impiety; such as Guicciardine * A Serpent, who with his immoderate ambition & poisoned infidelity, together with all the horrible examples of cruelty, luxury and monstrous covetousness, had infected the world. Guicciard●n. l. 6. p. 308. describes Pope Alexan. the sixth, a Father worthier of such a Son, as Caesar Borgia, or the Duke of Valentinois was, than to enjoy so high a place of paternal presidency in the Church of Christ. For what (I pray) can be more unsaintly, than to desire, yea, delight and glory, as some in England now do, in most unjust and uncharitable actions, in immoderate revenges, in the poverties, disgraces and dejections of their lawful Pastors, in the divisions, distractions and destructions of that nobly Christian and Reformed Church, in whose bosom they were duly baptised and instructed, legitimately begotten, wholsomely nourished, and carefully educated, as Christians, and as Reformed, to all excellent proportions of piety? Contra hoc concilium nostrum rebellatur, & omnis sacerdotalis autoritas factiosis conspirationibus destruitur. Cyp. ep. 40. ad pleb. What is less Saintly than for Christians to mutiny, nay rebel (as S. Cyprian calls it) against those reverend Fathers, orthodox and godly Bishops, and other worthy, yea excellent Ministers, to whom they and their forefathers do really owe themselves, as S. Paul tells Philemon, as to whatever they can rightly pretend of the true honour, privilege and power of Christiany? What is less Saintly than to cry up novel, partial and factious Reformations, to magnify uncouth and exotic ways of Ministry and Christianity, Church-fellowship and Communion; while in the mean time they ungratefully despise and cruelly crucify their proper Mother, the Church of England, together with those whom they sometime justly esteemed as their Fathers in God, and brethren in Christ? Malac. 3.8. What is less Saintly than to endeavour to rob God in a land of peace and plenty, to expose his servants and service (after the order of Christ's Evangelicall Priesthood) to as great contempts, deformities and diminutions in all points, both for order and authority, learning and maintenance, as ever Julian the Apostate did design? with great impudence crying down the rare and (indeed) incomparable Ministers of the Church of England, who had been liberally treated and honourably maintained, that they may, with vulgar easiness and credulity, by a penurious, covetous and sacrilegious sophistry, cry up some cheap new-fashioned Teachers, as rare Angels, that had no stomaches, and would preach gratis; who, I believe, are found in many places, as greedy and voracious as Bell and the Dragon in the Apocrypha? Nor can I think them other than Apocryphal Preachers, so far from Angels of light sent from God to comfort the Reformed Religion in its bloody sweat and agonies, 2 Cor. 11.7. that they seem rather as Messengers of Satan sent to buffet this Reformed Church and the renowned Clergy of England; whose fame and flourishing, whose piety and prosperity, whose honour and unity, whose Catholic order and authority, heretofore was so conspicuous, by the rare indulgence of God's providence, by the generous munificence of pious Princes, and by the moderation of wise and worthy Parliaments, that God (it seems) saw it in danger (as S. Paul) to be exalted above measure, by reason of those excellent endowments and enjoyments, both spiritual and temporal, which were bestowed upon it. All which are prone to threaten themselves by their excess; the usual temper of humane frailty being such, that it is never so fixed, sweetened and seasoned by any temporal blessings in the best of men, but it is subject to warp, to sour, or to putrify, if it stand too long in the warm sun of prosperity. However it becomes all holy and humble Ministers to bless God, with holy Job, though he take what he once gave: it is his mercy that he chooseth rather by impoverishing of us to correct us, than to leave us wholly to that crookedness and putrefaction, which we were ready of ourselves in peace and plenty to contract: it is better for any Church, any Clergy, any Christians, to be healed by the sharpness of God's corrosives and vinegar, than too much softened by the suppleness of his oils and lenitives. I hope the health and soundness of the Church and Clergy of England are God's last designs; that his blessings to both shall in due time be restored and enjoyed again, when being better prepared to use and value them, we shall be less subject to abuse and lose them. CHAP. XX. MEan time, The rudeness & irreverence expressed by some in religious duties, as a part of their Liberty. while many grave and excellent Ministers are fain patiently to hang their harps upon the willows, while they and other sober Christians daily weep over the waters of Babylon (our sad confusions;) a general astonishment hath seized upon all sober and serious, wise and worthy men, true lovers of this Church and Nation, who, with sad hearts and moistened eyes, do hear and see the more than childish petulancies, the rude insolences, the impudent familiarities, the irreverent behaviours, which in many places the common sort of people are grown to affect, and presume to use, even in our religious duties and sacred assemblies; expressing less outward respect or reverence in the presence of God, when his Ministers and his people assemble to worship him, than they are wont to use, either for fear, or civility, or shame, before the Steward and Jury of a Court Leet, or the meanest Justice of Peace and his Clerk in the country. From the rude examples and daring indulgences of some men, whose years and education might have taught them better manners) there daily grows up a numerous generation, a rustic, heady and impudent fry of younger people, who carry no more regard to any duties of Religion, or respect to the Ministers of them, than the forty children did to the Prophet Elisha, when they mocked him, and were for their ill breeding and irreligious rudeness * 2 King. ●. 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Quaest. & Resp. add Orthod. in ep. Just. Mar. Res. 80. torn in pieces by the she-Bears; to teach both parents and children better manners towards God's Prophets, as was of old observed. Yea there are some grown so clownish and Cyclopic Christians, that their very Religion consists (not a little) in their morose, undecent, uncivil, untractable spirits and demeanour: if others have their heads reverently uncovered in the presence and service of God, these must have their hats on; not to relieve the tenderness and infirmity of their heads, but to show the liberty and surliness of their wills and spirits. If others testify their inward veneration of the divine Majesty by their outward comely gestures, as either standing or kneeling, according to the variety of duties; these by all means affect to fit or loll, after such a lazy and neglective fashion, that easily discovers and openly proclaims, neither much fear of God, nor reverence of man: yea, some people are not satisfied thus to express their sullen tempers by their churlish and unconformable gestures, as to our religious duties and decencies (in case they vouchsafe to be present;) but they must be railing and reviling, prating and opposing, cavilling and disputing in public. What ear, not wholly uncircumcised, can bear the vain babble, the unprofitable, unpleasing and profane janglings of such sophisters, the unharmonious noise of such Low-bels, whose sound is neither with verity, certainty, harmony, nor gravity? yet do they, every where, seek to drown or confound the sacred consent of Aaron's bells, and that sweet music which was wont to be in God's sanctuary, in our Churches here in England, when good Christians did orderly and reverently meet together with their lawful Ministers in one place, with one accord, with one heart, one mind, one mouth, to serve the Lord, and to edify one another in truth and love, with all modesty, humility, decency and solemnity. CHAP. XXI. The sad exchange people make of their old Religion for new Raptures. WHich comfort & honour, solemnity and blessing of Religion, formerly enjoyed in most Congregations of the Church of England, how many of later years have dared, not more with rudeness than profaneness, to exchange for a kind of Sibylline rave, Bacchinal raptures? They obtrude upon poor people sudden correptions, licentious rantings, ridiculous quake, fanatic rave, senseless vapourings, and such like rallieries or gallantries in Religion, which seek to turn Christianity to a kind of buffoonery. If these corrept & corrupt ecstasies, or extravagancies, be not permitted to such fanatic triflers, troublers of travagancies, be not permitted to such fanatic triflers, troublers of Religion (which no sober Christian can tolerate in their public and religious meetings) they presently meditate the most desperate separations; they instantly fall to set up new Churches and Pastors after their own heart; their full revenge must be had, not only by dividing themselves, but by seducing and poisoning other silly people, as much as may be, withdrawing them from that good esteem they had, and respect they formerly bore to the Church of England and their lawful Ministers. Then the followers of these pragmatic Preachers are taught to bear with patience (as horses are the noise of drums and trumpets) all manner of scurrilous rail against the Church and Clergy of England. At last they are by troops brought up in front, to charge them with such insolency of speech and behaviour, of writing and acting, as sufficiently discovers their evil hearts to be like mines or Petards, full fraught and charged with all kinds of bitterness, contempt and animosity against them, in order to destroy them utterly, as soon as they have power and opportunity to do it. In the room of whose orderly beauty, learned gravity, sober sanctity, and exemplary piety, so famous, conspicuous and prosperous heretofore, these bold extirpators and bitter Antagonists have hitherto produced (as the eructations of Aetna, and earthquakes are wont, with much swelling, noise and terror) nothing but darkness, smoke and thick vapours, full of sulphureous obfuscations. Sure their executions and conclusions must be full of mischiefs, subversions, confusions, desolations, to the Reformed Religion; because there is not one dram or iota (that ever I could observe) of sound knowledge, of useful piety, of gracious effects, of holy patterns, of Christian principles, to be found in them, any way comparable to those proportions of wisdom and good understanding, of justice and charity, of meekness and moderation, with all which the English world was heretofore well acquainted, by the learned industry and exemplary piety of its reverend Bishops, and other godly Ministers; who were ever highly honoured, passionately loved, and worthily treated by pious Princes, peaceful Parliaments, and unpassionate people, long before either tumultuary rabble's, or schismatic agitators, or the Scotch sword, or the Smectymnuan juncto, or a sifted sequacious Assembly, or covenanting Houses, or Committee-Consistories, or Military Superintendents, undertook (by an unwonted authority and severity) not only to catechise, but to chastise the Church and Clergy of England, even all the Bishops, and most of the Presbyters; among whom many one person might be found, whose learning and worth (every way) might modestly be put into the balance against all that any or all those parties can pretend to, or ever yet discovered to the wiser and better world, who have been, and are, the most rigid exactors, severest censurers, and sorest enemies to the Reformed Clergy and Church of England. Whose more crafty rivals and cruelest persecutors, finding themselves (as heretofore, so still) vastly exceeded, and infinitely outdone, as to all real endowments, commendable practices, and visible sufficiencies, for learning, knowledge, utterance, prudence, for praying, preaching, writing and living, they are (now of late, after the way of those old fanatics, who called themselves the pure, elect, inspired and spiritual ones) flown to the retreats and refuges of their inward graces, to more secret and spiritual perceptions, to hidden and unseen acquaintances with God. Which are (as I formerly touched) the old 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of elect Manichees, Vid. Aug. de Haeres. Manich. and paraclete Montanists, mere shifts and sleights, blinds and evasions, where the light of men's works and gifts shines not to the glory of God, Mat 5.16. as our Saviour speaks: for these are (a nemo scit) as easily denied as they are rashly affirmed, 1 Cor. 2.11. Rev. 2.17. being indiscoverable and incommunicable to any but Gods and a man's own spirit. The hidden manna, the white stone, the new name, which none can read but he that hath it, these (if meant of Graces) are best asserted, or most confuted, by men's works. No man is of God, John 5.30. who doth not the will and works of God, as they are revealed in his Word, in all righteousness and holiness, with meekness and humility, with sobriety and good order: in all which, if any (the best) of these Novellers do at any time come near to the parts, graces and merits of those that were, and are, dutiful sons and servants to the Church of England; yet I am sure they cannot, without intolerable impudence, pretend to exceed them so far, that no fair quarter may be allowed to the former Preachers and Professors in this Church; that no place or nail should be left them in God's sanctuary here in England. CHAP. XXII. The soul mistakes & abuses of Christian liberty in vulgar spirits. INto which (as I have by many instances evinced) some men's folly or fury hath (of later years) sought to bring so much filth and confusion, that they have almost made this Church an Augean stable; so that it is an Herculean work to cleanse it of all those debordments and debasements fallen upon Christian Religion, of those fedities and deformities brought upon its reformed profession, of those disorders and undecencies which have invaded Ecclesiastic duties and mysteries: all which necessarily follow the invasions and usurpations of popular liberty in Religion; which (though already full of squalor and sordidness, yet) are still eagerly challenged, loudly clamoured, and fiercely asserted by the common people and their parasites, the most plebeian spirits. Who not capable to comprehend, or not willing to understand the gracious beauty, the holy modesty, and divine majesty of true Christian liberty (which most excludes all base licentiousness, as the brightest light doth all darkness, and the perfectest health all sickness) have excessively doted in later years upon this Image of imaginary liberty, as if it had newly come down from heaven in a whirlwind of Civil war and Schism; whereas (in good earnest) the most vociferant vulgar, Acts 19. 3● who most cry up this their Diana, like the riotous rabble at Ephesus, do lest know what the matter is, nor what true Christian liberty means: which undoubtedly puts the severest restraints that may be upon itself, as to doing any thing offensive to God, or injurious to its neighbour, in private and single, much more in public and social respects; in civil, much more in religious relations, which as men and Christians we bear to one another. True Christian liberty is as far as heaven from hell, from any thing that looks like incivility, rudeness, barbarity, inhumanity, frenzy, fedity, disorder, deformity. Rational and religious liberty is not the freedom of an untamed heifer, of an unbridled horse, of a mad dog, or an unyoked hog, which will ramble and wallow, and bite and root up where they list; which seeks to subvert, not whole houses only, Titus 1.11. but famous Churches, to infect as many as they can, with the plague and contagion of men's own evil hearts. It is not Christian liberty, but an earthly, sensual and devilish laziness, or licentiousness, for men and women that have been baptised in the name of Christ, and so dedicated to his worship and service (as well public and social, as private and solitary) to sleep and laze in their chimney corners on the Lord's day, rather than go to Church, as many hundreds do. It is no part of Christian liberty, to come seldom or never to the Lords Supper, to despise Baptism, to forsake those public assemblies where the true God is truly and sincerely worshipped, according to his Word, with soundness, holiness, order, decency and sincerity; to rail at, and separate from all those Bishops and Ministers of so well a reformed and wisely settled national Church, who are evidently furnished with good ability, and invested with most undeniable & due authority, to dispense sacred mysteries. It is no part of Christian liberty, for men to speak, and act, and behave themselves in Religion, as seems good in their own eyes; which are easily blinded with passion, pride, prejudice, covetousness, ambition, revenge. It is no part of Christian liberty, for men to have no regard to that order, peace, charity, duty and subordination which God requires, and which every Christian owes, as to the civil, so to that Ecclesiastic polity and Society in which God hath placed him, as by his birth and habitation, so by his baptism and profession; which are the holy ties of Religion, by which, as members of Christ's body in the judgement of charity (his visible Church) we are bound to him as the head, and to each other as members, in the several places and proportions where God hath set us, either in a coordination and community, as to brethren, or in subordination and superiority, as to Fathers, guides, Pastors, Governors, Teachers; to whom, as sons, Heb. 13.7, 17. or scholars, we owe the duties of love, gratitude, reverence, submission and obedience for the Lords sake, and for their work sake. 1 Thes. 5.13. If it be a great sin, and deserving the ponderous millstone of God's heavy judgement (as our Saviour tells us) to offend causelessly, Mat. 18.6. uncharitably and maliciously, one of Christ's little ones; how much greater and more intolerable must the condemnation of those be, who wantonly and presumptuously offend, yea, seek to wound and destroy, those that are duly and deservedly the Bishops and Presbyters, the chief heads and Fathers, Officers and Stewards, Guides and Governors, even in Christ's stead, and by his authority, over his house and family, his Temple and Body, which is his Church, in the several parts and proportions of it, according to the Catholic order and custom used in his Church? Of which riotously to make havoc, to rend, to strip, and waste all things of good order, Catholic custom, comely honour, authority, decency and solemnity, to the overthrowing of Christian unity and charity, to the dissolving, deforming and discountenancing even of that truth, those gifts and graces, which were in such a Church as this of England was, must without all peradventure be no less sin and crime, Sacrilegium schismatis omnia scilera supergreditur. l. 1. c. 4. cont. ep. Parmen. than it is a sacrilege and scandal (in S. Augustine's judgement;) agreeable to the sense of Dionysius Bishop of Alexandria, who in his Epistle, so famed, tells Novatus as much, who was a primitive Schismatic, or a Saintly Separatist, from the Catholic custom, judgement and communion of Christ's Church. For which practice in any case, a man must have very great and pregnant grounds (as S. Vid. Cyp. lib. ad Novatian. Haeret. & ep. ad Magn. 76. Cyprian & S. Austin oft observe) either in point of gross errors, or immoralities, obtruded upon a believer (in case he will keep communion) whereby to justify his desertion, division, or separation, which upon small and trifling accounts, or upon spiteful and malicious principles, or for covetous and vainglorious interests, or upon mere jealousies and surmises to violate, Quis non trepidat, Christi Ecclesia derelicta, ratione caeca, apud temerarios illosschi smatum Deuces & dissensionis autores converti● Cyp. ad Nou. was ever esteemed, by the soundest and soberest Christians in all ages, a sin much of the nature and size of Korah's, Dathan's and Abirams transgression or rebellion, as S. Cyprian observes, applying that History to some such mutinous distempers and unquiet spirits, as haunted the Church in his days and Diocese; That their popular and parasitick crying up of a Numb. 16. all the Lords people to be holy, their rude reproaching of Moses and Aaron, as taking too much upon them, these specious pleas did not serve their turn, when Gods searching severity, and not vulgar levity, credulity or ingratitude, was their judge: all their plausible pretensions of sanctity and liberty before the people, were not able to defend them from those horrid chasms, and unheard-of gapings of the earth, which by a new way of death, Cypr. ep. ad Rogat l. 3. ep. 9 & ep. ad Felicem ep. 78. swallowed up (even quick, and yet alive) these mutinous novellers and levelling rebels into the black and dreadful Abyssus of eternal death and darkness; whose names and memory (yet) the Cainites did venerate, as the commendable asserters of popular liberty, Haeres. 18. and the Princes or Protoplasts of Schism, as S. Austin observes. Nor is the usual fate of such like insolent and popular perturbers of Christ's Church much different or disproportionate at last: for either they fall (when their pride and folly is manifest) into the pit of vulgar hatred, 2 Tim. 3.9. contempt and abhorrence; or they are swallowed up with carnal lusts, with earthly, sensual and devilish passions, affections and actions; or being at last justly abandoned and abhorred of all sober and good Christians, they are (by God's utter forsaking of them) plunged into the gulf of their own polluted, seared and despairing consciences. If those were in the primitive times esteemed as given over to the will and power of Satan, 1 Cor. 5 5. 1 Tim. 5.20. who were justly excommunicated from the communion of the true Church of Christ; which sentence (as Tertullian tells us) every good Christian did dread, next to that doom of (Ite maledicti) Go ye cursed, Summum futuri judicii praejudicium. Tert. Apol. c. 39 as a dreadful pre-judging before the last and fatal judgement; how must they needs lie down in darkness and sorrow, who upon no just cause, do not only excommunicate themselves from any one Churches communion (in which they were) out of a fancy of I know not what liberty, but (out of an excessive pride, arrogancy and boldness of spirit) they dare excommunicate even whole National Churches, yea, such a famous Reformed Church as England; nay they exclude the very Catholic Church of Christ in all ages and places, from any communion with themselves (which certainly is no small height of uncharitableness) yea, and from all communion with Christ himself, which is a strange pitch of Luciferian pride. It is no news for the patient, but just and righteous God, to keep those men and women at a great distance, even from himself, and from the sweet communion of his holy Spirit, who proudly or peevishly despise the communion of any part of his Church, in the holy ministrations of the Word, Prayer and Sacraments. They that hope to kindle to themselves strange fires, and light new sparks by their violent strikings and novel agitations in any sound and well-ordered Church, God (commonly) beats the smoky brands ends about their own heads, and kindles a fire of displeasure in their own breasts, because they cared not to set wholechurches on fire, in order to roast their new-laid eggs; the best of which are of no great worth, and most of them are quite addle or rotten. CHAP. XXIII. ALthough I have thus far and thus long insisted (most honoured and beloved Countrymen) upon the mischiefs of abused Liberty, A further discovery of mischiefs from abused liberty in Religion. as the first and chief cause (I conceive) of the greatly lapsed and decaying estate of the Church of England and the Reformed Religion (which was heretofore so settled, so sound, so prospered, so approved by God and good men;) yet I cannot forbear a further search into this Ulcer or Fistula: for indeed her hurt is not now a green wound lately made, either by the malice of open enemies, or by the wantonness of those friends, who love to be always pickeering and skirmishing in Religion; but it is now by a long confluence of ill humours in people, grown a venomous and inveterate sore, contumacious to any ordinary Medicines, opprobrious to the best Physicians, contagious to the remaining parts of this Civil and Ecclesiastical body, which have any thing in them sound and sincere; many of which, especially among the common people, being weak, are less able to resist that petulant poison, and spreading itch of liberty, which is so bewitching a name to the populacy; a temptation and infection which few vulgar spirits are able to resist, or willing to remedy. And indeed the mischief seizing (like Mercury or Quicksilver) upon the spirits and brains of men that are rash, easy, & heady, it makes them presently suspect, and shortly to hate all those, as their enemies, who go about to curb or cure so welcome and flattering a disease: which is not less dangerous, because delightful; for commonly all those things that are most agreeable to natural men and carnal minds (who love to be licentious) prove grievous to God's Spirit, scandalous to the name of Christ, and pernicious to his Church's purity or peace. Liberty, if it be in ill keeping, soon putrifies to licentiousness, Exod. 16.20. as the manna did, which turned to worms. Not that I am any way against that rational, ingenuous, modest, inoffensive, charitable and conscientious liberty, which is the only true Christian liberty to be desired and enjoyed, either in private or in public; such I mean as is neither touchy nor turbulent, but carries an equal tenderness to other men's honest and harmless freedom, as to its own, seeking only by lawful means, either to remove those impediments of its well-being and doing, that are really rubs or remiras in its way to heaven, or else to obtain those holy allowed advantages which may most promote its communion with God; with Christ, and his blessed Spirit: which holy freedoms and happy advantages are surest to be met withal (as I conceive) in those high ways and plain paths, which Christ's Catholic Church in its nobler parts and ampler combinations hath constantly kept, after the primitive proportions, & Apostolical distributions of Churches, wherein the majesty of Christ, & the harmony of Christians, which is the honour of Christian Religion, are infinitely more to be seen, and safely preserved, than in any of those byways or diverticles, which Schismatic liberty affects to choose and follow; which will at length make any national, Christian and Reformed Church, that was heretofore grounded in truth, guided with order, united in love, conspicuous with beauty, fortified with its joint power, uniform in its solemn ministrations, and orderly in all its holy motions (like an army well ordered disciplined, and bravely marshaled) to be like the routed parties and ragged regiments of a scattered and divided army. It is an observation never failing, That the sanctity of Christian Martyrs, the honour and prevalency of that Religion which recommends the crucified Lord Jesus, as a Saviour and preserver, not a destroyer of mankind, these are best preserved in any nation or society of men, there, where least liberty or licence is permitted to private spirits publicly to innovate or alter, dispute or deny, contemn or subvert, those Catholic Truths and Doctrines, or those comely constitutions and customs, which are once well & wisely settled by public counsel and authority, which carried due regard to the glory of God, to the rule of his Word, to the Catholic precedents, and to the common good of that particular Nation or polity. All experience, and our own as bad as any, teacheth us, that liberty, in the vulgar sense and use, is like a sweet and rank kind of Clover-grass, with which the beast of the people will soon surfeit, even till they burst themselves, if they be not moderated, and restrained from over-feeding by their wise Governors in Church and State. The Histories of Sleidanus and others sufficiently show you, in the last Century, how wild the Boors of Germany grew, even to a kind of a Lycanthropy, by such liberties as their teachers first indulged, and themselves afterward usurped; how quickly this charm (like Circe's) turns men and women into dogs and wolves; how abused liberty having once seized upon the thatch and straw, the petulancy and insolency of common people, as most combustible matter, like a masterless and unbridled fire, it will devour more in a few days, by the pragmatic folly of some extravagant heads and hands, than the wisdom, piety and gravity of your forefathers could erect, or your posterity will be able to repair, in many years or ages: for no fires burn with more fury & pertinacy, than those which maintain their unquenchable flames by the oil of Religion and Liberty, with which they are least to be trusted, who most love to play with it, as children do with fire and gunpowder. Common people, like young heirs, who have more wealth than wit, are of so profuse an humour, and so lavish of their liberty, both civil and religious, when once they think themselves masters of it, that they will presently be undone, if they have not some wiser men to be their Guardians, who will be better husbands for them than they would be for themselves; nor are they ever more desperately prodigal, or more certainly miserable, than when (like madmen) they have by insolency or importunity extorted from their Governors and the Laws, such a portion of liberty, either civil or religious, as they least know how to use, and will be sure to abuse. Let those men that are the greatest Tribunes of the people, the seeming Patrons of their liberties (but real parasites of their licentious humours) in Religion, let them, I say, make but one years' trial, with how much good nature, reason, justice and modesty, these people will use their civil and natural liberty; in which, being absolved from all restraint of laws and fears, of power and of punishment, they shall have leave, with the bridle on their necks, to covet, challenge, contend, invade, usurp, and take every man to himself such women, such houses, such goods, such lands, such offices, such power and such honours, as each of them most fancies himself capable to deserve or enjoy: in a few days they will soon see how severe a revenge such folly will take of itself, both as to the actors and permitters. If such inordinate liberty (which naturally men affect, and which imposeth on mankind the necessity of having public laws and magistratick powers above all private men's fancies) if it be so pestilent in civil and secular regards, that the indulgence of it is no more to be permitted by wise and good men, for one month, or one day, than a fire may be left to its freedom for one hour in any private cabin or chamber, to the endangering of the whole ship and house; how (I beseech you) can it be convenient or profitable to the common interests of Religion, or the honour of any Nation that desires to be called Christian, to let every man pick and choose their several doctrines, opinions, forms and fashions of Religion, as they best fancy; or to suffer them to set up to themselves what Prophets, Pastors, or Preachers, what Churches, Congregations & Conventicles they most affect; 1 Cor. 3.4. one being of Paul, another of Apollo's, a third of Cephas; one Episcopal, another Presbyterian, a third Independent, a fourth owning no Ministers, no Religion at all? Specious names and godly pretensions may be very pernicious to the peace of the Church, the honour of Christ, and the good of men's souls, as the blessed Apostle there observes, through the folly and factiousness of people. Better the most deserving names, how much more the most flattering Novellers in the world, should be buried in eternal oblivion, than they should be set up in the Church of Christ, as so many apples of contention, so many wedges of division, so many rivals to the glory of Christ, so many moths to religious unity and the Church's beauty, so many Moleches or Idols, through whose fires your posterity, as Christians (that are not yours only, Heb. 2.13. but God's children, and, as it were, Christ's seed and offspring) should be forced to pass with popular noises and incondite acclamations of liberty, only to drown the sad cries of those poor souls who are to be tormented in those flames, those Tophets of uncharitable novelties and factious liberties. Christian liberty, as vulgar spirits commonly use it, is but a corroding salve spread on a silk plaster; it is a confection of carnal projects, wrought up with spiritual mixtures; it is poison presented in a gilt cup, the Devil's ratsbane mingled with sugar. The sad effects already upon us in England, and further threatening us, do promise nothing upon this account, 2 Cor. 12.20. but envies, wraths, strifes, jealousies, animosities, whisper, swellings, tumults, seditions, oppressions, and mutual persecutions, Jam. 3.16. with every evil work among us, as men and Christians. CHAP. XXVI. NOr are these mischiefs only rife among Laymen, The contagion of abused or mistaken Liberty spread among Ministers, to the dividing, debasing and destroying of them. or ordinary people (whose ignorance, meanness and discontent, are prone to tempt them to any thing) but even among those who desire to be called the Ministers, Teachers, Pastors & leaders of the people; for even these, in many places, either misled by the people, or sadly misleading them, are very much bitten and infected with this epidemical disease, of mistaken, corrupted and abused liberties in matters of Religion, both as to Doctrine and Worship, as to Ecclesiastical order and Ministerial authority: many of these (otherwise men of worth, for soundness and integrity, no way unfit for the work, or unworthy to have the honour of being Ministers of the Gospel) yet are miserably tainted with these divisions, distractions and deformities, even among themselves. Which contagion (among the Pastors as well as the Flocks) as a farther sad and evident instance of the grand causes or occasions of this Churches present miseries, and of the great decays of the Reformed Religion, I crave leave, without offence to any of my worthy and deserving Brethren in the Ministry (of what name or title, of what stamp or metal soever they are) a little to insist upon; that I may, by further discovering the rise and progress of our mischiefs, the better make way for such remedies as your wisdom (O my noble Countrymen) shall see fittest for the recovery of health, strength and beauty, to this deformed Church, and the remnants of Reformed Religion in it. As all experience tells us poor mortals, that our greatest enemies are many times nearest to us, and oft lie in our own bosoms; so the greatest mischiefs that have, or can befall the Christian Reformed Religion in England, do chiefly arise from some Preachers, or such as would be accounted the Ministers of Christ's Church, under several notions and formations. Vulgar reproaches, plebeian contempts, the injuries of Laymen, yea the persecutions of great and mighty men, the Clergy, or true Ministers of Christ's Church in England, might possibly have born with patience, constancy, comfort and honour, (though much to their outward diminution) if they had had the grace, wisdom and understanding, to have kept among themselves that harmony, constancy and integrity, in judgements, practice and affections, which became men that should be both wise and warm, prudent as serpents, and innocent as doves; if they had (as Christ's Disciples) loved one another, though the world hated them: Mat. 10.16. if they had (as one man) held together, like a well-turned Arch, surely they might at once have upheld themselves, and easily sustained any pressures laid upon them by the levity, violence and ingratitude of other men: the Clergy being as the cable and anchor of Religion, which firmly twisted together, and fraternally combined in truth and love, will in time bring the people to quiet and calmness in Religion; however they may have their storms and toss sometime, partly by innate fluctuancy, as the rollings and tidings of the sea, and partly by outward winds and tempests. What Nation hath there been so barbarous, what heathens so truculent, what persecutors so inhuman, whom godly Bishops and other Ministers have not by their exemplary faith, patience, unity and charity, with God's blessing, in time softened and sweetened, convinced and converted to be Christians; while they all spoke the same things, & carried on the same interests of Christ, as it were with one shoulder? These once broken in their orderly and uniform methods, varied in their Catholic succession and authority, divided in their fraternal concord and harmony, the people's minds soon grow distracted, and are violently driven, as ships from their anchors and cables, upon a thousand dangers. When primitive Pastors and people were most cordially united, though they were most cruelly persecuted, yet Christianity spread and prospered; what the fury of men pulled down, that the care and charity of their Ministers built up, twisting what others ravelled, either as Idolaters, Heretics or Schismatics: which reparations of Religion were easily effected, while the sheep knew their true shepherds, following them, or flying to them in case of any danger; when the people knew their proper Presbyters, and orderly Presbyters owned those Bishops to whom they were duly subordinate, when all ranks and orders in the Church of Christ, as parts in the body, kept their stations and ranks, their orders and correspondencies, their proportions and duties, either in filial subjection or fatherly inspection; when no good Christian was to seek what Pastors, what Preachers he should apply to, nor any Deacon or Presbyter did doubt to what Bishop he owed a respect, as to his Superior, in Ecclesiastic eminency, order and authority. This, this blessed harmony, this Catholic (and in primitive times undoubted, as well as uniform and constant) order, did then keep up, or recover, by God's blessing, the majesty of Christian Religion, the love, together with the honour and authority, of the Evangelical ministry, amidst the heaviest distractions and persecutions; and so, no doubt, it would have done in England, amidst all plebeian insolences and popular prostitutions. But (alas!) though all this evil be come upon us Ministers of all sorts and sizes, from without, from civil wars, and unhappy public differences in secular interests (which spare no men) as also from the private covetousness, inconstancy, malice, revenge, impatience, ambition and ingratitude of some vulgar people (not only to the great injuring of many Ministers persons, credit and estates, but to the menacing of an utter subversion, even to the whole tribe, office and function, as it was founded on Divine Institution, built up by Apostolical Tradition, and preserved by Catholic Succession:) yet in our distresses and afflictions many Ministers (as Ahaz) have sinned more and more: 2 Chro. 28.22. and as if it were a small matter that plebeian spite and petulancy could ambitiously inflict upon Ministers, themselves have added much fuel to their fires, encouraging their malice by wretched complyings with them, & flattering of them, in the very abuses of their liberties, in their rude arrogating, and usurpations upon the Ministry, infinitely to the disgrace of their holy calling, to the disparagement of their own judgements, and to the prostrating of their due authority, which is (as I have proved) divine, or none at all: that I mention not Ministers betraying of their own honest interests and enjoyments as to this world, in point of profit, honour and reputation. All which the gulf of secular avarice, and the Abyss of laymen's sacrilege, daily gapes to devour, after the pattern which some achan's and Ananiasses of the Clergy have set them: the poor remainders of which, as they are already forfeited, by the sordid and shameful debasing of themselves, to the humouring of people in their lusts and licentiousness; so they will in a few years be utterly lost and confiscated, by the advantages which will be given to people's covetous cruelty, through those mutual animosities, jealousies, distances and varieties, which are now maintained by the several sides and sorts of Ministers in England, all pretending to be Preachers of the Gospel, under reformed and super-reforming names. What infinite swellings, disdains, envies and pertinacies, Qui jam alios quieta consilia sequi persuadebit, quando vos (sacerdotes Dei) tam hostiliter arma sumitis & inter vos depugnatis? Niceph. l. 8. c. 16. orat. Const. m. ad Epis. are open to all men's observations, even among those men who would be thought grave, wise, learned, holy, and every way able to teach and rule the vulgar? How have their innovations, mutations, levitieses and divisions, so clearly manifested their weakness, folly and factiousness, that as it cannot be hid from vulgar eyes and censures, so it is already many ways confuted and sorely punished, not only by the palpable frustrating of some of their novel designs, but by their being generally debased far below their former station, and extremely worsted in all points, as to that handsome, if not honourable condition, which they might in unity and order (as heretofore) have enjoyed in England? If once the Ministers of any Church (who are as the walls and sea-banks) do make cracks and breaches upon themselves, or suffer the moles and water-rats of the people so to do; no wonder if the high tides of vulgar insolency and rapine soon break in upon them, & make their ruins not more deplorable than irreparable. CHAP. XXV. Unavoidable contentions among Ministers of different ordinations. YEt after all this sharp and sad experience, which hath rendered the profession of Ministers on all hands contemptible, their ordination disputable, their enjoyments miserable, their necessities irreparable, their dependences poor, plebeian, & almost sordid, by their mutual and unhappy divisions; yet still many, who glory to be called Ministers, (of whatever odd ordination or new edition they are) do fancy it a great part of their piety, to be pertinacious in those new opinions, ways and factions, which they have adopted; yea much of their sanctity is made to consist in their scorning all antiquity, and of all Reformation heretofore in the Church of England. If they can find nothing else to quarrel at in the old Clergy of England (whose doctrine was found, whose ordination most Catholic, valid and unquestionable by Bishops, whose learning and lives were most commendable) yet they must find fault with their very clothes; and rather than not differ, they must disguise themselves from the gravity of Gowns and Cassocks, of black caps and black clothes, to military cloaks, to Scotch jumps, to white caps, and all mechanic colours: in which posture being as Preachers once got into a Pulpit, then both they and the silly people fancy they see great Reformations of Religion, more looking at the gay and strange colours of a foolish bird, than minding how it speaks: especially if these new Ministers do gratify the plebs of the Laity and the plebs of the Clergy with any influence or stroke in their ordination, and consecration to the office of the Ministry; if they have highly cried up popular rights and liberties in making and marring, in electing and rejecting, in ordaining and deposing their Pastors; if they have gently condescended to such popular transports and real novellizing in England, as are contrary to all practices of ancient and best Churches; O what an high mountain do these new Masters and their new Disciples fancy they are ascended! to what a glorious transfiguration do they imagine themselves to be changed! what a new heaven and new earth do some of them, either more silly, or more subtle than others, glory they have created, in their godly corporations, their rare associations, and blessed ordinations! how strange, novel and disorderly soever they are, as to all ancient customs of this and all Churches. Nor do they think it worth considering, how much they deviate from all Antiquity; how much they desert, yea & reproach the wisdom of this Church and all estates in this Nation, ever since it was either Christian or Reformed; how much they go beyond the duty they owed to the civil peace of this Nation, as also that modesty, humility, ingenuity, reverence and subjection, which by the laws of God and man, by all sanctions, civil and Ecclesiastical, they owed to the Governors and guides, Pastors and Preachers, the peace and welfare of this Church of England; besides that prudence and policy which they ought to maintain, in order to the honour and respect, which is indeed due to their calling and authority, when it is truly ministerial and authentic. What sober and impartial man doth not see, how the despites, arrogancies and insolences, first expressed in tumultuary heats and furies, against all Bishops whatsoever (though never so learned, grave, godly and industrious men, fit to govern, and apt to teach the Church of Christ,) are still maintained and repeated daily; yea raked up and increased by the popular oratory of some novel Ministers, so far as to raise eternal prejudices and antipathies, even against all those Presbyters which were, or are, of Episcopal ordination? And the better to justify these Novelties and Schisms in the Church of England, (which some were so eager and easy to begin, so loath and unwilling to retract) they still entertain their nauseous, credulous and itching Disciples, with all those odious, stale and envious Crambes, which are most welcome to vulgar ears and sacrilegious aims: as how unfit it was for the Ministers of Jesus Christ, who was the great pattern of piety and poverty, to have great revenues, stately Palaces, and noble Lordships, which more godly men do want; for Preachers to have any titles of honour and respect, as Lords, to have any part of civil power, or indeed of Ecclesiastical jurisdiction. All which honest employments and enjoyments, I conceive, (under favour) the excellent Bishops, and other deserving Clergymen in England, were as worthy to enjoy, and as able to use, with honour, conscience and charity, as any of those men, either military or civil, who were most zealous to deprive, to debase, and to destroy the Hierarchy, or just honour of the Ecclesiastic state in England. Nor do I think it was any way displeasing to God, or in the least kind unbecoming the name of Christ, for Bishops and other Ministers of his Church to have such ample estates and honourable preferments for their double honour, in so plentiful a land as England was: this I am sure, it was far less beseeming any good Christian to repine at them, and unjustly to deprive them of them. If this envious vein of popular oratory grow at length fulsome, vile and ridiculous (as it is now to all sober and judicious auditors;) then the anti-episcopal parties of Ministers devoutly rip up, and sadly repeat whatever they have heard, or others invented, of any Bishop's faults, or the Episcopal Clergies past infirmities: whatever they can they rake up, though long ago buried as it ought to be, in the charitable forgetfulness of all good men, who either consider their own frailties, or remember how many holy Bishops were Martyrs and Confessors in all ages of persecution; how learned, how diligent, how commendable, how admirable, how useful they were to this Church, for their preaching, writing and living, in times of persecution as well as peace, even here in England. All good Bishops and other Clergy (as I have formerly expressed) confess themselves, as men, to be subject to infirmities and temptations; the best Bishops and Ministers lest deny this truth, being every day most vigilant to resist the one, and amend the other. These allegations then (like the Devils quoting of Scripture) though they may have some squint-eyed truth in them, yet they are spitefully, partially, and most impertinently alleged against all Bishops, especially by those fierce Presbyterians, or other implacable Preachers, who have now liberally taught the English world, that however the riches, pomp and honours of Presbyterian or Independent, or other Preachers, are (much against their wills) far less than those which God and man, reason and Religion, order and polity, devotion and gratitude, Law and Gospel, allowed to Bishops and Presbyters heretofore (that the eminency of their office and place in the Church might have something of honourable splendour and hospitable magnificence, proportionable to its venerable authority and great antiquity;) yet men are not so blinded by that popular dust, stirred up against the faults and names of Bishops, as not to see that the pride, covetousness and imperiousness of the most furious and factious anti-episcopal Ministers, come not one jot behind any of those Bishops, whom they look upon and represent with the most malignant aspect. O how magisterial are many new masters in their opinions! how authoritative in their decisions! how supercilious in their conversations! how severe in their censures! how inexorable in their passions! how implacable in their wrath! how inflexible in their factions! how irrevocable in their transports, though never so rash, heady, plebeian and unsuccessful! by which they (at once) forsook their duties to others, and their own mercies. And this many of them did to please others or themselves, contrary to their former judgements, their sworn and avowed subjection to Bishops for many years, when they paid that respect to those Fathers and Governors of this Church, which the laws of God and man required, long before either Presbytery was hatched, or Independency gendered in England. The sharp severities and early rigours of both which parties and their Consectaries, grew quickly both remarkable and intolerable to sober Christians: for as they were bred and born (like Pallas) armed, full of anger, revenge and ambitious fierceness; so they have acted, even in their infancy and minority, far beyond what regular, sober, and true Episcopacy ever did in its greatest age and procerity here in England; yea its greatest passion and transports did not exceed the aims of these new masters, both Ecclesiastical & civil, which was either to rule all, or to ruin all. Bishops commonly justified their real or seeming severities by those laws, either civil or Ecclesiastical, which were in force against all such as did not conform to them. Hence were occasioned (much, I am confident, to the grief, and against the desire of the most grave and godly Bishops) sometimes those so oft declaimed against, and aggravated persecutions of some unconformable, yet otherways godly Ministers, by silencings, suspensions, deprivations, etc. which sometimes were but just and necessary exercises of Discipline (as I conceive) if men will maintain any order and government in any Church or State; sometimes, it may be, some Bishops pressed too much upon the strictness and rigour of law, aggravated by their private passions, beyond what might with charity and moderation safely have been indulged to some able and peaceable Ministers, though in some things dissenters, yet, as to the main, good and useful to the Church. Yet all these old Almanacs, these stale and posthumous calculations of Episcopal severities, did not upon true account, no not in one hundred years, equal the number and measure of those pressures and miseries, which have been acted or designed in one fifteen years, by such as now profess Presbyterian and Independent principles, against all Bishops, and all those Ministers which are of the Episcopal persuasion. I think it may, without any stroke of Rhetoric or Hyperbole, be said with sober truth, that the little finger of Presbytery and Independency, with the warts and wens of other factions growing upon them, hath been heavier upon the Episcopal, which was the only legal Clergy of England of late years, than the loins of any sober and godly Bishops ever were for any one century, yea, and equal to the burdens of the most passionate and immoderate Bishops whatsoever in any age, who commonly were most imperious when the Church had most peace and civil prosperity; but the Presbyterian thunder and Independent lightning, urged most upon all Bishops, and all Episcopal Ministers, then when they were most scared, pillaged and harrased by a civil war, when most tossed by those sad storms, and almost overwhelmed by the impressions of those sad dissensions. Then, then was it that Bishops and other Episcopal Ministers, (whose consciences were guided in their judgements by the wisdom of this Church and Nation, together with all other Christian Churches in all ages) having lost their cloaks in the wars, must be deprived of their coats also; chiefly for their innocent opinion, and honest adherency to Catholic Episcopacy: then was it, that where Episcopacy had at any time, and that by special command from their Governors, silenced or sequestered refractory or turbulent Ministers, by ten or hundreds, possibly Presbytery and Independency inflicted either those mulcts, or terrors at least, upon thousands of Ministers dissenting from them, not as to the Religion established, or Laws in force in England, but merely as to their private opinions and principles about Church-government. Hence so many learned, pious and painful Preachers, since the civil digladiations ceased, had been condemned to chains of everlasting darkness, to remediless distresses, both they and their families, if there had not been some more generous mercy and connivance showed, than those men's spirits intended, or can well bear. Through which miseries and terrors, many Ministers grey hairs have been brought down with sorrow to their graves. After all which dreadful severities, either intended or executed, against the Episcopal Clergy, yet, as far as I can see, the condition of any sort of Ministers now in England is not any whit better, as to the generality, nor comparable to what the Clergy enjoyed in former times, who in my judgement might well have born the yoke of Episcopacy, with as little disparagement, and with as much ease and honour, every way, as they have for some years done the examination and inspection, the rebukes and frowns, the terrors and jurisdictions of Major Generals, or Country Committees, not only in secular and military, but even in religious respects: among which few, I believe, were to be found equal, or exceeding such Bishops and other grave Divines as England afforded, both able Preachers and excellent Governors; much more fitted in all respects (except their swords) to be the superintendents of Ministers, being of the same education, office and calling, than most of those men can be, who are (generally) so much (Heteroclite) different from learned men, both in their breeding, learning, studies and course of living, that even from hence they have sometimes secret Antipathies even against all Ministers or Clergymen, as persons of another genius, of more refined minds, and, if men were impartially weighed, of greater worth and merits. As than I cannot find that Ministers of any new name, form, title and extractions whatsoever, have much mended their condition, by that great alteration they have made or sought in this Church and State; so, I am sure, their mutual enmities and divisions do very much heighten their common afflictions, and add exceedingly to that general darkness and diminution, in all respects, civil and sacred, which is come or coming upon them, as upon wicked men, in the strict account of God's justice; or as weak men, in the vulgar process of man's severity. Indeed the worst of Ministers miseries they generally owe to themselves, who in piety and prudence, above all men, should by united counsels and cares avoid them; because it is sport to the most and worst of men, to see those men together by the ears, hating, despising, biting and devouring one another, who are esteemed the severe censurers of other men's sins and follies, sharp curbs to the childish, petulant and licentious humours of people. Ministers scufflings and contests with one another, is beyond any cockfighting or Bear-baiting to the vulgar envy, malice, profaneness and petulancy. 1 Kings 8.38. In the midst of all which sufferings, first from Divine Justice, (which calls upon every one to examine the plague of his own heart,) next from humane ingratitude and insolency, though every sober and prudent Minister cannot but see that precipice and gulf of irreligion, irreverence and contempt, to which the Reformed Religion and the whole office of the Ministry is now falling in England, through the endless capricios and extravagances chiefly of some Ministers; though most Ministers on all sides, that have any learning, worth or abilities for that office, do generally agree in the same Scriptures and Sacraments, in the same Faith and Salvation, in the same God and Saviour, in the same Graces and Virtues, in the same Doctrine for morals and Mysteries, in the same Precepts and Promises, in the same holy duties and blessed hopes; yet even these Ministers (which is a thousand pities) are sharply, and for aught I can see (unless God work miracles upon some of their spirits and tempers) resolutely and eternally divided by those wedges of differences, touching external Church-order and Discipline, the manner of worship, and power of managing of Church-government: so that the way of peace few have known; nor are they patient to learn, contrary to their presumptions. To recant their errors they are ashamed; remit their rigour they must not, lest they abate their parties and followers; exchange their animosities as men, for moderations becoming brethren and Christians, they will not, lest their credit decay, and their factions abate, lest those shows and shadows of popular empire vanish, which they have seemed or fancied themselves to enjoy, upon these accounts of rare inventions, and new models of Reformation, Ministry, etc. All which must by some men be kept up, though all things else do fall to the ground: though the Church of England lies languishing and sighing, weeping and bleeding; though the Reformed Religion is deformed, decaying, dying; though both piety and sincerity be much dispirited; though they cannot but see Ichabod wrote upon all their foreheads; though all Ministerial order, office, employment and authority, as to men's inward respect and consciences, no less than in their outward reverence and obedience, is infinitely slackened, and in many places (as well as in many hearts) quite dissolved; though the Catholic Character, or Christ's cognizance of Christians, which is sincere charity, be much defaced, & the Devils badges of factious confederacies be much worn; though the purity and simplicity, the warmth and worth, the words and works of true Religion be much out of fashion, giving way to fanatic follies and impudent vanities, daily vented in every place; though the beauty & serenity of the true Christian Religion, as of old, and of the well-reformed Religion, as it was of later years well established in Engl. be much hidden, defaced, disguised by many hypocritical masks & new dresses; though the palpable cunning of some men hath taught them to abuse this credulous age, by shaving off the hair & primitive ornament of this Church, which was very good & graceful (having the honour of ancient, venerable and gray-headed Episcopacy upon it) that they might the better induce Christianity, which is now above 1500 years old, to put on and wear (a lafoy mode) the new peruques either of young Presbytery, or younger Independency (rather than Religion should go quite bald, and be ridiculous by its deformity and confusion;) though the pristine polity, peace, purity, majesty, severity, sanctity and solemnity of Religion, as Christian and Reformed in England, be infinitely baffled and abased by the petulancy of those that affect licentious liberties and unsaintly extravagances; though all these evils (as Daemons meridiani) are pregnant, and every day proclaimed by the loud Herald of Experience, which themselves declaim against and deplore, as well as other men: Yet many Ministers (in other respects not to be despised, or much blamed) do still, as to the point of Church-order, discipline, government and polity, (which is the outward centre of unity, and visible band of peace) passionately desire and solicitously endeavour, that those wild oats and tares, which some men have of late years sown, watered and cherished (while the Nation and Church were not aware, as being engaged in war and blood, during whose heats great wounds of Religion are little felt) might for ever grow up, spread and shed abroad (like thistle-down) yea and succeed to after-generations in this nation; that so England might be more famous for variety of parties and opinions in Religion, than either Poland is or Amsterdam. How few nominal or real Ministers, that have been either Authors, or great sticklers and abettors, not of any modest, just and sober Reformations, but of needless, endless innovations, schisms, deformities and defections in the Church of England, can yet find in their hearts meekly to retreat by any humble, ingenuous and happy ways of Christian meekness and wisdom, to a sweet accord, from their first heady extravagances and unhappy transports? in which the heat and passion of men's spirits (as is usual in all quarrels) made, even at first, the differences, jealousies and offences far greater than the real injury or inconvenience indeed was: which is most clearly evident now, not only by our comparing the former happy estate of this Church, and of the Reformed Religion here, besides those comforts which the generality of all good Ministers and sober Christians in former times enjoyed in England under Episcopacy; but further, by our serious considering those fair offers, those great moderations, those self-denials and Christian condescensions, with which all worthy and wise Bishops, with all Episcopal Ministers, were, and are, ready to gratify the peace of this Church, and the desires of all good Christians, even of those who have been most their enemies and destroyers; whom they forgive the more readily, because they believe most of them, as the crucifiers of Christ, did it ignorantly; ignorant of the laws of this Nation, and of the good constitutions of this Church, ignorant of the customs, practice and judgement of all ancient Catholic Churches, ignorant of that equity and charity which they owed to others, ignorant of that honest policy and discretion which they owed to themselves and their order, lastly, ignorant of that pious, grateful and prudent regard they should have had of the honour, peace and prosperity of this Church, both at present and in after-ages. But however the exorbitancies of some ignorant men at first might be so far venial, as they were led on by the pious and specious pretences of others, rather than their own principles; yet they are less excusable (now) since the sad events have so fully confuted all those prejudices and pretensions; since popular looseness, avarice and madness, hath, as a rude broom, swept away all the finespun and speciously spread cobwebs of Reformation, either as to the state of this Church, or the Reformed Religion professed here in England, or as to the promised amendment of the Ministerial order and office, either for ability, duty, authority, or maintenance. Minister's first tearings and rendings of themselves asunder are not yet sewed together; yea Religion itself is fallen to rags, and preachers are become as so many piebald patches, of several colours and antic figures: which wretched division and fundamental deformity in Religion cannot but daily grow, as a Gangrene, to greater maladies, mischiefs and miseries, which will be bitterness in the later end. For as no City, so no Church can prosper, Mar. 3.24. that is divided against itself: neither grace nor peace can advance, where Preachers of Religion are mutual persecutors; where, while Ministers teach people to believe, to love and to live Christ crucified, they are daily crucifying one another. It is a deplorable and desperate state of any Church, where (as in Babel's building) the bvilder's tongues, heads, hands and hearts are divided, yea the very builders are self-destroyers, mutually ruining themselves under pretence of zeal to build, or repair the Church of Christ: what one rears with the right hand, another pulls down with the left; when they frequently leave their trowels, and fall to their pick-axes and poniards; when they fling lime and sand in one another's eyes; when they build, or dawb rather, with untempered mortar; when every one is ambitious to be a Master-builder, a new modeller of Religion, of Churches, of Ministers and of Ministry, contrary to the wisdom and piety of such a Church and Nation as England was. Leaving poor people (mean while) infinitely amazed, jealous, unsatisfied, perplexed, as to Religion. Some are sadly grieved, others are quite confounded: many are zealous for the newest fashion, others are for the good old way, a third sort is glad of the occasion to cast off all Religion, while they see those Ministers cut the Catholic cords of charity and unity in sunder, in order to bind Christians up to new parties and factions, or to private interests and opinions, which, like sampson's with'hs, will not serve to bind the lusts or consciences of men to their good behaviour. These, these are the sad effects which follow those deformities of Preachers turning Pioners, of Ministers being underminers and demolishers of one another, and their Mother-Church; when those that should be God's Ambassadors (forgetting the majesty of their mission, and sanctity of their errand) fall to railing and reproaching, calumniating and declaiming against one another (like so many eager Baristers and mercenary Lawyers, who are resolved (being once feed) to defend their cause and their client, whatever the merits of them be, because they have once undertaken them) without any regard to that justice, honour, wisdom, gravity, charity, meekness, harmony, joint counsel and ingenuous correspondency, which ought to be preserved in all fraternities and honest callings or mysteries: but chiefly among the Ministers of Christ's glorious Gospel; Preachers should be of the highest form of Christ's Disciples, the most exemplary in all piety, meekness and prudence, in all gravity, equity and charity; for want of which, even as to matters of outward polity, order, civility and ministration, they are (and ever will be) the more blamable before God and man, by how much nearer they profess to come to one another in the harmonies of faith, and confessions of the same reformed and true doctrine, which would soon unite their hearts and studies, if they had (on all sides) less of easiness, credulity, popularity, peevishness, obstinacy, small ambitions and juvenilities. The removing of which distempers from all Ministers, new and old, and from myself as well as any other, is one of my chief designs and endeavours to be carried on in the fourth and last Book of this discourse. At present it sufficeth to have showed (as an evil branch of abused Liberty in Religion) this to be none of the least causes or occasions of the Church of England's distempers, decays and miseries, that Ministers are (after Mundane and machiavellian methods) so sharply divided from, and eagerly opposite against one another; so hardly persuaded by any retreats and principles of piety, charity, prudence, which honest policy, public necessity, self-preservation, or care of future succession invite them to; which may make for an happy close and Christian accommodation. Upon some Minister's pride and peevishness, not any one, nay not all these considerations together, can so far prevail (I fear) as to induce them to any terms or treaty of equable accord; but they still carry themselves as young men, high in their own conceits, coy and elate in their parties, opinions, presumptions, prejudices, animosities and disdains, especially against the former Ministry of England, which was not more Episcopal than Catholic, Primitive, Apostolical and truly Christian. Few novel Ministers ever lay their hand on their heart, and ask, what evil have I acted, occasioned, or not hindered to this Church of England? CHAP. XXVI. THat I may a little further open the eyes of all my Brethren, such as either are, or deserve, The folly and factions of Ministers evidently seen and punished in their common calamities. or desire to be Ministers of the Gospel, and of all other my Countrymen, both as to their own private interests as Ministers, and as to the public concernments of the Christian Reformed Religion in this Nation, I shall yet more particularly, and as pathetically as I can, endeavour to show them the true state and posture in which their persons, their livelihoods, their credits, their worldly comforts, their calling at present, and their succession for the future (now) seem to stand in England: what scratched faces, what deformed aspects, how deplorable conditions all of them either feel, or may justly fear and expect, by reason of that inordinate liberty which people in England have lately carried on to such intolerable petulancies, insolences and licentiousness against Ministers; whereto they have been highly animated and encouraged, not more by their own lusts and malapertness, than by those unkind, indiscreet and unchristian dissensions, which have broke out among Ministers themselves against one another, while forgetting that gravity, constancy, modesty and equanimity, which they owed to themselves and to each other, they either rowed down, or suffered themselves to be carried down this foul stream and torrent of vulgar liberty, out of principles of facility or faction, popularity or pride, covetousness or cowardice, ignorance or sequaciousness; which have so blinded some Ministers, otherwise of very good abilities, that (like men drenched over head and ears in water) they cannot suddenly or easily see what deformities are upon them, what dangers threaten them, both as men, and as Ministers. Whatever title, order, original, badge, or discriminating character of their Ministry they bear and wear in the world, whatever principles they profess, whatever party they patronise, adhere to, or adopt, new or old; this I am sure, if they be not purely plebeian praters, of the very scum, lees and dregs of people (which have no sense of sin, shame, or honour) if they are persons of any learned latitude, of any ingenious capacities and abilities, of any tenderness in honour or conscience, if they be painful, pious or prudent men in any degree, they cannot but see, that no men's condition in England, or almost under heaven, of whatever calling and quality they are, is more mean and miserable, more tattered and scambling, less honourable, or less comfortable; no profession, order, or fraternity of men, is more divided, dubious, distressed, forlorn, despicable, as to all civil and secular interests, for profit, peace, respect and reputation, both for the encouragement of their present ministration, and for the hopes of an able future succession: none of which things wise and worthy Ministers ought supinely, sordidly, sluggishly, or simply to neglect. Their own and all men's eyes that are open and clear, may easily see the sad prospects of Ministers dejections, diminutions, debasements, distresses in all those points: all of them are under the scorn of some opposite party or other; most of them live in a low and mean estate; many of them (to my knowledge) contend with extreme difficulties, and all manner of necessities; not a few of them, which I have been oft an eye-witness of, have been, and are reduced to a morsel of bread, and are driven even to beg alms for the support of themselves and their distressed families. How many of their cries have I heard? how many of their tears have I seen? with what pallor and dejection, with what squalor and horror, with what astonishment and despair, do many of them wander from one village, city, and country to another for relief, until being weary and wasted, sunk and oppressed by their daily distresses and remediless tragedies, they go to their graves with sorrow, to the shame and sin (I believe) of the Age in which they have thus lived and died Ministers of the Gospel, and very worthy ones too, if it be any merit to have constantly deserved well of the Church of England, by their godly preaching and living: over whose sad ruins I know the enemies of this Church and the Reformed Religion, both at home and abroad, do infinitely triumph and seriously rejoice. Nor is this hard fate befallen those Ministers only, who were, and are of the Episcopal persuasion, and most constant to the love and duty they owe to the Church of England; but even those Ministers have been shrewdly singed, who most eagerly sought to heat the fiery furnace of popular wrath and revenge against all Bishops, and the Episcopal Clergy: the thumbs and toes of many of those great Adonibezeks have been cropped off, who most joyed in the like executions done by popular revenge and vulgar fierceness against all of the Episcopal order and ordination; even those Preachers who filled their sails most with the people's breath, are now either becalmed, or come aground, or very leaky, or quite dashed in pieces, as to their former great influence and reputation among the people: nor have they made either such a fair port, or such a prosperous voyage, as might any way answer their former presumptions, their high ostentations, and their flattering expectations. This I am sure, that the ambitious wantonness of many Ministers lusting to taste of the forbidden fruit of government, beyond their share, proportion and capacity, hath now (if not altogether) almost quite driven themselves, and all others of that calling, name and profession, out of that paradise of peace, plenty and respect, which they did heretofore, as Ministers, enjoy in England, and still might have done, if they had used such modesty, prudence and piety, as best became wise and worthy men, who had been masters of any prudence and providence. But now (alas) who ever professeth to be a Minister of the Gospel in England (not as an interloper or mongrel, who ekes out his other mechanic trade, by putting the new patch of a plebeian Preacher to that old garment (for these wretches are deservedly despicable to all conscientious, sober and ingenuous men) but even those who have destinated and confined themselves wholly to the Ministerial work and function, whatever account they go upon for the derivation of their mission, ordination and authority, whether Episcopal, Presbyterian, Independent, or Plebeian) yet if they make their Ministry their work and business, and not their wantonness and sport; if they give themselves to that painful plough and sacred husbandry which tills rocky hearts, and sows in hopes of an eternal harvest; they shall be sure to find work enough both to do and to suffer; enemies enough to encounter with, indignities more than enough to digest, necessities enough to contend withal: at their very best estate they are altogether vanity, accounted as the scorn and outcasts of the people, the filth and offscouring of all things, by some party or other. Even those Ministers that fancy themselves most favoured by the potent or impotent, by Prince or people, yet still they are attended with many evil eyes, bitter speeches, contemptuous reproaches, 1 Cor. 13.4. spiteful affronts, from some side or other. This, this is the portion of Ministers of all sorts to drink; this is the cup which vulgar liberty and their own dissensions have mingled for them, as to all civil respects and worldly enjoyments. CHAP. XXVII. TRuly they had need make much of good consciences, The great diminutions of all sorts of Ministers in Engl. as to all civil respects. for little comfort else is left to most of them, as to any civil splendour, competency, or certainty in this world. Look but to the point of estate, and that moderate subsistence which all ingenuous & industrious men may justly expect and aim at for themselves and their relations, in the way of honest labour; no men's salary, subsistence, or maintenance is generally so dubious and uncertain, so arbitrary and hazardous, so burdened and exhausted, so thin driven, and, as it were, wiredrawn, both by their own necessities and other men's injurious sharkings: insomuch that many Ministers very well-deserving, are reduced not only to tenuities, but to difficulties, necessities, extremities; they are forced to live by faith: and some of them have (as I have heard) even died with famine; others had so perished, if charity had not interposed, wanting those necessary supports which their aged and languishing condition did require. The truth is, not one of ten (I might say of an hundred) of any sort of common people make it a matter of conscience to pay them their deuce, if they can hold their livings; few do pay them without delay, defalking and defrauding: many people make it a great point of conscience, to pay them nothing, either by the Laws of Justice or Gratitude. Ministers must in most places only learn how to want; Phil. 4 12. for in few they shall ever learn how to abound. Many of them have been a long time quite turned out of God's Husbandry, from their Livings and Labours: many, such as have leave to labour, have (most-what) their labour for their pains; forced to study how to live, when they should live to study: such as should dispense the bread of eternal life, and consecrate the Sacramental bread, which is the Communion of Christ's blessed Body to his Body the Church, these are solicitous for that perishing bread, which is the staff of this momentary life. Many Angels of Christ's Church, and Stewards of his household, are exposed, many ways, and many times, to sordid necessities, and scurrilous indignities. The chief Pastors and ablest Shepherds are very much leveled to the meanest of the flock, while yet the weakest and most scabbed sheep affect to be shepherds: the very abjects of the people, every where, dare, if they list, contemn their Ministers to their faces; they make no scruple, yea they take pleasure to be petulant, peevish, refractory, and insolent, even in public. The aim of many is, to have such Preachers, as shall be, not Fathers, Rulers, and Heads in the Church, but either as sequacious and flexible tails, following the frowns and flatteries of the people, on whose good will they must depend, if they will eat; or as firebrands of unquenchable factions, engaging the populacy to infinite parties and sects, under the notion of new Ministers and new Religion. Jer. 26.23. These, these are the treatments, these the methods used by some, to bury not the dead carcases of Ministers in the graves of common people, (which fact is branded in King Jehoiakim, as a token of great irreligion to God, and irreverence to the Prophet Uriah;) but they seek to cast them yet alive into a most plebeian state, the graves of ignominy, poverty, contempt, and shame: yea many hope at length to make the Reformed Clergy or Ministry of England, as odious as those Heathen Priests became, Socrat. Hist. Eccl. l. 1. c. 14. when (as the Church-Historians tell us) their Temples were rifled▪ when their despicable Deities, their deformed Idols and worm-eaten gods were discovered. Nor is this deplorable estate befallen those incruders only, who from the basest of the people have of late consecrated themselves to serve those calves that list to set them up, 1 King. ●3 33. or follow them; but many great Prophets, like Jeremy, Jer. 38 6. stick to this day in the mire and dirt of those dungeons into which they are cast: 1 Sam. 2.36. others are become miserable, as Eli's posterity, crouching for a morsel of bread, even to their enemies, I mean those factious and sacrilegious spirits, who would be glad to see the most learned Ministers in England advanced to no higher preferment than Musculus was in Germany, Melchior Ad●m. in vita M●sculi. who though an excellent Preacher and Writer, yet was forced for his livelihood sometime to help a Weaver at his Loom, otherwhile to work as a Scavenger in purging the Towne-ditch. N●r is this a Parable of Misery, or an artificial and Theatrick Tragedy made by me: No; I solemnly protest to you (my honoured Countrymen) the World affords not greater, more numerous, or more calamitous objects of Christian pity and humane charity, than are many Ministers at present in England, if you consider their calling, their abilities, their education, and their sad condition. Many of them are already implunged into the horrible pit of darkness; others are upon the very brink and precipice of extreme poverty, meanness and contempt, through the trials or displeasures of God, executed by the restless malice and immoderate revenge of some men, against this Church, its Ministry, and the Reformed Religion; whose spite and passion have much overborn (of late years, as by a new, unwonted and ponderous bias) the ancient noble genius and generous piety of this Nation; which was by no people under Heaven heretofore exceeded in its honourable munificence, yea magnificence, toward their God and Saviour, toward learned and religious men, especially those who had the honour to be their Teachers, Governors and Guides to heaven. No men had more privileges and immunities; no men had more tranquillity and leisure to be good; none had more means and encouragements to be good, and to do good, to live holily, hospitably, honourably; no men had abilities, opportunities, and hearts to do more works of piety and charity both to rich and poor, great and small, both transient and permanent, occasional and monumental, than the Clergy of England: Witness the several goodly Foundations, and liberal Endowments, which the ecclesiastics of England have either themselves erected, or persuaded others to Found and Endow, to God's glory, to the good of Mankind, and the honour of the Nation. But now (alas!) as the Estates of most Ministers are so small, that they hardly reach to their own necessities; so their influence upon other men's estates and minds is almost as little. They are despised by many, valued by few, scarce loved by any, and honoured almost by none: they are all reduced to such a timorous, sneaking, servile, arbitrary, dependant, and plebeian proportion. Nothing grand, conspicuous, magnificent, honourable or venerable, is upon any of them, especially as to vulgar eyes and censure: who are never too liberal of their courtesy, civility, and respect to Ministers; much less when they find them at a low ebb, as to the esteem of their betters, the rich, the noble, and the mighty. For with common people, Learning, Wisdom, and all intellectual excellencies, generally signify little or nothing, if they see nothing of power, authority, plenty, splendour, or eminency in men, by which they either hope to be benefited, or fear to be punished. Certainly that part of the Clergy of England were extreme out, as to all Politics, who fancied that common people, yea, or the better sort of mankind, were so good-natured, as to value them most for Ministers, when they enjoyed least as men. Angelic virtues do not weigh so much in the world's balance, as houses, lands, revenues, preferments, and honours do. A golden calf easily tempts people to worship it, while desolate and wooden virtues are despised: yea they much mistook the interest of Christian and Reformed Religion, as well as of the Ministry in England, who thought it would turn to any account of honour and advancement of Reformation, 2 Sam. 10.4. to serve the Clergy as Hanun did David's servants, not only stripping them of their upper garments, and those comely ornaments which became God's Ambassadors, but cutting off their nether garments and necessary coats, to such a curtailed proportion, as renders them both ashamed of themselves and ridiculous to others. The real impoverishing, sufferings and abasings of many Ministers, have been very great, in all bitter extremities; nor are the fears, terrors or dejections of those, few or small, who have scaped best, who are still permitted, either by their gentler neighbours, or the less severe Lay-Bishops of later inspection, to earn their bread with the sweat of their brows. For even of these Ministers, many of them dare scarce demand their wages, when they have dearly deserved it; nor can they tell how with safety and peace to get it, when they have hardly earned it: so terrified and overawed, so threatened and reproached are they, some by peevish parishioners, others by separating stragglers, and a third sort (which is a very Epidemical mischief) by sharking and shuffling, dilatory and grumbling paymasters; who think they deal very bountifully with their Ministers, if they pay them at the years end, with some difficulty, and many importunities (which looks very like pure begging) after the rate of two shillings in the pound for their Tithes, when they are bonâ fide worth four, five, or six shillings. Few, yea very few, as I said, make it any point of Conscience in Law, Religion, or Gratitude, to do justice to their Ministers, so as their rights are assigned them by Man's laws. Few scruple to rob, deny, shark, detain, and immodestly to delay the payment of their deuce, even according to their own agreements. If the poor Minister complains, though never so softly and whisperingly, if Necessities so pinch him, that he must either cry aloud, or starve with his wife and children, if he have so much spirit and courage, as he dares roundly to demand, or to urge the Law in his behalf; presently he is scared with the menaces of some proling Sequestrator, or some surly Aproniere, who being the fag-end or dregs of a Countrey-Committee, and soured either with anabaptistical leven, or other factious principles, thinks he does God good service to threaten, to terrify, to torment, to rout, to undo such a quarrelsome Minister, who dares thus far to own himself, his call, his condition, and his rights by Law; especially if the Minister be known to be of the Episcopal judgement, a lover and honourer of the Church of England, and have a Living worth the losing. O what arts and policy, what windings and shifts, what complyings and cringings must this poor perplexed Minister use, to fence himself against the crafty agitations of his spiteful neighbours, and those pragmatic pieces, who in every corner do hover over the heads of Ministers, as Kites do over Pigeons! How many times have Ministers been affronted publicly, even in their Churches, amidst Divine Offices; and had been much more, even to the outraging of their persons, if either the piety or the policy of those in power had not intervened, and in time repressed this intolerable insolency, which was never heard of, never indulged, never connived at in any Nation under heaven, that owned any public veneration, service, or Religion to their God? If some stop and restraint had not for shame been given to these profane enormities, certainly by this time no true or worthy Minister should have opened his mouth in public, but he should have been smitten on the mouth (as Ananias commanded them to use St. Acts 23▪ 2 Paul) by some of those rude and facinorous Assassinates, whose design is to silence and extirpate all the Reformed, Orthodox, and orderly Clergy of England; not only Bishops, as the Apostolic roots, but even all sober Presbyters, as the branches of Ecclesiastic ordination. For besides the private scorns and contests, no less than public affronts, which Ministers have personally sustained, their enemies have proceeded many times to give even public alarms to all the tribe & function, by rude Pamphlets, bitter libel, and insolent Petitions, importuning an utter extirpation of the Calling, Ordination, and Succession, Esth. 3. (such as Haman designed against the whole Nation of the Jews) together with a total alienation or confiscation of all the settled maintenance of Ministers by Glebes and Tithes. At which morsel some men's mouths have a long time extremely watered; with which prodigy of sacrilege they have been big a long time: nor do they yet think they are quite miscarried, or that this godly & gainful project is wholly abortive; although they have not yet been able to get a public law or Parliamentary sanction to be their Midwife; nor I hope ever shall be able so far to blind and abuse the whole Nation, no less than abase the Ministry of the Gospel. But the frequent tamperings and essays which some men still make in these kinds, (for what dare not the meanest wretches meditate and adventure against the best, yea all the sober Ministers of England?) these (as the clouds did Deucalion after the Flood) do still so terrify the minds of the better sort of Ministers (till they shall see a clearer rainbow of assurance appearing in the English firmament, for their favour and security, than yet hath been seen) that they have continual damps on all their spirits, great and daily checks in their studies, industry and ingenuity. Few of them can be so good husbands in these times, as to lay up any thing out of their livings for posterity: nor dare they be so provident, as to lay out any thing upon the glebes or houses of their livings, either for their after-benefit, or present conveniency, because they know not (besides the hazards of mortality) what a day or a night may bring forth; uncertain how soon they may be undermined, and together with their miserable families turned out of that house and home, which heretofore was counted their freehold by law, till by law they had forfeited them. Many Ministers have been suddenly conformed to our Saviour's condition, who had not of his own where to lay his head: which was not his necessity or impotency, but his gracious choice, by being poor to enrich us; but poor Ministers are not armed (as Christ was) with miraculous supplies when they please, nor may they now expect to be courted with such devout donaries and charitable oblations, as in primitive times were remarkable for their munificence, amplitude and splendour; of which the Acts of the Apostles, the after-Church-histories, and Ammianus Marcellinus in the fourth Century give us accounts. Alas, this age is an iron age; and men's estates are not generally more impaired than their hands are withered, and their hearts petrified: these are hardened in many, the others are exhausted in most. men's minds are every where indifferent towards their Ministers; in many places they are divided from them, and their spirits exasperated against them. No wonder then if charity be grown cold, if popular stipends and arbitrary alms (like morning dews) be soon dried up. The Devil is so crafty, that he knows, if once he can take away that ancient, legal and Evangelical maintenance of Ministers by Tithes, he shall soon by starving take that royal Citadel and Sanctuary of God's Church, that ancient Fort of Christian Religion, the Ministry itself: which above all things in the world he aims to slight, undermine, and utterly demolish; and hopes to do it by the help of such crafty and cruel engineers, who have, as Satan's mouls and pioners, done all they could in these times to undermine and batter down that firm pillar and support of Religion, a legal and certain maintenance by Glebes and Tithes, which are yet left to carry on any Church-work and Ministry, with any comfort or cheerfulness. CHAP. XXVIII. The sordid envy and grudging against Ministers Tithes and Glebes. YEt how cruelly do these still stick in some men's teeth and stomaches, only because they cannot, yet, devour them. I have otherwhere largely showed to the public view, how endlessly and earnestly some covetous and sacrilegious sophisters have disputed, or rather cavilled against Tithes, as paid to the Ministers of the Gospel, either in a civil or religious right, as given to them, and deserved by them, as God's proportion and man's assignation. O what swines-flesh, what abominable broth are they still to some men's squeamish stomaches; not as to their receiving them, or to their detaining them, against all Law, Justice and Conscience, but as to their paying of them to those to whom they are many ways and only due! O how Legal, how Judaical, how Ceremonial, how Popish, how Antichristian are Tithes in Ministers hands! Let these holy Harpies once get them into their own clutches, either by impropriation, or sequestration, or hard compositions, by fraud, force, or by any way never so illegal and injurious, O then, how sweet is the sacred sop to them! how quiet is the Cerberus of their tongues and consciences in the point of Tithes when paid to themselves! These (as all things) are a portion meet for such Saints, if they can but get them by any means; though neither God nor man, Law nor Gospel, Reason nor Religion, give them any true right or title to them. Nothing is more halting, more partial, more subtle, more sinister, than covetous hearts and sacrilegious spirits, as is evident in this one instance of Tithes; which hath been long debated to and fro by the perverse disputations of men of corrupt minds, who have been told a thousand times, that the Ministers of the Gospel do not plead any right of Tithes, as the Jewish Priests did, by any Mosaic Law and Jewish Institution; for our service, our sacrifice, our Ministry, are all changed to an higher and more noble Priesthood than that of Aaron or Levi was. We plead that Tithes weve prae-Mosaical, and so may be post-Mosaical, before Moses, and after him in the Church of God; Heb. 7.8. they are due to the Melchisedechian Priesthood of Christ; they were paid to the Type or Shadow, and so much more may be to the Antitype or Substance: that they are God's proportion even by a general law of * Learned Bochart observes out of Herodotus, Pliny, Strabo and others, that the Sabeans or Arabians constantly paid the tithe or tenth of all the Frankincense they gathered in Arabia Faelix, to the Priests and Temple of Apollo, or Phoebus, which is the Sun, as an acknowledgement, that to his warm beams and influence they owed those sweet perfumes. Vid. Bocharti Geograph. Sacr. in Arab. Fel. natural gratitude, besides God's special choice and assignation: that as they were ever owned and confessed as due to the Divine Majesty by an innate principle or a traditional dictate of all nations, almost in all ages, confirmed by a parallel law of God among the Jews; so they are no where in the Gospel abrogated or denied, but confirmed as to Evangelical uses and respects, in as much as the Christian hath no less cause to pay such an homage to God and his Ministers now, than the Jew had of old; the Ministry of the Gospel (which a Heb. 8.6. is a more excellent Ministry) deserving as much and as well of mankind as that of the Law: besides, in all reason, God's ancient demand and unrepealed proportion is rather to be chosen than any other, as most pleasing to God, most equal in itself, and every way best, both for Minister and people, more agreeable to good conscience, and least subject to cavil, grudging or exception on either side; especially when 'tis most evident, that it is confirmed by Evangelical sanctions and Apostolic orders; even b 1 Cor. 9.13, 14. so hath the Lord ordained, that they who preach the Gospel should live of the Gospel, as those that served at the Altar did live of the Altar. If these repiners do not like God's assignation, and Christ's right to Tithes, (which was not levitical, for c Heb. 7 14. Christ was not of that tribe) which are devolved to his Evangelicall Ministers, as being in Christ's stead and office; yet they may very well satisfy their consciences in the paying of them, merely d Heb. 7.5, 6, 8. upon the account of Ministers civil rights, and the public donation of the nation, which hath by law invested Ministers, yea Christ and his Church, in the right and property of demanding, receiving and enjoying Tithes. This in all other cases holds good, even with these godly grudgers, as to Meum and Tuum, the law giving to every man what is his own by any honest acquisition of industry, purchase, or donation: which last title of gift is as good, both in law and conscience, as any title in the world; especially where it is done by public counsel and consent of a Nation, upon valid reasons of gratitude, equity and piety, both to God, to Ministers, to men's own souls, who have the greatest benefit by Tithes, if they have grace to partake of those spiritual good things, which Ministers do (at least ought) conscientiously to dispense to them. If these devout devourers of things sacred (these Helluones decimarum) had as many pregnant Texts of Scripture, as much Analogy of Religion, as strong grounds of reason, as potent pleas of merit, as great evidences of equity, before the law, under the law, and after the law; if old Testament and new Testament were as evident for any thing which they fancy to set up, and are concerned to promote, as all these undeniably are for Tithes to be paid to the Ministers of the Gospel; O how should all the world ring, and all ears be filled with their noise, cries and clamours of a Divine Institution, an Ordinance of Jesus Christ, an holy rite, a necessary duty, a Gospel-dispensation, an everlasting Law, an undispensable Institution! O how should all men, all Christians, all Churches be unchurched, unchristened, unsainted, unheavened, quite excommunicated, and eternally damned, if these men might not have their wills; if all not did not readily submit to so clear a cause, in which Christ Jesus was so much concerned, at least in their opinion and interpretation, especially if it made for their profit! But in the case of paying their Tithes, being themselves most concerned not to part with them, they are so stupid, so sottish, so wilfully blind and impertinently peevish, that seeing by all those lights, yet they will not see what is equal, just and righteous before God and man; the bias of their covetous and base hearts being therefore cross-grained to the paying of Tithes to Ministers, because they hope (foolishly) that Tithes will one day lapse to their own private hands, as owners or farmers, and that they shall shark them not only from Ministers, but from the Exchequer, and from their several Landlords: the one of which will certainly confute the folly of these men, who are never to be reconciled to Tithes, till they can get them, or save them, if by no other ways, yet by their turning popular Preachers: in which employment (forsooth) their consciences will serve them now at last to receive those Antichristian Tithes, which they cannot now much deserve, and which they heretofore so eagerly disputed against, and injustly denied, as too much for true and worthy Ministers, beyond, yea, against all modesty, civility, gratitude, honesty and equity. By which rude, injurious and vexatious tempers and dealings of such men, swarming in every corner of the land, poor Ministers of late years, in many, yea most parishes, have hardly been able to keep life and soul together: what they get is with difficulty, importunity, grudging, reproaches, unkind and uncomfortable contests, below the spirit of any learned and ingenuous man, especially when he thinks he hath a right both of Law and Gospel, of public gift and personal desert. CHAP. XXIX. WHat, Minister's condition not to be envied, but pitied. I beseech you (O noble Englishmen and generous Christians) can you find in this posture of Minister's condition, that hath the least shadow of double honour? what is there here to be envied? what not to be pitied, as to the present? what hopes, what help for the future, if your favour, who are persons of piety, ingenuity, honour, compassion, constancy, fail them? If you also forsake them, they are utterly lost, and, as to this world, of all men most miserable. For as to the vulgarity and generality of people, what is there in the best condition of any true Minister, that carries any thing with it of spirit and life, of comfort and encouragement, of vigour and improvement to those studies and prayers, those pains and parts, those charities or hospitalities which do become a Minister, and which people expect from them, though they feed them but with pulse, the bread and water of affliction, and make them (with their families) look like Pharaohs lean kine? what almost is there left for their comfort, either as to future provision, or present subsistence? By that time their poor pittances are injuriously compounded, and slowly paid by dribbets and with infinite delays; by that time taxes, tenths, and town-rates are defalked out of their wages; by that time they have satisfied the poor and rich in every Parish, which always expect, as a right and due from their Ministers, something of charity and hospitality, be their Livings never so small; by that time the upper and the nether millstones, private necessities and public exactions, have ground these poor men; alas, how little will be left for necessity, how nothing for conveniency, how less than nothing for posterity? You may despair of any such superfluity as should serve for any such great, good, and generous designs, as the Clergy in former times did effect, both for piety and public charity. Their Livings, at best, are but for life; and (now) many times upon a very vertical point, an arbitrary and uncertain account: Besides, they are many ways peeled and exhausted beyond any men's estates, paying not only civil Taxes and Subsidies for their Tithes, after the rate of Land of Inheritance, but First-fruits also and Tenths, as a Spiritual Tax and special mulct upon them. Truly, for my part, I am so far from seeing any cause for men to envy and grudge at Ministers enjoyments, such as they are for the most part, that I rather wonder at many of their subsistence, considering how ill it becomes their breeding and calling, to debase themselves to any sordid and mechanic ways of gain. Especially when I consider a further cumulation incident to Ministers miseries, which is, To be oft molested with peddling, peevish, and unhandsome Suits of Law, to which they are compelled by those that list to be contentious: Ministers not having to this day any such easy, quiet and compendious way to get their wages when they have done their duties, as is daily used in raising the Soldiers pays, or the Poors collections; but the poor Minister, if he will not be utterly impoverished, must ride and run, solicit and engage in tedious and chargeable attendances upon Justices, Committees, Lawyers, Attorneys: among whom although Ministers find some very just, ingenuous, and generous Gentlemen, lovers of Learning, Religion, Equity, Order, and of their Mother the Church of England; yet others of them savour so strong of the apron antipathy, of a rustic, mechanic and illiterate breeding, besides that factious and peevish temper which they have lately added to their other perfections, that (in good earnest) the sober and sound Ministers of the Church of England are as unwelcome to them, as cold water is to their feet in winter, or vinegar to their aching teeth, or smoke to their sore eyes, which they have (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) many ways and oft expressed by their looks, words, gestures, actions; some of them treating aged, grave, godly, venerable, and most deserving Divines, (much their betters (God and man knows) in all true worth) not only with rudeness and petulancy, but with such bitterness, haughtiness and disdain, as they would not show to a Footman or Lackey, related to any person whom they either fear, love or esteem. Herod was civil to John Baptist in comparison. Mark 6.20. These puff and swell, they by't and threaten, as Ahab did at Eliah or Micaiah: counting these Ministers, though never so supple & humble, 1 King. 21.20 Hast thou found me, O mine enemy? 1 King. 22.8. But I hate him. tame & trembling before their good Worships, as enemies, because they hold to the Catholic truth; and as troublers of their Israel, because they will not be flatterers of their new fancies in Religion; because they persist in a judicious and conscientious owning their Orders and asserting their Ministry, which is their chiefest honour; because they will not yet fall down and worship the imaginations which some men seek to set up in England; because they follow the Primitive order, constancy and verity, not complying with that ignorance, levity, vulgarity, Schism and Apostasy against the Church of England, wherewith some men are so delighted, without any sense of sin or shame, though never so much against that duty, gratitude, love, honour, estimation and communion which they owed to the Church of England, and the worthy Ministers of it. CHAP. XXX. THis I write to you (O nobler Christians, Experimental instances how petulant some people are to their Ministers. and my Honoured Countrymen) as with great certainty, sorrow and sympathy, in regard of my Brethren the Ministers of this Church; so with the greater freedom, because it neither hath been, nor is my particular case (through God's mercy) either to be considerably injured, or in any degree overawed by common people, much less by any men in Power, either Military or Civil: Nor have I any cause to complain of the generality of my own people, as to any want of justice, gratitude, or civility expectable from persons of their size and proportion. Yet my own experience teacheth me to have the more sensible belief of many other Ministers sad complaints, who having (it may be) less advantages above their people, and much depending upon them, are forced in a very low posture to truckle under such factious, imperious, and injurious spirits as they meet withal. There is, I find, no flock of Pigeons so pure and entire, but there will be some Stairs, Jackdaws and Rooks among them; no people so modest and ingenuous, so respective and submissive to their Ministers, but there will be some surly and supercilious, petulant and insolent spirits among them. No Minister of any good name and merit is so exalted in the love and respect of his people, but he will have some messenger of Satan to buffet him; some Judas among his Disciples, that will be prone to betray him, to traduce him privately and publicly, to make him an offender for a word, to suck poison as Spiders out of the sweetest flowers of his zeal, piety, charity, and oratory; turning honey into gall, and requiting evil for good. I could give you (if you wanted daily experiences) some near and notable instances, how respective, how gentle, how good-natured, how grateful, how civil some people are to their Ministers, since they have taken the liberty to be rude, petulant, insolent, unholy, unthankful. I have seen how much they disdain to pay any more civility or outward respect to their Minister, than they challenge to themselves, or than they give to their meanest comrades, which are of the same bran and barrel with themselves: yea some of them have taken a glory and pleasure to show incivility, rudeness, contemptuousness in words and behaviour as well as looks; more passionate, malapert, and imperious to their Ministers, than they durst be toward a petty Constable, or a Bumbailiff: some of them so unthankful, that for twice seven years constant pains among them, they never returned any acknowledgement: some have not been ashamed to use downright railing, scorn and ruffling to their faces, others behind their back. Some are so conceited of themselves, that they have adventured to dictate and prescribe in a way even haughty and menacing, what their Minister should do and say. There want not some aguish and feverish Auditors, who hear only by fits, when they list: others are great critics and severe censurers, whose wanton curiosity useth Sermons, as Walnuts; they crack them, and peel them, and cast away the greatest part of them with great nicety, eating little, and digesting less of sound doctrine. Some have high conceits that they can preach better than myself, I or any Minister. Some have begun a clownish contest with their Minister at the Font, bringing their children to Baptism with such indifferency, as when one was asked by his Minister, if he desired to have his child baptised in the Christian Faith, he answered very surlily, Yes, if you can do it. Another with great peremptoriness refused to have his Child baptised, unless the Minister would do it himself, though he pleaded (with truth) his great weariness after twice Preaching that day, and desired another Minister then assistant and present might do it, as was usual: But he, stiffe-girl, and inexorable, went with a short turn out of the Church, carrying his child with him, nor ever after offered it, that I know, to be baptised, although he was entreated with great gentleness and kindness. These are the religious demeanours and deeds of some people that I have known. Nor am I a stranger to those garlands and flowers of rustic oratory and civil behaviour, wherewith some true plebeians do crown the heads of their Ministers, with as much love and respect as those did, who plaited a crown of thorns on Christ's head. I have heard and read the language of some of their tongues and pens too, for they dare to scribble as well as babble; nor doth their goose-quill want teeth any more than their lips do the poison of Asps, sufficient to exercise the best Antidotes of Christian patience and charity, which any true Minister bears about him. I have seen sometime the virulent letters of some of these Scribes and Pharisees, as full of contempt, insolency and menacing, as their little wits and great malice could invent: and this from such as have been sometime personally obliged, and to whom their Minister willingly never gave the least offence. No touchwood or dry gunpowder sooner kindles to flames of wrath, indignation and disdain, than some ordinary and mean men dare, yea delight, now to do against their Ministers. I have seen both by their pasquils and practices some instances of their ingenuous manners, of their great respects, love and gratitude: all which (in good earnest) I might (I think without any vanity) have challenged and expected from all men, especially from my own Parishioners and auditors, whom for many years I have endeavoured to entertain with so much industry, civility, candour, charity and hospitality, as is not inferior to most (if any) Ministers in the country; and in some things, as to public charges and burdens, I believe I have exceeded any man of my estate and calling in England. As for private charities to the poorer and richer, to the well and the sick, for food, physic, clothing, etc. it is fitter others assert me, than I should vindicate myself against the petulant ingratitudes of some men; among whom one had his tongue so much at liberty, that uninjured, unprovoked, yea almost unknown to me (yet one of my many hearers) he doubted not openly to join me with my man, and put upon us both the title of a couple of proud Jack anapeses, when he was but, after two or three years' forbearance, demanded to pay what was due, professing he would not maintain any proud Parson. Such spirits as these I must leave to be punished with their own manners; I must pardon them, as David did Shimei, and pray for them, as Samuel did for the ingrateful Israelites: the rather, because, I thank God, I meet with few of them in a very numerous people, who for the greater and better part of them, do indeed deserve all that care, love, labour, kindness and constancy, which I have showed to them for 15 years together. Only by these experiments, both myself and others may easily conjecture how the pulse of people beats in most, if not all places, toward their Ministers, whatever they be; if they be men of any worth, spirits and parts above them. 'Tis sure enough, that even the best of them in the best places they meet with, are brought to a low ebb, in comparison of what respect they formerly enjoyed in England. Indeed some Ministers (perhaps) have some little sleights and popular artifices to win and please the vulgar; whom rather than offend, they will do, or say, or omit, or silence any thing, not grossly a sin and shame; and rather than not please, they will rub ever and anon some salt upon the Bishops, the ancient Clergy, upon the Liturgy and the former constitution of the Church of England: for this gall is honey to the palates of some plebeian spirits. And rather than displease some people, there are Ministers that will never use the Creed, Decalogue, or Lords prayer in twice seven years. Nay some people so rule the tender mouths, and ride the galled backs of their Preachers with so sharp a snaffle and hard a saddle, that they are afraid to offend these their great Censors (rather than good Masters and Dames) by putting the title of Saint to any holy Evangelist, or Apostotick writer, no not when they name their Text, or cite any place out of their holy writings; but those holy and reverend men are named with as little respect or honour to their memory and merit in the Church, as if they spoke to Matthew, and James, and Peter, and John in their kitchen, as their servants, or fellows and familiars. Yea so spongily soft, timorous and sequacious some Ministers are, that what they own as their judgement among men of learning, parts and courage, this they smother with great wariness and cowardice among those plainer Hees and she's, by whom they are overawed, as it were, by a kind of necessary sportulary dependence. CHAP. XXXI. The personal sufferings of Ministers, after all their pains, merits and troubles. WHat the sufferings, dejections, d●basements, indignities are, which many Ministers have, and do endure, no man can imagine, who doth not see and feel the weight of high shoes, or the ponderousness of Weavers beams, when they dare to tread on Ministers toes. If (as I have experimentally instanced) it be thus done to a green tree, to one that hath been not barren or unfruitful among them, whom God of his mercy and bounty hath planted in an upper ground, and in many degrees of eminency above the vulgar; how (think you) will rustic spirits lift up their flails and scythes, their hooks and bills, their shuttles and shovels against those of my brethren, whom they look upon as much their underlings and shrubs, by reason of the tenuity of their condition, though they be never so tall Cedars in learning, piety, and all true worth? How do they threaten, and scorn, and molest them, if they do not suffer them to enjoy those shaking and sacrilegious compositions which they will make, or none at all, for their Tithes? else Articles and Committees, sequestrations and suits are loudly threatened: at best, parties, factions, schisms and separations are presently hatched and nourished against him; if the Minister do not sacrifice with great tameness a great part of his small means, as a peace-offering or atonement to these turbulent spirits, who if they may not be his Masters and Commanders, resolve to be his oppressors and undoers, if they can; however they take the freedom to be his declared deserters and enemies, discouraging and disparaging him what they can, by separating from him, and from the Congregation or Parish, to some private and spiteful Conventicle. Which reserve of malice never fails to follow there, where any Minister hath the courage and confidence so far to own himself, as not to submit either to the injuries or insolences of some proud and pragmatic spirits. If the conscience of his own integrity sets him immovably as a sluice against the tide of their folly and petulancy, O how excessively will their spleen swell against the good man! Rather than fail of having some revenge upon him, they will take this most severe revenge against themselves (as malice is oft its own mischief) wholly to deprive themselves of all the benefit to be enjoyed by his learned, judicious and devout Ministry; which they labour to cry down, as that by which they cannot profit; that to refresh their souls, they are forced to seek out some more warm, complying, creeping and inspired Preacher: such an one, though a mere rhapsodist and rambler, must presently be cried up as a rare soulsaving Preacher. And indeed it may justly be feared, that most Separates of later years have taken the rise and occasion of their schisms and separations from their lawful Ministers, and from the Church of Engl. not so much upon any scruple of conscience, as upon pride, covetousness, ambition, revenge, and other inordinate lusts, with which their Ministers would not comply: from which centre of order, union and consistence in the Church, when country people are once removed, no wonder if, like their cart-wheels, they run round in a vertigo of Religions; & being themselves once bitten with their own rage, they run (like mad dogs) up and down the country, seeking whom they may bite and infect with the contagion of their malice, contempt, revenge and abhorrence against their former Minister and all of his form, raising what mutinies, conspiracies and animosities they can against them, among those rural neighbours, to whose conversation the most part of Ministers are condemned, and by whose egregious insolence many of late years have been, as with evil spirits, grievously vexed and tormented, being in most places little respected and less beloved; generally but men of small estates, helpless enough, and friendless, full of frequent perplexities, between conscience and necessity, between piety and policy; having run through so many Ordeales or fiery trials of State, first a Protestation, than a Covenant, after that a Vow, next an Engagement, and soon after a dis-engagement. One while they are bound to maintain the Reformed Religion, as established in the Ch. of Engl. according to their education, judgement, conscience and ordination: if they keep to this station, first Presbytery hath a fling at them, next Independency pincheth them; at last the licentious humour of people lets out a whole kennel of Libertines to worry them. Thus have many Ministers lingered out their lives of late years, laden and almost oppressed, worn out and quite tired with the burden of years, cares, labours, fears, anxieties, necessities, rude affronts, and remediless afflictions. All which calamities have fallen so thick upon them in their persons and reputation, in their estates and quiet, in their calling and employment, that none, but very ingenuous minds and compassionate hearts, are apt or able to consider fully those sad talents of lead which lie upon many or most Ministers. Their private closerts are almost daily witnesses to their sighs, tears, prayers, bitter complaints, despondencies, and almost despairs: many of them ready, with Job and Jeremiah, to curse the day of their birth, Job 3.1. Jer. 20.14. their education as Scholars, and their ordination as Ministers: many of them, as Eliah, say secretly in their souls, Lord, 'tis enough, take away my life, since I have outlived the glory of this Church, and the honour of my calling. Many are in such anguish of spirit, that they long for death, as for their rest, and seek for the grave, as for hidden treasure; so sorely doth the heat and burden of the day beat upon them, as upon Jonah, and no gourd to refresh them. All which griefs and dejections, however they strive, many of them, by a generous magnanimity, to conceal and smother, as much as is possible (knowing how vain a thing it is to complain, where is no hope but of pity, and scarce that;) yet many of their neighbours, both friends and enemies, are so much curious spectators of their distresses and discouragements, that the one hath the pleasure to pity them, the other to insult over them. Which dismal reflections when the poor Ministers discern in men's looks, words, treatments and comportments toward them, how do they ruminate afresh, and chew over their calamities, when they retire home, and hide their heads in their ruinous and uncertain habitations, which daily, with their masters, fall to dilapidations? Ministers having neither money to lay out, nor hearts, if they had money, to repair such uncertain, and, it may be, momentary mansions, where every relation they meet renews their regrets and vexations, both as to their private and public condition; when they consider how much they and their profession are fallen in England, as to all former civil and secular interests, either honourable, or honest and comely, and forced to stoop to those that make them their footstool, Isa. 51.23. commanding them to bow down, that they may go over their backs. When they hope a little to divert their melancholy thoughts, by going abroad and meeting with other men; with what force and affectation do Ministers contend to put on so much brow and confidence, as may keep them from appearing too sensible of their being every where discountenanced and despised as Ministers? Hence they think themselves safest, when they are most disguised in their clothes, both for colour and fashion, such as may least bewray them and their pitiful profession; being Ministers now rather by force and fatal necessity, than of any good will, choice, or self-comprobation, finding the best of their condition, preferment and expectation amounts not beyond a dispirited, dejected, despised, decayed, precarious, proletary, predicant, not many degrees removed from a mendicant, condition. Thus while the Soldier looks big, and glories to be seen in his arms, as the ensigns of his well-paid profession; while wary Lawyers keep as grave and wise men to their robes and gowns, as badges of their calling, which is their honour and gain too; while other civil fraternities and companies of trades own their vests and liveries; only the poor Ministers of England study with great artifice to disguise themselves, as manifestly, and not a little ashamed of their order and function; and this not only in highways and markets, but even in their very Churches and Pulpits: they had rather appear as Lawyers, Physicians, Troopers, Graziers, yea, Mechanics, Apprentices and Servingmen, than in such a colour, garment, garb and fashion, as best becomes (in my judgement) grave Scholars and venerable Preachers: so great is the damp and discountenance they are sensible of, when they come among Laymen, being always loath, and oft afraid to be taken for Ministers, lest they be openly disgraced, jeered and contemned: this makes many leave off their wearing black, when they have cause enough to be in mourning. There is yet one relief only left them, by which a little to buoy up their sinking spirits; that is, when Ministers meet together, they seem with some show of wit, or gravity, or learning, or confidence, or sanctity, to hold up each others chins, especially if they be of a party, and get into some associate convention (which is the least of comforts to consorts in calamity;) and even this invention is carried on (as yet) rather furtively and precariously, than with any great solemnity or authority: and here, in the midst of their feigned mirth and seeming serenity, O what a secret guilt, shame and regret, do most of them find in themselves and in one another! O how great a cloak of confusion covers their faces! as those most, who are most modest, ingenuous, ancient and innocent, when they see in their own nakedness, how God hath satisfied either the superpolitick or the simple sort of Ministers with their own delusions; what a cloud they have embraced instead of Goddesses; with what slighting they are treated & looked upon by all sorts of men; how they have helped, with much zeal and little wisdom, to reduce themselves and their order to this diminutive posture; being so divided & disordered among themselves, that they are easily despised, derided and destroyed by any that dare to attack them: having now no national circumference as Churchmen, no Ecclesiastical centre for union or ordination, no shadow or paternal shelter of protection among themselves, to defend them from vulgar heats and plebeian storms; nothing of filial subordination or fraternal conjuntion, to keep them in any comely posture and regular motion. Look beyond the seas, and they see all orders cast into a strength, stability and honour, by their subordination to their Bishops and Superiors, after the ancient and venerable pattern of all Churches: look homeward, and they find all mysteries of civil trades and merchandise kept up by mutual correspondencies and corporations, for order, counsel and government: only the Ministerial Tribe is become a disorderly order of men, like Simeon and Levi, Gen. 49.7. they must be divided in Jacob, and scattered in Israel; which was the lefthanded blessing of that holy Patriarch to those fierce and furious brethren, etc. Yea, the Clergy, or Ministry if you will (for some like that new title best, since their condition is much worsted) are become in England like the Jews in all lands; who are dispersed in many countries, but have no where any polity, community, authority, or government. Add to this dissipated and distracted state of Ministers, their private distresses and poverties, together with the public neglect and indifferency of people toward them; who can wonder if they look pitifully one on another, which no jocose or juvenile drolings can relieve? how forced are their mutual salutations, since they affect to call one another brethren, and yet have cast off their Fathers? how feigned are their smiles and embraces, when they see how hard an aftergame they have to play for their subsistence, reputation, civil respect and Ecclesiastic union? For splendid estates, or any beam of public honour and real authority, further than the Territories of their desk and pulpits reach, they may sadly and justly, many of them, despair of them: though I am of opinion no men can better deserve them than some Clergymen did heretofore, and still do; but not those, who by a spiteful and rash prodigality have set their own as well as other men's cornfields on fire, by helping to tie foxes tails with firebrands. These may be glad if they can preserve the petty Provinces of their Parochial and Independent Episcopacies, which they so infinitely ambitionated, that they indiscreetly ventured to consume the larger harvest of this Church, which was annexed to the honour of Ancient and Catholic Episcopacy; by which means, not only many Ministers of the Episcopal Ordination and judgement have been shrewdly distressed, but even Presbyterian and Independent Preachers, who flatter themselves as if they were the special favourites of the people, even these are fain, in many places, with much ado, to fall to their glean, to pick up what small compositions, remnants and scatter of support and respect, they can here and there get or find, as new and special undertakers to preach the Gospel, and give some credit to the lapsed and distressed Ministry of England. This, this is generally the fate of Ministers; deservedly indeed of some, but most unworthy of many of them, who not without a patient horror behold this prospect of calamities befallen them in their decline & age: and all this after great pains in their studies from their youth upward; after infinite prayers and tears, for their own and others souls improvement; after unwearied diligence in their calling; after invincible patience under common people's incapacities, stupidities, ingratitudes, indignities; after many rigours and severities of life, voluntarily, besides necessarily sustained; after a kind of civil martyrdom endured, like that of Simon Stilites, who loaden with irons, confined himself into a narrow pillar of stone, while most Ministers are all their life-time condemned to the rusticity, barbarity, moroseness and brutishness of the flinty vulgar, being like Orient Jewels set in sockets of copper, or brass, or lead, or iron, or clay. What Minister but finds in these licentious times, the deportment of many common people, as in the city proud and supercilious, so in the country harsh as hedgehogs, and hard as rocks? for so their society oft seems to those men that have once tasted of ingenuous breeding, of softer and civiler conversation; from which to be wholly removed, and all one's life confined to hobnails and high shoes, to lo●es and lasts, to tempers utterly clownish, or merely mechanic, yet ponderous or petulant enough, as now they dare appear, is as if a man should fall from a down bed into a plot of briers and thorns. Tell me I beseech you (O my brethren and fellow-labourers in the Ministry) who have many years contended with the clod, and toiled in the brick clamp of a country living, being as Ministers (now) even fallen under ploughshares, and saws, and harrows (as David once treated the children of Ammon;) tell me (O you my companions in this tribulation) who have any thing in your temper, constitution, or education, that is courteous and civil, polished and generous, learned and ingenuous; yea tell me (O ye Noblemen and Gentlemen of England, who are the chief pillars of cloud and fire, of light and favour, of capacity and affection (under God) to the now depressed Ministers either in their several solitudes, or amidst those rural societies, which are many times more sad than utter solitudes;) tell me (I beseech you all, who are my betters or brethren) are not those excellent associates, rare refreshments, precious rewards, noble encouragements, which Ministers of worth and parts in most places of England (for in Wales they say few are resident or incumbent) do now enjoy, for which they must spend their spirits, wast their lungs, decay their health, exhaust their lives, neglect all other ways of livelihood, both for themselves and their families? After all which, little shall be left them, if some men may have their wills, but contempt cast upon their persons & calling together, with the legacies of extreme poverty, which after a lingering death they must leave to their desolate wives and fatherless children. Good God what arts did Churchmen in former times use, when they did so much out-wit and out-wealth us; when having less charge, less learning, and less work, they had more order and unity, more honour and revenues, even heaped up, pressed down, and running over? whereas (now) the tale of brick is much more, and the supply of straw far less: Livings heretofore worth an 100 l. per annum, are now ebbed and hardly squeezed to 50. or 60. pounds; and this with much whining and grudging, with many evil eyes and evil words on all sides. Nor are these yet the dregs of that bitter cup, which Ministers above all men are to drink: for after all their former pains faithfully bestowed, after they have been miserably tossed and weatherbeaten by the storms of a long and dubious civil war, in the bowels of the Church as well as the State, after they have made shipwreck of almost all but a good conscience (few of them being ever admitted to any composition or resumption, as to their livings, yea many of them denied to make use of any such plank or rafter, which might serve to buoy them up from utter sinking and starving, though it were but teaching school in a belfry;) yet after all these personal sufferings and extremities, behold they must live to hear and see their very calling and orders, their whole function and fraternity disgraced and disordered, yea (as to some men's desires and endeavours) quite routed and abolished; the primitive pipes and ancient conduits of all Ecclesiastic power quite broken, and new cisterns set up, which hold no water, comparable to that brazen sea of Apostolic Episcopacy and orderly Presbytery, which ever served the Sanctuary of Christ's Church, in all ages, places and offices. It might (possibly) break the quiet, the cheerfulness, the estates of many worthy Ministers, to see their persons, preaching, pains, prayers and holy ministrations neglected by many, despised by some, and trampled under foot by not a few; who (after the rate of plebeian spirits) following the revolutions of men's fortunes, think there can be no worth meriting their value and respect, either civil or religious, but only under the characters of riches, honour, and power; soon ebbing in their love and esteem of the Clergy, when they see the tide of honour and munificence so turned and abated, even to the lowest water-mark almost, as now it seems in England. But it breaks the very hearts and spirits of worthy Ministers (like old Elies) to hear and see Philistines take by violence the Ark of God, 1 Sam. 4. and carry it captive to their Dagons, the Idols that every one's fancy lists to set up in private Conventicles, under the title of Ministerial power and holy ordination: this at present infinitely dejects all sober Christians and true Ministers; this for the future quite sinks them in despair. CHAP. XXXII. Discouragements to ingenuous men to be made Ministers in England in aftertimes. O How high and holy an ambition, I beseech you (my worthy Countrymen) will it be in aftertimes, and already is, for any man of parts, of learning, of conscience, (guided by Scripture, and by all ancient practices of the Catholic Church, no less than that of this Reformed and famous Church of England) to devote himself to be a Minister of the Gospel, when he shall see no Reverend Bishops, no subordinate Presbyters left to ordain him, few or no people left to entertain him with due respect to his calling; some doubting, others denying, a third sort wholly despising all his Ministerial power and authority! of which, next to our salvation, Ministers and other Christians should study to be assured that it is valid and divine, upon good and authentic grounds, which may both merit their acknowledgement, and oblige them to submission. If any man that is fit, and willing to be a Minister in England, if, I say, he can dispense with the Novelties, irregularities, and inconformities of his ordination, as to all Antiquity, no less than the orders of the Church of England (which ever was by Bishops, as the Apostolic Conduits, the chief Fathers and proper Conveyors, so confessed by all Reformed Churches;) if he can bear the tedious journeys from the remoter Counties, the long delays, the unexpected scrutinies, and the strange questions he shall meet with, before he be allowed and admitted to officiate; which are very hard trials to men that are tolerably learned, and not intolerably necessitated for a small living: if these difficulties can be digested, which we see of late have deterred many good scholars and hopeful students from entering upon the Ministry, rather diverting their thoughts to other employments which are more easy, profitable and honourable now in England; yet still, whatever door he comes in at, he is a great and bold adventurer, daring at once to undertake so tedious and dreadful an employment, in which he must daily undergo many oppositions, many abuses, many injuries, many indignities incident from one side or other, to any Minister, what stamp soever he bears. He must be fortified with invincible patience, with heroic resolutions, with humble constancy, with Hermetical content, with Martyrly charity, while he contends with many causeless enemies, with all those difficulties of poverty and contempt, which are very unwelcome to flesh and blood, though never so spiritualised and refined: these do and ever will attend him as a Minister, while common people take so great liberties and confidences to baffle, to dispute, to despise, to disturb, and to undo their Ministers, besides their daring to obtrude themselves into his place and office. The meanest tradesman or handicraft mechanic bears the labour of his hands, and that sore travail of his soul, during his mortal pilgrimage, cheerfully and comfortably, while being willing and able to work for his living, he gets his wages without any man's grudging, and enjoys himself without any envy or obloquy, in honest ways of industry, though possibly it reach no further than making of ribbons, or points, or buttons, or babies, for the use of the Common-weal: only the poor Minister (especially if he dare own the Church of England, or assert his authority from an higher origine, than what is novel, secular and popular) after twice seven years rigging and preparing himself for so rough and hazardous a voyage; after he hath many nights and days, by studying, watching, fasting, praying, weeping, furnished himself as a workman that needeth not to be ashamed before men; after he hath wholly and only devoted himself to that heavy plough and employment, the care and culture of men's souls (which are naturally hard as fallow grounds, full of weeds and thorns) which work may well take up the whole time, ability and industry of the best of men; after he hath so followed this holy husbandry, as to neglect all other means and opportunities to advance his worldly condition, thinking it would be enough for him to merit well of his Country and the public, and, as a learned, grave and serious Minister, to serve God and mankind, by setting forth and communicating to the world the inestimable riches and excellencies of his and their Saviour; which service might well deserve as good salaries and encouragements as those enjoy, who have offices in the Customs, Excise, Exchecquers, and treasuries of unrighteous mammon; after he hath thus denied, exhausted and macerated himself, in order to promote the highest interests of God and man, which is the eternal salvation of sinful souls, and this at no great charge, or expense of men's estates; after his modesty, charity and hospitality hath convinced all men, that he covets them, not theirs, condescending oft below himself, in order to captate the love and civil favour of people, that he might gain more advantages to save their souls: Yet still this good Ministers condition will of all men's in Engl. be most miserable: for while he is daily doing his duty, and doing it well, with meekness of wisdom, with good conscience and discretion; yet he shall be sure to contract many enemies without a cause. Many that are mere strangers to him will hate him out of antiministerial Antipathies and Epidemic principles; which are so rife and in fashion in England, against any that own themselves as Ministers (ex officio) by duty and office, especially after the order of the Church of England. Upon this very name he shall adopt the censures and hard speeches, the envy and malice, the janglings and ruffling, the injuries and indignities of many: he must be made a man of strife, whether he will or no; oft destinated to disgrace and ruin, unheard, untried, unseen, unknown. If he own himself as a man of any spirit, and a Minister of any authority, than he is censured as proud, a Pope, a Lucifer; if he be soft and supple, than he is counted spongy, poor-spirited, pusillanimous: if by any honest arts and innocent frauds he can preserve his station, his living, his liberty, than he is counted cunning, a mere politico, a timeserver, an hypocrite: where he is best known he must look to be least beloved by many high Seraphicks and supercilious Separatists; there will be some godly bubbles, swollen with pride and ignorance, that will scorn all his learning, all his abilities, all his devotion, all his duties. When their mouths are stopped, and their gainsayings confuted, though not silenced, yet neither his work nor his person will be accepted; nor will some men own their profiting by his Ministry, that they may save their purses, and excuse themselves for not paying him his deuce. His wages must be oft changed by peevish Laban's, sometimes totally denied by churlish Nabals; and there are who never batten more than when they most cheat their Minister. In fine, he will need Argus his eyes to look about him, for fear lest the whole foundation of his livelihood and subsistence be so undermined, shaken, assaulted and quite overthrown by two or three pragmatic and spiteful neighbours, that he will be in hazard to be quite routed and outed, without reward and work, forced to be either indigent or idle; and this without any ordinary rule or remedy, that I know, as to the Laws of England. A dreadful prospect, God knows, of Idleness and Indigence, sufficient to scare a very resolute soul, more than that spectre did Brutus the night before he fought unfortunately in the Philippick fields; discouragements capable to damp any provident men's spirit, from so dangerous, and almost desperate a service as this is, to be a professed and ordained Minister of the Gospel in England. What young men of any parts and hopes, of any pregnancy and ingenuity, will be so zealously forward, as to prick their fingers by gathering roses and lilies, among such rude thorns, as now either hedge up the way, or encompass the paths of every solid and sober Minister? It is a fervour not very frequent, nor are they quotidian fits, either in younger or elder men of any worth, to embrace Religion in rags, and virtue when it is vagrant and mendicant, out at heels and elbows: when to be a Minister of Jesus Christ, is to have little for the belly or back, less for books or the brain; nothing to exercise charity of hospitality, less than nothing (as from man) to cherish graces, to increase gifts, to whet industry, to promote piety. What mortal is so brutishly hardy, as having no fleece or wool on his back, he would choose, not to dwell, but do penance in so cold, so Scottish a climate, as old England will soon prove to worthy Ministers; when it is become an Iseland, a Freezland, a nova Zembla, nothing but Hyperborean rigour, frozenness, and barrenness in it; no spring, no summer, no harvest expectable, as to any common favour, ingenuous pleasure, honest profit, or moderate honour? which is the temperature that some men's distempers have sought to reduce poor Ministers to, while they endeavour to turn the English Church and Clergy either up-side down, or out of doors. CHAP. XXXIII. CAn you (O my worthy and honoured Countrymen) without an infinite vanity, folly and presumption, A worthy Mystery not expectable, unless there be a worthy usage and entertainment. (most unworthy of your piety and prudence) ever expect that there should be such burning and shining lights among you, as have been in this Church and Nation; when there shall be little or no oil to supply the lamps, or such as shall be rather whale-oil and Greenland-stuff, than such sweet and golden oil, Zach. 4.12. as through the golden pipes flowed from the Olive trees, which were round about the Candlesticks in Zachariah's vision, which was an emblem of Evangelicall diffusions from Christ to his Ministers, and from these to his Church? Do you think any men's sons of better quality, or others (whose hopes and ambition will carry them above the condition of a Cobbler or a Tinker) when they come to years of discretion, and have a true prospect of that barren heath, that dry and parched wilderness, to which the Ministry of England is like to be confined and condemned in the midst of a land of Goshen, which flows with milk and honey to all other ways of industry; do you think (I say) that any man, who hath not lost his mother-wits, and those innate principles of self-preservation, will spontaneously rush into so many sharp contentions and temptations, like the horse into the battle, where hunger, and thirst, and cold, and nakedness, and shame, and sordidness of living, shall threaten him as a Minister, like the ragged regiment attending that armed man, Prov 6.11. Psal. 68.13. whose name is Poverty; besides the black pots, among which these doves must lie, I mean the foot and scullery of vulgar insolency, plebeian petulancy and fanatic contempt? all which, like the over-hanging brow of a rock or cliff, threaten to fall upon him and his relations, who seeks for the refuges of his life and pilgrimage, under the shelter of the Ministry: where if any single men (being more (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉,) callous and iron-sided) can bear with, and bustle through their own sufferings and others rude oppositions; yet when they are married, and have relations more tender and dear to them than their own lives, O how will their bowels be broiled like S. Laurence's, and their hearts turned upon the gridiron, when they are frequently forced to hear, and see, and feel the cries, the wants, the distresses, the tears, the pallors, the squallors of their wives and children, which pierce and wound the very souls of ingenuous men! O how cruel will that indulgence appear in after-ages, which took away the heavy yoke and severe restraints, beyond what God and Nature, Law or Gospel imposed, as on the other Western Clergy, so here in England, by the policy more than piety of the Popes of Rome (contrary to the sense of the Nicene and primitive Fathers) when the fruit of such clergymen's marriages shall appear no other than withered plants, starved in their very original, and condemned to perpetual tenuity, both of parts and employments! In ancient times, when the state of this Church and its Clergy was more idle and superstitious, but more opulent and honourable, what Gentleman, what Nobleman, what Prince, yea what Sovereign Kings did not ambitionate to plant some of their sons (as Henry the seventh intended his second son, Henry the eighth) into God's vineyard, for the work, office and honour of a Churchman? Now a Gentleman of the first head disdains it, a Yeoman disputes it. If the Father's piety can digest to make the meanest of his sons a Minister, the Mother's tenderness dreads it; if the good Mother's zeal devotes the poor youth to that perpetual servitude, yet the Father's prudence and policy rather chooseth for him a life of more activity, ease, peace, pleasure and honour; if it be but to make him, as the last refuge, a common trouper, or a foot-souldier, who may in time over-awe the best Bishop and Minister in a County, yea a whole Diocese and association of them, if Ministers shrink the next ten years as they have done of late. Nor may any wise men, that wish well to their Country and the Church of England, ever flatter themselves, that one man of a thousand, who hath good abilities of mind, or any competent estate, sufficient to redeem himself from the servilities of poverty and popularity, will ever condemn himself, in a monastic or melancholy humour, to be a Minister. The old stocks already are dwarft in great part, or hewn down; and generally they will be but shrubs, on which the Ministry hereafter will be grafted, in a foil and age that grows so barren, stingy, ungenerous, unbenigne to them. Possibly there may be now and then an heroic resolution in a Gentleman of worth, for family, parts and estate, to assert the honour of his Saviour, and the declining dignity of his blessed Ministry, by undertaking holy orders: but these are rare birds, and will be Phoenixes in after-ages; not more admirable than commendable indeed, when they come in at the right door of Catholic ordination and Apostolic succession, which are the visible seals of Divine Authority and Commission, conferred of old, even from the first age, by none (that ever I read) without Episcopal power and precedency, which immediately succeeded the Apostles in that ordinative and gubernative eminency; which, I believe, was to be ordinary and constant in the Church's Oeconomy, both to preserve an orderly polity, and to confer holy orders with due, that is, Divine authority, in an uninterrupted succession. But where a child's portion must be wholly raised by a man's own industry, and God's blessing upon his employment in the Ministry, O how cruel will those parents seem to their sons at years of discretion, when once they come to taste and drink deep of that cup of gall and vinegar, tenuity and contempt, which some men's charity designs to mix for Ministers! How will such poor and despised Preachers, all their tedious and necessitous lives, condemn, and in the bitterness of their souls sometime be ready to curse (as Job and Jeremiah did the days of their birth) that preposterous zeal, and pitiless piety, which bred them up, with no small care, cost and pains, only to condemn them to the pulpits, as to the galleys of plebeian slavery and necessity; when they shall by woeful experience find, that all their costly learning and education, their ingenious parts and excellent abilities, have made them like the sacrifices of old, adorned with ribbons and garlands, that they may with the greater pomp and solemnity be slain by popular insolency; when parents devoting their hopeful sons to the service of the Church, is to prefer them to labour and sorrow, to pains and poverty, to scorn and shame, to vulgar contempt and contradiction! Which very unpleasing and horrid apparitions of all manner of discouragements, have of later years so evidently damped and discouraged many worthy men, that not only very hopeful scholars have diverted their studies to any other design than that of Divinity and the Ministry, but few parents, who can find any other way to dispose of their sons, are so unnatural, as to expose them to that sad fate, which they see attends every Minister that dares own the right way of acquiring and exercising the sacred authority of that function. Certainly origen's juvenile impatience not to be a Martyr, was not many degrees above the resolution of those young men who will now adventure to be Ministers in England, upon a good and Catholic account, which equally abhors plebeian petulancy, popular dependency, and uncatholick novelty. And to hope that common people will in time grow better-natured toward Ministers, by enjoying whatever liberties they list to arrogate or indulge to themselves in Religion, is so high a presumption, as is next door to despair: unless it can be imagined that mankind (naturally enemies to God and all grace) will of themselves learn to value their souls and their eternal interests, which are so remote from their senses, as much as they do their bodies and estates; or that they will look upon Divines and Ministers as no less necessary for their good, than Lawyers and Physicians are; whose fees and entertainments tell the world, that men willingly or necessarily bestow many pounds in order to secure their bodily health and wealth, when they miserably and basely grudge at three halfpences spent upon their Ministers and their souls: on which to bring men to set a due value, hath been in all ages the chief end of true Religion, the great work of all the Prophets, Apostles, holy Bishops and godly Ministers; yea the main design, next the divine glory of God himself, and our blessed Saviour Jesus Christ. Men are miserably betrayed to themselves, when they are suffered to live at that liberty or looseness, which will certainly debase, despise and damn their souls. Which sad events being chiefly imputable to common people's own folly and madness, yet will those men be highly responsible for them, in whose power it was, either to teach them better, or to restrain them from those profligate humours, by which prodigal and poor wretches are prone to destroy, as well as to despise, both their Ministers and themselves; whom to persuade to a true value and reverence of themselves, is an high point of Philanthropy and Theologie, of charity and piety, of humanity and Divinity: which foundation once well laid, would soon recover the decayed and desolating condition of Ministers, who will never be valued, loved, or rewarded proportionably to their worth, labours and dignity, until men think they have infinite need of them; yea, more need than of the most learned and honest Lawyers, or the most faithful Physicians, who have so great an influence, yea empire upon mankind, because men sensibly feel and find the want of them, which they do not of their able Ministers; every prating intruder being enough to serve their turn. But I have done with the causes and occasions, the instances and evidences of the decays and deformities of Religion in the Church of England; which chiefly rising from the licentiousness of people, and the inordinateness of Ministers, have been the main subject of this second Book. BOOK III. SETTING FORTH THE EVIL CONSEQUENCES Felt or feared from the Distractions of RELIGION in ENGLAND. CHAP. I. HAving in the FIRST BOOK endeavoured to set forth the sad and just complaints of the Ch. of Engl. therefore just, because her calamities are neither deserved by nor descended from Her former well-reformed constitution; having also in the SECOND BOOK enquired after, and in great part discovered (as I suppose) the genuine and proper causes together with the unhappy occasions of Her calamitous distresses and decays; I am now in this THIRD BOOK to set before you (my honoured Countrymen, as to honest Englishmen and worthy Christians) those evil consequences which already are greatly felt, or may rationally be feared, as to the interest of the true Christian and Reformed Religion in this Church and Nation: Which I shall chiefly reduce to these four heads. First, the palpable decays of Religion, as to the power of godliness, in the proficiency and practics of piety and charity, together with the daily increase of Atheism, with a supine neglect and irreverence towards all Religion in all sorts of people. Secondly, the unprofitable, scandalous, vexatious & endless disputes about Religion. Thirdly, the Romish advantages and Papal prevailings, which are unavoidable. Fourthly, the civil dangers and dissensions necessarily following religious differences, if once they come to be fomented by numerous parties, as they will be, if fit remedies be not seasonably applied to restore, establish, encourage and unite the pretensions and interests of the Reformed Religion, according to some order, polity and discipline in the Church of Engl. such as may be most agreeable to Scripture, to reason, and to the patterns of primitive Antiquity: all which pious and prudent methods our Forefathers very commendably and wisely followed (as I conceive) in that excellent Reformation, which after the fiery trial of Queen Mary's days came forth of that furnace, pure in its Doctrine, complete in its Liturgy, comely in its Order, solemn in its Worship and duties, authoritative in its Discipline, harmonious in its Government, sound in the Faith, fervent in all Charity, full of good works, abounding in the gifts, and transcending in the graces of God's Spirit. It was, as God's darling, for many years highly prospered with all temporal and spiritual blessings, as the beloved Disciple, lying in the bosom of Jesus Christ, to so extraordinary indulgences of divine favour, that all Reformed Churches admired her; yea the Greek Patriarches and Churches, though in a depressed and distant state, yet highly revered her so pious, so prosperous, so prudent, so primitive constitution and condition: in all which how it now is impaired, and daily will further decay, will best appear by taking an impartial view of those sad effects and bad consequences which either already attend, or further threaten, the divided, distracted and distressed state of Christian Reformed Religion in this Church and Nation. Decays in godliness, as to the former generation of Christians. The first of which is, the great abatement and palpable retrogradation of godliness, as to the proficiency & power of it, both in men's hearts and lives. The sweet savour and fragrancy of Religion, which ariseth from truth and peace, from inward sanctity and outward harmony, these are grown infinitely soured by the leaven of differences, embittered to factions and despites, to mutual despiciencies and eternal animosities. Where envy and strife are, there must needs be (as Saint James tells us) confusion, Jam. 3 16. and every evil work, heightening men by spiritual pride and evil jealousies to a kind of zealous malice and cruel charity, which choke (as the Devils tares and thorns) the good seed, giving great and daily advantages to all manner of evil temptations, even to gross fedities and barbarous immoralities: for where Religion is once poisoned with passion, & swollen to factious emulations, men count it a great part of their own godliness, to censure others for ungodly: it is made a masterpiece of piety to cover their own impieties, by the sharp and severe imputations they cast upon other men's opinions or profession; thinking it no small assurance, even of their own salvation, confidently to condemn all that differ from their party in opinion or communion. By this means the root and fruit of true charity, which is the life and soul of Christianity, the milk and marrow of all graces, this first grows mortally infected through the pestilence of divisions and distractions in Religion: this vital and natural Balsam of piety once decayed, dried up, or exhausted by unchristian calentures, no wonder if the whole constitution of Religion grow weak, ricketly and consumptuous. For as planting and good husbandry are commonly neglected where war rageth, men being more intent to killing than tilling; so in parties and factions of Religion, Christians study to live more upon the insolent plundering of other men's opinions, upon the rifling and harrasing of others consciences, than upon their own pious industry, or humble devotion; every one is so eager to make good their side and contests, that they cannot much intend the great work of grace and truth in their own hearts, which most thrive in fair and clean weather, in the summer's serenity and tranquillity of Religion. As the hot and scorching beams of the sun soon dry up the morning dew, or as violent flames instantly lick up the water cast upon them; so are controversies in Religion to the sweet distillations of grace, and heavenly diffusions of God's Spirit▪ Gods still voice, or those silent and secret whispers of his love to the soul, are not to be heard in the clamour and tintamar of controverted Religion in the same house or Church. The work of grace, both in private hearts, public congregations, and greater Churches, is best carried on, like Solomon's Temple, with least noise and knocking, the furthest from such contention and confusion, which are only proper for the building of Babel's. They are most preposterous and unevangelical methods, Isa. ●. 4. by which Christians beat their ploughshares of mortification into swords of destruction, and their pruning-hooks of repentance into sharp spears, by which they may smite and pierce to the heart one another. While men's heads are so hotly busied in disputations against others tenets; their hearts and hands easily grow cold and idle, as to that work of sanctification which they owe to their own souls; and that exemplary conversation in all holiness, which they owe to others. Cant. 2.2. The lily (indeed) of Christian Religion did mightily thrive amidst the thorns of heathenish persecutions; but it was soon choked by those of uncharitable janglings and contentions which grew up among Christians: Acts 15.39. which commonly prove so sharp and hot (like that between Paul and Barnabas) that even good men separate one from the other; the bellows of disputes blowing up sparks of native passions to uncomfortable dissociating, distances and damnings. At last the daily whetting of men's wits, and exasperating of their spirits, tongues, or pens against each other, do infinitely blunt the edge of their charity, and dull the brightness of all their graces, both solitary and social, as to the holy improvement of their own or other men's souls; for all things of Religion are disputed and acted, as between rivals, or enemies never to be reconciled. We find of old, See Mr. Tho: Fuller his learned and elegant History of the holy War. that no wars were ever carried on with more popular eagerness, godly presumption and pious pertinacy, nor yet with more superstition and unsuccessfulness as to Christianity, or with more depopulation to true piety, and vastation of real sanctity, than those which were at first called the holy wars; when men inscribed the Croisado on their arms and banners; fight in the first design only against Saracens, Turks and Mahometans, but at length against Christians, both Greek and Latin, by the policies and cruelties of some Popes and Princes. Thus transports of piety usually engage men, not only against the first supposed enemies of other men's errors and evil manners, but even against those truths and holy duties, at length, by which the Antagonists seek to serve and assist their parties one against another. At last the dust of dispute so blinds men's eyes, that in pursuing of one error to destroy it, they are engaged and wounded unaware with another; as is evident in the ancient reciprocations of opinions, touching the reality and unity of both natures in the one person of Christ: in which, as in other disputes, men of no mean parts for learning and piety greatly over-shot themselves; as Vincentius Lyrinensis instanceth in Tertullian, Origen, Apollinaris, Eutyches, Arius, and others; himself being suspected for Religion too, if those Quaestiones Vincentianae, to which Prosper gives answer, be of that Vincentius. After much inordinate heat and expense, both of time and spirits, the ablest Christians quarrellings do at once wound others, and waste themselves, as we see between S. Jerome and Ruffinus: but common people by these childish bicker in Religion, as by cracking of nuts, rather break their teeth, than ever fill their bellies, losing most-what the kernel, sweetness and substance of true holiness, while they eagerly contend about the husk, shell and shadows of Religion, beyond which the plainer sort of professors hardly advance in disputes. The purest spirits of true Religion, which are very fine, subtle and volatile, do quickly evaporate, when such chemical heats and unchristian fervours are applied, as are no way apt to fix and consolidate true piety, either by charity, or humility, or holy humanity, or any blessed harmony. All which speculations of wise men are most evident in the late experiences every where pregnant in England, where the Christian and Reformed Religion being overheated in the furnace of some men's zeal, and too much hammered upon the anvils of needless and various contentions, they have only made some sparks to fly in each others eyes, not without great waist to the solidity, substance and beauty of that former excellent Reformation, which was so glorious and renowned. The high tide of justice, mercy, humility, meekness, charity, thankfulness, obedience, order, unity and sincerity, which heretofore flowed among us, as Countrymen, as Christians, and as Reformed, is now brought to so low an ebb, that every one is either censuring, or complaining, or condemning some other: several parties are jealously cautious of one another's injuries, cruelties, malice, pride and hypocrisy. In stead of mutual symbolizing and sweet complyings in holy duties, as prayer, conference, comfort & communicating, people with Pastors, and Pastors with their people, or with one another, both privately and publicly; all places are full of cavillings and calumniating, quarrelings and dispute, scorn and contemning, schismatizing and separatings, which in many are now advanced (as fire in light and combustible materials) to infinite hatred and utter abhorrencies of each others persons, piety and professions. One party thinks itself not safe, if another enjoys as much freedom in Religion as itself affects or usurps; it is death to some to see others live in any order and unity; each faction measures God's dislike and displeasure by their own: at last they begin to persuade themselves, that nothing would be more acceptable to God, than victim and Holocausts of all those Christians, both Magistrates, Ministers and people, who are not of their parties and adherencies. Thus are the main pillars of Religion, righteousness and peace, meekness and patience, charity and humility, mortification and selfdenying (which are the noblest victories of ourselves, and the most generous conquests of others) these are undermined, shaken, battered, and in danger to be quite overthrown by these modern bicker and digladiations of Religion now in England. Every one is ploughing and harrowing long furrows, either on other men's faces or their backs; Steril●scit seges gratiae inter contentios●s opinionum spinas. few are sowing, weeding, or watering the seeds of grace in their own hearts and consciences. Christians, like cattle in hot summer's days, are so molested with the biting of these flies, that they cannot feed fat; so agitated with scruples, that they can take no rest: like silly sheep, engaged among bushes and briers, they not only lose their food, but their fleeces, getting nothing but scratches; which are the decoys of flies, and nurseries of vermin. What serious and charitable Christian is not grieved at heart to see so many of their children, neighbours, kindred and acquaintance, disputing away so much of their precious lives, and uncertain moment? While they should be examining their consciences, repenting of their sins, strengthening their faith in Christ, increasing their love to God and man, getting good evidences for heaven, and preparing for an happy departure; they (alas) are bawling and braving, railing and raving against one another: yea, many are doubting and disputing, while they are dying; ravelling and undoing their own comforts, as well as other men's Religion, when they should be working out their own, and assisting others salvation with fear and trembling: even poor silly souls are then full of Obs and Sols, when penitent sighs and fiduciary tears were much more seasonable and necessary for them; kindling and increasing those fires with their breath, which they should rather quench with their tears, nay with their blood, than leave them to be such everlasting burnings, the very Hell and Tophet of the Church, the continual torment of infinite Christians, that possibly mean well, and might do well, while they get little good, yea they both suffer and do much mischief: like sheep surfeited in good posture, they infect others, and die themselves of the rot, or scab, or maggot, having no skilful and careful shepherds to cure or relieve them. Thus infinite poor people in England, by officious tending upon some late new Masters and various Teachers, do by their Religion, as the poor link-boys in London, who so wast their links by running after other men's steps, that they are fain to go at last to their own homes in the dark. Without doubt, many Christians heretofore very thrifty and well-liking, able and honest, have of late years lain down both in sorrow, poverty and obscurity, as to the point of true spiritual comfort and inward peace; which are the fruits only of quiet, humble, charitable and composed minds: for as pigeons are scared out of their houses by much noise and knocking, so are the gracious motions and consolations of Gods sweet spirit driven out of Christians hearts; between which calm breathe or soft insinuations, and the rude tempests or commotions of men's passions, there is as much difference, as between the operations of oil and of vinegar, or between a tuneable peal of well-rung bells, and those harsh janglings which are used as the alarms of scare-fires, or tokens of public conflagrations. Nor are the public symptoms of decayed Religion, as to the gracious power and charitable efficacy of it, more apparent in other men's lives and conversations (so scattered, so divided, so dissonant, so unsocial, so uncivil, and so unsympathising generally with one another, unless with those of their own side and party) than those damps and decays are which men must needs find secretly in their own hearts; when many, both Ministers and people, cannot but see (though they are loath to confess) that the Sun of righteousness, which was well risen in their souls, ● King. 20.11. with healing in his wings, is now gone backward many degrees (as the shadow did on King Ahaz his dial) whereto it was heretofore ascended. In stead of their first unfeigned love, Rev. 2.4. which is most lost and decayed towards God and true Religion, there is general coolness, much chillness and lukewarmness brought upon their purity and sincerity, by many sinister policies and worldly interests, besides their own passions, which, like water, are mixed with the wine of their Religion: many trees of God that were heretofore sound and full of sap, florid and fruitful, are now become mossy, cankered, hidebound and barren. I am sure the liberal hand and outstretched arm of Christian Charity and English munificence, to God, his Church, his Ministers, his poor, are now shrunk and withered, 1 Kings 13.4. like Jeroboams, when it was stretched out against the Prophet of the Lord. Neither Ministers nor other Christian men love one another, John 13.4. as Christ's Disciples, (qua tales▪ & quia tales;) but rather as confederates, in their several factions, interests, separate parties, sidings and designs: who, though they be like Gebal, and Ammon, and Amalek, Psal. 83.6. Isa 9.21. like Manasseh against Ephraim, and Ephraim against Manasseh, in their mutual Antipathies; yet all are against Judah, against the distressed Ch. of Engl. and all such as do with the greatest conscience, charity and constancy, adhere to the former good order and holy profession of the reformed Religion here established, which now in many places, in many men's lives and hearts, appears, as to its cordial spirit, its vital and celestial vigour, like the old drugs and dispirited simples of Apothecaries: the earthy, gross and material parts, do yet remain, in some proportion, as to the main bulk and pretence of Reformed Religion; but the virtue and efficacy of it is much vanished and evaporated, both as to the hearts and lives of Christians, both of Pastors and people, comparing them with the former generation of their forefathers, or with themselves in their former grave, comely, humble, wise, sober, useful, orderly and peaceable conversation; which made many of them like vines, figtrees and Olive-trees, Judge 9.8, etc. bearing good fruit, to cheer God and man; where now they are like so many sharp, bushy and scratching brambles, rather ambitious to have dominion over other men's faith and consciences, than any way careful or helpful to their own edification or others comfort, either private or public, as Christians and neighbours, or as members of one national Church; in which relation they once thought themselves to stand obliged, as members of one great and goodly body, to support, sympathise, and pity one another: now the aim of many is to divide themselves, and tear others asunder from all Catholic communion, to a Catholic confusion and destruction. Thus is Religion evidently decayed, as to the power of it, in those that were formerly strong and lively in the ways of piety and charity. CHAP. II. AS for that new generation which is grown up of later years, Decays of godliness as to the new brood and later offspring of meaner Christians. and who have never known those joseph's, whose prudent piety established and preserved the Reformed Religion for many years, with great peace, plenty, prosperity and proficiency in the Church of England; these have, for the most part, been only spectators or abettors of those ingrateful exorbitances, which some Christians have affected and miscalled for precious liberties, though beyond all bounds of modesty, charity and piety, as well as beyond the merits of the Church of England and its well-reformed Religion. These have hitherto seen the face of this Church and our Religion, like that of a field, in which a fierce and cruel battle hath been fought, and still is, with dubious success, by Christians of bold, pertinacious and implacable spirits; they behold all things, as to the purity, peace, order and harmony of the Reformed Religion (which was once wisely established and uniformly professed in the Church of Engl.) full of clamour and confusion, of hatred and horror, of bitter complaints, uncharitable jealousies, Satiric invectives, sharp disputations, endless contentions. Many are brought up in gross ignorance of the very fundamentals of true Religion, counting it a part of their liberty & Religion, not to be taught by any man, Parent or Minister, any principles of Religion: others that have some glimmering knowledge, are but mere Sceptics, and unsettled, ever dubious and vertiginous, thinking it a token of their true conversion, to be daily turning from one side and opinion to another: a third sort quarrel at all they have been taught and baptised into by the testimony of the Church and its Ministry, as a method below the sublimity of their spirits, who fancy nothing but immediate teachings of God, illuminations and inspirations, beyond the usual dispensations of the heavenly treasure, 2 Cor. 4.7. which hath been hitherto in earthen vessels. A fourth sort of people, driven by the furies of their own lusts and passions, animated also by the extravagancies of others (who seem pretenders to Religion) have sought to cast off the thought, care and conscience of any Religion, fancying such a Religion and Liberty, as may best consist with their temporal safety and worldly interests; however they profess, they practise perfect Atheism, to live without any God preceptive, but only providential, in the world. Nor are there wanting some men of great parts and conspicuous learning, as well as estates, who set their wits on work to maintain this principle, That there is no Numen, no divine being distinct from that we call Nature, no Creator, no creature, no Scripture as God's Word, no Saviour, no Sin as against God, no reward or judgement to come. Yea, that universal Tradition, that inbred Principle, that Catholic persuasion, which hath possessed all Nations and successions of mankind, (as Tully observed) touching the immortality of rational spirits or humane souls, as to their eternal recompenses; this point is not only doubted and disputed, but by some denied: notwithstanding that few men in all ages, by their greatest wit and wickedness, were ever able to redeem themselves from the terror of this truth, and the captivity of their own consciences, which are hardly freed from these convictions, that there is a God above us, and an immortal soul within us: nor have ever any men endeavoured to put out this light within them, M●lint extingui quam ad supplicia reparari. but only those, whom the conscience of their wickedness made desirous rather to perish utterly, than to be perpetuated to an after-being in misery. From these main unhinging of Religion in men's consciences, which have set them above any fear of God or reverence of man, who can wonder at those disorderly motions, which have so long filled and deformed this Church with so many schisms, Heresies and Tragedies? The utter irreligion of some, the superstition of others; the peevishness of some, the pertinacy of others; here Atheism, there hypocrisy; here any Religion that civil polity lists to set up, there no Religion settled, to give any check or restraint by law; here novelties and varieties of Religion affected, there uniformity and Catholic antiquity despised; these encountering and contradictions among men, as to matters of Religion in England, what strages and vastations have they made in the minds of common people, and the younger sort especially? The face of Christian and Reformed Religion looks blasted with fire, black with powder and smoke, besmeared with dirt and blood; the prospect of it is full of death and despair; the distractions of it threaten both it and us with destruction at last; because nothing whets men's swords sharper against each other than Religion. With how much glorying, even in point of conscience, have Christians and Protestants wounded, oppressed, killed one another in England, in great part upon the quarrel of Religion, yea, and of Reformation? The scandal, eclipse, and ruin of which, as to its truth, credit and consistency, is far more considerable, than the loss of thousands of our carcases, or vile bodies, which were worthily and almost meritoriously sacrificed, if by such means the true honour and interests of Religion, as Christian and Reformed, could be preserved or advanced. But (alas) this is so far from any advantages of life, health and vigour, by all those bitter pills and potions it hath taken, by all those sharp phlebotomies & lance it hath endured, that it seems exhausted, dispirited, languishing, drooping, decaying and dying; sinking under its own weight, or rather under the pressures of impotent passions on all sides: not only to indifferency, negligence, and unsetledness as to any Religion at all, which is very rife; but to sottish ignorance, gross superstition, high Atheism, and insolent blasphemies against our God, our Saviour, our Scriptures, our Sacraments, all ordinances, and all that is sacred. The epidemical rudeness and irreverence, the vulgar profaneness and immorality, their brutish stupor and barbarity, their licentious impudencies and insolences, their public scorns, affronts and oppositions of the lawful Ministers of England in their holy Ministrations (part of which I have seen, others I have heard of,) these and the like fedities, like a plague and leprosy, have mightily infected and daily spread over the souls of men and women, young and old, in countries and cities, both in England and in Wales, as necessary consequents and concomitants of that liberty in Religion which many men have challenged to themselves. Nor is this depravedness only befallen the beasts of the people, the meaner sort, whose souls are as precious as the best, though their condition be poor, their breeding bad, and their manners generally vile, having naturally a brutish carelessness and dulness to any Religion; but their greatest awknesse and averseness is against that Religion which is most soberly settled, and exactly professed; this giving most check to their boisterous lusts and extravagant fancies: whose Religion is generally more upon custom and constraint, than upon judgement, choice or conscience; ever waiting, as water penned up doth, for any opportunity to get such a liberty as will at last quite spill and spend itself; being never better pleased than when they find themselves least tied to please either God, or any men but themselves. This sort of vulgar people may in part excuse the abuses they make of any liberties or indulgences they can at any time extort by their terrors, multitudes and importunities, from wiser men. CHAP. III. The evil consequences infesting Christians of better quality. BUt the mischiefs of unsettled Religion and Irreligion, like a Gangrene, is further spread to the more noble parts of this body politic, to persons of generous quality, of hopeful ingenuity, both by extraction and education, who have fair fortunes, like fuel, to maintain the flames of their factions; and good abilities, like oil, to nourish the wildfires of their fancies, which way soever they affect to rove. This sort of young gallants, who are grown up amidst our late civil broils and religious distractions, as handsome young trees oft do among brambles and bushes; these (I say) who might be the strong supports and goodly shelters of Religion in after-ages; these are miserably shaken, depraved, distorted: not so much by the impetuousness of their own juvenile fervours and passions (which, Omnis inordinatus animus sibi poena. if inordinate, will, as S. Austin observes, be their own sting, reproach and punishment) as by those various circulations and contrariant traversings of Religion, which have tossed their minds to and fro, to a kind of delirium or vertigo, a mere whimsical uncertainty, as to Religion. Which distemper and giddiness in their heads and hearts they have contracted, chiefly, by beholding that unsettledness, looseness, giddiness, variety, irreverence, contempt and confusion, which hath been cast upon the face of the Reformed Religion and this Church of England: for since they came to any years of discretion, and a capacity, as men, to judge of humane affairs, they have seen nothing managed with less discretion, gravity and judiciousness, than the public interests of the Reformed Religion and this Church. Many of them have been taught by words, and more by examples (full of all petulant rallieries against our Church and Religion, as formerly established) to despise and abhor all that their forefathers reform, or settled, or professed and delivered as their Religion. How do some suck from their very milk and nurses all manner of bitter scorns and reproaches against the Church of England, its Baptism, divine Ministrations and Ministry? Some that are now grown up men and women, yet are still in the very infancy and cradle of Religion, either sleeping securely in sensual impenitency, or delighting to be variously rocked from one side to another, with a lullaby of novelty, which will bring them to a drowsy indifferency by a religious inconstancy. Thus the very salt of true Religion, as to its smartness and savour, its piercing and preserving virtue (which only is able to keep persons of pregnant parts and opulent estates from vicious putrefactions) this is presented to them as useless, unsavoury, infatuate, while they have from their youth upward seen it, especially in its chiefest dispensers & most constant professors (according to the establishment of the Church of England, daily cast out upon the very dunghill of plebeian petulancy and contempt, exposed to poverty, yea beggary in many places, yea and profanely trampled under foot by the very beasts of the people. Hence it is that the Christian and Reformed Religion appears to many great spirits and young Gentlemen, not as a matter of eternal truth, of infinite weight, and highest concernment to them; not as having the Catholic testimony of the wisest and best of mankind in all ages, the expectation of the Patriarches, the prediction of the Prophets, the preaching of the Apostles, the signatures of Martyrs and characters of Confessors, by their bloodshed and sufferings, which they chose rather to endure, than the least abnegation, Apostasy or swerving from so great, so holy, so constant, so necessary, so divine principles, as the Christian Religion is grounded upon. Many good wits of later years in England look upon Religion with a supercilious eye, with a squeamish coyness, with a nauseating and huffing aspect: so far are they from fear and trembling, as if they did God a good turn to own him in any fashion, or Religion were beholden to them, if they were but civil to it; not considering the majesty of Miracles, the admiration of Angels, the accomplishments of Prophecies, the manifestation of the Messias, the express image of God's grace and glory, mercy and truth upon it, in the holiness of the precepts, in the honour of the examples, in the preciousness of the promises, in the astonishing love, compassion, wisdom and goodness of God contained in it, laying out gracious and glorious methods of reconciling and saving sinful mankind, by such a way of propitiation, satisfaction and merit, as no whit blemisheth or diminisheth his justice, but every way advanceth and magnifieth his mercy. All this divine beauty, majesty, glory and ecstasy of true Religion, so highly valued heretofore in England, by Princes and Peers, by Noblemen and Gentlemen of all degrees, is now looked upon by many as a mimical play, a popular pageantry; a business so sceptical and litigious, so mutable and various, so childish and impertinent, so trivial and plebeian, that many think it a point of gallantry and greatness of mind, totally to undervalue all Religion, as a mere fabulous flourish, set forth with some pomp and solemnity heretofore, now with specious liberties and indulgences, in order either to amuse and over-awe, or to please and gratify common people, whose brutal strength and refractory rudeness is found to be such by all wise Governors in all ages, that nothing can over-awe or bridle the populacy so much, as the opinion of some Religion, derived from a Deity; whose power being represented as omnipotent, can only give either terror and check to vulgar presumptions, or fixation to their everlasting revolutions. Which volatile temper of common people some cunning men of later years having observed, how in nothing of received Religion they were settled, they have flown anew to the old craft of those heathenish Legislators, to pretend Nymphs and caves, to dreams and visions, to extatick grotts and groves, to converse as Sibyls with Demons or Spirits, and to keep immediate intelligence with God himself, by special inspirations, beyond any thing of traditional Religion, anciently received and constantly delivered by this or any other Church of Christ. Nor doth this sorry artifice fail to take some simple birds that are more silly and incautious, who hardly ever get out of these snares and lime-twigs of pretended new Religion, till they lose their feathers, much of their time and estates, besides the hazard of their souls and consciences. But others, of more bold and robust tempers, are from these temptations and scandals of snarled and entangled, or loose and unsettled, or arbitrary and nulled Religion, betrayed to downright Atheism; from thence they are carried down the stream of all sensual debaucheries, without any stop or check of conscience, as to God or any Religion, by which they stand obliged and responsible to a Divine power above them. All which comes to pass, by reason that they fell into such unhappy times, as to their Religion, education and imitation, as offered them for many years very little but novelties; and in them nothing worthy of the name of true and solid Religion, as to any public certainty, harmony, unity, or authority. Nothing must be owned as the uniform piety of this Nation, or the consent of the Church, either as from wise men or good Christians; nothing fixed, as becomes the majesty of a glorious God, and a gracious Saviour, an immutable goodness, and unerrable truth, held forth by the most idoneous and credible witnesses in the Catholic Church, through all ages and successions: but, as if all Christians had been either ignorant or impostors in this and all Churches, as if no Christian Princes, no Presbyters, no Bishops, had had either wit to discern, or grace to retain true Religion; so have many people on all sides run up and down, to pick and choose, to begin and invent, to contrive and cut out what they listed to call their Religion: yea, many rigid Reformers, and most severe pretenders to Religion (upon new accounts, as schismatizing in, or separating from the Church of England) even these are daily found either split upon the rocks of uncharitableness, or beating upon the quicksands of change and uncertainty; not only their several factions, but the same persons having as many faces successively of Religion, as Proteus had shapes. The stakes and cords of that Christian and Reformed Religion, which was fixed in the Church of England, these are pulled up, quite ravelled and broken into pieces by many. Nor are these new modellers such as made modest trials and essays of truth; but they are generally fixed to their unsettled fancies, constant in their inconstancy, pertinacious in their extravagancies, and hardly ever to be persuaded by any experience of their own folly, to recant or repent of their apparent and imprudent transports; much less to return from their exotic novelties and fanatic inventions they have lately chosen, to that solemn & sacred, uniform and majestic, primitive and Catholic posture of Religion, in which it was for many years illustrious in the Ch. of Engl. and in all other famous Churches. CHAP. IU. THe very light of nature and common reason commands mankind to be serious and settled, Profaneness the fruit of unsettledness in Religion. grave and reverend in the public service and veneration of their God: to which end they added (as Varro, Tully, and Isidore Hispalensis tell us) not only many Ceremonies to adorn their Devotion, but a public consent and sanction, to authorise, and confirm, and fence their Religion, against all those (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) that affected to be rude, or dared to be profane. For right reason tells us, that Novices, strangers, or beginners in Religion, must be miserably betrayed to all manner of irreligion, where they see all things of Religion presented to them, like a kind of Matachin dance, or counter-skuffle, full of fraction and novelty, of change and contradiction, of intricacy and incongruity, of emulation and faction, of strife and envy, of hatred and enmity, of contempt and confusion; debased to meanness, and prostituted to vulgarity; which can by no persons of any right understanding be thought to be the temper of any thing that is worthy to bear the name & inscription of the true God, or the Christian and Reformed Religion. This is not the pulse of piety, nor can be the influence of God's holy, wise, and peaceable spirit. No Christian can be so uncatechised, as not to know, that these wounds and scars which are upon the face of Religion, and made by Christians of the same country and communion, are not the marks of Christ's sheep, nor the characters of his Disciples; who have been in all ages most eminent for all graces and virtues, for all things true, comely, orderly, just, generous, benign, charitable: none exceeded or equalled them for mutual love, while they were near or far off; insomuch that primitive Assemblies of Bishops, Presbyters and people, were most lively resemblances of that Angelic Order, Choir, and Harmony which is in Heaven, before the Throne of God, and of the Lamb. Rev. 20.4. This union and subordination kept up the reverence of Religion, and the dignity of the Evangelicall Ministry among Christians, even then when persecution most raged against them: when the persons of holy Bishops and Presbyters were imprisoned, banished, mangled, and massacred by Heathenish and Jewish persecutors; yet then was the authority of Ministers looked upon as sacred and divine, not from the earth, but heaven; not from Kings and Princes, not from Parliaments and civil Senates, not from Protectors and Major-Generals, or new Triers, much less from any principle or power which is now challenged by popular arrogancy and vulgar usurpation, but from Christ Jesus, and so from the blessed God, who sent his Son, and He his Apostles and other Ministers, as his Father sent him, John 20.21. Ephes. 4.11. for the same end and work, in those measures and proportions of his Spirit which were necessary for the calling, converting, continuing and perfecting the Church, as the Body of Christ. While these continued in an holy and uninterrupted succession of undoubted Authority, as Apostles, Bishops, Pastors and Teachers, of one mind and mission, of one ordination and succession, they easily preserved the doctrine of Christian Religion uncorrupted, the Mysteries unprofaned, the Ministry unviolated, the reverence of Religion unabased: but these once divided against each other in opinions and factions, their ranks and order broken, their succession interrupted, their commission counterfeited or varied, their office invaded, their authority doubted, denied and destroyed; who knows not what springtides, what whole seas of faction and fury, of negligence and irreverence, of Atheism and irreligion, must necessarily flow in upon the face of any Church; when the truest and compleatest Ministers shall be questioned or scorned, the dubious, defective, or false ones magnified, by secular policy, or popular levity; when Laymen shall either think there are no Ministers invested with any due authority, or themselves as good as the best, set up after some novel and arbitrary modes of their own invention, which must not only vie with the true, ancient and Catholic ordination of 1500 years standing, but justle it quite out of the Church; like the bastard Abimelech, Judges 9 who slew all the legitimate issue of Gideon his Father? Who can hear with trembling, or pray with devotion, or receive with reverence, or be reproved with patience, or be comforted with peace, or be terrified with judgement, or mortified to any lust, or moderated to any passion, or confined to new obedience, or won to true repentance, or moved in conscience, or raised in hope, when he applies to any or all these duties, out of faction, novelty, curiosity, levity, custom, affectation, or hypocrisy; when he thinks the Minister that officiates hath no more power than himself, or his groom and footman; when he looks upon his Minister as a poor man, confined to his teddar, staked to his petty living, dependant upon men's charity, exposed to plebeian contempt, at best but an almsman of the State, a public pensioner, or an Evangelicall Trooper, whose commission is (ad placitum hominum) after the will of man, having no divine power or authority to his office and work, no legal right or title, as to certainty or perpetuity in any thing he enjoys as his wages, further, than the arbitrary favours or frowns of men are dispensed to him; a very trembling and precarious orator, whose pulpit is (like the Ara Lugdunensis) soon made his scene, his coffin and his sepulchre; especially if either fervently praying, or faithfully preaching, or justly, yet wisely, Isa. 29.21. reproving, he displease any captious and peevish Auditor, who hath confidence enough to make him an offender for a word, and influence enough to sequester, to silence, yea to starve him and his family, if he use an honest and innocent parrhesy, or freedom of speaking, such as becomes the Messenger of heaven, the Minister of Christ, and the Ambassador of God? When the mouths of God's oxen are thus easily muzzled, when his Prophets are so cheaply despised, when his nearest servants are thus despitefully used; no wonder if irreverence, Atheism and profaneness in all sorts of people attend all religious exercises, as necessarily as shadows do those gross bodies which intervene between the sight and light: which is the first sad and bad consequence following and flowing from the inconstancy and unsettledness of Religion. CHAP. V. BEsides the decays of Piety and Charity in men's hearts, Ministers molested by endless and vexatious disputes. both as to the principles, power and practice becoming Christians, which (like a Lethargic numbness and stupor) is come upon the old stock of Christians in England; together with that unsettledness, irreverence, contempt, Atheism and profaneness, which grows upon the younger sort of people, who have been bred amidst these our divisions, distractions and extravagancies of Religion, to very much of irreligion; the lusts and vanities of their minds being not any way so kerbed and repressed by the incumbent majesty and authority of any such settled and uniform Religion, as is necessary either to persuade men to be good, or to over-awe and restrain them from being so bad as they would be: Besides these mischiefs, which I have already set forth to you my Honoured Countrymen; there is a second sad and bad consequence, which, like a Gangrene or spreading Canker, daily frets the spirits, and as it were eats up the very substance and vitals of Religion in this Nation, by reason of those endless and vexatious disputes, which agitate the spirits and exasperate the minds of all sorts of Christians: and of none so much as Ministers, who are looked upon as those that expose and offer themselves to be the chief heads or Champions of Religion, in their several parties; who are to undertake the combats and challenges of all opposers: which truly were no very hard province, if either Ministers were unanimous, and mutually assisted by concurrent judgement among themselves; or if they were protected by the shield of this Churches declared Doctrine, and uniform profession of Religion. Which heretofore was justly esteemed as sacred, inviolable, and invulnerable: having its strength and materials from the Scripture; its model, manner, and composure from the counsel, wisdom, experience and authority, not only of this Church of England, but of the Primitive, Ancient, Catholic Church in all ages and places; against all which few men had heretofore the confidence, or indeed impudence, in any grand part, much less in the whole, to oppose their private fancies and suggestions. Now, no petty people are so clownish or inconsiderable, but they dare to cavil, question or deny, almost every point owned as Religion in the Church of England. I shall not need to instance in the grand Mysteries of the Trinity, Christ's Divinity, his satisfaction to divine justice; in the resurrection of the body, or the souls immortality; nor yet in the point of Original Sin, or natural depravedness and defects; of the necessity of Divine Grace; of Christian's imperfection in the best state of this life; of the right use of the Moral Law, and the true bounds of Evangelicall Liberties. All which (with many other grand concernments of Religion) are daily not only ventilated and discussed, but contradicted and denied by many Modern Arrians, Socinians, Pelagians, Antinomians, Novatians, and others, (besides the constant Controversies of Papists) so far, that nothing almost is left sound or settled among us; nothing that any Minister can preach or practise as Religion, but somewhere or other it finds much snarling, quarrelling, and gainsaying. Every crosse-grained piece of pride; or peevishness, or ignorance, adventures to bark at what they list, yea to bite, tear and worry the reputation and integrity, together with the learning and ability of any, yea all the true Ministers of England: who are become miserable, not only by that great and unintermitted pains which they must take, if they will be faithful to their own and other men's souls; nor yet by that biting poverty or tenuity of their worldly condition, for the most part of them, which is so hardly to be relieved by those dribliting pittances which, with tedious attending and shameful importunings, they can get in. But beyond both these, Ministers are in such a state of perpetual inquietude, as is like that of very poor people, who are only rich in vermin, and so troubled with them, that they are not permitted night or day to take their rest, or to enjoy that sweet sleep and quiet repose indulged to all creatures, by which they might sometime deceive their sore labour, and forget both their miseries and their sorrows. For when all is done that belongs to a sober Ministers ministerial duty and charge; after indefatigable pains, continual studies, invincible patience, which, like Ostriches, must digest the iron morsels and manners of this age; when despairing and made incapable of any honorary rewards in Church or State, answerable to his gravity and merit every way, he only covets for some ingenuous rest and tranquillity under the shadow and protection of that Church and State, which he hath a long time faithfully served; yet then, even in his age, and at all times, he must be summoned with daily alarms, and provoked to successive duels, by all sorts of factious and fanatic Spirits, new or old, who list to be contentious T. though he be wearied, and almost tired with the long and constant fatigations of his Ministry; though he be almost naked and unarmed, as to the polemic or controversal part of Divinity; yet must he be compassed with Briars and Thorns; frequently molested with the perverse disputes and endless janglings of those, who have no reverence to this Church, nor the Catholic Churches constant opinion or practice, grounded upon Scripture, and manifested by undeniable Tradition. The Ministers of England are the common Butt, at which every fool's bolt is presently shot. If any be less apt for disputation, through unwontedness, weakness, depressions, poverty, and infinite dis-spiritings, and so (possibly) less able on the sudden to defend that truth, and that Church, for which he hath dared to be a suffering Martyr and Confessor, against the bitter arrows and subtle Sophistries of his many-mouthed Adversaries, modern Sectaries, (who make what use they can of the Philistines files and grindstones, the wont cavils, sophistries, and fallacies of the Papists and Jesuits, against this Church;) the seeming disadvantages of any one Minister, when he is publicly surprised, and in the very Church assaulted by such impudent Antagonists, these are presently voted among the vulgar, as the total rout, baffle and disparagement of the whole Ministerial order, yea and of the Church of England: As if none of its Fathers or Sons, its Bishops or Presbyters, so cried up heretofore for their excellent learning & dexterous fortitude, were able to encounter these doughty Champions, these men of Gath; whose glory (now) is rather to defy and over-awe the Israel of God by force, than to fight lawfully, by the rules of right disputation, from Scripture or Reason. If the enemies of the Church of England would lay aside their Swords and Pistols, their Troopers and Musketeers, their Guns and Canons, which have been so oft their Seconds, and so always a terror to the true Clergy of England; if they would keep to the lists and weapons of Scripture and reason, of Catholic example, and constant tradition, (which arms are proper for Religious contests;) I believe they would be easily so matched in every point, that they would have no cause long to boast of having the better of any Learned and Grave Minister, who undertakes to assert the cause of the Church of England, both in its Doctrine and Discipline. Which is indeed assisted not only by the Spirit and suffrage of all estates in this Church, as Christian and reformed, as ancient and modern; but also by the wisdom and consent, the judgement and practice of all the famous and flourishing Primitive Churches throughout the world: so that the justification and honour of the Church of England depends not upon any one Ministers weakness or ability, but upon that solidity, juncture, and conformity it hath, in all the main parts of it, with the Catholic Church of Christ in all Ages. He that fights against one, fighteth against all; he must confute them all, before he can justly condemn the Church of England, which hath for so many years laboured between the Furnace and the Anvil, under the restless files and hammers of its various Adversaries, who have resolved sooner to die, than to suffer the Church of England, or its orderly Ministers, to live in peace. CHAP. VI The endless bicker with Anabaptists, etc. now in England. AMong other Sects that, like swarms, are of late risen up against the Church of England and its ancient Ministry, none are more numerous, petulant, and importune, none more busy, bold, and bitter, than the haughty-spirited and hotter-headed Anabaptists. (For all of them have not (at least show not) the like horns and hoofs: some are persons of more calm, grave, and charitable tempers.) These novel Disputers against, and despisers of all Infant-Baptisme (whom no ancient Church ever knew; no late● Reform Church but ever spewed out and abhorred) these now desire to appear as Goliath in their complete Armour, boldly braving the whole Church of England: and this not only as great Scripturists, but great Artists too; yea they would seem great Statists, pragmatics, and Politicians. They pretend to be curious inspectors (beyond all men) into all religious mysteries; yea rigid and exact Anatomizers of all both Modern and Ancient Churches; subtle Insinuators into all Interests, and grand Modellers of all Polities both Civil and Ecclesiastical; aiming (no doubt) in time to erect some Saintly sovereignty for their party in England, though their former ambitious attempts have every where miscarried, as in several parts of Germany, so of late in Ireland. These Anti-paedo-baptists, who are such hardhearted Fathers, such unkind and unchristian Parents to their Children, as to deny them those distinctions and indulgences of divine grace and favour, which God of old granted to the Jewish infants, and which the Catholic Christian Churches in all ages have thankfully accepted and faithfully applied to the Children of professed believers, as a privilege and donation renewed to them by Christ, and confirmed by the Apostles; Job 39.14. these Birds, (glorying like Ostriches in their negligence toward their young ones) are risen up to be not only nimble Disputants against children, but valiant combatants against men. For they find (after the way of the world,) more is got in one year by the terror of arms, than in ten years by the show of arguments. And although the pretended principle at first of that party was, to go with soft feet, as Lions and Cats do, (hiding and preserving their Claws till there is use of them) crying up Peace, and crying down all War and sword-work upon Christ's or the Gospel's score; yet the latter sort of their Disciples, (being in hopes to become more regnant and triumphant,) have interpreted the meaning of their Grandsires to be, only in prudence and caution, not in piety and conscience: that fight was only forbidden them, when they had cause to despair of getting the better, or just fear to be worsted; but if Providence gives them honest hopes, and advantages by the arm of flesh, and the sword of Steel, to set up the Kingdom of Jesus Christ and his spirit, they are ready, with S. Peter, not only to fight for Christ, but to cut off Malchus his ear, yea and his head too; if they find any Christian, Prince or Prelate, Magistrate or Minister, stand in their way, or if he seemeth to fight against that Anti-infantall Christ, which they say is so predominant in them, that he ought by their assistance to reform and rule all the Christian world; first beginning to destroy the Baptismal rights of Christians Infants, and then to go on to invade the rights of their parents, both Civil and Ecclesiastical. The ancient Church, as in England, so every where, adored a Saviour, who invited infants to him and blessed them: These men set up a Christ, who will not endure the Infants of his Church and people to come near him, or have any relation to him, as Lambs of the flock to that great Shepherd. Thus, the Papists on the one side agitate an endless controversy with this Church of England and all Reformed Churches, touching the Lord's Supper, First, in not restoring the Cup to Laymen, agreeable to Christ's institution and intention, which was best declared by the practice of the Apostles, and the Catholic Church after them for a thousand years; next, in their stating precisely and explicitly, as matter of faith, under a grievous curse and Anathema, the manner of Christ's presence in that Sacrament; which as we confess to be very mysterious, adorable and ineffable, yet most real, true and effectual to a worthy Receiver, according to the proper capacity of Faith receiving its object; so we conclude, that it is not in that gross and contradictive manner, which they have lately invented, and imposed upon the Church's credulity by way of Transubstantiating, In the Councils of Trent & Lateran. 1 Cor. 10.16, 17. 1 Cor. 11.26, 27. & which is a strange nulling of the substance & nature of the signs, Bread and Wine, (owned as such by the Apostle after consecration) and inducing the entire substance of Christ's Body and Blood, under every crumb and drop of those accidents or shadows, which seem still to be Bread and Wine to the four Senses. And this must be first done, even then when Christ was yet at table with the Disciples, and had not yet suffered: so that they corporally eat of Christ's Body made of the Bread, when he gave them the Bread; and was at once in their eyes, and between their teeth. Which strange and unheard-of manner of super-omnipotent transmuting or transposing, or annihilating of Substances, the Papists owe more to the wit and subtleties of some Schoolmen of later ages (who scorned to seem ignorant of any thing, or to be posed in any Christian mystery) than either to the verdict of their senses, to the principles of true Philosophy, to the grounds of sound Reason, to the Analogy or tenor of Scriptures in parallel Mysteries or Sacraments, or last of all, to the Testimony of the Primitive Fathers and ancient Churches (as hath been amply and unanswerably proved by many Reformed Divines at home and abroad.) Who, though they spoke very high things of this blessed Sacrament (as to its holy use, end, and relation to the Lord Jesus) yet they thought it enough for Christians to believe, adore, and admire the invisible, mystical and spiritual, yet real, presence of Christ in it; (for truly and fully present they ever believed him to be, though they confessed themselves ignorant how, and so were both humbly and modestly silent of the manner of his presence.) In which bounds if the later Church of Rome could have contained itself, I believe much trouble and misery, much bloodshed and persecution had been saved in these Western Churches, which are now divided and destroyed upon no point more than this of the Lords Supper; which was the greatest Symbol of Christians communion with Christ and one another, till the Papal arts and policies did so maim and mishap that blessed Sacrament of the Lords Supper, as to make it a ground of everlasting contention. On the other side, the peevish and petulant Anabaptists, who for many years past (almost since the first dayspring of the Reformation visited these Western Churches) have by the pens and tongues, the writings and preachings of many learned and godly men, been brayed in the mortar of Scripture-testimonies, Ecclesiastic practice, Catholic custom and tradition, Prov. 27.22. yet will not their folly depart from them. These, I say, have heretofore in Transilvania, Westphalia, and many parts of Germany and the adjacent Countries, (and of late in England, since it became Africa Septentrionalis, the Northern Africa, full of Serpents and fruitful in Monsters) with greater boldness and freedom than they ever enjoyed under any Christian Magistrate, or in any Reformed Church, sharply contested against the other great Sacrament of Baptism, so far as it was in the Church of England, and ever hath been in all ages and successions of Christianity, imparted to the Infants of Christian Parents, who own their own Baptism, and continue in the Church's communion, professing to believe that covenant of God made to them and their children, as God's people, or Christ's Disciples, for the remission of sins original and actual through the blood of Christ. Against which gracious sign of the Evangelicall covenant, (sealing the truth of the Gospel, & conferring the grace of it; also distinguishing, as by a visible mark of Church-fellowship, the Infants of Christians or believers, from those of heathens and professed unbelievers, who are strangers to the flock of Christ) the Anabaptists have (ever since their rise in Germany, which is about 130 years) been not so much fair and candid disputants, as bitter and reproachful enemies, for the most part: not modestly doubting, or civilly denying it, as to their own private judgements, with a latitude of charity to such in all the Christian world, who from the Apostles days have, and do retain Infant-Baptisme; but as if all the Church had erred till their days, they imperiously deny it, they rudely despise it, they scurrilously disdain and mock at the baptism of Infants, as wholly void and null: therefore they repeat Baptism to their Disciples; whence they have their name. CHAP. VII. IN this one vexatious Controversy (heretofore happily settled in the Church of England, The perverse dispute of Anabaptists against Infant-baptisme. both by doctrine and practice, conform to all Antiquity) I presume as much hath been said and wrote on either side, as the wit of man can well invent, or the nature of the thing bear, and possibly more than can well agree with Christian Charity on either side, if the difference were only as to a circumstance of time, and not about the very essence or substance of our Baptism: against which the spirit and design of the Anabaptists doth so fiercely drive, that by absolutely nulling all Infant-baptism in the Church of Christ, they might overthrow, not only the honour, fidelity and credit of this Church, but of all other, yea, and the whole frame (even to the foundation) of all Christian ministrations, privileges, comforts and communion, both in England and all Christian Churches through the world; as if all we had done, said, or enjoyed, as Christian Ministers and people, had been irregular, confused, inauthoritative, invalid; all things of Religion having been begun and continued, exhibited and received, by such Ministers and people, as had no visible right to any Christian duties or privileges in a Church-communion, as having never been baptised after the way which Christ instituted; so that their claim to be Christians or Churches, is as false and insufficient as theirs is to an estate, of which they have no deed, seal, or seisin, but what are false or counterfeit. By which high and bold reproach of the Anabaptists against this and all other Churches from the beginning, it must follow, that (contrary to Christ's promise) the gates of Hell have so long prevailed against the Catholic Church, Mat. 16.18. in so great a concern as this Sacrament must needs be: which being made void and null, as to any initiation, obsignation and confirmation of all Evangelicall gifts, graces and privileges, it will follow not only that all the Ministry and ministrations of the Church have been illegitimate, invalid, irregular, being acted, dispensed and received by such as had no right, title, or authority to them, being persons unbaptised; but also all the faith and repentance, all the confessions and absolutions, all the celebrations and consecrations of the Lords Supper, all the perceptions of grace and spiritual comfort, all sense of peace, joy, love of God, and Christian charity, all the patience and hopes of all Christians, as Believers, Confessors, Martyrs, all must be either very defective of Christ's order and method, or merely fanciful and superstitious, or grossly presumptuous, preposterous, and wholly impertinent, because wanting the first root of Christian Religion, the badge and band of Christ's Disciples, right or lawful, true and valid Baptism. So that, however God guided his Church in all other things aright, yet in this it seems to have erred a Catholic error so far, that in stead of one Baptism (which the Apostle urgeth, Ephes. 4.5. as concurrent with other unities of Christian accord, as one God, one Faith, one Body, one Christ, one Head, etc. all which the true Church retained constantly) there must have been no Baptism at all, for the greatest part of 1600 years; in which time, as (generally) before, so universally after the Church had peace, all Christians brought their Infants to Baptism. Which abominable consequence, or conclusion, following the Anabaptistick opinion and practice, seems to me so uncharitable, so immodest, so absurd, so cruel, so every-way unworthy of any good Christian, who understands the fidelity, exactness and constancy of primitive and persecuted Churches, Judas 3. in following the way once delivered to them by Christ and his Apostles (from which they were so far from an easy receding, that they rather chose to die;) that this jealousy and scandal rather becomes Turks, Jews, Heathens, Heretics, and Infidels, or downright Atheists, than any good Christians, so far to charge openly, or but secretly indeed to suspect the fidelity, honesty and integrity of the Catholic Church: nor do I see how any judicious, sober, and humble Christian can with charity, comfort, and good conscience, entertain and promote so horrid a jealousy and censure of all the Christian world; as if having kept the two Testaments entire (which I suppose the Anabaptists do not deny or doubt) yet they had lost one of the two Sacraments, and that which is the first foundation, main hinge and centre of all the Church's polity, privileges, community and unity in this world, both to Christ, and to each other. It is not my purpose in this place or work (which is rather to deplore the lapsed state of this Church, than to dispute this or any other point, long ago settled in this and all true Churches) my aim is not to tyre you (my honoured Countrymen) with drawing over the rough sand of this controversy at large; which hath of late by sharp reciprocations made such deep wounds or incisions on this Church's face and peace (agreeable to the practice and spirit of the Anabaptists, wherever they come and prevail.) Only give me leave (since this Anabaptistick poison is still pregnant in this Nation) in order to move your compassions to the Church of England, and your love to the truth of God as it is in Jesus, to show you how unjustly She hath, and still doth suffer, yea, and is daily more threatened by this sort of men, who upon weak and shallow pretensions seek to overthrow so great, so ancient, so Catholic, so Primitive, so Apostolic, so Scriptural, so Christian a practice and privilege, as that is of baptising the Infants of Christian Professors. First, the Anabaptists cannot with any forehead or face of reason (and therefore the soberest of them do not) deny, but that the Infants of Christians have both in respect of sinful nature, and in regard of the offer of Evangelick grace by Christ, as much need and as much capacity of Baptism as the Jewish children had of Circumcision, so far as both those initial Sacraments betoken the taking away of sin, the supply of righteousness, and other benefits attainable by sinners, young or old, through the covenant made in the blood of J. Christ, between God and his Church, both Jewish and Christian. Only they put in these three popular bars against Infants partaking of those benefits which they need, The sum of the Anabapt. strength. and are (otherways) capable of by Christ; but not (as the Anabaptists say) in the way of Baptism, at that age, in which they have no right or capacity to be baptised; because, First, They allege, there is no precise or nominal command in the New Testament to baptise any Infants by name. Secondly, Baptism is limited to such as are first taught and profess to believe; which must ever exclude Infants. Thirdly, There is no one express and nominal instance of any one example, where Christ or his Apostles baptised any infant; which if they could find, they confess they should then (with us) interpret all places in favour of infants, Mat. 28.19. Acts 16.15. 1 Corin. 1.16. Acts 2.39. as contained under the expression of all nations and whole households, and you and your children, etc. since they confess the tenor of the Gospel, the extent or proportions of Evangelicall mercies, the sufficiency of Christ's merits, and the sinful state of infants by nature, yea their damnable estate, unless they be washed and saved by the blood of Christ: all these make much for infants enjoying the Sign and Seal, as well as the Thing signified, Grace and Glory too; if they had but one example, or could be convinced that ever any Apostle did baptise any one infant. CHAP. VIII. THis in brief is the whole strength (as I conceive) of the Anabaptists, whereto they so pertinaciously hold, The weakness of Anabaptists grounds against Infant-Baptisme. merely as to the literal silence of the name Infant, in the point of Baptism: and at the same rate they may deny many other points of Christian doctrine and practice, (which yet I suppose they do not) which not having the express and individual letter of the word for them (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) have (yet) (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) the general tenor, and inclusive command, namely, the reason of the Scripture, and Analogy of Faith to justify them; besides the constant practice and judgement of the Catholic Church, whose fidelity is not to be questioned by any sober man, upon such slight and captious pretensions of the Scriptures silence, in point of particular enumerations, when (yet) it is full, as to general and comprehensive expressions: which are many and valid foundations, on which to build Infant-baptisme: no more to be justly overthrown by the most subtle Anabaptists in the world, than the Saducees might deny and overthrow the resurrection against Christ; or the Psychopannuchists, the souls immortality; or the Antidominicarians, the Lords day; or the Antiscripturists, the received Scriptures; or the Antitrinitarians, the Trinity; or the Arians, the coessentiality of the Son with the Father, as God; because none of these are (as the Arians urged) in those very words, names and syllables, so set down, as possibly cavilling Sophisters would require, or else they will not believe. The silence or not express naming of Infants, is no more to be urged against them in this case, than the silence of Christ as to the partakers of the Lords Supper, who gave it only to the twelve Disciples, with command to them to do it, etc. without speaking of any Women or Laymen; yet were not these hereby excluded from the Communion, as to matter of fact, Acts 2.46. before it was so recorded in the Acts as an History. The Church of Christ always understood the latitudes of Baptism (expressions as well as graces) to include Infants of Christians no less than the institution of the other Sacrament did Laymen and Women; which were neither present at first institution, nor are nominated in any particular command of Christ. As for the condition limiting persons baptizable, which is actual believing, this also the Church of Christ understood in a limited & temporary sense, as reaching only to those who were the first fruits or plants of the Christian Church; Gen. 17.10. who were first (as Abraham) to be taught the nature of the covenant, duty and seal, before they could reasonably receive the sign, or communicate it rightly to their children: who come to their claim and privilege, as of Circumcision, so of Baptism, not by virtue of their personal knowledge and faith, which Abraham and men grown, but not their children, first had, and so the first called and converted Christians (as parents) ought to have; but by that federal relation which they have, even in their ignorance and infancy, to believing parents, and by them to God, as his people, part of his flock and Church. And this, not by a natural or civil right (which (yet) descends to and upon children, when they know nothing) but by an Evangelicall right, as to that covenant made by God in the blood of Christ, with his Church, both of old and of late, with Jews and Christians, inclusive of children, yea, even Infants of eight days old; as is evident in Circumcision, which signified the same grace under another sign or ceremony, as the Apostle declares it at large, Rom. 4. Leaving therefore the cavilling and pervicacious insisting of the Anabaptists about the letters, names and syllables, which they must have, or they will not believe Infant-Baptism, more than Thomas Christ's Resurrection till he felt his wounds: although we grant what they allege as to the nominal silence of the word Infants, wrested by their perverse disputations; yet nothing is abated as to the right and use of Infant-baptisme, which is grounded upon so many grand reasonings and right deductions from Scripture-sense; which being explicit and clear in many places, aught to overrule that silence of the name Infants, and seeming (but misunderstood) limitation of taught and believing, which is all the force (upon the point) that ever the Anabaptists could muster together against the Church's Catholic judgement and practice, conform to the whole tenor of God's mind and will, his love and mercy; Christ's grace and merits dispensed to his Church by some initial Sacrament, including Infants as well as the adulti of riper years. That you may better see upon what little molehills the Anabaptists stand so on tiptoes, as of late they have done in England, pretending to over-top the mountain of the Lord, which hath been established in all lands, I mean, the judgement and practice of the Catholic Church; I will briefly set down (as in a matter largely handled by many others, both late & long since) what are the grand deductions and Scriptural reasonings, upon which the Church of God hath (as I conceive) always maintained the right, privilege and comfort of Infant-baptisme; and this without any scruple or dispute for 1500 years: not but that the Anabaptists objections, from the silence of the Scripture as to the name Infant, were then as obvious as now; nor were there wanting heretical spirits (of the Jews and Gnostics) who would have cavilled in this as other points, against the true and Orthodox profession, if they had not been so palpably overborn and convinced by the pregnancy of the Church's practice and judgement, agreeable to the Apostolical Tradition in this point, (who without doubt had baptised many Infants some years before there was any part of the New Testament written, which the Anabaptists so much urge) that it had been an intolerable impudence to doubt or deny Infant-baptism, or to oppose the after-letter of the N. Testament against the constant and precedent practice of the Apostles and their Successors, whose actions were a clear and sufficient, yea the best interpretation in the world, of the letter of the Scripture, in case of any thing that seemed less explicit, or any way dubious. Nor do I doubt, but the Church was ever in this so far commendable, as it was conformable to the Apostles practise, and went upon the same grounds as they did, not once erring so Catholic and great an error, as to apply a Sacrament to such as Christ never intended, yea denied and forbade it (as is pretended;) and only therefore pertinacious in all ages after, yea, so stupid, as not to be sensible of so grand an error or misapplication (that it might not be thought to have erred:) but rather the Church continued constant and without scruple in the doctrine of the Apostles, and practise of Infant-baptism (as S. a Aug. Ser. 10. de verb. Apost. & Paedobapt. Nemo vobis susurret doctrinas alienas: hoc ecclesia semper habuit, semper tenuit; hoc à majorum fide accepit; hoc usque in finem perseveranter custodit. Tert. de An. c. 39 Tam ex seminis praerogativa, quam ex institutionis disciplinâ. Austin urges against Pelagius) because they were assured from the beginning it was the mind of Christ, which the Apostles best understood, and according to which they did constantly practise the baptising of Infants from the beginning, where once the faith was planted in the parents; the branches or seed being presently b 1 Cor. 7.14. holy in God's claim or covenant, and by the children's relation to them and to God, so soon as the parents were believers, and had by receiving the faith, and being baptised, been brought into the visible fold or flock of Christ. The Scriptural, Religious and rational grounds, which this and all true Churches went upon in baptising Infants of believing parents, (not apostated or excommunicated) were these; which I oppose to the petty and capricious cavils of the Anabaptists, as a mighty wall or bulwark planted with great canon against so many potguns or bulrushes. CHAP. IX. The Catholic strength for Infant-Bapt. 1. FIrst, The Church of God considered the nature of that Evangelical and perpetual Covenant, which was explicitly made with Abraham and his seed, also confirmed to him and his children by another parallel Ceremony or Sacrament, namely, of Circumcision: which Sign or Seal being (as the Anabaptists confess) long ago abrogated, rather by the consent & practise of the Church, than any personal command of Christ that can be alleged, who himself was both circumcised and baptised; yet 'tis certain that the Covenant still continues to Abraham and his seed, as eminently contained in Christ, & by relation to him derived, Gen. 17.13. not only to the Jews after the flesh, but to those that are Jews inwardly, the Israel of God, or spiritual seed of Abrah: as he had his name augmented, and was to be the Father of many nations, not by natural succession, but by fiduciary imitation of his faith, who is called and commended to Christians as the father of the faithful, whose privileges Evangelical descend to all those, Rom. 4.11, 12, 13, 17, 18. who after Abraham's example, do believe the Evangelical promises of blessedness by Christ; these being of the household of faith, & Abraham's children, have right to Abraham's covenant, Gal. 6.10. & the privileges of his spiritual seed; which reached as to the natural sons of Abraham, and their Infants, Jews, so to these imitative sons and their infants, whom since no word of restraint or forbidding hath excluded from the relation, covenant, rights, privileges & comforts Evangelicall, once given to Abraham, and to all the family of Faith, there was no cause for the Church-Christian to exclude infants of believing parents from partaking that Evangelicall new sign and visible seal, which is Baptism, set to the ancient Covenant: with which, either Anabapt. must affirm no Infants now have any thing to do, no right to it, or the benefits by it; or they must think infants have this in so tacit, blind, & implicit a way, as they nor their parents have any visible sign, seal, and token of it now in the Christian Church, unless they will fall to circumcise their children again, who so obstinately deny baptism for that end to infants, whatever they think of it as to those of riper years. 2. However the Anabaptistick flourishes & ratlings (as to the cram of their negations, that neither precept nor practice is found in Scripture, mentioning Infant-baptism) make a great show & noise with common people, of small capacities and unbiased; yet the Anabapt. have no cause to flatter themselves, that they are wiser than all those Divines of Engl. & other Churches, who can render valid, cogent & unanswerable, both Historick instances and reasons, for the Catholic practice of this & all Churches in this point; and these drawn from the twisted and concurrent sense of Scripture, Origen. l. 5. ad Rom. c. 6. Ecclesia traditionem ab Apostolis suscepit etiam parvulis dare baptismum. Mat. 22.29. 2 Pet. 3.16. set forth in the words of Christ, confirmed by his actions, best interpreted by the constant practice of the universal Church, (as in the second Cent. Orig. tells us the Church always used Infant-bapt.) which may not be thought to have erred from the Apostles practise in this, any more than the Apostles did from Christ's mind. 3. So that the Anabaptists err, partly by not understanding the Scriptures, partly by wresting them. They wrest the letter of one or two places to an exclusive sense, contrary to the meaning of many other, which are inclusive of Infants, upon very great reasons, and to avoid many absurd consequences, as to the state Evangelicall. They urge against Infant's Baptism the Scriptures not expressly naming them, in precept or practice. We might as well urge for them, the like silence of Scripture no where by name excluding, forbidding, or excepting Infants, where in common sense they are included; as in all nations, whole families or households, Matth. 28.19. Acts 16.15. & 34. 1 Corin. 1.16. Coloss. 2.11. Aug. de Bapt. cont. Donat. l. 4 c. 23. V●raciter conjicere possumus, quid valeat in parvulis baptismi sacramentum, ex circumcisione carnis quam prior populus accepit. 1 Cor. 10.2. where they are either actually baptised, or commanded to be baptised by the Apostles without any reserve, limitation, or exclusion, as to Infants. 4. The usual parallel also of Circumcision and Baptism (which S. Paul urgeth, and S. Austin oft observes) is of great force to those who consider, that this latter Sacrament, or sign of God's covenant to his Church-Christian, succeeding to the former, as to its end, use and virtues, may not in reason be thought less extensive to Infants in the Church of God, than the former was; nor may the Antitype be straitened short of the Type. In this all the Jews Church (even Infants, as well as others) were baptised to Moses in the red Sea and the cloud: so must all to Christ in the Baptism of his Blood now in the Church, which was by that sea represented. 5. Nor is it inconsiderable in this point, the custom of washing or baptising among the Jews, as a religious ceremony used in admitting proselytes of the Gate, which were not circumcised; these were (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) baptised with their whole household, servants and children, as the Talmudists report. This usual ceremony and custom of Baptism chosen by Christ for an Evangelical Sacrament, or sign of admittance to his Church, may justly be thought, in Christ's use and intention, to extend to the like latitude in its use or applying to Infants among Christians, as it did among the Jews; especially where neither Christ nor the Apostles make any restraint or exception in the case of Infants: 6. Who under the Gospel (as S. Aug. l. 1. de pec. mer. & remis. c. 26. Austin proves against the Pelagians) are in as much want (by nature) of Evangelical mercy, as they were under the Law and Jewish polity. Nor is it to be imagined, without great absurdity, that Christ lessened God's mercy or favour to them under the Gospel, short of what was under the Law; seeing they are every way as capable of this new Sign and Seal, Ecclesia traditionem ab Apostolis suscepit etiam parvulis dare baptismum; sci●bant enim illi, quia essent in omnibus genuinae sordes peccati, quae per aquam & spiritum ab●ui deberent. Orig. l. 5. ad Rom. c. 6. as they were of the former, and want this as much; which Origen urgeth as the ground of Infant-baptisme. 7. Neither the Analogy of the Scripture, nor the proportion of God's dispensations of grace to his Church-Christian, will allow us to think, that God under the Gospel denies to believing parents or their children such latitudes of mercy and holy privileges, in the visible means of grace and salvation, which were in another form afforded to the Jews; that God hath no regard, or makes no claim to children, as his, or any parts of his Church, till they come to years of discretion; that he would have the children of Christians while Infants, now, in no better state and capacity of his mercy by Christ, than the children of mere Heathens and Infidels; that either no Infants are now to be saved, or not by the Blood of Christ, or by no visible sign and means, or by the Spirit alone without Water; which Christ joins together, John 3.5. affirming that none can enter into the Kingdom of Heaven, either the Kingdom of Grace, or Glory, the visible or invisible Church, (in the ordinary methods of God's dispensation of grace now under the Gospel) unless they be born again of Water and the Spirit. 8. If children are capable to be sanctified by the Spirit, they are no less capable to be washed by baptismal water, which is consecrated by the Word and Spirit or power of Christ in his Church, to so holy an use and spiritual washing away of sin, as is attained by his blood, represented by baptismal water: for the sign is of less value than the thing signified, as the wax and parchment are far less than the land or estate consigned and conveyed by them. Since than Christ hath joined these together in so full, express, and large a manner, extending to all, it must needs appear, not only a petulancy, but arrogancy, in any Christians to separate them; and in order to gratify a novel fancy or exotic opinion, to run counter to all these proportions of Evangelicall Truth and Mercy, which evidently cross all those mentioned absurdities, as inconsistent with Evangelicall promises, favours and dispensations of grace, which are much ampliated and enlarged, but no way straitened or abated. 9 This general tenor and scope of the Scriptures, so highly favouring Christian Infants, as a great part of those a Psal. 22.27. & 82.8. Isa 2.2.52.15. many nations and families which are prophesied and promised shall come in to Christ, is in my judgement sufficient to satisfy all those that list not to be contentious; especially where the b Mat. 19.13. Mark 10.14. Luke 18.16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Eust. Omnes venit per semetipsum salvare; omnes, inquam, qui per eum renascuntur in Deum; Infants, & parvulos, & pueros, & juvenes, & seniores. Ideo per omnem venit aetatem, & infantibus infans factus, sanctificans infants; in parvulis parvulus, sanctificans hanc ipsam habentes aetatem. Iren. l. 2. c. 39 words and actions of Christ do further expressly intimate, yea largely declare his special favour & indulgence toward (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) little Infants in his Church (as Irenaeus justly urgeth in favour of them, who lived anno 150.) Christ having himself been an Infant, and received then the seal of Circumcision, as an Infant, to denote his grace for them, and favour to them, suffering and shedding his blood in infancy for infants; he afterward (as three Evangelists tell us) invited infants to come, or be brought to him, testified a favour for them, blessed them, and declares them capable of the Kingdom of Heaven, as members of the Church, both in grace and glory. For as Infants have the spirit and principles of reason, even then when they cannot exercise or exert them; so may they have (as Tertullian observes) the * Designati sanctitatis, & per hoc etiam salutis, fidelium filii. Tert de An. c. 39 spirit and principles of grace and glory, of sanctification and salvation, even then when they are (as under Circumcision) only passive receivers, not active employers of the grace of God given them by Christ's merits. The magnetic virtue may be communicated to a needle, although it be not presently put into such an even posture or aequilibrium as will actually show it; so is the grace of God in Infants. Which mercy and indulgence of God to the Infants of his Church, is a gracious counterpoizing of that native misery and pravity, which (as Origen and Austin observe) they derive from the old Adam; to which they are not actively contributive, Quia sunt in omnibus genuinae sordes peccatorum, quae per aquam & spiritum abluin debent. Orig. l. 5. ad Ro. c. 6. Hoc ipsum peccati corpus appellatur. but passively receptive. In like manner, by the second Adam (Christ Jesus) the Antidote or remedy is early, and so preventive of their agency, that (as S. * Quanto magis prohiberi non debet infans à baptismo, qui recens natus nihil peccavit, nisi quod secundum Adam carnaliter natus contagionem mortis antiquae prima nativitate contraxit, etc. Cypr. ep. ad Fid. Cyprian urgeth) the means of life and salvation is dispensed to them (also) in Baptism, before they can know their calamity. CHAP. X. 10. ALl which weight and strength of reasoning drawn from Scripture in many instances, Of right reasoning from Scripture. and most conform to the love, grace, philanthropy, mercy and benignity of God, through Christ, to his Church under the Gospel, are sufficient to outweigh those two small and weak cavils, urged by the Anabaptists; either from the Scriptures silence, not naming Infants in the precept or history of Baptism; or limiting, as they fancy (for ever, which was but in the first planting of Churches) Baptism only to such as are taught and actually believe: which is true (as in Abraham's case, and such as were men grown in his house; he and they were first taught of God the meaning of that Evangelicall mystery; but the Infants, who, in the second place, received it, could not be instructed, and yet were circumcised, that is, owned for Gods, dedicated to him, distinguished by this visible sign from the children of Aliens, and by this means of grace brought, no doubt, to glory) so is it in Baptism, where the root of parents believing is once holy by baptismal relation and dedication to God, keeping communion with Christ and his Church, there the branches or children are also holy, 1 Corin. 7.14. and belong to the Lord. 11. Nor is this reasoning from Scripture, as to the harmony and concurrent sense of it, either sceptical, or curious, or infirm; but far more pregnant and potent in Religion, both as to faith and manners, than any urging of one or two particular places, contrary to this tenor and Analogy of faith; or those proportions of truth and mercy, which are so manifest in the Scriptures, that the contrary opinion or practice, however seemingly drawn from some Scripture, (as Tertull. Cyprian, S. Austin, observed in the quotations of Heretics) yet carries great incongruities and absurdities, such as are inconsistent with the Evangelical dispensations, many ways in other Scriptures declared, and easily to be observed by those that bring no prejudice or prepossessions with them. Our blessed Saviour's wisdom hath taught us thus to understand the mind of God, by this collective or deductive sense of Scriptures. Thus he evinceth a grand article of Christian faith, the resurrection of the dead, Matth. 22.29. against the blind cavils of the Sadduces; first, by alleging such Scriptures as named not, but implied the Resurrection, yea rather the souls immortality; then he doth by principles and consequences of right reason, draw forth the force of those places, showing as the souls existence, so the possibility and certainty of the Resurrection, also the state of those that are once risen and in glory. Matth. 12.5, 8. In like manner our Saviour, by comparing Scriptures, proves Gods dispensations of labour, as to works of piety, charity and necessity, both to God, to man, and to beasts, even on the Sabbath, where the letter of the command was express and fully negative, Thou shalt do no manner of work, etc. yet doth Christ redargue those sabbatical rigours which were by the Pharisees both hypocritically and uncharitably urged from the letter of that command; Christ tells them they erred (though they insisted on the letter of the command) not knowing the Scriptures, in their harmonious and concurrent sense, which is by sober and right reasonings to be fairly understood, rather than by harsh and dissonant exactings so urged, as to make one part of Scripture clash with another, or one place enterfeare and jar with the whole tenor and Analogy of Divine wisdom, truth, mercy and grace. Which in this point of Baptism the Anabaptists do; if not to their own damnation, yet very much to the subversion of the faith of many, to the dividing, undermining and destroying of a famous and well-setled Church, which hath suffered infinitely of late by some Anabaptistick petulancy, pertinacy and peevishness. Which in this point of Baptism is much upon the same lock as they are in the point of Minister's maintenance under the Gospel by Tithes; which is clear by the Analogy, equity, and intent of the Scriptures, comparing the old and new together, in which the mind and measure of the just and gracious God is evidently as liberal to the Gospel-Ministers as to the Jewish, 1 Cor. 9.14. as S. Paul urgeth, Even so hath the Lord ordained, etc. The force of which place I have unanswerably proved in a particular discourse upon Tithes. Yet what out-cries and clamours, what reproaches and calumnies, what a Tragic and Judaic business hath the covetous scrupulosity and sacrilegious nicety of some men made against Tithes, and Ministers now receiving them, pretending Scriptures against them, which are most fully for them; still wresting in this, as other things, the Scriptures silence, or letter, by the bias, and screw, or rack of their own prejudices, or depraved lusts and passions, against the equity, force and reasonings of Scripture, concurrent, and manifest from many places? CHAP. XI. 12. BUt in case the Scripture-meaning and letter were less clear in this point of Infant-baptisme than indeed they are; Of the Church's Catholic custom and testimony. if several places do seem to stand in such defiance and opposition against each other, that it were necessary to have an umpire to reconcile them so, as might moderate, limit and qualify the seeming literal difference of some places, in order to bring them to a compliance with others, which are possibly less explicit in the letter, but more comprehensive of and conform to the general tenor, sense and meaning of them, and that Analogy of Faith or Evangelicall dispensations, which are the whole scope and design of the Scriptures: In this case, to quiet the consciences of Christians, and to compose the state of the Church of Christ, in a way most charitable, most comfortable, and no way inconform to the will of God in his Word, I appeal to all sober minds, Consuetudo veterum Christianorum optima Scripturarum interpres. Grot. whether the constant practice & Catholic custom of the Church of Christ in all ages and places, be not the best interpreter and reconciler of Scripture; when so Universal and Primitive, as this of Infant-baptism is owned by all witnesses, that it must needs be derived from Apostolic men, yea, and Apostles themselves, who best knew the mind of Christ, and (without doubt) most exactly in this, as all things, conformed to it. No Anabaptist ever did, or can prove by any one ancient Writer, that from the beginning it was not so; that Christian parents either ordinarily did not, or that any one Doctor of the Church held it unlawful to baptise their infants: no not Tertullian, Tert. de bapt. c. 18. De anima cap. 39, 40. Apostolus ait, ex sanctificato altero sexu sanctos procreari, tam ex seminis praerogativa, quam institutionis disciplina. Infants designati sanctitatis, ac per hoc salutis. the only ancient which the Anabaptists urge in favour of their novel fancy; who yet doth acknowledge otherwhere the prerogative of Christian Infants wholly, yea, and the use and practise of the Church in his days, to baptise Infants with eagerness and haste; even in that place, where rather with wit and fancy, than with argument, he speaks of the inconvenience and impertinency of committing heavenly riches to those that are not capable to manage earthly, and urgeth their innocency, not having any sin, and so needing no remission: which was true as to actual, but not to original sin; for which cause, as Origen, Cyprian, and Saint Austin urge, Baptism is applied to Infants. The same flourish might have been made against the Covenant and grace of Circumcision, yea, against Christ's blessing the little children, when brought to him; yea, and it may as well be urged against giving the right or investiture of any estate temporal to Infants, (which is usual and good in law) because they cannot use or manage them at present. These are strains of wit, not weight of reason or Religion, in Tertullian, or any man; nor may they sway with any Christian in this or any case, contrary to the judgement and practice of the Church, even then, and at all times. Which a Cyp. lib. ep. 3. ep. 8. Nulli hominum nato D●i gratia & misericordia deneganda; una est apud omnes, sive infantes sive majores natu, divini muneris aequalitas. Id. Nam Deus ut personam non accipi●, sic nec aetatem. Id. S. Cyprian, in his large Epistle to Fidus, owns as his own and others uniform judgement, without any question, as to Infant-baptisme, who certainly in this differed not from his beloved Master Tertullian (as he called him;) yea, he would not so fully have allowed baptism of Infants, without any limitation to the eighth day (which was the question put to him) if he had thought Tertullian seriously doubting in the main, of their being at all to be baptised. I am sure Cyprian is as valid a testimony for it, as Tertullian against it: who yet is not against it, unless, it may be, in some cases, where persecution may hinder parents care of their children's education, and so there may be danger of children's Apostasy. The judgement of b Cypr. ep. ad Fid. is most large & clear. Cyprian (with 66. Bishop's) is followed and commended by S. c Hieron. l. 3. con. Pelag. Hier. and S. d Aug. de pec. orig. c. 40. de remis. pec. c. 9 contra Jul. l. 3. contr. Non. l. 4. epist. 3. ad Volusian. And oft against the Pelagians. Austin, as a most settled and Catholic practice; owned by S. e Chrysost. hom. 40. in Gen. Chrysost. f Athan. q. 91. de Script. Ter mergimus infantem. Theodo. epit. div. dog. cap. de Bapt. Athanas. g Ambr. de Abrah. l. 2. c. 11. Ambr. Paulinus, h Nazian. or. 40. de baptis. Gregory Nazian. S. i Basil. in Tom. 1. exh. ad baptis. Basil, k Epiphan. haeres. 8. Epiphanius; so before them, by l Origen. in Rom. l. 5. c. 6. in Levit. hom. 8. in Lucam hom. 14. Origen and m Iren. lib. 2. c. 39 epist. ad L●t. Irenaeus. Of whose testimonies I shall not need here to make more particular mention or repetition, for they are in many books of late duly cited, which have wrote in English and in Latin of this subject; nor can any Anabaptists teeth so gnaw that chain and series of successive Infant-baptisme in the Church of Christ, as to break any one link of it, or instance in any one author or century, where it appears to have been otherwise in the judgement or practice of any one Church or famous person. 13. Which Catholic custom of the Church, so fully consonant to Scripture and the evident mind of Christ, set forth in all his Evangelicall dispensations, both general to all men, and specially to infants in the Church, no judicious, sober, humble, and charitable Christian, can either doubt, with any show of reason, or dispute against, with any show of modesty. 1 Cor. 11.16. Contra Apostolicam fidem manifestissimam, contra ecclesiae ●un●●tissimum morem, nemo sentiat. Aug. ep. 28. Matth 18.17. 1 Tim. 3.15. Considering that as the custom of the Churches of Christ is stamped with the authority of a law, silencing all contradiction, and suppressing all novelty, by the Apostle S. Paul; so Christ himself bids us to hear the Church: which if it hold good in lesser censures and determinations of private Congregations, how much more is it our duty to be attentive to and observant of the Church's directions, which are Catholic; whose authority is very great and sacred, as the pillar and ground of Truth, holding it forth by doctrine and example, by Scripture and practise? Nor do I doubt that Christ and his Apostles left many things, as to the outward polity, practice, and ministration of Religion, less clear and express in the letter of the Word; that thereby the credit and authority of the Catholic Church might be more conspicuous and venerable with all peaceable and orderly Christians, who may safely defer this honour to the Catholic Church, and to every particular Church agreeing to it, as to acquiesce in a conformity to its judgement and practice, no way contrary to the Word of God; from which it cannot be presumed that the Catholic Church of Christ from the beginning, or in any Age, did vary, either through ignorance or wilfulness, however particular Churches and Teachers might. 14. The Catholic testimony of the Church of Christ is more than a bare humane or historic witness: it is so sacred, so divine, Quisquis Catholici dogmatis & moris sensum, divinitus per loca et tempora omnia dispensatum, contempserit, non hominem contemnit, sed Deum. Vin. Lyrin. so irrefragable, that it is more to be valued than an * Gal. 1.8. Angels from heaven; and therefore ought in all reason and conscience to end such controversies lately raised in the Church: and so it would have done long ago, if humane passions and interests had not swayed more with some men, than matter of conscience and Religion; or if the Baptism of infants were the only thing that some Anabaptists have an aching tooth at, or a mind to pull down. No, that cannot much hurt them; nor doth any mischief or inconvenience follow that pious custom, either to parents or children, yea much good and comfort accrues to both: Religion never thrived but with it; no point of faith is prejudiced by it; no Evangelicall truth or mercy is diminished or overstretched, but rather asserted and magnified to its due and divine extent. Yet Infant-baptisme must be still crucified between the policy of the Anabaptists and their partiality: their partiality urgeth one or two limited places against many pregnant and large ones; their policy, I fear, would attain something beyond, and more to the advantage of their popular spirits and designs, which have in many places been discovered, as far from equity and charity in civil regards, as they are in this of Baptism far from verity, modesty and antiquity; scornfully slighting the testimony of the Churches of Christ in all ages, for which (undoubtedly) they had sufficient warrant from Christ and his Apostles, even before the letter of the New Testament was written, or the Canon settled. Nor did they either need or expect a more explicit commission of baptising of infants of believing parents, than that which was sufficiently expressed, as in the general command, to make Disciples in all nations, baptising them; so also by the particular words and actions of Christ toward infants, not without check to his Disciples; also by his requiring all to be born again of Water and the Spirit, who pretend to be of the Kingdom of Heaven, that is, the visible Church; and lastly, by the former parallell-dispensations of God's mercy in the Covenant of grace, by Circumcision, to the members of his Church, as children of faithful Abraham, both young and old, men and infants. 15. Contrary to all which, for a few new men spitefully, peevishly, and everlastingly thus to contest, and, indeed, only cavil, I conceive, is not only a great irreverence and scorn put upon the Church of Christ, which we should respect, love and honour, as the mother of us all; Gal. 4.26. Matth. 28.20. John 14.26. John 16.13. but it is an high affront to Christ, to his Word, Truth, and Promise to be ever with it, even to the end of the world, by his Spirit leading it into all Evangelicall Truths, for precept and duty, as well as promise and comfort; also keeping it from all Catholic Apostasies into any error destructive to the foundation. John 13.20. If they that reject or despise any one of Christ's Messengers, despise himself and his father; how much more they that disbelieve, despise, and discredit so many of his Messengers and Ministers, who in all ages have by uniform word and practise declared to us the mind of Christ, as to this point of Infant-baptism? By which unhappy Controversy, as by many other, the strange, but just judgements of God, have of late, in full vials of wrath, been poured upon this Church of England, by the Anabaptistick spirit chiefly; after so much light and truth, peace and unity, grace and piety, poured forth upon us by God's former munificent mercy, sanctifying and sealing with his Spirit and grace in due time that Sacrament of Baptism, which thousands had received in their infancy, to their parent's comfort, to the infant's happiness, dying and living, also to the great glory of God in this, as other Churches in all ages. Nor is there to this day, after so many bicker and contests, so many public heats and flames kindled upon this and other accounts, any way of wisdom and meekness publicly used, by which to quench these flames of wildfire, which threaten not only to scorch, but utterly to consume this Reformed and truly Catholic Church, with all its true Ministers and holy ministrations: in which the Anabaptists are highly subservient to the Papists grand projects and designs; which is, to deface, disgrace, and quite overthrow all the frame of Reformed Religion, and the face of any either uniform or reformed Church in England. CHAP. XII. FOr my part, I freely profess, The sin of presumptuous delaying and denying baptism to Infants. that if the administration of Baptism in point of age and time, were in itself free and indifferent, so as men might be baptised when they will, and so baptise their children sooner or later, as they please, deferring it, as some of old did, even to their decrepit age and deathbeds, because they would not sin after it; if this were left to an indifferency, which I do no way think it is, any more than all other duties of the Lords Supper, prayer, hearing the Word preached, etc. are, which have no precise measure and limited time set, because they oblige always, as opportunity is offered; God's favours and indulgences import man's duty to accept and use them, as soon as the Lord offers them to us and ours; though Baptism be not, as S. Cyprian tells Fidus, confined to the eighth day after infant's birth, nor yet to the eighth year, yet when it may be duly had in the way of God's providence, it may not be delayed to the death of the child (unbaptised) without a great detriment to the infant so dying, and crime to the parents or guardians so delaying, and by their sottish negligence depriving the child of that visible means of grace which God hath allowed in his Church, Gr. Naz. orat. 40. de Baptis. a & eos baptizahimus qui (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) nec damnum nec gratiam sentiunt? 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Ita prorsus, si quod periculum urgeat. Praestat enim absque sensu (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) sanctificari, quam sine sigillo & initiatione abscedere. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. both to parents and their children: which is the judgement of Gregory Nazianzen, one of the ablest Divines that the Church ever had. As a due debt unlimited to any day of payment, is every day due; so the favours of God, and privileges of his Church, not precisely confined, but daily offered us, and not accepted, contract upon us a great sin, either of unbelief under the means, or affected negligence, undervaluing and ingratitude toward Divine Mercies: sins under which no Christian of a truly tender conscience will dare to lie seven years, no nor seven days, merely upon the delays and scruples of his own or other men's both foolish and sluggish hearts. As that a Gen. 17 14. soul among the Jews was precisely cut off from the Church of God, (both parents and children) who was not (unless in God's connivance and special dispensation, as in the b Josh. 5. forty years' pilgrimage in the wilderness) circumcised the eighth day; so may those among Christians justly seem to be cut off from the Church of Christ here and hereafter, which do presume to slight, neglect, and so not at all use Baptism to their children, according as God gives them in the uncertainties of life both opportunity and conveniency. God's leaving some things to our choice, discretion and ingenuity, must not be any remission, but an excitation to speedy duty, especially in settled Churches, where daily, at least weekly, opportunities are offered; which if denied by hot persecutions, the delay is more excusable, and (it may be) in some cases commendable, where parents have just cause to fear, lest their baptised children shall never attain by their paternal care such education as is correspondent to their Baptism: In which cases, I conceive, it was of old deferred; not because it was thought either unlawful or undesirable in itself, to baptise infants born in the Church, but for fear of the mischiefs attending persecution, and sometimes the parents were cold and negligent in their duty. If, I say, the time of Baptism were left to our freedom, which it is not, as I have showed; yet still the black brand and gross impudence of such a reproach, contempt, and error, as the ruder and spitefuller sort of Anabaptists cast upon this and all other Christian Churches, is most intolerable; while they dare to re-baptize such who have been once duly baptised (if it be indifferent when) in their infancy: which rebaptising of such as were once duly baptised in the Church, was ever judged as much a monster, and most insolent in all Christian Churches, as it would have been to renew or repeat circumcision among the Jews, which was not so much in express letter of Scripture forbidden, as made indeed impossible in nature: Ephes. 4.5. nor is repeating of Baptism so expressly forbidden in the Word of God, where (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) one Baptism is mentioned, (which place the Hemerobaptists or daily dippers slighted) as indeed it is, and always was excluded by the interpretation, tradition and practice of the Catholic Church; which no more allowed any to be twice baptised in Religion, or twice ordained to the Ministry, than twice born in nature: yea, this fancy, heresy, and novel insolency, was looked upon as the setting up of a new Gospel, another Jesus, and more Gods than one, as the ancient Councils and Fathers always determined, even in the case of S. Cyprians candid error. Con. African. can. 48. Synod. Capuensis an. 389. Zonar. in Con. Carthag. can. 53. Against whose judgement, for invalidating, and so repeating Baptism, where administered by Heretics and obstinate Schismatics, the Councils both of afric, Europe, and Asia determined, upon the ground of Scripture and Primitive custom; both as to the use of Infant-baptisme, and the not repeating of that or any other true baptism once received. Both which being such Catholic determinations of the Church, it is, with me, not in the least degree disputable, whether I should choose to conform to the Churches universal testimony, constant practice, and primitive tradition, in this and other modern disputes (as that of the government of Churches in larger distributions by Bishops above Presbyters and Deacons; so the use of the Lords day, instead of the Judaic Sabath, etc.) which are conform to the general scope, tenor and direction of Scripture; or rather comply, both sillily and shamefully, with those modern captious novelties and perverse dispute of some private spirits of yesterday, who dare to cast so great jealousies, blame and dishonour upon the Catholic Churches of Christ in all ages and places, as not only to suspect, but to proclaim them, both socially and singly, to have been either grossly ignorant, or most basely unfaithful, as to what the Apostles had delivered to them for the mind and will of the Lord, either by Epistle, word, or Example. No, I had far rather, with humility and charity, though in infirmity and ignorance, conform to the Catholic Church in errors and mistakes, (not fundamental or immoral, of which it never was guilty, nor will be) rather, I say, than by proud and pernicious curiosity, or by sceptical and schismatical novelty, either blemish the Church's Integrity, or break its Unity. Both which the Anabaptists ever have done, and ever will do (since their first eggshell and spawning in Germany) by their endless and peevish litigations touching Infant-baptisme; which though to some it seem but a small and circumstantial business, in point of time, yet the scorn, contempt, and abhorrency of the Sacrament, as applied to infants, is an error (as I have showed) of so spreading a venom and dangerous consequences, that it tends to overthrow all that is or hath been of religious polity and power too, of essence and order, in this and all true Churches, of which we have any record in Scripture or other Writers. CHAP. XIII. BEsides, this poisonous (and now so swollen) error of the Anabaptists in Engl. against Infant-baptism, The dangerous effects & principles of Anabaptism. is further soured by other seditious principles & infamous practices attending that opinion, wherewith some of them have taught the world long ago in Germany, as lately in England, to beware, lest in stead of water, they baptise both infants and elder people with blood and fire, as proclaiming all to be no Christians, nor better than Heathens, who will not come to their new dippings. Their error is not solitary, nor the sting of their schism either soft or blunt, or unvenomous; which doth not a little discover their opinion to be as far from the Spirit of Christ, as it is from the mind, meaning, and intent of Christ in his Word: nor are they now excusable (as Luther at first thought, but afterward recanted, when he saw the bad and bitter fruits of their new doctrine;) they cannot now with any colour plead simple or invincible ignorance (which, now, is boiled up by the heat of their spirits to obstinacy, contumacy, and insolency against this and all Churches both peace and practice) for they do still boldly persist in their tedious error, after so many Scripture-demonstrations, cleared and confirmed by the Catholic testimony and practice of the Church of Christ. Nor is their judgement or practice in other things accompanied with such meekness, modesty, charity, humility, and innocency, as might render this a venial error, or tolerable difference; which may grow as a weed (not very noxious or unsavoury) among many sweet flowers of Graces, Virtues, and good Works: like that of S. Candidissimi pectoris naevus charitatis velo obtegendu●. Aug. de Cypr. errore. Cyprian in point of rebaptising such as Heretics had baptised; which S. Austin calls (in that holy man and Martyr) a wart or mole in a fair and candid breast, to be covered with the veil of Christian charity. But the Anabaptistick fury flies in the very face of this and all Churches, pulling out the very eyes of Christians, by which they obtained their (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) first illumination, Hebr. 10.32. as Baptism was anciently called by the Fathers, and the Apostolic Author to the Hebrews: it not only slily picks at, but violently strives to overthrow the first foundation of all Christian Faith, Profession, Polity, Order, and Church-communion. Hence, besides its novelty and heterodoxie, it riseth naturally from so presumptuous an error, to pertness, sharpness, tumultuariness, sedition, haughtiness, contempt of all Christian men and Magistrates too, who will not either receive, or connive at, this and other their imperious errors. Who is the●, Minister or other, that differs from them, be he never so sober, grave, and holy, but he must be vilified, reproached, and openly railed at, by their libellous & scurrilous, either pens or tongues? Their greatest spite and malice lies (as the Jesuits) most leveled and implacable against the best and ablest Ministers, who retain both Catholic Ordination and Baptism; whose successful labours and excellent lives do most confute this and all other novel fancies; while themselves are, by the blessing of God, justified to all the Christian world (not willingly blind) to be Ministers, not only of the Letter and Water, but of the Spirit, Grace and Power. Such as desert Catholic Ordination and Government by Bishops, give greatest advantage to Anabaptists; for the pulling out of one cornerstone in a wall, makes way for others easily to follow. As all Anabaptists are against Bishops, so all the Ancients who are for Infant-baptism, as Catholic, are for Episcopal Government, even S. Jerome himself. Not that I think all men, who, it may be, less approve Infant-baptisme, than that of elder years, conceiving that practice to be more clear in the letter of the Scripture, have the same calentures and cruel distempers; many of them, I hope, may have sincerity to God-ward, and charity to those Christians who in this differ from them. But I conceive the tumultuating, rude, violent, and uncharitable Anabaptists (with all their Spawn of other Sects) have greatly sinned against the Lord Christ, and against his Church, both in England and elsewhere, also against his servants the Ministers of all ages and places, whom they have most injuriously slandered, and shamefully treated with great scorn, malice, and all manner of indignities that were within their reach and power; whom I pray God to forgive, giving them that true repentance, which may redeem them from that gall of bitterness, and bond of iniquity, in which they seem to lie: this is the worst I wish any of them. In order to which good desire, I thought it not amiss thus far to express my judgement, and as much as in me lies, to justify (after many others) in the point of Infant-baptisme, the doctrine and practice of my Mother the Church of England, and both its Fathers and Sons, who have suffered so undeservedly, and therefore complain so justly of, the mischiefs and miseries befallen and threatening them, from this dangerous party and faction; who resolve never to be satisfied in their perverse disputes and endless janglings; who with one puff blow away all that concurrent strength, which in the behalf of Infant-baptisme is truly and solidly mustered up, from the Covenant of Grace, from the tenor of Scriptures, from the proportion of Evangelicall privileges, from the relation which Christians in the Church have to God by Christ, from the Catholic custom and practice of all Churches old and new, from the joint suffrages of all a Conc. Carth. v. Milevit. an. 418. can. 11. Qui parvulos recentes ab utero matris baptizandos negat, Anathema fit. Conc. Gerundense anno 517. Parvuli, si infirmi fuerint, etiam eadem die qua nati sunt, si oblati fuerint, baptizentur. Can. 5. Conc. Bracarense an. 572. Praecipiant epis. ut infantes ad baptismum offerant. Councils, Fathers, and Church-Historians. Against all which cloud and army of Witnesses, they bring only two or three literal allegations, partially and incompleatly interpreted. They boast much, but falsely, of Tertullian in this point, whom they forsake in many others; who was a person, though excellently learned, and of high parts, yet immoderately passionate, easily transported, and in that very point, as I have showed, is either different from himself in other places, or to be understood in a b Tert. de bap. c. 18. Quid festinat innocens aetas ad remissionem peccatorum? meaning limited and occasional; either to the children of Heathens, yet untaught and unprofessing Christian Religion, or the children of Christians hurried up and down by persecutions, which in Tertullia's times were, if not constant, yet very frequent. After him they have found in six hundred years one c Anno 850. de reb. eccls c. 26. Walafridus Strabo, who seemed to scruple Infant-baptism, as not of primitive use, but shows no grounds of his scruple: and at last Ludovicus Vives, in his d Ludou. Vives in l. 1. c. 27. Aug. de civ. Dei. notes of late on S. Austin de civitate Dei, is produced as a witness against Antiquity; a Papist in all things else, and in this point differing from his own e Bellarm. de Baptis. c. 1. par. 3. So the Council of Trent. Church and Communion, if it were his opinion and judgement; which I see no cause to believe, because he proveth nothing, he not thinking it unlawful or vain, but (perhaps) not absolutely necessary to baptise all in infancy; to which f Naz. or. 40. de Bapt. Nazianzen inclines, except in case of death. But all these are either single Doctors and private opinions, or petty Pigmies and Mushrooms, compared to those g Propriae, occultae & privatae opiniunculae, à communis, generalis, & publicae sententiae autoritate secretae. Vin. Lir. c. 39 many Heroes, that Lebanon of tall Cedars, which were all advocates of Infant-baptisme in all Ages and Churches from the Apostles days. There is not any one of the Ancients doth dogmatically deny it as lawful, or so far doubt and dispute it, as to question the usual and approved practice of it from all times; which S. Austin so vehemently affirms, that in his Epistle to Volusia, he says, The h Consuetudo matris ecclesia in baptizandis parvulis nequaquam spernenda, nec omnino superflua deputanda, nec omnino credenda, nisi Apostolica esset traditio. Aug. ep. ad Volusiam. custom of our Mother the Church in baptising Infants, as it is not to be neglected as superfluous, so nor would it have been either practised or believed, unless it had been so delivered by the Apostles, as their undoubted sense and practise: which Pelagius did not, yea, could not with any colour deny, as i Aug. l. 1. de pec. mer. & remis. c. 26. Parvulos baptizandos esse concedunt (Pelagiani.) Qui contra autoritatem universalis ecclesiae proculdubio per Dominum & Apostolos traditum venire non possunt. S. Austin observes, though it had much served his design about original sin, if he could in that point have baffled the credit, custom and authority of the Catholic Church: which k Ep. lib. 3. ep. 8. ad Fidum. S. Cyprian, who lived in the second Century, so beyond all cavil or scruple, so industriously and fully sets down, that if there were no other testimonies of the Ancients, that alone would satisfy any sober man, being written, not upon any heat of dispute, but calmly and clearly, as of a matter ever done, and never under dispute in the Church to his days. But I have in this part done more than I designed, in order to advance not strifes and further contention, but Christian peace and charity on all sides in this Church and Nation, as to those religious differences which are a great occasion of our miseries. CHAP. XIV. The Romish advantages by the divisions and deformities of the Ch. of England. FRom the Deformities, Divisions, and Degeneration of Religion, also the Falsifications, Usurpations and Devastations, which of later years have been made by the violent sort of Anabaptists and other furious Sectaries, against the Unity and Authority, the Sanctity and Majesty of the Church of England, destroying its Primitive Order and Apostolic Government, its Catholic Succession, its holy Ordination, its happy and most successful Ministry, to the great neglect and contempt of all holy ministrations and duties of Religion; I cannot but further intimate to your piety and prudence (O my honoured Countrymen) that which is most notorious, and no less dangerous, both in religious and civil respects; namely, the great Advantages, Applauses and Increases, which the Roman, or Papal party daily gain against the Reformed Religion, as it was once wisely, honourably, and happily established, professed and maintained here in England: which is now looked upon by the more subtle, superstitious, and malicious sort of Papists, as deformed, divided, dissolved, desolated; so conclamate for dead, that they fail not with scorn to boast, that in England we have now no Church, no Pastors, no Bishops, no Presbyters, no true Ministry, no holy Ministrations, no Order, no Unity, no Authority, no Reverence, as to things Divine or Ecclesiastic. Insomuch that we must in this sad posture, not only despair of ever getting ground against the Romanists, by converting any of them from the errors of their way to the true Reformed Religion; but we must daily expect to lose ground to the Popish party and their Proselytes: there being no banks or piles now sufficient to keep the Sea of Rome from overflowing or undermining us, in order to advance their restless interests; which have been, and still are, mightily promoted, not by the reverend Bishops and the other Episcopal Clergy (who are men of Learning, Piety, Prudence, and Martyr-like constancy) as some men with more Heat than Wit, more Spite than Truth, have in their mechanic and vulgar Oratory of late miserably and falsely declaimed; but by those who have most done the Pope's work, while they have seemed most furiously to fly in the Pope's face, as popularly zealous against Popery, and yet at the same time by a strange giddiness, headiness, and madness, they have risen up against that Mother-Church which bore them, and those Fathers in it, who heretofore mightily defended them and theirs from the talons and gripes of that Roman Eagle: and this not with childish scufflings or light skirmishings, to which manner of fight the illiterate weakness and rudeness of our new Masters and Champions hath reduced those Controversies; but with such a Panoply or complete Armour of proof, such sharp Weapons, such ponderous Engines, such rare dexterity of well-managed Powers, raised from all Learning, both Divine and Humane, that the high places and defences of Rome were not able to stand before them heretofore, when they were battered by our Jewels, our Lakes, our Davenants, our Whites, our Halls, our morton's, our Andrews, and the late invincible Usher, who deserved to be Primate, not only of Ireland, but of all the Protestant Forces in the world. All these were Bishops, Worthies of the first three, seconded in their ranks by able and orderly Presbyters, as Whitakers, Perkins, Reynolds, Whites, Crakanthorps', Sutliffs, and innumerable others, while our Regiments were orderly, our Marching comely, and our Forces both united and encouraged. Whereas, now, there is no doubt but the merciless mowing down and scattering of the Clergy of England, like Hay, with the withering and decay of Government, Regularity and Order in this Church, these have infinitely contributed to the Papal harvest, and Romish agitations; the glean of whose Emissaries will soon amount to more than the sheaves of any the most zealous and reformed Ministers in England. By the Papal interests and advantages, I do not mean the Roman Clergies preaching or propagating those Truths of Christian Doctrine & Duties, which (for the main) they profess in common with us and all Christian Churches: if any of them be thus piously industrious, I neither quarrel at them, nor envy their successes, but rather I should rejoice in them, with S. Paul; Phil. 1.18. because however Christ crucified is preached, by some whom common people will either more reverence, or sooner believe (than they generally do the decayed, despised, & divided Ministers of Engl.) who seem to have (many of them) so small abilities, and carrying so little show or pretence of any good authority for their work ministerial; nor can they be potent or esteemed abroad, who are so impotent and disesteemed at home. But I mean that Papal Monarchy, or Ecclesiastical Tyranny, by which the Church, or rather the Court of Rome, (by such sinister Arts and unjust Policies, as were shamefully used and discovered in the Tridentine conventicle) seeks to usurp and continue an imperial power over all Churches and Bishops, as if there had been but one Apostle, or one Apostolic Church planted in the world; also to corrupt & abuse that ancient Purity, Simplicity, and Liberty of Religion, which was preserved among Primitive Churches and their coordinate Bishops: Further, without fear of God or reverence of man, opposing some Divine Truths and undoubted institutions of Christ, also imposing such erroneous Doctrines and superstitious Opinions upon all Christians, to be believed, and accordingly practised, as become not the severity and sanctity of true Religion; adding to that holy foundation (which was indeed first laid by the great Apostles, and continued happily for many hundred years, by the successive Bishops of Rome) those after- superstructures, not of ceremonies only, which are tolerable (many of them, like feathers, making but little weight in Religion) but of corrupt Doctrines, and superstitious Duties, as seem (at best) impertinent to true Piety; but some of them are erroneous, sacrilegious, pernicious. In some things they are boldly adding to, or detracting from the Doctrine and Institutions of our blessed Lord Jesus Christ: in other things they impose, for sacred and necessary, such opinions and customs, which are but the rust and dross, the disease and deformity of Christian Religion, contracted in the long ignorance, darkness, and almost barbarity of times, Acts 17.30. which God winked at: but now they appear highly and justly scandalous, yea, intolerable to more judicious and less credulous Christians, who are very sensible, not only of that offence, which many Papal Injunctions and Observations give to themselves, as Christians, but also to the very Heathens, to Jews, and to Mahometans, who cannot reconcile in any Reason or Religion the Idolatrous use of Images and Hosts among Papists, to which they must submit, if they will be in communion with them, or converted to be Christians; nor yet those Tridentine Terrors and anathemas of eternal damnation, which are thundered by them against all those who will not, against Christ's express Word, own as Truth, and submit to as necessary, those opinions and practices among Papists, which seem either impious or impertinent, as to true Faith and a good Conscience. Against all which burdens (too heavy for any wise and generous Christians to bear, when once duly informed of the weight & danger of them, and duly reform from them) as the great Wisdom, Piety, and Order of the Ch. of Engl. in its sacred Ministry and holy Ministrations, was heretofore the greatest bar and bulwark in all the Christian world: so the disadvantages of the Reformed Religion are now so palpable, and the danger of the people of this Nation, as so obvious in their returning to that Egypt and Babylon again, which is not the Church of Rome, but its disease and oppression; that I know not in ordinary providence any means can be used, or is left, to stop the daily prevalencies of Popery, and the great Apostasy of England to the Romish superstition and subjection in aftertimes, unless God stir up such Wisdom, Zeal and Care in those that have honest hearts joined with public power and influence, not so much to fleece and depress Popish Recusants by pecuniary exactions (which is to set Religion to sale, and to make merchandise of men's errors, rather than fairly to persuade and win them by the proper and persuasive engines of true Religion;) but (rather) duly to restore and speedily assert the Honour, Order, Succession, Unity, Authority and Majesty of this Reformed Church and its Catholic Ministry: from which when the Papists see ourselves to be such profound Revolters, with what face can we expect they should ever come in to our Reformation, which they now behold with joyful and disdainful eyes, so mangled, so deformed, so massacred by our own hands? How can we with Justice, Honour, or Humanity, inflict severe penalties upon Papists, as refusing to conform to our Church and Religion, when they protest, with so much truth, to our faces, they cannot see any Church, any Religion among us, as uniform, public, authentic, constant? What (they say) formerly had the goodliest figure and fairest presence of a Christian Church, and the best Reformed of any, is now deformed, ruined, demolished; nothing but scattered rafters and pieces of that shipwreckt vessel now appear floating up and down in a restless and foaming sea of faction, opposition and confusion, between Bishops, Ministers, and People: some are Episcopal, others Presbyterian, a third sort Independent: all are disparate or opposite in Discipline, some are Heterodox in Doctrine: the Anabaptists rise against all, and the Quakers soar above all. To which of all these, with many other Sects, shall an honest-hearted Papist apply himself, to be safe and settled in Religion? If to the poor and depressed remains of Bishops, and the Episcopal Clergy, who yet adhere to the Church of England; alas, they are weak and exhausted, contemned by many, pitied by some, but asserted by few or none, according to their true merit in former ages, or their present Worth, Courage, Constancy and Patience in this. If the Romanists go to the Presbyterian party, which like small shoots sprang out so thick in England, upon the cutting down of Episcopacy, to which they all formerly submitted; these, besides their Levity, Parity, and Inconstancy, as to their former Stations, Opinions, and Oaths, seem so unseasonably insolent, and magisterially domineering, before they had got a full and just dominion, that all sober men think them rather popular, plebeian, & impertinent in their heats, transports & passions, than so modest, wise, and grave, as becomes those who will undertake to wrest Government out of the hands of their superiors and betters every way, and to impose a novelty of untried and undesired Discipline upon such a great and stout Nation as England is; which disdaining the insolency of Popes, and offended at the indiscretion of some Bishops, will hardly ever bear the pertness of petty Presbyters, who cannot want Vanity, Impudence and Arrogancy, when they fancy themselves in a supremacy of Power above People, Parliaments and Princes: for they affect no less, as Christ's due and theirs too. If the tossed Romanists run to the spruce and self-conceited Independents for shelter, because these fine new Masters seem to have patents for Christian Liberty, and urge a Magna Charta from Christ, to be accountable to none in matters of Religion, but their own little Congregation, Church, or Body, in which, as in an Ecclesiastic Corporation or free Burrough of Religion, they may hang and draw, exercise high and low Justice upon men's souls as they list in their little Conventicles; yet here the poor Papist finds so much of a rude and exotic novelty, such a gross show of Schism, such variety, such an inconsistency, such a plebeian petulancy, such pitiful and ridiculous affectations, and arrogating of Church-power in some of the plebs, and such contempt of it in others, that he cannot think it is other than some pieces of joseph's bloody coat, or some torn limbs of his body, compared to what Splendour, Order, Strength, Beauty, Unity, Decency, and Majesty in Doctrine and Discipline, in Faith and holy Duties, was formerly to be observed, even to the envy & admiration of sober Papists, in the Church of England; how much more in the Ancient and Catholic Churches grand Combinations, from which these petty fractions and crumbling of Christians seem most abhorrent and dissonant? This goodly Cedar, then, of the Church of England being thus broken and hewn down, and nothing like it, or comparable to it, planted in its room, but such Shrubs and Mushrooms as grow of themselves out of the rankness of the earth (vulgar humours and passions) under whose shade any Egyptian Vermin, Frogs, or unclean Birds may hide themselves; no wonder if the Papists triumph in their sufferings and constancies, if they despise all our Presbyterian, Independent, Anabaptistick, and fanatic Novelties; if they rejoice in that vengeance which they conclude God hath made upon our Schisms, Errors, Obstinacies, and Persecutions against them, by our mutual confusions. Hence must daily and necessarily follow secret inclinations and accessions to the Roman party, by all those who are not well grounded in the Reformed Religion, or not much prejudiced against the Popish Errors, or are indifferent for any Religion which is most easy or pleasing. These at length will warp to the Roman party, as the most specious of any: so that unless there be a speedy restauration of the honour of the Church of England, I see not how it is possible to prevent that fatal relapse, either to Romish superstition and slavery, or else to a dreadful persecution, which will in time necessarily follow those dissipations and destructions of this Reformed Church, its Ministry, Government and Religion; which some men have already too much, & still do, beyond measure, so industriously promote, to the excessive joy and gratifying of the Popish party and designs, which are not only invasive upon the honour and freedom of this Nation, but highly scandalous to our Reformed Profession, and dangerous to our consciences; especially as we yet stand convinced of the Errors, Superstitions and Sacrileges of the Romish Religion, since it lapsed from the Primitive Institutions of Christ, the patterns of the Apostles, the ancient Communion of Christian Churches, and the fraternal Coordination of Bishops, who were always united in orderly, happy, and harmonious Aristocracies, rather than subordinate to any one Monarchical Supremacy, as to Ecclesiastical Power and Jurisdiction: however they had such regulation and primacy of order, by Patriarches and Metropolitans among Bishops and the representers of several Churches, as became wise men, that were numerous when they met in great Councils or Church-Assemblies. CHAP. XV. I Cannot but (here) recommend it to the most serious consideration of all wise and worthy Christians, The wide and just distances between the Reformed and Romanists. who make conscience, and not policy, of Religion, as Christian and Reformed. That, however the soberest sort of Christians in Engl. do in many, and possibly in most things necessary to salvation (which are not very numerous) agree both charitably and cheerfully with those of the Roman Church, as to our common Faith in Jesus Christ, and hope of Salvation by his merits, in the way of an holy life and good works; yet, as it will never be hoped, that the Papists shall return to a communion with us, while we are so divided among ourselves, and daily excommunicating each other from Church, and Christ, and Heaven; so it will be very difficult and dangerous, both in point of conscience and prudence, of sin and safety, for you or your posterity, to return to a plenary and visible Communion with the Papal profession, or Roman Conventions: considering how we now stand convinced in our judgements, and so will many of your posterity ever be, until all Books of controversy, which no purgatory Index can correct, are burnt or buried, by which you and they must needs be so well informed, as to be justly opposite and uncompliant to those Errors, Superstitions and Sacrileges, which the Roman party seeks to impose upon all those that will have visible communion with them; which no conscientious Christian can swallow down, when they appear to him not only different from, but contradictive, in plain terms, to that Word of God, which themselves, with us, do own to be the rule of faith and manners, the measure of all true Religion: contrary to which, some of their Tenets, Injunctions and Practices seem to us, either to rob God of his peculiar honour, and omniscience, which is to search hearts, to hear and answer the prayers of our souls as well as our lips; or to rob Christ of the glory of his only Merit, Mediation, Satisfaction, and Intercession for us; or lastly, to rob the Church of Christ of that pure and plenary perception of Christ's holy Institutions and blessed Sacraments, to which they add and detract as they please, performing religious offices, most-what, in such a language as most people cannot understand, and so not be edified, either in their judgements or affections; which ought, in all reason by holy duties, to be either more enlightened, or judiciously warmed and devoutly excited to the knowledge of God, to the love of Christ, to an holy Life and mutual Charity. To remove all which Deformities, Disorders and Indignities, put upon religious Mysteries by the Church of Rome, the Church of England, with great Prudence, Piety and Charity, did assert and restore to a scriptural rectitude, primitive simplicity, and sober decency, the state of this Church and Nation, by a just, necessary, and prudent Reformation of those Romish Errors, Superfluities and Corruptions, which had with great fraud and fallacy prevailed upon this, as other parts of Christendom here in the Western world. Which great and happy work of due Reformation was begun, carried on, and completed, not by any foreign or intestine Swords, not by popular and tumultuary rudeness (as in many places) which are the odious methods of the Devil to blast, over-drive and pervert due and true Reformation in Churches or States; but in God's peaceable, just, and holy way, by such public, lawful and complete Authority, both Ecclesiastical and Civil, as this Church and Nation had originally in itself, without any authoritative or subordinate dependence upon any foreign State or Church, Prince or Prelate: however it did in Charity so comply for many years, and correspond with the pristine renown and eminency of the Roman Church, as might most preserve Order and unity in the Christian world; till it felt, as well as saw, the Roman Yoke to be intolerable in honour and conscience. Which Independent and absolute state of this Church and Monarchy, as to the original right and power of it in itself, hath been unanswerably asserted, as by others, so of late by those very reverend, learned and judicious persons, who have made it their business in particular Tracts, to defend this Church and Christian State, from the just charge of any unjust Schism, See B. Bramhall, Sir Roger Twisden, Dr. Hammond of Schism. in respect of the Roman Communion and Jurisdiction, or usurpation rather; resuming upon good grounds, both as to Divine and Humane Laws, that supreme power which is inherent and unalienable in this Nation, both in Prince, Nobility, Prelates and People, for the preserving of true Religion and reforming it, as need shall require, in order to the Honour, Peace and Happiness, both of Prince and People, Church and State; who never did, nor indeed ever could, alienate or give away from themselves and their posterity, those primitive & ancient Rights or Immunities of the Nation, which if any had in the darkness & drowziness of times by great artifices and pretensions encroached upon, all Reason and Justice required, that when Prince and People awaked out of their dreams and superstitious slumbers, they should reassume those honorary powers, and hereditary privileges of Church and State, which were cunningly lurched or filched from them, while they were dozed or asleep; without which the welfare of this polity and entire Nation, both in secular and religious regards, could not be preserved by honest Magistrates, conscientious Ministers, or wise and valiant Princes. Yet, as our wise, godly, and sober Reformers (first and last) did, worthy of the Honour and Piety of this Church and Nation, vindicate the civil and religious Rights of both, in all necessary points and interests of Doctrine and Government: so their charity was no less cautious and commendable than their courage, in this, that as they did duly reform what they thought amiss, and establish what they judged in Piety and Prudence best; so they did not by any heat and fury of popular transport, either unnecessarily or uncharitably affect to give any offence to the Romanists, by such distances as needless and groundless Innovations must needs occasion, either to that or any other Christian Church in the world; with all whom they ever aimed, by their moderation, to preserve & merit a Christian communion & correspondency; not intending to schismatize or separate from them or their Christian Predecessors, as to any Christian band and tie of Christian Verity or Charity; not as to any point of Faith, Morality or Sanctity; not as to any right Order and Catholic succession of the Evangelicall Ministry; not as to that Apostolic Government, Inspection and Authority, which either was of old, or still is preserved in the Roman Church, or any other; nor, last of all, did they intend to vary from them in those things of honest policy and decent ceremony, which were most commended by the Prudence and Piety of Antiquity: only they retained and rejected, as they thought most became this Church in the use of its Liberty, in matters Ceremonial; wherein the Roman, as all Churches, have like freedom left them, to be used with that Modesty, Conscience and Charity, which becomes all Christian Churches, without giving or receiving any offence; as St. Ambrose long ago expressed his sense to S. Austin. But the aim of our wise Reformers (who rather chose to be Martyrs & Confessors for the Truth, than popular Praters or Compliers with State-policies and private interests) was only this, to purge away that dross and dust which Christ's floor had contracted by slovenly labourers in his husbandry. They cast away the chaff, but retained the wheat well winnowed: they reform those gross Superstitions in Prayer, Sacrileges in Sacraments, Superfluities in Ceremonies, Usurpations as to this Church's liberty and authority, with all blind Innovations of later date (compared to true primitive Antiquity;) all which were as evidently discernible by the reformed or restored light of Learning and Religion, which God then brought into the Christian world, to be upon the face of the than Roman Church, as the leprosy of Naaman was upon Gehazi's forehead; if neither they nor we may be judges, but the pregnant testimonies of holy Scriptures evidently setting forth the institutions of Christ, the Doctrine and Practices of the Apostles, and the primitive constitutions of Churches. All these further cleared to us (if any thing be dark or dubious) by the joint and concurrent suffrages of the first Councils, the ancient Fathers, and all Ecclesiastical Historians; which, together, aught to be valued far beyond the sense or example of the Roman, or any one particular Church, as the immovable bounds and unalterable measures of true Religion, as to the substance and essentials of it. Nor doth any particular Church (though heretofore never so justly famous, as that of Rome was) merit the honourable name and title of Christ's Church, or Catholic, but rather of (so far) Apostatick and Antichristian, when the Pastors and People of it do, not by insensible degrees & unawares slide into venial errors and small abuses; but after so clear a light and conviction, as the last (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) regeneration of Learning and Religion hath afforded these parts of the world, they yet wilfully and obstinately persist to corrupt, no less than pervert, the Doctrine and Institutions of Christ Jesus, who is the great Pastor of his Church, and chief Bishop of our Souls, Matth. 17.5. whose voice all parts of it ought readily to hear, and humbly to obey at all times, without regard to the antiquity or prevalency of any errors or abuses in former times; Id pulcherrimum quod verissimum; illud verissimum quod antiquissimum. Tert. to which no time or use can give authority or validity against the first appointments of Christ, which are every way, as the ancientest, so the best, for Truth, Comfort and Safety, to any Church, and to every Christians Soul. CHAP. XVI. Irreconcilable differences between Reformed Truths and Romish Errors, which are as manifest and obstinate. I Shall not need (here) to enumerate at large, and in particular points, those many and great differences in Religion, which make your and your posterities return to the Roman compliance and communion impossible; if you have judgements to understand, or consciences to act according to their dictates out of the Word of God, understood in the sense of the Catholic Doctors and Councils of the first 600 years after Christ. The work is already done by so many able Writers in this Church, that it is needless to repeat, and scarce possible to add more weight to what hath been by them alleged, to justify their protestation against, and reformation of the errors, abuses and corruptions of the Church of Rome. Papists pertinacy against the true Canon of Scripture. He that seriously considers the Fraud, Falsity and Pertinacy of the Romanists in that one grand point, the Canon of the Scripture, which is and must be (when all is done that Policy and Art can invent) the main pillar and standard of true Religion, cannot but grow very jealous of their honesty in particular points of lesser concernments, when he shall see, beyond all reply or forehead, that they have in the Council of Trent, under the highest anathemas or Curses of all that differ from them, assumed into the Canon of Scriptures divinely inspired, written and delivered to the Church as the Word of God, those Apocryphal Books, which however we (with the Ancient Churches) value according to their Worth, Truth, Credit and use, yet we receive them not into the canon or rule of Faith; because we find for certain, that neither the Greek nor Latin Churches of old, neither Jews nor Christians, Councils nor Fathers, for 1400 years, did ever so own or receive them. Which Truth, after many others, and beyond any other (if I may say it without envy) is exactly and fully cleared of late by a person, Dr. Cousins his late History of the Scriptures. whose reputation formerly clouded by some popular jealousies (as to his Sincerity and Constancy in the Reformed Religion of the Church of England) deserves to have its true lustre for Love and Honour with every true Protestant at home, as he hath abroad, for that learned Industry, Courage and Honesty, which he hath showed in that particular, to assert the main hinge of Religion, the Canon of the Scriptures, against the Papists effrontery in that particular; which hath engaged them in such a Dilemma, as is hard to be avoided by the greatest sophisters of the Roman party. For if the Canon of the Scriptures be such, as they now obtrude, including the Apocryphal books, than did their Church err for so many hundred years before it so owned them for properly Canonical; Cajetan in c. 10. Estheri. as Cardinal Cajetan confesseth, who saith, that all Fathers and Councils in their expressions as to the larger Canon of Scriptures, must be reduced ad Hieronymi limam, to S. Jeroms file. If the Canon be such, as we with the Ancient Churches, with Josephus, S. Jerom, Ruffinus, Aug. de civ. Dei c. 36. & cont. 2. Gaudentii epis. c. 23. Hieron. in Pro. Gal. & ad Demetriad. Ruffi. in Symb. the Council of Laodicea, Gregory Nazianzen, S. Austin in his riper years, and others, did and do hold, as to the Old Testament; then is the Church of Rome now in a very great and obstinate error. So that one way or other the Pope's Infallibility and his party is shrewdly endangered, unless they distinguish (to salve their credit) the books into Protocanonicos & Deuterocanonicos, Books of Divine Authority and Ecclesiastical use, as Sixtus Sen. Bibl. l. 1. and Stapleton Fid. doct. l. 9 c. 6. do. To tell you further, how undigestible to sober Christians (because Preter-scripturall and anti-scriptural) the Roman practice and opinion is, of worshipping and praying to Saints departed, and to Angels; of worshipping with Divine worship the Images, Crosses, and Relics, which they so credulously and highly prize; their so unprofitable using of a Language in their Divine and public Services, which to common people is not understood; so far from Religion and the Apostles Rule, that it is against all sense and reason, 1 Corin. 14 9 1 Cor. 14.19. against the end of speech and devotion, which is to instruct or edify the hearers; their snares of celibacy, and such vows as many have cause to repent full sore, either that they made them, or no better kept them. Add to these, their profitable and popular imaginations of Purgatory, they applying not only Prayers, but Masses and Oblations, Pardons and Indulgences, yea other men's merits besides Christ's, to those that are dead as well as to the living: and this in so mercenary a way, as makes the most ingenuous Papists not a little ashamed, to see Piety so much a servant to Policy, and Religion a lackey to Superstition. Add to all these so oft decantated Instances of Papal errors and presumptions, which have so little Scripture for them, one enormous Error both in practice and opinion, which hath so much Scripture-evidence against it, as nothing can be desired more; yet in this, when we would have healed Babylon, she refused to be healed. Jerem. 51.9. This is their so great, The sacrilegious obstinacy of Romanists in the Lord's Supper, as to the Cup, etc. rude and sacrilegious maiming of the Lords Supper, by their partial communicating of the Bread only to the people, without the Cup; then their strange racking of Christian's Faith against all sense and reason, nay beyond all Scripture-phrase and proportion of Sacramental expressions, or mysterious predications, to believe they do not receive so much as Bread, but another substance under the accidents and shows of Bread. What learned Romanist can deny, but that both Clergy and Laity did, * Olim omnes fideles qualibet die cum sacerdote corpori & sanguini Christi communicabant. Durand. Rat. off. div. l. 4. for above a thousand years, receive the Lords Supper in both kinds, after the constant use of all Primitive Churches, the Apostles Practise, and Christ's Institution? Nor is there any more doubt, but that the ancient Churches received those holy Mysteries with an high veneration indeed of that Body and Blood of Christ, Roman obstinacy and credulity in Transubstantiation. which was thereby signified, conveyed and sealed to them in the truth and merits of his Passion; but yet without any Divine Adoration of the Bread and Wine, or any imagination that they were transubstantiated from their own seeming Essence and Nature to the very Body and Blood of Christ. B. Ushers Answer to the Jesuits Challenge about real Presence. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Iren. l. 1. c. 9 Which fancy of (Metemsomasis) changing the Body and Substance of Sacramental signs into the bodily Substance of the Thing signified and represented by them (as the incomparable Primate of Ireland hath observed out of Irenaeus) began from the juggle of one Marcus a Greek Impostor, or juggling Presbyter, who using long Prayers at the Celebration of the Eucharist, had some device to make the Cup and Wine appear of a purple, or red and bloody colour, that the people might think, at his invocation the Grace from above did distil Blood into the Cup. After this the imagination spread from Greeks to Latins, by popular and credulous fancies, promoted much by one a Lib. de corp. & Sang. Christ. Who lived an. 850. Videtur agnus in manibus, & cruor in chalice, etc. Paschasius Radhertus, who in a legendary spirit tells us of Flesh and Blood, of a Lamb and a little Child, of appearing to those Receivers that were doubtful of Christ's corporal presence; so he tells of limbs and little fingers found in the hands and mouths of Communicants. From hence Damascen among the Greeks, and P. Lombard among the Latins, carried on this credulity, or vain curiosity, using all their wits to make good this strange and impossible transmutation of disparate subjects and substances: in which having nothing from Sense or Reason, Nature or Philosophy, from Scripture-Analogy, or Sacramental and Typical predications, Exod. 12.21. 1 Cor. 5.7. 1 Cor. 0.4. Ezek. 37.11. Gen. 41.26. Dan. 4.22. frequent in Scripture (as the Lamb is called the Passeover, so Christ our Passeover; Christ the Rock, Vine, Door; these dry bones are the house of Israel; the seven ears of corn are seven years, etc. the Tree is thou, O King) to prove the Miracle, they fly to absolute omnipotency, whether God will or no, and shut out all reasoning from Sense, Philosophy, Scripture. Nor do they regard ancient Fathers and Councils: all which, though highly and justly magnifying the great Mystery, yea, and the Elements consecrated, as related to and united with the Body of Christ, as Signs and Seals of its Reality, Truth, use and merit to a sinner; yet generally they held them to be substantially and physically Bread and Wine, but Sacramentally, relatively, or representatively (only) the Body and Blood of Christ: as the Council of Constantinople anno 754 consisting of 338 Bishops, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Bertramus li. de corp. & sang. Christi. Panis ille vinumque figuratè Christi corpus & sanguis existit. did affirm, the Bread to be the Body of Christ, not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not in substance, but in resemblance, use and appointment. Which Doctrine, as Catholic, was maintained to the Emperor Carolus Calvus, by Bertramus or Patrannus, anno 880. which was also maintained in England by Johannes Scotus in King alfred's time, until Lanfranks days, anno 1060. who condemned that Book of Scotus about the Sacrament, agreeable to the opinion of Bertram; whose Homily expressing his judgement at large against Transubstantiation, was formerly read publicly in Churches on Easter day, in order to prepare men for the right understanding and due receiving the Lords Supper. Nor did the Doctrine of Transubstantiation obtain in the Church, until the year 1225. when Pope Innocent the third in the Council of Lateran published it for an Oracle, Conc. Later. c. 1. Christi corpus & sanguis in Sacramento altaris sub speciebus panis & vini veraciter continentur; Transubstantiatis pane in corpus & vino in sanguinem divina potestate. That the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ are truly contained under the forms of Bread and Wine, the Bread being transubstantiated into the Body of Christ, and the Wine into the Blood of Christ, by the power of God. Hence followed the invention of Concomitancy, which presuming that the Communicant received under the accidents and show of Bread, the whole Body of Christ, and so his Blood, it was judged rather superfluous than necessary (yea and less safe in some respects) for the Lay-people to receive the Cup, or Wine, and Blood of Christ apart, as he instituted, and the Church of old, even the Roman, constantly practised, as do the Greeks at this day, according to what Christ commanded, and in what sense he gave it, and called it real Bread and Wine: for such he took, such he broke, such he blessed, such he gave to the Disciples, when he said, that is, this Bread, is my Body, this cup is my Blood; such S. Paul understood them to be, and so declares this the mind of Christ, as he had received it immediately from Christ, The Bread which we break, is it not the Communion of the Body of Christ? For we are all partakers of that one Bread. So, 1 Cor. 10.17. 1 Cor. 11.27. whosoever shall eat this bread and drink this cup unworthily. Let a man examine himself before he eat of that bread. Certainly either the Apostles expressions must be affectedly very dark, and his meaning different from his words, or he was quite of another mind than the Papists are at this day, who durst, in the all-daring Council of Trent, damn all those who follow Christ's example, use his words, and are of the Apostles judgement, expressing their sense of the blessed Sacrament in his words; which we think much safer to follow, both in the use of Sacramental Bread and Wine, communicated to all Receivers, and in the persuasion we have of our receiving true Bread and Wine, yet duly consecrated, and so Sacramentally united to the real Body and Blood of Christ, which we faithfully behold, thankfully receive, and reverently adore in that blessed Mystery, according to the ancient Faith, Judgement, Reverence and Devotion of the Church of Christ, void of sacrilegious novelties, and incredible superstitious vanities. If we Christians of the reformed Church of England had no other wall of separation to keep us from the Papal communion, than these two so palpable and gross opinions, with their consequences, so rigidly enjoined upon all Christians under pain of God's eternal curse, yet both so dissonant from and opposite to the example of Christ and the words of the Apostle; these were sufficient to keep sober Christians at an eternal distance from them, lest (knowingly) partaking of their sins, and abetting their wilful and obstinate sacrilege, Rev. 18.4. Mal. 15.3, 6. we also partake of their punishment, who in vain serve God after the commandments and traditions of men, contrary to the Divine Word and Prescription. Nor will the silly shifts and pitiful salvoes serve here, which are used by some Romanists, whose Learning, Wit and Sophistry are all set on work to take off the aspersion, odium and envy of these gross and rude Innovations. How childish & ridiculous is it to talk of the Pope's imaginary infallibility, or the Roman Churches usurped Supreme Authority, in cases expressly contrary to the Institution of Christ, and the Apostles explication; from whom the Church of Rome profess to derive their Religion! Nor may they with any foreheads or modesty, becoming good Christians, so rudely vary from them; if they desire to have the name and merit of faithful and good Christians; whose greatest Liberty, Joh. 14.21, 24. Duty and Honour is, if they love Christ, to keep his commandments, and neither for pride nor policy to warp from them, and after clear remonstrances to refuse to return in case of straying to a conformity with them: which obstinacy makes little for the Pope's infallibility, or Rome's supreme Authority, never challenged by Popes, or owned by any other Bishops in the Church for 600 years after Christ, nor by Pope Gregory the Great, who, as an holy and humble Bishop, abhorred the title and pride of that name, Universal Bishop, as appears in his works, and others of the Ancients, of whom I gave a particular account in my Hieraspistes, p. 249. Yet these two are the main hinges on which the unhappy disputes of Christendom do turn, and the chief anvils on which the animosities between Protestants and Papists are now hammered, as otherwhere, so here in England. The ruin of which famous Church is the greatest prize which the Romish party hath gotten since Luther's days, who began, not without his passions and infirmities, that pious Apostasy; which being found just and holy, moved, as other Churches, so this of England, not to forsake the communion of the Church of Rome, so far as it was or is a Church of Christ, but only so far as it seemed to have been oppressed with a Synagogue of Satan, deformed with such sinful deformities and sottish fedities, besides their Court-tyrannies, as became no Christians to endure, who were either not in the dark (and so could see the need they had to get out of such a dungeon, full of mire and darkness) or were at their own dispose, as was the state of the Nation and Church of England, depending on none, nor subject to any, but God alone. These so oft recocted Crambes of Popish controversies, as I delight not to aggravate, so I am forced here to touch some of them, to show you (my honoured Countrymen) as what cause the Church of England had to reform herself, with what prudence she did it; so how inconsistent it must be with good conscience, for us in Engl. to revert to the Popish Communion, being of so different persuasions from them: which wretched Apostasy (being the grand design and agitation of Roman Counsels) will in time draw this Nation away from God's rectitudes to man's obliquities, if the Roman furnace and bellows be so plied and advanced for them by these operators of several sects and factions, whose end will be, whatever their aim is, quite to melt down the former fashion of the Church of England, and its well-reformed state of Religion, that it may by degrees run into the Roman mould and form. CHAP. XVII. NOt that I repeat these differences, Necessary separation and distance from Rome, without uncharitableness. 1 Joh. 1.5. & 4.8. in order to increase or continue uncharitable bitternesses among any good Christians, whose hearts are honest, though their judgements may be erroneous: the blessed God (who is both light and love) knoweth that I have not any design to widen the sad breaches of Christendom, or to hinder the charitable closings of them, so far as may stand with good conscience and Catholic truth; whose rule and ground ought to be the Word of God rightly understood, which is its own best interpreter, and plain in those things of Duty and Persuasion, 2 Tim. 3.16. of Faith and Devotion, which are most necessary to salvation. I confess I cannot but vehemently approve (being now past juvenile heats and popular fervours in Religion) the pious and learned endeavours of those excellent men, who after Melanchthon, Cassander, Saravia, Wicelius, Thuanus, Grotius, Casaubon, and others, have not only seriously deplored the sad rents and wounds of Christian Churches, but sought to pour in Wine and Oil of wholesome and unpassionate counsels; not palliating apparent errors, yet not aggravating needless jealousies, nor inflaming mutual angers, in order to gratify either the sacrilegious policies of Princes, or the pride of Popes, or the factiousness of people. I have no Antipathies in me, contracted by any Education, Custom, or Acquaintance, against the Learned, Wise, and Worthy Romanists (or any others) either as men or Christians: in both respects I love and esteem them, for their many excellent parts and works, which are worthy of commendation and imitation. To them and their pious predecessors, with whom we in England once were in full communion, we thankfully owe (under God) (as did our forefathers) the successive honour and happiness of our being baptised, and admitted to the privileges of Christ's flock and people: to them we owe that conservation, for the main, of true Religion as Christian (although it were wrapped up in some either rotten rags or unhandsome clouts (as Christ in the Manger) for many years;) the substance of which our Reformation in England no more changed, than the Angel did the person of Jehoshua the high Priest, Zach. 3.3, 4. when he bid take away from him the filthy garments wherewith he was clothed, and to put on him change of fair and goodly garments. We owe to the Romanists (though ill husbands of Religion in later ages) that Word and those Sacraments, which they conserved and transmitted, like candles put into a dark lantern; by which, when we came to open the light side, we saw both our and their deviations from the good old way, which is God's right way: to which we rather choose to return under the name of pious novelty and just reformation, than obstinately to continue with them in their pristine aberrations and inveterate deformities. Though they were our Fathers in Nature and Religion; yet we think it not only lawful for us, but our duty, without any brand of disobedient children, to cure that leprosy or Hereditary disease which we had contracted from them our less healthful parents, especially when themselves have preserved for us and afforded to us that receipt of God's Word, which teacheth and alloweth us the proper medicine and cure. The successful use of which is not more comfortable to us than commendable in us, notwithstanding our Progenitors obstinacy to continue in the same deformed maladies, after they have seen the happy experiments of its Virtues and Remedy upon us; who never gloried in, or designed any new Christian Religion, but only the just Reformation and recovery of the old from those crazy distempers and dangerous diseases, which by ill times and ill orders it had contracted. 1 Cor. 13. I well know how little all Religion signifies without charity; that, next to gross Ignorance, Immorality, Unbelief, and Impenitence, Uncharitableness is the pest and poison of the Soul, which infects beyond the Antidote of Gifts, good works and Miracles. I consider that many imperfections and failings are venial with true charity, which covers a multitude of sins of infirmity; but no perfections are acceptable to God, 1 Pet. 4.8. or available to the enjoyer of them, if destitute of charity: that the measure of a Christian is more by his heart than his head, by his humble and honest affections than his high and puffing speculations: that in the bosom of the Church, 1 Cor. 8 7. as many perish by the rock of uncharitableness, as the flats of ignorance. Therefore, however I see the Papists are most-what so supercilious and high in the instep, that they not only deny us Protestants of all sorts, even the most noble, sober and moderate (which were in the Church of England) their charity, but they despise all our charity to them; Vid. Papists reply to Charity mistaken, against Dr. Potter's offer of Charity. yet I cannot think it my duty to requite evil with evil, or uncharitableness in them with the like unchristian passion in myself, but rather to requite evil with good, to commend what is good in them, to own with thanks any good from them, to pray for them, to be ready to do all offices of Christian love to them, to keep all inward Christian communion with them, and to be cheerfully disposed to exercise all actual communion with them, in all such holy Doctrines and Duties of Christian Faith & Worship, as agree to the Word of God, and the mind of Christ, which are the centre and circumference of all Ecclesiastical union: that as the guilt and fault of Schism and Heresy is retorted on both sides; so, I trust, it will only be charged there, where wilful Error and Uncharitableness are found, but not on the Integrity and Candour of those who are only driven and forced so far from visible communion, because they do withdraw from what they saw to be gross Error, Idolatry, or Superstition, according to the rule of Christ's Word, and trial of his Institution, evidently cleared by the Apostles and Primitive Churches. Contrary to all which, unless we will (even this whole Church of England) wholly comply with the Pope's Interests and Roman Errors, they loudly excommunicate us, renouncing all communion with us, as with Schismatics and Heretics, fitter for fire and faggot than Christian fellowship. This notwithstanding on the Romanists part, yet I think it my part, and all true lovers of Reformation and Christian Union, not to slacken or abate that Charity and Christian good will, which is due to all men, and especially those that profess to be Christ's Disciples, Gal. 6.10. of the Household of Faith, where the Sick and Lame and Blind are parts of the Polity, and Members of the Oeconomy or Family; to pray night and day impartially, that God would remove out of his Church on all sides, whatever doth offend his pure eyes, and any good Christian; that he would give both Protestants and Papists grace, unpassionately to consider from whence the one are fall'n by humane policies, and to what the other transported by popular zelotries; that whatever pride and peevishness is on either side, might be composed and laid aside, by such General Synods, Free Councils, and Christian correspondencies, as might bring forth some happy accord and harmony among Christian Churches; that those sad and superstitious principles of everlasting Schism might be removed, by which on one side they think, because in many things they were right, therefore in nothing they could err; on the other side, because in some things men have mistaken and erred, therefore they can be in nothing right: for to this height both Papal and Antipapall Christians are come, that each thinks their greatest piety consists in perfect and implacable Antipathies; that their most commendable zeal for Religion is that which is farthest from moderation, Christian temper or Charity; that where they like not all, they must loathe all; that nothing is (afterward) (with good conscience) to be used which hath once been abused; that all things must be popularly cried up, either upon the account of their Antiquity or Novelty, without regard to that verity and charity which are the life and quintessence of true Christianity. Although I shall, by God's gracious assistance, keep that station and distance from Popish Errors, where my judgement and conscience, guided by God's Word, hath set me; yet to leave the Romanists without excuse, as much as in me lies, I do most earnestly desire, and should most industriously promote, such a Christian and Catholic accord, as were most for the honour of Christ and the peace of Christendom. I know the youthful fervours of some are jealous of all such motions, and for fear of seeming lukewarm, they resolve to boil over all bounds, till they quench both Truth and Charity among Christians, and make way for Atheism, Turkism, Confusion and Barbarity. These hotter heads possibly dread what I calmly desire; that such a grand Catholic Convention of able ecclesiastics in these Western Church's might, by the consent of Princes and chief Magistrates, be so orderly convened with Freedom, Impartiality and due Authority, as might enable them to consent in one Canon or rule of Faith and good manners; that the clear and concurrent sense of Scriptures might be owned by all, in which all things necessary are contained either literally, or by just deductions; that what is dark or dubious should be left indifferently to Christians use and judgements; that all would agree in the same ancient fundamental Articles of Faith, contained in primitive Creeds, also in the same Sacraments, or holy Mysteries, to be devoutly celebrated, so in the same way of good works to be practised; that we might all have the same Catechise, the same public Liturgies, so composed, that all Christians might with Faith and Charity say Amen to them, and in their several Languages understand them; that a Commentary on Scriptures, and Sermons containing all Christian necessary Doctrine, might be agreed upon; that neither curiosities nor controversies should be couched in public Prayers or Preachings; that all might enjoy the same Catholic Source and course of Ecclesiastic Ordination, Ministry, and Authority, so tempering Government and Discipline in the Church, that none should justly think others too much exalted, nor themselves too much depressed; that Catholic Customs, ancient Ceremonies and Traditions, truly such, being consonant to God's Word, and practically interpreting the meaning of it, might be observed by all, leaving yet such freedom in other things to particular Churches, as might be most convenient, yet still subordinate to, and to be regulated by, the judgement of such a General Council, contrary to which none should affect extravagant liberty, to the ruin of Christian Charity. Blessed Lord! What good Christian could be injured by such a Christian accord in the main concernments of Religion, which cannot be impossible in the nature of the thing, because it was of old enjoyed, and many hundreds of years generally preserved among all Christians and Churches, of any name and repute in all the world? Nor did either the heat of Persecution or Prosperity (as warm and sultry weather) dispirit this charity of Christians; who might still be as capable subjects of so great a blessing from God on earth, if Passion, Prejudice, Partiality and private interests on all hands were laid aside, without parting with any true and real interest that concerns a wise or good man, either in Conscience or Honour, in civil or religious regards. CHAP. XVIII. WHich blessed accord, so good and so pleasant to behold, Two grand Obstructions of all Christian accommodation in these Western Churches. how much more to enjoy, being not only possible, but most desirable and commendable among all good Christians, two great Impediments or obstructions seem to me chiefly to hinder, as to man (besides our ill deservings on all sides at God's hands:) which, however I do not hope by my weak shoulders to remove, they being like the Grave-stone on Christ's Sepulchre, Mat. 28.2. whose sad and massy weight requires some mighty Angel from heaven to do it; yet I cannot but here express my sense of them the more sensibly, by how much I see the miserable distractions of the poor Church of England, and the advantages given by some men's late immoderations and madnesses, to alienate the very best and soberest of the Roman party from all propensity or thoughts of any happy close, by reforming, and so reconciling the parts of divided and distracted Christendom. Which evil effect (now more exasperated than ever) I here instance in, as one of the saddest consequences following the divided, dissolved and deplored state of this Church of Engl. which was the grand mirror or example of Christianity and Reformation, from which neither Romanists nor others did so much withdraw by many degrees heretofore, as now they do. The first great hindrance is, 1. Great Bar, The Roman Pride. that exteme pertinacy and height of those of the Roman party, who so much magnify themselves, their chief Bishop, their Church and Communion, upon the specious names of Antiquity, Infallibility, and Primacy, as if no Church or Christians in the world were to be considered, other then as novices, ignorants and underlings, in comparison of the Roman Name and Majesty. Their Antiquity is not denied by sober men, but their great Age is evidently attended with many decays and infirmities, which are novelties; from which even primitive Churches were not wholly free, both as to Humane frailty and Divine reproofs, as we read in the Epistles of the Apostles, and of Christ to the seven Churches. Rev. 2. & 3. Nor do I know any privilege the Roman Church hath above others, unless they could make good their Infallibility, either as to their chief Bishop, or as to any Council, in which he should preside. That their persons have erred in Doctrine and Moralities, that they have varied from, and clashed against each other in their public Decrees and Councils, yea and from not only pious Antiquity, but the Scripture-verity, is so evident in what myself have here lightly touched, and others amply demonstrated, that no ingenuous and honest Romanist at this day can deny it. For the affected Supremacy or Primacy which they so glory in and challenge, not only before, but above and over all Churches, not as a matter of order and precedency; but of power and authority; as there is no Law of God which requires this, or any Church so far to own that of Rome, or to be subject to it; so nor did the ancient Ecclesiastical Laws and distinctions lay more to the Roman Inspection or Jurisdiction, than the Suburbicarian Regions, which extended 100 miles from the City. That the Roman Bishop was owned, as the first or chief Patriarch, in Order and Precedency, in Place or Vote, was not a regard to the persons of the Bishops, or their authority, as if it were more than other Bishops by any Divine or Humane right, but a regard to the pristine Majesty of the City, and the Apostolic eminency of that Church, in which the two great Apostles, S. Peter & S. Paul, had not only placed much of their pains, but ended their lives. Lay aside the Roman pomp and insolency, no sober man but will allow the Bishop of Rome his Civil and Ecclesiastical Primacy, as King James and other Protestant Princes offered long ago: nor would any of the great Reformers, Luther, or Calvin, or Cranmer, have grudged this, if the Bishop of Rome would have submitted either to a General Council, or to the Word of Christ. If the Roman Arrogancy will needs claim and usurp more than its due (which was heretofore rather invaded and challenged by them, and connived or winked at by others, than ever given or granted to them by any power of lawful donation or concession;) yet this cannot hold good by any former subtlety on their part, or simplicity on the part of this or any Nation and Church, to the prejudice of that fundamental Liberty and Honour, which are inseparable from the free people of this Nation and Church, as men and as Christians, until the Roman power hath made them Vassals again, as a conquered Nation, and dependent Church upon that Sceptre and Mitre too: which thing as yet was never done since Rome was Christian, and, I hope, never will be. How much more worthy of the Learning, Prudence, Antiquity, Gravity, seeming Piety and affected Majesty of that Roman Church, were it, for them to glory in nothing so much as in the knowledge of Jesus Christ and him crucified; in conforming all things of Religion to his Word and example, which hath the truest Antiquity, only Infallibility and eminency upon it; yea, and where they see, as by the light of the Sun at noonday, there hath been either aberration from, or addition to the rule and pattern of Christ, through the ignorance, or error, or policy of former Ages and Persons, there to return with such holy and handsome Reformations to a conformity with Christ and the ancient Roman purity, as will make no less for the glory of the present Church of Rome, than it was some eclipse and diminution to their predecessors, to suffer so much tares to be scattered among Christ's good wheat, which by Apostolic hands was first sown and watered, to mighty increases for many hundreds of year? The misery is, when knowing and learned men grow wilful, and serve their own and other men's secular interests more than that of Christ and men's souls, they choose rather to over-load the foundation of Religion, than to lighten it of needless superstructures. How little could it hurt them, honestly to restore the cup to the people, as was sometimes done to the Bohemians, at the importunity of the Nobility and Clergy, and offered to Queen Elizabeth, as Sir Roger Twisden proves, provided she would acknowledge the Pope's Supremacy; where (as Luther urged against Eccius) if the Blood of Christ, as is pretended by Papists, be given Laymen by concomitancy with the Bread or Body, sure they are as capable of the Cup in Christ's method, as in man's novelty and variation? What could it lessen the Romanists, if christian's being on all sides taught the real presence of Christ's Body and Blood, with the benefits of them in the Sacrament truly offered, and reverently received by every worthy Communicant, the modus of the Presence were left undefined, uninforced upon any Christians belief, after the primitive freedom; which rather admired and adored that Mystery, than disputed it, or determined precisely of it? So in other things, as praying to Angels and Saints, worshipping before Images, praying and offering for the dead, in order to mend their condition; how would it no way abate Christian verity, or comfort, or charity, to lay these Superstructures of straw and stubble aside, when we all believe that we have by Faith in Christ access to the Throne of Grace? besides, men would more take care to live and die holily, when they less expect other men's devotions to relieve them after death. These and many other humane and impertinent, because unprofitable, additionals to Sacraments and holy Duties, how easily might they be spared without any loss to Religion, as with great advantages to Christian and Catholic Communion? Nor should these just Reformations prove any diminution to the estates or honours of the Roman Churchmen, if I might have any vote or influence in so happy an agreement; which last jealousies and fears in matter of Honour and Estate, are, I believe, the great wall of partition and terror, that keeps off and scares the wary Romanists from any thought of Reformation, since they see the Deformities, Uncertainties, Beggaries, Ruins and Vastations, which at last follow some men's Reformations of Religion, of Churches and Churchmen, if they be suffered to run on as far as popular humours have a mind to gratify their passions with the Spoils and Scorns of Religion and Churchmen. This indeed is, in my judgement, the second great bar, 2 Great Bar, The transports of Reformers. the unmovable obstruction and unexcusable scandal, which lies in the way of any Reconciliation, fair Accommodation, and Christian Communion among these Western Churches: which in all probability might, by God's blessing, have much advanced ere this time, not only just Reformations of what was really amiss, but happy Unions, in stead of those Rents and Separations which are now every where predominant, if those of the Roman party had seen those sober bounds, that Christian moderation, and those uniform fixations among Reformers, in their Doctrine and Manners, which did become so good a work as Reformation is. Nor were the most sober, learned, grave and impartial of the Romanists so much against such a discreet and settled Reformation, as they saw flourished in England, beyond any Church in all the world, in which due regard was had to Primitive Order, and Catholic Antiquity, to the just rewards and dignities of Churchmen, together with the sanctity & solemnity of true Religion, until they discovered that immoderation, violence, unsatisfiedness, tumultuariness, giddiness and transport, which long ago, even here in Engl. murmured and mutinied against the Happiness and Honour of this flourishing Church and State; mens Prejudices, Passions, and private Interests, tyrannising over their Reason, Religion, Charity, Obedience, and Consciences, still clamouring for further Reformation, See M. hooker's Preface to his Eccl. Pol. and threatening violence, if they might not every one set up their fancies in Religion, under the name of through-Reformation, and bring in intolerable licentiousness, under the colour of Christian Liberty; talking so much of the pattern in the mount, till they have laid this Church and its Religion in the valley of death and shadow of darkness; so eager not to have an hoof left in Egypt, that they have engaged themselves and this whole Church into a red sea, and brought it to an howling wilderness: nor is it easy to be seen, without multiplied miracles, how they will ever bring Christian Religion to any land of Canaan, a state of rest or due Reformation, either here in England, or otherwhere. Which we must ever despair (hereafter) to see make any progress among the Romanists, either as to private men's persuasions, or whole Churches Reformations; especially since the late terrors of some English Super-reformers have given so loud an alarm to all wise Princes and sober People, especially to all prudent Churchmen, assuring them that there is neither bottom nor bounds of some men's preposterous reformations: their spirits are the black Abyssus of immodesty, injustice, disloyalty, cruelty, sacrilege, inhumanity, barbarity; their teeming fancies are everlastingly spawning with new inventions; their restless humours are always like a Sea ebbing and flowing, casting up mire and dirt; their lunatic Religion aims to abolish the use of all those things which have at any time been abused, though never so holy and good in their use and institution: they condemn every House, every Church, as well material as rational, to Ruin and utter Desolation, on whose walls they fancy there are, or ever have been, any spots of leprosy or superstition, though neither incurable, nor infectious, nor indeed any way dangerous to Religion or men's Salvation: yea, they have such malevolent, spiteful and envious principles in their spiteful and gainful Reformations, that they judge all things in Religion to be unclean, out of which they may make any temporal gain or benefit; that Bells and Steeples, Cups and Chalices, Churches and Chancels, Glebes and Tithes, all Ecclesiastic Honours and Revenues, are Popish, Superstitious, Antichristian, never sufficiently reform, till utterly alienated, and confiscated to the public Exchequer, or their private purses; that neither Church nor Churchmen are duly or throughly reform, till they are made like a barren wilderness, who were as the garden of God; till, like Naomi, they be empty and destitute of all worldly comforts and supports; till they look like Pharaoh's lean Kine; till Ministers preach and pray themselves into absolute hunger and thirst, their souls fainting within them, and their eyes failing, while in vain they look to be satisfied with bread. These are the holy sparks, these the blessed flames of uncharitable and unquenchable zeal, which the Romanists see burning in some men's reforming breasts, so long, till they become predatorious and adulterous, consumptionary and culinary, false and base fires, which are not to be maintained, but by such sacred fuel as pristine Piety, Charity and Munificence bestowed on the Church and Churchmen, for God's service and Christ's sake. Thus covetous hands and sacrilegious hearts hold the nose of Religion so long to the grindstone of their Reformations, till they have utterly defaced the Justice and Charity, the Order and Beauty of Christian Religion: nothing is well reformed (they think) while there is any thing left, at which they can repine, either in the hospitable houses or at the charitable tables of Churchmen. Certainly the Romanists must needs be eternally resolved against such Reformations, as follow the dictates of men's stomaches more than their consciences, and serve men's bellies more than the Lord, whom they scruple not to rob and spoil, while they pretend to purge his Temple and reform his Ministers, ever finding fault with the Church, while any thing is left to Churchmen, or any booty yet to be extorted from the Clergy; never thinking them or their Religion sufficiently circumcised, till they are quite excoriated, exsected, eunuchised, that is, made so poor and dispirited, so mean and embased, that they are wholly unfit and unable to do any thing that is Generous, Ample, or Charitable, either in their Studies, Preaching, or Living; aspiring no higher than that vulgar softness and popular easiness of some men's praying and preaching, which costs men of competent boldness and voluble tongues neither much Study, Charge nor Pains, beyond a few hours lose meditating, and as much time in confident Praying or Preaching, as raw and confused notions can stretch into. When once the Clergy (or Ministers of Christ's Church) are thus reduced to be as poor and mean in Spirits, Parts, and Estates, as hackney horses, which have long journeys to go, and little provender given them to eat; when Ministers of the Gospel, the Preachers and Professors of Divinity, are (one and all) leveled to the condition of Peasants in France, or Boors in Germany, when they are endowed with Scotch stomaches and stipends, either at the mercy of the impropriating Laird, or at the sad charity of godly and well-affected people to Mammon; when Churchmen appear in England, as they have for the most part in other Reformed Churches (and now in many places here) threadbare, indigent, necessitous, exposed to all shamefall and mechanic shifts: Then, O then, these gracious Sacrilegists and godly Reformers can at once endure them and despise them, without finding any great fault with them, when they find nothing but beggary and ignorance attending them; then their Preachers shall be what they will, in Title and Name, Apostles, Evangelists, Bishops, Presbyters, Moderators, Pastors, Shepherds, Angels, gracious and precious men, men of God, etc. though they be never such silly sots, shameless sycophants, and slavish flatterers, either to Prince or People; provided they neither have nor crave any thing. It matters not how little Learning, Piety, or Prudence they have, provided they have no courage in their hearts, and no money in their purses: they will not then dare to have many reproofs in their mouths against their good Masters and Dames, their Lords and Ladies, upon whose Alms and Trenchers they must feed, and upon whose Frowns or Favours they either thrive or starve. CHAP. XIX. The equity & charity of severe and sacrilegious Reforming. THis, this hath been the project and platform at which some men's Reformation hath aimed, even here in England, the better to persuade Papists to renounce their Superstition, and embrace the Reformed Religion, which (like a sharp Razor or keen Axe) however it hath yet spared some Underwood and Copices of inferior Ministers, Presbyters and Independents most-what (for the better shelter and covert of their designs;) yet they have felled to the ground all the fairest trees and choicest timber, whose bark, boughs and bodies afforded most advantage to the fellers: Not that these trees were useless or fruitless, sapless or decayed in this Church; but some Reformers had evil eyes at their goodly bulk and breadth, their stately heights and tops. What wise and impartial men at home or abroad, in present or after-ages, but must, and do confess, that the greatest faults of most of the dignified Clergy in England were their fair Houses and Revenues, their Manors and Honours? For they were never legally charged or convinced (either as to their Persons in particular, or their Functions in general, as Archbishops or Bishops, Deans or prebend's) of any such misdemeanours as deserved, by any Law of God or Man, the forfeiture of all their lawful Enjoyments and Ecclesiastic Preferments; which were as the just rewards of their personal Worth and private learning, so the public, national, and honorary encouragements of their calling and profession, to the dignifying of Christian Religion, and the magnifying of wise and moderate Reformations; such as became the Honour, Piety, Gratitude, Munificence and Majesty of this English Nation, towards its God and its Clergy, being blest of God with abundance of all good things, and no less with excellent Governors and able Preachers, as well Bishops as Presbyters, who well deserved whatever the pristine nobleness and bounty of this State had bestowed on men of Learning and Desert, as public Ministers of Religion sent from God to his Church: whose true and just reformation was no diminution to their just enjoyments, or deserved preferments; that so it might be no discouragement, check or hindrance to others, from embracing such an innocent reformation of Christian Religion, as consisted with Piety, Equity, and Charity, with the Glory of God, the good of men's Souls; also with the Dignity of Churchmen, and the Honour of this Nation. Contrary to, and destructive of all which, many men, as in other places, so of late in this Ch. of Engl. (which was the most complete pattern of excellent Reformation, keeping a mean between doting antiquity and affected Novelty, between Papal Superstition and popular Immoderation) have discovered such ill will and envious eyes, not only against the Clergy and Church of England, (which was heretofore honourably and handsomely reform) but against all National Churches, and orderly ecclesiastics in such Churches; that they do not think it enough (as Calvin, Beza, and the Augustan Confessors at first did) for Bishops and Churchmen to forsake their convicted Errors, and amend their scandalous Manners, where they are really amiss; but these severe Super-reformers expect, yea, forcibly require, that all Clergymen should be so sordidly tame and plebeianly patient, as not only with silence to permit, but with a Scotizing zeal humbly to invite, to the utter ruin, as of their Order and Function, so of their Honours and Enjoyments, those Lay-ravens, Cormorants, and Harpies, who can not only devour and digest the Libraries and Householdstuff, the Livings and Estates, the Flesh and Blood of Bishops and other Churchmen, but like Ostriches they can greedily devour and wonderfully digest the Timber, Led, Stones, Iron and Glass of all material Churches. There are many throats so wide, and gules so gluttonous in England, that they can swallow down goodly Cathedrals, Bishops large Houses, whole Colleges and Chapters, with many large Manors, as easily as gilded pills in syrup: Thus reforming Churches and Churchmen, by rifling them of all their public Patrimony and Endowments, till Churches and Churchmen are left, like the poor man in the Gospel, naked and wounded, exposed to the transient, extemporary and arbitrary Charities of such as shall pass by; who, like the Priest and Pharisee, may be great professors, but little relievers of Religion or religious men, who owe their Wounds and Necessities to such rude, unjust, and cruel reformers, who loudly command all Romish Churches and Churchmen to abhor such Reformation, as their ruin and utter undoing. For these wild and vile methods of reforming will do as much good, in order to win upon the Papists, or to stop the prevailing and spreading of Popery, as the Pope's exactions are wont to do upon the Jews, in order to their conversion; who (as Sir Edwin Sands tells us) must forgo all their Estates when they turn Christian, Sir Ed. Sands' Survey of the Western Churches. to show the sincerity of their conversion; that so his Holiness may have the happiness of the Confiscation, as they will have of their poor Conversion: a threshold (certainly) so high, at the very Church-porch or entrance to Christianity, and so to any wise man's reformation, that few will ever desire to go over it, into any Church or Reformed Profession of Religion. Therefore I judge it a most cruel principle and scandalous practice (taken up by some sharp Anabaptists and other hungry Factionists here in England, fomented by some subtle Jesuits, in order to make the Reformed Religion odious and ridiculous to all the world) which seeks to treat all worthy Bishops, true Ministers and deserving Churchmen, after such a base & penurious rate, that tells the world they cannot be worthy Preachers in their esteem, till they be not worth a groat; never sufficiently reform, till they be quite ruined; never truly holy, till they are deadly hungry; then only throughly reform and purged of all their dross, when they may truly and sadly say with S. Peter, Acts 3.6. Silver and Gold have we none, either for Charity, Hospitality, Civility, or Necessity. Which Apostolic poverty and Primitive beggary hath been of late years, and still is, the state of many venerable Bishops and other worthy Clergymen in England, and is threatened to all, in order to make good that Canon of the Apostle, 1 Tim. 5.17. which requires double honour to those that rule well, and labour in the Word and Doctrine. How much it hath been, will be, or is ever like to be, to the further advance of any true Reformation here or elsewhere; how worthy measure it is to be meted to reverend Bishops and other grave Ministers, that had not criminally offended any Law of God or Man; how worthy it is of the Honour and Magnificence of this Church and Nation, I leave to God, to all good men, and specially to yourselves (O my nobler-minded countrymen) to consider of and judge; who are witnesses with me, how many grave Bishops, and other both great and good Divines, have lived many months, nay many years, as they do to this day, merely upon extraordinary providences, or small pittances, attending many times Elias his merciful Ravens, miraculously to feed their famished Souls and distressed Families. Noble and potent encouragements (no doubt) to invite the Romanists at home or abroad, or any other prudent persons that have either wit or sense, to embrace such a reformed Profession of Religion, which (besides other Novelties and Scandals, not easily washed away or excused) hath that brand of Sacrilege upon its hands and forehead, spoiling its chief Professors and Preachers of that double Honour (Maintenance and Reverence) which in persecuting times were zealously paid to the Pastors and Bishops of the Church, who, after the new modes of some men's covetous and cruel reformings, must be stripped of all those Honours and Enjoyments which pristine Piety and Bounty consecrated to God's Glory, his Church's Service, and the encouragement of his Ministers: who, having difficulties enough in other respects to contend withal, aught in all Reason and Conscience to be redeemed from the intolerable pressures of poverty and contempt; especially in an age which is wantonly wicked, and impiously petulant against all Governors, especially those that are spiritual. CHAP. XX. NOr is this sin of sacrilegious severity to be palliated, The excuses and pleas for sacrilegious excesses answered. as some Politicians and Parasites endeavour, by pleading, 1. That the Estates of Bishops and Cathedrals were in few men's hands; 2. That the generality of the Clergy was untouched and unconcerned in them; 3. That what they had was too much for them; 4. That Religion had no advantage by them; 5. That the Public needed those Revenues for other uses; 6. That some amends hath been made to the Church, by many Augmentations given to small Livings and godly Ministers. All these are Fig-leaves, which cannot cover the shame of that Sin, Answ. nor absolve the consciences of the Doers and Approvers. To each of them it may be replied, 1. Though they were in the hands of few men, yet these had a just and personal right to those Estates, no way forfeited by their misdemeanours; no one honest man, to gratify a multitude, may be injured or deprived of what is his own by all Laws of God and Man. 2. Bishops, Deans and prebend's, though they were few men comparatively, yet influentially they were many, by the eminency of their Places, their Learning and their Preferments; which though few persons could actually enjoy, yet many were encouraged and excited by their example, to deserve such preferments by their worth, though they never attained them. 3. They were great decorations & advantages of Honour & public Respect, given by the Nation to the whole Function of the Ministry; as the Ornament of the Head and Eyes are the Crown and Glory to all parts of the Body. 4. To say those Preferments and Revenues which some Churchmen enjoyed, were too much for them, is a speech more worthy of Nabals, Judasses', Ananiasses, and julian's, than of Just, Grateful, and Reformed Christians: they must have very evil eyes against God, his Church, and his Ministers, who grudge those means as too much for twenty, nay an hundred of them, which some one Layman can now possess and engross; whose worth, for Piety, Learning, Charity, Hospitality, or any useful Virtue, is not comparable to the meanest of those men whose Estate he enjoys, and whose Bread he eats. 5. If there had been no other advantages to Religion by those Preferments, Dignities, and Revenues, but this, that so it became the Honour, Justice, and Policy of our Reformation, both for the avoiding of Rapine or Sacrilege, also for the encouragement of the prime Pastors of the Church, to conciliate respect both to them, and in them to all other Ministers; these had been reasons enough, beside the Merits of the persons, and Justice of their property, to have preserved their Estates from such spoil. 6. For the public need of Church-revenues, and Church-mens Estates; as no honest Man, so no wise and worthy State, ever needs any thing which he cannot with justice attain; no man's or State's Necessities can justify Injuries against any one man, much less against many, and those Churchmen, yea deserving Churchmen. 7. Besides, they that pretended the public want of these Ecclesiastic Revenues, had far greater of their own; nor should the Ewe-lamb have been taken away from the Church, where the State had so many rich Flocks: in public necessities the Priests Lands should be last spent or invaded, after the method of Joseph's Piety; nor should they be ever quite alienated, though their Revenue were for a time borrowed. 8. God knows there was in England no such necessity, but Plenty, Superfluity and Luxury; however Laymen should rather beg, than rob God or his Church. 9 Nor was ever either Prince, or Nation, or Family the richer (in a few years) which feathered their nests by Church-revenues. Witness our Henry the 8. who took away vast Estates, both movable and immovable, from Monasteries and other Collegiate Churches (which seemed but the superfluities of Religion, the wens and excrescencies of a Church) yet he spent more still, and left the Crown much poorer than he found it: witness also his great Engine the L. Cromwell, who got an Estate ne● to the value of 2000 l. per ann. yet a little before the King's death he lost his Head; and in the third generation the Heir of his Family exchanged the last remnant of all that estate in Eng. for a little Land in Ireland, where he might live less noted and molested by Lawsuits. Commonly Sacrilege makes an evil bargain, even as to this world, but ever as to another. 10. Lastly, as to the amends made by laying some Impropriations, and by them making Augmentations to some Ministers Livings; these are but a few feathers in stead of the body of a fair Fowl; nor are they upon other terms than arbitrary Donations, not fixed Revenues. The mending of small and incompetent Livings is a work worthy of the Honour, Riches, and Piety of this Nation; but Peter ought not to be robbed to pay Paul: the waters of the Sons of the Prophets might have been healed without stopping up the wells and fountains of their Fathers and their Assistants, which were of old from many Generations; which hath given great scandal both to Reformed and Roman Churches: few will ever desire such Reformations, as extirpate Bishops, and confiscate all Church-revenues. CHAP. XXI. CErtainly covetous Principles and sacrilegious Practices are more pernicious to true Religion, Sacrilege a great pest to Religion and stop to Reformation. both as to the Profession and Power of it, than any superstition can be, that holds the foundation: For Superstition is but as an Itch, or Scab, which may easily be healed, and Religion restored to its Health and Beauty, as was done in England; but Sacrilege is a Canker, which eats up the flesh, and frets the very sinews and bones of Religion, defacing and destroying all the Beauty and Loveliness, all the Strength and Stability of Religion, all its Honour and Majesty, as to outward Polity and visible Profession; yea, and it infinitely abates all the inward power of it, as to the Reverence, Value, and Love of it in men's hearts. Superstition is but as Misletoe, which (in time) may grow upon old fruit-trees, which are of a good kind, and it may easily be pruned off; but Sacrilege is like the very peeling or barking of a tree round about, which will infallibly starve the Tree, and in a short time quite kill it. Besides, Sacrilege hath greater insinuations and temptations on men's minds than Superstition, in as much as worldly Lusts or earthly Affections urge more upon men, than those that are of a pious and spiritual notion; such as move to Superstition by a kind of overboiling or excess of Devotion, which makes men prodigal of their Estates & Lives too: But Sacrilege is a Mischief so leveled to those covetous, envious and despiteful humours which are naturally predominant in men's hearts, that every one is prone to be courted by it, to be tempted and inclined to it, out of hopes that some gain may accrue to them by the spoils of the Church and robbery of Religion. Hence many common people heretofore seeming to be godly and peaceable Christians, Titus 1.10. when once the hope of gain appeared (though never so filthy lucre) have been suddenly and strangely zealous to drive the principal Pastors of the Flock, and chief Shepherds of this Church, out of their Estates and Honours, to utter Poverty and Contempt, under the colour and clamour of Reformation; which was (as they pretended) to be so mended and perfected, as might invite all the world, Papists and others, to admire, imitate and embrace the Beauty of such a Bride, such a new Jerusalem coming down from Heaven, but in a storm and whirlwind of Civil and Ecclesiastic dissensions, between which it was to be stripped of its chiefest Ornaments and Encouragements, and must have henceforth either no Bishops and orderly Ministers, or these no ample Estates or due respect; no double honour, beyond what Tenuity and Contempt afford. Which festering scratches have no more the true lineaments or marks of religious and liberal Reformation, than Baboons, Apes and Monkeys have of humane Beauty, Procerity and Majesty. That maxim of the Apostle is in no experience more verified than in those of the Church's interests and true Religion, 1 Tim. 6.10. That Covetousness or love of Money is the root of all evil: for it doth not only famish the souls of such rapacious wretches of all true grace and comforts, rising either from the love of God, or the care of their own and their brothers spiritual and eternal good; but it prompts them to all manner of injurious evils: it being impossible they should be truly holy in any kind, 2 Tim. 3.3. who are so unjust and unthankful in the highest degree, despising their God (whose property or peculiar Church-revenues are) also his chief Ministers, who being by God and man appointed to feed the flock of Christ, ought not themselves to be famished or debased; no nor should they want (much less be undeservedly deprived of) those temporal encouragements in the work of the Lord, or God's husbandry, which give both credit, authority and comfort to true Religion, in times of Peace, and in a land of Plenty. Of which Blessings when once true Religion is miserably spoilt, and so exposed in its Ministry and Order to all Distresses and Scorns, no man can wonder if Popish Superstition, and all Factions of ungodly Appetites, do mightily thrive and improve by the ruins of such Reformed Religion; no wonder if Atheism and Irreligion, if barrenness and leanness, if Egyptian darkness and death, prevail in a short time over such people and their poor plebeian Pastors too, whose blood will be required of those sacrilegious Reformers, who shall thus deform reform Religion, impoverish a famous Church and flourishing Clergy, embase a rich, a renowned, and an ancient Christian Nation, to the indignity and injury of the public, as well as the danger of their own private souls; to whom that sin of Sacrilege is rarely forgiven, because they seldom have the grace truly to repent of it; for Repentance cannot be true (as S. Austin saith) unless restitution be made, which few Sacrilegists ever do, or dream of. Hence (as the learned Sir Henry Spelman observes, by instances of his particular experience in many Families) further grows that moth, not only of men's consciences, but of their Estates, which devours them unsensibly; a secret pest of Families, which destroys at length all their increase: Job 31.12. which that learned Knight had observed within sixteen miles' compass of his own dwelling in Norfolk, where so many Estates, first raised out of Abbey-lands, were now quite extinct, or almost undone; but so many others in the same compass, continued in flourishing or competent conditions, who were of far ancienter standing, and not enriched with any Sacrilege; for so he esteemed the dissolving of religious Houses, destroying of Churches, etc. of whose Superstition and Forfeiture true Religion should have had the advantage; Num. 16.39. as the censers were holy, in which strange Fire was offered. Yet might that former Confiscation, which devoured so many Churches, Chapels, and Religious and Superstitious Houses, seem modest and venial, in respect of some men's later attempts and designs against all settled maintenance of Ministers. A Christian Church might well subsist, as those in primitive times did, without Monks and Nuns, without Monasteries and Nunneries, without Abbots and Abbesses, without Abbeys and Priories; but not well, if at all, without Pastors and Governors, Bishops and Presbyters: these were Primitive, Apostolic, after Christ's own pattern, followed by all Churches in the world, necessary to the well-being, yea to the complete being of a Church, in any Order, Polity, and regular Communion. Nor is the honourable support of Church-governors and Ministers more comely than necessary, upon politic as well as Ecclesiastic Principles, either by occasional Donatives, and spontaneous Oblations, as in times of primitive Zeal and Persecution, or else by settled Dedications and fixed Revenues, which were afterward in times of Peace plentifully given to God and his Church, for the support and honour of an Able, Hospitable and Charitable Ministry. As it had been high Sacrilege to have taken away, by stealth or force, those portions which were given to Ministers, when their Presbyters were yet (sportularii) depending on the bag and basket of Christians oblations, and the Bishop's dispensations; so is it no less sin to take away those settled Revenues, which were invested in God for the use of his Servants, the Governors, Guides, and Ministers of his Church, both for their Maintenance and Honour. Injuries are no less in taking away Lands than Goods from men that are the just owners of them; nor doth the Clergy in these evil times more stand in need of convenient Sustenance than due Respect and Reverence, which is hardly had where Poverty appears. Yet since the noonday of Reformation hath gloriously shined and continued in this Western world, this (Meridianus Daemon) sin of Sacrilege (as rankest vermin breed in warmest weather, and horridest Monsters are gendered in richest Soils) hath grown most bold and violent, an Epidemical & unblushing sin, aspiring to so full and unrestrained a Liberty, See the excellent History of Scotl. by the Archbish. of S. Andr. in the life of Mr. Knox. as hath not only much afflicted other Reformed Churches long ago (of which great complaint was made by Luther in Germany, and Knox in Scotland, before they died) but the venom and infection is come into the rich and generous Nation of England, to so pernicious a measure and degree, that it reacheth from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot. Heretofore (indeed) Sacrilege was not so much a Plebeian as Princely sin, the attempt not of Pigmies but of Giants, not of the Populacy, but of Popes, of Kings, of great Noblemen and Gentlemen; these only durst adventure to put so rude affronts on God and his Church, by alienating, defrauding, detaining, impropriating & confiscating what they could of holy things: B. Andrew's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Dr. Baziere, Sir H. Spelm. Sir Ja. Semple, and others against Sacrilege. against which adventurous Sin many learned and worthy men, in all Ages and Countries (as in Engl.) as well Laymen as ecclesiastics, have wrote by most unrepliable demonstrations from the Law of Nature and Nations, from principles of Reason and Religion, from Scripture Canons and imperial Constitutions; all which nothing but a covetous violence and blind fury can gainsay or resist. But now (while the Prince abhorred Sacrilege no less than Idolatry) every petty, pragmatic, yea poor peasant, dares to adventure upon sacrilegious projects and practices: 'tis sport to common people to plunder & pull down Churches, to deprive Ministers of their legal & Evangelical Maintenance, to strip this Church of its ancient Portion and honourable Patrimony, which is the fuel and oil to keep the holy Fire of Devotion on the Altar of God, and the bright-shining Flame of true Doctrine in the Lamps of the Temple: 'tis now the Presumption and Ambition of mechanic and vulgar Spirits to rob God of his Service, People of their able and honourable Ministers, the Flock of Christ of its worthy Shepherds, and the Souls of people of those sacred Portions and Provisions, which are in order to an Eternal Life. The meanest people's impudence dares (now) to dispute, detract, usurp, profane, confound, and challenge as their own, all things sacred, both the Work and the Reward, by a Spirit so licentious and insolent, that it is thought (by many of them) a great offence, for any man to write or preach against this enormous and crying sin of Sacrilege; yea, many Ministers, in other things of hot spirits and sharp tongues, yet in this are (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) mealy-mouthed, of soft and silken tongues, and therefore do not, because they dare not, in the least sort, quetch against this odious sin of Sacrilege. Which the very light of Nature abhorred as Parricide, and Heathens condemned as the Murder of Parents; which the true God implies by his earnest expostulation and sharp redargution to the Jews, * Malac. 3.8. Qui sacrum sacrove consecratum clepserit rapscritque parricida esto. Lex 12. Tab. l. 1. cod. Justin. Will a man rob God? (that is, any man that is not a Beast) but ye have robbed me, even this whole Nation, by acting and assenting; for the Sin is not less crying or criminous, because a popular or national sin. The Jews granted it parallel, yea superior to Idolatry, as the Apostles Appeal to a man's Conscience infers, Rom. 2.22. Thou that abhorrest Idols, dost thou commit Sacrilege? Idolaters own a God, or Gods, under the Names and Figures of Idols; whom they honour and adorn with costly Temples, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Cl. Alex. Tetriùs peccat Deum Iudificans quam negligens. Isid. great Gifts and large Revenues, even to a prodigality: but Sacrilegists either own no God, or they mock their God, making a spoil and sport, a play and a prey of their Numen; which is the highest indignity can be offered to the Deity; as rising from such vile and Atheistical Principles, which worse presume thus to defraud and abuse their God, than not at all to own him or deny him. Nor have the● been wanting such signal strokes of providence in all Ages, avenging this Sin even in the eyes of the Heathens, that men could not but confess, Doubtless there is a God that judgeth the earth. And certainly, as among Christians this sin of Sacrilege is at this day a great scandal to all Jews, Mahometans and Heathens; so among Protestants or the Reformed Christians, it is no less offence to Papists, and an obstruction to their Reformation: for as Averro chose rather to bequeath his soul to herd at last with Philosophers, Sit anima meacum Philosophis. than with the Papists, who profess to worship, and yet to eat their breaden God; so many Papists resolve rather to live and die in their liberal superstition, than conform to these penurious Reformers, who make no scruple to worship, and yet to rob their God, to steal from him with their hands (like holy Cutpurses) while they speak to him, and look him familiarly in the face as Friends. That I may speak my mind freely, in this point, before I die (out of love to my God and Saviour, to his Church, to my Country, to the honour of true Reformed Religion, and the happiness of Posterity) I confess this sin of Sacrilege seems to me, as of the greatest magnitude, so of the saddest weight, and most malignant presage, against, not only private Persons and Families, but against any Church and Nation that owns the true God, and his Son Jesus Christ, in their Worship, Ministry, Order and Service. Nothing portends greater Maladies and Plagues of Religion, than when this Comet blazeth in any Christian Church or State. Commonly great Ebbs of Learning and Religion, with great Floods of Ignorance and Atheism do follow, when nothing is counted sacred and inviolable; when all things are counted godly which are gainful, and reforming which are ravening; when (upon any civil Feuds and Breaches, wherein Churchmen cannot but be one way or other involved) Laymen presently think they have (as the plunder of War) a good title, not only to the Libraries and Lands, the personal Goods and Estates of particular Ministers, but even to the constant Revenues and perpetual Patrimony, wherewith the Church is endowed in the name and right of God Almighty, for the Order, Honour and Support of his Worship and Service. Nor do many covetous wretches make any scruple what they do in this kind, if they have an Order under the hands of such as have power in their hands: as if any Order or Act of any poor Mortals (made but yesterday) could either prejudice and annul, or out and dispossess God or his Church, or his lawful Ministers, of those just Rights, Titles, Donations, Possessions, and Acquisitions, which either a Ministers private and honest Industry hath, by God's blessing and the favour of the Laws, obtained, and no way forfeited, or which other men's Piety and Bounty hath humbly and thankfully long ago devoted to God, his Church, his Service, and his Ministers, agreeable to the laws of the Land, and the will of God, who commands us to honour him with our substance, Prov. 3.9. Mal. 1.10. Mal. 3.8. Prov. 20.25. Eccles. 5.4. graciously accepts such grateful oblations from us, and precisely forbids us so far to mock him, as not to pay our own vows, much more to rob him of the fruits of other men's devotion and vows, whose Donors sealed and confirmed those their (Anatham●ta) holy Gifts and Consecrations to God and his Church, with dreadful execrations and just imprecations of Divine Vengeance, on any that shall presume to alienate the Gift from God, and violate the last Will of those pious Benefactors, who are dead many ages ago. Truly I cannot see how either Committees, or Soldiers, or Parliaments, Prov. 20.25. It is a snare to the man who devoureth that which is holy, and after vows maketh inquiry. or Princes (all of them but momentary poor worms, clothed in specious pompous Titles) can pretend any good Title or Authority to God's derogation and diminution, who is the Lord Paramount, the principal and proprietor in the Church's Estate, and in Church-mens public Goods, which they have upon the account of his service, as his salary and reward; for which his Word is not only a sufficient Justification to Givers and Enjoyers, but it ought to be a sufficient Caution from ever sharking and alienating those things which are not (bona caduca & mobilia, but successiva & perpetua) momentary and movable goods, but aught to be as lasting as true Religion and the Service of God among mankind. Nor do I think this execrable sin of Sacrilege more desperate and damnable in its chief Authors, first Actors and Abettors (dying impenitent, that is, without restitution) than infectious, pestilent & damageable to Posterity and After-ages, who after this example will, like Locusts and Caterpillars, in time, not only devour all things that are holy, and leave nothing but Beggary, Contempt, Plebeian and Stipendiary Dependency, for the Alimony, Honour and Encouragement of God's constant Ministers and holy Ministrations; but infinitely discourage all Christian Liberality, Gratitude and Munificence, from dedicating any thing of settled Emolument to the Service of God and use of his Church, which will be in worse condition than the ordinary Hospitals, or the Halls and Companies of London, who are capable of any Endowments. Which I more fear, because I find that the most popular, panic, and compliant Preachers, who, in all those ruffling times wherein this Sin marched most furiously and triumphantly, have had many opportunities to have given some check and stop to it by their preaching or writing before both the great and the many; yet not one of all those grand Masters (otherwise Boanergesses, Sons of Thunder enough) have ever (that I have heard or seen) fallen upon this execrable sin of Sacrilege, by pen or tongue, to reprove it or repress it: nay some of my own coat have made no bones to be Actors and Applauders of it, to eat the Flesh and gnaw the Bones, which some Laymen (as over-gorged) have left, who probably would not have ventured thus on holy things, if they had not been animated by some Pulpiteers to prey upon the Church and Clergy. Yea, some Preachers have been not only persuaders to invade and alienate Church-Lands, but themselves have purchased them to their private Estates and secular uses, to the perpetual infamy of their Names, and horror of their Souls and their Children, that shall enjoy those sacred morsels. Hence is it that the warmest and most overboiling Reformers of later days, never so much as summoned, arraigned, questioned, or censured this Monster of Sacrilege, this reforming Extortion, before their new Consistorian tribunals. The lean sin of Sabbath-breaking (even to a poor man's gathering a few sticks, or earning a penny to relieve his hungry belly, or walking abroad to refresh his spirits) this is oft scared, catched and scratched (together with swearing and drunkenness, private, personal and petty sins in comparison) in the renewed nets of State-Acts and Ordinances; but the fat sin of Sacrilege ever goes scot-free, as if it had the Privilege of Parliament, not to be arrested: it was never yet called to the bar of Lords or Commons, never examined by civil Justice, never presented or promoted by the reverend Scot-English Assembly, which were as the grand Inquest, the Promoters or Apparitors so long to the long Parliament. For even these Rabbis sitting so long in Moses his Chair (and helping to displace all Bishops, with all dignified Churchmen, from their Convocations and Cathedrals, upon I know not what supposed misdemeanours) yet in their large catalogue of scandalous sins, which they had long studied, and at last, with much gravity, presented to the Honourable Houses, in order to a Presbyterian perfect Reformation of all things amiss, as to Conscience and Religion in Church and State, they had not either so good memories, or so good courages, or so good consciences, as to reckon among that black rabble, or to impeach, no not so much as to mention, or once to name, either the sin of Sacrilege or of Schism. Good men! sure they either over-saw these sins in the crowd (though they are (one of them at least) higher by the shoulders than most they there enumerate;) or they saw that a dispensation of course was to be granted to these sins, which became so popular and epidemic, yea so specious and gallant, as being clothed with the spoils of the Church, and wearing the Liberties of the people for their Liveries. It is not a less true than pertinent observation, which a very prying and perspicacious eye hath made, as to those larger Annotations on the English Bible, printed 1646. (by persons of commendable Learning and Industry (some of them) if they had been of more impartiality:) These Annotators, in every place through the Bible, where the Word and Spirit of God signally commands them to brand the sin of Sacrilege with a black mark, as one of the Devils hindmost herd, do so slily and slightly pass it over, as if they had neither seen nor smelled that foul Beast; as if there were no Gall in their pens, no Reproof in their mouths, no Courage in their hearts against this Sin: they scarce ever touch it, never state it, make no perstrictive or invective stroke against it: which he thought could not be their ignorance, or inadvertency, but the cowardice, cunning and parasitisme of the times; in which they were content, for some Presbyterian ends, to connive at Sacrilege in those good Lords and Masters, whose charity they hoped (yea I heard some of them profess they expected) would turn all that stream which Bishops, Deans and Chapters enjoyed, to drive the Presbyterian Mills, to keep up the honour of Ruling and Teaching Elders. Otherwise it had been impossible that any thing besides a studied silence and affected palpation in men of any light and sight, could have so gently slid over that place of Achans sacrilege, Josh. 6.7. or that of Belshazzars, Dan. 5.2. where they blame his drunkenness, but not his sacrilegious profaneness, which the emphasis of the Text more points at than the other. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Callidè intervertere aut surripere quippiam, ne ad domini notitiam & usum perveniat. Nay, upon Acts 5. they urge against Ananias and Saphira the sin of Lying, Covetousness and Hypocrisy, but not that of their Sacrilege, and defrauding God of what now was his, and not theirs, being put out of their power by pretended donation of the whole, which was the capital crime, withdrawing and purloining from God and the Church, part of that estate which they had pretendedly devoted (in solidum) the whole to sacred uses, and so put it out of their own power to resume or detain it, as S. Peter tells them: yea, on Rom. 2.22. these soft-fingred Censors very gently touch that rough satire of Sacrilege, where it is expressly put in the balance with Idolatry, and overweighs it, as the more enormous. So on Levit. 25.34. where the Levites lands are forbidden to be sold; and on Gen. 47.22. where Joseph's Piety and Pharaoh's Policy forbear to buy or sell the Priests lands; and on Ezek. 47.1. & 48.14. where, in order to support the Evangelicall Service and Ministry, care is taken to appoint an holy portion of land to be laid out for the Priests as an holy oblation to the Lord, which might never be sold. In all these places, which are as a bright cloud of witnesses against Sacrilege, these wary Annotators shut their eyes, as if they could not see the prodigy; there is altum silentium in all their Glossaries; this Agag was to be spared; by a grave and prudent silence, they do not so much as put in any caution against it, much less pass any crimination or condemnation upon it: but as if they were Chaplains at once serving the Lord, their Bellies and the Times, as partaking of the Table of the Lord, and the Table of Devils; so do they rather coaks than crush this Cockatrice; seeming (forsooth) fearful of appearing superstitious men, or but lukewarm Reformers, if they damped some of their good Master's zeal, by bitterly inveighing against, and justly damning this darling and damnable sin of Sacrilege; which puts on the form, not only of Godliness and Reformation, but of Thrift and good Husbandry, to save the public purse in the necessary expenses of a Civil War; which in some men's desires, as I believe it had never been begun, but only in order to destroy the Government of the Church, and confiscate those Revenues, so (all things computed) I no less believe that the State or secular purse hath had but a dear pennyworth of those Church-Lands, at so vast a charge as hath attended the War, first commenced by Presbytery against Episcopacy. CHAP. XXII. WHich Flames having soon consumed the Lands, Houses, The insatiableness of sacrilegious spirits unrepressed. and Revenues of Bishops and Cathedrals (whose honour was the public Honour of this Nation, of this reformed Church, and of every sober Minister) grew so masterless, that they threatened not only the Livings of Parochial Ministers, but the very Nurseries of Learning, the Schools of the Prophets, the Colleges and Lands of both Universities; which seemed to be spared and reprieved a while by the loud outcries of those men who had there got into the warm nests of other Birds, whom they had driven from thence; but the wide jaws of some sacrilegious spirits did, and do still gape and grin upon these Ecclesiastic and Academic remaining Morsels, grudging that they are not satisfied with them: nor will they fail to be devoured in a few years, if persons of Sovereign power and Nobler spirits do not protect them, as hitherto they have done, from that ever-craving leech of Sacrilege, which lives unsatiably crying Give, give, in some laymen's breasts; nor may they be too confident of every Parliament to be their Friends or Defenders. A notable alarm and instance of which danger the Lord Herbert gives in the reign of our Henry the 8. Hist. of Hen. 8. who as an Helduo or unsatiable gulf, having swallowed up, digested and egested as much Treasure and Lands as would have purchased a good Kingdom, and maintained it in all equipage, both Military and Civil, becoming Majesty, yet still indigent and necessitous, he was offered by the House of Commons in a Parliament toward his later end, all the Lands and Houses of the two famous Universities, to be confiscated to his Exchequer, by a most mechanic prostitution of the Learning, the Honour, and the Piety of the Nation. But that dreadful Prince told them, not without a just scorn, that he had too much of a Scholar in him to destroy two such Universities as the world had not the like. And he had so much of a Christian Prince too, as not to destroy Bishops and Cathedrals, or to take away their Houses and Estates; but he rather added to them, and erected four new Bishoprics out of the Lands of some Collegiate and Monastic Churches. Had he with the same moderation and justice then restored Impropriations to the Church, for the competent maintenance of Ministers in all places, he had done a work so glorious and useful to Religion, as might have expiated all other his Royal Extravagancies. For my part, I am confident the just God will visit this sin of Sacrilege upon any Person, Family or Nation, that are guilty of it: nor will the Controversy ever be taken up till either full vengeance, or due restitution and redemption be made, of what was God's portion, for the Order, Honour and Maintenance of his Service and this Church, no more than Israel could stand in battle, while Achan and the accursed or devoted thing was among them. Josh. 7.12. The Safety, Honour, Peace, Plenty, Happiness, and chiefly the Piety and Religion of any Nation, professing the Name and Worship of the true God, all these will fatally decay, and be upon not only great hazards, but diminutions and distresses, while Professors of Religion and Reformation make God the Father, and Christ the Godfather of any Sacrilege, as if it were as acceptable a service to them, to take away from such a Christian and Reformed Church such means as was fit to maintain (and anciently devoted to) the honour and encouragement of Christ's Ministers and Governors of his Church, as it was to burn the Chariots, and hough the horses of the Sun in pieces. 2 King. 23.11. 'Tis true, all that is dedicated to false (that is no) Gods, is an injury, and a sacrilegious robbing of the true God; therefore those Donations may lawfully, in some men's judgements, be taken away: but none ever allowed true men to be false to the true God, to rob and defraud him, who is the maker and giver of all. Shall Christians grudge to give that to Christ, yea and rapine that from him which others have given to him, who is the repairer and restorer of all? No, good Angels can guard those men or that Nation which they see guilty of robbing that good God they profess to worship. Certainly Sacrilege is the more notorious sin, and of deeper die, by how much it is committed among Christians, and most where they profess to be most reform, who should best know how much they owe to God, how they should value the gift of his Son Jesus Christ to die for them, and the feet of his Messengers, who preach those glad tidings to poor sinners. Nor can I but observe, how God hath already visited with no small or light strokes of his vengeance, as the whole Nation, so in particular, the sinful and shameful silence even of those Ministers who were so cold, cunning and indifferent, as to the reproving of Sacrilege and Schism, provided they might (in other designs) gain their process. They and their dictator's too have, for the most part, both in England and Scotland, reaped nothing but Shame and Infamy, Reproach and Contempt, which is the shadow ever following Sacrilege, even among honest Heathens and true Christians, while they could liberally declaim and lift up their voices like Trumpets, in an Oratory not more loud and popular, Sacrilegi Diis exosi, hominibus infames. Valer. Ma. than flat and insipid, against a few decent and innocent Ceremonies, against a handsome and wholesome Liturgy, against learned, godly and reverend Bishops, far their betters, against Ancient and Catholic Episcopacy, which preserved the Order and Unity of the Church; but in the great concerns of God's Glory, this Church's Honour, the Clergies Maintenance, the good of men's souls, and the credit of the Christian and Reformed Religion (which were all so invaded by a bold and resolute Sacrilege, threatening all settled Livings and Maintenance of Ministers and Scholars) there they peep and mutter, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ventriloqui. Isa. 8.19. like Obs and Python's, whispering as out of the earth and their bellies, not from their hearts, more dubiously than the Oracles of Apollo, and more obscurely than the Sibyls leaves. Thus artificial are some men at the swallowing of Camels and sticking at Gnats. I do not forespeak or imprecate a further evil day upon any, but rather I pray for Personal, yea national Repentance, Amendment and Pardon; without which I am confident God will vindicate his great Name, and the name of Jesus Christ, together with the Honour and Principles of both Christian and true Reformed Religion, from so great a scandal as Sacrilege is, against all those men, whatever they are, their Parties and Posterities, who not only dare to commit it, but to connive at it, yea commend it, yea to boast of it, yea impute it to the impulses of God's spirit, to their zeal for Religion, and to their aims at a perfect or through Reformation. After all which noise and rattle, God knows, much is more deformed than ever in Religion, both as to the Polity and power of it, the outward Order and inward Efficacy; nothing truly reform by robbing the Church, but only the tenuity of some men's former fortunes. If the persons of any Churchmen in England had by their misdemeanour legally forfeited their use and enjoyments of such holy things, as they had in God's name, and as the Church's servants; yet certainly the whole Church and Nation had not lost their right in them; Posterity could not consent to be deprived of those advantages of Learning and Religion, and I am sure God's title to them can never fall under any forfeiture or escheat, whose special patrociny those Demesnes were. In the Goods and Lands belonging to the Ministry and Church of Christ, for the Service of God, for the Education and Maintenance of his Ministers, for the well-ordering and Government of the Church, and Relief of the Poor, who ever presumes to impropriate them by mere Power, or purchase them to his private Estate, had need have either a very good pennyworth of them, for they will destroy more than they bring, or a better title than Ananias had to what was once his own, or than God himself hath to them, when once devoted and given to him; yea, they need more power to preserve such Estates to their use and their Posterities, than God hath to bless or curse both them and theirs. I have read it as an observation made out of many Authors, that the holy vessels of the Temple, which were taken from Jerusalem by Titus Vespasian, and tossed up and down to many Countries and Cities, in Europe, Asia and Africa, In Sir H. spelman's discourse of Sacrilege. MS. did (as the Ark among the Philistines) carry always a storm and calamity with them, with such a sacred horror, that no man durst melt them or divert them to secular uses or private benefit, until they were at last brought out of Africa from Carthage (as I remember) to Constantinople, and there dedicated by a Christian Emperor to the service and honour of Christ, in the goodly Church of Sancta Sophia, Euseb. l. 10. c. 5. Hist. which Constantine the Great built and endowed with many goodly both Vessels and Revenues, as Eusebius tells us, yea and commanded all goods taken from Christian Churches in former times to be restored. Sacrilege, what fair face soever it carries, hath the tail and sting of a Serpent; nor can any man die with peace, or hope for the prosperity of his Family after him, who knowingly is guilty of that Sin. Modest and Honest Christians will not (no not in their extremities) take from God and his Church so much as a shooe-latchet to make them rich; David would have been famished (I believe) rather than by force have taken the Shewbread, 1 Sam. 21.5.22.18. or Priest's portion from them, which was a work only fit for Doeg, who durst take away their lives. CHAP. XXIII. Pleas for Sacrilege answered. I Know it will be pleaded by some (that are more politic than pious, Religionis trapezitae) 1. That civil Polities have the absolute supreme power over all things of civil Rights and secular Enjoyments, to dispose of them as seems most for the public Safety, Profit and Honour; 2. That whatever is acted, passed and possessed by such Authority, seems valid and unquestionable; 3. that those Lands and Revenues which nourished Bishops, Deans and prebend's, were superfluous, if not superstitious, as to the point of Christian and Reformed Religion; 4. That if there be any fault in any mens first invading and alienating things sacred, yet private possessors, either by gift or purchase of them, are afterward in no fault, as having the highest civil Right to what they so enjoy; 5. Besides divers Princes and States have disposed, as they pleased, of Church-Revenues. To all these pretensions every man's own reason and conscience will first and best give answer, if it be not partial, and bribed by its own private gain: but to open the eyes of such as are willingly blind, I must tell them, in words of soberness and truth, with all due respect to whatever powers are ordained of God as supreme among men, 1. No man, as to his own private civil Estate (to which he hath a good right in Law) would think it just, without any fault done by him or proved against him, to be deprived of it, and turned out of all by any reason of State. How then can he think it just, as to any Church-mens Ecclesiastic Estates, that they should be outed of their Estates, to which they have both a civil and religious Title, both Gods Right and Man's Donation? No Christians should offer that measure to Christ and his Ministers which they would not have offered unto themselves. 2. Though civil polities m●y have the supreme power over particular men's Estates, among men, yet 'tis a power (sub graviore regno) subordinate to God's Sovereignty, and aught to be subject to those rules of Reason, Justice and Religion, which he hath given mankind, and especially Christians: the greater any men's Power is, the more strict the Piety and Equity of it should be; for they are subject to err and to sin no less than private men, and are no less punishable by Divine Vengeance, both singly and socially: whole Nations may rob God, and be accursed of him. 3. Mal. 3. Civil polities in their due conjunctures are indeed justly counted supreme upon earth, being, as they ought to be, free and full; when all Estates, called, convened and concerned in public Counsels and Transactions, have liberty to plead and vote, deny and grant, to hear and argue, to judge and determine, according to the conscience of all, and not according to the prevalency and bias of any one party, nor exclusive of any men's consent which ought to be had in such cases, either as to the right of Enjoyment, or as to the joint, legislative and supreme power, which only can make a legal alienation of any civil rights. 'Tis evident that the most united and excellent Parliaments in England for Piety and Peace, did abhor and avoid Sacrilege as a sin against God, his Church, and all good men. The Kings of England were bound by Oath to preserve the State and Rights of the Church; nor were Peers and People less bound in duty and gratitude to God and man, than if they had been sworn. 4. It doth not appear by any Law of God or Man, in Reason or Religion, that any humane or civil power hath any authority or jurisdiction to the prejudice of God's Rights and Interest, whose the Estate and Revenues of the Church are in Fee, as chief Lord, being dedicated to his Service, Worship and Glory, and are indeed in no man's property, however in Church-mens use, as God's Tenants. The acts of power and will may prevail among men, and hold good in Westminster-Hall, in foro soli & humano; but they cannot give a right in foro coeli & conscientiae, before God's Tribunal, or in a man's own Conscience, which regard not actual and arbitrary Power, but internal Right and Equity, which forbids any injury to be done to any man, Acts 5.35. Ye men of Israel, take heed to yourselves what ye intent to do, as to these men. John 19.23. and specially to those that are the Ministers or Servants of Christ and his Church, whose injuries redound to God himself. Good Christians must consider not quid factum valet among men, but quid fieri debuit, as to the exact righteousness which God requires. The dividing Christ's garment among the Soldiers, and casting lots for his Vesture was not sufficient to give them a good title to his Clothes as their fees, when Christ was so partially and unjustly condemned. 5. The practice of some Princes or commonweals is no precedent or rule for Christians to follow, no more than Jeroboams reason of State to prevent the return of Israel to David's house justified his Calves. Yea, though we read some tolerable or good Kings of Judah did make bold with the Treasures of the Lords house, to redeem themselves, 2 King. 18.16. and both Church and State, from hostile invasions (as the ancient Clergy oft sold their rich Vessels or Chalices of the Church, to redeem captive Kings, as our Richard the first, and other Christians) yet this is recorded by the Spirit of God to their diminution, though it were but borrowing the gold of the Doors, and superfluities of the Temple, with a purpose (no doubt) to restore them in better times: but we never read that any Prince or People of any note for Piety, did ever take away the Lands and Houses of the Priests and Levites of old, nor those Revenues, Tithes and Oblations, which were the honourable or necessary subsistence of Evangelick Ministers, the very livelihood of many worthy men and their Families, the public rewards of learned Men and useful Virtues, also the honorary encouragements of all Ministers, and advantages of Christian Reformed Religion, especially in Engl. where Governors in some eminency will be found as necessary for the order and well-being of the Church, as Ministers are for the praying and preaching part. 6. If the first Alienators of holy things be, as principals, sinners and sacrilegious against God and his Church, I fear it will be hard for those to excuse themselves of being accessary to the Sin who (knowingly) accept or purchase them at the second or third hand; however the title may by power be made good among men, yet sure there is no Power valid, or Title good against God, nor can unjustice stand before his exact justice; if no wise or honest man will deal in dubious Estates or cracked Titles, as to civil Bargening and Purchases, much less where God and the Church, besides particular men and Ministers too, make so pregnant Claims and clear Titles by Law, that nothing but absolute will and power of man can be brought to make good the contrary. Nothing is more for the honour of a Christian Nation, than to have no men in it that would buy God's Portion, and the Church's Patrimony. 7. He that had bought the Wedge and Garment of Achan ignorantly, might have been excusable, Josh. 7. as to any complication with, or comprobation of his Theft and Sacrilege; yet, no doubt, he must have restored them, as Anathemaes devoted to God, if he expected any Peace or Comfort: but whoso had knowingly bought or received them of Achan, could not but be guilty of his sin, and under the same condemnation; nor could Israel ever recover its Courage, Strength and Honour, till the camp was cleared of those both goods and persons, who stood before God under the brand, offence and high guilt of Sacrilege. 8. Every man's own experience or conscience will give him the fullest convictions, as to this sin: and I am of opinion, that no man's Estate is so fat and thrifty, by what he hath at first, second, or third hand taken or detained from the Church, but he feels the sharp stings and gnawings of his own misgiving conscience, besides his famished and fearful soul; which justly dreads to look Judgement or Death in the face, when he knows how ill account he can give either of goods unjustly taken and detained from the right owners of them, or (willingly) bought at under rates from a second had. If personal and private injuries done against the estate and livelihood of any one poor man, will oppress the greatest oppressor at the last day; where will they appear who are found oppressors of many men, and these religious men too, yea and Ministers of God and his Church, for the good of the souls of many thousands for many generations? Nor will it excuse some men, that they are (upon occasion) zealous to relieve poor Ministers and other distressed Protestants abroad, if they help to undo and impoverish their own Pastors at home. Sacrilege is certainly a scandal not to be so easily wiped away from the face of any Reformed Church and Religion, if it were either the principle, practice, or approbation of any, which it never was, is, or will be: nor can so great a sin be so cheaply expiated by any men, with alms given to relieve some poor men in their distresses. But I have done with this Viper, this Dragon, this fiery flying Serpent; against whose poison and fierceness I know no Antidote sufficient, but a pure heart, innocent hands, and a good conscience: nor is any charm potent enough to resist its contagion among mean and mercenary spirits, when once it comes to be an indulged and exemplary mischief, fortified as with a Law, yea consecrated as the brazen serpent, for an healing Emblem, that is, a Lay-meanes to reform Churches, to regulate Clergymen, and to recommend Christian Religion, which must all be impoverished that they may be improved. No arms are strong enough to give check and repression to its insolency, but such thunderbolts as Jupiter is said to have used against Typheous, or Briareus, or Enceladon; See B●chartus Geog. S. de Sicul. phoenicibus. l. 1. c. 28. Qui super impositi spirans per montis hiatus. Aeter●os vomit ore ignes. En celadi bustum qui saucia membra revinctus Spirat inexhaustum flagranti pectore sulphur. Claudian. de Aetn. such Giants as designed to pillage the Gods, and to sack Heaven itself, whom the Poets fancied to be cast into those Tophets or burning Mountains, such as are Aetna, Vesuvius, and others; the fittest terrors of everlasting burnings to scare men from Sacrilege, which is a mischief (a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) beyond any that can befall true Religion, or mankind, especially when it pretends most to befriend and regulate Religion. Such Sacrilege (as a clandestine persecution) is worse than any open hostility: for this invited even enemies to embrace a profession adorned with such Saintly patience and heroic constancy; but the other alienates all, both, Friends and Strangers from such Religion as (is felo de se) cuts its own throat, mocks and strips its Saviour, thiefs from its God, impoverisheth and debaseth his Priests and Ministers, gives nothing but scandals and offences to all men of any just Principles and generous Piety, not only to Divines and Preachers, but to Princes, noblemans, Gentlemen, Lawyers and Soldiers, both Protestant and Papist, who have any value of their Saviour, respect to their God, gratitude to their Preachers, or love to true Religion and true Reformation. Not but that I know many men, in a licentious and presumptuous Age, which nothing but daily thunderbolts can confute, Object. like deaf Adders, after all is said that can be against Sacrilege, yet flatter themselves in the good purchases they make of Church-lands. They reply with great confidence, that many grow rich, who dwell and trade in Sacriledge-alley; that Church-lands afford as good Crops and Rents as any other; that many prosper under this imaginary curse, which is rather in Church-mens fretful fancies than in God's displeasure, that if it be a sin in the first Alienators, yet the after-Purchasers are not concerned in the guilt, many of them thriving and leaving their substance to their children. My answer is, Answ. It is very true (as King John scoffingly said) That Stagg may be fat which never heard Mass. Belshazzar might drink pleasant Wine out of the Vesssels of the Temple: Dan. 5.2. many Pirates (as the ancient Moralists observed) had fair winds after they had pillaged the Temples of their Gods: many enjoy the warm sun, who are out of God's blessing; without which, not only leanness enters into men's souls, amidst their greatest worldly enjoyments, but terror also, sooner or later, seizeth on them. No man's Estate can be justly esteemed prosperous which lies obnoxious to God's curse, as theirs expressly doth Mal. 3.9. even to an whole Nation, who are robbers of God. Without he continual feast of a good conscience, fullness itself becomes famine. No man can with comfort build or dwell· there where the beams and stones out of the wall cry against him, Hab. 2.11. as a sacrilegious invader or possessor. There must needs be gravel between those teeth which eat that bread which belongs to the nourishment of those who ought to feed the flock of Christ. I am sure no sacrilege can at present enjoy a secure and serene title before God; and for the future, it is in many instances to be verified (vix gaudet tertius haeres) such estates seldom descend, and if they do, are seldom enjoyed with Blessing and Comfort by the third heirs, whose teeth are set on edge by those sour grapes which their fathers have eaten. A Serpent doth sometime or other bite the hand, Eccl. 10.8. head or heart of such who break down the hedge and fence of God's Church and Vineyard, which cannot be duly dressed, if God's Husbandmen, the Pastors and Ministers, be weakened and impoverished: with whose spoils as I resolve, by God's grace, never to be enriched, either by Purchase or Gift upon any terms; so I wish the like resolution to all my friends: & (as a Father) I do impose it by way of solemn charge upon my posterity (less arbitrary than that injunction of drinking no Wine, Jerem. 35. observed by the Rechabites) that they never buy or accept any thing which they find is by any pretence, power or presumption whatsoever, alienated from Gods Right, or the Church's Patrimony; that is, such things as have, according to the Evangelical tenor of Gods will and Word, been dedicated or given to God's glory and worship, either in piety or charity, either for the maintenance and support of Christ's Ministers in particular, or for the general honour, polity, order and government of them and the whole Church; which is, in my judgement, as sacred and inviolable, both in Equity and Charity, Honour and Humanity, as what is once, and so irrevocably, if lawfully, given by way of alms to the poor; for this concerns but the momentary, the other the eternal life of poor mortals. In earnest, no Religion can be carried on with due reputation, 1 Timoth. 6.5. which turns godliness into unjust gain, or makes secular advantages, by perverting of things devoted to Divine uses, to spiritual and sacred ends: of which sin I fear too many in England have been and still are guilty, both as actors and abettors, under the name and pretence of I know not what Reformation. Object. Plea against Restitution from indemnity of the Purchasers. 2 Chron. 25 9 But men of Consciences rather Legal than Evangelicall, will be ready to object, (in behalf of such Proprietors as have given valuable prices, rather than good consideration, for such Revenues as have been alienated in the heat and roughness of times from the Church) as Amaziah King of Judah did to the man of God, What shall I do for the hundred talents which I have given? etc. What shall Purchasers do to have recompense, who have adventured their Estates in such Bargains upon public justice, Protection and faith? Must they be wholly losers of their bargains, yea and must their money (like Simon Magus') perish with them, as will follow, if they hold not what they have thus bought? My Answer is, First, many of them had such Bargains, Answ. as they can be no great losers, if they should freely restore the peeled and remaining Lands to the Church; as it might perhaps lessen their Profit a little, so possibly it might much increase their Peace and Comfort. But to make the way of Restitution less clamorous, and most equitably conscientious, I humbly conceive, that as the public Purse, to save men's secular Estates, had the benefit of those Church-confiscations, and sales in most expensive thrift, which seems to me less commendable, and less comfortable; so the Wisdom, Justice, Piety and Honour of the Public shall do worthy of itself, to find some such way both to buy in Impropriations, and to make such restitutions as may be least oppressive to any particular man: which is no very hard work, much less impossible, if men's Hearts were as large, and their Purses as free for the means of saving their souls, as for their civil safety, which every year costs as much as in one year for all would in great part effect this most Honourable▪ Just and Religious work, of restoring to God, his Ministers and his Church, those things which fall under so dubious a title at best, that few Lawyers of Learning and Conscience can find salvoes sufficient to satisfy those grand Objections, which Reason, Scripture, Ecclesiastical and Imperial Laws, make against the dispossessing any Church of those Donations and Enjoyments which are Gods in chief. CHAP. XXIV. WHat sober, wise, and wary Christian, The Romanists discouragements as to the Reformed Religion by Sacrilege. not wholly carried down the stream of Envy and an evil Covetousness, can henceforth wonder to see those of the Roman party obstinate in their errors, and hating to be reform, while they see Reformation thus marching, like Jehu, furiously, looking in every quarter for the prey and spoils of the Church, as if it were carried on not by the meekness and bounty of primitive Christians and Pious Princes (such as Constantine, Theodosius, Valentian, and others of former times) but by Achmats and Selimusses, by Saracens, Tartars, Turks and Crabats, men like evening-wolves, devouring all they can rap and rend from the Church, where ever they prevail; such spirits of burning, which (like flaming fire) leave all things like a parched heath and barren wilderness behind them, which they found well planted and watered, beautiful and plentiful, like the Garden of God, while the Church enjoyed its nursing fathers and careful preservers of its Polity and Support, its Order and Honour, its Revenues and Rights, both Humane and Divine. The ecclesiastics of the Roman party are not only very numerous, but (many of them) persons of noble families, excellent breeding, great learning, generous spirits, and choice abilities, for Affairs civil and sacred; every way as well meriting and employing those advantages of Estates and Honours, which they lawfully enjoy, as any of those are like to do, who would by force, or under specious pretensions, deprive them of those enjoyments; who can think it strange, that such persons of eminency, with all their Relations, Friends, Clientels and Dependences, are very unwilling to come under the hands of such rifling Reformers, such mad shavers of Religion, who design not only to cut off some part of the long locks and overgrown hair of Churchmen (I mean the Riot and Luxuriancy of their Manners, which are the real deformity of any Christian, much more of any Clergyman) but they intent to treat them as Hanun did David's Messengers, or as the Philistines did Samson, shave them so bare and close, make them so curtailed and cropped, that all their strength, beauty, esteem and honour shall depart from them, not only in the sight of people of better quality, but even before the very abjects of the people; who may afterward safely contemn and scorn them, as persons unable to do them good or hurt. Who sees not that some men's cruel severities and rude reformings, if they had their wills, are not to be satisfied with the wool and fleece of Churchmen, but they study to flay off their very skins? They gape like the pit, and enlarge their mouths like hell, while any Estate is yet left to the Church; not only goodly manors, and fair houses, which have properly belonged many hundred years to Churchmen and the Church of Christ, but Glebes, Tithes, yea, the material Churches and Chapels must all go down the unsatiable gulfs, the sacrilegious Gules of some lack-latine Reformers; nothing ample or settled must be left to any Ministers, either Bishops or Presbyters, be they never so sound in Doctrine, exemplary in their Lives, of excellent Abilities, and charitable Spirits, as many were heretofore, and still are, in England. The greedy godliness of some Reformers would have all Preachers such spiritual persons as should, like Chameleons, live only upon the air, their own and the popular breath, with little or no corporal sustenance, urging much that primitive poverty, which, armed with the conspicuity of miracles, and attended with primitive charity in Christian people, was no diminution, but advantage to the Bishops and Ministers of the Gospel; for they then lived among believers of so generous liberality & grateful beneficence, that they were the cream and flower of Christianity, esteeming their Preachers dearer than their right eyes: But we alas are fallen among unsatiable leeches & tenacious vultures; in an age ingeniously wicked, to mock God, to rob the Church, to deceive and damn their own with others souls, full of the dregs of hypocritical cruelty & covetous formality; which loves the goods of the Church of Christ as much as those in former times did the good of it, when by their munificent bounty, Christian Princes, Nobility and Gentry, bestowed those many ample and honourable endowments on the Church of Christ, and his Ministers in all Country's, where the state of Christians was peaceable and plentiful;) which gifts now were the great baits of some sacrilegious Reformers, who to be sure love the world, themselves, and their mammon very well: how they love God and Christ, the Church and the Clergy, I list not to judge, but leave it to be known by their good works; by the great things they have either done or suffered for Religion; by the cost and charges they have been at from their private purses, to make a gainful Reformation; by that zeal they have to eat up the Houses of God, to serve God in a way that may cost them nothing to be sure, and next, get them some good Booty and Advantage from the Church, while any is to be had. I therefore appeal to all men of any equitable, honest or ingenuous Senses, Is it expectable, that persons of so much Learning, Reason, Prudence and Experience, as the Roman Clergy generally are, should ever think of approving, much less of embracing such a Reformation, which (besides other foul spots cast by some upon it, unsuitable to any thing of true Religion) evidently threatens the utter ruin of their Honour and Livelihood, yea of their very Order and Function? Will any sober Papist wash in this Jordan, in order to be clean, which he sees not only so troubled and tumultuary, but so violent and excessive, that, like a rapid Torrent, it overflows all banks of Modesty, Moderation, Equity and Charity, carrying down all before it, and overwhelming at once both Churches and Churchmen? it hurries them away (without ever hearing them plead for themselves) into the gulf and precipice of Poverty and Baseness, of Dishonour and Contempt, of Disorder and Confusion. What grave and well-advised Romanists will not be much upon the reserve, as to any thoughts of Reformation, when they see that under that colour they are sure to be undone? They must lose all those personal acquisitions and honorary enjoyments which they have obtained by the will of the dead, by the laws of any Christian Nation, by the proportions of Equity and Gratitude, by the indulgence of God, & the merits of Christ: yea, though they should be content to admit of all real Reformations in doctrine and manners, yet still they must, by a pious stupidity and asinine sanctity, consent to have themselves and their whole Order deprived of all those necessary Supports, comely Ornaments, and just Honours, which were most fitting for the Christians God and Saviour, for Christian Churches, and Ministers of the glorious Gospel: all these must be wasted, alienated and embezzled from God, his Church, and his Ministers, in order to gratify either the exorbitant luxury of some riotous Prince, or the more thrifty covetousness of some State and Commonwealth, or the ever-craving and envious necessities of some private mean-spirited people, till they see Deformity, Beggary, Contempt, Confusion, and all Irreligion, dancing, like Satyrs and evil Spirits, among the Ruins of Religion, and amidst the Desolations, not of the pomp so much as of the very power and profession, of true Christianity. The evil eye of some Reformers against material Churches. Which dreadful effects must needs be much in the eye and abhorrence of every pious and prudent man, who sees by evident experience what some men's Reformations do mean, when they not only grudge at all settled, just and honourable maintenance of Ministers, which they would fain swallow up and divert another way; but they are further as studious to demolish and devour, as ever their forefathers were to build, even those public Monuments of pristine Devotion, Gratitude and Magnificence, which became Christians, above all men, to their bountiful God and blessed Saviour. Even those goodly Cathedrals and other material Churches (which never cost their defacers one penny to build or repair them) these must, if some men may have their wills (and they have had it, God knows, too much) be so robbed of all their great endowments and ancient Revenues, that nothing must be left so much as to repair them, or keep them up for the honour of Christ, and the use of Christian people, for the Service of God and the Glory of the Nation: no, they must be so pillaged and stripped, that they are exposed to the injuries of Wind and Wether, and at last left so bare and naked, without covering as well as repair, that they must necessarily drop down with their own weight, daily mouldering away, and burying themselves in their own rubbish; out of which some wretched Sacrilegists' aim to extract and scrape some profit to their private purses, by a most prodigious kind of prodigality and unthrifty thrift, which reduceth the cost of many thousands of pounds, and the public Monuments of Piety and Honour, to a peddling private gain, or a three-half-penny account, sacrificing so many sumptuous piles of many hundred years' duration to the Purses, Kitchens and Bellies of some pitiful and proling Reformers: all which sacred and stately Structures were once consecrated to God's Glory, and dedicated to the public celebration of holy Duties and Mysteries, in the Name, and for the Honour of our Saviour Jesus Christ. Can you (O my noble and honoured Countrymen) imagine, that sober ecclesiastics, or others among the Papists, are so blind, as not to see these sad Events, and to foresee their own Calamities in other Country's, if they should give way to some men's rude reformings? If a sober and settled Reformation (such as was sometime so conspicuous and renowned in the Church of England,) if this did heretofore any way invite or incline many Romanists to embrace it, as some did, with the safety of their civil Profits and Honours, as well as the Advantages of God's Truth and Piety; and if the unjesuited Papists could have found in their hearts (as many did) to apply to that Reformation of Religion, which preserved, together with the Sanctity, Integrity and Majesty of true Religion, the honest Interests of deserving Churchmen, as well as of other Christians, from those popular Rapines and sacrilegious Exorbitances, to which the Envy, Baseness, Rusticity and Covetousness of vulgar Spirits are prone to be transported: yet certainly, now, they cannot but with Shame, Horror and Disdain, look upon, speak, or think of those boundless and bitter Reformations, which some in later years have aimed at and endeavoured in England; which will endure, 1. First, no Liturgy, or Uniformity of Devotions in public holy Celebrations, by which to avoid those either Defects or Excesses, those Partialities and Prejudices, those Improprieties and Scandals, which necessarily attend holy Duties, and the minds of people, while all Prayers and solemn Consecrations are left to the Varieties, Sufficiencies, or Deficiencies, to the private and extemporary confidences of every Man and Minister that lists to officiate. 2. Next, it will endure no Ancient and Authentic Ordination of Ministers, nor any degree of Eminency, Order, or Government among the Clergy, but all must be left to a Presbyterian parity, or higglede pigglede of Preachers, yea and People too; in which Young and Old, Grace and Green, Novices and Veterane Ministers must be leveled and jumbled together. Notwithstanding God and Nature, Age and Years, Gifts and Graces, Prudence and Gravity, Piety and Policy, have distinguished them, and made them fit to be superior and subordinate in Reason and Religion, in Piety and Policy, as Fathers and Sons; yet these must all be blended and confounded in I know not what new consistory Chaos, which at every meeting creates its raw Moderators and unexperienced Precedents, turning by a continual Circumgyration and multiplied Epicycles, its Heads into Tails, and its Tails into Heads; its rulers into ruled, and it's ruled into rulers. 3. Last of all, the new Modes of some men's Reforming will not endure that any Churchmen, as Ministers, should have any thing certain or settled, as their own, whereon to feed, unless it be their nails and fingers ends; no nor any constant either Mansions, where they should dwell, or Churches, where they should meet with Christian Congregations, to worship and serve the God of Heaven, in that Order and Beauty of Holiness which becomes his Name, his People, and Public Service in times of Peace and Plenty. CHAP. XXV. A plea for PAUL'S and other Churches in England. IF such odious, scandalous and sacrilegious Proportions of some men's Reformations were any way disputable, or less discernible in every City, Town, and Corner almost of the Land (to which (as Cuckoos in April) this evil Bird of Sacrilege is flown, every where crying with its harsh and unwelcome note, Give, give,) yet there is one instance of its malignity and deformity so great, so visible, that as it cannot be hid, so I cannot be silent of it, even in that imperial chamber, that overgrown Metropolis of this Nation, the Rich and Renowned, the Opulent and Populous City of London; where that vast and stately Temple, which was once dedicated to the honour of the true God, and the service of our blessed Saviour, distinguished by the name of the great Apostle of the Gentiles, S. PAUL, whose Gospel sounded even to this Island, this Church (I say) hath engraven upon its Ruins, and written on its dust, the dreadful Characters of what thousands will interpret either a sacrilegious Covetousness, or a great contempt of Religion, or a Negligence and Indifferency, as to any sense of public Honour & national Renown, there being not the like spectacle to be seen in all the Christian World. All which, both Foreigners and Domestics, present Age and Posterity, will be prone to impute to the exceeding Disgrace and Reproach of that large & luxuriant City, which hath nothing in all that mighty forest of buildings, comparable to that magnificent pile; on whose unrepaired and (in a few years) irreparable Ruins, the irreligion of some men's Reformations, besides the dishonour of that City (that I say not of the whole Nation) will be so written and recorded in the heaps of many generations, that no time will wholly remove the one, or obliterate the other. Especially when it shall be remembered, how vast a charge was not many years since laid out, and how great a progress was made, by the Art, Industry, Piety, Munificence, Care, Cost and Honour of that City and the whole Nation, toward the reparation of that stupendious Mass: three parts of four were so admirably restored, even beyond their primitive beauty and strength, that they needed not to fear the teeth of Time, nor the corrosions of that fuliginous air for many hundreds of years; such Cost and Art conspired to its Restauration and Preservation, that in all probability Paul's might have lasted a Monument of pristine Piety and modern Magnificence, the Crown and Honour of that City, as long as the world endured; nor should have suffered any other fate than that which threatens, in not many centuries of years, to shake heaven and earth. 2 Pet. 3. But now (alas) all this great Care and Cost is (for the most part) quite lost and run to waste, for want of adding a little more, to have gloriously completed what was generously begun. What ingenuous soul (not eaten up with an envious Eye and a sacrilegious Spirit) did not find vehement Regrets, honest Pity, and sharp Remorses in his heart, when he saw that goodly Temple of God turned to a stable by a military either necessity or liberty; when (passing by) he discerned all the scaffolds which supported those ponderous arches (till the sides of the Building were confirmed) pulled down, not without the danger and dread of those which removed them, to burn or sell them; when (after this) he beheld the lead which covered it flayed off by piece-meal, and turned to private advantages; when last of all he was afraid to pass through the Isles, or come near the Arches of that great structure, for fear it should fall upon him and oppress him with those horrid heaps, which every moment threatened to fall, their cement being dissolved by rain and weather? To this Tragic posture is that stately structure reduced, which was the noblest ornament of that great and renowned City, as it were the centre of its stability, magnificence, and honour: yea, it was justly reckoned among the chiefest visible instances of the Christian glory and renown of this Nation, while both Natives and Strangers beheld it not without a sacred horror and unwonted admiration. I pray God the Ruin of that Church be not a presage of other Ruins, which will be more unwelcome to many of that City, when their seiled Houses shall become ruinous heaps. I know there are of later years, so many pedlars and enterlopers in Religion, that they are in danger to spoil the grand trade of true Reformation, which ought to be carried on by a public joint stock of Christian Counsel and Charity: for their gainful godliness aims not only to make all Ministers of the Church so mean and miserable, that they shall have just cause to envy the poorest peasants and the meanest mechanics; but they further design to reduce all our material Churches, or Houses of God in the Land, to such sordid deformities, Psal. 83.12. that these shall have cause to envy, not only the spruce and costly Houses of these thrifty Reformers, but their very Barns and Stables, which they will have more substantial, and in better repair, yea more decent and cleanly, than our Churches; into which Christians (as God's Harvest) are frequently gathered together, to serve and worship their Saviour, to praise, adore and admire the God of Heaven. While there is no end of the Cost and Curiosity, the Beauty and Richness of their private Dwellings, yet are these Church-worms, these moths of Reformation, ever murmurnig & repining at what charge is bestowed, even by other men, either long since, or late, upon our Churches; and with a most supercilious demureness and affected zelotry (the better to colour over or conceal their sacrilegious spirits) they are heard very oft to cry out, To what purpose is this waist, this excessive, yea, Objection. Matth. 26.8. superstitious cost? What need is there of such goodly stones, such stately pillars, such massive timber, such costly cover with lead, when we may serve God at a cheaper rate, full as well, nay far better, in a Barn or Stable, in a common Hall or Parlour? Alas, God dwells not in Temples made with hands, nor is he pleased with such prodigal expenses, in order to his worship: how much more acceptable were it to him, if this money were bestowed on the Poor, those living Temples of God's Spirit? Ans. These are the penurious Principles which some whining Reformers, use, to save their purses, yea, and to fill them, as occasion serves, with the spoils both of Churches and Churchmen too; which some men, I believe, have already done, without giving (that ever I heard) any portion as Alms to the Poor: and for hire, some poor labouring men have been so conscientious Christians, that they would not be employed or hired by them on any terms to pull down Churches, lest they should do the work and receive the wages of iniquity. I cannot but answer these men according to their folly and presumption; the rather, because they pretend Religion and Reformation of all things to a spiritual way of worshipping and serving God, which they understand may reach their Hands, Eyes, Tongues, Heads and Hearts, but not their Purses. That is their Noli me tangere, the peculiar and reserve exempted from God's claim and title, not contained in any Commission of Religion, yea precisely excluded out of the new Copies and Schemes of Reformation, drawn different from all ancient Originals of Judaick or Christian Devotion, by men that are very wise in their own eyes, and very wary to save their purses. I pray God they be as careful to save their souls. That these new Masters may not too much triumph in their own fancies, they may please to understand, that we other Christians, who love to serve God in the beauty of holiness and handsomeness, who are ambitious to honour God and his worship with our substance, Prov. 3.9. we are not so uncatechised, as not to know almost as well as these supercilious and parsimonious censors, that the Divine Immensity is so far from dwelling in a comprehensive or enclosed manner, 1 King. 8.27. Act. 17.24. in Houses made with hands, that the Heaven of Heavens cannot contain him; he only is his own Heaven, a Centre and Circumference fixed in and full of himself, alone comprehensive of his own incomprehensible excellencies: yet (under favour of these Seraphic Teachers) the high and holy one that inhabits eternity delights to dwell among the Sons of men; Prov. 8.31. Rev. 21.3. not only in humble Spirits, contrite Hearts, and believing Souls (by the special and invisible residence of his Grace and Spirit) but also in such visible manifestations as are specially circumscribed by times and places; where it may not unproperly be said the Lords name is placed, while there it is solemnly called upon, blessed and praised by the Congregation of the Lords people, who meet together to worship the Lord in such places, as not only fit their own conveniencies best, but carry some proportion to their affections, Honour, Reverence, Devotion and Relation toward their great God and glorified Saviour, even before the sons of men, who by the light of Nature require and expect that the Divine Majesty should be worshipped, not in places of profane and common use, but such as are specially separated from them, and dedicated or consecrated to holy Services, agreeable to that relation they bear to the most holy God, as houses of Prayer, and so houses of God, such as the blessed Apostles and the Lord Jesus himself disdained not to frequent, among the Jews, as the place of public worship, consecrated to God. 'Tis true, our God needs not such Houses, as to his Omnipresence; but he requires them so far, as they are evidences of our respects to him. Nor are Churches only intended for the conveniences of Christians to meet together, that they may sit warm and dry; but they serve further to express (when God gives us Peace and Plenty) that high esteem and honour we bear to our God; also the love we have to the place where his Honour dwells (as to visible Service and outward Communion:) last, they serve to tell the world how large-hearted and liberall-handed true Christians and well-reformed ones can be toward their God and Saviour, not only equal to, but beyond, if need be, to what Heathenish devotion and Romish superstition did pretend. If such costly and stately fabrics of Churches were less needful, in respect of the proportions of Love and Respect we ought to bear, and express to the Glory and Service of God; if Christians, at first, might well want them, when they could not in their Poverty and Persecution either have or enjoy them; yet in a settled and flourishing State, as Eusebius and others tell us, Christians were ashamed and most impatient, not to show forth by the cost and state of their Churches, what was their zeal for God, and high honour to their crucified Saviour. Goodly Churches and Princely Cathedrals every where grew up on the sudden in all the Christian world, like Tulips, or fair Flowers in a Garden, when the winter of persecution was gone, and when the spring-time of peace began to shine, as in the blessed time of the Great Constantine; then began Christian Churches, Oratories, or Dominicals, to outshine the Temples of the Heathen Gods, the Palaces of Princes, the Balneos and Theatres of free Cities: these great and lasting Foundations were the Trophies, or triumphant Arches of Christian Religion, every where erected, and witnessing that it had, by the blood of the Lamb, and the patience of primitive Martyrs, happily conquered the malice of Satan, the wisdom and power of the World. Lastly, if we Christians needed no such Churches for Christ's Honour and our own conveniency, yet Jews, Turks, Heathens, do need them, as notable marks of our high and honourable regard to our God and Crucified Saviour; yea they are indeed notable pregnant Monuments to all spectators, of the Antiquity of Christian Religion, and of the munificent Devotion used by our Forefathers. To me, I confess, any Country seems desolate, that hath not the fair Landmarks of Churches; nor can it ever be either Honour to our Nation, or any Advantage to the true Reformed Religion, as it will be a great scandal to all that are not Christians, also a great advantage to the Popish party and profession, for us in England, or elsewhere, now to soil and deform our Reformation, by the Rapine and Ruin of those Churches which our Forefathers builded. I find that (in point of Thrift) men of narrow hearts seem so much children in understanding, that they usually allege Scripture, as the Devil did, Mat. 3. partially and fallaciously, which ought to be applied according to its several scopes and intents; not so to magnify Gods transcendent and invisible Majesty, as therefore to avile or debase his outward and visible Ministry, or Glory, which is specially present at such times, and in such places, where his Worship and Praise are celebrated. These sharking Sophisters cannot but remember, that our blessed Saviour chose for the first Celebration of his Supper (which is the highest Mystery and solemn solemnity of Christian Religion) a large upper room ready furnished; Mark 14.15. the fairest (no doubt) for Space and Ornament in that House: To show us, that Christians are not confined to Caves and Cottages, nor ought they to affect Barnes and Stables for their holy Conventions, when God's indulgence gives them means and opportunities to enjoy other accommodations, more becoming that Order and Decency which God requires and expects of us in his Service, unless himself hinder, and deny us those comely advantages. No men are branded with blacker and juster marks of Vileness and Unworthiness, than those who either grudged at, or secretly defrauded, or forcibly took away what was once dedicated or given to the Worship of God, the Honour of Christ, and the Benefit of his Church. Thus Christ, the Disciples, John 12.6. Acts 5.3. and all Christians, ever counted and called Judas a Thief, a Traitor, and a Devil: so Ananias and Sapphira, by their sacrilege, gave occasion to the first thunderbolts of Church-censures, which struck them dead upon the place. Who was ever more odious than Diocletian and Julian the Apostate (a man otherways of great Learning, severe Justice, and Stoical Moralities, as Ammianus gives us account of him, who followed him to his death) yet is his name execrable for a witty Persecutor and a perfidious Sacrilegist, while he scoffed at those goodly vessels of Gold and Silver; also at the fair Basilica's or Cathedrals, in which the Galilean (as he called our blessed Saviour) was served, when he had a mind to confiscate the Church's Goods and Treasures, that he might the better pay his Soldiers. CHAP. XXVI. CErtainly there are pious prodigalities and holy superfluities, not only lawful and convenient, Of pious munificence becoming Christians. but most comely and commendable among Christians, yea in some respects necessary: when God's indulgence gives them peace and plenty, than they ought to be ashamed to serve God niggardly; Malac. 1.8. to serve themselves with the best, and God with the refuse; to afford him only such expressions of their Duty, Honour and Devotion, as cost them little or nothing: it is then a sin arguing a Nabalitick and vile heart, 2 Sam. 24.24. Isa. 3●. 5, 6. to meditate nothing but vile and illiberal things for God; to use in Christian solemnities no other but vulgar conveniences and Kitchen- accommodations, such as their extemporary and every-days thrift, allows to their very Beasts and Servants; no way proportionable to the bounty or God, or answerable to that Majesty they profess to adore in their Redeemer Jesus Christ, who not only expects, as a free-will-offering, but requires, as a proportionable and acceptable service, that we honour him as becomes us, even before the Sons of men; that the glory of the Gentiles may be brought to Christ, Matth. 2. and such munificence of Gold, Myrrh, Frankincense, and things equivalent, as may import to Aliens that Christians esteem their Saviour as a great King, Priest and Prophet; yea, as a God, deserving to be worshipped with the best we can present him withal: which (as Isidore Hispal. Isid. l. 8. Etymol. Magnificentiam & cultus & sermonis ad Deorum & religionis honorem homines prim● excogitarunt: Hinc templa Deûm privatis domibus pulchriora, simulacra corporibus humanis ampliora, laudes eorum august●ori eloquentia cel●brabantur, certis numeris inclusae; Ind vatum & poetarum versus, & Hymni ad Deos, etc. observes after S. Austin in his Civ. Dei, and others out of Varro and other Heathens) were the methods they were taught, even by the light of Nature, to exalt and magnify the Names and Honour of their Gods, by Houses far more costly and stately than private Edifices, judging it fit to pray in better rooms than they eat, and drank, and slept in. They added to their Temples Images of their Gods more ample than humane and ordinary Dimensions; they adorned all with solemn Ceremonies, and such accurate Eloquence, as chose rather to set forth the Praise and Majesty of their Gods in the Grandeur and exactness of Verse, than in the flatness, vulgarity and looseness of Prose; that by all means they might conciliate an high Respect and Veneration to their Gods, not only from the Worshippers, but from the very Spectators. It is a shame that Jupiter, Apollo, Diana, Venus, and Aesculapius, Gods that never lived, nor died for their Worshippers, should boast of their Temples, to the upbraiding of Christians; or that the Jews and Mahometans should have cause to suspect us of a disesteem and slight of our God and Saviour, who lived among us and died for us, by our neglect of the places where we Christians meet to serve our God and Saviour. While we ambitiously dwell in sciled houses, Hag. 1.4. Gods houses lie waste: poor mortal worms affect Palaces for themselves, and crowd their God, the King immortal, into a Cottage. Mark 14.4. The pouring of that costly ointment on our Saviour's head, was not that which he either absolutely needed or required; but he deserved it, and all that could be rendered to him, as tokens of Love, Honour and Gratitude: and we see he was so far from finding fault with it, or complying with the thrifty and thievish baseness of Judas, that he accepted it kindly, he justified it publicly, and commended it highly, as worthy to be recorded wherever the Gospel is preached; that it might be an everlasting example of generous Grace and liberal Love, capable to give check in all Ages to such dangerous Christians and penurious spirits, as are prone, under pretences of Piety or Charity, or any reforming Frugalities, to quarrel at or condemn parallel expressions of munificent Honour and heroic Gratitude to Jesus Christ: for the honour of whose name, I thought it my duty thus far to vindicate, against sacrilegious Vastators, the sanctity and sumptuousness of those places where the honour of our God and Saviour eminently dwells, in the solemn and public celebration of his Name, Praise, Merit, and Divine Majesty; Phil. 2. who abasing himself to the shame of the Cross, and now ascended above every created name of Power and Honour in Heaven and Earth, ought not to be in any respect treated in such a vile fashion, as if we thought meanly of him, or with the Samosatenians and Arians, esteemed him no other than (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉,) a mere Man, to be served in as mean or meaner way than we serve ourselves; which seems the sense of some wretches, who are glad to see Churches lie like Hog-sties, Dan. 4.29. full of filth and confusion, and to be made even as Jakes and Dunghills; (which fate Nabuchadnezzar threatened to those that spoke any thing amiss against the true God.) A sight and example which, I confess, I take to be as little to the credit or encouragement of any reformation of Religion, as it is no advantage to a beautiful face, which possibly is a little foul and besmeared, to scratch and tear its skin till the blood come, in stead of washing it clean. I could not forbear to insist on this subject; in which, if I offend some penurious and sacrilegious spirits of the present Age, I hope I shall please and promote the desires and designs of more generous posterity, in whose days it may be God will restore the captivity, repair the ruins, & wipe away the reproaches unjustly by Papists & others cast upon this Church and the true Reformation, which indeed never owned any such Principles or Practices as savoured of Sacrilege, which is a taking away from our God, and the Lord Jesus Christ, from his Church, his Ministers, such things as are dedicated to his Worship and Service, to the Church's Benefit, and his Minister's Maintenance, Order and Honour; without which Religion cannot flourish, nor indeed well subsist, especially among such Christians, as under pretence of love and zeal for Reformation as friends, daily pillage and spoil Religion as its cruelest enemies. CHAP. XXVII. IT was a speech in old times of better significancy than sound, Luxus Clericorum Laus est Laicorum, The main hindrances & unlikelihood of a conjunction between Protestants & Romanists. The Splendour or Pomp of the Clergy was the Praise and Honour of the Laity: not that Churchmen should at any time be riotous and luxurious in their greatest abundance; but it is the commendation of Christian people (as indeed of all men) so to entertain the Ministers of their God, and Dispenser's of their Religion (specially in times of peace and a Land of plenty) as may set them and their Profession furthest off from Poverty, and its inseparable companion, vulgar contempt; that Churchmen might have, not only wherewith to keep up the outward Decency & Majesty of Religion, but to maintain themselves and their families, at such a proportion as may extend to charity, liberality and hospitality. The habits and exercises of which virtues become no men's Hearts, Hands and Houses, better than Christian Ministers and Rulers of the Church: nothing more confirming the Doctrine they teach of God's munificence to mankind, than their living so, as to be ever giving; Religion is never so acceptable to common people, as when they not only hear the Word and see the Ceremony, but taste the sweetness and substance of it in the real fruits of its bounty. Which pious Policy and charitable Craft in former days kept up the credit of Religion, both while it was Roman and when it was Reform, to as high a pitch in England, as in any Nation under Heaven; while the Clergy enjoyed those blessings of Gods and man's Donation, which enabled many an one of them to build and endow many such noble foundations of Churches, Colleges, Hospitals, and Almshouses, that any one of them now goes beyond all that ever sacrilegious spirits did or designed, either for God's honour or man's benefit, if all their good works and thoughts were summed up and put together, (though indeed those men are uncapable of doing any good work, as to Charity, who are guilty of sacred Robbery; stolen Sacrifices were not to be consecrated to God, Deut. 14.21. no more than dead carcases.) Every History of England shows at large what good and great works Bishops and other Churchmen in England did, not only in their Papal Celibacy, but in their Primitive and later Conjugacy; fruits indeed of pious and Princely Magnificence; such as now neither the joint abilities of the indigent and peeled Clergy, nor the gripple charity of whole Counties can or will so much as keep up or repair; no not so much as to the very fabric of those fair Churches, which were the honour of Cities, Counties, and the whole Nation. Whose vast Revenues being taken away both from Churches and Churchmen, no wonder if the sordid vastations of them and their deplorable decays, as that of S. Paul's in London, and of Ely-Minster in that Isle, every where appear as shameful, scandalous, and prodigious Spectacles to all ingenuous persons, to Papists both at home and abroad; also to all Foreigners, Christian, Mahometan, or Heathen, who come into this Island, who may easily see such sights, as rather proclaim Saracenism, Barbarism, and Atheism, than such a sense of Christianisme as possessed our noble Progenitors, who were ashamed to seem base and niggardly toward a bountiful God and Saviour. Every City in England, besides other Towns, had such stately and durable monuments of pristine Piety and Charity in them, as were hardly to be destroyed by the malice of Time, in many Centuries, if the sacrilegious petulancy and malice of Man had not so assaulted them in these last few years, that the care of learned and ingenuous men is now how to preserve their Memories and goodly Fabrics, in the Pictures, and printed Types or Effigies of them; whose beautiful Structures are daily threated with everlasting and irreparable ruins. I am the more sensibly sorry and ashamed, to see these deplorable and execrable ruins, because I know they are great reproaches to my Country, as well as to the Reformed Religion professed in this Church. The better sort of English people were ever esteemed as Valiant, as Generous, as Munificent, as Charitable, as Hospitable, as Pious, and as Devout, as any civil people under Heaven: I know not by what evil fate or genius we are now so changed, that many men do not only repine and envy at all plenty and splendour, bestowed on Churches and Churchmen, nor do they only suffer, through laziness and neglect, those goodly Temples to lapse and decay; but they do with covetous hearts, and cruel hands, industriously seek to strip and pull them both down: which, I am persuaded, no Christian under Heaven, either Greeks or Latins, Russians or Abyssines, Georgians or Armenians, Reform or Roman, would ever either act or permit, if they had the honour to enjoy such stately Houses of God among them; they would infinitely disdain to appear so degenerous from the patterns of paternal piety. Yea I should injure the very Jews, Turks, Persians, Tartars, Indians, and Chineses, if I should believe they would suffer such stately Edifices, being dedicated to the service and honour of their Gods, to run to ruin; if they were masters of them, doubtless they would both preserve and employ them to such uses as they thought holy. Yet these are the beams that afflict some men's eyes in England, these the Camels they long to swallow down, under the pretended hunger and thirst of special Reformations; whose impudent appetites have dared of late years publicly to petition the demolishing of all Church-edifices whatsoever, pretending they have been guilty of superstitious abuses: which (if so) is yet the fault of the Persons, not the Places, which are (without doubt) as capable to be consecrated by pious uses and holy duties, as desecrated by any past superstitious abuses: besides, no public Edifices of Churches should, upon this account, ever be preserved in the changes incident to the various opinions and persuasions, the outward modes and fashions of Religion; every form seeming to such as differ from it to have in it something either impious, superfluous, or superstitious, by its Antiquity or its Novelty, by its omissions or admissions. If these sad and sordid spectacles, which have so foul an aspect of sacrilegious profaneness in respect of our material Churches (which are the most visible tokens and public badges of religious Honour and Reverence in any Nation) if these cannot but scandalise and scare any sober & ingenuous Papist, from any thought or inclination to approve or adhere to any such immoderate & immodest Reformations; how much more will any honest-hearted Romanist loath and abhor the very name of such Reformers, as he sees daily spitting upon, and casting dirt in the faces of their own Fathers, the Bishops and Ministers of their Christian and Reformed Religion, so much heretofore authorised & reverenced by the voice of the whole Nation in its Parliaments? whom yet some men have not only sought to lop & crop to the very stub (as to former endowments of Estate and Honour) but they aim (still in order to farther Reformations) to grub up the very roots of all Religion and Learning, of Civility and Sanctity: they would depopulate and desolate the very Nurseries and Schools of able Scholars, excellent Preachers, sage Counselors and prudent Governors, both in Church and State: all Universities, Colleges and Free-schools, must be robbed of their Lands and Revenues; there want not those who long to see them confiscated, and to make private purchases of them; who would fain have leave to treat the Colleges and Scholars in them, as Bears are wont to do the poor Bees, when with their rude and merciless paws they tear in pieces and overthrow their hives, that they may plunder them of their honey. Which abomination of utter desolation had ere this befallen all Scholars, as well Laymen as Clergymen, in England, if God's good providence had not set some bounds to the endless projects of sacrilegious Reformers, by the Moderation, Learning, Justice, Generosity and Prudence of those, whose great power, and greater minds, were (only) capable to curb that plebeian petulancy and mechanic importunity, which not content to have taken away the liberal mangers and large provender of fair Estates and Honours from the Clergy of England (with which all were dignified, though but few enjoyed them) have further sought to muzzle the mouths of the most laborious Oxen, grudging the meanest and painfullest Ministers (who are generally so lean, that they are reduced to skin and bone) the tenuity yet left them of Hay, Straw and Stubble; any thing of settled and secure Maintenance, in their little, and many times litigious, livings. Which cruelty, however at present it would infinitely gratify and fatten the Popish party, to see all Ministers and Scholars (which are the light and life, the rational part and intellect, the very soul and spirit of any Nation) in such a Reformed Church as England was, thus treated and abased; yet they cannot but stomach and scorn all Reformation, that hath such scratches of sacrilegious Cruelties and rapacious Practices, which are as the Moths of Religion, the very Mice and Rats of Reformation, the effects not of piety and purity, but of envy and fury, great rocks of offence to all sober men, to all good Christians, to all ingenuous Papists, setting them (no doubt) at everlasting distances and defiances from all Reformations of Religion, which have such brands of Covetousness, Contempt, Sacrilege, injustice and confusion upon them. When these two precipicious Rocks, and high Cliffs of distance, can be closed, between which lieth that deep Gulf of mutual antipathy, hatred and abhorrence, which keeps sober Protestants and moderate Papists from passing over or conversing, as Christians, one with another; When (on the one side) the Romanists will not be ashamed, ingenuously to own, and consciensciously to reform, such things as are evidently and grossly amiss, yea confessedly such, if Scripture, Antiquity, Catholic and Primitive Testimony, yea and many of their own best Authors may be Judges, (such as are (for example) The taking away the cup from Christian people, The peremptory defining the manner of Christ's presence in the Sacrament, and imposing an explicit belief of it contrary to all senses, common reason, and Scripture Analogy, The worshipping of any creature, or God under the form of it, as in Bread, Images, Angels, Saints, Relics, The fallacious peddling with Indulgences and Purgatory, The adding to the Scripture-Canon, The imposing new articles of faith, besides other intolerable practices of Papal arrogancy and Tyranny, carried on by Jesuitick Policies, Principles and Practices, against all rules of Morality and Piety, Honour and Humanity;) when these, and some of the like rank leaven, are recanted and removed from the Roman party; On the other side, when the Protestants and all that pretend to any name of Reformation shall be ashamed, under any cloak of Piety or Christian Liberty, either to rob from God and his Church, from his service, and special servants the Ministers of the Gospel, or not to restore to them what is theirs by all Laws, Divine and Humane, by right of Testamentary Donation, by religious consecration, by civil sanction and confirmation, by long use and peaceable fruition, no way forfeitable by Man, or alienable from God, whose the fee, right and property is, as a gratitude and homage paid to the Honour, Worship and service of his great Name; When Papists forbear their Superstitious Sacrilege, and Protestants their Covetous Sacrilege; when the first restore the Truth, Purity, and Integrity of Christian Religion, which they have long detained in unrighteousness; when the other restores that Order, Honour, and Estate, which belongs to the support and government, the decency and Majesty of Christ, his Church, and true Religion: Then, and not before, may we expect some happy close among these so divided Western Churches, whom first Papal policy and pride, now Plebeian looseness and insolency, on all sides factious and schismatical, covetous and cruel practices, have now no less divided than former different Doctrines, opinions and ceremonies did, the reconciliation of which many learned and peaceable men have seriously studied, soberly proposed, and charitably endeavoured. The want, & almost despair now (without multiplied Miracles) of which most desirable atonement, & the sad consequences which must needs attend the continuance and increase of desperate defiances, implacable violences, and cruel immoderations on all sides, these, these (I say) are calamities more deplorable than any that a Christians eyes can behold in all the world, since they are at once the sin, shame, and misery of Christendom; besides the scandal and scorn of all the world. It being a far sadder sight, to see Christians thus rob and spoil, thus worry and wound one another, than to see them persecuted by Heathens and Infidels, Jews and Mahometans: as it is far more horrid to see men fight with one another, than beasts; or brethren, than strangers. Without any doubt, the mutual animosities and barbarities exercised by Christians on all sides, as they will in time open a door for Turkish power to prevail against them, so (mean while) it makes Christian's turn Turk's one against another. Besides that these unchristian Practices on all sides do leave not only the loser sort of men and women to an Atheistical indifferency as to any Religion; but the more sober and just Christians on every side (Protestant's and Papists) are so scandalised and perplexed, that they do not well know what course of Religion to hold, nor how to steer between the gross errors on the one side, and the base rapines on the other: It being an hard choice for a serious and honest Christian, whether he should keep Communion with superstitious and Idolatrous Papists, or with schismatical and sacrilegious Protestants; the one refusing to be justly reform, the other deforming even Reformation itself. Amidst which miserable distances and disadvantages of Christian Religion, this sad event and burden of the Lord may be too easily foretold by one of the smallest Prophets, That as Atheism, Profaneness and Irreligion is like to get ground on all sides, through the deformities, immoderations, varieties, & inconsistencies of Religion, so (to be sure) the Papal party, repute & interest will daily prevail every where, (as of later years it hath) against those of the Protestant and Reformed profession: since they see even the most famous, settled and flourishing Church of England, (which was the Mirror of Reformation, the noblest standard of Religion, the ablest Antagonist against Romish pride and superstition in all the world,) this, even this, sought now to be so reduced, so battered and divided, so peeled and spoiled, distressed, deformed, dissipated and despised; and this even by those that pretend high to Reformation, which must, they say, be attained and perfected by utter divesting, even this so famous a Church, and its deserving Clergy, of their former Honour and Estate, Order and Government, Authority and Dignity, Revenues and Reputation, Uniformity and Unity; all which heretofore they enjoyed by the mercy of God, and good will of such Princes and Peers, Parliaments and People, as were the best Christians and best reform, who justly abhorred those sacrilegious and sharking arts, which make either Religion or Reformation▪ Preachers or true Professors, either avaricious, or beggarly and necessitous; which their Wisdom and Piety knew would be the way to undermine and obstruct all true Religion and progress of Reformation; all experience teaching us, that mankind is naturally prone rather to follow liberal Errors than niggardly Truths: few men will adhere to hungry Holiness and famishing Reformations, such as some men have designed and vehemently agitated of late years in England, little (God knows) to the credit or advance of any true Reformation. It cannot then but be most evident to you (O my noble Countrymen) and to all wise men, that as the sad condition of the Church of England at once pleaseth and hardeneth the Romanists (who are glad to see her thus wasted, though they abhor the means and methods of her misery;) so the real interest of the true Reformed Religion in England seems now much weaker than ever it was, much more exposed to the objections and obloquys, the Policies and Practices of pragmatic Jesuits and other spiteful Papists, who with infinite Industry, with all Arts and Alacrity▪ daily undermine all the remaining parts, yea and the very foundation as well as the reputation of all reformed Religion in the hearts of the people of England. Doubtless, if Popish Priests, which are men of learning and sober lives, had liberty in public to promote their party, they would draw most men and women after them, in the Novelties, Distractions, Confusions and Deformities of Religions, yea and of Reformations here in England, in despite of all the orderly and Orthodox Clergy yet left in England: so little would they consider any stop or impediment, that either Presbytery or Independency, Scotl. or New-Engl. can give them, who have all been made active and contributive to their own shame, and to the general ruin of this Church, and consequently to the real advantages of Popery, which professeth great uniformity and constancy in their Religion. Nor can the subtle factors for the Papacy but expect and hope by degrees, in a few years, to bring in again into England, the justly feared and abhorred Inundations of the Sea of Rome, in its superstitions and usurpations: against both which our wise and pious progenitors, both since and before the Reformation, did in many Parliaments make several cautions, provisions, Premunires, and sanctions, to preserve the liberty, honour, and purity of the Church of England. For they well knew, that the secular interests and Ecclesiastic designs of the Church and Court of Rome ever have been, and still are carried on with a mighty tide and strong current, not only of Papal authority and popular credulity, as of old, but of Learning, Eloquence, Riches, Honour, Power, Pomp, Policy, yea & with great plausibilities of Piety, Sanctity, Unity and Charity, of later Ages. All which popular and potent biasses will easily and unavoidably over-beaer, in time (as to the generality of people) all those feeble resistances or oppositions that can be made by such an equivocal generation and dubious succession of poor, despised and dispirited Ministers, whatever they are, whether of Episcopal, Presbyterian, or Independent characters; who in great part naked and unarmed, unfed and unstudied, reduced to a sneaking and starveling habitude, both of Body and Mind, of Honour and Estate, will prove pitiful Champions for the true Reformed Religion, when they shall neither have just Ability nor justifiable Authority, to assert the true and just measures of Religion and true Reformation. Who is there that in after-Ages will adventure his Soul & his Religion with those men & Ministers, that can have neither Learning nor Livelihood capable to bear up with their spirits and parties, or the Authority and Honour of their calling; especially when they are to encounter with such sons of Anak, such Zanzummims and Goliahs, who will ever appear on the Papal side, to defy all Reformation that seems to reproach their deformities? Alas, will not the predicant (or rather mendicant) Patrons of so divided Religion and deformed parts of Reformation, seem in their own eyes (unless they be strangely swelled with the puff and breath of Popularity) but as Zanies and Dwarves, as Grasshoppers before them, with their threadbare Coats, hungry Bellies, and servile Spirits? How will these that never had means or leisure to advance their studies of Divinity or practice of preaching beyond a modern Synopsis and an English Concordance, being raw and infants in dogmatic Truths, perfect strangers to Polemic, Historick, and Scholastic Divinity, to Councils, Fathers, and Languages, how will they be affrighted to read or hear of the great names of Baronius, Bellarmine, Possevine, Perron, Petavius, Sirmundus, and many other Grandees of the Roman side, great Clerks, great Churchmen, and great Statesmen too, who are able to carry with them Troops of Auxiliaries, Legions of Assistants, being as rich as learned, very wise and weighty to use and improve all the strength and advantages they have of Estate and Honour, Studies and Parts, for the advance of their side, in their Errors and Superstitions? which of late years their followers have done with unhappy success and great increase of their faction against the Reformed Religion of the divided Church of England; whose scattered Remains (in a short time) will be like a flock of silly and helpless Sheep, that have neither safe folds, nor any skilful and valiant Shepherds to defend and rescue them. CHAP. XXVIII. Roman interests advanced by the petty factions of super-Reformers of Religion. NOr do these wilily Romanists exercise their malice against this Reformed Church, only with their own strength and dexterity, but they have other oblique Policies and sinister Practices, by which they set on work the hot heads and pragmatic hands of all other Sects, who pretend the greatest Antipathies to Popery, and yet most promote its interests by their Factions and fanatic Practices; by their heedless and headless, their boundless and endless Agitations, which blast all true Reformation, and bring in nothing but Division and Confusion. For among these there are a sort of people who affect Supremacy in Church and State too, a spiritual and temporal Dominion, no less than doth the Pope of Rome: there are among them many petty Popes, who would fain be the great and only Dictator's of Religion; whose opinionative pride and projects are as yet of a lesser volume & blinder print, but they every day meditate & agitate new Editions of their power, and larger additions to their parties and designs; being as infallible in their own conceits, as imperious in their spirits, and as magisterial in their censures, as the proudest Popes of Rome; not doubting to condemn and excommunicate any private Christians and Ministers, yea whole Christian Churches, yea and the best Reformed in the world (such as England was) if they be not just of their form and fashion, or if they will not patiently submit to their multiform and deformed Reformations, by which they daily wiredraw true Reformation to such a small thread, that losing its strength and integrity, it must needs snap in pieces and become useless: the strange fires of blind, popular, preposterous and sacrilegious Zeal so overboiling true Religion and sober Reformation, till they are utterly confounded and quenched with such sordid and shameful deformities, as must needs follow their Divisions, Distractions and Despiciencies, as to all Church-order, Christian unity and Ministerial authority. Thus many heady and giddy Professors have been so eager to come out of Babylon, that they are almost run out of their wits, and far beyond the bounds of good consciences; so jealous of Superstition, that they are Panders for Confusion; so scared with the name of Rome, that they are afraid of all right Reason and sober Religion; Eccles. 7.16. so fearful of being over-righteous by following vain traditions of men, that they fear not to be over-wicked, by overthrowing the good foundations of Order, Honour, Peace and Charity, which Christ and his Apostles have laid in his Church: fierce enemies indeed against the Idolatry of Antichrist, but fast friends to Belial and Mammon, Rom. 2.22. to Schism and Sacrilege; which having no fellowship with God and Christ, must needs belong to the party of Antichrist, which contains a circle of Errors, while Christ is the centre of Truth: and we know that parts diametrally opposite to each other may (yet) make up the same circumference, and be at equal distance from the centre; so may Practices and Opinions which seem most cross against each other, yet, as Herod and Pilate, alike conspire against Christ and true Religion, like vicious extremes, which are contrary to each other, and yet uncorrespondent with that virtue from which they are divided. They are children in understanding who do not already discern and deplore (what wise and godly men have long ago foreseen and foretold) that by these two, Papal policy and fanatic fury, the superstitions of the Romanists, and the confusions of Schismatics, the happy state of the reformed Church of England was always in danger to be mocked, stripped, wounded and crucified: some men already fancy, that they see it weeping and bleeding, crying and dying, using in its sad expiring the last words of its Saviour; first, to her God, Why hast thou forsaken me? next, for her Enemies and Destroyer's, Father, forgive them, they know not what they do. While the Papists on the one side rob God of his glory, giving religious worship to Creatures: the Sacrilegists on the other side rob God and the Church, their Mother, Fathers, and Brethren, of that double Honour, Maintenance and Reverence, Authority and competency, which is due to them, and was settled upon them, snatching away the children's bread that they may give it to dogs, to greedy and grinning men, authors and fautors of all our rents and confusions; who (as the Psalmist expresseth it) run up and down through every County, City, Ps. 59.6. Street and Village, grudging if they be not satisfied with the Priest's portion. Thus while the Papists too much pamper & overcharge Religion with Pomp and Luxury, with superfluous Ceremonies and Superstitions; while the fanatics strive to underfeed and starve it to a despicable feebleness and deformity; both of them are become dangerous enemies to the true reformed state of Religion, in this or any Church and Nation, whose best temper and healthfullest constitution is made up of sincere Truth, unfeigned Charity, liberal Piety, unaffected Decency, a duly- ordained Ministry with just Authority, and uninterrupted Succession, entertained with holy moderation and humble prosperity. All which were heretofore as remarkably to be seen in the Church of England as in any Nation under Heaven: which now is in danger to be put upon great straits, to run between two Seas and Rocks, like the Ship which carried S. Paul; uncertain whether it must be destroyed by Papal, or popular insolences; whether it shall at once be driven and split upon the high rocks of Popery, or tossed with the Herricano's of vulgar tempests and variety, till it run upon the flats and shallows of Sacrilege, and be swallowed up by fanatic Quicksands. 'Tis true, these insectiles, the later and lesser fry of novel Sects and various factions in England, daily multiplying and dividing in their Opinions, Religions and Reformations, may possibly seem to some men like small Pilchards or Shotten Herrings, compared to the great Whales and mighty Leviathans of Rome; neither so dreadful, nor so dangerous to the Reformed Religion: But wise men may consider that what seems wanting in their Mass and Bulk, severally looked on, is made up in their number and activity: not only Sea- Monsters may sink a ship, but small worms, which grow to its sides and keel, will eat it through and destroy it. It is a great deal of mischief that Mice and Rats, Ants and Mites, will do in a little time to great bodies, if they be let alone. This I am sure, some of these petty- spirited, but very spiteful animals, which some men so much despise, have of late years so excessively spawned and swarmed by a licentious superfetation of Religions and Reformations here in England, that they are become like the numerous Locusts, Flies and Caterpillars of Egypt; not only very busy and importune, but biting and devouring what ever they can light upon; yea many of them, like Wasps and Hornets, are most exasperated against those sober Christians and Ministers, who are less patient to have their Estates, Liberties, Consciences and Religion, at once destroyed by their gnawing or corroding Reformations. The fruits and effects of which African mixtures and confusions, every wise man may easily foretell, being utterly inconsistent▪ with not only the Sanctity, Charity, Unity, Tranquillity, and Majesty of Religion, becoming this Reformed Church and Christian State, but with the very civil Peace, freedom and secular Honour of this Nation. Nor can any sober person tell what any one or all of them, in their fractions and factions, would be at, either in respect of the flourishing of Religion, or felicity of the civil state, beyond (or any way comparable to) what was formerly professed, practised and enjoyed in this Church and Nation, long before Satan had leave thus to winnow the Church, with Saint Peter, or to smite the State, as he did Job, with these civil boils and botches. I know there are some grave and godly men (who are well-affected to the Church of England, and zealous for true Reformation in a settled and happy way) who do not account these Modern and Minute Sects, these broken and divided factions, to be any way very dangerous, and so not considerable to the public welfare of this Nation, either in Religious or civil respects; because they think none of them to be of a firm and durable constitution, but rather as Vermine, bred of putrid water, in warm, unwholesome, and to them most indulgent seasons, between Pride and Peevishness, Ignorance and Licentiousness, Envy and Covetousness, they cannot either continue long, or propagate any lasting succession, but as animals of a crude, imperfect and equivocal generation, having spent that corrupt matter out of which they have both their production and nutrition, they will (like Maggots) die of themselves: as did the Gnostics, Montanists, Manichees, Novatians, or Catharists, the Aerians, Euchites, Circumcellions, Donatists and others in ancient times, whose folly being made manifest to all sober Christians, 2 Tim. 3.9. it prevailed no further. Such creatures in time, like Snails, wasting their slimy and indigested substance by their own motions. The rage of Heretics and Schismatics being like that of mad Dogs, which after they have a while foamed and snapped here and there, run themselves to death, and are tired by their own cruel agitations. Nor will they find many to succeed them, especially when once the wisdom and piety of a Christian Nation so far recovers, as to cut off and curb that popular, licentious and lazy humour, or to obstruct those hopes of profit, pleasure and preferment, which are the Favonii, the warm winds, that impregnate these creatures. How few would have deserted, and so defied, the Church of England, (as they have done) if they had not had other temptations than those of conscience or religious persuasions? 'Tis true, I do not look upon these many-headed and misshapen factions, which are so highly animated against the Church of England, (being most-what like Monsters, either excessive in their Seraphic Whimsies, everlasting Novelties, and affected fancies, or defective in that sound knowledge, that humble, orderly and peaceable charity, which becomes true Christians) I do not look upon them as any way apt, or able of themselves to build an orderly and durable structure, no more than the Brick-layers of Babel, when their Tongues were divided: for I find they are commonly like Rooks, which strive to make their own nests by rifling their Neighbours. Little solid or settled, in Reason or Religion, in Church or State, is expectable from tempers and activities which are like that of Pioners and Plunderers, chiefly for undermining and ruining prostrating and levelling, both Churches and States, all Magistrates and Ministers that are either within their reach and stroke, or without their mark and cognizance upon their foreheads. Yet give me leave to suggest, yea and to urge upon your most serious considerations (O my Honoured and beloved Countrymen) than the consequents necessarily attending the divided opinions and destructive agitations of those that may seem the most petty parties, and inconsiderable Sects now in England, must needs be very dangerous, and may in time prove extremely pernicious to the peace, piety, honour, and welfare of this Nation; not only in respect of the Reformed Religion, whose authoritative Ministry and maintenance they will ever seek to devour and utterly destroy, but even in respect of secular interests, and civil peace. For the first, (The integrity and true interests of the Reformed Religion,) who, that hath read what I have already, not more passionately then impartially written, can be so blind, as not to see, That the pride, petulancy and despite, the ignorance, licentiousness and covetousness of some of these men, hath been and still is such, that they have not only sought to waste and deform, to reproach and defame all that outward order, visible beauty, polity, support and unity, which became so famous a Church and Nation; but they have further studied to weaken and destroy the most solid and essential parts of Religion, by many gross errors, damnable Doctrines, bold blasphemies, high Atheisms and rude immoralities? all which do naturally boil up in the corrupt hearts and violent lusts of mankind, when they have any fire of temptation, or encouragement. What is then so immodest, so impudent against the glory of God, against the honour of our Lord Jesus Christ, against the written word of God, against the reputation of the Catholic, or any well-reformed Church, against the Laws of nature, civil societies and common justice, against the good of men and Christians, their temporal and eternal welfare, which some of these abaddon's, these Apollyons will not adventure to broach and abet, to act, own and applaud, when they see their raveries are apt not only to amuse the vulgar people, but to mend their own fortunes, which are the first and nearest designs they aim at, Finis operantis & operis. as the chief ends of the agents? But the end or effect following their actions, (though possibly not some of their intentions) will be this, to prepare by these various windings, confused circulations and distorted wrest of the Reformed Religion, the way for Roman factors, Papal interests and Jesuitick designs, whose learned abilities, orderly industry, and indefatigable activity is such, that by that time the old stock of Reverend, orderly and authoritative Bishops and Presbyters, (the truest and most unquestionable Ministers of the Church of Christ,) are worn out in England, and the reformed Religion is reduced with its titular and extenuated Ministers to a mere medley, or popular Chaos of confusions; (the most of sober people being either sick, or ashamed, or weary of their homebred disorders, and unremedied diseases in Religion) by this time (I say) the Romish agitators will not only devour all these petty parties, and feeble factions of Reformers, with as much ease as the Stork did the Frogs; but they will (in time) utterly destroy the remains of the defamed Doctrine and deformed Religion, which your forefathers owned, and to the death professed, as most true and well reform, with great Honour, Holiness, and Happiness; which yet the ignorance and insolence, the Illiterateness and Rusticity, the Barrenness and Barbarity of novel Sects have already rendered poor and despicable, much to be pitied and deplored both at home and abroad. I must ever so far own my reason, as to profess that I look upon the Defamers, Dividers and Destroyer's of the Church of England, whatever they are or seem) to be no other than the perdues or forelorn hope of Popery, which by lighter skirmishes open advantages to the Pope's main Battaglio; the Vancourriers, or Harbingers, sent and excited (in great part) from the Pragmatic Policies of Rome, whose grand interest since the Reformation hath been, not more to advance the House of Austria and preserve the Papacy, than to regain the Church of England to the Romish slavery. In whose present calamities may easily be discerned a far greater reach and deeper Spirit, than is usual to be found in ordinary Sectaries and Schismatics, who are commonly of low and mean parts, unbiased and short-spirited, of very shallow wits and extemporary designs, rarely aiming at any thing that is of a public concern, of a grand, notable and durable proportion; but rather gratifying their sudden passions and occasional fancies or correptions, which are pitifully poor and plebeian, seldom reaching higher than the pleasure of scratching their own or other men's itching ears with some novel fancies and opinions, or setting up themselves by a sorry ambition to be Heads and Leaders, the Pastors and Teachers of some credulous company, which makes itself into some new mode, and very superciliously calls itself The Church; not in charity and communion with, but in contempt and defiance of all other Churches, Parochial, Provincial, national, or Catholic, owning none of the Primitive, Grand and Apostolical Combinations, or their Successions, to be truly constituted Churches. By such little arts some of them feed their bellies and cloth their backs better than heretofore, when they made no such cakes for their Queens of Heaven, nor Shrines for their several Diana's, but were confined to their less gainful trades; some of them feed merely upon popular breath, which, as the wind, will never last long in one point or corner; lastly, some of them keep up their vulgar Pride and sad Ambitions by nothing else but by the fame of their Antagonists, the glory they have to contest with, the Church of England and her ablest Ministers, who are (in earnest) so much superior to these sorry Rivals and Ruiners of them, in all Learning, Religion, Virtue, Wisdom, Honesty and Modesty, as the Stars in the firmament are beyond the glittering of rotten chips in the dark, or the shining of Glow-worms in a ditch. Certainly these petty parties, who scarce know what they drive at, and are full of varieties in their Fancies, Forms and Factions, these cannot produce so constant a current and so strong a tide, as is always urging against the Church of Engl. and the honour of the Reformed Religion; but they are driven on by a subtle and secret, yet potent impulse, as waves of the sea, not only dashing and breaking upon each other, but (all of them) battering the Honour and Stability of the Church of England, as the great rampart or bank which stands in the way of the Sea of Rome, mightily opposing and hindering heretofore both fanatic Confusions, Papal Usurpations, and Romish Superstitions; whose advantages now are evidently prepared and carried on by those, that under the name of Reformation will most effectually at last overthrow it. For after these petty spirits, who have been and are the great Dividers, Despisers and Destroyer's of the reformed Church of England, have a few years longer played their mad pranks in this sometime so flourishing and fruitful vineyard of the Lord, (pulling up the hedge of Ecclesiastical Canons, and Civil Sanctions, throwing down the wall of Ancient Discipline and Catholic Government, breaking in pieces the wine-press of holy Ordination and Ministerial Authority and Succession, pulling up both root and branch of holy Plants and regular Planters;) what (I beseech you) can hinder these subtle Foxes and wild Boars of Romish Power and Policy, to enter in, and not only secretly, but openly (as occasion shall serve) to destroy all the remaining stock of the true Protestants, and Professors of the Reformed Religion? who at first soberly protesting against Popish Errors and Deformities, afterwards praying (invain) for a joint and just Reformation, did (at last) reform themselves, after the rule of God's Word, interpreted by the Catholic Practice of purest Antiquity. What (without a miracle) can hinder the Papal prevalency in England, when once sound Doctrine is shaken, corrupted, despised; when Scriptures are wrested by every private interpreter; when the ancient Creeds and Symbols, the Lords Prayer and Ten Commandments all wholesome forms of sound Doctrine and Devotion, the Articles and Liturgy of such a Church, together with the first famous Councils, all are slighted, vilified, despised and abhorred by such Englishmen as pretend to be great Reformers; when neither pristine Respect nor Support, Credit nor Countenance, Maintenance nor Reverence shall be left either to the Reformed Religion or the Ministry of it? without which they will hardly be carried on beyond the fate of Pharaohs Chariots, when their wheels were taken off, which is to be overwhelmed and drowned in the Romish red Sea; which will certainly overflow all, when once England is become, not only a dunghill and Tophet of Heretical filth and Schismatical fire, but an Aceldama, or field of blood, by mutual Animosities and civil Dissensions, arising from the variations and confusions of Religions. All which, as the Roman Eagle now foresees, and so follows the camp of Sectaries (as Vultures and Birds of prey are wont to do Armies) so no man, not blinded with private passions and present interest, is so simple, as not to know that it will in time terribly seize upon the blind, dying, or dead carcase of this Church and Nation; whose expiration will be very visible, when the Purity, Order and Unity of Religion, the Respect, Support and Authority of the Ministry is vanished and banished out of England, by the neglect of some, the Malice, Madness and Ingratitude of others, your most unhappy Countrymen: Then shall the Israel of England return to the Egypt of Rome; then shall the beauty of our Zion be captive to the bondage of Babylon's either Superstition or Persecution; from both which I beseech God to deliver us. As an Omen of the future fate, how many persons of fair Estates, others of good parts and hopeful Learning, are already shrewdly warped and inclined to the Church of Rome, and either actually reconciled, or in a great readiness to embrace that Communion (which excommunicates all Greek and Latin Churches, Eastern, Western and African Christians, which will not submit to its Dominion and Superstition) chiefly moved hereto, because they know not what to make of or expect from the Religion and Reformation of the Church of England; which they see so many zealous to reproach and ruin, so few concerned to relieve, restore, or pity? As for the return of you (my noble Countrymen) and your Posterity to the Roman Subjection and Superstition, I doubt not but many of you, most of you, all of you, that are persons of judicious and conscientious Piety, do heartily deprecate it, and would seriously avoid it to the best of your skill and power, as indeed you have great cause, both in Prudence and Conscience, in Piety and Policy: yet I believe none of you can flatter yourselves, that the next Century shall defend the Reformed Religion in England from Romish Pretensions, Persuasions and Prevalencies, as the last hath done, while the Dignity, Order and Authority of the Ministry, the Government of excellent Bishops, the Majesty and Unity of this reformed Church and its Religion, were all maintained by the unanimous vote, consent and power of all Estates. Nay, the Dilemma and distressed choice of Religion is now reduced to this, that many peaceable and well-minded Christians, having been so long harrassed, bitten and worried with novel Factions and pretended Reformations, would rather choose that their Posterity (if they may but have the excuse of ignorance in the main controversies, to plead for God's mercy in their joining to that Communion which hath so strong a relish of Egyptian Leeks and Onions, of Idolatry and Superstition, besides unchristian Arrogancy and intolerable Ambition; that their Posterity, I say) should return to the Roman party, which hath something among them settled, orderly and uniform, becoming Religion, than to have them ever turning and tortured upon Ixion's wheel, catching in vain at fanciful Reformations, as Tantalus at the deceitful waters, rolling with infinite pains and hazard the Reformed Religion, like Sisyphus his stone, sometime asserting it by Law and Power, otherwhile exposing it to popular Liberty and Looseness; than to have them tossed to and fro with every wind of Doctrine, with the Fedities, Blasphemies, Animosities, Anarchies, Dangers and Confusions, attending fanatic Fancies & quotidian Reformations, which, like botches or boiles from surfeited and unwholesome bodies, do daily break out among those Christians, who have no rule of Religion but their own humours, and no bounds of their Reformations but their own Interests; the first makes them ridiculous, the second pernicious to all sober Christians. Whereas the Roman Church, however tainted with rank Errors and dangerous Corruptions in Doctrine and Manners (which forbid us under our present convictions to have in those things any visible sacred communion with them, though we have a great charity and pity for them; Charity in what they still retain good, Pity in what they have erred from the Rule and Example of Christ and his Catholic Church;) yet it cannot be denied, without a brutish blindness and injurious slander (which only serves to gratify the gross Antipathies of the gaping vulgar) that the Church of Rome, among its Tares and Cockle, its Weeds and Thorns, hath many wholesome Herbs and holy Plants growing; much more of Reason and Religion, of good Learning and sober Industry, of Order and Polity, of Morality and Constancy, of Christian Candour and Civility, of common Honesty and Humanity, becoming grave men and Christians, by which to invite after-Ages and your Posterity to adhere to it and them, rather than to be everlastingly exposed to the profane babble, endless janglings, miserable manglings, childing confusions, Atheistical indifferencies and sacrilegious furies of some later spirits, which are equally greedy and giddy, making both a play and a prey of Religion, who have nothing in them comparable to the Papal party, to deserve your or your Posterities admiration or imitation, but rather their greatest caution and prevention: for you will find what not I only, but sad experience of others may tell you, that the scythes and pitch-forks of these petty Sects and plebeian Factions will be as sharp and heavy as the Papists Swords and Faggots heretofore were, both to your religious and civil Happiness. CHAP. XXIX. The danger of divided parties in Religion as to the civil interests of England. FOr however the feebleness and paucity of lesser Sects and Factions in Religion in some places, their mutual Divisions and intestine Quarrels in others (being like the Birds called Ruffs, ever brusling and pecking against each other) may make them seem at present not so dangerous or pernicious, in regard of civil Troubles and Seditions, as they have been to the Ecclesiastical Uniformity, Beauty and Honour; yet later as well as former experiences may not only admonish, but assure you, that besides the Roman advantages, which are greatest and last, the private Passions and various Interests even of these lesser Factionists and Sticklers, will not seldom nor a little hazard your civil peace, when once their several parties and opinions can get numbers capable to set up their pretensions, under any specious name, either of Anabaptistick Repentance, or special Calls and Inspirations, or a Fifth Monarchy, or Christ's Kingdom in this world, or any Saints reigning upon earth for a thousand years more or less, according as they can get and hold power over men's bodies and souls, and be supreme to all intents and purposes, both civil and religious. I make no great doubt but these men will be found as rigid, cruel and implacable in their heights and sovereignties, as ever those bloody Papists were, whose principle was to destroy all they count Heretics, and the others to destroy all they count not godly & Saints, because (forsooth) not of their respective parties, either Papists or Schismatics. England at several times, beside other Country's, hath had terrible Essays what such spirits aim to do (and they will outdo their own aims) when their rude hands should be able to keep pace with their giddy heads, malicious hearts and extravagant tongues. How have they sometime threatened to destroy, not only Churchmen and Ministers, but all Gownsmen and Lawyers; See the History of Jack Cade and War Tile● lately set forth. yea all others in any power or capacity above them, if incompliant with them? You cannot be ignorant how the pulse of such people beats, when they have tasted of several Religions, See the History of Hacket and Coppinger, in Mr. cambden's Elizabeth. and sipped of many Reformations, which, like variety of Wine, so strangely intoxicate common men and women, that of friends they grow most insolent enemies against those Churches and Christians which they first despise, then forsake, at length divide, and at last destroy, as far as lies in their power. Thus desperately disdainful, unaffable and intractable, grew the Donatists, Novatians, Arians, and others in St. Augustine's time, superciliously refusing all offers of Christian conference and charitable accommodation with him and other holy men of the Catholic Communion: Aug. Epist. ad Victor. num, 122. yea some of them unprovoked (as St Austin tells us) put Catholic Christians and Ministers to exquisite tortures, casting unslaked lime with vinegar into their eyes to burn them out, R●ssidius in vitâ Aug. that they might be as blind in their bodies, as their persecuters were in their souls; railing most bitterly, as Rossidius in the life of S. Austin tells us, against that holy man and his fraternity of Bishops and Presbyters, because he did mightily discover, and render detestable their hypocritical madness, for which these impudent wretches, and impious pretenders to religion, called him a carnal man, a formal Professor, a rotten Christian, an execrable person, not fit to live: thus (for the comfort of many unjustly despised, and untruly reproached Bishops and Presbyters of the Church of England,) was he treated by these fanatic Factionists, who was one of the most excellent lights for learned humility, charitable industry, and modest constancy, that ever God raised up to his Church since the Apostles days. I will not odiously repeat to you the well known, yet infamous, Set forth by S●eidan, in his Comm. By others of late in English seditions and rustic tumults raised in Germany by the Anabaptistick and other Spirits, to the destruction of above an hundred thousand poor people. Other attempts were made by such Zelots upon other Provinces and Cities, sufficient to tell the world what good stomaches some men have to devour all things civil and sacred, when once they can be Masters of misrule. Their despite is not only against the learning, livelihood and lives of Bishops and true Ministers of Churches, either Reform or Roman, that stand in their way; but all is fuel that comes under their flaming Fingers: They long to be sharers and Masters of the Estates, Lands, Places, Profits, Honours, Powers, and Wives of Magistrates, Noblemen, Gentlemen, Merchants, Citizens, Yeomen, and Tradesmen, whose barns, or shops, or houses are better furnished than these Reformers yet are. Whosoever they or their Prophets & Parasites, should decree, as John of Leiden did, to be Reprobates (because not complying with their wild opinions and holy rave,) presently they were branded for ungodly; next they were voted as enemies to Jesus Christ; at last they were devoted to Poverty, Prisons, Banishments and Deaths, unless they chose a voluntary Confiscation and banishment, to escape other men's inordinate fury. Who can marvel that these abominable desolaters, in their Principles and Practices, should not be very sparing of those Supports which men have for their bodily lives and temporal welfare, where they see them to be such prodigal and pitiless wasters of all those Ministers and means, which might most contribute to make men's souls eternally happy in Piety and Charity? of which the Devil never makes greater havoc, than when he obtrudes excessive, needless, and endless Reformations, as his grand Impostures, which, like violent torrents, not fill, but trouble and confound all those purer streams and fountains of Religion, which had much more of Christian purity and constancy in them, though not so much of the overflowing fury and muddy inundation. How can you (O worthy Gentlemen, or your posterity) expect other effects in the sacred or civil concernments of this Nation, when inordinate liberty naturally begets licentiousness in Religion, licentiousness variety, variety animosity, animosity fury, and fury force? the usual Climax or gradation of all popular and irregular motions in Religion. In which common reason and natural Divinity (much more Christianity) possessing men that there can be for the main but one true Religion, as there is but one true God, and his holy will but one, every man is prone first to presume that he is in the right; next, he grows so partial to his own persuasions, as to imagine this above all others best, and only pleasing to God; then he concludes all other ways of Religion are as displeasing and offensive to God, as to himself. Hence he kindles to a zeal in God's behalf, both to decry all other, and to cry up his own Religion; after this he hath potent impulses to propagate his own, and extirpate all others, as an acceptable service and sacrifice to God. This he first doth by words, disputing, writing, railing, reviling: If these methods of converting and reforming the wicked world will not serve, he concludes them as his and God's opposers to be obstinate; then he flies to the sword, first in vote, then in use, so soon as he and his party can get number and power sufficient to act with probable safety: such an opportunity he counts a call of God, an hand of providence, inviting and directing what to do, in order to set up their new way, against all others never so ancient, never so approved by good men, and prospered by God's grace and blessing: Yea all old things must be done away, they must make all things new; and their way must needs be the new Jerusalem meant in the Revelation. Thus factions in Religion, like Crocodiles, from small eggs at length grow to great and formidable serpents, with wide jaws, and long tails, threatening to devour all that will not submit and conform to them; wars, bloodshed, and death, being the stings of those Scorpions, Rev. 9.7, 8. whose faces at first seemed as the faces of men, faire-mannered, good-natured, and well-minded? which was St. Augustine's charitable censure of the Euchites and Circumcellions simplicity, so Luther's of the Anabaptists sincerity, till they saw them growing numerous like Locusts, and appearing like horses prepared for Battle, having hair and soft dresses like women, but teeth like Lions; violent exacters of their own Liberty, but insolent oppressors of other men's. 'Tis evident in all ages and places, That as few men, when they grow many, are capable to use and enjoy with modesty and humility that Christian liberty, which in their paucity and minority they craved of their superiors for themselves; so few are willing to grant the same freedom to others, now their inferiors in number and power; morosely denying what they once importunely desired: which partiality riseth out of such pregnant jealousies and reasons of State, as dictate to all men thus much, That public differings in matters of Religion are very dangerous to the civil peace of those that enjoy power, and are quiet under it; which every party secretly envies, repines at, and seeks to obtain to itself, that it may have its Triumph as well as others, and not always be a Puny or Underling. We ourselves have lived to see upon this account the Tables so turned in England, that many who heretofore desired a favourable connivance at nonconformity to the Church of England, are now most jealous and impatient to grant it to those who are still conform to it in their judgements, and inoffensive in their practices. The like temper and carriage is expected by all from those they count Recusants to them; whom they therefore study to suppress, either secretly undermining, or openly exitrpating them as rivals and enemies. Not only those greater birds, Popery and Prelacy, who are thought to affect rule in the Church of Christ (of which they are most unworthy, if they deserve to be linked with blasphemy and other villainies) but all those little birds, who first defiled their own nests, than made new ones, and laid their eggs in the branches of such Christian liberty (as is hardly granted by them to those that still adhere to the Church of England,) even these no sooner live and flutter, but they cluck and flock together, aiming to grow as numerous as they can: nor will any one of these fail to be dangerous in respect of the ciull peace, when once they are confident of the power, as well as the superlative Piety of their party, if the present policies of State did not poise and balance one party with another, yea awe one by the other: none of them is of so small courage, and tame Spirits, as not to aim at the Converting, Reforming, Ruling and subduing of all others. The least of these feeble people, like Coneys in some Islands of Greece, would make a shift to extirpate all the Inhabitants but themselves; They no sooner grow up, increase, and multiply, but they are ready to fight, as the serpent's teeth sowed by Cadmus, (which fable imported, as learned Bochart tells us, nothing else but the Phoenician Colonies armed with brass, and arriving in the Greek Islands, who presently sought by force to subdue all the Pristine and Native Inhabitans; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the same Phoenician and Hebrew word signifying brass and a Serpent) This principle being bred with all pretenders to mend Religion, that there is no conscience to be made of any civil or Ecclesiastic subjection, no use of Christian patience and submission, longer than they want power to subdue all things under their feet, and to assert their due sovereignty. Those parties, separations, Sects and divisions, which have of later years unanimously set themselves against the former constitution of the Church of England, (which was once far above them) are now grown not only very pert and rigorous, but so various, and each of them so strangely vigorous, that they are not like the twins struggling in Rebeca's womb, History of the Netherlands. but like the brats which a Countess in Flanders is reported to bring forth, equal in number to the days of the year: Nor are they Infants, striving without much strength, and with less malice, but they are grown adult, manly, Gladiatorian, Cyclopick; the balancing of whose Spirits is indeed a great piece of art and policy, and may hold while there is so great a Master of Power and Prudence as can do it. But 'tis certain every party affects prevalency, not content to truckle under any other, since they have equally emancipated themselves from the authority and subjection to, yea from the Charity & Communion with the Church of England, whose authority and eminency was sometime as conspicuous as its order, merit and glory. Such as now disdain her and seek to destroy her are venial, if by a retaliation of divine vengeance, they ambitiously strive for mastery against each other; each aiming to be like the Master- Pike in a Pond, which (they think) may lawfully devour those that are of lesser size and growth. 'Tis certain that every faction in Religion hath its fears of oppression, whetting them to mutual emulations and ambitions, not knowing what party may, like the beasts in Daniel, get the better over others, if not by arguments, yet by arms: nothing more frequent than those civil conflagrations or burnings of Cities and Countries, whose first fires are kindled from the Coals of the Altars, from Religious firebrands cast by Christians in each others faces. We need not go farther to verify this presumption, than to the late great Instances so remarkable among ourselves here in England, sufficiently proving that there can be no civil security, where there is such a Religious variety, as serves to give both occasion and confidence to different parties, both to excite their private ambitions, and in time to exert them in ways of open hostility, whensoever opportunity is given by any negligence, offence, or distemper in government or governor's; upon the least bruise, the ill humours, as in foul bodies, will have such confluence to the disaffected part, as easily causes terrible inflammations, and many times such gangrenes of poisonous and indigestible humours, as nothing but the sword can cure. Not only Germany and France heretofore have felt the sad effects of these Religious factions, frequently embrued in the blood of their Countries; but Scotland, Ireland and England, have heretofore had many shaking fits of these Religious fevers, though never any that cost each of them so much letting of blood as these last Calentures, which have infinitely wasted the people and spirits of these three Nations, taking their first popular heats (or pretending so at least) from the zeal each party had for its Religion, not as Christian, which all profess, but as discriminated by particular marks of lesser Opinions and Persuasions, which occasion more discords than all their agreement in other main matters can preserve of Love and Concord, as men, as Countrymen, or Christians. How oft since the Reformation in England began, and was perfected (to so great a beauty, for Justice, Piety, Order, Charity, Moderation and Honour, as became the Glory of God, the Majesty of Christian Religion, and the Wisdom of this Nation) have the struggle of Religion threatened, and began civil broils, not only in Henry the eighth's days, both in the North and West (when yet Reformation was much unhewn and unpolished, people being unsatisfied because untaught, as to the just grounds of necessary Alteration) but afterward, in succeeding Princes days, especially in Queen Elizabeth's long and happy reign, how infinitely did religious discontents boil in some men's breasts? insomuch that for want of vent in open flames of Hostility (which the public Power, Policy and Vigilancy of those times repressed) they bred all sorts of foul Impostumations, even to the study of Assassinations, Empoisoning and Treasons; some so black and barbarous, as are unparallelled in former, and will be scarce credible in after-Ages. Nor did the discontented Papists only meditate first revenge, than Sovereignty, by blowing all up at one blow that was sacred or civil in this Nation; but even that little cloud, which at first seemed but as an hands breadth, of difference in some outward Forms, Ceremonies and Circumstances of Religion, as Christian and Reformed, this in time grew so full of sulphurous or hot vapours, that it looked very black when it was not yet very big in England, either by schisms or separations, being much cooled and allayed, yea in great part dissipated and vanished, through the excellent temper of that Government both in Church and State, which that renowned Queen and her wise Council preserved; which suffered neither Conformity to grow wanton and lazy, nor Nonconformity to be presumptuous or desperate, nor yet too popular, by outvying the other party either in Piety or Industry. Episcopacy, as the ancient and only Catholic Government of this and all other Churches for 1500. years, was then had in due veneration, allowed its double honour, both in Church and State, in Parliaments and Synods; it was treated with great gravity and respect by that incomparable Princess; afterward it was asserted with greater indulgence and passion by King James, who began that Proverb which his Son saw verified, No Bishop, no King: yet in the beginning of the late King's days, Episcopacy and the state of the Church was even pampered and cosetted by so excessive a favour and propensity, as made it seem his chief Favourite, not only for reasons of State, but of Conscience. The Episcopal throne and dignity seemed as immutable as the King's Sceptre and Majesty; so zealously devoted he was to assert it, so fearful by any sacrilegious act to diminish it; such a Patron, such a Champion for the State Ecclesiastic, that upon the matter he was resolved to venture Kingdoms, Life and all upon this cause, and either to swim or sink with the Church of England against the Tide of all Faction. What could be desired of greater advantage and security, than such an immensity of favour from so potent a Monarch, for the indemnity and stability of the Episcopal interests and its friends in England? which in the Beginning of King Charles his reign had what they could hope or desire; his benignity exceeding the very hopes of Churchmen, his Royal favour confirming all those Immunities, Honours, Jurisdictions and Revenues, as sacred and inviolable, which they enjoyed by the Laws, Privileges and Customs of England; to which the Learning, Gravity, and Merit of many worthy Bishops and other Churchmen in England bore so great and good a proportion, that few were so impudently envious, as not to think that many, yea most of them, well deserved what they soberly enjoyed? The heat of the opposite Factions, as Non-conformists or Separatists, was so much allayed, that it seemed quite extinguished: nor possibly could it have revived to so sudden and dreadful flames, if the immoderations of some men's passionate counsels and precipitate activities had not transported them beyond those bounds which politic, and it may be pious, prudence did require; which easily re-inkindled those old differences which had been so much suppressed, that they seemed quite buried in England, till they took fresh and unexpected fires from the cold climate, but hot spirits, of Scotland; which finding prepared and combustible matter there and here too, soon broke out to such flames as were not to be quenched but with the best blood in England, and the overthrow of the ancient Government both of Church and State, even then when both seemed to be in their greatest height and fixation. So dangerous, even beyond all imagination and expression, are the sparks of religious dissensions, if they be either by preposterous Oppositions provoked, or by imprudent Negligences permitted to ferment and spread in any Church and State, or if they be not by at powerful way of real Wisdom and true Piety (which is the best and surest policy) so quenched and smothered, as may take away from all men of any Worth, Modesty and Conscience, any just cause to endeavour or desire any such Innovations as those did, who upon Presbyterian principles first aimed at, not a total change of Doctrine, but only an amendment of Discipline and Government in this Church; which as they seemed in a short time to have obtained beyond their first designs, so in no long time after they were as much frustrated, and soon defeated by other subsequent parties which sprang up upon the like grounds of religious differences. After Episcopacy was thrust under hatches, what I pray could be more absolute and Magisteriall, bigger in words, looks, enterprises, in terrors of others, in boasts and confidences of itself, than the Presbyterian party was after once that Leven, by a Scotch maceration and infusion, had diffused itself, and soured many people's simplicity here in England, against the Episcopal constitution and administration of this Church? How did this highflying Icarus in a short time disdain any rival, puffing at all its Prelatic adversaries, setting its feet on all the Bishops and the Episcopal Clergies neck, as the Israelites did on the five Kings of the Amorites, before they were to be slain? which thing was done at Josuahs' command, Jos. 10.24. who was the supreme Magistrate: but these forward Spirits tarried not for any such command or consent to their dominion, from the Prince of the people; but their new soveraginty fought to spread itself like lightning in a moment to the latitude of these three Kingdoms, impregnated and palliated with many popular petitions for Reformation of Religion, which was in effect no more than the setting up of a sole sovereign and absolute Presbytery. A novelty in any other Reformed Church, whose necessity, rather than choice, drove them upon it: but in England it seemed a mere insolency; yet how was it now to be seen flourishing with the Scotch sword in one hand, and the Covenant in the other? How was it heightened by the name and reputation of Parliament? How was it to be Christened and adopted to Christ in England, by an Assembly of Divines, who were indeed rather the Gossips and Witnesses, than the Fathers or begetters of this alien; which was rather a Scotch Runt than of true English breed? For most, if not all the new Patrons and Godfathers of Presbytery, both Gentlemen and Clergymen, had formerly sworn to, or subscribed, or asserted, or at least cheerfully submitted to the ancient legal and Episcopal Government of the Church of England. From which they were so suddenly, passionately warped, and partially inclined to Presbytery, that although myself were by I know not what sleight of hand shuffled out of that Assembly (to which I was as fully chosen as any, and never gave any refusal to sit with them, further than my judgement was sufficiently declared in a Sermon preached at the first sitting of the Parliament, to be for the ancient and Catholic Episcopacy;) yet the Zeal of some men to put Presbytery into its throne and exercise was such, that I was twice sent to by some members of both Houses, and summoned by the Committee of the County where I live, to preach at the consecration and installing of this many headed Bishop, the new Presbytery: which work I twice (and so ever humbly) refused to do, as not having so studied its Genealogy and descent, as to be assured of the legitimation, right and title of sole Presbytery, to succeed, nay to remove its ancient Father Episcopacy, not as then quite dead, nor (I think) fully deposed. Yet such was the double diligence then of many English Divines (men otherwise of useful abilities) that they did as officiously attend on the Scotch Commissioners to set up Presbytery, and to destroy Episcopacy, as the maid is wont in pictures to wait on Judith w●th a bag for Holofernes his head. Besides this, Presbytery had then fortified itself with a special piece of policy, in order to its prevalency and perpetuity; which was, to engage the better sort of common people, or the Masters of every Parish, and so in effect the whole Populacy, to that party, by indulging them (as Mr. Calvin did in Geneva) a formal or titular share of Consistorian or Ecclesiastical power, under the glorious name of Ruling Elders, on whom, as on less comely members, they were pleased to bestow more abundant honour, at least in words; for few of them could really be fit for, or ever capable to use any actual authority, beyond that of Sides-men, Constables, Churchwardens, or Overseers for the poor. Yet must the Divine Authority even of these pillars to Presbytery be set up, though it stands but on tiptoes, and as it were upon one leg, favoured but by one Text of Scripture, and not one example, either in Scripture or all Antiquity for a thousand years and more, as learned Mr. Chibald proved in that excellent work of his, which was very seasonably for the design, but not very honestly, embezzled by some fast friends to Presbytery, as I have other where complained. How loath were many men, as they still are, to understand, that the Apostle St. 1 Tim. 5.17. Paul in that single place could not, according to that Spirit of wisdom which appears in all his writings, there institute two distinct sorts of Elders? but he only notes those different degrees of ability, industry and merit, which might be in some of the same kind and order; some being as Preachers and Bishops, Pastors and Rulers fixed to particular charges and congregations; others with greater zeal, pains and hazards following nearer the Apostles steps, in watering what they had but newly planted among the first converted Nations, yea and in further new planting the Gospel among the Gentiles, which was the great work of the principal Pastors, Elders or Bishops in those times. The Apostle too well understood the proportions of justice and remuneration, to give the same double honour (that is, equal maintenance and reverence from the Churches) to those whose pains in them must be so vastly different, as well as their abilities; the work of their supposed ruling, but not preaching Elders, being no way comparable in Reason or Religion to the work and worth of those that duly preach and plant the Gospel. The ruling part, as it was assigned them by these new dividers of Church-Government, was such, as required no great time or pains, nor great abilities; which, if required, could not easily be had in most Country-congregations, much less in primitive times among the poor and (for most part) Plebeian Christians: besides the office doth so much gratify most laymen's small ambitions to be in office, and so little hinders their other trades, that they cannot be thought to deserve any great reward, much less double, that is equal, honour to him that expends most of his time, Spirits, and talents in preparing and employing himself for the Preaching Ministry, which will constantly exercise the best of his power and abilities. If these Ruling Elders must have equal honour, as to maintenance, with Preachers, the Church is undone; for it cannot afford it: If Preachers must have no more maintenance or respect than these Lay-Elders will deserve, Preaching-Elders or Ministers are undone; for they must either starve, or tack other callings to the Ministry to patch up a livelihood. What is further brought from Helps and Governments, 1 Cor. 12.28. to help Preaching Elders to the Government in common, and Rustic or Lay-Elders to a share with them, seems to me to have as little force to convince any sober man's judgement, or persuade their consciences to submit to the novelty of them, as that argument used by a good old woman had to confute them; who being urged by a young Presbyter, for the better countenancing of his authority, to submit herself to the Examination and Jurisdiction of these Elders, which were news to her, She replied, rather very resolutely than rationally, No, by no means, she would not be subject to them, because she had both heard and read that Elders were Apocryphal, and would have ravished Susanna. But in earnest, these Ruling Elders were in prudence, not in conscience, in reason of State, not of Religion, in Policy, not Piety, first added to the consistory at Geneva, merely to appease and please the unsettled people, who having tumultuarily driven out their Bishop and Prince, now upon the Essays or new modelings of Church and State, would not be quiet, till Calvin allowed them some that might seem Tribunes of the people in Courts Ecclesiastic as well as Civil. 'tis true, Lay-Elders have been continued and used there, and other where, after that platform of so-disciplined Churches; but not therefore any way the more or better reform. For these are rather as Ciphers, adding some number, train and company to the Ministers, than signifying aught of themselves, further than prudence & policy may make use of them: But certainly no Religious necessity commands them as a duty and of divine Institution, there being an impossibility to find them in every parochial congregation, where there is seldom any one man of the Laity, who is meet in any kind to be joined with the Minister, in any such authority, which claims to be Sacred and Divine; for which God ever provides fitting instruments, Psal. 68.11. where he commands to have any use of them. God gave the word, and great was the company of Preaching Elders, Bishops and Presbyters in all ages: but of Lay-Elders and Ruling only, we read so little, so no use in any Church or age, that we may conclude, God gave no such word for them. The wise God abhors unequal mixtures, Deut. 22.10. such as the ploughing with an Ox and an Ass: and such seems the joining of Preachers with these Lay-Elders in the discipline and government of the Church; the Ass both disgrace and overtoyling the laborious and more ponderous Ox, who hath more hindrance than help from so silly and sluggish an assistant. Motly and unsociable conjunctions, in sowing mislane, or wearing linsy-wolsy garments, are also forbidden by the Lord, Deut. 22.9, 11. as emblems of his abhoring all things that make any uncomely and unsociable confusion, which ought chiefly to be avoided in Church-affaires, that order, solemnity ability, and prudence, might keep up the Majesty of Religion, the Churches venerable discipline, and the Ministerial divine authority, even there where no civil Magistrate would own it. Yet if any Presbyter be so wedded to these Lay-Elders, that he will never be reconciled to Primitive Episcopacy if he be wholly divorced from his dear Elders, for my part he shall have my consent to enjoy them, upon a politic and prudent account, where he may conveniently have use of them. For I do not think the outward Government of the Church to be made of such stuff or fashion which will not in any case either stretch or shrink, as those garments might do on the Jews bodies, when they beware them forty years in the wilderness, provided all things be done decently and in order, with due regard to the main end and the best examples. But if any contend for these Elders upon a divine and strict account of Religion, my answer is, with St. Paul, we had no such custom in England, 1 Cor. 11.16. nor the other Churches of Christ in the world, for 1400. years, who were fed and ruled by Bishops and Presbyters as the only Elders, Pastors, and Precedents in Ecclesiastical Government. This is sure, Presbytery was at first so confident of its sure standing in England, (where it never yet had any footing since Christianity was planted) that it doubted not to make use of such a wooden leg or crutch as Lay-Elders are to support its new Government and discipline; which was hereby rendered very popular and specious to many Ministers, and other men of vulgar Spirits, who were more ambitious of any small pittance of Church-Government to pass through their fingers, than judicious to measure and design the true proportions of it or themselves, which certainly ought to be most remote from a Democratick temper, Church-Government depending not upon many strong, rash and rude hands, but upon wise heads and holy hearts; of which no great store is ordinarily to be found among common and Countrypeople, upon which crab-stocks nevertheless this graft of Presbyterian government was to be every where grafted on the one side, not without mighty applause, and great expectation from the meaner-spirited people of England, in every parish some of which were to be found, not only among the very Mechanic and Rustic Plebs only, but among some Citizens, Gentlemen, and Noblemen too, who began to have very warm and devout ambitions to enjoy the title of a ruling Elder, as a divine honour added to their other civil honours, gently submitting their and their posterities tamer necks to such a yoke, as neither they nor their forefathers ever knew; by which one little Minister with two or three of his Elders, might be impowered to excommunicate a King and all his Council, as King James expresseth in his sense of their arrogancy. But while the common people of Engl. were every where preparing themselves to admire, adore, or dread, yea to entertain and feed with double honour, which was required for its due, this new and strange beast of Presbytery, which rose out of the sea of Scotish broils and English troubles (being, as was thought, adorned with seven Heads and ten Horns, coming forth conquering and to conquer;) in the midst of so great glory, swelling confidences and superfluity of successes, behold, a little stone of Independency, cut out by no hand of Authority, riseth up against the great mountain of Presbytery, as its Emulator and Rival. This in a short time hath so cloven it in sunder, that it hath quite broken its hoped Monopoly of Church-government; and Independency having never had any Patent from any Christian King or people heretofore, pleads a Patent (as doth Presbytery) from Christ Jesus, which hath been, it seems, dormant and unexecuted these 1640 years. This some more gross and credulous spirits do easily believe, though they never saw the Commission. Only as the more acute and nimble Independents (besides the more profound and solid Episcopalians) eagerly dispute against the usurped Authority of Presbytery, alleging that Classical, Provincial, and national Presbyteries are to them much more Apocryphal than Deans and Chapters, Bishops and Archbishops; so do both of them no less urge a pure Novelty, besides the fractions and parcellings of Government, against Independency, tokens of weakness, imprudence and inconsistency in Government. Yet amidst all this stickling, the puny of Independency (which enjoyed at first the smiles and cajolings of Presbytery, counting it an harmless and innocent Novelty, because yet unarmed) grew up by strange successes and unexpected favours of power, to such a stature, procerity and pertness, that it not only now justles with Presbytery, but it makes it in many places glad to comply, yea to curry favour with, and to truckle under Independency; which challengeth Seniority before Presbytery, with much more probability than Presbytery can allege any authority for its rejecting Catholic Episcopacy; it being more evident, that particular Congregations were first governed by one sole Apostle, Pastor, Teacher, Bishop, or Presbyter, present among them, than that many Presbyters ever governed the large and united Combinations of Christian Congregations and Churches, without some one Apostle or eminent Bishop, as chief Precedent among them: to which all Church-history consents, without any one exception in all the world. Thus hath Independency, as a little, but tight, Pinnace, in a short time got the wind of, and given a broadside to Presbytery; which soon grew a slug, when once the Northwind ceased to fill its sails. Besides this, Independency confining all its authority to a little body and narrow compass of one Congregation, hath a stroke or knack in it of greater popularity than Presbytery itself; which having many heads and hands, soon grew terrible to great men as well as common people, threatening them not only with one sword or sceptre, but with the combined force of many Presbyters and Presbyteries, with appeals from one Consistory to another, which looked like dew-rakes and harrows, armed with so many teeth, that none great or small should escape them, but he must needs fall under the first, second, third or fourth Consistorian Power, either Parochial, or Classical, or Provincial, or national; new names and great words, which common people would hardly learn in one year, nor understand in seven. Furthermore, the Magistratick genius and Imperial spirits of this Nation (intending entirely to govern it, both in Civil and Ecclesiastical respects) began in time to be better advised, and so to be aware how they or the Nation fell under the Discipline of any Populacy or Presbytery, whose Rods, nay Scorpions, castigated King James, during his pupillage or minority in Scotland, so severely, that he could never forgive or forget their insolency to his dying day, as he bitterly complains in his Basilicon Doron; every petty Presbyter that had twenty Marks a year salary to live upon, fancying himself a Peer, not only to the Lords, but to the Prince himself. This (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) many-headed Hydra of Government, King James did (and so might all wise men) see cause enough perfectly to abhor both in Church and State; that it was not only folly, but madness, to buy the experience of it in England at the charge of our own miseries, when we had our neighbours late examples so near us; that they were enough to have scared any wise men from such an harebrained and plebeian Presbytery, as King James and others describe, specially the Learned, Reverend and Impartial Archbishop of S. Andrews, who modestly sets it forth in his late excellent History of the Church of Scotland, in its rise, progress, activity and recess: which was a Government popularly at first extorted from Bishops, Peers and Princes, by a company of minute Ministers or petty Preachers, whose extravancies the wisdom of King James after reduced to a well-regulated Episcopacy; under which Scotland, as well as England, enjoyed, I believe, its best days. Thus when Presbytery had lopped Episcopacy to the stumps in Engl. yea and thought it had grubbed it up by the Mattock and Pickax of the Covenant; when itself from a small Shrub had set itself up, began to take root, and to fill the land, against the will of the chief Cedar in the Forest, fancying it was now full of sap, both of Divine and Humane Right, as if it were in high favour both with God and man; yet than it suddenly dwindled and looked so withered as if it had been Planet-struck, or smitten with a sharp East-wind, when indeed it was nothing else but the spirit of Independency and other Novelties, which like Palmer-worms or Caterpillars secretly bred in every corner of the land; and which have now also made their way even into Scotland itself, sometime the great Scene and Throne of Presbytery, now very tottering and much weakened, as to that part of affected sovereignty in Church-affairs. Nor is this young, tall, and seemingly so thrifty shoot of Independency (which is yet but slender, and more run up in height than spread in bulk) this is not so firmly fixed, that it cannot be removed, having little root in Scripture, or in the true reason of Government and Polity, nor more in any Church-patterns or practise of Antiquity; being like Jonah's gourd, the child of a night, of yesterday, in comparison of Primitive and Catholic Episcopacy, yea and a younger brother to Presbytery: which was but a modern shift used among some Reformed Churches, when they could not have as they desired, Reforming and Reformed Bishops to rule them; for else they had never (God knows) dreamt any thing of such a Presbytery as should tend to the extirpation of Apostolic Episcopacy. Nor is Independency with all its easy rootings and windings in our loose and broken soil of England, as yet far spread in the judgements of the most learned, grave and sober persons of England, looking upon it as incongruous in its Novelty, Feebleness, Factiousness and popular temper, to the Genius and interest of the English people, who are never to be long or well ruled by those whom they think their equals or inferiors. Even Independency itself (which hath a pretty soft phrase, and easier cords to bind people together in small bodies) will in time find its weakness in itself, and betray it to others; whence will follow other variations from it, oppositions against it, and contempts of it. Who knows what way fierce Anabaptists, ambitious Millenaries, Seraphic Familists, rude Ranters, and silly Quakers will affect for their Church-government, or any other new and yet nameless Faction which may hereafter be spawned, more agreeable to the vulgar humour, which loves greater Latitudes, Indifferencies, Loosenesses and Cheapnesses of Religion, both in Opinion and Practice, than learned and modest Independents will allow? Who sees not how much the uncivil confidence and childish clownery of Quakers takes with the vulgar beyond any thing? while to set off their Enthusiasms with a greater emphasis, they affect a rude and levelling Conversation, with a familiarity of Thouing their betters and superiors at every word, fancying great holiness in their simple and superstitious Yea and Nay, which are not the sole and confined, but only the shortest expressions of true and honest meanings; disdaining to use any signs of Duty, common Courtesy, or Respect, which by the Laws of God and man are due to Parents, Equals or Superiors, according to the gentle, courteous and humble behaviour of all Christians in all Countries and Ages: yet do these sort of new leaders pretend they come nearer to Jesus Christ and to God, because they have no respect of any persons but themselves: and no doubt, in order further to relieve their Necessities and Obscurities, these men would be content to have all things common, after the fashion of primitive Charity, when the Church's necessities had an empire of love (not force) over particular Christians proprieties. These and the like discriminations of parties in Religion, which are but lately grown out of the distempers of the Church of England (as worms out of Job's sores or dunghill) have already not only their Founders and Patrons (which must be almost deified by their respective Disciples) but they have also their grand Masters, Abettors, Propagators, Followers and Champions; each challengeth to themselves the titles of Christians, Saints, godly people, the Church, etc. not as good fellows in a charitable community and Catholic correspondency, but in a supercilious reserve, almost excluding all others, and unchurching them who are not just of their modes, who do not follow their colours, and are not ready to fight under their banners. To be sure they all bandy against the poor Church of England, agreeing in this one Antipathy, how disagreeing soever in other things; they study to divide her Unity, to break her solid Entireness, to enervate her Authority, to infatuate her Wisdom, to weaken her Strength, to spoil her Patrimony, to destroy her very Being, and to render her Name odious; with great coyness and disdainful smiles looking upon any man or Minister that shall but speak of the Church of England, and counting him presently as their common enemy, if he profess a filial Regard, Duty, Love, Pity, Adherence and Subjection to it. Mean while, each of these Agitators for their several parties and interests, fancy to themselves a great power resident in them, a Divine Liberty and Authority derivable from them, to begin new Churches, to beget their own Fathers, to lead their Shepherds, to teach their Teachers, to ordain their Pastors, to celebrate all holy Mysteries, to consecrate Sacramental Symbols: thus arrogating all that is Divine or Ecclesiastic to themselves, in their several methods and capacities. Sometimes the Pastor begets a Flock for himself, otherwhile a Flock begets a Pastor to themselves. It is no wonder that they are so greedy and vigilant to shark what they can from the Church of England and its Ministry, which they cry down as defective, as contemptible, as useless, as pernicious, as null; crying up their Novelties in opinion or practice beyond all that was ever used or known by the Church of England or any other ancient Church. Thus animated by confidence of themselves, and instigated by contempt of others, specially of the Church of England, they daily and zealously labour to make Proselytes to their respective parties; so to increase their numbers, then to enlarge their quarters: though their hands have hitherto been jointly & chiefly against the Church of Engl. yet they are ready, as occasion shall serve, like Ishmael, to be against one another, counting every one against them who is not for them. In fine, what doth any of them want, but Strength and Opportunity, to set up themselves and their parties, to lift up their Standards, to display their Ensigns, to inscribe on their Flags of mutual defiances the names of their several Factions, to advance their distinct, divided, and (now) discovered interests and designs, presented under some specious notion or name of Reformation, of Christ's Kingdom, or Throne, or reign with them and by them, as soon as they can begin, and as long as they can continue that sacred Empire? which must, it seems, begin in England; for no where else in the world men's Heads are so busy, men's Hearts so divided, their Wits so frantic, their Religion so fanciful, their Pride so insolent, their Wills so wilful, their Consciences so loose, their Charity so partial, their Unity so broken, their Liberty so licentious, their Christianity so self-crucifying, their Reformations so rude, so ridiculous, so ruinous, both to their common Mother, and to each other. As for the Church of England, there is not one of these fierce and flagrant Novellers but they look upon her with such an eye as ungracious children use to do upon their aged, weak, bedrid and impoverished Mother, whom they think never like to get upon her legs again, much less to be able to assert herself, to recover her Strength, Authority, Reputation and Estate, from their unnatural and rapacious invasions; Her they have devoted to utter destruction, without any remaining sparks of Honour, Love, or Pity for her; they conclude her as condemned to perpetual Desolations; each of them resolves to make their advantages by her Ruins, as some do by the Decays of our Cathedrals: and this upon no other quarrel, that I could ever see, but because she was, as much elder, so much wiser and better than any, than all of them, as to all Learning, Wisdom, Order, Gravity, Gifts, Graces, Charity, Constancy, Unity; these new modes of Religion and Reformation consisting more in breaking than binding, in taking than giving, in pulling down than building any thing that might be a remarkable Instance and Monument, either of pious Magnificence, or munificent Piety. Possibly they may, out of principles of policy and self-preservation, keep some fair quarter to each other, and pretend a correspondency, as brethren in discontent or iniquity, while they either are kerbed by a potent and prudent hand, as to that civil predominancy and liberty they affect; or while they have some jealousy of the Church of England's recovery (their sore and just enemy, in their esteem, when indeed it is their truest friend, and lest their flatterer:) but when they fancy her to be irreparable, and each of themselves in such potency as can bear no competitor, they will certainly justle each other for more elbow-room. Their spirits are too big to be confined, when once blown up with confidence of numbers and successes; neither their herds nor herdsmen can feed longer together: like Cocks of the game, when they have sufficiently crowed over the Church of England, they will fight with one another. Their Principles are, and so will their Practices be, Mahometan as well as Christian, rather to be active than passive, to follow the crescent rather than bear the cross. They are for rule and empire, rather than for Christian patience and subjection: those were superstitious, or necessitous, rather than religious Principles and Practices of primitive silliness, more than simplicity and innocency (as they count them:) the Serpent in them will devour the Dove, as soon as it grows great enough, that it may be no longer a creeping, but a flying fiery Serpent. Late experience too much gratifying, even to a glut and excess, the various, licentious, factious and cruel Novelties of some men, hath thus far manifested the Folly, Ingratitude, inordinateness, Ambition and Madness of their Principles, Practices and Spirits, that I see some men can never be content with moderate blessings in Church or State, nor satisfied with any thing, unless they may be their own carvers: they are so eager to catch at the shadows of Novelty and whimsies of Reformation, that they are blindly zealous to lose the substance of Religion, and deform the best Reformations in the world; the issues of their Counsels are the issues of Death, and their paths tend either to Romish darkness or Atheistical indifferencies. From all which true observations of men's tempers and activities, presages of future sad events, I cannot but with grief of soul justify (what many men's immoderate zeal is loath to believe) the wise observations of S. Austin and many others, who were set beyond juvenile heats and popular fervours; That Novelties in any well-ordered Church and Religion (though seemingly, yea and really, as to some degrees, for the better, yet) usually perturb the Church and State of Religion more than they profit them. Magis perturbat novitas, quam prodest veritas. No private men's reformings end without their greater deformities; if perhaps they add to the Purity and Verity, they take as much away from the Charity and Unity of Religion. That Passion commonly darkens and sullies more than their pretensions of Piety do polish or brighten Religion. That preposterous Reformers instead of snuffing the lamps of the Temple, are prone to put them quite out: especially when the ignorance and insolence of Laymen undertake to set the Ark of God upon their Cart, 1 Sam. 6.10. to draw it with Beasts, and drive it with their whips and whistlings, though they whistle to the tune of a Psalm; yet Religion always totters, is oft overthrown by them, being never safe but when it is, as the Ark ought to have been, carried upon the shoulders of able Priests and Levites, such Bishops and Presbyters as aught to bear it up, and to whose care that sacred depositum is chiefly committed by Christ and the Apostles. Nor hath the learned and godly Clergy in England ever been so weak and unworthy, as to want either ability or will, Sufficiency or Authority, to do this service to God and his Church; however now they are so debased, discouraged, and almost beaten out of the Sanctuary. Reformations of Religion ever prove either abortive or misshapen, when they are either begotten or brought forth by Minister's factiousness or people's fury: tumultuating and irregular ways of reforming any Church do but cut up and so kill the mother, in hope to save that Bastard-child, which having neither due form nor legitimation deserves no long life. We see by too woeful experiences and infinite expenses of blood, that Churches, when in some things decayed, are easier mended in Fancy than in effect, in the project than performance; That this Church-work requires not only proper workmen and skilful Artists, but tender hands and cautious fingers; That where the Essentials, Vitals and Fundamentals of Religion in any Church, are good as to true doctrine, saving faith, holy institutions, and honest morals, the prudentials and ornamentalls cannot but be commendable, if they be tolerable; That the peace and safety of a settled Church ought not to be endangered for circumstances; That it is a dangerous practice of Empirics, to give able and otherwise healthful bodies uncorrected Quicksilver, which shall kill them outright, in order to kill some little itch or tetter upon them, whose breaking forth to the circumference or outward habit of the body is a good effect of an ill cause, a sign of firmer health in the nobler and more retired parts. I must ever conclude, with S. Austin and Dionysius Bishop of Athens, it is better, for the Church's peace and Christian charity sake, to tolerate some inconveniences (for some there will ever be, or at least to some men seem to be, in the best constituted Churches) than to admit of such hazardous ways and means of reforming, as will endanger the ruin of Religion and total routing of a well-setled Church; that it is better in all respects to acquiesce in, or submit to public determinations and tried appointments of true Religion, than to be still tampering with untried experiments and essays of Novelty, to the waist of that Order, Peace and Unity, which ought to be preferred before any such Truths as are but probable, or so disputable, that good men on either side have, do, and may hold them in some opposition without danger of their salvation. It is but a delusion and device of the Devil, which prompts men to wind up the strings of Religion to so high a note of Reformation, as breaks both the strings themselves, and the very ribs of that Instrument which they pretend to set to such a pitch. An immoderation which hath (as I have endeavoured to set forth by many sad instances in this third Book of the Church of England's Sighs and Tears) so defaced, deformed, shaken, disunited, weakened and endangered the state and honour of Religion, as Christian and Reformed, in this Church and Nation, that it threatens, like a Fistula, Gangrene, or Cancer, a total, though it may be a lingering, fatality both to Church and State, unless by some wise hearts and worthy hands the Lord of Heaven vouchsafe to apply such Cures as may stop the prevailings of such sad Effects, and remove the Causes which began or promoted them so far, as to give occasion to this famous Church and her Children thus sadly to bemoan themselves. BOOK IU. SETTING FORTH THE SIGHS and PRAYERS of the CHURCH of ENGLAND In order to its Healing and Recovery. CHAP. I. HAving set before you (Honoured and beloved Countrymen) in the three former Books, first, The design and method of this fourth Book. the well-formed and sometime flourishing constitution of the Church of England, (Lib. 1.) secondly, its present decays or destitutions; both in the causes (Lib. 2.) and consequences (Lib. 3.) relating to Ministers and people, in sacred and civil regards, to the great diminution, detriment and danger of the Reformed Religion, in this Church and Nation: It is now time to apply my thoughts and yours in this fourth Book to the Restitution, or recovery of that which is the honour and happiness of this as all Nations; which (undoubtedly) consists in the Purity, Unity, Stability, Sanctity, Solemnity, Authority, and Efficacy of True Religion. Hitherto I have poured Wine into the wounds of this Church, not so much suppling as searching them, by an honest severity: The bruises and putrified sores, which are all over the body of our reformed Religion, were not capable of Oils and Balsams, of softer and sweeter applications, till the putrid and painful ulcerations were first opened, the cores of them discovered, and the pus or sanies of them let out; which to conceal and smother by gentle, but unsincere salves, by civil▪ but cruel plasters (rather palliating our miseries, than healing our maladies) were a method of so great baseness and unworthiness in me, as might for ever justly deprive me of the honour of faithfulness to God, to this Church, to true Religion, to my Country, to my own and to your souls. I know the freedom of my pen hitherto, like the sharpness of a Lancet or probe, may be prone to offend on all sides: few men are so humble as not to find fault with those that tell them of their faults: those are commonly lest patient of Physicians or Surgeons hands, who need them most, crying out of other men's severities, which are occasioned, yea necessitated, by their own debauchnesse and distempers. Yet since my aims are in this writing upon, or rather ripping up the bilious inflammations of Religion, not to spare my own disorders, or theirs with whom I may seem most to symbolise in my opinion and practice, I hope no good man, great or small, will be causelessly offended with the just incisions, or scarrifying I have made; which as the gangrenous necessity of our maladies (otherwise desperate and incurable) have compelled me to, so the pious, peaceable and charitable intentions of my soul, inorder to a common and public good, will then best excuse them, when my Readers shall perceive with how liberal an hand and free an heart, I do in this fourth Book impart the best of my thoughts, my humblest suggestions, faithfullest counsels, and tenderest cares, in order to their happiness, no less than my own, who am infinitely solicitous, and passionately concerned what becomes of the Ark of God, of the true reformed Christian Religion in England, jealous lest the Philistines take it, and with it the glory of our Israel. I know it may be retorted upon me, That nothing is easier than to complain of others, nothing harder than to mend one's self; That censors of Epidemic disorders make themselves public enemies, and subject to ostracism on all sides; That both Prince and people, Magistrates and subjects, are prone to interpret such representations for reproaches of them, as if they were defective in their counsels and cares of Religion; also as arrogancies in any private man, to seem either more sensible of, or more solicitous for, or more consultive in order to those great and public concernments, which no wise men can fail to discern, no good man forbear to remedy, as far as is in his power; That it is not so much an heroic, as an inordinate charity, or indiscreet zeal, for any man to discompose his own tranquillity, by importuning others to be better than they like to be, or to do better than the distemper of times will give them leave; that neither Magistrates nor Ministers are to be blamed or traduced as defective in their duties, because they are not presently masters of people's petulancies, nor can suddenly command that great Ship to steer about, and obey the Rudder of Reason and Religion, which hath lately been carried violently away, as by the sway of its own ponderous bulk, so by the fierceness of mighty and contrary winds, also by the fatality of those secret, but irresistible tides of Providence, when Divine Justice and vengeance hath struck in with humane passions and transgressions, at once to use them and to punish them. I am so far from reproaching any that are in power, and those lest who are in greatest place, that (in earnest) I pity them for what they cannot act, as effectually, as I charitably presume they soberly design and desire in respect of that Christian unity and harmony of Religion, which every wise and good man must needs be unfeignedly ambitious to enjoy and promote. The obstructions of which arise, not from depraved and dangerous State-policies, (as some suspect) purposely fomenting Divisions in Religion, (which no prudent Governor but sees cause to fear, and will study to avoid) but from those headstrong furies and animosities, which accompany the vulgar, when once (like Stone-horses got loose from their stalls, traice, and bridles) they find themselves at such a liberty, as is beyond the switch or spur, the curb or whip of their riders and governor's; whose riotous and boisterous courses are hardly to be stopped, till they have either tired, or entangled, or hurt, or confounded and overthrown themselves and others; till which time, it is not safe for their Keepers to come too near their wanton heels, or forcibly to reduce them, like wild Asses and Unicorns, to their wont stations and cribs. Nor is (perhaps) the dilatory cautiousness of wise men herein to be blamed so much as commended, while they temporize for some time with the Populacy, till experience of their own folly, disorders, dangers and miseries, hath taught them how much safer they are under other men's orderly restraints and government, than their own licentious choice and freedoms, as in Civil, so in Religious Concernments. I believe the mutual feuds, jealousies, and animosities in England among the divided Factions in Religion, have hitherto been so eagerly bend to advance themselves, and to depress their rivals, that it hath been a work of great Prudence, no less than Policy, so far to balance them, till Time had discovered to them their common deformities and dangers, by their disagreements and defeats; besides the general decay and mutual debasing of what each highly pretends to advance, The Reformed Religion. Nor do I doubt, but those Powers and Counsels, under which Providence hath at present subjected our Civil and Ecclesiastic Interests, will so far with favour interpret my endeavours, and accept of them, as they must needs appear to all sober men, only studious to serve the public good, and not to advance any private interest or particular party in Religion. Nor shall I be taxed (I hope) for self-conceited and too presumptuous, as if I supposed all men to be blind or dim-sighted besides myself, while I offer them this Collyrium, or Eyesalve: No, I know my own obscurity, tenuity, and infirmity. Nor do I here offer my own private sense so much, as the general votes, prayers, hopes and expectations of all moderate and impartial men, so far as I have been able to observe the pulse of their hearts, and desires of their souls: yea many such as have heretofore highly engaged for or against any faction, during the transports of their first fits and Paroxysmes, even these, being grown (now) much cooler and better composed in their spirits, do seem to breathe after nothing so earnestly, as some such happy composure of our religious distractions, as may most advance the general interests of the Christian and Reformed Religion against the common enemies of both; and therein so secure their respective and particular privileges, or innocent immunities in point of Conscience, as may least tempt them to fear the being oppressed by others; or, by way of revenge, to seek the oppressing of any others that would lead a godly and peaceable life. What good Christian, that lists not to be Atheistically profane, what honest Protestant, that cannot comply with the Roman errors and insolences, doth not deplore the scratches, the wounds, the bloodsheds, the deformities, the decays, the deaths, which the Reformed Religion hath lately suffered here in England? Who is so brainsick or barbarous, as not to see that our common safety is in our religious unity? that our civil honour and happiness cannot be secure, until established upon the pillars of Christian purity and harmony? To this mark I press thus hard; at this design I earnestly drive; this is the prize I aim at, during the remain of my short race in this world: as I know I do not run alone, so I hope I shall not run in vain, but being assisted with God's gracious Spirit, which is full of meekness and wisdom, I trust I shall enjoy the concurrent suffrages, good wills and prayers of all those that wish the prosperity of true Religion and these British Nations. To pour in the balm of Gilead with the more order into the wounds of this Church and its Reformed Religion, I shall first set forth the confessed difficulty of the work, I mean the closing and healing of Religious breaches in any Church or Nation, where once differences are exasperated; and not only men's opinions and passions, but their civil interests and secular designs seem engaged. Secondly, I shall show the necessity of some happy composure; 1. in respect of Religion, as Christian and Reformed, 2. as to the civil peace, 3. as to the honour, 4. as to the gratitude of the Nation. Thirdly, I shall manifest the possibility or feisablenesse of the work; both as to the nature of it, and the inclinations of all sober men to it. Fourthly, I shall endeavour to propound what I conceive the proper methods and means of effecting it, to be used, 1. by Ministers, 2. by Magistrates, 3. by all sorts of people, that have any principles of Piety and Honesty toward God and Man. CHAP. II. FOr the first; I know it is a work of great difficulty, The difficulty of repairing a decayed Church. and so of most ingenuous, as well as pious, industry, to buoy up Religion, when once, like a great Ship, it is sunk in the seas of vulgar errors, or bilged in the owse and mud of factious confusions, or plunged into licentiousness, irreverence and irreligion; By which not only the base and more brutish lusts of men are sought to be indulged to all sensual luxuries, but the more spiritual wickednesses which usurp upon the highest places of men's souls, (such as are Envy, Revenge, Ambition, Covetousness, Vainglory, Emulations, and Hypocrisies) these study to be gratified in the several designs and interests which men's corrupt and base hearts do fancy most agreeable to their contents. In nothing are men, and women too, more opiniatre, more morose, more touchy and obstinate, more proud and peremptory, more fierce and contradictive, more gladiatory and offensive, than to be stopped or opposed, kerbed or restrained, questioned or dissuaded in those opinions or practices which they have stamped with the marks and impressions of their Religion. This, as the Colours, Ensign and Standard of their lives and honours, of their credits and comforts, must be preserved with the greatest vehemency, hazard and impatience. Every one fancies, that, as they need, so they use the special power of God's Spirit in all their pious pertinacies, which will not endure to have what they call their Religion evicted or wrested from them, by the pleasure or power of any man living. The difficulty here of winning people from the error of their ways, of redeeming and overcoming them with a gentle conquest, when once their lusts, errors and ignorances' have bound them as Captives with the chains of their opinions, is so great, that, as it must not discourage, but rather whet the edge of pious and charitable industry in Magistrates and Ministers, so it will exercise all their honest policies, their Christian prudence, and charitable patience; having herein to contend not only with the pragmatic follies of people, and a kind of variable wantonness or madness, but also their rudenesses and reproaches, their ingratitudes and contempts, their menacings and assassinations, who oft meditate even the death of those, as greatest tyrants and persecutors, that will not let them live at what rate and riot of Religion they list. The Primitive Fathers and Christian Emperors (whose learning and power most asserted the Orthodox and true Religion) had never more cause to muster up and employ all the forces of their Tongues and Pens, of their Counsels and Policies, of their Senators and Soldiers, than in those cases where they endeavoured to stop the contagions, or recover from the Apostasies of Religion, such as were deservedly branded for Heretics and Schismatics. How tender severities, how mild angers, how soft rigours, how gentle zeal, how meek wisdom; how charitable chastisings, were they forced to use, (I mean, the Fathers of the Church) in their polemics and Apologies, in behalf of true Religion, against Epidemic or popular errors! And no less solicitous were the godly Emperors, to dispense their enforced, yet merciful, cruelties, so as might most preserve the honestly erroneous, and only destroy, refute and suppress their extravagant, desperate and damnable errors. Here the torrent of Tertullian's rougher eloquence, the sweeter fluency of St. Cyprian's zealous candour, the invincible sinews of Athanasius his style and resolution, the liquid gold of St. Chrysostom's tongue and pen, the gentle dews and plentiful showers of St. Augustine's holy and humble soul, the strong tides, vehement storms of St. Jerom's mighty genius, which prostrates all it cannot carry with it; Here the Gregory's and Basils', Irenaeus, Hilary, Optatus, and all other Worthies of old, (who were Champions for the Truth, and contended earnestly for the faith once delivered, and the unity of the true Church of Christ, against all opposers and factious seducers) used all religious force, and pious engines, that were proper to apply to the restitution of Religion, and reparation of the Church, when it was either scattered and persecuted by Infidels, or defamed and divided by Schismatics, or poisoned and corrupted by Heretics. Nor were they more industrious to use the power of arguments in their own Sermons and disputations, than cautious how they stirred up the spirits of Princes to apply the power of Arms in the matters of Religion, further than for its necessary defence from the pragmatic petulancies and real insolences of Manichees, Arrians, Circumcellians, Donatists, and others, whose hands they thought might by such methods be justly kerbed and resisted; although their hearts were not to be so softened, nor their errors so confuted. Indeed the reparations of Religion, and the restauration of any lapsed or decayed Church, is a work not to be done by sudden pulls, merely by ropes and cables: unseasonable applications of violent and coercive means are prone to harden men's hearts, to exasperate their spirits, and to make them both more refractory and pertinacious in their religious errors, extravagancies and affectations. The work is much more easy and proper to be effected by such discreet and sober counterpoising of Reason and Religion, of Grace and Virtue, of Wisdom and Charity, in worthy Magistrates and Ministers, as may in time, by insensible degrees, as it were outweigh those sad and heavy depressions which are brought in and maintained by people's sinister passions, petulancies, prejudices, or superstitions, to the splitting of any Church, and sinking of Religion; these must be counterpoised by that gravity, sanctity, majesty, solemnity, due authority, just encouragement, and honest advantages, which pious Princes and godly Magistrates cheerfully and liberally afford to the orderly Preachers and sober Professors of true Religion; forbidding in the first place any men to make a prey or spoil of the Church in any kind, or to advance any secular emoluments by their schismatic and sacrilegious extravagancies. Few men ever separate from, or fight against the Church, or true Religion, but as Soldiers of Fortune, in hope to plunder them. Nor is it the honour so much, as the profit of the victory, that vulgar spirits aim at, when they contend against the Bishops and Pastors, the honour, order & stability of any Church and its Ministers. Besides this first difficulty, in restoring any shattered Church and Religion, which proceeds from the ruder passions and impatiencies of the licentious vulgar, Wise men have further to contend with those tempers in common people, which are most humane, soft, and commendable in them; that is, their pities and compassions, which make them prone to sympathise with any persons or opinions, never so bad and base, when once they see them violently oppressed, and, as they suppose, persecuted for that which they profess as their Religion, which they are ready to judge less confutable by Scripture and right reason, when they see it set upon by Swords and Pistols, by Fire and Faggot, by Prisons and Confiscations. People are ready to oppose all force with pity, to adopt any opinion that they see rather punished than convinced; whom they cannot help with their hands, they relieve with their hearts, their prayers and tears; which, by softening men's minds, make an easy way for any error or heresy to insinuate into their consciences, though recommended by nothing but the patience or pertinacy of the sufferers for it. Hence some wise and calmer Statesmen as well as Churchmen, blamed the severity of burning used in Q. Eliz. days against some Anabaptists; and once in King James his reign, against an impudent Arian, (for which Mr. Calvin and the Geneva Consistory had given him an example in Servetus:) In whose ashes (as King James said) while men rake to find a Martyrly patience, they oft find an heretical pravity, and such damnable, yet desperate errors, as he after thought were better smothered by prisons or banishment, than exposed to light by those horrid fires which burn men alive, or subject them to such remarkable sufferings, as stigmatize their errors on the hearts of many their pitiful spectators. How have we found even the dry trees of Pillories in the last King's days, so fruitful in popular compassions, that the supposed petulant and intemperate spirits of some men, who suffered on them, made thousands adhere to them; who otherways would, in calmer proceedings, have utterly abhorred their folly and faction, their popularity and arrogancy? Hence many wretched men, that despair by other means to be remarkable or infamously famous, affect to be sufferers; ambitious by their seeming Martyrdoms to gain reputation to their rotten, erroneous, and seditious opinions. Downright force is indeed very effectual to do not only great executions upon the outward man, but to make strong confutations, and seeming conversions, upon men's opinions and persuasions in respect of civil right and justice: For vulgar minds are loath to look beyond outward events, and willingly resolve their Consciences into Providences; prone to conclude, that all is just and righteous, that is potent and prosperous. They easily fancy with themselves, and flatter others, that those have the better cause, who have the better end of the staff. True Religion (indeed) exactly regards the Word of God, and the intrinsic measures, even in Civil affairs, of Truth and Justice. But easier Superstition dotes on the Superficies or Idol of Success, counting all is well, when the event is not ill; willingly suffering themselves to be carried down that stream, where prevalent power carries dominion with it, and commands subjection to it, (which prudent compliance with the outward man seems not only venial and tolerable in common people, but commendable even in all sober men, as to civil and secular affairs, while nothing interferes with those inward morals, nor contradicts those necessary Articles of Christian faith, which are indispensible at all times, and on all occasions to be believed, asserted and obeyed. But in matters of Religion, common people are not generally so tame, nor so soon cowed or overawed by mere force and club-law: by which methods the Duke D' Alva lost his Master the King of Spain those fair Provinces of the Low-countries. For besides their natural restiveness, stubbornness and doggedness, they are mightily heightened in these tempers and humours by the imagination of zeal, and resolutions of necessary perseverance in any way that they have chosen for their Religion, though it be never so extravagant, yea ridiculous; especially if bare force be applied to remove them, than they are as ponderous as the congealed Mountains, or Northern heaps of Ice, which no Engines can remove; but the warmer Sun will secretly thaw, and easily melt them, so that they shall of themselves dissolve and fall asunder. It is obvious to all men to hold and grasp that fastest, which any seeks to wrest or extort from them; and all spectators of such contests, are ready to judge, that that side either wants, or distrusts its rational and persuasive power (which is most proper to be applied to the minds and consciences of men, in matters of Religion) when they see much use is made of persecutive and compelling power; which is rather brutish than humane: such as Balaams' passion used towards his Ass; Numb. 22.22. but it was not used by the Angel toward Balaam, who being the more perverse and refractory beast of the two, yet the Angel by God's commission only reasons, argues, and persuades with him, while he with fury smites his Ass once and again. Not only Piety and Christian Charity, but common Reason and Humanity teach all good-natured people to frown upon force, and look sadly upon sufferers, upon any Religious account, unless (as Hacket and his complices) where men's blasphemous opinions and riotous actions, like madman's, are such, that they break all those bounds which Morality, Modesty, Civil Justice, Public Peace, the honour of established Religion, and the Reverence of the Dive in Majesty, do prescribe to all men, no less than to all Christians. State- breaches, or Civil fractures, like flesh-wounds, will in time be healed by a kind of weapon-salve: I mean, that Sovereign power of the Sword, which prevails, will in time either depress or extirpate contrary factions; either so over-awing them by fears, or winning them by rewards, that they will with patience and prudence rather embrace a safe and quiet subjection, than adventure upon dangerous and improbable commotions. But the violent strokes made against men's Religion, reach even their very hearts; n defence of which all their spirits gather together, resolving (if they have any courage or sincerity) rather to die, than deny or desert what they at present count their Religion. The casting of good store of water, or blood, upon civil conflagrations, will, at last, quench them; and prevalent power will make a shift to build itself new mansions or palaces, out of those ruinous materials which were much burnt and wasted, but not quite consumed, by those fires. But religious burnings, like the flames of jealousy, are contumacious, rising like wildfire most violently against all means that are used suddenly and forcibly to smother and extinguish them. Many of all sorts of Religions have chosen rather to be burnt themselves, than to have their opinions quenched, and their Religion suppressed; especially if they can have the glory to be Champions for a side, or Patrons of a party, and have many spectators or sectators to be their applauders. Putid humours and noxious ulcers once broken out, and far spread in any Nation, (as now in England) upon the account of Religion, (like Saint Anthony's fire, or sharp Erisipylas) are safest healed by lenitive purgations, rather than cold applications outwardly. Factions in Religion, like Fistula's or running sores in foul bodies, are in least pain and danger, when they have some vent allowed them, by which the venomous humours may leisurely spend themselves; and those pestilent opinions which carry with them pernicious practices, so drain away, as most keeps them from recoiling upon the head, heart, or other noble parts. All sudden skinning over, or closing of the orifices, by which those sharp humours are obstructed, but not purged, is very dangerous and diffusive of the mischief, making the source of the malignity to flow higher, if it be not drawn away by such gentle dieticks, or healing applications, as strengthening the sound parts, assisting the weak and purging the disaffected, enables them by little and little to cast out what ever was unsound in them, and noxious to them. Nothing makes the nestitutions of true, but decayed and divided Religion, more difficult in any Nation, than those mutual corruptions and passions, those animosities and transports which disaffect both the People as Patients, and many times the Magistrates and Ministers as Physicians. And nothing renders that work more facile and feisable, than that calmness, moderation and temper, which ought always to be in Physicians, whatever violent fits and distempers appear in the Patients. Governors in Church and State must ever expect such distempers in people's minds, especially when they are touched upon the tender place of their Religion, with which men's consciences seem so vehemently to sympathise, that Reformers had need carefully to furnish themselves with such meekness of wisdom, as is the best antidote for their own security, and against the others malady. Then there will be hopes of healing in Religion, not when Toleration or indulgence is granted to all opinions and professions, which list to christian themselves; but when such a public way of solid and sincere Religion, both as to doctrine and practice, is seriously debated, duly prepared, publicly agreed upon, and solemnly established, as carries with it most of clear Scripture-precept, and Saintly pattern, in faith and manners, in virtues and graces, in duties and devotions, in order and authority, in honesty and charity, with the greatest uprightness and impartiality towards God and man. However Epidemic contagions may for a time be permitted something of necessary connivance, that they may more freely breathe out themselves; yet this great remedy and sovereign medicine in due time ought to be applied, which consists in the owning and establishing of such a Religion as hath in it whatever is holy, necessary, useful, comely, and commendable in any of the pretending parties. This once approved, and fixed by grave counsel, and public advice of all Estates, as the Standard of the public profession and practice of Religion; being also asserted and propagated by Preachers of most indisputable authority, of pregnantest abilities, and of most exemplary lives, orderly and unanimously agreeing among themselves, hereby meriting and enjoying the double honour of public respect and maintenance; these gentle, rational, and wholesome methods of Religion, will certainly in a few years, by God's blessing, either drain, or drive out, by secret and gentle workings, all those pestilent distempers in Religion, which vulgar minds, by a corrupted Liberty, as by a licentious and foul diet, have contracted, to the great disorder and deformity of any Church or Nation professing Christianity. For in a short time, such as are truly conscientious, by the fear of God, and love of true Religion, will cease to be either pertinacious, or contentious, or factious, or inconstant, when they are convinced of so excellent a way, as they cannot but conclude to be safe; since it is holy and true, sober and settled, comely and charitable. Others that are mere Politicians in Religion, either formal Pharisees, or false hypocrites, or fawning Parasites, ready to change and comply with any party and persuasion, in order to secular advantages, even these will soon give over their factious agitations, their pragmatic stickling, and popular sidings and shift in Religion, when once they find which way the wind or stream of public favour and civil interest do drive. The Mills of Factions in Religion will soon give over their motions, when once they perceive no grist of Profit, or stream of Preferment, or breath of vulgar Applause is brought in to them. There is no wonder to be made at those late sad and mad extravagancies, which of later years have prevailed against the reformed Religion once settled in England; while the Majesty and Honour of this Church and State, the sanctity of our Laws, Civil and Ecclesiastic, the solemnity of God's public worship and service▪ the authority and maintenance of his Ministers, have all been (through our civil broils and tumults) unhappily exposed to infinite arrogancies, spoils, contempts, and insolences, even of common people; while they saw so many prisons and bonds, so many sequestrations and silencings, so many deaths and dangers, attend not only the Bishops, but the Presbyters, the chief Preachers and prime Professors on all sides of that reformed Religion which was established in England. No wonder, if while the populacy see great Preachers and Professors cast so much dirt, and spit in each others faces; while they suspect that all piety, honesty and Christian charity, are made to truckle under State- Policies, and bend to worldly interests; no wonder if the vulgar desperately leap into the Sea of confusion and faction, out of that ship which they saw not only so leaky and crazy, that it was almost sunk, but so set on fire, that they despaired to quench it: No wonder if they venture upon either inventing what new ways of Religion they list to fancy, or despising all wont public forms and professions; since they think themselves not only encouraged, but in a sort exemplarily commanded, and almost compelled to cast off with scorn that Reformed Profession of Christian Religion, which had so great a Name of Wisdom, Law, Honour and Holiness, Glory and Happiness, as that had which was established in the Church of England, (never to be mended, as to the main and substantials of Religion, in Doctrine, Worship, Discipline, Devotion and Government; however in some circumstantials, something might possibly be altered, or added, by the sober counsels of wife and peaceable men, who had both ability and authority for such a work.) Whose great difficulty now is chiefly heightened by that popular froth and vanity, those animosities, and arrogancies, those infinite variations and confusions, with which vulgar fury and passions have deformed, the face divided the body, yea almost devoured every joint and limb of Chiristan and reformed Religion in England. 'Tis true, these will in time very much waste, sink and vanish of themselves, while one Faction justles, crowds and confounds another; the new ones (as the night-mares) insulting and overlaying the Elder: But this is only as the changing of a Captives Chains, this will but bring in religious rabble's or successions of confusions, but no sound recovery, or just Redemption and restitution of true Religion, and any due Reformation, until people see the public marks of Divinity autoritatively set upon Religion, when it is set forth & settled with such Truth and Holiness, such Order and Honour, such Bounty and Beauty, such Unity and Tranquillity, such Favour and Benignity, as becomes the Majesty of that profession which imports man's highest relation and union to their God and Saviour. If after such a wise restauration and public establishment of Religion, there should still appear some such licentious and disorderly Spirits, who, like old wild birds, are impatient of any restraint, and will rather pine away and die with sullenness, than exchange their fancied freedom for the best cage and food in the world; yet it is far more pious and charitable to set just bounds of restraint and check to their affected liberty, than to suffer them to injure the public welfare, or hinder the happy settlement of Religion, by their heady and endless extravagancies; from whence arise the greatest difficulties and obstructions which lie in the way of wise men: which yet are not so insuperable as to occasion any sober man's despair, or to damp his Prayers, or to discourage his worthy endeavours; in all which honest industry will whet itself to a greater edge and brightness upon the rocks of difficulty, which are but the whetstones of true Christian piety and charity, when God shall please to give such just power, and fair opportunities, as may best answer the necessities and importunities of those public cases wherein divided and decayed Religion is so highly concerned, that nothing is less to be dallied, delayed, or dispensed withal. CHAP. III. Grand motives to a public restitution and fixation of the Reformed Religion. ANd such indeed to me seemeth the case of Religion, as Christian and reform in England; whose necessary restitution and speedy reestablishment to Unity and Uniformity may be justly pressed upon all persons of worth and wisdom in this Nation, not only by softer notions and plausible insinuations, but by the most cogent demonstrations, and potent persuasions, that can be applied to the minds of Men and Christians, as to (1.) Conscience, (2.) Prudence, (3.) Honour, (4.) and Gratitude. First as to the Conscience of our duty to God and Man, in Piety and Charity, what, I beseech you, can be more urgently incumbent upon all good men's Consciences, than the public advantages of God's Glory, and the eternal good of men's souls? Both which are highly concerned in the vindication and fixation of true Religion, as Christian, and as Reformed. 1. Reason from the glory of our God and Saviour. For the Glory of the great God, and the Honour of our blessed Redeemer (which ought to be the chiefest designs of every good Christian's highest Zeal and best endeavours,) 'tis most evident, that nothing tends more to their dishonour and disparagement in the eye of all the world, both at home and abroad, that when Aliens and Infidels, Jews & Mahometans, Atheists and Epicures, Sceptics, & Politicians, debauched, profane and ignorant livers, shall see that Religion (by which this Nation professeth a singular regard to the Divine Majesty and Honour) to be shamefully divided, supinely neglected, and sordidly despised, and by vulgar insolency prostituted, as to that public Solemnity, Majesty, Authority, Ministry, Order, Peace, Uniformity, and Stability, which befit that high and holy relation wherewith true Religion invests men, as obliging them to the supreme Good, the blessed holy, and only Eternal God our Saviour, to know, own, fear, love, reverence, imitate, obey and enjoy him in the greatest exactness of duty, and sanctity of Devotion: and this not only privately and retiredly, but publicly and socially; where the exemplary solemnity, harmony and beauty of holiness, not only conciliate an honour to true Religion, but they are the highest instances men can publicly give, as of their pious regards to God, so of their charitable tenderness towards all men as their neighbours; Who being naturally most averse from that Religion which is the best and holiest, should have the fewest discouragements, damps, or scandals, either wilfully cast, or negligently left in their way, lest they either avert to downright irreligion and atheism, or divert to those broader and easier paths of Superstition; which (as among the generality of Papists, so among all Sects that affect a popular and loose way of religion) indulge many things to men's lusts and passions, even while they most recommend and set off themselves with such ostentations of Novelty, Liberty, Facility, and formal Sanctity, as may be most taking to their vulgar followers, and plausible to the humours of most people, who are prone to measure religion rather by their senses and fancies, their ease and appetites, their worldly benefits and interests, than by their understandings, judgements and consciences. I have formerly showed at large in all the instances of true Religion, both for the Substance and Form of it, the graces and duties, Lib. 2. c. 4, & 5. that the Generality of people, if left to themselves, are so lost, that they are loath to be sought and found to any true Piety or happiness; as being in love with their being wantonly wicked & miserable: They will ever choose disorder, yea death, while they forsake all orderly and holy ways, as to any true, serious and powerful Religion, unless wise Magistrates and worthy Ministers be better to them than they ever will be, or design, or wish, to themselves. If they may eat and drink, plough and sow, buy and sell, build and marry, dispute and wrangle, trifle with God, and baffle with their own consciences, very little or no Religion, as strict and true, will serve their turns; liking that best which leaves them most to themselves, where they have least restraints, though never so holy, just and comely; but may enjoy such pastimes and indulgences in their profession as most gratify their humours and fancies, their wantonness and petulancy, their covetousness and barbarity, their vanity or villainy. Certainly, if the Goodness of God had not first by Primitive Bishops and Preachers, after by wise Magistrates and valiant Princes, first reduced, then preserved, humane societies to some settled forms of civility and order, piety and polity, beyond their own licentious extravagancies, this, as all nations, had to this day continued in their native savageness, without reverence of Man, or fear of God. Nor would the several inventions and varieties of people's Lunatic Religions, (which possibly they would every new Moon pick and choose of themselves) these, I say, would have been so far from advancing the common Peace and welfare of mankind, that no fuel would make their fury burn more vehemently to mutual destructions, than what naturally riseth from the Trash and Dross, the Straw and Stubble of those opinions and persuasions which people are prone to adopt to be their Religion and Devotion; with as little Verity and Charity, as they have nothing but Variety and Vanity. So that endless differences and deadly defiances in our Religion, among us as men and Christians, cannot but tend, as to the dishonour of our God and Saviour, so to the infinite detriment and damage, as of ourselves and our neighbours at present, so of posterity to after-ages; Who will with astonishment and horror read the Histories of our times, so desperately engaged to reform Religion, that they well-nigh ruined it; so pertinacious to retain their Christian and Reformed profession, that they almost made a shift to lose both; as hunters do that game which they only scare from them while they eagerly, but indiscreetly, pursue it. 2. Reason from prudence and civil policy. Secondly, besides conscience to the Glory of God, the honour of our Saviour, and the good of Souls, all civil prudence and true policy not only invites, but necessitates sober and worthy men to study and endeavour the restitution and establishment of true Religion, in this or any Nation, to its true proportions and just fixation, as Christian and Reformed. Now although nothing can in true Oratory be (among Christians) added, after the weighty considerations of God's glory, Christ's honour, the hazard of our own and others souls to eternal darkness, ignorance, confusion and misery, (all motives being as the dust of the balance compared to these;) yet, because I must level the force of my persuasions, as arrows, to the proportions of most men's principles and designs in point of temporal interests, as well as draw them home to the head and height of Spiritual and Eternal concernments, give me leave to represent and inculcate that consideration, as to Religions necessary settling, which of all other makes the quickest and deepest impression on men's minds, the neglect of which will certainly forfeit all that reputation of wise Men, great Statists, and good Politicians, even after the world's calculation of wisdom, which Magistrates and Gentlemen are ambitious to obtain, and leave to the honour of their Names and Memories. It is this; There is no hinge upon which the civil Peace and Secular welfare of you and your posterity doth so much depend and move as this of True Religion, which is at no hand to be left to a plebeian Liberty and vulgar latitude, but to be confined and settled upon its own weight and basis to its Verity, Certainty, Sanctity, Solemnity, true Ministry and due Authority. In vain shall you hope to enjoy the Peace of men in worldly affairs, if you want the peace of God, if you have nothing but wars and jars, distances and defiances, as to Religion, both with God, your Ministers, yourselves, and with one another. Which Sacred Fires will infallibly kindle horrid conflagrations, not only from those hot disputes and attritions which concern the principal Articles and more solid parts of Religion, which are held necessary to salvation, but even from the lightest and smallest materials, which seem but as the chips and parings, the bark and leaves of Religion; even these, like tinder and touchwood, are prone to strike and entertain such sparks in small and vulgar minds as will set all on a light fire at last. Which is most evident in our late Holy Wars, where few men of any modesty or honesty did at first stickle so much about the weighty points of Religion, in Doctrine or manners, tending to true Faith or practical Holiness, (objects too deep and weighty for the weak and shallow brains of most Novellers and Vastators;) few, I say, or none of any worth did or do contend about true Grace or real Virtue, who shall be most Holy, Penitent, Humble, Faithful, Pure, Patient, Just, Charitable, Meek, Devout, Sincere, inoffensive to God and Man: No, the Lord knows, a little touch, or dash and colour of these serves the turn with most men, that are most eager for any side and party of Religion in their rude disputes and uncharitable janglings. The greatest strifes, the sharpest emulations, and most unfeigned feudes of Religion arise from principles of Envy, Revenge, and Ambition in men's Spirits; when once they are divided upon any spark or pretext of Religion, their ambitious Zeal, like fire, presently ascends and lifts them upward: The grand interest of their Godliness is (like the Sons of Zebedee) who shall be chief, what person, what party, shall prevail and rule over others, who shall sit on the right hand of Christ, judging the rest, not as brethren, but as subjects and vassals. For all pregnant factions in Religion are not only solicitous to preserve themselves in some honest liberty and modest tranquillity; (as a candle whose confined flame keeps within its own socket and compass:) but they presently meditate the extinguishing of all others. They aim indeed at Conquest and Sovereignty, every one's fingers itch at the Sceptre of Jesus Christ, that is, at such power and authority, as may govern the souls and bodies too, the consciences and carcases of other men both in Church and State; that they may (in Christ's Name) have Dominion over the opinions and judgements, the minds and spirits of all men, subduing them, if not at first by disputation and arguments, yet at length by Fightings and Arms, by silencings and imprisonings, by plunderings and undo. For which purpose each party, the better to justify its insolency and cruelty against all others, holds forth some Ensign and Flag, as of difference, so of defiance; either as to some lesser matter of Opinion and Doctrine, or (rather than fail) of some mere outward Form and Discipline, yea of some sorry Ceremony and Custom no way essential to true Religion: Yet from hence the eager, but weaker, Zelots on all sides, (Episcopal, Presbyterian and Independent) have and do foment those miserable flames, which have not only scorched, but almost consumed this Church of England. For, these petty contests readily fall under vulgar capacities, as more obvious and sensible; these fit the humours of the minue people and petty Preachers too, who are (naturally) as proud and imperious, as masterly and surly, as the greatest Clerks or Scholars, whose learned abilities may better excuse their pertinacies, ambitions, and other insolences. Who is so blind as not to see that from the first differences which were spawned at Frankfort, and hatched at Geneva, about nonconformity and Church- Discipline, the Presbyterian and popular Spirit hath always grumbled and mutined at that eminency and government which Episcopacy (for the main) hath enjoyed from the beginning, not of Reformation only, but of Christian Religion? From whence some other men's Spirits, (too high perhaps and Prelatical) out of jealousy, have, on the other side, sought to engross and exercise more of a sole, arbitrary and absolute power, not only above, but apart from, all Presbyters and people, than was ever challenged or used in the Primitive Constitution, in the first and best practices of Episcopacy, which seems to have had more of Aristocracy, by the joint Counsel and assistance of select and Grave Presbyters, than of absolute Monarchy, or sovereign and sole authority, further than an eminency of Office, Order, Place, and presidency, might keep an united and regular power in their more ample and combined Churches, which consisted of many Christian congregations and Presbyters. But as the Duke of York first professed with oath, that he aimed at no more than his Duchy, yet afterward aspired & gained the Kingdom of England, by the name of King Edward the fourth; so some Presbyters at first pretended only to claim a coordinate exercise of Counsel and assistance with Bishops, in some things, consisting with a modest and orderly subordination to them as chief Fathers of their Ecclesiastical Tribes and Families; yea I knew some chief Rabbis of them have professed that they cried down and covenanted only against the Tyrannic Government of Prelates, and the overgrown train of their officials, showing some reason to regulate Episcopacy by reducing it to the modesty of Primitive patterns: Yet this motion was no sooner begun among us, but (we see) it increased to such a violence, as kindled the ambition of some people and Presbyters so hot against all Bishops, that the best of them (and many of them were incomparable men, excellent Christians, and most admirable Bishops) were counted Refractory, Popish, and Antichristian, with all their abetters, because they would not tamely contribute to their own utter destruction, and presently consent to the reproach of this and all ancient Churches, where Bishops I think were as well known, and as long used, as the Sacraments or the Scriptures. Yea at last the contention grew so sharp, that it not only whetted many tongues and pens, but it came to swords, ending (if it be ended) in much blood, Presbyters challenging to have not only a meet share and concurrent influence (as was ancient in Ignatius, and St. Cyprians, and St. Augustine's times, and which might be very fitting and useful in Church-Government) but they will have all or none, and this upon Christ's title: Bishops (as usurpers for 1600. years) must have no fair quarter, nay none at all; but persons and power must be wholly exautorated, extirpated, impoverished, contemned, abased, undone. Though they had done nothing but what either the Laws commanded, or the Prince (in whom by law was the chief Ecclesiastical as well as civil power) indulged, yea and required them to do, yet no medium, no moderation can be expected between Caesar and Pompey, Sylla and Marius, Antonius and Augustus, when men's Spirits are heightened by jealousies and emulations to seek each others destruction. After all this, the peremptory reign of Presbytery, (which cost this Church and Nation so dear) was not long-lived, nor could be well established, though at first it looked so big, and grasped on the sudden even at three Kingdoms; For before it was warm in its nest, or well seated in its Throne, we see Independency got hold on one end of its Sceptre, or quarterstaff rather, threatening, in the right of Christ Jesus, and in the behalf of all Christian common people, to wrest it quite out of the hands of Presbytery, either by legerdemain, or main force, unless it might go at least half with it in the spoils of Episcopacy, and that share of Church-Government which they pleaded was due not only to a few Preaching Parsons and ruling Elders, but to the whole congregation, as being holy, the Lords people, the body of Christ in particular. This check made Presbytery much more tame and tractable than it was wont to be, when it first whetted its tusks so sharply, and bristled so fiercely against all Episcopacy, root and branch, hooves and horns; no regulation, no remission, no moderation, no merit of so many Godly, Learned, Moderate, yea Martyrly Bishops, heretofore, and even then in England would serve the turn. After all this trouble, the more grave and sober sort even of those Presbyterian and Independent Ministers are brought (as we see) into no small straits, and reduced to this great Dilemma of policy, whether they should choose to put their heads again under the Bishop's hands, or under the common people's feet; whether it be more for the honour of their Ministry to be subordinate to grave and worthy Bishops, as Learned Moderators, presidential Fathers, and elder Brothers, or to be thus everlastingly haunted with evil and unclean Spirits, to be thus hampered with the giddy and ungrateful vulgar, who are very petulant and saucy companions, very sour and insolent masters. Nor is this Triumvirate of Episcopal, Presbyterian and Independent Antagonists and rivals, the boundary of men's religious Ambition and contentions in England; There are other Names and Titles, and daily will be more and more new Sects and Factions, which will have their Godly agonies and pretensions, no less than those three have had. Yea, the least and most unsuspected, the feeblest and silliest of them, will serve either to kindle new, or to continue successive fires of jealousies, troubles, seditions, and wars in this Nation. Take them all together, and leave them equally to their several principles, and contrary operations, they will be like the complication of many diseases in one body, as the quartans, Dropsies, Scurvys, Hectic Fevers and Consumptions of this State and Church: not only shaking oft, and daily dispiriting, but (in time) quite destroying the Beauty, Health, Strength, Peace, Safety, and Honour of this Nation, whatever it be, Commonwealth or Kingdom, Aristocracy, Democracy, or Monarchy. For while men's Spirits are sharpened by daily contentions in Religion, to anger, emulations, and ambitions who shall be greatest in popular esteem, in prevalency of parties, in number of Sectators, in novelties of opinions, and in presumptuous practices, they not only sour to secret animosities, but break out to open enmities, from the least differences. For the true life and power of Religion, (which consists in a Knowing, Humble and Charitable Zeal for God's glory and each others good, this) is taken off and extremely dulled (as the edge of sharp knives by cutting of cork,) while men's head and hearts are wholly busied in whitling and hewing those small points and softer parts of Religion, which consider (at first it may be) only the rituals, externals and polities of it; yet in time these continual droppings undermine and overthrow the very fundamentals, which consist in the Unity of the Faith, the Sanctity of Manners, and the Sincerity of Christians Charity to each other, which held better in Unity, Health, Beauty, and Strength amidst heathenish persecutions, than they ever did, or can do, amidst Christians contentions, needless and endless janglings of Preachers and Professors among themselves. For these rising most-what not from the holy and humble warmth, but the wantonness and luxuriancy of men's Spirits, (especially after long peace and settling upon their Lees) do naturally break out to such boyles and tumours of Factions, as swell every Opinionist and his party to the hope of having a turn, or share at least, in rule and Empire; wherein the present prevalent party is ever jealous and impatient of having any equal or rival either to affront or disturb them; and the depressed parties still conceive they are injured, and oft complain of being persecuted: Nay they are filled with Whisper and Murmurings, with Envies and Animosities, (though they be let alone and connived at by way of Toleration) when they see the public rewards of Valour, Learning, Industry, Parts, and (as they think) of Piety itself, only or chiefly bestowed on those that adhere to, and symbolise with the prevailing party, which is the only rising side; all others despairing to rise, till the great Resurrection, unless by power or policy they can undermine or overthrow the predominant faction. In these nests of Religious differences and zealous emulations are the eggs of all civil discontents, popular seditions, and pernicious rebellions, commonly laid and hatched, to the infinite hazard, and many times utter ruin, of civil States; which are never so safe, as when all parts of them, like the parts of a globe or sphere, fairly correspond with each other by the unity and entireness of the same Religion; whose content or orb is the holy Scripture, whose centre is God's glory, and whose circumference is Christian love, unanimity or Charity, without any of which Religion is but a Rhapsody of men's opinions, passions, and ambition. From these holy confinements when once Christians come to divide as to their Religion, they soon fall to defy, to destroy, yea to damn one another: Every party hath such high paroxysmes of zealous hopes and presumptions for their way, that they presently ascend God's Throne, and Christ's Tribunal, severely judging all men but themselves: which judicial and uncharitable arrogancies have (as we see) at this day, not only in England, but in all the Christian world, so filled and inflamed men's minds with cruel counter-curses and angry anathemas against each other, that if God's last doom should echo after the clamours and censures of Christians passions, we must all be damned, every mother's child of us, notwithstanding that we all profess to believe and serve the same God and Saviour. If not every particular person of each party, who may have more moderation and charity, yet to be sure the froth and scum, the populacy and vulgarity of them, (which are always boiled highest) these mutually condemn each other, not to a Purgatory or a Limbo only, but to a very Hell of infernal and eternal torments. Thus many Protestants utterly damn all Papists, as if God had no people in that Babylon of Popery; the Honesty, Humility and Simplicity of whose Faith, Works and Hearts may bring them out of the contagion of Rome's Plagues, Policies, and Superstitions. Papists on the other side universally damn all Protestants, (though they hold all the ancient Creeds and Articles of Faith, though they practise all Christian necessary duties, and keep to the Primitive Order of the Catholic Church) only because they will not tie the keys of Faith, Conscience, Scripture, Religion, and Church-Government, to the Pope's girdle, or absolutely submit to him in a blind obedience against Reason, Scripture and History, as to the surly Jailor, rather than the safe keeper, of Christian and true Religion. In like manner the violent Lutherans call the Calvinists Devils, and the passionate Calvinists defy the Lutherans as lukewarm Protestants, and smelling too rank of Rome. Look to the eager and acute Arminians, the Socinians, the modern Pelagians, the Anabaptists, Catabaptists, Familists, the Seekers, Ranters, and Quakers: As the Independent, Presbyterian, and Episcopal hands, so these are generally full, either of firebrands from hell, or thunderbolts from heaven; which are eagerly cast by the more violent Spirits in each others faces, as Heretics or Schismatics, as Antichrists and Hypocrites, as deceived and deceiving. Nor will the Zealots and bigots on any side make any great scruple (if they have power) to destroy those whom they account no better than desperate and damnable even in their Religion. Amidst and against all which factious discriminations of Religion, every Nation and Polity, which either is, or would seem to be wise, must seek to preserve its safety, by establishing some Uniformity and Unity in its public profession: For no nation is far from misery, that is pestered with variety of Religions, and is fixed at no certainty. The sad example of this Church and State of England, (besides our neighbours) is an instance as unanswerable as palpable; for the Church of England stood Neuter as to all the sides and factions of Christendom, yet held so far Communion with Greek and Latin, Reform and Roman, Lutheran and Calvinian Churches, as it saw they held communion with the Scriptures, and with the ancient Catholic Symbols, or Councils, which were the best boundaries of Christian Religion. It had, if not more, yet as much Solidity and Sincerity, Piety and Proficiency, Gifts and Graces, Charity and Moderation, Order and Good polity, as any, yea all of them; far less of Partiality; Popularity, Novelty, Oppression, Superstition and Confusion, than almost any one of them; while the favour of God and man shined upon her, strangely blest with Peace, Plenty, Honour and Prosperity, while it kept its Ecclesiastic Order and Uniformity in Religion, which was the chief solder or cement of civil Tranquillity. This Palladium once stolen away by the Jesuitick subtleties, and other factious policies, how have the Temples and Towers of our Troy, the Churches and Palaces of our Jerusalem, the Oratories and Houses both of God and man fall'n to the ground! not with their own age, infirmity, or weight, but battered and subverted chiefly by those Engines which factious fury and devout ambition puts into all men's hands upon the score of their Religion: a fate which still threatens all the remains of Religion and Peace that have yet escaped, if God be not so merciful to this Land, as to show us some Balsam that may heal the Divisions and Wounds of our Church and Religion, which will easily fester and inflame the body politic of any Nation; for civil Peace cannot be firm where public Piety is not sound and settled; nor can any Kingdom or Commonweal be established, in which true Religion is either baffled or abased by being divided and distracted. But suppose that you (O my Noble Countrymen) and your posterity should enjoy a moment's miserable prosperity, and a pitiful kind of peace, merely upon the account of a mere Mahometan power, and Gladiatorian Prevalency of one side, possibly over-awing all other parties and pretensions of Religion, or so counterpoising them by secular policies to some consistency, as doth rather distort and depress, than advance or encourage the progress of that true Piety and Christian Charity, which are the surest marks of Christianity and of God's favour to any people; yet, I presume, you are so piously prudent, as to consider First, that such worldly tranquillity and prosperity are scarce worth owning or enjoying apart from that sweet harmony and fruition which goes with true Religion, and flows from it, when it keeps the unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace, when its sacred ointment is diffused from the head Christ Jesus, not only to the chief members of his body, but even to the skirts of his clothing, the use and capacity of the meanest believer, in an holy Unity and happy Uniformity, not only of true Doctrine, but of comely Order and charitable Communion. This mortal life, with its highest natural ornaments and civil accomplishments, is no blessing, separated from the means of a better life, or from the enjoying of them in such a way of Unity, Order, Decency and Charity, as not only becomes a Christians conversation best, but most advanceth his comfort: Our miserable moment is no further valuable, than it may be serviceable to a blessed Eternity. True Religion, and the sweet enjoyments of it, sets humane societies and souls above the form and fate of beasts, much more than common reason and civility can do, which the Heathens and Infidels in all ages have enjoyed for a time. Secondly, next, you cannot but conclude, that whatever civil peace you and your posterity may enjoy▪ not settled upon religious grounds, it cannot be either very secure or sincere, and so not long lasting: for it must needs be either very Tyrannous, if any one Factions power and ambition gets uppermost, and seeks to force all others to obey or comply against their judgements and consciences; or it must be very querulous and quarrelsome, if all enjoying an equal toleration, yet each side nourisheth such Distances, Defiances and Jealousies against others, as putteth them always upon their guard and fence, breathing them (as it were) with daily contests & private skirmishes, thus preparing them for blood and war at last. When they have sufficiently preached, and prayed, and scribbled against each other, when they have disputed, and discommuned, and unchurched, and unchristened one another then (if they are numerous) they are ripe and ready to rifle and plunder, to kill and destroy, to despise and devour one another, as mutually damning each other. All Histories of the Church do loudly proclaim to us, That neither Church nor State, Kingdom nor Empire, Monarchy nor Commonwealth can be long-lived or flourishing, where true Religion, once generally professed and venerated among them, grows to be divided and despised, abased and impoverished, even by Christians themselves. The sad experiments of which Eusebius tells us, Euseb. l. 8. hist. cap. 1. when he sets forth the meritorious causes and originals of all those dreadful vastations which befell Christian Churches under Diocletians persecutions: Also of those barbarous inundations which followed in St. Augustine's days, who died while the City in which he was was besieged. The chief rise and occasions of those hostile incursions sprang from the factions, inquietudes and contentions▪ so rise among Christians, neither Bishops, nor Presbyters, nor People agreeing as they should, but oft breaking forth to tumults, riots and seditions, by the popular furies of Manichees, Novatians, Donatists, Arians, Circumcellians and Pelagians; or by the discontents and ambitions of Presbyters, or by the pride and oppressions of some Bishops, to the infinite dishonour of Christianity, and to the inviting of contempt and insolence from the common enemies of it. For who can think those Christians worthy of any Peace, Honour, or Respect from strangers, who so little love or value their Brethren, yea their Mother and Fathers, as not only to despise them, but to destroy them? The African, Asiatic and European, the Eastern and Western, the Greek and Latin Churches (if we had not the late testimonies of our own and our neighbour's calamities) sufficiently tell us, that no comet presageth greater calamities, or more public mischiefs to any Nation, than these dissensions in Religion, which setting men's hearts most on fire, are hardly quenched, but with their blood, tending and oft ending in the ruins both of Churches and States. These, these gave opportunity to that raging Sea of Mahometan pride and perfidy, which easily swallowed up so many famous Christian Churches in Asia, Africa and Egypt, and at last the whole Grecian Empire, when the banks of Christian Unity, as well as Piety, were broken down by Christians themselves; who in vain boast of Piety, Miracles and Martyrdom, unless they keep true Charity among themselves. As no men deserve more noble and durable monuments to be made, not of marble-stones, but of thankful hearts, than they whose wisdom successfully endeavours to compose unhappy differences, as to Religion, in any Church or Nation; so no men are more and more justly to be blamed than they, who sitting long at the helm of government in Church and State, and being sufficiently furnished with power to prevent or speedily remedy such distempers, yet have either occasioned and exasperated them by needless and unseasonable rigours, or else connived at and too much indulged them by careless remissions and negligences; from whence some small vipers or faction (which in my memory were so charmed, that they seemed quite dead in this Church) have so revived, that they have grown to such vigour and activity, as with their teeth and claws forcibly to make way for their own unhappy birth, by the corrosions or eating through at last of those very bowels of the Church of England, in which they were tacitly, and (indeed) either by too much confidence, indulgence, or indiscretion most unhappily bred and fostered. No Christian State or Church can be too vigilant or unsecure in this point, the suppressing and preventing of all religious feuds and disturbances, whose first conception commonly springs from, either some odd stroke in the heads, or some putrid humours in men's hearts, wherein long peace and plenty makes men either wantonly refractory against other men's forms and opinions, or pertinaciously zealous for their own inventions, many times not more superciliously than unseasonably; every one being so loath to sweep away the cobwebs they or others have made, either late or long since, that they rather choose to set on fire and burn down the whole house, in which they all had their safe abode and first breeding. Certainly such petty serpents in Religion, which afterward swell big with their uncharitable poisons, should by wise Governors in Church and State, be charitably and timely prevented, and, if possible, stifled in their birth; which had been (I think) no hard matter in England, if such discreet and seasonable applications of piety and power had been used, as all Charity allowed, and all honest policy commanded, before ever those popular and many-headed Hydra's came to such a prodigious birth, as scared both Fathers and Mothers, yea and those very midwives who most officiously waited to assist those strange and monstrous productions, which were scarce ever seen or heard of heretofore in England. What prudent and Heroic Spirits there are yet left, whose power, managed with Christian justice and wisdom, with piety and charity, may haply quell these licentious vastators of Christian and reformed Religion, also of the peace, honour, and happiness of this Nation, I must leave to the alwise and almighty God, of whose mercy we may not despair, while we have leave and hearts to pray to him. Nor can I yet give over the Church of England, as quite forsaken of God and good men, or only to be pitied and deplored by the best of my Countrymen, since no wise or worthy man, who hath observed the sad and bad effects of religious factions and dissensions among us, but must needs be now not only out of love with them, but in as great fear and abhorrence of them, as he hath any favour and good will to the peace and prosperity either of his Country or this Church, to the promoting of which as conscience binds him, so all prudence and policy invites him. CHAP. IU. THirdly, Sense of true Honour calls for the establishment of Religion. to these I may further add that great spur of generous industry, which we call Sense of Honour, or an impatience that worthy persons have to come short in any thing of that which doth best become them, or is by God and good men expected from them. I know how touchy even small minds and petty-spirited men are in point of reputation there where no true honour lies: But mere shadows and imaginary punctilios deceive them under the notions of honour, after that vulgar rate and esteem which gives many Gentlemen quicker resentments of any affronts, neglects, indignities, or injuries done to themselves, than of blasphemy to their God and Saviour; more sensible for the honour of their mistresses of pleasure than for their Mother or Fathers; I mean not so much natural and political, as Spiritual and Ecclesiastical, the Church and the Pastors of it, such by whose care they have been bred and born to Christ, baptised in the Name of the blessed Trinity, brought up in the true Christian Faith, nourished, confirmed and sealed by the body, the blood, and Spirit of Christ, directed in the ways of Holiness and Eternal Happiness. Certainly the Command binds all Christians to Honour these parents as much as any. No sense of Honour should be more quick and sensible, than that which reflects upon our highest concernments, in which not only our private, but our public, not only our temporal, but our eternal welfare is wrapped up, and so confined, that if in this we fail or miscarry, all is lost that a great and gracious soul can consider. If you were a Nation pinched with poverty, overawed with slavery, despicable for your weakness, base for your cowardice, brutish for your ignorance, dull with stupidity, dejected by tenuity, or barbarous through want of learning and civility; if you were now to begin the principles of Christianity, and knew not what belonged to true Religion, (which is the highest honour and happiness of any Nation;) if that were the present State of the Nobility, Gentry, and Commonalty of England, that they were now beginning to be Civilised and Catechised, I should think my labour lost, my oratory vain, and my importunity improper, thus to conjure you by the highest sense of Honour, to study the settlement of true Religion, before you were acquainted with the sense of Civility, Religion, or Honour: Or if I thought you had not so much pregnant light of Religion, as might make you sensible of the truest and highest points of honour, or not so much apprehension of honour, as might make you most zealously tender in the behalf of true Religion; I would not be so impertinent as to think to move you beyond your inward principles. But when I consider you as a people pampered with plenty, exalted with liberty, renowned for strength, dreaded for valour, enlightened with knowledge in all kinds, accurately vigorous, actively industrious, as the chief of the Nations, as the princess of all Islands, heightened to all magnificence, polished with all good literature and civility, old Disciples of Jesus Christ, many hundred years ago converted to Christianity, and never wholly either perverted by Heretics, or subverted by the many barbarous invasions and warlike confusions which you have endured; when I contemplate the grandeur, the power, the wisdom, the majesty, the public piety (heretofore) of this Nation, the antiquity of this Church, and the prosperity of its reformed condition heretofore; I cannot but with all humble and faithful respects tell you, That it is not worthy the name and honour of the English Nation, so famous for Learning and Religion, for Scholars and Soldiers, for Magistrates and Ministers, for Christian Princes and Christian people, (scarce to be paralleled in all the world) It is not for the Honour of such a Nation, to halt between, not two, but twenty opinions; to variate thus between the true God and the many new baalim's, between Christ and the many Belials, who will endure no public yoke of Religion or Church-government, but what themselves fancy and frame, though never so different from that which this and the Catholic Church in all ages, not only used and submitted to, but highly rejoiced in, as the only order that Jesus Christ and his Apostles had settled in all parts of his Church. It is a shameful posture for wise and sober men, for ancient and renowned Christians, to be thus inconsistent, as divided between a doting upon former superstitions, (which some impute to us) and indulging modern innovations (which others reproach us for.) 'Tis ridiculous to be always dancing the rounds of Religion, and giddily moving in the mazes of endless Innovations, which are but private, and for the most part Childish inventions, the effects either of proud and imperious, or of peevish, popular and plebeian Spirits, who aim not at the public Peace, Piety and Honour of the Nation, so much as at the gratifying their own little Fancies, Humours, Opinions and interests; whose Novelties (never so specious and plausible at first, yet) soon appear pernicious to the public, so far from mending and reforming the State of Religion, that they threaten to mar all, if the goodness of God and the moderation of wise men do not prevent. Private forms and inventions, never duly examined or solemnly allowed by the public Representatives of any Church in national Synods or Councils, nor from thence recommended to, and approved by, the Representatives of the civil States in full and free Parliaments, but surreptitiously broached at first, afterward Magisterially obtruded, by some pragmatic Preachers, upon any Church or Christian people, these prove no other in the end, than like the ashes scattered over Egypt, productive of sores and boyles swelling to great pain and insolency. Especially in such a Church and Nation as this, which was of the highest form both for Christianity and reformation; where God had (to our admiration, and his eternal praise) blessed the former settled State of Religion, and the Churches excellent constitution, under those reverend and renowned Bishops, assisted by Learned, Orderly, and Worthy Presbyters, whose pious and profitable endeavours had long ago advanced this Church's honour and happiness to as high a pitch in point of Doctrine and Devotion, and all spiritual experiences, as any Church ever attained; and further had improved its welfare in point of Discipline, if they had not been ever kerbed and hindered by the jealousies and impatiences of some Princes or people, who would by no means endure the ancient, just, and holy Severities of Christian Discipline should be exercised by the Clergy against their Haughty and Licentious manners, no not when the Ecclesiastic State of England was in its highest elevation and lustre for Learning, Honour, Order, Estate and Unity: How much less are they now to be exercised by poor pusillanimous and petty Preachers, with their pitiful Lay-Elders? Yet amidst all the obstructions (either in Doctrine or Discipline) which either the pride and policies of men, or the subtleties of devils have hitherto put, amidst the peevishness of Schismatics, and the spite of Romanists, amidst all the damps and dispiritings that this Church of England and the worthy Clergy thereof have long found and felt from all sides that were factious and had evil eyes, or evil wills against them; yet even then did the Lord of his Church so highly exalt them and this Nation in the eyes of all the world, to such degrees of Piety, Learning, Peace, Plenty, Honour, Love, and all prosperity that could bless any Christian Church or Nation, that in good earnest there was no need any of these new patches should be put as deformities to that old garment, which was so goodly and graceful for true Christian Religion and due reformation, that no novelty from private heads or hands could mend it; especially when obtruded as a rent, or forcibly pinned upon it as rags and hangbies of Religion, by every petty Master, whose fingers itch to be meddling and innovating in Church affairs, without any public and impartial counsel and authority. Such preposterous endeavours, no way worthy of the honour of this Nation, nor contributive to its happiness, God hath already soon all sides blasted, that they have been not only unprosperous, but many ways pernicious, dishonourable, & ridiculous, divine vengeance at once discovering their follies and confuting their confidences, which instead of further settling or better Reforming Religion, (as was on all sides vapored and pretended) have, as much as in them lies, reduced a famous and flourishing, a well-reformed and united Church, almost to ruinous heaps and sordid confusions, to the great shame and dishonour of this Nation; both reproaching your pious progenitors, and you their posterity, as if for this last hundred years, none of them or you had served God as they and you should have done, with holy and acceptable service, because neither they nor you did permit every man or Minister to choose what Religion he would broach, what Opinions he liked, or to use what Discipline he pleased, or beget what Churches and Pastors he fancied best: and this after every freeman had either in Person or by his Proxy consented to that religious establishment, which bound all men either actively to obey, or passively to submit with silence and patience, because it was of his own appointing, being the result of all Estates in this Nation, who without doubt were much more able to consider and conclude what was best for the public Piety, Peace and Honour of this Church and State, than any private man could do, whose self-overvaluing and overweening is generally the first step of their own and other men's undoing; yea many times from these practices, which at first are not much regarded, much mischief accrues to the public, as the plague is thought to begin first in private alleys and by-lanes, or from some one man or woman that hath a foul body or a very stinking breath, which easily poisons the ambient air in which they walk, especially when disposed to putrefaction, and so diffusive of the Infection to others. The stop and cure of which Epidemic pestilence, (which beginning from some men's ill lungs or lives hath now seized upon Religion itself and this whole Nation) by your applying seasonable Antidotes and safe defensatives, is a work most worthy of the Wisdom and Honour of this Nation, which can be in no point more concerned or conspicuous, than in this of true Religion, so settled and maintained as best becomes both the Majesty of Religion, and the renown of the Nation. Fourthly, to which great and good work, you stand obliged not only in duty to God, in love to your Saviour, Sense of gratitude invites to restore and establish Religion. in charity to posterity, and in just respects to yourselves, (all which are great ingredients in true Honour) but further, give me leave to tell you, something of Gratitude and just retribution lies upon you, as to the ancient Clergy or Ministry of this Nation, who have faithfully served God and his Church, you and your forefathers, for many years, in all Ecclesiastical duties and religious offices. If you and your Forefathers (most honoured Gentlemen, and beloved Countrymen) did well and worthily in a grave and orderly way of public consent, and by due Authority, purge this Church and redeem this Nation, in its Doctrine and Duties, its Ministry and Worship, its Discipline and Government, its just Liberties and immunities, from the dross and druggery of Romish errors and superstitions, of Papal Tyrannies and Usurpations, reserving or restoring that Purity, Decency, Authority, Order & Uniformity of Christian Religion, which became the wisdom and honour of this Church and Nation, by the exactest conformity with the Catholic Church, in its purest and primitive constitution; If you have effected and enjoyed this happiness, by God's blessing chiefly upon the pious Counsels, devout Prayers, potent Preachings, and learned Writings, as of the first reform and reforming Bishops, and Presbyters subordinate to them, so of their worthy Successors in the same Orders, Offices and Functions, who have (many thousands of them) confirmed their Doctrine, sealed their labours, asserted and authorised their Ministry, by their holy lives and comfortable deaths, yea some of them with their patient sufferings and Martyrdoms; If the Clergy of this Reformed Church in their several stations and degrees, have by the Divine assistance ever since preserved this holy depositum of the true Christian Religion, duly Reform, according to the Primitive gravity and scriptural verity, for above one hundred years, to your and your forefathers inestimable honour and happiness; and this, as with great Learning and all sorts of holy abilities, so with no less industry and fidelity, (though not wholly without humane frailties and personal infirmities, which God in mercy will pardon, and man in charity ought to pass by, where there was so much integrity and proficiency, so much of commendable worth and constant excellency, as to the main;) If you cannot deny the many signal testimonies which God hath given of his being well-pleased with this Church's Reformation, with the Ministry, Worship and public Profession of Religion in this Nation; not so much by that long peace, plenty and prosperity, which you and your pious predecessors have (to a wonder) enjoyed at home, besides the great Honour and renown abroad; nor yet by those national and signal deliverances from deep designs and imminent dangers, which threatened the utter subversion of Church and State; (these preservations and lengthnings of our tranquillity being then surest signs of God's favour, and approbation of our ways, when they are honestly obtained, thankfully received, and modestly enjoyed) but (beyond these conjectural fruits of common providence) we have those special tokens and testimonies wherein the Lord hath, as I conceive, evidenced most clearly his good pleasure and liking to this Church of England, its Religion, Reformation, and Ministry, namely by those eminent gifts, and undeniable graces of his Spirit, which in great and various measures he hath plentifully poured forth upon the Godly Bishops, and other good Ministers of this Church who were subject to them, to the edification of his faithful people among you in all spiritual blessings, even to the admiration of our neighbours, the joy of our friends, and regret of our enemies: If the excellently Learned and Godly Bishops (whose names and memories are blessed) assisted by other able, orderly, and painful Ministers of this Church, (who being duly sent and ordained by them, were humbly obedient to them as to spiritual Fathers,) if they have carefully and happily steered for many years the sometimes fair and rich Ship of the Church of England, (in which so many thousand precious souls have been embarked for heaven and eternity,) between these two dangerous gulfs (the Scylla and Charybdis) of Papal Superstitions and uncharitable Separations, steering it by the compass of God's word, with such Christian prudence, order and decency as is therein commanded or allowed; in which happy conduct they and their successors were still very able, willing, and worthy to have proceeded, if the wrath of God (highly offended for the wantonness, wickedness and unthankfulness of the generality of people under so great means and mercies,) had not justly suffered so rude storms, of both religious factions and civil dissensions, to arise, which having torn the tackling, rend the sails, loosened the junctures, unhinged the rudder, broke the main mast, cast the chiefest Pilots and skilfullest Mariners overboard, quite defaced the lesser card or compass of Ecclesiastical Canons and civil laws, have (at last) driven her within the reach and danger of both these dreadful extremes which she most declined, leaving this poor weather beaten Church, after infinite toss, like a foundered ship, in a troubled Sea of confusion, attending one of these two sad fates, either a Schismatical dissolution, or a Papal absorption; either to be utterly shattered in pieces by endless factions, or to be swallowed up at last in the greater gulf of Roman power and Policy, which cannot but have always a very vigilant and intentive eye what becomes of the Church of England: If the Ministry of the Church of England, (whilst it was yet flourishing and entire, as a City united in itself, as an orderly family or holy corporation, consisting of Fathers and Brethren, of Bishops and Presbyters, might justly challenge before God and all good men, this merit and acknowledgement from you and your forefathers, that for Learning and Eloquence, both in preaching and writing, for acuteness and dexterity in disputing, for solidity and plainness in teaching, for prudent and pathetic fervency in praying, for just terror in moving hard hearts to softness, and feared consciences to repentance, for judicious tenderness in comforting the afflicted, and healing the wounded Spirit, lastly, for exemplary living in all holy and good ways; in all which particulars becoming a Christian Church, neither you nor they have had any cause to envy the most Christian and best Reformed Churches in the world, as to that honour and happiness, which consists in the excellent abilities, honest industry, due authority, regular order of Ministers, also in the decency, usefulness and power of holy Ministrations; all which blessings experience sufficiently tells you, were formerly enjoyed by many gracious and judicious Christians, far beyond what hath been, or ever can be hoped under these modern divisions, deformities, distractions and dissolutions, which do (indeed) threaten in time utter desolation to this Church and the true Reformed Religion, if God's mercy and wise men's care do not prevent: If nothing but ignorance or malice, blindness, or uncharitableness, barrenness or bitterness of Spirit in any men, can deny this great truth, this honest, humble, just and modest boasting, to which the injuries, indignities, and ingratitudes of these last and worst times have compelled sober Ministers, as they did St. Paul, who ought to have been better valued and commended by them: If you (O Noblemen, Gentlemen, and Yeomen of England) are so knowing, that you cannot be ignorant of this truth, and so ingenuous, that you cannot but acknowledge it in behalf of the Church of England and its worthy Clergy, while you and they enjoyed Piety, Peace and Prosperity; if beyond all cavil or contradiction, this right aught to be done to God's glory, this Church's honour, the ancient Clergies merit, and your own with your forefather's renown, (that after-ages may not suspect them for Heretics or Schismatics, nor you for Separates or Apostates, as forsaking that good way, in which they were reform and established in the purity, power and polity of true Religion:) If all these suppositions be true (as I know you think they are) how (I beseech you,) can it be in the sight of your most just God and merciful Saviour, (who so abundantly blest this Church and his servants the Ministers of it, in teaching, comforting, and guiding you and your pious predecessors souls to heaven) to change and cast off such a Ministry and such Ministers? Yea, how can it be in the censure of pious and impartial men, other than a most degenerous negligence, a Mechanic meanness, a most unholy unthankfulness for you, or any Christians, to pass by with silence and senselessness, with carelessness and indifferency, all those sad spectacles of Church-divisions and distractions, of Church-mens diminutions, debasements and discouragements, lately befallen them (by a divine fatality and justice) partly through the imprudence of some Clergymen, severely revenged by the malice or mistake of some Laymen, whose heavy and immoderate pressures have fallen chiefly upon those ecclesiastics who were Christ's principal Vicegerents, Messengers, Ministers and Ambassadors, his faithful Stewards, his diligent Overseers, his vigilant watchmen, his wife dispensers of heavenly Mysteries to your Souls. From whom so many Apostasies have been commenced and carried on, by infinite calumnies, indignities and injuries against them and their orderly authority and function, as if you and your Children had lately found more grace and virtue, better Ministerial sufficiencies and proficiencies, in some Tradesmen & Troopers, in Mechanic ignorance & illiterate impudence, in the glib tongues, the giddy heads, & empty hearts of such fellows as are scarce fit to be your servants in the meanest civil offices; as if these were now fit to be your Pastors and Teachers, your Spiritual inspectors, and rulers of your Souls, beyond any of those Reverend Bishops, and Learned Doctors, and other Grave Divines, who heretofore (through the grace of God) dispensed to you, by their incomparable gifts and real abilities, those inestimable treasures of all sound knowledge and saving wisdom, of grace and truth, which were carried on with comely order, and bound up with Christian unity. Doubtless, the forgetting of those joseph's, who have been so wise storer●s and so liberal distributers of the food of eternal life to our hungry souls, who have brought forth, as good Scribes instructed for the Kingdom of Heaven, out of the good treasuries of their hearts, things both new & old, (the Learning of the ancient Fathers, Councils and Historians, set off with later Experiments and Improvements of all spiritual operations and gracious comforts,) the forgetting, I say, of these Ministers cannot be worthy of that pious gratitude which becomes noble-minded Christian. How mean, uncomely, and much below you, must it needs appear to all wise and sober Christians in the present age and all posterity, if you suffer their holy orders to be despised, their spiritual offices to be neglected, their divine authority to be usurped, their primitive orders and constant succession to be interrupted, their persons to be abused and shamefully treated, their support, as to double honour, to be so abuted, that their maintetenance shall be very small, sharking and uncertain; also their respect and esteem none at all, especially among the common people, whose civil and religious regards are much measured either by the bag and bushel, or by the examples of their betters, their Landlords and Governors? The wilful dividing, debasing, discrediting, disordering, and discarding of the ancient Clergy, as to their Ordination, Government, Ministry, Authority, and succession in England, (which was most Christian, Catholic and reformed,) must needs be, as the sin and shame, so the great injury and misery of you and your posterity, being the ready way to bring in, First, a scrupulous unsatisfiedness and unsettledness, as to our former Religion, as if either not true or not reform; Secondly, next it raiseth a jealousy and suspicion of any Religion, under the name of Reformation, as if it would not long hold, and had no bottom or bounds; Thirdly, after this follows a lukewarmness, coldness, and indifferency as to all Religion whatsoever, as Reform and as Christian; Fourthly, then will there creep in by secret steps a general Apostasy at least from our pristine wise Reformation, and happy constitution of Religion, to the Roman errors, superstitions and usurpations, which wait for such a time and temper in England, whereby to make their advance upon people's minds, wildred and confounded, when they shall see the shameful retreats, recoilings and variations made in England by the Reformed Religion upon itself; whose disorders, disgraces and deformities necessarily following the contempt of their Ministers, or the change and rupture of their Ministerial descent and succession, will make most, if not all men, in time to recede from it, and rather adhere to its grand Roman rival, & its implacable enemy, Popery, whose policies will bring you and your posterity, by the contempt and want of true Bishops, to have no Pastors or Ministers of any uniform validity, of Catholic, complete, and most undoubted authority. If any man may be a preacher that listeth to pirk up into a Pulpit, certainly in a few years you shall have no Preachers worth your hearing, no Ministers of any reputation and authority, either among the Idiots and vulgar, or among the more ingenious and wiser sort of people, who are not naturally either very solicitous or industrious in the concernments of Religion, or the choice of their Ministers. If neither God nor good men have any further pleasure in their servants, the ancient Clergy of England, if they really are as useless and worthless as they have been made vile and reproached by some men's tongues and pens, if they have deserved to be thus tossed in an eternal tempest of factious divisions, vulgar depressions, and endless confusions, beyond any other order or rank of men; if this be their evil fate and merit, after all their studies and pains, after all their Praying, Preaching, Writing and Living, to the honour of this Nation, and the great advantages of the Reformed Religion; if to have equalled at least, if not exceeded the Clergy of any Church in any age since the Apostles departure, be the unpardonable fault of the Reformed Bishops and their Clergy in England; if their very sufferings, as the vipers seizing on St. Paul's hand, make them appear to barbarous and vulgar minds as sinners, therefore despicable, because they are so much despised, and so thought fit to be destroyed; if this lingering and shameful death of being thus Crucified, is that by which the Clergy of England must glorify God, if this bitter cup must not pass from them; truly it will be a merciful severity to hold them no longer in ambiguous calamities; but rather wholly to expose them to the last outrages of Fanatic, Popular, and Schismatic fury, the Lions that hunger and roar to have these daniel's wholly cast into their dens and jaws; that so your eyes may no longer see your poor, despised, distressed, and miserable Clergy, many of whom (both Bishops and Presbyters) are forced (as you know) to embrace the dunghill, being destitute of order, honour and estate, some of them having neither food convenient, nor any abiding place, nor any fitting employment; that so that Episcopal Clergy (now rendered so odious) who (under God) formerly redeemed you and your forefathers out of the bondage and darkness of Egyptian superstition, may by an Egyptian Magic and fate, be drowned in the Red-Sea of vulgar contempt, popular confusion and inordinate oppressions; that thus the new Jannes and Jambres may not only resist, but wholly prevail by their enchantments against your Moses and Aaron's. But if your Consciences (O worthy Gentlemen, who are the Beauty, Strength, and Honour of this Nation,) do on the other side tell you (not with faint and dubious whispers, but by loud and manifest experiences, proclaiming to all the world) that the ancient Clergy of England have (generally) deserved better of you, by their Learning, Preaching, Praying, Writing and Living; what (I beseech you) can be more worthy of the Wisdom, Justice, Piety, Honour and Gratitude of this Nation, than to assert with their public love and favour, the dignity of their worthy Divines, the honour of their Clergy, the Sanctity of their Religion and Reformation, against that plebeian petulancy and insolency which hath so pressed upon them, and daily depresseth all their Authority? not only by reason of some laymen's folly and insolency, but even by their variations and inconstancy who presumed to be Preachers, and challenge upon what score they please a share or lot in the Evangelicall Ministry. Truly it is high time to redeem the Sacred Orders, the Divine Authority, the Catholic succession, the ancient and authentic dignity of the Evangelicall Ministry in the Church of England, from the obloquys, contempts and oppressions of ignorant and unreasonable men, who are great enemies to the piety and prosperity of this Nation, and but back friends to the Reformed Religion, being at so deadly a feud against the ancient Clergy and Catholic Ministry of this Church; whose total extirpation, both root and branch, Bishops and Presbyters, they have so resolutely designed and restlessely endeavoured, that they long for nothing more than the natural death of all the reverend Bishops, and all Episcopal Ministers, who yet survive, being civilly dead and buried in obscurity. O how infinite jealous are all Novellers lest the English world should (at last) see the dangerous mistake of exchanging gold for copper, Learned, Grave, Orderly, duly-ordained, and authoritative Bishops and Presbyters, (of a primitive stamp, and Catholic Edition) for a scattered and tattered company of new-coined Pastors and Teachers, who have either not the metal, or to be sure not the mint and Character of such a Ministry as was ever current in England, (and in all the Christian world?) whose care was not to broach every day new fountains (as Samson did with his Ass' jawbone) of Ministerial office and authority, when ever factious Presbyters or fanatic people thirsted after the novelties of parity or popularity; but they ever kept to that cistern, those conduits or pipes which were first laid by the Apostles, and derived from Christ's grand Commission, as the source and fountain of holy orders, which was deduced by orderly Bishops and Presbyters to all parts and places where any Christians owned themselves to live in any Church-order, fellowship and communion: which was never known in the Christian world for 1500. years to be any where separated from the Episcopal oversight, regulation, presidency and jurisdiction; if all scriptural and Ecclesiastical records do not deceive us, which never show us any Church, of greater or lesser dimensions, without some greater or lesser Apostles, as Bishops, presiding and ruling over Presbyters, Deacons and people; which neither Aerius nor St. Jerome himself of old, nor the disguised Wallo Messalinus, or Blondel of later days, did ever so much as endeavour to disprove by any one credible instance, of any Church in any age. Upon so deep and large a foundation did the Clergy, Ministry and Church of England formerly stand, till the Scotch Pioners and other Engineers undertook with their pickaxes to undermine and overthrow the Catholic antiquity of Episcopal authority; which work some novelizing Presbyters beginning to transgress, gave occasion to puny Independents to go beyond them. Neither of which parties have yet, (nor are ever like, for aught I see) so to mend the State of Christian or Reformed Religion in England, beyond what it enjoyed in former days, as to make any learned or wise man so much in love with their various novelties, that they should abhor that uniform antiquity, to which the Episcopal Clergy of England did conform. The enjoyment of whose renowned worth, learned labours, and everlasting Monuments of true piety, this nation hath so little cause to be ashamed of or repent, that there is no Jewel in the Diadem of English glory, which it ever had or will in any age have so much cause to boast of and glory in, as the excellency of its Clergy or Ministry, both Bishops and Presbyters, for the last Century; whose private failings and personal infirmities (the cram oft alleged to an impudent hoarseness by some detractors, whose uncharitable Synecdoches impute the faults of every part to the whole) will never be sufficient to justify this nations general unthankfulness to the memory and merit of its former Ministry and Ministers, taken in the completion of their harmony and orders, as made up of Bishops, Presbyters and Deacons, that threefold cord of Ecclesiastical polity and unity, which is not easily, and ought not rashly, much less rudely & ingratefully, be broken by any Nation professing Christian and reformed Religion; but rather it should be carefully twisted and wisely recomposed, where either prelatic extravagancy, or Presbyterian arrogancy, or popular petulancy, have ravelled, unloosened, or dissolved the entireness of its meet subordination and its ancient constitution. CHAP. V. The hopeful possibility of restoring true Religion to unity and settledness in England. TO which temper and method of Ecclesiastical Unity, Order and Authority, as piety, policy, honour and gratitude do invite the wisdom of this Nation, (which I have hitherto in many instances demonstrated;) so my next endeavour is to encourage all sober and good Christians to desire and advance, in all worthy ways, that happy Restitution and Primitive settlement in our Religion, by setting before you and them the possibility of effecting so great, so good, so necessary a work; while many difficulties do not yet run us upon that rock of utter despair which shipwrecks all industry, but they are easily counterpoised by that not only possibility, but hopeful probability, which seems to appear in the inclinations of the wisest and best men of all Religious interests and parties in this Nation, who have learned wisdom either by their own or other men's follies. For this Good the wise God hath brought out of the evil of our follies and miseries, that the sad consequences (possibly not intended by many, but) pursuing our late deviations and transports on all sides in this Church, (where the projects and practices of particular men rather served their private passions and presumptions, than the Divine Institutions, Christ's glory, or the Churches general good,) these have already so fully confuted their Authors and abettors confidences, by the sin, shame, weakness and fatuity of them, that they need no blacker marks or deeper brands of dislike, than those which they have with their own hand set upon their foreheads; having brought the things of Religion to so great a deformity as it is this day, by their praeter, subter or super-conformities, either beyond the use, intent, or indulgence of the laws, or beyond the constitutions and customs and interests of this Church. Thus while either restive and sullen, or busy and pragmatic Spirits will needs be breaking that hedge which their wise forefathers made, serpents have bitten them: while they would take burning coals from the Altar without tongs, (which the Seraphin used as the ordinary means) they have shrewdly burned their own fingers, in so much that many, if not most of them, I believe, would be glad they were every way fairly healed, to as great a soundness of Order, Honour and Unity, as they formerly enjoyed; of which they were as weary as unworthy, whose indiscreet forsaking that medium and measure of their happiness, which was wisely established by public counsel and authority, hath been of late so many ways unblessed and unsuccesseful, that their very going out of the right way which was the way of Peace, Truth, and Order, hath somewhat prepared their feet for an happy return. Every one that is so blest as to see their unlucky extravagancies, hath learned to esteem the good old way better than heretofore they did; when private presumption tempted them to prefer their own novel fancies before the public establishments of such a famous Church and renowned Nation as England was. I make no question but many men are grown wise by their own woes; others at a cheaper rate have bought wisdom by observing the fruits of their neighbour's folly, rashness and weakness. Some have deeply suffered for their former Hydropic fullness, restiveness and laziness in Religion, contracted by long peace, great plenty, and high preferments; which it is far more honour to use piously and profitably, moderately and wisely, than to enjoy pompously, superciliously, luxuriously and idly: others are brought almost to utter consumptions of Religion by their own Calentures, and those Hectic fevers which have so long afflicted themselves and (as contagious or spotted sicknesses) infected others. Some of all sides and sorts have suffered. I am sure all are threatened, because each party hath by their passionate transports rather studied to advance their private opinions, parties and interests, than the common and public good of this Church and Nation; mutual sufferings (which have taken from all sides the confidence of their innocency) have so wrought upon all men of serious piety and honest purposes, as by this fiery trial to purge them from their dross of common infirmities, and to refine them for some further service to this Church and State. Nor do I doubt, but as other wise and good men, so particularly Ministers of parts and piety, could they once amicably and authoritatively meet, confer and correspond together, would sincerely and cheerfully (by God's blessing) agree upon some expedient to recover the truth, order, honour, peace, uniformity and authority of the Reformed Religion and its Ministry in this Church and Nation; that neither they, nor you, nor your posterity may be ever thus possessed, distorted, torn and tormented with evil Spirits, which sometimes cast us into the waters of cold and Atheistical irreligions, otherwhile into the fires of intemperate zealotry and contentions. For so hath the Church of England passed through all the poetic racks and tortures, which (if not remedied) will be the portion of your posterity, one while rolling Sisyphus his restless stone of endless Reformation, whose recoilings and relapsing sink the true Reformed Religion to lower deformities than ever it was in: after this they must be put upon Ixion's wheel, tossed up and down with continual circulations and giddiness of Religion, as every man's whimsical brains list to turn it round; whereas Religious orderly motions ought to have, as their due bounds and circumference of truth, so their fixed centre of Christian unity and public communion, both which would in no long time (by God's blessing) be regained in England, if some men's private policies and sinister projects did not (as wedges) still hinder the closing and agreement of honest and impartial men, in such ways as would restore Religion to its just honour, Authority and consistence; from the enjoying of which, after all the specious pretences made on all sides, we are still as far remote, as Tantalus was from eating those fruits or drinking those waters, which only deluded, but never satisfied his famished soul. Yet many good grapes and some fair clusters are still left upon this battered vine of the Church of England, in which I hope may be a blessing, which neither the little foxes of peevish Schismatics have much bitten, nor the greater bores of Romish seducers have wholly subverted. Many well-meaning people, and not a few Preachers too, who formerly had their Midsummer-fits, and shorter Lunacies, as to their religion, are now so sober in their senses, and well recovered to their right wits, that having once tried that vanity and vexation, that froth and futility of Spirit, which attends all factious inquietudes, and exotic innovations obtruded upon a well- settled Church, they are resolved ever hereafter to avoid and abhor them; as being no better than specious poisons, delicate delusions, spiritual debaucheries and religious lucuries, which growing from plethoric tempers in men's souls, (especially where they are high fed with duties) do easily tempt them that are less cautious and moderate both to wander and wantonness in Religion, first to simple fornications, and at last to gross and foul adulteries; to which men (otherwise of commendable strictness and purposes) are easily betrayed, if (as Dinah) they give way to the temptations of novelty, curiosity, popularity, and ambitious vanity in Religion, there, where it hath been well and worthily settled by public counsel and joint consent; yea and hath been happily enjoyed for many Ages, with almost miraculous, I am sure very marvellous prosperities, so as it was, beyond all dispute, here in the Church of England. The inconsiderate rufling and disordering of whose religious constitution, many men (of all sorts) are now ready to recant and expiate, if by any honest endeavours they may recover the order, unity, beauty, authority and stability of Religion in this Nation. To whose Ecclesiastic communion I perceive many (heretofore more warm than wise, more credulous than considerate) are now cordially returned, as to their judgements and consciences; to which, no doubt, their conversation would willingly conform, if once they could see any ensign of religious uniformity authoritatively set up in England. Many Ministers would willingly recant and return from their violent and vulgar transports, if they could but have a protection for their foreheads, or a screen to hide that shame and discountenance, which they fear hangs over them for their levity, from the common-peoples' censures and scorns. Not a few Ministers (sometimes orderly and regular enough) would fain get free from those popular lime-twigs, which have too long held them, if they did not fear to lose some of their feathers, either as to their reputation or maintenance; who flying from that good sense which was heretofore set in the Church of England for their defence, would needs light on that bare hedge for their refuge and perch, which proves to most of them no better than the beggar's bush, fuller of gins and snares than of berries or food. O how glad would hundreds of popular preachers and preaching people be, to be commanded by superiors to make (not verbal, but) real retractations of their errors, seductions, surprises, schisms, and apostasies? that so their variableness in Religion might seem to arise not from their private innate levitieses, but from either fatal or sovereign necessities; which are always good salvoes, and go for current excuses among common people, either to plead for their extravagancies, or to justify their changes, especially when they are reduced to the better. Many Ministers of Presbyterian and Independent practices rather than persuasions or principles, now (together with their followers) who formerly were highly a-gog, (even when they were yet in their down, pin-feathered, and scarce fledge) in those fine speculations and rare projects which they had fancied for erecting new models of Church-work, after the forms of Consistories and Elderships, Classes and congregations of Corporal Spiritualties, & Spiritual Corporations, which were to be reared out of the ruinous, nay out of the most entire parts of the Reformed Church of England, which was by them to be wholly ruined, though it were by the Laws of God and man, by constitutions Ecclesiastical and Civil, both wisely form and happily fixed in the Primitive and Catholic form of order and dependency; yet even these men and Ministers of destruction, not edification, with their late Chapels of Little-Ease, would I am confident be now very glad to be handsomely sheltered under the protection of some such Episcopal seat, fair Cathedral or Mother-Church, with which England formerly abounded, to the great honour of the Nation, no less than of the Clergy and Ministry of all degrees: the Slips and Shrubs of Churches, (which some have lately planted) thrive so ill, that they wish them fairly removed and reingrafted into that ancient stock, that goodly and venerable tree of Episcopacy, which was so flourishing and so fruitful to all orders of Christians in England, and in all ancient Churches, ever since the first plantation of Religion in this Island, or the other world. O how would all sober Ministers and others rejoice to come under that shade and superintendency which might not sadly over-drop, but gently protect every Minister and member of the Church, in their several branches and boughs? Who sees not by experience that verified which St. Jerom told them long ago, That a regular Episcopacy is the best, if not the only defensative, both in the Catholic and particular Churches, from the scorching heats of factions and schisms, to keep men from those shift and toss in Religion, from those uncharitable rendings and separations, which are so uncomely and inconvenient, yea so noxious to the Churches of Christ, and therefore to be conscientiously avoided by all good Christians? Besides, this constitution containing in its bosom the true interests of Presbyters and people, as well as of Bishops, redeems the Clergy, beyond any other form of Church-order and Government, from that which is very intolerable to men of learned piety and ingenuous Spirits; that is, the sordid dependence upon, yea and slavish subjection (even in religious concernments) unto those Lay-dictators, and plebeian humours, who are generally very crosse-grained and spitefully peevish to men of more learning than themselves. Vulgar minds are always contemptuous to their teachers, and rugged to their Monitors, but most unsufferably insolent, when they find either Magistrates or Ministers dependants upon their benevolence; never triumphing more unfeignedly than when they see those deformed spectacles which this last age hath oft shown them, namely, those grave and worthy Ministers, who taught them in the name of Christ on the Lordsday, the very next day pale and trembling, to appear before them in some Country Committee, compounded of Laymen, yea and of some Tradesmen, who are generally not guilty of much learning in any kind, and least in Divinity: yet these are the men that must catechise, examine, censure and condemn Ministers in the sight of their people, both in points of Doctrine and in practices Ministerial, for which some one Minister is able to say more in one hour, than most of those Assessors or silly Spectators can understand in ten, or ever have read in all their lives. What ingenuous Christian blusheth not to see Ministers of excellent learning and lives so disparaged, so degraded, so discouraged, by the Incompetency of those who must be their Judges, when many of them cannot so much as understand the state of the question or matter in dispute? What Christian is there of so popular, plebeian, trivial, and mechanic a spirit, as not to desire to see proper and meet judges set to examine and determine matters of Religion, for doctrines, manners, and discipline? in all which there are many cases so obscure and intricate, that they require men of very good learning, of composed minds, of sober judgements, and unbiased consciences, to debate and determine them, being very dubious and disputable in truth and holiness, in faith and morality; which when some silly Saints and devout bunglers will undertake to manage and modelize beyond their line and measure, after their rash, rude and slovenly fashion, it is not to be expressed how much detriment both Religion and its sacred Ministry suffer through the ignorance and passion, the rusticity and confidence, the petulancy and impertinency of such ridiculous arbitrators and incompetent judges, who are so far from being fit for any such Authority and Judicature, that they are not only not equals, but in most points very much inferiors to those whose doctrine and manners, whose callings and consciences they presume not so much to search as to insult over, with as much unfitness and unreasonableness, as if Divines should arrogate to themselves the Judicature of Common-Law, or of persons and cases Martial; so that both Pleaders and Judges, Soldiers and Commanders should fall under Minister's decision in all debates incident to their functions and affairs. Every man not ambitiously vain and fulsomely foolish, doth now wish in his soul to see that grave, solemn, idoneous and equable dispensation of Religion, both in its Mysteries and Ministry, its Doctrine and Controversies, its Scandals and Indignities, as may best become the Honour and Majesty of Christianity, most avoiding those improprieties and absurdities, which have been sufficiently manifested in our late confusions; which have chiefly risen from want of that wise settlement in Religious administrations which would lay out every part and parcel of them, so as is proper for them both as to persons, places and proportions, after the order and method anciently▪ used both in God's Tabernacle and his Temple. Indeed nothing can be managed orderly and happily in Church or State, in Civil or Ecclesiastic affairs, unless they pass through such wise hearts and pure hands, as can both well understand them, and discreetly discharge them; so as may conciliate in all men's minds an inward reverence to their persons that do dispense them. Which respect ariseth not from parchment Commissions or popular approbations, but from personal and real sufficiencies; which appearing to all sober men both in reason and Religion, give them the greatest satisfaction, and thereby as it were charm the common people not more by fear, than love and shame, to preserve that peace, and to observe those orders which they see wisely settled, and authoritatively used in any Church or Christian Commonwealth. CHAP. VI THe happiness and honour of which religious harmony and authoritative order, Of means to recompose the differences of Religion in England. as every Christian is ashamed not to seem at least to desire, and all honest men (no doubt) do really intend as their chief end and design, so the greatest differences now perpetuating our Religious distractions in England, seem to arise from the several means propounded, and methods prosecuted by men, possibly of honest meanings, but of differing minds; who (each presuming their own ways to be best for the Reforming, reconciling and establishing of Religion,) grow so divided in the use of their means, as still to hinder the attaining of the end: just like Physicians, who honestly and heartily aim at the cure of their patient; but every one of them so urgeth the taking of his particular receipt, that either they give him no physic at all, or so various and contrary prescriptions, as first confound, and at last kill him, more by the mutual repugnancy of their Medicines, than by the Malignity of the disease. Such is the state and fate of the Church of England, as to my observation; having, I hope, many honest and upright hearts in it, but possibly not so many wise heads and wary hands, which in all public healings do well to be joined together, these as fittest to effect what the other design. God forbid I should be so vain as to imagine there is any thing in my tenuity fit to be offered to that piety and prudence, which I know is in many of my Countrymen; so great a presumption of wisdom were my greatest folly: I only crave the leave and pardon of all wise men, so far as I adventure to express their sense (as I suppose) to the public; which every man will not do, although he heartily owns it, and every one is not apt to do, although he vehemently approves it. Many men, yea all men naturally, have the same principles of Mathematics in them, but not the same leisure and genius to study and dilate them, as did Archimedes, Euclid, Ptolemy and Alphonsus. Some that have capacity and leisure enough, yet may want calmness and composure of mind, being partly agitated by their passions, partly biased by their worldly affairs and private interests; and not only prepossessed by their sides and parties, but wholly engrossed and addicted to them. My leisure being great, my private & partial interests being none, my temper neutral and indifferent, addicted to no side or party, that either shoots wide, or short, or beyond the Church of England, (the only mark or Butt which is and ever hath been the measure of my best aims and actings, my words and writings) possibly I may obtain so much favour of you (my wise and worthy Countrymen) as you, will at least bear with my folly so far, as I shall represent to you, and others your inferiors, what is my sense, and, I presume, yours too, in order to reconcile our differences, and compose our distractions in matters of Religion. 1. From Ministers or the Clergy. The methods of our Healing and Recovery must have regard to the originals and progress of our maladies and distempers, which I impute to Ministers Divisions, People's Distractions, and Magistrates perhaps not indifferences so much as Diversions (hitherto) by reason of many secular Incumberances, so pressing upon them, that they have not yet had time and leisure since they had power, so to intend the settling of Religion in England and Church affairs, as the matter itself deserves, as God commands, and as all sober men in the Nation both desire and expect. My first address must be to men of my own Profession, who own themselves as Ministers of the Gospel: For these are so generally charged to be the fountains, fautors and fomenters of our English troubles both in Church and State, that few men pity them, but rather justify the miseries befallen them on all sides, as the grand occasioners of their own and other men's calamities; which, they say, had not their first fire or flame from civil ambitions or discontents, so much as from those which appeared in Church-concernments. Indeed all ages of Jewish and Christian succession have showed us, that from Prophets and Priests, from Bishops and Presbyters, from mal-admissions and mal-administrations of Holy Offices and Functions, evil hath gone out into the whole Church and State. No sooner hath God by the preaching and sufferings of worthy Bishops and other Ministers planted and settled, purged and reform his Church in any Nation, but the Devil crowds some of his Chaplains into Christ's Chapel: such were Arrius, Eutyches, Paulus S●osatenus, Apolinaris, Novatus, Donatus, and many others, Churchmen by their Profession, but pests to their Churches by their presumption. Thus did those drones or wasps rather of Religion follow and infest the first Lutheran essays of Reformation in Germany: when he had (as Sleidan tells us) notably triumphed over Eccius and other Sophisters of the Popish bran and Monkish bellies, than had he to contend with those peevish and hot heads, which broke out into Fanatic fancies and Anabaptistick furies; Anno 1527. such as Carolostadius, Murecer, Storkius and others were, whose Names and Effigies are alike terrible. Nor have there been wanting in England since our true Reformation, (the most perfect and best in the world, because the least popular, most orderly, gradual and authoritative) such strange spirits, so curious and captious, so quarrelling and reproaching, so perpetually tampering and botching with this Church, and its reformed Religion, that no sooner had this Church any settled plantation and quiet, but it had (on every side) many petty pruners, perturbers & supplanters, who from the first to this day cannot be made to believe, that this whole Nation in all Estates, both civil and Ecclesiastic, ever had either so much piety, purity, or policy as themselves: half a dozen fierce non-conformists, who had kindled their matches at Francfort or Geneva, were always confident of themselves, and cried up by their Disciples, to be greater lights for burning and refining of Religion, than all the Kings and Queens, all the Lords and Commons, all the Bishops and Convocations, all the Martyrs and Confessors; whose cruel fires, aiming to consume the very vitals of the true reformed Religion, were no sooner quenched, but these foreign infected Ministers began other fires of lesser faggots, which at first did pretend only to sing the overlong hairs of the reformed Religion in England, but now at last we see they have roasted it round, and turned this Church, like Saint Laurence, from side to side, over the gridirons and burning coals of various factions, which have each their Anti-Ministers, their Cata-Presbyters or counter-preachers, bandying one against the other, and setting all people together by the ears as well as themselves. The first and most effectual means to recover the settled State of the reformed Religion in England to a peace and uniformity, following the methods of our miseries, must begin with us of the Clergy or Ministry, what names or titles, what principles or patterns soever we pretend to follow: 'tis true, many, if not most of us, were loath to see and hard to be convinced of our pristine errors and indiscretions, our immoderations and transports, our Popish and popular compliances, our Jesuitick evasions and pretensions, our politic Salvoes and distinctions, our pompous and empty formalities, by which we made either the power of godliness odious, or factions popular, innovations pious, and factions plausible, until God overtook us all with his just, though sharp, chastisements. Some Churchmen thought their hill so strong it could never be removed; whereas no policy avails, without true and exact piety, to bear up the honour of Churchmen, when once people see without spectacles. Other Ministers fancied that if the high places of Arch-Bishops and Bishops, of Deans and Chapters were taken away, presently their valleys would ascend, (as the earth is said to have done under St. David's feet as he was preaching in Wales) that their Molehills would swell to be all Mountains of God, of equal height, on which their Jerusalem's should be built after new Church-models either of a Presbyterian or Independent fashion, whose small and, as to the Public peace and benefit, ineffectual, p●oductions have hitherto so little justified their inventions or discretions, that their mutual divisions and several diminutions, besides the general abatement and abasement both of Religion, Reformation and Ministry, do make the whole face of this Church appear rather like Babel than Jerusalem; which was a City at unity in itself, not made up with patches and botches, by fits and jobs, with deformed angles, crooked walls and swelling windows, (like some narrow lanes in London, whose sides seem built in spite to defy and darken one another) but designed and wrought by such a juncture of wise Counsel from grand Architects as had well forecast and fore seen their work, as those did by divine revelation, who were to build the Ark, Tabernacle, and Temple for God, as Moses, David, Solomon, Zerubbabel, and Ezekiel; who had leisurely and exact visions, sober and orderly revelations, after due and Mathematical proportions or platforms given them, and were not hurried on by sudden raptures, extemporary snatches, and passionate surprises, which are the Convulsions of Religion; no fit tempers or motions to build or repair the Church of Christ, which even in Primitive defections, (as we read in the Epistles Correptory or Consolatory to the seven Asian Churches or others,) were taught by the Spirit of Christ and the Apostles, not to seek out new Forms, Fashions and Inventions, to make Divisions, Schisms and Separations, either in or from the Respective Churches, or from their Angels or Bishops, the Precedents or Presbyters. But in their Reformations they were to keep their former Church-communion, in the grand and Apostolic Combinations, which were constituted and proportioned by the guidance and wisdom of Christ's Spirit: both Pastors and people were to remember from whence they were fallen, to have due regard to their several Rulers and Overseers in the Lord; to return to their first love of truth and peace; Revel. 3.2. to restore what was decayed, to preserve what remained and was ready to die; to hold fast what was wholesome, sound, and good, while they tried and pared off what was evil and superfluous; Judas 3. to contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to them; to keep to that form of Doctrine, with those Catholic Traditions and Customs which they had received: They were not to invent new ways of Churches or Pastors any more than new Doctrines or new Gospels. I am for Primitive Sanctities and Severities in all sorts or degrees of Ministers, no less than for Primitive subordination and communion: Ambitious I am for restoring the Piety and Purity, as well as the Polity and Unity of Pristine times. And although I find many Ministers so ill natured, so peevish and crosse-grained, that they can sooner vomit up the meat they have digested, than recall or recant any error or extravagancy they have adopted and fomented; yet I hope better things of the major part of my Fathers and brethren, who are men of more calm and ingenuous tempers, furthest from juvenile fervors, from private designs and popular dependences. Nor do I doubt, but all Ministers that are worthy men, will easily recede, not from their Religion and Consciences, but from their various superstitions and presumptions, from their immoderate values and Idolatrous adorations of some petite opinions, and novel imaginations, which they have of late years taken up, if once they could happily meet and parley together, not in arbitrary Junctos and Associations; but being thereto called and encouraged by the command and Counsel, the Gravity and Authority of those their Superiors, who are most able to advance the good of this Church, and the restitution of the Reformed Religion. If you (O worthy Gentlemen) should find us ecclesiastics more restive, pertinacious or obstinate than becomes us, 2 From Magistrates and Laymen. either to retain our needless indulgences, or superfluous severities and rigours of opinions and practices; it will be your honour and candour to supple us, and by your exemplary persuasions gently to compel us to be such as best becomes us and yourselves. You cannot give us, the Ministers of England, a more signal and ample testimony of your love and regard to us, than by your exacting from us in our several places, not only all moral severities and sanctities of life (which are indispensible to our calling and duty) but all those real Ministerial strictnesses in all points of holy Ministrations, to which our greatest enemies do so much pretend themselves, and complain of us as most defective in them, either as to care, or diligence, or love towards our people. But (I beseech you) let these sacred exactions, as to our lives and Doctrines, as to our ordination and Ministration, be first, scriptural, as to the main ground, rule and end of them; next, Rational, as to Order, Decency and Gravity of them; lastly let them be Primitive and Catholic, not Novel and Fanatic, but as much as may be conform to the pattern of all ancient Churches, who had their formations and fixations from the Apostles, long before any of these modern disputes and factions arose, or passion had seized any Ministers judgements as to their particular sides and interests. But let us not (for God's sake) be urged (as some design) utterly to forsake the Church of England, to renounce our own former both practices and persuasions, our stand and understandings too, as Ministers (which were so much grounded upon scriptural directions, Apostolic exemplifications, Catholic imitations, and national constitutions;) only to conform to some private men's modern fancies, or to prefer, as to Church-ordination, Ministration and Government, the novelties of Amsterdam or Geneva, before the antiquities of Antioch and Jerusalem. Nor yet may you leave us so far to ourselves, as to suffer every one of us to invent and do whatever seems good in his own eyes. Alas, many of us are weak in our Learning, Religion, and Reason; strong only in our Passions, Prejudices, and Presumptions; easy and soft in our Judgements, heady and obstinate in our opinions, prone to be biased with private interests, and abused with popular pretensions. While we mean well, yet we are ready to do very ill, having much in us either cold and doting, or young and raw, or overhot and uncomposed; never worse governed than when we are left every man to govern ourselves, or our private flocks, after our own various fancies and affectations, which are most-what very partial, plebeian, imprudent, impolitic: not many of us understanding the proportions of true Church-Government any more than we do the designs and dimensions of the most noble and magnificent buildings, which were never erected and perfected by the occasional concurrence of every spontaneous workman, that listed to join his head and hand, to carry on what figure and form he thought best; but they are the effects of mature Counsel and grand advice from wise Master-builders, who first agree in the whole model or Idea, before they put the parts in execution. The truth is, no sorts of men are less tractable (generally) than we that profess to be Ministers. If we have little Learning, we are envious, peevish, and jealous against those that have more; if we have much, we easily grow proud, high-conceited, dictatorian. Some of us are very rustical, morose and refractory; others of us very imperious, supercilious and magisterial; few of us of so wise, calm and safe tempers, as to be left to ourselves in things of public Office and Order, lest we grow heady and extravagant: Nor are we of so humble and meek Spirits, as to be willingly led by others. If left free, we grow insolent, popular and factious; if under any Government or restraint, we grow touchy, refractory and petulant; not easily kept within our own or others bounds, until by pregnant reason and prevalent power, meeting together in wise and resolute magistrates, we are at once convinced and commanded, persuaded and overawed to keep those honest bounds of order and subjection, which do not only best become us, but aught to be least arbitrary, because most necessary both for our own and the public good: most of us will be good subjects even to Church-Government as well as State, when we see we must be so; and few of us will be either quiet or content, when we find that we may be what we or the vulgar will, by loose Tolerations and indiscreet indulgences, which betray Ministers no less than other men to many dangerous extravagancies. To cure (therefore) the distempers of Religion, and to restore some Health, Beauty, Order and Unity to this sick, deformed, disordered and divided Church of England, the first applications, as I humbly conceive, must by wisdom and power be made to those that profess to be Ministers of the Gospel, who must have, as broken, or started and dislocated bones (whose flesh and muscles are highly swollen and inflamed) not only wholesome diet and Physic given them, but such splinters and ligatures as may be at once gentle, yet strong; not bound so hard as may occasion pain or mortifying, nor yet so loose as may suffer any constant dislocation or new flying out. To such ruptures and inordinacies, the many notions and raptures that Scholars and Preachers get by reading and conversing (besides the pregnancy of their wits, and ambition of their own Spirits) are prone to tempt them: no preacher is so mean, but he would fain appear some body; if he despair of his own merits, as to public notice and preferment, than he applies to popular arts and lesser engines. Discontent and ambition are observed, both in old times and of later, to have been the great perturbers of the Church's peace; which some have written even of Mr. Cartwright himself, a man of excellent Learning, Mr. Fuller's History of the Brit. Church. yet unsatisfied when he had not the good fortune to be so much favoured and preferred by Queen Elizabeth, as others were who bore a part with him in public Acts at Cambridge before that popular, yet politic, Princess; Who had no greater art in her Government than this, to give not only shrewd guesses at men's tempers and geniusses, but exactly to calculate the proportions of their spirits and parts, and accordingly either to refuse them, or employ them in Church or State. Nor could she easily have kept this Church of England from flying in pieces in her days, when many notable Ministers wits did work, like new beer or bottled Ale, to blow up the Government of the Church, unless she had, besides the Canons agreed in Synods, and the good Laws passed in Parliament, applied such wise, able and resolute Governors to the Helm of the Church, as were Parker, Grindall, Whitgift, Sands, Matthewes and others; whom the storms (yet safety) of the Church in those times showed to be excellent Pilots, and excellent Prelates, no less than excellent Preachers: Whose names and authority had then been made as odious and unpopular, as now all Bishops and Episcopal Clergy have been, if (under God) the resolute power and ponderous authority of the Princess had not preserved them, besides the Gravity, Piety, and prudence of their own carriage; which abundantly stopped the mouths of their clamorous enemies then, and further justified them to all posterity, to have been, as the true Sons of wisdom, so deservedly the venerable Bishops and Fathers of this then famous and flourishing Church. I well know that Ministers in England, above all sorts of men, do stand bound in conscience and prudence to use all fair means for the speedy settling and happy restitution of the State of Religion in this Church; because however many of them profess to be great patrons of piety, and sticklers for Reformations, either old or new, yet most, if not all our Church-deformities and miseries, have been and still are imputed chiefly to their immoderations, passions, or indiscretions, when too much left to themselves: Some driving so furiously to conformity, that they went beyond it; not only overshooting themselves, but the good Laws, Canons, and Customs of this Church, hereby putting the common people into high jealousies of superstition, by their too great heats, and surfeits of ceremonious innovations and affected formalities: Other Ministers were so jealous and impatient of what they fancied, rather than felt, to be burdens in Religion, that they not only cast off some superfluous loads of new ceremonies, but the very comely Garment, Girdle and Government of this Church; yea some of them at last flung off all their clothes, and tore off (as Hercules in his fiery shirt) much of their own skins, by a frantic kind of excess, severely revenging even other men's real or imputed faults upon themselves and upon the whole Church, committing greater injuries than ever they did or indeed could suffer, while they possessed their souls in patience and peace; whereas now they have left themselves and this whole Church, (as the Tortoise did, that was weary of its shell, and put it off) almost nothing for safety, comeliness, or honour, but are nakedly exposed to all those dangers and deformities which attend any Church, Religion and Ministry, which being once ungirt as to order, unity and Government, will soon be unblessed as to all holy improvements either in Piety, Verity, or Charity. Hence, hence it is, that such a crowd of importune and insolent mischiefs have (as the Sodomites upon the Angels and Lot at his door,) not only rudely pressed, but notoriously prevailed too far upon all Ministers and the State of the Reformed Religion: chiefly the jealousies, feuds, factions, animosities, immoderations, indiscretions, divisions and dissociations among Ministers; who can never expect to see common people return from their madness and giddiness to sober senses, until they see their Preachers to recover their wits, and their pastors to become patterns, as of piety and zeal, so of humility and order of charity and unity, of gravity and constancy, of meekness and wisdom; and not to be like mad dogs, so daily snarling and snapping at one another, so biting and infecting their own and others flocks with their poisonous foam and teeth, that (at last) they disorder the whole frame of the Church, and endanger the civil peace of the Nation: whence some men have been ready to think it were a part of wisdom and State-policy, to put in execution the counsel and resolution which once Queen Elizabeth took up in some time of Her Reign, even to forbid all preaching and praying, as to ministers own inventions and composures, because she found most Ministers passions so inseparable from their pulpits, if they were left to themselves. The want of Christian harmony and correspondency in public and lawful conventions, with unanimity and fitting subordination among Ministers in England, for these last twenty years (good God) what havoc and confusion, what waste and desolation, what scorn and contempt hath it brought upon the whole Ministry, the Church and the State of Reformed Religion; not more in the order and peace, than in the power and purity of them! while several Ministers in their partial conventicles and mutinous meetings go several ways, seek only to draw Disciples after themselves, not to lead them nearer to God, and Christ, and this Church, but to their own private opinions, parties and interests, according as they can possess people to comply with their new Ministerial authority, new Church-ways, and new spiritual projects, which being so horribly divided, the good only way of Christianity is almost destroyed; for none that are novel can be so authentic and authoritative, but they are by some suspected, by others denied, and by most despised. Hence mutual loathe between people and people, Pastors and Pastors; hence that nauseous abhorrence in many of all Sermons and Religious service; hence that Atrophy or indifferency of most people to the blessed Sacraments; hence that rudeness and irreverence showed by many in all Religious duties; hence that looseness in moralities, that rottenness in opinions, that coldness in devotions, that boldness in blasphemies, that impudence in heresies, that fondness after novelties, that boasting in schismatic rendings; hence so many new and strange secular policies are grown up, as thistles in the good field of this Church, instead of Primitive simplicities; hence so many gay and cunning hypocrisies spring up (like cockle and poppy among wheat) instead of sober honesty and Christian charity, which were heretofore so abounding in England. A pious and prudent closing, a sincere and thorough healing of those wounds which Ministers have given themselves, this Church and the Reformed Religion, by their easiness, credulity, inconstancy, popularity, and impatience to bear any thing, and also by their too much confidence in secular Counsels and arms of flesh, (while they served divers lusts and passions of men and times more than the Lord;) this would advance the real interest of all parties, so far as they are Christ's, and bring the whole frame of Religion to such an happy consistency as becomes the honour of such a Nation, and such a Reformed Church as England sometime was. In which paternal presidency, fraternal assistance, and filial submission, might all meet together, to satisfy all calm and sober Spirits, that are either of Episcopal, Presbyterian, or Independent persuasions; which are (I think) the most considerable parties (yet) in England, both as to their numbers, abilities, and worth. I know it is very hard for weak and wilful men to reclaim themselves or others from those transports, which they have not chosen, but ventured upon; it is the work of wise men to recant their own errors, and to recall people from those scatter and extravagancies to which they have been once throughly scared and cunningly driven. History of the Church of Scotland, by S●otswood Archbishop of S. Andrews. I have much admired, while I have read the prudent Arts and pious guiles which King James (a Master of great Learning, Wit, and Eloquence) used, whereby to calm the hot Spirits of Ministers in Scotland, so as to reduce them to that excellent Church-frame and Government, of which many popular, factious and covetous Spirits were not more weary than unworthy; by the overthrow of which, I believe, the jealous Presbyters in Scotland, & that Church and State, have got so little, that they may well put their gains in their eyes, and yet see both their folly and their misery, rather weeping for their destroying, than justly triumphing in their extirpation of so excellent a constitution of a Church, as indeed they enjoyed with as much happiness (had they known it) as they obtained it with much difficulty. Great bodies (we see) cannot move regularly or handsomely, unless they have such respective heads and precedents, as may be principles of order and union, of proportionate motions and useful operations. The want of which (with the dissolving of all Ecclesiastical subordinations into popular parities, and reducing national Convocations or Synods into partial Assemblies and Associations) all sorts of sober Ministers have found by woeful experience to be so pernicious both to their private and the public interests of Religion, that I believe most of them are now very solicitous how to heal themselves, lest they further appear Physicians of no value to the people, who can never think themselves either well taught or governed by such Ministers as know not how to govern themselves, and yet are impatient to be governed by any other but themselves; who being either mean, or weak, or wilful men, taken singly, will not be much abler or stronger, or more valued, in any arbitrary, precarious or partial ways of self-combinations or Associating. CHAP. VII. Of the late Associations projected by some Ministers. I Am neither wholly ignorant of, nor averse from, those later projects and Essays of Associations, which some Ministers have presented to the world, and (as I hear) practised among themselves in some Countries, with what good success or public advantage I do not yet understand: however this plot of Associating doth proclaim to all the world, that the generality of Ministers are very sensible of that shame, solitude, feebleness, contempt, dissipation and diminution, to which their late divisions have exposed them, even among those people whom they most gratified with eating that forbidden fruit, which by a surfeit of liberty hath brought so great sickness and mortality upon the life of Religion, as Christian and Reformed; also upon the honour of the Clergy, and the happiness of the people of England. I see the sense of their own and the people's nakedness, (as to Ecclesiastical union and Government) hath made Ministers seek for some covering for themselves, though it be but of fig-leaves, in comparison of that goodly Garment which God had formerly clothed them withal, after the manner of all ancient Churches, who were governed, adorned and defended by Episcopal Eminency, Presidency, and Authority, strengthened with Presbyterian Counsels, and further helped by the service and care of Deacons, or Overseers for the poor, to complete the well-Governing of the Church with Charity, Wisdom, and Orderly Authority: So that neither the Wise, Strong, Great, or Rich, might be extravagant and unruly; nor the Simpler, Weaker, Lesser, and poorer sort of Christians be neglected and contemned. A method of Church-Government, certainly, not more ancient and Catholic, than complete in all the requisite proportions of Government, which had in it not only all principles of reason, polity and prudence, but was further commended and confirmed by the ancient patterns of Gods own appointment among the Jews, by Christ's Doctrine and example, together with his Apostles practise and appointment, evident in their writings, and in the imitation of all Churches from the beginning. The want and waste of which Primitive and Catholic Government as I do unfeignedly deplore in the Church of Engl. so I am glad to see any of my brethren so sensible of it, as to make what handsome shift they can for a while to unite and defend themselves, till the mercy of God and the wisdom of Governors shall restore such ancient order, unity and authority to us, as may be most happy for us on all hands. And although I think these Associatings to be as incomplete as they seem partial, yet they are so far considerable and commendable, as they seem to invite and draw Ministers to some Ecclesiastic union and fraternal society; which may be in time much for their own Honour, Safety and Happiness, as well as the people's peace; especially if such closures arise not from a continued confederacy of factious Spirits against true Episcopacy, but rather as preparations for it, so far as times may bear, or bring on the due restitution of it, not to its pristine pomp and splendour, (which is not expectable) but to its Primitive Order, Power, and Spiritual Authority in the Church; which without doubt is the Conservative, the Crown, the Consummation, the Centre of all Church's Government. Short of which what ever popular and plausible prefacing these projects of Associating may make, to endear some Ministers by the parity of their Oligarchies in Presbytery, or to draw in common people by their specious Democracies in Independency, yet (I confess) I expect no great or durable good from either of their partialities. First, because they are but private men's projects, not the results of the public counsel and united wisdom of this Church and Nation. Secondly, they are in their constitution defective, as to the true proportions of good Government and Polity, which must have ability, order, entireness and authority; which are not to be found in the parity or plebs either of Ministers or people. Thirdly, they are as new, so precarious and arbitrary, therefore unauthoritative and unauthentick, easily baffled and despised by any that list to be recusant and refractory. Fourthly, as they are divided no less than oligarchy and Democracy, so they may be dangerous to the Authors, abetters and executors of them, when ever those that a●e or shall be in civil power, list to bring them to the trial of a Praemunire; which statute binds up the hands of all Pragmatic Presbyters and people, from acting of their own heads in Church-affaires without Law. This I am sure, the policies of Statesmen are easily jealous of Churchmen, nor can the Clergy discreetly act any thing by way of public influence in things Ecclesiastical, for which they have not the public Counsel and consent. Possibly these Associations, if friendly and ingenuous, may be some seeming shelter to some poor Ministers from the urgent storms of popular contempt and insolency, like the undergirding of that crazy and weatherbeaten ship, Acts 27.17. in which St. Paul was embarked and ready to perish, until the tossed vessel of this Church may be brought into a more commodious haven and fully repaired. But if the aim of Associating be no more than a cunning complicating of Presbyterian and Independent principles and interests together, that they may rule in their Duumviracy, exclusive of all primitive Presidency, and slighting all pleas for Episcopacy, which hath the only Catholic and Classical precedents for authentic ordination and full authority in the Church, all will be no more than daubing with untempered mortar, by which they may foul their own fingers and other men's faces; but they will never erect any stately and durable structure, capable to supply the room of that Primitive, Apostolic and Catholic Government, in comparison of which these precarious and poor Associating of Ministers are but a setting up a stanty hedge, instead of a good quickset or a brickwall, for the sense of Christ's vineyard. Presbytery hath been already so baffled in England, and Indepency hath so little place or credit, both are such exotic novelties, and so incompetent for Church-Government, that neither single nor social, ravelled nor twisted, they will ever have any considerable power, nor be able to give any protection to either Ministers or people, much less will they promote the Reformed state of Religion, or the peace of the Nation. The community of Ministers and people, though never so much Associated in such levelling factions, will still appear, both to their enemies and friends, but as so many silly sheep, who, fearing to be further worried by wolves and dogs, do flock together indeed with great eagerness and crowding, but they are not thereby much the safer, if they have neither fixed folds, nor able, valiant and watchful shepherds to oversee and defend them, with such eminent power and lawful Authority as becomes the masters of such Assemblies, and the chief Fathers of those Families which make up the most complete Churches of Christ. As it is hard to draw a true circle unless the centre be fixed, or to build a firm arch without the binding and centre-stone be added to the rest; so I firmly believe, that neither the interests of people by Independency, nor of Presbyters by Presbytery, will ever be advantaged to any honourable, happy, or durable condition by these Associations, if they arrogantly and factiously usurp the rights and power of Primitive Episcopacy, which hath been always as useful as venerable in the Church of Christ, either used, or approved, or desired by all learned and sober men, and asserted by infinite, pregnant and unanswerable testimonies, both ancient and late. Nor will, I hope, the Antiquity, Sanctity and Majesty of Primitive and Catholic Episcopacy ever want such Princes & Peers, such Presbyters and people, as both in true polity, and in good conscience, will so approve it, as to prefer it no less before all modern models, than the first temple was preferable before the second, or either of them before the Tabernacle. If these Associations do only intend, as some of them pretend, to take in all interests, with reservation of latitudes and freedoms, both of different principles and practices, to all sorts of Ministers, will they not prove at last Dissociatings, and amount to no higher edifying of this Church, than the laying of brick and sand without lime, which will never make a durable and strong building? For they will soon divide and dissolve who are held together by no other bond than their own will and pleasure. Possibly thus far they may be of use, as means somewhat to discover more the rubbish and ruins of our late distractions, which have made Ministers so much strangers, that they are enemies to each other; yea, possibly they may, by drawing them to some amicable conventions and Christian conferences, occasion better understanding between many of them, and so by God's blessing in time produce some such counsels as may be worthy of them and the public. But if their aim be slily to get into some hands such popular advantages (by their soft insinuations of seeming equanimity and moderation,) as shall further displace and disparage the former Catholic Government of this and all ancient Churches, they will be but as new patches put to an old garment; which will make the rent and deformity the greater. Certainly, the state of the Reformed Religion in England will never be happy till it is settled, nor settled till it be uniform, nor uniform, till the office and authority of Ministers be valid and venerable, nor will this ever be, until the sanctity and sameness of ordination, together with the use of Ecclesiastical power and holy Ministrations, be rendered so August, so Sacred and Complete, as may be most conform to Scripture and to pure Antiquity; for while Ministers are of divers makes and moulds, they will be of divers minds, nor can they produce other than multiforme Christians, of different fashions and deformed factions in Religion; which do as necessarily bring forth infinite mischiefs in any Church or Christian State, as the itch breeds scratching, and scratching fetches blood. As the blessed Apostles, so their holy successors kept to one way of Religious Order and Power; which preserved the unity of faith and love among Christian Bishops, Presbyters and people. I confess, I do sometimes in my sad and retired solitudes hope, that our common calamities may, by God's softening and calming grace upon men's spirits, make both all Godly Ministers and all good people so wise, as humbly, sincerely and charitably to search into the clear steps of Primitive prudence, Apostolical order, and Ecclesiacall Authority, which had due and tender regard to all sorts of Christians, so as to keep up a meet subordination with a Christian communion; To which end I was willing to hope this show of Association might conduce. But when I find in some of them nothing that looks civilly upon Episcopacy, many things cast reproachfully and scornfully upon the excellent Bishops of England and all the Episcopal Clergy, who were not inferior in any regard to the best Associators; when I find that some of them have the confidence to exclude all that have of late years been ordained by any Bishop with Presbyters, though such an one as the late most venerable Bishop of Norwich, Dr. Hall, (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) when I see that some rigid Presbyterians, and popular Independents, affect with great Magistery to Duopolize all Church-power, to grasp into their hands and bosoms (as the sides of a drag-net meeting together) all Ministerial Authority; not only not owning the best surviving Bishops with any respect, nor yet in any fair way applying to any of them, after all their undeserved indignities, but spitefully and professedly abdicating all communion with them, under the name of Bishops, reducing them (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) to the level and parallel of Presbyters, (which the 630. Orthodox Fathers, Concil. Chalcedon. Can. 29. in the fourth general famous Council of Chalcedon, (which all Ministers of England approved and (I think) subscribed to) call (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) an absurd and unreasonable practice, yea (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) a great sacrilege; and Zonaras upon that Canon makes it a (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) fight as Giants against God, as a dethroning of Christ, the Bishop's eminent authority and presidency in the Church being a lively representation of Christ's sitting in the midst of the throne, who did (undoubtedly) delegate his visible authority of governing the Church to the chief Apostles, above the 70. and all other Teachers; after which manner and proportion these chief Apostles, who were the first and great Bishops after Christ, did both commit and derive their authority to the following Bishops their successors, who were a lesser sort or second edition of Apostles: when I see what an Idol some Ministers and people make of their Scotch-Covenant, by which great Engine, or Military Ram, they still think themselves bound to batter Episcopacy, as if their Covenanting against it as it then stood in England, were an obligation to persecute all Episcopacy for ever; when in earnest, the least variation of its former constitution both satisfies and absolves from that bond, which some men still superstitiously venerate, as if it were an image fallen from heaven, a matter of divine precept and institution, and not rather of humane machination and politic invention; (which we are sure it was,) as if it were the solemn result of the pious or of the peaceable and public sense of this Nation, and not rather the issue of troubled brains and broken times: indeed many forget that the Covenant smells more of fire, smoke of sulphur and gunpowder, than of the Spouses myrrh and perfumes, of Christian Love and Charity: Again, when I consider how passion and pride betrays many men to rashness, rashness to folly, folly to obstinacy, obstinacy to presumption, presumption to animosities, and these to unchristian feuds, everlasting despite and bitterness, which must still be vented as choleric humours once in a month against the most innocent and Primitive Episcopacy, yea against the most deserving and yet most suffering Bishops, of this Church, and of all the world, old and new: when I see the personal erratas and exorbitances or infirmities of some few Bishops, by most uncharitable Synecdoches, (which put a part for the whole) are in a pitiful fallacious way of vulgar oratory urged against all Episcopacy and Bishops in any orderly eminency or presidential authority in the Church, contrary to the faith and honour of all antiquity, and the former happy experiences of this Reformed Church: when I find how wary and shy some Ministers are (in their zeal and forwardness for their petty Associations) to seem to own even their own judgements and real inclinations toward any such condescensions, and close with Episcopacy as may reflect upon their former transports; how loath they are really and freely to offer such proposals as are equable and ingenuous, pure and peaceable, to the Episcopal party, who aim at no more than such a paternal presidency and order, as may best preserve the undoubted power of ordination and Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction, as it was Primitively settled in and transmitted by the hands of the first Bishops, who immediately succeeded the Apostles: When I see (as I plainly do) this partiality, restiveness, and cowardice in some Ministers of good parts, then do I almost sink in despair ever to see or enjoy (while I live in England) any thing in the Order, Government, and Discipline of this Church, that may look like the Primitive pattern; which was indeed a Catholicon, approved in all Churches, used in all ages, and submitted to by all sorts of good Christians; the only proper Antidote (I think) against the poisons of our times; far beyond any of these kind of new confections, which tampering and partial Empirics may make or boast of, and prescribe to those that list to be their tame and credulous customers; who will find that all these new Balsams of Covenanting and Associating against Episcopacy, are not only not sovereignly or solidly healing, but full of noxious, festering, and pernicious qualities, scalding one place while they seem to skin over another. So that if I should only look to the arm of flesh, or at some Ministers inconstant, ingrateful, violent, partial and intractable spirits, there is little hopes that either they or their Sectators will return to any happy close and general accord, without a miracle: and indeed it would be as strange to see some Ministers return with meekness, and submit to their lawful and worthy Bishops, as their Fathers, or Chief Heads and Rulers of their Ecclesiastical fraternities and families, under any the most innocent qualification and temper of Episcopacy, as it was to see Saint Dennis his Corpse or trunk take up his head and carry it 3. miles after it was cut off, as the French Legends report of that Martyr; so prepossessed and prejudiced some Ministers and their Disciples are against the Order and Honour of their own calling and function, no less than against the happiness of this Church, both Ministers and people, against the peace also and prosperity of the reformed Religion of this Nation; all which are so concerned in a right Episcopacy, (wherein the real interests of Christian people, sober Presbyters, and worthy Bishops should be all preserved) that in earnest I cannot see how they can, without such an orderly Communion and venerable Authority, ever be happy, because not united either in principles or practices, in opinion or affection. I believe no good Christian is so blind as not to see, that faith cannot in this world be separated from charity, that Church's divisions are their confusion; as leaky and unhooped vessels let out much, if not all the good liquor in them. CHAP. VIII. Of civil assistance from Laymen to restore this Church and Religion. THerefore, leaving these my hotter-spirited brethren to take breath, after their earnest pursuits against Episcopacy, and their zealous agitations for either Presbyterian or Independent interests by the new junctoes of their Associations; expecting in time to find them in a much cooler temper, as already I do all sober and moderate Ministers, who unfeignedly approve, and heartily pray for Episcopacy in its Primitive proportions; I shall in the next place apply myself to You of the Magistracy, Nobility and Gentry of this Nation, if possibly your spirits, less engaged, and so less embittered in Church-contentions, may incline to the meditations and embrace the motions of Ecclesiastical peace and accord in this Church and Nation. Act. 16.9. Saint Paul saw in a vision a man of Macedonia coming to him and calling for Help. It is not a vision in the night, or a dream of distress, but the noonday or meridian of this Churches miseries, which presents to you many thousands of poor people daily overgrown with Ignorance, Lukewarmness, Licentiousness, Unsettledness, Superstition, Faction, Atheism, and all manner of Irreligion; also many hundreds of poor Ministers, (for none is to be esteemed rich, or renowned, where all are either envied or condemned by one side or other) of all persuasions, Episcopal, Presbyterian, and Independent, many of them endued with excellent parts, most of them with competent and useful abilities, all these, and in them the whole Church and Nation, call to you, Come and Help us; Help to redeem us from that vulgar insolency, reproach and contempt into which we are fallen (both our persons and profession) by our mutual divisions, our childish contentions, our uncharitable factions, our unseasonable ambitions, our unreasonable revenges, by our immoderate, popular and implacable passions; Help us, Euseb. in Vita Const. as Constantine the Great did those Bishops and other Churchmen who were met at the famous Council of Nice, to burn and bury all those complaints, quarrels, libels, jealousies, disaffections, reproaches, dissensions, and mutual disparagings, under which the Ministers and Ministry of England now lie and labour; Manasseh being against Ephraim, and Ephraim against Manasseh, and Judah against both; Episcopal Ministers against Presbyterians, and these against Episcopal, and Independents against both, and some against them all. Help to restore us to a condition beyond slaves and villains, reduce us to the state of ingenuous freedom, such as the Law affords all honest and industrious men: Reform and reunite us, if it be possible, but not with Swords and Staves, with Pistols and Prisons, not by the arbitrary Discipline of Soldiers, and absolute Tribunals of Committee-men, not by plundering, sequestering, silencing, and ejecting us out of all upon mere politic jealousies, or only venial infirmities; (when for the main we carry ourselves in all things Righteously, Soberly, and Peaceably.) Do not expose us to men of new lights, to men of erratic judgements and fanatic fancies; who lay as much Religion upon their new Disciplines and Church-modellings, as upon all the Doctrine, Piety, and Charity of Christianity. Leave us not to the novel and illegal power and partiality of such men, who will try us with passion, and judge us with prejudice, destroy us with pleasure, & undo us without appeal or remedy; who greedily receive accusations against us as Ministers, without letting us see or hear our accusers; which are not always two or three, according to Gods command both in the Law and Gospel, but many times (testis singularis) only one, sometime none, besides some men's jealousies, disaffections, and surmises against us, Tit. 3.10. who seldom give us two admonitions (after the Apostles order) but at first dash they quite blot us out of their book of life, utterly routing us and our families, disabling us ever after to plead our innocencies, or exercise our abilities, or supply our necessities, in any convenient way of living. Help to redeem, if not our persons, which are made by vulgar scorn, as the filth and offscouring of all estates in this nation, yet at least our Function and Profession, which was ever esteemed holy; redeem it from those invasions, intrusions and usurpations, which are made upon it by illiterate, mechanic, sordid and simple people, who can have no true or tolerable authority to be Ministers of holy things, when they have no competent abilities, and who being on no hand duly consecrated, set apart, sanctified or ordained for such holy Ministrations, cannot but profane, abuse and abase them, by their abominable arrogancies and sacrilegious usurpations, which are the greatest abuses of you and the whole Nation. Help to restore the dignity and Authority of the Evangelical Ministry to its Pristine honour and reverence, to that Sanctity and Majesty which becomes the deputation and vicegerency, the Command and Commission of your blessed God & Saviour. Let not that lie despicable and trampled under the feet of vile men, which is a means (and the only ordinary) to instruct, to convert, to sanctify, to confirm, to comfort, to save your and your children's souls. Let not that office and function be made trivial, despicable, and execrable among men, which is holy, high and honourable in God's esteem, as his Embassage, venerable before the good Angels in Heaven, and terrible to the very Devils in Hell. Let not the preaching of the Word be slighted, mocked, and laughed at, by the unautoritative insolency and unsufficiency of unordained and impudent praters, who will never make powerful Preachers. Let not the solemnity of public prayers and Sacraments be made ridiculous, vain and void, by the simplicity and barrenness, the nonsense and flatness, the slovenly rudeness and confusion of those undertakers to officiate, whom no man (in Christ's name) hath duly authorised or sent according to any Primitive pattern, or Catholic custom in this and other Churches. When the Authority of Ministers is doubted, denied, divided, despised on all sides, it is impossible there should be any unity or charity among either Ministers themselves, or those to whom they thus brokenly Minister holy things; nor can there be any reverend and sacred esteem of those things, which they so administer, with so much variety, dubiousness, and inconformity. Civil respect to Ministers of the Gospel will follow, where there is a religious regard to their Ministry, as sacred and Divine, indeed as Christ's, for so it is, or it is none upon any religious account: Therefore I forbear to urge you with any importunities, in order to restore the Pristine honours and dignities, the many privileges and great plenty, which the Clergy enjoyed in England. I know those are unseasonable motions in an iron age, amidst so many sacrilegious Spirits as envy even those pittances that yet remain of oil in the cruses or meal in the barrels of poor Ministers, who are (generally) in a low, depressed, squeezed and almost exhausted condition: not only public exactions, but private sharkings of people, in many, if not most places, have reduced heretofore convenient livings to pitiful tenuities. Ministers affect indeed to wear longer hair than they were wont; but their condition is now so much shorn and shaved, since the Scots razor was first applied, that most of them are very bare and quite bald, to the great joy of Papists & the viler sort of licentious people, who want but one vote more to perfect their desired Reformation; That is, to take away all tithes and glebes, rather giving them to Moloch or Beelzebub, than to Christ, his Church and his Ministry, to whom these are paid by many men so grudgingly, sharkingly and superciliously, that few Scholars of any generous minds and parts will apply themselves now to be Ministers; and many grave men, heretofore devoted to that calling, are content to be silent, rather than to preach to ungrateful and gainsaying people; yea some Ministers think it better to starve with honour, than to be fed with scorn, preferring any calling before that, which must first work, then beg or contest for its wages. But as the poverty and tenuity of Ministers, the popular contempt of their persons and calling, the neglect and irreverence of holy ministrations, the intrusions and usurpations of petulant people upon their function; as all these could not have grown upon them, had they not been scattered and divided among themselves (for by these cracks and leaks those bitter waters have prevailed thus far to sink and depress them:) So the reducing of Ministers to some unity in their judgements, to uniformity in their Ministrations, to an identity or sameness for their Ministerial power and ordination, also to a decent subordination and government among themselves, these methods would be most effectual, beyond any thing I can think of, to remedy all those great inconveniences and mischiefs under which they now labour and groan. From Ministers mutual separations, affrontings, reproachings, oppressings, and despisings of one another, common people have learned the language and carriage of clownery and contempt: For how can people see any thing worthy their civil, much less conscientious respect and love toward any Ministers, when they see, hear, and read, how they depreciate and scorn, envy and malign, eat and abominate one another on all sides, each invalidating or disparaging the others authority to officiate, and almost annulling all they do in holy duties as Ministers? Be they never so able and fit as to their gifts, knowledge, utterance, holy lives and good report in all things; yet still they are thought by some side or other either to enjoy more than they merit, or to arrogate more than is their due, or wholly to usurp that which is no way their due. Certainly, it is not a more pious and Christian, than heroic and prudent work, to reconcile the discrepancies and feuds that are grown among Ministers of several forms and names, as to their ordination, or admission to their Ministry. And, since there are on all sides men of very good abilities, commendable lives, and useful parts in this public service, as Ministers of the Church, it is infinite pity that Christians should be by any prejudices deprived of the common benefit to be had by them; or by factious and frivolous discriminations, if their Ministerial Authority be frustrated of those many blessings which all good Christians might happily enjoy, both publicly and privately, by a firm union and uniformity among all true Ministers, both in the origination of their power, also in the manner of the derivation and dispensation of it: Which harmony as (without doubt) it would highly contribute to the honour of the reformed Religion, so it would much obstruct the advantages which Popery gets by the scandal of Ministers discriminations and divisions in this point. For what sober-minded man will not rather adhere to what seems uniform, though an error, than to what seems divided, though a truth? Men will rather turn Seekers, Quakers, and Enthusiasts, than weary themselves in dancing after every Minister's pipe, and the new tunes they set to both their Ministry and holy Ministration. For my part, I should rather choose to live in a solitude as a private Christian, or retire to any corner of the land as a Minister, than to correspond with such societies of Preachers as are either evidently Schismatical in their principles, or only formally and partially Associating in their politic practices, which do but declare their spirits to be at as great distance from their duties, both to their betters and their equals, as ever they were. I prefer a cottage in a smooth and peaceable wilderness, before such palaces as are built among briers and thorns. I am sorry and ashamed to see those Ministers who are able and worthy to use the trowel for edification, should be so eagerly employed at the swords, for mutual destruction: Since they generally agree to preach and live Christ Crucified, since they do for the main correspond in doctrinals of faith and morality, yea in holy Mysteries and Ministrations; what a misery is it they should not all endure the same imposition of hands, or the same holy and Catholic ordination? yea what pity is it, they should not all dare to say publicly and Ministerially the same Creed, the Lords prayer and the ten Commandments; to all which I suppose they all are ready privately to say Amen? How sad a prospect is it, to see those men who profess such zeal for Church Government and good Discipline, to be so little governed or correspondent in any wise communion and discreet subordination among themselves? And all this while every plausible preacher is ambitious rather to ordain and govern others after his own fancy, than to be ordained and governed as a Minister after the Apostolical pattern, and that one ancient form which was universally owned and uniformly used in Christ's Church, both for the ordination and subordination of Ministers. CHAP. IX. IN order therefore to invite all able, A scrutiny of what is good or bad in all parties. Orthodox and honest Ministers to some Christian correspondency and fraternal accord, it will not be amiss for me to present both to your equanimous wisdom, (O worthy Gentlemen) and to your piety, what I humbly conceive the best Medium to be used in so great and good a work, which must be tenderly and impartially carried on by a serious discovery and discerning, First, what is really good, useful, and commendable in any party, that this may be allowed and preserved, agreed to and embraced by all; Secondly, what either is or seems defective or superfluous, evil or inconvenient, scandalous or dangerous on any side, that this may be either pared off and removed, since it may be well spared, or else in reason and Religion, in piety and charity, so qualified and moderated, as may comply with what is truly good and useful for the public on all sides. First then to begin with Episcopacy, not as it enjoys or loseth the benefits of secular favour in estate, honour, or jurisdiction, (which are not essential to it, any more than clothes are to the man) but as it appears in its Apostolic primacy of Order, in its Catholic centre of Unity, in its chief power for Ordination and Ecclesiastical jurisdiction; which it ever enjoyed among good Christians, though it were never so poor and abased by civil powers, as it was in Primitive times of persecution for 300. years. The real good of true Episcopacy (which undoubtedly hath the clearest, 1. The best and worst of Episcopacy. best and most ancient title to ordination & Church-Government, according to the custom and prescription of all Ages for 1500. years) is Decency, Order, Unity, Authority, Stability, Paternal Presidency, Grave Government, with subordination of younger to the elder, and inferiors to superiors, agreeable to the rules of right reason, and the measures of the best polities, military, civil and religious. Here are the aptest remedies and conservatives against Schisms, the fittest mediums for Catholic Councils, for correspondencies, conventions and Communion of Churches, not in popular rabble's and heady multitudes, but in their chief Precedents and representatives. In this is best kept up, as an Uniformity of particular Churches, so a Catholic Conformity to the Church universal, when Primitive, purest and most persecuted, which without any peradventure did follow the Apostolic prescription and pattern in all things of so universal use and reception. Upon the head of Episcopacy, as upon the hill of Hermon, hath the dew of heaven, the blessings of God, as in temporal enjoyments, so in all spiritual gifts and graces, most plentifully fallen, and from that to all the lower valleys and inferior parts of the Church. To this it is that all the most learned, moderate and wise men in all the Christian world, of what ever party or side they are in other things, whether Latin or Greek, Lutheran or Calvinian, Protestant or Papist, all agree in this, that Episcopacy is the ancientest and aptest, the wisest and noblest, the only Apostolic and Catholic, consequently the best and compleatest of Governments in the Church; containing in its right constitution and use all the pretended excellencies of all other Governments, and something more than any of them, as the crown and perfection of all. The evils, defects and dangers incident to Episcopacy, (and rising not from the function or employment, but from the persons of Bishops,) are pride, ambition, secular height and idle pomp, a supercilious despiciency, and Lordly tyrannising over other Ministers, and the flocks of Christ under their inspection; arrogating a power to do all things imperiously, arbitrarily and alone, without any due regard either to that charitable satisfaction which was anciently given to Christian people, or to that fraternal counsel and concurrence, which might and ought in reason to be had from learned and grave Presbyters, or such Consistoryes of choice Ministers, who possibly may for wisdom, piety and ability, be equal to the Bishop, however they are inferior in order and authority. As the complete good of presidential and paternal Episcopacy deserves above all other forms to be esteemed, desired and used in the Church; so it may easily and happily be enjoyed, if the personal faults and failings of Bishops be prevented and avoided, which is no hard matter where Bishops are chosen (as anciently they were) by the suffrages of the Presbyters or Ministers of the Diocese either personally present, or, to avoid noise and tumult incident to many, by their proxyes and representees chosen and sent from their several distributions. The Bishop thus chosen is easily kept within bounds of moderation, if he do nothing of public concern validly and conclusively without the presence, counsel and concurrence of his appointed Presbyters; being further responsible for any misgovernment, to such conventions of the Clergy as are meet to be his judges, and are by the Laws appointed so to be. Certainly these limits, supports and ornaments of Episcopacy, would easily restore it to and keep it in the compass of its Primitive beauty, honour, and usefulness to the Church. 2. Trial of Presbytery. The good of Presbytery (especially in conjunction with Episcopacy) is grave and impartial counsel, serious discussion and well-advised deliberation, arising from many learned and Godly men, which is as the joint and concurrent assistance of all the Clergy; whose public suffrages may carry all things Ecclesiastic as with less partiality, so with more authority, most satisfactorily to Ministers and people too, yea and with less odium or envy upon any one man as Bishop or Precedent, in cases that seem less popular, or in censures that are more heavy. Beyond all this some men cry up Presbytery in its Aristocratick influence, as the great Choke-pear of Antichrist; as the best receipt in the world to make the Pope burst in pieces, like the pitch and hair which Daniel mixed to split Bel and Dagon: This, this they say is the strongest sense against all tyranny, usurpation and ambition in Churchmen, the great conservative not of an absolute parity, but of those ancient privileges which are due to all Ministers; also of those liberties and indulgences which are the people's darling, while they see all Church-matters managed not by private and partial monopolies, but by public and general complacencies of all sober and good men, at least the major part of them. The evils of Presbytery in a parity or equality are, emulation, faction, division among Ministers; the younger sort naturally mutinying against the elder, and the graver sort thinking themselves more wise & worthy than the younger. Hence grudgs and coldnesses, cavils and contradictions, sidings and divisions; Hence adherings to several heads and patrons of factions, in different opinions or practices. Then follow popular adherencies, and such declamatory endeavours as may most draw people to several Masters: all which are sufficiently evidently the experiences of Franckfort of old, of Rotterdam in later years, also of new and old England; besides the intolerable petulancies and troubles by Masterly Presbyters in Scotland for many years in King James his minority, and King Charles his too. All these have loudly proclaimed that malapertness, rudeness, insolency, effrontery, factions, confusions, are the genuine fruits of an un-sub- Presbytery, as indeed of all Government which is made up with parity or equality, which is rather a lump or mass of flesh, like monstrous and abortive births, than any comely polity or symmetry befitting an organised body, which must have some prime part for the honour, order and regulation of the whole, which must needs be loose, diffused and confused, if it be not cemented, centred and fixed (yea ruled and awed) with some eminent part and principal power, which having virtue from the whole, giveth also life, vigour, firmation and Majesty, as to the whole body, so to the Government and polity, what ever it be, civil or Ecclesiastic; being as the Hoops or Curbs of vessels, which keep all the pipe-staves together. The want of which authoritative order, decorum and majesty in Government, is prone to give such temptations to young and hotheaded Ministers, (besides giddy and surly people, moving them to ambitious novelties, to popular and preposterous practices) that men of parts cannot easily resist them. Besides, the generality of people, either of meaner or better quality (especially in England) will never have such reverence to petty Presbyters in a leveled parity, as they will have when they see Ministers united, guided, honoured and animated by a person of that Gravity, Age, Worth and Eminency, that not only the best Ministers own him as a Father, but the best Gentlemen, yea Noblemen, will reverence him as a man of excellent Learning, Piety and Wisdom; whose censure or sentence no man of modesty or conscience can despise, when they are managed with so much reason and Religion, with such order and honour, with such gravity and integrity, as become such Bishops and such Presbyters, happily united in a comely subordination. 3. The Trial of Independency. The good that Independency pretends to hold forth to the people of God, or Christ's little flock, in its several parts and lesser parcels, is a more near union and endeared love of each other, a closer care and watching over each others souls, more frequent and familiar intercourses between Pastor and people, exercising of their own, exciting and discovering of their brethren's gifts and sisters graces, nearer Communion with each other, after the fashion of bodies, though small, yet so complete and confined to themselves, that they are neither subject nor responsible to any but their own chosen members, officers and pastor; whose Tribunitian, not imperatorian, power is immediately founded (as they say) in the very plebs or herd of people, as derived immediately from Christ, and so completely endued with all Church-Power or spiritual authority, that they are to Try, Elect, Ordain, Censure, Rebuke, Depose, Excommunicate and give over to Satan any part of their body. They further profess an Art or Receipt they have above all others to keep all ordinances of Christ most entire and pure from all humane mixtures and inventions, most set off and adorned with that Simplicity, Sincerity, Fervency, Charity and Sanctity which becomes the Gospel; all which are most eminently manifested in the precincts of their little bodies, their Independent or congregational Churches, far beyond what ever either Episcopacy or Presbytery, severally or socially, could attain unto. These are the gloryings of Independency. The evils laid to the charge of Independency are, first, novelty and inconformity to all pious antiquity. A way untaught, untried, unthought of by any Christians that owned themselves as parts of the Church Catholic, and related to its grand community or sacred society. It meanly and miserably confines the Majesty of Ecclesiastical power, and shrinks its authority; it draws the Church's polity and communion to so very narrow and small a compass, that Independency seems to act rather by distorted and convulsive motions, than by that equable harmony of parts which attends all orderly bodies in their concurrent motions. Farther, it exposeth particular Churches or congregations, together with the honour and safety of Religion and all Christian States, to petty parties and fractions, to popular, nay plebeian humours: It abaseth the honour of the Evangelicall Ministry, weakening the power, and diminishing the dignity of all Christian societies, mincing and destroying those ancient Grand and Goodly combinations, which were Apostolical and Primitive, in the respective Churches of Jerusalem, Antioch, the 7. Churches of Asia, and many others, cutting them into small chips and shreds. It placeth the sole and absolute power of the keys, for Doctrine and Discipline, there where no wise man, much less the wise Redeemer of his Church, would place them, even among the vulgar, where are seldom found any fit subjects capable to understand, much less to manage and use them. That such are the common sort and major part of all people, no wise man is ignorant: though they may be plainly and simply good, yet seldom are they so prudent, so knowing, so composed, or of such credit and reputation, as is fit for any Government either in Church or State to be committed to them, as the grand Masters and absolute Dictator's; which they seem to be in the Independent model, which either hath so many heads that it hath no feet, or so many feet that it hath no head. Furthermore, Independency seems like the flats and shallows of ponds and rivers, the proper beds for all Faction and Schism to spawn upon; the seminary that breeds, and nursery that feeds all the vermin of Religion; while every silly soul, that can but get two or three to conspire with his folly, and flatter his new fancy, may without fear or wit make a Minister, begin a party, and beget a Church, built and distinguished by some new character of opinion or practice, as its badge or signpost. Besides this, Independency is indicted by many sober men as a fellow or plagiary, a sacrilegious robber of other Churches, one that steals away Children from their Spiritual fathers, sheep from their flocks and shepherds, seducing servants from their Masters, and children from their parents, true Religion, worship and devotion, yea from all Christian Communion with them; enticing them first to straggle, then to separate, then to starve rather than return to the good pasture and fold whence they have once wandered. Lastly, as it affects an equal and yet enormous power in every part of the whole body; so it exerciseth this authority with such confusion and passion, with so much Childishness and petulancy, that there is little or nothing of due subordination, fear, reverence and submission, as to any Divine Authority, as of Conscience of or for Christ's sake; but every one takes offence when he listeth, grows froward and insolent, divides, and so destroys (as much as in him lies, and at as easy a rate as one doth crush a worm) those petty bodies and puny Churches, which are indeed but Infants, Embryo's and Pigmies, compared to that stature and strength, that procerity and puissance, which of old was preserved, and ever aught to be in the Church of Christ, when it hath its peace and growth; not shred into poor patches and pitiful parcels, but united, maintained and managed in conspicuous combinations, in ample and august proportions; in which may well be contained many thousands of Christian people, some hundreds of worthy Presbyters and Deacons, under some one or more venerable Bishops, in so holy, so happy, and so handsome a subordination or dependency as was of old, that whatever was done by the Authority of those that ruled, or the Humility of those that obeyed, all was done with Charity and Unanimity, while excellent Bishops knew how to keep the true temper of Christian Government, and both Presbyters and people concurred with them in filial obedience and fraternal love. CHAP. X. The reconciling of the real interests of Episcopacy, Presbytery and Independency. THus we see every party or side, however it justify or magnify itself, yet it falls under either the blame or jealousy of its rivals, as defective or excessive; yet not so much in the fundamentals of Religion, or main points, either for Doctrine, Worship, Duty, or Manners, as chiefly in matters of Ordination, Discipline, and Government: Nor is the difference here so broad, that any side denies them as necessary both in the parts and whole, in greater and lesser proportions, for the Church of Christ; but the real dispute is, who shall manage and execute them, in whom the chief power and Authority shall reside, whether eminently in Bishops, or solely in Presbyters, or supremely in the people, as the Alpha and Omega, the first recipient and the last result of Church-power. All sides (except fanatics, Seekers, and Enthusiasts) seem to agree, as in the Canon of the Scripture, so in the soundness of the faith, in the sanctity of divine mysteries, in the celebration of them by such as are some way ordained and authorised for that holy service; also in the participation of them by such only as are in the judgement of Charity worthy or meet to be partakers of them. All agree in the main Christian graces, virtues, and morals required in a good Christians practise; yet still each party is suspected and reproached by others: the brisk Independent boasts of the Liberty, simplicity, and purity of his way, yet is blamed for Novelty, Subtlety, Vulgarity & Anarchy; the rigid Presbyterian glories in his Aristocratick Parity and levelling community, which makes every petty Presbyter a Pope and a Prince, though he disdain to be a Priest, yet is taxed for petulancy, popularity, arrogancy and novelty, casting off that Catholic and ancient order, which God and Nature, Reason and Religion, all civil and military policy, both require and observe among all societies. Episcopacy justly challengeth the advantages, right and honour of Apostolic and Primitive Antiquity, of universality and unity, beyond any pretenders; yet is this condemned by some for undue incrochments and oppressions upon both Ministers and people's ingenuous Liberty, and Christian privilege, by a kind of secular height and arbitrary sovereignty, to which many Bishops in after-ages have been betrayed, as by their own pride and ambition, so by the indulgence of times, the munificence of Christian Princes, and sometimes by the flatteries of people. Take away the popular principle of the first, which prostrates Government to the vulgar; Take away the levelling ambition of the second, which degrades Government to a very preposterous and unproportionate parity; Take away the monopoly of the third, which seems to engross to one man more than is meet for the whole: each of them will be sufficiently purged (as I conceive) of what is most dangerous or noxious in them, for which they are most jealous of, and divided from each other. Restore to people their Liberty in some such way of choosing, or at least approving their Ministers, and assenting to Church-censures, as may become them in reason and conscience; restore to Presbyters their privileges in such public counsel and concurrence with their Bishops as may become them; lastly, restore to Bishops that Primitive precedency and Catholic presidency, which they ever had among and above Presbyters, both for that chief Authority or Eminency which they ever had in ordaining of Presbyters and Deacons, also in exercising such Ecclesiastical Discipline and Censures, that nothing be done without them: I see no cause why any sober Ministers and wise men should be unsatisfied, nor why they should longer stand at such distances and defiances; as if the Liberties of Christian people, the Privileges of Christian Presbyters, and the Dignity of Christian Bishops were wholly inconsistent; whereas they are easily reconciled, and, as a threefold cord, may be so handsomely twisted together, that none should have cause to complain or be jealous, all should have cause to joy in and enjoy each other: Bishops should deserve their eminency with the assistance, counsel and respect of their Presbyters; Bishops and Presbyters might enjoy the love, reverence and submission of Christian people; both people and Presbyters might be blessed with the orderly direction and fatherly protection of the Bishops; all should have the blessings of that sweet subordination, harmony and unity which best becomes the Church of Jesus Christ, both in the Governors and Governed, in Ministers and People; wherein we see the most antiepiscopal Presbyters and refractory people cannot but be so sensible, by their own sufferings, of the want of some principle of order, some band of unity, and some ground of due Authority among them, that they are forced to make use of some Moderator, Chaire-man or Prolocutor, as a kind of temporary Pilot, and arbitrary Bishop; there being no regular moving of popular bodies in Church or State without such an head or Precedent (as the rudder of a ship,) whose order as it is useful, so than most when it is fixed and confirmed with a valid power and venerable authority, which are the main wheels of all Government. As for the Sacramental scrutinies and other holy severities to be used in any part of Christian Discipline, with charity and discretion; Of Sacramental scrutinies to be used. however the Presbyterian and Independent preachers have very much sought in this point to captate popular applause, and exalt themselves above measure, as if they exacted far greater rigours of preparatory sufficiency and sanctity, than the Episcopal Clergy ever did or do either require or practise; Yet is this but either a vapour, or a fallacy, or a calumny, in respect of the constant judgement and general practice of the best of those that were and are of the Episcopal judgement, and hold Communion with the Church of England. For these do (according to the pious and prudent appointment of the Church of England,) not only profess, but strictly enjoin, and seriously exact of others, as they practise themselves; First, competency of sound knowledge in the fundamentals of Religion, as to faith and obedience to God and man; which may be saving, though it be but plain, and no less sanctifying and sincere, though it have less of that subtlety, curiosity and sublimity, which some preachers pretend to, and exact of their Seraphic Disciples, who must seem to fly before they can well go: Secondly, the Episcopal Clergy require pure hearts, good consciences, faith unfeigned, charity without dissimulation, an holy and orderly profession, and in sum, an unblamable life becoming the Gospel. In cases of gross ignorance and real scandal, they abhor and avoid, as much as any, to admit men (profana facilitate) with a profane easiness, Cypr ep. 10. & 26. Prosanâ sacilitate Sanctum Christi corpus prosanare. as St. Cyprian speaks, to the profaning of the Lords body and Blood. They do not knowingly and willingly cast pearls before swine, or holy things to dogs, as the same Father speaks. No, the learned and Godly Episcopal Ministers are and ever have been as zealously intent as any, to preach the Gospel plainly, powerfully, to all; to Catechise and instruct diligently the younger sort; to examine carefully the first candidates and expectants, before they are entered into the list or Catalogue of Communicants, or admitted to the Lords Supper, being self-examiners as to their faith, repentance, charity, sincerity; they exhort, admonish, comfort, reprove, yea suspend and refuse some, according to that power which their place and duty requires of them. Not that they love or affect to be either arbitrary, sole or supreme in their censures and suspensions or excommunications, well knowing both their own passionate frailties, and other men's touchy impatiencies; and therefore they desire and are glad to be guided and governed by others, as under authority, both to be asserted by, and responsible in all things to them as their lawful superiors, to whom appeals properly may and aught in reason to be made either by themselves, or any of the people, in cases of Ecclesiastic injuries by excesses or defects. As for special grace and effectual inward conversion, which some men now so much urge as the only mark of their Members and Disciples, the Episcopal Ministers do as earnestly pray for it, and zealously labour to effect it (as workers together with God) in people's hearts, as any the most specious Presbyterians or Independents. They are heartily glad to find any signs or shows of grace, much more any real fruits and effects of God's Spirit in Christians lives and deeds, as the most pregnant tokens of true grace, and the best grounds of the judgement of Charity: but they do not pretend to any spirit or gift of infallibly discerning grace in other men's hearts; nor do they affect either to make or to glory in impossible scrutinies into men's consciences; nor do they Pharisaically and pragmatically exercise Magisteriall censures, either alone or with others, in any consistory, conventicle or congregation of Elders, or Priests or People, as to those inscrutable points of true grace, or of the Spirit of God in men's hearts, which is the secret of the Lord, conceiving that the visible polity and outward communion of the Church of Christ do not depend upon any such characters or discriminations of grace, (which are inward and invisible, known to none but Gods and a man's own spirit) but upon such a confession with the mouth, 1 Cor. 2.10. 1 Joh. 4.2, 13. Rom. 10. 9, 10. and profession in the outward conversation, as are both discernible by man's judgement of charity, and approvable both in reason and Religion, as sufficient grounds for Church-Communion, according to the example of Christ toward Judas, and of the Apostles toward Simon Magus, both which were admitted to visible Church-fellowship, to the Lords Supper and to Baptism, not for the true grace they had, but for the outward confession and profession they made to believe in Jesus Christ and to embrace the Gospel. Whereas the inward grace is as easily pretended by specious Hypocrites, as it is believed by credulous Christians, Acts 8.13. when they list to comply with and flatter one another in the way of soft and formal expressions, or of false and affected Language; which may easily have God and Christ, grace and Spirit on men's tongues, when these are far from their hearts. Da populo phaleras, lay aside the late fine words and flourishes used by some Presbyterians and Independents, who would seem more precise and devout than all other preachers; come to solid truths, to holy lives, to good works, to selfdenying and mortifications of potent lusts, as the best discoveries of gracious hearts; God forbid any of them should in these grand and costly realities, (whatever cheap formalities or phrases others affect) go beyond the practice and experience of worthy Episcopal Divines, and other Christians of their adherency and communion, who hardly believe that these very professors of such new modes of Religion, these exactors of new rigid experiments, as to inward grace, as if it were to be tried by man's day or Tribunal, do (in earnest) find themselves much improved in any Spiritual gifts, graces or comforts, since they peremptorily forsook the Communion of the Church of England. In opposition to which they have had either no Sacraments for these twice 7. years, or only after such a new way of partial discriminations, as looks very like uncharitable schism, censorious and imperious faction. Divines of the Episcopal persuasion do indeed modesty and humbly content themselves with the Scripture discoveries and Primitive characters of Saintship, with what then first entitled Christians to a Christain visible communion or Church-fellowship as Saints in profession. They count it no shame to be sometimes charitably deceived as to true grace in others, but a great sin and shame to be uncharitably censorious, flatteringly confident of some, and needlessly severe to others. They see that the pretenders to be so great critics in this new way of trying either Ministers or Church-Members, are (many times) grossly and childishly abused by some men's crafty insinuations and pretensions; otherwhile they are unchristianly rigid, and incredulously severe against other men's sober professions and unblamable lives. They well know that man's eye can look no further than the outward appearance, the polished case of men's confessions & conversations, 1 Sam. 6.7. God only looks into the Cabinet of men's hearts and consciences. They judge it a great pride and popular arrogancy in such pitiful men, (who were and are but very obscure Masters in Israel,) to set up this new court or inquisition of (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) Heart-discoverie, which is a very High-Commission indeed, yea a very high presumption, when poor men have no such Power, Authority or Commission given them from God, no precept or pattern in Scripture; where we know that the Master of the harvest (the blessed God) tolerates, as to man's Discipline, those to grow in the same field of his visible Church in this world, who differ as much in point of true grace, as wheat and tares do in their nature and worth. So that as the curiosity and confidence of Episcopal Divines is far less than that of those other preachers, so their candour, modesty and charity is much more becoming wise, grave and sober Ministers; whose care must be humbly to do that work which God hath required of them, and to leave his own operations, discoveries and judgements to his allseeing eye and Almighty power, as St. Fancies singulorum videmus, corda sc●utari non possumus; d● his judicat occuliotum scrutator, c● to venturus, & de arcanis cordis jud catulus. Cyp. ep 53. Cyprian expresseth the sense and practise of Christian Bishops and Presbyters in his time, as to Church-scrutiny and examination. The strictness of worthy Episcopal Divines is such in things that are rational, grave, wise, and truly religious, that no man exceeds their desires, designs, endeavours and principles, in soundness and diligence of preaching, in the warmth and discretion of praying, in the sanctity and solemnity of celebrating Christian mysteries, in the serious dispensation of Ministerial power, and the useful execution of Church-censures or Discipline, even to fasting, prayers, tears, penitential mortifications in themselves, and due restitutions to others in cases of injury, so for reconciliation and some special works of bounty and charity, which may testify a self-revenge, and most satisfaction to others. They are ambitious to excel in nothing more than in well-doing, and patient suffering, in all the ways and offices of Piety, Humility, Obedience, Peace and Charity; yea such is their moderation, concession, and recession from their wont practice and indulged privileges or power by man's law, that they not only approve, but desire the joint counsel and concurrence of grave and worthy Presbyters in all things of Ecclesiastic Ministry and public concernment; yea they allow Christian people their sober Liberty, as of presence and conscience, so of objection and approbation, in all proceedings where they are interessed; that they may either fairly testify their full satisfaction, or else produce the grounds of their dissatisfaction, in all things that concern their advantages in Religion. All which the glorious Primate of Armagh testifies in his late printed Treatise of reconciling Episcopal and Synodical power in the Church-Government. If the earnest pleaders for Presbytery, and the sticklers for Independency, which are the professed extirpators of Episcopacy, had the same equanimity and calmness in them as the moderate Episcopal men have, I do not see what could hinder them from giving the right hand of fellowship to each other: certainly it cannot be the real concernments of Christ's glory, and the good of Christian souls, but particular factions, oblique biasses, and some partial popular respects, which continue such misunderstandings, distances and animosities between the Episcopal Divines, the Presbyterian Preachers, and the Independent Teachers; who thus severed from each other lose all the great advantages and blessings which they and the whole Church might enjoy, if they could wisely, humbly and meekly close in one subordination and harmonious order, as did all Christian Bishops, Presbyters, Deacons and People in Primitive times; of which St. Ignatius, Irenaeus, Tertullian, St. Cyprian, St. Ambrose, St. Austin, St. Jerom, with many other writers, give us a thousand clear instances and happy experiences. The inordinate heats of the chief patrons and ringleaders, as to any of these new ways and parties, would soon allay and cool, if their petty policies, secular interests, self-seekings and popular complacencies were wholly laid aside; if these wedges were once pulled out of men's hearts, their hands would soon close together: Momentary advantages would soon give way and vanish, if all Ministers were possessed with that great and good Spirit, which directs all believers to things that are eternal, chiefly looking at God's glory, Christ's honour, the Church's peace, and the salvation of all men's souls. Petty spirits, opinions and projects are the pests of the Church and of Christian Religion; these betray it to the enemies of it, such as seek to abase it, to divide it, and to destroy it. CHAP. XI. True Episcopacy stated and represented to its Antagonists. And here, because I suspect and see that the design of the new Associating parties seems chiefly to unite Presbyterian and Independent principles and interests together, that Presbyters and people (as Teaching and Ruling Elders) might fully possess themselves of all Church-Power, (though to their own confusion and this Church's desolation) excluding all Ministers of Episcopal principles; pleas and persuasions, further than they list humbly to submit to truckle under and comply with those Ministers who resolve to ordain, to censure and suspend, to excommunicate and anathematise, to dictate and regulate all things in Religion, without owning any authority in, or making any ingenuous offer or address to, the venerable Bishops yet surviving in Engl. or to those Divines who are still conform to the Church of England; but all the claims and interests of Episcopacy must be either smothered, or slubbered over, or shuffled into the meteor of a moderator, and the phantasm of a Prolocutor; as if there never had been, nor yet were, any thing considerable either in the persons of these Bishops and Ministers, or in those many strong pleas and clear allegations of Scripture-pattern, and divine prescription of Apostolic practice and imjunction, of Catholic imitation and persuasion, in all the consent of ancient Councils, Fathers and Historians, yea in the judgement of all the best Christians, Presbyters, and people of old, nay nor in the confessions, votes and desires of the most learned & pious Reformers both at home and abroad, that either enjoy Episcopacy, or feel their want of it, and heartily wish for it; but all must be slighted as childish or popish, as obsolete or ridiculous, which is brought and believed by so many excellent persons, in behalf of Episcopal eminency and authority: Yea, as if all the losses, sorrows and sufferings of so many pious, learned, reverend and most excellent Bishops in England, (together with the miseries of many orderly and worthy Clergy men that were subject to them and the laws) were so just, that they were never to be pitied, nor any way relieved; as if all the insolences of many Presbyters, and the petulancies of many people, were highly to be commended, as great helps and furtherances to a new Reformation of Religion; as if there were nothing of uncharitableness, oppression, revenge, sacrilege and exorbitancy, so much as to be thought on or repent by any one of them, no less than complained of by their Episcopal brethren, (who are become their enemies because they have told them the truth, and charge them with inconstancy, immoderation, popularity, schism, faction, sedition and the like;) so stiff and unrelenting are some antiepiscopal men to this day, who after all these representations of truth wipe their mouths, and harden their hearts, as if there were no error, evil or transport in their hands or hearts, always aggravating by a vile and vulgar oratory the rigours and tyrannies of some Bishops, as if all were to be blamed, none to be commended; and highly magnifying the zeal themselves have for a through Reformation, that is, that they might freely and fully gratify their own and people's ambitions, by setting Episcopacy and all Bishops quite beside the saddle, on purpose to make way for themselves, who are for the most part as fit to govern Churches alone as apes are to build houses. I crave leave in order to promote a fair and firm accommodation, (with all ingenuous freedom and candour) to make some more particular application of my desire and designs, to those Ministers of the Presbyterian and Independent ways, who have opposed their faces, sharpened their tongues or pens, and hardened their hearts most against all Episcopacy, even in the most innocent, useful, regular and moderate constitution of it. I mean that Primitive order and paternal residency which was universally acknowledged to be eminently in one Precedent, as Bishop or chief Pastor over many Presbyters in his Diocese, after the pattern of the 12. Apostles, who were by Christ's appointment above the 70. and so their declared successors, as Timothy, Titus, Archippus, & those others who are called the Angels of the 7. Asian Churches, with many others to whom they derived, not only their example and practical constitution, but their Authority and Power Ecclesiastical as is evident by the Canons and Rules set forth, not only in ancient Councils, but in the Epistles to Timothy and Titus, for the settling and managing of Church-order, Discipline and Government, in such a way as clearly gives not to any consistory, or company of Presbyters and people, but to one man a Paramount Authority, as Bishop or Superior, both in Ordination and Jurisdiction above others as his inferiors, and so subordinate to his spiritual power so far as to reprove, examine, censure, reject, etc. All which being to me immovable and immutable foundations for the establishing of Episcopal presidency (as the only succession of that ordinary Apostolic power and authority which is necessary to be always in the Church of Christ) they do make me daily by these considerations more restive and less compliant to any new ways or Associating than perhaps otherwise I should be, both by the sociableness of my temper, and my earnest desire for another way of happy union among Ministers of worth and moderation. This uncorrespondency, to which I am upon those grounds compelled, is with the greater regret to me, because I know the learning, the industry, the zeal, the piety, the ingenuity, the potency of some of those (my dissenting brethren) in their preaching, writing, praying and living. I am charitably persuaded of many of their sincerity, in aiming at God's Glory, and at the purity of holy Ministrations. I do not see wherein many of them differ from the best Episcopal Divines, ancient or modern, as to any main matter of Religion in doctrine or duty. Nor can I find any reason yet alleged by any of them, sufficient to justify that pertinacious distance and defiance which (of later years only) they have taken up against Episcopacy, merely upon the account of jealousy and impatiency to choose and admit a learned, grave and worthy Bishop, as a fixed Father or constant Governor and Grave Moderator, authoritatively to preside among them in their several grand distributions or Dioceses, after that order and eminency which were most comely for them, and most unquestionable, as to the fixing and completing of Church-order and Government, to all sober Christians satisfaction. I will not tax or suspect the soberest of my Presbyterian or Independent brethren of such pride and arrogancy, as can endure no superior or chief among them; I rather conceive it was a Sympathethick impulse at first from those Scotish motions and pretensions, which swerved them not only from the former good constitution of the Church of England, to which they heretofore very orderly and happily submitted, but also from their conformity to the Catholic Church in that point, to which I believe their judgement heretofore, and inclination now, may incline and lead them, as apparently best for their public and private interests. Some are prone to suspect, that the best of them did not heretofore submit so humbly and heartily to their Lawful Superiors and Governors in the Church, as in duty and conscience, by the laws of God and man they ought to have done others challenge them for want as of piety and honesty, so of Christian charity, yea and of common humanity or compassion; for their forwardness and fierceness to undo all Bishops and all dignified Clergymen▪ at lest for their ready consent to their utter ruin, holding the garments of those that stoned them to death; never so much as praying heartily for them while they were in power, nor yet pitying them in their miscarriages or calamities, no nor so far interceding for or listening to any just moderation, which was oft proposed and offered, as might have been not more happy for the Bishops, than for themselves as Presbyters, yea for this whole Church and all Christian people in England. I am willing to hope that many Ministers mutations began with good affections, and were carried on at first with principles of sincerity and zeal, though not with that knowledge, meekness and wisdom which was requisite. But to many of them that are now the most haughty, stiff and obstinate against all accommodating with Episcopacy, I cannot but still appeal, whether they do not in their consiences find that either at first or afterward, some secular advantages and private hopes did not a little warp and sway their inclinations to novelties; whether they felt not the secret, but dissembled strokes of discontent, anger, envy, revenge, popularity, ambition, feigned jealousies, inordinate affectations of liberty, exciting and animating them to the utter extirpation of Episcopacy; whether they did not by a self-conceit generally imagine themselves, not only jointly but severally, as fit and able to govern the Church in the whole or in parcels, as any, yea all the Bishops in England; whether any of them do believe the case of Episcopacy to have ever been fully heard, freely discussed, and impartially stated, by the peaceable wisdom and piety of this nation; whether many of these Ministers, (as Politicians and Statesmen) did not rather comply with the stream and vogue of times running fiercely against Episcopacy, than with their own clear convictions in reason, law, scripture, antiquity, conscience; whether they kept that equanimity and moderation in all things of this nature, Phil. 4.5. which became wise and good men of an Evangelicall Spirit and temper, or were not biased, yea transported by something that was popular and sinister; whether they do not think that the violence and precipitancy of some of their examples, was beyond all solid arguments to drive many well-meaning Ministers and People to such heady and hot petitionings against Episcopacy, and to such pitiless Antipathies against all the most excellent Bishops, which were then, and still are England. Last of all, I appeal to all sober Ministers, whether they do not think that Episcopacy, as now it is stripped and devested of all secular greatness, and reduced to Primitive poverty, might be as safely restored, as any of their crude and new Associations in their several stations and formations, with their mutable moderators and temporary Precedents, either in greater or lesser Circles, which are but the thin parings, small shreds, and weaker shivers of Episcopacy: whether they do not in their consciences think that some righteous and just compensation ought to be done to good Bishops, and to the case of true Episcopacy, which have suffered so hard measure a long time now in England; that so we might not in this nation (beyond any place in the Christian world) cast eternal and indelible reproaches▪ not only upon this Church, since its first plantation, but upon the Catholic Church of Christ in all ages and places, as if wilfully (for ignorantly they could not) they had from the beginning swerved from the Apostles prescript and example, in the Order and Government, Discipline and Authority which was to be in the Church of Christ. I will not suspect any honest-hearted or worthy Minister of having been so base and sacrilegious in his Spirit, as therefore to cry down Episcopacy root and branch, new and old, good and bad, out of secret hopes of filthy lucre and secular glory, expecting some benefit by plundering the personal estates of Bishops, or by sequestering the revenues of their Churches, or gauging to buy at last some good pennyworths of them. These temptations were so black and base, so sordid and Plutonian, that they may not be suspected of any Ministers or other men, but those whose notorious actions have put them beyond all suspicion. Presuming therefore in charity, that those precipitant alterations in Church-Government, which have produced so sad consequences and calamities in this Church, were from principles of honesty and purposes of integrity in the best Ministers on all sides at first; and finding now that the itch of former novelties is passed, and the pleasure of Ministers scratching one another is now very little, because of the rawness and soreness of all their common conditions, besides the distractions and confusions of ordinary people; and foreseeing that this painful posture is not only very grievous to all honest Protestants, but dangerous to this Church and Nation, if they be not speedily healed; Give me further leave to ask of the greatest Zelots and sticklers against all Episcopacy, and the admirers of either Presbytery or Independency, whether (after they reflect upon the rough means used, and the sad events which have followed the design of extirpating Episcopacy, and introducing any other ways) they do still believe, was pretended, that either the God of order, or the Saviour of his Church, who is the Bishop of our souls, and the exemplary Institutor of Episcopal eminency in his chief Apostles, for Power and Authority over all parts of his Church, (who accordingly transmitted their ordinary power and superintendency to others, as Bishops, or successive or minor Apostles in all Churches,) whether (I say) they do in earnest believe that God, or Christ, or the Apostles, ever were or are such enemies to all Episcopal order and presidential eminency as hath been vulgarly clamored and passionately pretended; so that now after 1600. years' prescription and succession of Episcopacy in all Churches, God is not to be pleased unless Episcopacy be extirpated, and Presbytery or Independency, as ways of parity and popularity, be brought in. Can they sufficiently wonder at the patience of God and our Saviour Christ, that for 1500. years bare with Episcopacy, yea continued it in the peaceable possession of Church-Government, as to the Primacy and priority of it, both in Order and Authority, without any notable check from any Martyr or holy man. 'tis strange that Aaron's Rod should never bud before, nor Presbytery challenge its Divine right in all that time, nor Christ ever enjoy the freedom of his Kingdom and Sceptre, till these last and worst times. Do they in earnest think that no Scripture, no word of God, old or new, no precepts and patterns of the Apostles, no Primitive practice, no true testimonies of Fathers, Councils and credible historians do any way favour a right Episcopacy, further than they were misunderstood, warped and wrested by all antiquity from the mind of God, the will of Christ, and the way of the Apostles, only to gratify the ambition of some few Bishops and Clergymen, who made way for Popes and Antichrists? 'tis strange all should conspire thus to eject Christ from his Kingdom and Government, or to abuse the whole Christian world, from holy Polycarp, Polycrates and Ignatius his days, all Primitive Bishops, yea from St. John's days, and yet none detect or decry the fraud, none persevere in the first way, if it were, as is now pretended, Independent or Presbyterian in the many shepherds or many sheep, without any prime pastors and Governors among them as Bishops. Yea further I demand, whether their divisions, at least into such a Dichotomy as they now are in, be not a just jealousy to sober men, that both of these novelties may be in the wrong, since both of them cannot be in the right; whether regular Episcopacy may not yet be as the virtue or medium between these vicious extremes which are made up either of parity & popularity, or of Tyrannic and Papal Episcopacy; whether they now find that either of these new ways have any thihg so much to plead out of Scripture for themselves, as Episcopacy hath, or the thousandth part so much out of any good Antiquity; whether they be not pure novelties of later invention and unprosperous use, hardly yet form, and never well settled in this or any other famous or Reformed Church that enjoyed its just freedom, without the oppression of either sacrilegious Princes, or heady and mutinous people. Can any learned and sober Minister, either Presbyterian or Independent, now flatter himself, that there is no light or shadow, no show of Reason or Religion, of Scripture or Antiquity for Episcopacy? Can they any longer wonder (without ignorance or impudence) that learned and moderate Episcopal Divines are so firm to their first principles and persuasions, which are not easily answered, or with any reason overthrown by any ancient example? at least Episcopal men are very excusable in adhering to their ancient and Primitive way, till they find these novel opposites to Episcopacy, and rivals to each other, so well reconciled by a firm Associating together as may wholly supply the Office, Power and place of Episcopacy; which yet they have not done as to the Order, Polity, Peace and Unity of the Church, or to the satisfaction of the most learned and godly men at home and abroad. Where, I beseech you (O my good and gracious brethren of Presbyterian and Independent principles,) where do you think were the Eyes, the Learning, the Wits, the Hearts, the Honesty, the Conscience of all holy men in all Churches before your time? Can you prefer the factious fancies of one Aerius, or Acolythus, or Ischyras of old, before all the famous Bishops, Presbyters and Councils? Can you honestly plead St. Jerom for your Presbytery, till you reconcile him with himself, who is plain and punctual for Episcopal eminency, and only pleads (at most) for the joint Counsel and assistance of Presbyters (in which rank himself was?) which I and all sober men do earnestly desire, as best and safest for the Church, yea and for Bishops too. Shall one David Blondel, or Walo Messalinus (that is, Salmasius) men indeed of excellent Learning, yet obliged (as Pet. Moulin confesseth of himself in his Epistolary dispute with the most Learned Bishop Andrew's) to plead what might be for the enforced stations, and necessitated conditions of those Presbyterian Churches with which they were then in actual fellowship and Church-Communion, shall (I say) these two men, which are the greatest props for Presbytery (who yet are allowers of Episcopacy, though not as absolutely necessary, yet as best for the Polity and Government of the Church, where they may be had) be put into the balance against all the ancient and modern assertors of Episcopacy? or shall the votes of the late Assembly be a just counterpoise against all the chief Reformed Divines at home and abroad, as Calvin, Peter Martyr, Bucer, Zanchy, Chemnitius, Gerard and many others, who are all well known to be for Episcopacy and Bishops, if they will be Fathers and Fautors of the true Christian and Reformed Religion, as Bishops in Engl. were? Did not Deodate from Geneva & * Postquam comperisset Presbyterialem statum citra Episcopalem in iis ecclesiis co●sistere non posse, etc. Vide Salm●siii vitam, p. 50. Consulebat Episcopos non omnino tollendos, etc. Salmasius from Leiden, write hortatory (though concealed) letters to the chief sticklers (of late) for Presbytery in England, advising them to acquiesce in and bless God for such a regulated Episcopacy as had obtained and might best be retained in England? Have not others (abroad) much deplored their want of such Episcopacy and such Bishops as England happily enjoyed since the reformation and ever before? Can the late Scotized Assembly modestly pretend to better light, clearer spectacles, more discerning eyes or more honest hearts for Religion and due Reformation, for Christ's honour and this Church's happiness, than all the ancient Councils or the modern Convocations, and national Synods of Engl.? Or can it now at last seem either an unreasonable expectation in Episcopal Ministers, or an unconscientious condescension in those of the Presbyterian and Independent parties, to turn their Extemporary Precedents or Momentary Moderators into fixed and deserving Bishops? can it be an hard matter for them to conform to uniform Antiquity, who have so long gratified various novelty? What great matter were it for them so far to satisfy the consciences of Episcopal men, yea and the interests of all sober Ministers, as not to suffer any further Innovation, or longer abscission, or total interruption, or final abruption to befall the Catholic Order and Authority of Episcopacy in this Church? the restoring of which would no way injure their own true interests, as Presbyters or patrons for the people, who might both have and enjoy all those ingenuous Liberties and Privileges which they justly claim, short of an absolute, sole and sovereign power in Church-Government, which is never to be trusted either in common peoples or common Presbyters hands. I ask these Acephalists, who will endure no head but that on their own shoulders, whether the City of London is worse governed, because it hath a Lord Mayor among and above the Aldermen and Common Council; whether the Colleges in the Universities, or the Companies and Fraternities in Cities, are less happily ordered, because they have Precedents or Masters and Wardens in them and over them; whether they think it were better for an Army to have no Colonels or Commanders in chief, but all military Counsels and transactions should be managed in war and peace by a mere Democratick or popular way, as every soldier fancied his own valour and ability. I doubt not but in all these parts and proportions of good Government, sober men stand convinced that they are then best, when Counsel and Order make up the Majesty and completeness of Authority, by subordination of all and the suffrages of many joined to the eminency of one worthy person in their several precincts, stations and jurisdictions. Nor can I think that chief Governors can be heretical, irrational, irreligious or Antichristian only in the point of Church-Goverment, as if this polity and fraternity beyond any other were exclusive or incapable of that order and eminency which is the Crown and completion of Government, which is used in all other Societies, and ever was so in the Churches of Christ. In order therefore to draw the designed platform of Ecclesiastical Communion from the novelty, partiality and popular policies of Associations, to its just proportions and due dimensions, my last quaere or proposal to my brethren the Ministers is, whether all things considered in cool thoughts and conscientious tempers, it were not worthy of all Learned, Godly and sober Ministers, first to unite themselves in their judgements, counsels and desires, with all singleness of hearts and mutual brotherly kindness; and then humbly to crave leave of the civil powers to permit them, to cast themselves into such prudent and orderly combinations for Church-Government as might best suit, as with the peace and prosperity of this Church, so with the Primitive and Catholic way of Christ's Church; thereby satisfying all honest desires and pious interests of all considerable parties: That neither Bishops should be wholly ejected as superfluous, nor yet Presbyters despised as mere cyphers, nor Christian people any way oppressed as slaves or beasts; who having each of them their several honest interests and just uses, will better attain their desires in an happy conjuncture than in any separations, which first weaken them apart, then destroy them all. Nor may this model of Church-union and Government be thought a mere Idea or Utopian fancy; experience of all times, and the best times for Religion as Christian and reformed, that ever England or any Nation enjoyed, assures us, that it is not only feisable, but every way most commendable, as most agreeable to every honest interest, and indeed every way completest, for the glory of God, the honour of Christ, the good of this Church, and the Communion with all other either Christian or Reformed. For by this means the scandal and shame of late Schisms would be removed, the ancient Ecclesiacall succession continued; the grand power of Ordination will be neither various nor defective, neither innovated not altered; the Ministerial Office and Authority will be most authentic and undoubted; the minds of all Learned and sober men will be satisfied, their heads, hearts, tongues and hands united, Christian charity and brotherly Communion best restored; the reverence and Majesty of Religion, also the honour and dignity of the Ministry as Christian and Reformed, would be mightily recovered; the Peace and Unity of this famous and well-reformed Church would be established, and the tranquillity of the Nation highly settled and confirmed upon the best foundation of peace that can be among mankind. In all which things we have and do on all sides so far extremely suffer, as we differ by such unreasonable distances and uncharitable defiances, first among Ministers, which are presently followed with all disorder, lukewarmness, irreligion, profaneness▪ arrogancy, Atheism, Affectation and Faction among the people in England, chiefly, as I conceive, upon this account, The needless variating, shifting and changing of that Primitive platform, that Apostolic and Catholic order and succession of Ecclesiastical Authority and Ministerial power in this Church, which hath ever been owned with religious reverence and conscience in Engl. ever since it was Christian, preserved as sacred by the most pious Princes, honoured as Divine by the most Religious and reformed Parliaments, prospered by the special benignity and grace of God, peaceably enjoyed by all devout, judicious and humble Christians, to the unspeakable comfort of their souls living and dying, when they knew who were their Bishops, Pastors and spiritual Fathers, owning them with all due respect and love as in Christ's stead, submitting to them for conscience sake, as to the Lord, and receiving from them good instructions, just reproofs, holy comforts, and heavenly Mysteries, not as from man, but God; after the rule of the Scriptures, and the example of the best Christians in all ages, who looked upon Episcopacy or the Government of the Church as fixed, completed and exercised chiefly by Bishops assisted with worthy Presbyters, not only as a book of a larger volume, greater print and fairer binding than Presbytery or Independency (that is, the sole power of Presbyters or people by themselves) but they looked upon the Episcopal eminency as having more in it of Apostolic power and Ecclesiastical Authority, both in point of ordination and jurisdiction, than is either in Presbyters or people by themselves: Bishops and Presbyters being as the eyes and hands, which are not more members of the body than the legs and feet, yet they are the more noble parts, and have more of public use and virtue as to inspection, direction and operation, for the common good of all parts in the body. No wonder then if the honour of all Religion be much abated, if the renown of this Reformed Church be thus abased; no wonder that Presbytery itself is so baffled, and Independency despised; no wonder that all the Office, Power and Authority of Ministers, together with their persons, be reduced to such a low ebb, and almost quite exhausted, when Bishops, the grand Cisterns and chief Conduits of all Ecclesiastical Orders and Ministerial Authority (as derived from Christ and his Apostles) are not only bruised and cracked, but utterly broken, cut off and cast away; whom (yet) no Presbyter or Independent of any learning or forehead can deny actually to have been in all ages used and esteemed as the constant successors and immediate substitutes of the Apostles, first invested with that power by the Apostles themselves, after their decease chosen by the Presbyters, and after consecrated by other Bishops, to be as the prime receptacles, conservators and conveyors of all Ecclesiastical Power and Ministerial Authority: not only as Teachers of Divine truths, preachers of the Gospel, and dispensers of holy Mysteries in common with Presbyters; but as chief Fathers, Pastors and Rulers of those larger flocks which constituted those famous ancient Churches, which were not limited to the bounds of one family, or one congregation, or one little parish (in which one Preacher or Presbyter may in ordinary duties suffice,) but they extended to such ample combinations, as contained large Cities and their Territories, in which were many thousands of Christians, many congregations, and many Presbyters, who all made but one Church or polity Ecclesiastical under one chief Pastor or Bishop, residing with the Presbyters at first in the chief City: afterward these were fixed to particular parishes or villages by the care of the Bishops. Without whose authority and consent nothing of consequence was done by any in the public managing of Religion, without the just brand and censure of Schismatical arrogancy: it being ever judged, that Bishops had derived to them an higher degree of Apostolic power and Church- jurisdiction, than ever was or could be in any one or many Presbyters or people without them, who could not regularly nor never did (unblamably) ordain, of themselves or by their own sole Authority, any Ministers, or exercise the censures of the Church in a plenary and absolute jurisdiction, without deriving their power from their respective Bishops; without whom and against whom few ever acted in any age of the Church; and never any good Christian refused subjection to and communion with their lawful and orthodox Bishops; no nor did ever any Heretics or Schismatics proceed to such extravagancy as to reject and disclaim all Episcopal order, till of later years: whose example hath little in it to make it compared with, much less preferred before, Catholic customs and Primitive patterns of all ancient Churches, what ever glosses the wit of men, or their craft, or their successes, or their Godly and necessary pretences, may put upon their variations and schisms. CHAP. XII. Objections against Episcopacy discussed. IT is not now my design either to spin out, or to wind and sum up that long and tedious thread of dispute▪ which hath been so much snarled and entangled of late years in England by popular pens, or cleared and unfolded by more able, learned, and impartial Writers. Who is not weary now and ashamed of those threadbare allegations drawn from the sameness or promiscuous use of Names; 1. Object. From the sameness of their Names, Bishop and Presbyter signifying but one office and power. which we know vary with time, and must yield to use and custom? as if Apostle, Evangelist, Bishop, Presbyter, Pastor, Preacher, Teacher and Ruler, (they may add Deacon, and Servant, and Minister) were all one in the equivalency of their power, order and authority in the Church. For any one, nay all these names are in the latitude of their sense given to some one man or officer in the Church, yet in the more strict, precise and Emphatic sense, they denote different gifts, orders, authorities, dispensations and functions (as well as degrees) in the Church of Christ; which did never confound Deacons with Presbyters, nor Presbyters with Bishops, nor all with the Apostles; because the chief Apostles (who contained in their ample authority and commission all Ecclesiastical powers eminently under Christ) are sometimes called Presbyters, Compresbyters, and also Deacons or Ministers of Jesus Christ, and servants of the Church, deriving all these powers in their several degrees and orders to Bishops, Presbyters and Deacons after them. To the first (as to a lesser sort of Apostles, but chief Rulers or Overseers in the Church) they gave the eminent and peculiar power of ordaining Presbyters, and exercising spiritual jurisdiction over them, as is evident in the power that Timothy and Titus had given them by Commission from the great Apostle St. Paul, who certainly in this was conform to all other Apostles in their several Bishoprics or Distributions. To the second, as Presbyters, (or a lesser kind of Bishops and Apostles over private and particular congregations) they gave power to preach the Gospel, administer Sacraments, and assist their chief Pastor or Bishop in governing the Church according as they were required and appointed to their several duties and charges. But no where in Scripture (that I see) do we find either the sole or chief power of ordaining Ministers, or of exercising any Ecclesiastical jurisdiction over them by correption, or rejection, given to any one or more Presbyters, as such, unless men list for ever to play the children, and cavil with the identity or sameness of the names used of old; which calls Apostles Presbyters, as a word of honour, and Presbyters Bishops, as overseers, and all of them Deacons, as servants to Christ and the Church, and all may be called Apostles too in some sense, as sent by Christ on his work. Which Crambe is so fulsome a (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) cavilling about words, to confound all good sense and order, that all sober men are now weary of it, when they clearly see that all ages and actions of the Catholic Church have sufficiently declared, beyond any fallacy of identity as to Names and titles, the real and actual differences of persons and duties, or offices, to which words may (at first) be indifferently applied without implying any such confusion of places and powers in the Church, any more than when the name of ruler is applied, to supreme and subordinate Magistrates, or when the name of Officer is given to Corporals, Lieutenants, Captains, Colonels and Generals, or that of Alderman to such as are so by age, or office, or estate; just as if one should obstinately maintain that the petty Constables of every parish, the High Constables of every Hundred, and the Lord high Constable of England or France, were the same things, as to office, power and honour, because the same name of Constable is applied to all of them. It may with as much reason be urged, that every Master of Arts in a College, and the Master of the College are the same in office, place and power; or that every one who is called Father by nature, age, affinity, adoption, merit, or relation, either Domestic, Civil or Ecclesiastical, presently may challenge the same Authority over us, and the same Duty or Obedience from us, as our natural parents have and do expect, because all are called Fathers. So we shall have many Gods and Lords, to justify the Polytheisme of the heathens, because there are many that are in Scripture called Gods and Lords, as the Apostle tells us. 1 Cor. 10. These Sophistical equivocations from names and words, have been indeed the bushes or thickets, the borrows and refuges a long time of those men who aimed to bring in all factions, innovations and confusions into this and other Churches, only under such empty colours and fallacious pretensions, out of all which they have been lately so stripped & ferreted by many learned & unanswerable assertors of Episcopacy in its just presidency and authority, that they are now naked and ridiculous to all sober spectators, who see that all the judgement and practice of antiquity, besides the Scriptures analogy, is so clear and distinct against all their petty cavillings and popular levelling, that the real differences of the powers, orders, degrees and offices in the Church, (as begun by Christ, exercised by the Apostles, also continued in that method and series through all ages,) are not less evident than their peevishness and pertinacy are, who list to urge the first indifferency or latitude of words, against the after and evident distinctions of things declared and confirmed by the constant judgement and practice of all Churches; which is (in my judgement) the best and surest interpreter and distinguisher of what ever seems wrapped up, or any way obscured and confused in Scripture-expressions; otherways we must with the Papists own as many Sacraments and Mysteries as these words are applied to in Scripture, either in the Greek or Latin. Presbyters might well enough be then called Bishops in a general and lower sense, when there were so many Apostles as chief Bishops above them: which Name of Apostle the modesty of after- Bishops refusing, they contented themselves with the peculiar title of Bishops, and confined that of Presbyter to that second order or degree of Clergymen, as that of Deacon to the third, which yet in their latitude are applied to Bishops and Apostles themselves. I know there have been many things speciously urged for Presbytery, and odiously against Episcopacy; all which have been so abundantly answered, that it is time they were forgotten, and all enmity buried with them. My aim in this pacificatory address to all worthy Ministers, is not to revive the cavils and disputes, but to reconcile all interests, to compose all differences, and to satisfy all demands. Only, because I know there is no closing or glewing of pieces together with firmness, where there is not first made an evenness and smoothness on all sides, for their apt meeting; I shall here further endeavour fairly to take away some remaining roughness, swelling and protuberancy, which possibly may be still in some sober men's minds, as great hindrances of the desired closure and composure of all sides. Obj. Secondly that Presbyters did choose and empower their Bishops of old. I know it is further urged by some, that every Presbyter singly, and much more socially, (that is, in a joint body and Associate fraternity) may be rationally thought to have the full power and divine authority of a Bishop, to all ends, offices and purposes, since it is well known in all antiquity (as St Jerome tells us,) and it is confessed by all Episcopal men, that Presbyters as such primitively chose their respective Bishops, as at Antioch, Jerusalem, Alexandria, (from S. Marks time) & in other places so that Bishops may seem primarily to receive all their authority and eminency from Presbyters, who certainly can confer no more upon any of Bishop, than is radically, seminally and eminently in themselves; as a superior Magistrate that nominates an inferior or a Corporation that chooseth a Major or chief officer, or as Fellows of a College who choose a Master or Precedent over them, or as an army (which is St. Jeromes instance) who choose their Imperator or General. From this ancient and well-known privilege of Presbyters to choose their respective Bishops, many conclude their joint power at least to be equal to any Bishops, yea superior to them, as causal and efficient, insomuch that they may, if they please, exercise it apart from, and wholly without any Bishop, by choosing none to be over them or among them, but serving their occasional meetings with a temporary Moderator rather than a constant Superintendent. Ans. To this it is easily answered, That however Presbyters of old did, and of right (as I conceive) ought, by the leave and permission of Christian Princes, to choose and approve the persons of their Bishops, as being the fittest men in the Church to judge of a Bishop's sufficiencies for that place and charge, yet it no way follows that any Bishop hath his Spiritual or Ecclesiastical power from them, as the original of it, any more than of his temporal Barony and revenues, to which he is admitted by the Presbyters election of him; but only he is by their election and comprobation duly admitted, and regularly enabled to exercise that power, whose root (as that of Presbyters) rise and foundation is from a far higher principle and greater authority: Just as the Fellows of a College choose the Master, Precedent or Warden, at least they admit and accept of him to the possession, enjoyment and use of that power, which is not in them jointly or singly without their Master; nor yet is it derived from them to the Master, but he hath it from the first Founder's Will, and the Statutes or Customs of the College. In like manner, the chief Magistrate of any City or Corporation, though he be chosen by the Commons or Fraternities in it to his chief place and office, yet his power and jurisdiction is not from them, but from that Charter or Grant which gave the first constitution to that power and polity. So in an Army, Officers may choose their General to a power above them, which he enjoys and exerciseth beyond what any one or all of them hath right unto, or any capacity to use; yet doth that power accrue to him from those principles of Right, Reason, Order, Polity and Authority, which is derived and vested in him by the suffrage or consent of many, who have right and reason thus to advise for their common order and safety, by preferring one above themselves; by whose suffrages and consents, as by the Sun's beams united in the centre of a burning-glasse, a greater heat and lustre of authority is raised, than is in any one or many beams scattered and divided. By virtue of which principles of reason, order and polity, as these other civil instances, which act by their several Charters and Statutes, are neither left at liberty to choose or not choose any to be their chief Magistrate or Governor; nor yet may they in right reason or law exercise that paramount power without him, but they are bound in conscience and duty, as well as by custom and charter, to choose such a chieftane, and so to invest him in that power paramount above them; yet do they not give the power to that elect person, but the person to that power which was settled before them. So in the Church of Christ, Presbyters of old did freely choose (indeed) their Bishops, at least they consented afterward to accept of him whom the Prince, or possibly the people in some cases, nominated as a worthy and deserving person; yet neither people, nor Prince, nor Presbyter did confer upon any Bishop that power Episcopal or that eminent Ecclesiastical Authority, which he had properly in himself to use and exert it after he was thus chosen, consecrated and installed. No, he had it from that grand Charter and Catholic Custom which was in the Church of Christ; by which the first Apostolic Canon's or Scripture-Statutes and Institutions not only founded, but derived this Authority as received from Christ, and by the Spirit of Christ conveyed it to their Successors the Bishops, in the name and power of Christ, for the orderly governing of his Church in all places; which hath been, and (I think) ought where God hinders not, to be continued in the Churches of Christ by the like successive choice or approbation of Presbyters in the want and vacancy of their Bishops. Nor do I doubt but Ministers are sinfully wanting to that duty which they owe to Christ and his Church, when they cease to do, as much as in them lies, what they ought in this point to do, & might do if themselves did not hinder, their choosing and having their lawful Bishops, as well as people their Presbyters, according to the Primitive rule and Catholic pattern, which hath the force of a law: it being no less necessary for the Church to be orderly governed and thus united, than to be taught and communicated to in holy things. Nay, those two or three Bishops which, after the great Nicene Council, were required to join in the more solemn consecration and investiture of every Bishop, did not impart of their own power, but solemnly declared and blessed as good and worthy the choice and investiture of him that was first duly elected by the Presbyters, and then further confirmed by their publication and benediction, which benediction was never, that I read, done by any Presbyters, as being now inferiors to him whom their consent and suffrages had chosen to that Episcopal degree and eminency above them, who as Presbyters might choose their Bishops, but yet not depose him; this work requiring their appeal to the higher power of a Council or Synod of many Bishops, who were in that joint capacity above any one Bishop, and so only capable to be his judges, upon the complaint of Presbyters or people against him. As Presbyters have their Office and Authority by Bishop's ordination as conduits, but not from them as fountains of it, (there being but one spring of it, which is Jesus Christ) so Bishops have their power by Presbyters election, as instruments or mediums, but not from their donation, as the source and originals of their power and authority, Obj. 3d. That Presbyters are as able and willing to ordain as any Bishops. which is Christ's. Thirdly, Some Presbyters and Independents do with great brow and confidence urge, that Bishops are wholly superfluous, because Presbyters and any ordinary Preachers, two or three or more of them, are very able and willing every where to beget their like, every petty Presbytery is become a seminary or spawner to ordain Ministers and confer all degrees of holy orders; for which they think themselves no less fitted than for preaching and administering Sacraments, which (they say) are employments requiring greater abilities, and no less authority: yea many Country-Presbyters have made themselves and one another of late Chorepiscopi or Country- Bishops, ordaining Ministers when, where and how they list, without any Bishop among them. And this (they say) with very good success and acceptance to Countrypeople, who besides the pleasure they take in any daring novelty and insolency in Religion, protest to find no less judgement, discretion and gravity, than was heretofore pretended to be in Bishops for that service: Nor is it to be doubted (say they) but the ordination, authority and Commission of such Presbyters is as valid as that done by Bishops, since these Godly Ministers do so try and examine such as come to be ordained, that they commonly pose the best Scholars and soberest men that come to them: Further they pray and preach as well as most Bishops did, yea they very gravely exhort and charge the ordained brother with as great weight and severity, both for gifts and graces Ministerial, as ever the Bishops did, though it may be not with so much pomp and formality. Hence they deny the necessity and use of Bishops, yea they deny any flaw or defect to be in their new Presbyterian and popular ordinations for want of any other Bishops but themselves, who are as pert in their novelty as ever any Prelates were in their antiquity. That these Heteroclite or equivocal ordinations have of late been acted in England with much self applause and popular parade by mere Presbyters, I well understand; but quo jure, Ans. by what right from God or man, by what authority civil or Ecclesiastical, I could never yet see; yea, I am sure no law of God or men heretofore ever was thought to give any such power to mere Presbyters without, yea against their lawful Bishops: insomuch that many learned and sober men have much blamed, at least suspected, these Presbyterian transactions for Schismatical presumptions, these ordinations for disorderly usurpations, at least in such a Church as England was, where there were (and still are) venerable Bishops of the orthodox faith, reformed profession and ancient constitution, willing and able to do their duty in the point of ordination. Which in all (ordinary) cases appears to have ever been their peculiar right, specially derived to them as Bishops from the Apostles, through all successions of times and Churches, without any interruption; except when some factious and insolent Presbyters ventured to be extravagant and usurpant, whom all the learned Fathers, venerable Councils and good Christians in the Church every where condemned as most injurious, because usurping that Authority which no Apostle, no Council, no Bishop ever gave to any that were mere Presbyters in their Ordination and Commission, no more than the Laws or Canons of this Church and State. Nor is there (as far as I can perceive) any one place in Scripture, that by any precept or example invests either one or more simple Presbyters with the power of trying and examining, of laying on of hands, of giving holy orders, as from themselves alone, of committing or transmitting what they had received to other faithful men that should be able to teach. 2 Tim. 2.2. All which were given to Timothy and Titus as chief Bishops. The Pope of Rome (indeed) animated by those flatterers which would make him the sole Bishop by Divine right, and all other Bishops as surrogates to him, dependants upon him, and derived from him (as if there had not been 12 or 13, but only one ●●sion ●lick Chair, or prime seat of Episcopacy) hath some ●eath given power of ordination to such as were but Presbyters, as ●nd read of some Abbots and Priors; but it was always to the great scandal of the best Bishops and Presbyters of the Church, as contrary to all ancient Orders, Canons and Customs of the Church, unless he first made them as Chorepiscopi or suffragan Bishops. But in earnest, it is hard to judge whether Popes or Presbyters be most enemies to Catholic Bishops. As for the pious pomp and the specious apparences, the formal dress and verbal adorn, which they say are used by Presbyters in their late Ordinations in England, though I never saw any of them, yet I have heard and read so much of them, as giveth me to judge far less to be in them of authority, true, complete and valid, than aught to be. For besides the persons not impowered or commissionated to that office, there is, as I hear, no transmitting, and so no receiving, of the holy Spirit, as to that Ministerial Order and Power, which is thereby derived to Ministers as from Christ, whatever there may be of godly solemnity and plausible formalities, which are (usually) more studied and affected to please the people, there where men are most conscious to the defect of authentic, real and righteous power. But all these saintly shows (to wise men) signify nothing, no nor the personal abilities either of the ordainers or ordained; who cannot by their personal power, knowledge, virtues, graces or private gifts, make any Officer in State or in Armies, in War or in Peace, much less in the Church and Ministry of Jesus Christ. Alas, no private capacity in any man can make the least petty Constable, or Bailiff, or Corporall, or Sergeant, without they first have a public and lawful Commission from the fountains of Authority, to give them an Authority far beyond any private arrogancy and presumed sufficiency of their own. Possibly, extraordinary cases may in time be their own excuses in such Churches where Bishops may be all dead or banished; or where such as are Orthodox cannot be had, and they that are will not ordain any Presbyters, without imposing upon them such things as are erroneous and unlawful: but nothing can be pleaded that I yet see, no nor doth the candour and charity of Bishop Ʋsher know how to excuse such Presbyters from being Schismatics & factious, presumptuous and disorderly, who first cast off and forsake such Bishops as are of the same faith and reformed profession, worthy and willing, able and ready, every way authorized by Church and State to do their duty. The contempt and rejecting of such Bishops is (I fear) a great sin before God, I am sure a great grievance to such Churches as first suffer those distractions. And no doubt it is, as a great, so a needless scandal to most Churches and the best Christians in all the world; nor can it be other than a foul reproach and scorn cast on all pious antiquity, nor will it prove other than a lasting misery to any Church and Nation that wilfully continues that guilt and defect upon themselves and their posterity, especially when God ●s them sufficient means to remedy that mischief, to supply th●●fects, and to compose those differences, which are ever follow●●he wa●, much more the needless expulsion of Primitive Episcopacy. For whose power and authority while either Presbyters or people are scrambling, they do but make Religion a May-game, & bring (as we see) both themselves and their Ministry into contempt: for no Presbyters or people can while the world stands ever stamp such an honour and Authority Ecclesiastical upon themselves, as was in all ages and by all Church's consent (besides the Scripture-Character and Apostolic signature) set upon Primitive and Catholic Episcopacy, which ever united, centred and confirmed power in one man; not over all, which the Pope affects, but over their Dioceses or Provinces. A 4 th'. Obj. 4. That Episcopacy was the root of the Papacy. Objection much flourished by some popular Preachers against Bishops and all Episcopacy in any Authority and eminency above Presbyters, is, that Episcopacy is the root of Popery; that Prelates were the parents of Antichrist; that every Bishop hath a Pope in his belly; and that the Pope is no other than an overgrown Bishop; that to rout all Popery, and raze the foundations of Rome's pride, all Prelacy or Episcopacy must be stubbed up. My answer to this is, that this objection sounds as little of truth as it savours much of malice, Ans. especially in any Presbyters of any learning and ingenuity, who well know the abasing of Bishops is the design, and hath been the magnifying of the Popes of Rome beyond their line and measure of old; That if Episcopacy could have held its Primitive and ancient parity, according to the Apostolic seats and patterns, that one Chair of Rome had not so far exalted itself in this Western Church above all those that are therefore called Gods, because the power of Christ and the word of God came to them as much as to Rome, and is to be derived by them to their successions. 'tis certain that Bishops did not at first (as Nimrod) set up themselves by any private ambition: they were either constituted by the Apostles yet living, as Irenaeus, Eusebius, Tertullian and others tell us; or when the Apostles were dead, the Presbyters of every chief city and Territory or Diocese did (as S. Jerom tells us) choose some Apostolic and eminent person from among themselves to be their Bishop; not compelled hereto by any civil powers, nor by any popular force or faction, but merely moved so to do by the precept and pattern, the constant custom and imitation of the Apostles, which were so full of pregnant reason, necessary order, and holy policy, that nothing could be better. If any than be to be blamed for giving occasion to the Papal ambition, and what some count the great Antichrist who is, (as Isid. Hispal. defines, by so much the more Antichrist, by how much more he professeth Christ, yet lives or teacheth contrary to the rule and example of Christ) it must be either the Apostles themselves, who first designed Bishops as their successors, or the succeeding Presbyters of every Church, who to avoid Schism and Confusion, first chose successive Bishops in every Church after the death of the Apostles; not only in obedience to their commands, and conformity to their pattern, but in order to preserve necessary polity, Primitive unity, and Apostolic authority in the Church of Christ. And yet now (behold) by a strange vertigo or change of Counsels, Presbyters must in all hast pull down all Bishops, the better to avoid Antichrist, who lies as much in confusion as error, in schism as in heresy; none of which will ever advance Reformation or settling of true Religion. So that it is an intolerable insolency and rudeness of some men, to say or suspect that every Bishop, whom the Apostles themselves, or the Presbyters after them, first constituted, were but spawns and embryos of Antichrist, when many, yea most, if not all the first and best Bishops for 300. years were not only excellent preachers and wise governor's after the way of the Apostles, but such resolute Martyrs and confessors, as few of the more delicate Presbyters and softer-fingred Independents of our age would willingly carry the least stick of their faggots, or touch the least coal of their fires, or bear the least stroke and burden of their torments. As then the Papal Tyranny, so the Presbyterian Parity, and Independent Anarchy, may and will give (I fear) greater advantages to Antichrists, than ever Episcopal order and eminency either did or can do while wisely settled and managed. Obj. 5. That Bishops are prone to be severe and tyrannic. Fifthly, another great bugbear or terriculament which scares some from looking back with the least cast of favour on Episcopacy, is the terror they pretend to have had of some Bishop's sharpnesses and severities, of which say they many godly men feel the smart to this day. Ans. My answer is, I do not go about to justify or excuse any unreasonable, unseasonable, indiscreet or uncharitable actions of any Bishops, who are justly to be blamed, so far as they exceeded their Commission and power, by the Laws of man or Christ, and the Church, given to them not for destruction, but edification. Though some Bishops might show themselves to be but men, yea and some of them to be harsh and rash enough in their passions, yet these failings and infirmities they neither had nor discovered as they were Bishops; no more than tyrants do tyrannize as they are Magistrates, or Judges are corrupt as they are Judges, or Presbyters are partial, popular and imprudent as they are preachers. It must still be granted that not only some, but very many, yea most Bishops in England since the Reformation were as Angels of God in their light and love, in their excellent learning and worthy living every way; which sufficiently proves that piety and Episcopacy may as well meet in one man, as piety and Presbytery, or sanctity and Independency. If any of these good Bishops seemed sometime too severe to some that were rudely refractory against the laws then in force in this Church and State, possibly those very persons that most complain of them will be found not short of the sharpest of them: if any of these complainers have suffered by any Bishop's rigours, I am sure they have had their full and excessive revenge upon them. But to avoid the feared exorbitancy of Episcopacy for the future, it will be sufficient effectually to restore that (Commune Consilium Presbyterorum, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Ign. ) common Counsel and concernment of worthy Presbyters to their pristine use and assistance, without which Bishops should do nothing public and authoritative (according to the Canon of the Council of Cartharge, and agreeable to the judgement, as of St. Jerom, so of St. Concil. Carth. 4▪ can. ●3. Consessus honorem cum Episcopo habent Presbyteri. Cyp. ep. 46. & 55. & saepealibi▪ Communi Presbyterorum consilio regebantur Ecclesiae. ●en. Epist. ad Euag. Cyprian, Ignatius, and all the ancients) This (as I formerly touched) is the best preservative of Bishop's authority, of Presbyters privileges, of people's liberty and the Church's safety. As I believe Episcopacy by this time sees it did itself as much wrong as any men could design, in doing many things of public concern without the presence, counsel and concurrence of their gravest and most discreet Presbyters; and as I think that modest and sober Presbyters shall do not only themselves a right, but the best Bishops too, in their Christian advice and assistance, to bear (partem solicitudinis) part of the care, trouble, odium and envy, which is prone to offend all good Bishops, as all good Governors in Church and State: so I conclude that violent Presbyters have done themselves, the Bishops, the people and this whole Church, as much injury and indignity as they well can, by rudely rejecting and obstinately refusing (as much as in them lies) to readmit the Order and Honour of Episcopal Presidency, which indeed was the common Honour of the whole Clergy. Episcopacy we know preferred many Ministers of the Gospel to be as Lords and Peers in England; whereas Presbytery & Independency have purely leveled and abased all Clergymen to a plebeian condition, if not to be slaves and vassals, yet to be very vile and servile, even in the esteem of the vulgar. Certainly it was in prudence to be desired by all wise Presbyters and other Ministers, rather to bear much under the burden of the Episcopal yoke (which was to them more (honos than onus) a dignity than any depression;) than thus by a precipitant impatiency to run themselves & their whole Order or function into a plebeian slavery, while they affected an inordinate liberty. It is better for birds to be fed in their cage or restraint, than by wand'ring from them to be starved. The best Bishops were wisely severe, and most venerable when least remiss; the most rigid of them were not more imperious or intolerable than some Presbyters have been to all Bishops. The last, but greatest, terror to some men is, Obj. 6. The jealousy lest Bishops should recover their lands. that if any thing like a true Primitive Bishop should revive and authoritatively act again in England, especially fortified and assisted with such a strength of wise and grave Presbyters, orderly combined with their Bishops, there might be great danger of the Clergies recovering the Lands and Revenues which once belonged to Bishops and other Churchmen in England. Thus the jealous hearts and mis-giving consciences of many men do beat within them, Ans. who have bought Bishop● 〈◊〉 other Church-lands; which do make them as vigilant over the Bishop's Sepulchers, as the Jews and Soldiers were over Christ's, lest the second error of losing Bishops Lands should be worse than the first of taking them away, not only from very worthy Bishops then in lawful and unforfeited possession, but from the whole Clergy, yea from the service of the whole Church, and of Christ, and of God, who had a sacred interest in them. By what right they were alienated, and are now possessed, let them see who first did seize upon them, and upon that title have either sold or bought them. For my part, I can look upon Episcopacy in its Primitive poverty and present bareness, with as much respect and reverence as in its greatest pomp and superfluity. I value it and desire it not for state, but conscience, not for secular ambition, but spiritual satisfaction. Let them keep the lands that have justly got them, or paid a valuable consideration for them, provided they will but help to restore Primitive and Catholic Episcopacy, without which Ecclesiastical authority, yea and Ministerial power, seems to me and to many wiser men, if not wholly dead, and void or null, yet very defective, dubious and infirm; as one that is lame and maimed, yet is still a man, having an esse or being as a true man, but yet esse defectivum, a being short of that fullness, firmness and perfection which might be, were he so complete as he ought to be according to the pattern of God and nature. The Herculean work of resuming Church-Lands, and restoring either Revenues or civil Honours to Episcopacy, is not to be expected without a miracle, such as shall shake heaven and earth, despising all humane opposition, and making the unjust keepers to be like dead men; for no thunderbolts of divine vengeance are more penetrant and irresistible, than those which fall upon the head of sacrilege, as both Humane and Divine Histories tell us. True, I think it were an act worthy of this Nations pristine piety and renowned munificence, to add something comely for Hospitality and Charity, besides civil respect, to Bishops, if they will have any. Nor were it (as I conceive) a work less becoming the Honour and Devotion of England, to repurchase and restore those ancient Church-Lands or patrimony to the Church, than it was to take them away, and sell them to lay-hands. But in this I am not so solicitous: the honour of all Bishops, and so of Presbyters, will be, diligently and wisely to do the work of God, which (its probable) will never want the respect, love and liberality of all good Christians, as was seen in Primitive times, where Bishops were never poor, if Christian people were in plenty, peace and unity. As Mephibosheth said to David, so do I to all my Countrymen and brethren, Let Ziba take all, as to Bishops Lands, so as those Bishops may return in peace which are after the Lord's mind and the Scripture-rule, the Apostles pattern, the Primitive judgement and Catholic practice in the Church of Christ. The less there may be of riches and secular honours added to Episcopacy, the more it must provoke both Bishops and Presbyters to holy industry and eminent virtues, which are the best foundations of true honour. CHAP. XIII. MY chief ambition is not to procure civil honours or estates to Bishops, Earnestly exhorting Ministers of all sides to an happy composure and union. but so to reconcile all sober Ministers and others to true Episcopacy, as may promote that Christian union between all Ministers (that are worthy of that name and office,) and all sober Christian people in England, which may most remedy and avoid those miserable factions and sad divisions which we see are the pests of true religion, the moths of all Reformation, the advantages of superstition, and nurses of profaneness; against which St. Paul in his Epistles, and St. Clemens in his to the Corinthians, 1 Cor. 3.3, 4. so much inveighs, as carnal and not spiritual methods of Religion. I should heartily rejoice to see before I die the dry land to appear, this deluge of factious confusion not only to abate but to be quite spent, by which Christian Religion and true Reformation hath lost (together with Episcopacy) in one score of years very much of that public Majesty and Authority, that Power and Improvement, that Love and Honour, that Sanctity and Solemnity, that Charity and Unity, which they formerly had and held in England for above a hundred years, highly to the glory of God, to the happiness of this Church, and to the Honour as well as Peace of the Nation. It is great pity that any man who bears the name of a Minister of Christ should appear to the world other than an able, wise, humble, holy, peaceable and orderly person; that we may not cease to be sociable and reasonable creatures so soon as we undertake to be Preachers, as if we presently turned Tragedians when we grew Theologians, Divines in profession but Devils in our dissensions; that none of us may be so far bereft of our wits, as to fancy that we Ministers or Clergymen, beyond all men, may not enjoy nor endure that comely and holy subordination which is lawful and most necessary in all other societies and fraternities of men, and no less among those that are Presbyters or Preachers, where (we see) God and nature, age and gifts, learning and prudence, distinguish even these men so far, as makes some one or few very fit to govern, and the other, though many more, only fit to be governed. There is much folly, rashness, juvenility, indiscretion, presumption and vulgarity to be seen even among the community of Ministers as well as other common people; who can never be safe or happy, unless they be settled in some comely Government, Ecclesiastical as well as civil, yea and governed by some men that are much wiser than themselves. Certainly Religion cannot prosper or be glorious in the eyes of the world, as Christian or Reformed, if it be not uniform as to the main, both in its source and course, its origination and dispensation: For every notable difference (especially in the same Church and State) seems to the several parties and divided sides as a great deformity in their adversaries. Religion will never be uniform, if the Ministers or dispensers of it be not wisely united, not only in their doctrine, but in the derivation and reception as well as dispensation of that holy Authority by which they officiate: for otherwise one Minister is prone to magnify himself against all others of any other make & mould, to disparage all that is done by others as sacred, to draw disciples from one side to another, persuading people, according to the feuds which were between the Samaritan Jews and Priests of that Temple against those of Jerusalem, that what is done in holy duties by such as are not of his stamp & form is unauthoritative, presumptuous, invalid, mere nullities, and profanations of holy mysteries, without Spirit, Life, Power or Efficacy; an histrionick pageantry of Preaching, Praying, Baptising, Consecrating, Celebrating, Censuring, Binding, Absolving, Terrifying, Comforting, as in the name of Christ; when indeed there is either no power or authority, but a new one, that must needs be a false one, either usurped, or obtruded, or pretended, by those that have nothing to show for their Commission, Order and Derivation of such spiritual power, either from the Scripture, or the constant practice, or the Catholic Custom of the Church of Christ. Thus everlasting feuds, distances and defiances will follow among people and Pastors, where an harmony is not in this main point of ordination, or Ministerial Authority; which certainly were no hard matter to effect, if Ministers would so far agree (by an Episcopal subordination in an uniformity of ordination, and all other Ecclesiastical Ministrations) as no Ministers or people's just claim and interest should be either neglected, excluded or oppressed. 1. First, the rights of people should be so far satisfied, that no man should be ordained a Minister, but in the most public and solemn convention of the Diocese, Sacerdos plebe praesente sub omnium o●ulis deligatur, & dignus atque idoneus omnium publico judicio ac testimonie comprobetur. Cyp. Ep. 68 after public notice given of his name, and demand what any could say against his being ordained: in like manner, no Minister should be obtruded upon any people by patron or Bishop, without hearing what they had to object against him, and rational satisfaction given to them; which was required in St. Cyprians time. 2. Next, the rights of Presbyters should be so far satisfied, that none should be ordained a Presbyter, until he had passed the orderly trial as of the Bishop, so of any Minister that list to examine his sufficiency, or his manners and life; after which done Presbyters should not only be present at the solemnity of preaching and praying, but such as could conveniently of the eldest and gravest Ministers, might lay their hands with the Bishops, or Precedents, upon the ordained, both in their own and others behalf, as a testimony of a joint consent on all sides to his ordination. 3. Last of all, the rights and claim of Episcopacy or Bishops would easily be satisfied, and very compliant with the other of Presbyters and people, if no ordination might pass without either the presence of the Bishop as Precedent, or of such a Presbyter as in the Bishop's necessary absence should be his suffragan or Vicegerent, nominated by him, and allowed by that Presbytery over whom the Bishop presideth. This method and moderation would (as I humbly conceive) both complete and settle, in all sober men's judgements, the ordination of Ministers, and (giving satisfaction to all just demands or ingenuous pretensions) it would powerfully and happily unite both Bishops, Presbyters and people; as answering all the claims and expectations considerable of Episcopal, Presbyterian and Independent parties, as to the main point of unanimous and uniform Ministry. Among whom a like correspondency would easily▪ (if wisely and meekly) be carried on in all other Ecclesiastical affairs of public concernment, for Doctrine, Worship, Discipline, Censures, Appeals, Admission, Abstention, Excommunication, Absolution, Synodal conventions and the like. It is not imaginable how great an harmony, honour and happiness would hence arise, to the infinite content and comfort of all good Christians, to the great advantage of the Reformed Religion, to the peace of this Church, to the happiness of the Nation, to the Glory of God, and to the unspeakable quiet of many thousands of poor souls; who are now agitated with infinite Scruples, Fears, Angers, Jealousies and Despites in Religion, according as they are engaged and exasperated in their first entrance or beginnings: all these would peaceably and comfortably apply, by God's help and Ministers harmony, to the improvement of their souls in faith and repentance, in truth and love; to lead holy and orderly lives; to hear with diligence and reverence; to receive with frequency and charity; to pray with understanding and fervency; to do all things with meekness and wisdom; lastly, to die with earnest desire and blessed hope of further enjoying that Christian and sweet Communion with God, with Christ Jesus, and his holy Servants, Saints and Angels, in an other life, of which he hath had so blessed experience and pleasing a fore-taste even in this world, where the only heaven a good Christian can have consists in the happy Communion he hath with God and good Christians, without which all society is but solitude or worse, an harmony no better than what may be found in hell, which is a conspiracy in sin, and conjunction in misery. This holy Communion is so much the more divine and joyful even in this world, by how much it enlargeth itself to greater numbers and extentions; true Christian love being loath to be confined to a narrower compass than the Christian and Catholic faith is, but coveting (as light and heat) most ample dilatations and Catholic diffusions, seeking (if possible) and as much as in it lies, to live peaceably with all men, and cheerfully with all that are of Christ's family, or the household of faith, who love the Lord Jesus in sincerity. By these and such like peaceful methods of prudence and love, of moderation and mutual condescension among Ministers, (without further disputing or urging any of their former principles upon which they seemed to differ, much less casting any further reproaches upon each other,) I do not see but, by the blessing of God upon them, they might all meet in an happy union and accord in Church-Government, according to those principles of right Reason and Religion, of Piety and Polity, of Scripture-Canons and Catholic Customs, in which all sober Ministers must necessarily agree, as the best rules of Christian prudence, the surest methods of holy order, and the firmest bonds of Christian Communion. To which main ends as all good Christians should chiefly bend all their Counsels, Prayers and endeavours; so, I do not conceive they are so strictly confined and limited by any precise rules or forms of any extern Polity and Order, but they may, as occasion requires, for the peace of the Church and edification of Christians in love, use such a liberty in their mutual condescendings and compliances, as shall no way offend the blessed God of Truth, Order and Peace, nor violate any of their own consciences, while they bear such a tender regard to other men's, as they desire may be extended to themselves. The contentions and confusions in Religion must needs be endless, if they be left to the natural passions of most men▪ Then they may find happy conclusions, when those that are Rulers and Teachers of others, and so not only more learned, but more prudent, unpassionate and composed (as Magistrates and Ministers ought to be, beyond any men) when (I say) these men do apply the utmost of their Piety, Power, Parts, Zeal and Discretion, by fit means to compose all controversies among themselves, which will then soon decay and die among the common people. The Spirits and reputation of Ministers are commonly the chief sparks and bellows, that first kindle, and after increase to public flames, the fires of dissensions and disaffections, both among themselves and the people: once extinguish or moderate these enormous heats among Ministers, there will be no such conflagrations of Religion among ordinary people, which have of late been more like the black and confused eructations of mount Aetna, than the sweet and holy fires of mount Zion, or the flames and perfumes of God's Altar and Temple. Which that I might be some means to restore to this Church and Nation, I have thus made my amicable, humble and Christian address, as to all good men, so chiefly to all my Brethren and Fathers of the Ministry in England; who are persons of any competent abilities and considerable worth, as to the duty and dignity of that great and holy, that dreadful, Angelic, Divine employment. I confess I cannot but passionately deplore, as other men's, so my own solitude for these many years, by reason of that uncorrespondency as to any fraternal meeting with any of them in any public way; being hereby deprived of that great Comfort, Improvement, Joy and benefit, which might be had by those excellent abilities and graces which are in many of them. It is great pity, good and able Ministers should be longer severed, whose brotherly union and frequent convenings in orderly and public meetings, would not only set a greater edge and brightness on their studies and parts, which alone and confined only to Country-auditors and associates grow rusty, flat and dull; but they would highly advance the progress of the Reformed Religion, both in profession and power, giving hereby a mighty check as to the increase of profaneness & atheism, so of Popery and superstition; mightily conducing also to the general peace of the Nation, by allaying those unchristian feuds and uncivil heats which every where so much at present affect, infect and disaffect the minds both of Ministers and people. But these meetings of Ministers must be authoritative, not arbitrary, not precarious, but subpenall: otherwise the restiveness, laziness, wantonness and factiousness of some will mar all; either forbearing all meetings, or perturbing them, if they be not kept in some awe as well as order by their betters and superiors. If I knew any Motives more prevalent, any words more pathetic, any charms of love more effectual, any grounds of piety or polity more pregnant; if Writing, Preaching, Praying, Beseeching, if any Words, any Tears, any Sighs might work upon Ministers of all sides, to bring them to this blessed accord, to public, friendly and fraternal meetings, to grave, orderly and comely conventions (which would be of great use as well as honour to them) I should in nothing be more prodigal of my time, spirits and pains: Then would Ministers be able to redeem their Persons, their Office, their Orders, their Sacred Authority, their Religion, from vulgar contempt, from mechanic arrogancy, from those base prostitutions and levelling, to which those (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, terrae filii) sons of the earth, vile and m●ane men, have of late years debased, as the holy Ministry, so all heavenly Mysteries: then would that rust and rusticity, that plebeian Spirit and ungenerous temper which possesseth many Ministers out of fear and flattery, be removed; then would that scurf and moss, that barrenness and canker which is now upon Christian and Reformed Religion, be taken away, and that floridness with fruitfulness, that beauty with holiness be restored, which Tertullian so excellently sets forth among Primitive and persecuted Christians in their assemblies, In which were highly conspicuous a reverential fear of God, a modest and mutual regard to each other, Tertul. de praes. c. 43. Ubi metus in Deum, ibi gravitas modesta, diligentia attonita, cura solicita, communicatio deliberata, promotio emerita, subjectio religiosa, ecclesia unita, Dei omnia. a most intentive diligence to duties, a most solicitous care of themselves and others, a most prepared and deliberate communicating in holy things, carried on by the most deserving eminency of some, and the most religious subordination or conscientious subjection of others; all parts of the Church and Clergy were happily united, and God was all in all, his glory the centre, his love the circle or band of all their aims and actions, their hearts and thoughts. The venerable piety and almost Divine Majesty of such conventions (wherein Bishops, Ministers and people were of one heart and one mind in the Lord) advanced the reverence of their censures, monitions, reproofs, abstentions and excommunications to so great a regard and just dread, that no good Christian great or small disdained the authority of the Bishop, or slighted the judgement of the Clergy, which judged and declared the mind of the whole Church, because according to the mind of the Lord Christ, and of God himself. Then was it that lapsed and scandalous sinners were soon brought to be penitents, in so humble, yet comfortable a manner, that as St. Hier. ep. 36. Amb. de poen. .1. c. 16. Sulcarunt lacrim's genas, & vultum fletibus exarabant; mortis speciem in spiranti corpore praeferebant. Jerom saith of Fabiola, and St. Ambrose of others, They furrowed their faces with sorrows, and ploughed their cheeks with tears; they paved the Churches with their prostrate bodies, which were so penitently pallid and deplorable, that they seemed only living corpses and breathing carcases. So few Christians did then entertain their sins with smiles, or laugh at those Teachers that reproved them, or schismatically separate from those Orthodox Bishops, with the Clergy, that justly censured them, as obnoxious to God's judgements, and unworthy of Christian Communion till they amended: no man or woman ever lived or died in peace of conscience, whose soul was justly wounded with these arrows, the censures of the Church; they either drank up their sensual and proud Spirits, and brought them to repentance, or they sank them into a desperate state, both of obstinate sin and eternal horror. Such holy and happy Assemblies of Ministers, consisting of authoritative Bishops and orderly Presbyters, were far more to their honour and comfort, more befitting their breeding and learning, their labours and industry, their parts and worth, their sacred function and dignity, than to be pitifully scared and overawed by Country-Committees, and a new sort of Tryars, where grave Ministers are oft catechised, chastised and contemned by such men as are (some of them at least) of very moderate, that I say not mean, abilities (except their estates be instead of all reason and Religion, all learning, worth and wisdom,) very incompetent judges (God knows) of the Doctrine and Manners of Ministers, unless in matters of civil misdemeanours, for which there are higher courts and abler judges appointed, to hear and determine matters according to law, with more honour and less partiality than Ministers can expect from such men as are very sorry Magistrates and worse Ministers. This is a certain maxim, the cheapness and despicableness of Ministers ariseth chiefly from their mutual divisions and dissociations. Their union and harmony will be their Honour, Safety and Happiness. I pray God show us all, and guide us in the ways of his and our own peace. And (in earnest) it is high time for us as Ministers of Christ, and as sober men, to give over our popular Projects and pragmatic activities, our secular policies and state agitations, by which we have all gained far less than if we had only intended the Cross of Christ, and imitated the patience as of our great Master, so of the best of our predecessors; not to concern ourselves so much in Crowns and Sovereignty's, in Kingdoms and Commonweals, in Parliaments and Armies, in Killing and Slaying our brethren upon Christ's score▪ as in saving our own and others souls. What was of old falsely and odiously objected, hath of late been too much verified in many of us, Num. 16.3. You take too much upon you, O you Sons of Levi, both in sacred and civil affairs. Let us learn to rule our own passions, to obey actively in all lawful and honest things our superiors, and passively in others: Leave it to God to rule this, as all States and Kingdoms, by what hands, heads and hearts he pleaseth. Let us in all times do all things, rather in a Ministerial then military fashion, Honestly, Humbly, Meekly, Charitably, Unanimously, and the God of peace will be with us in this private and public posture; we shall better bear the frowns or favours either of Princes or people, who will never be our friends, if we be our own enemies. CHAP. XIV. HAving done my duty to those that are of my own profession, Humbly exhorting Magistrates to assist in so good a work. as Ministers (how ever they differ at present in the derivation of their orders and exercise of their Ministerial Authority) my next address must be to those persons whose influence, social or solitary, personal or Parliamentary, either is, or may be, most effectual by their Counsels or Commands, by their proposals or power, to recover the Purity, Order, Unity and Stability of Religion in this Nation. It is not fit for me to presume to suggest to persons so much above me in prudence and experience, as well as power and reputation, any thing that looks like counsel or advise. I know Superiors are prone to take those suggestions for affronts from inferiors, as if they thought themselves wiser than those that rule them. But yet our humble petitions have acceptance with God● himself, not as suggestions to his wisdom, but submissions to his will, and supplications of his goodness. No Christian Empire was ever so imperious as to disdain the prayers of any that craved their favour and assistance in just and fair ways. And since I find few Ministers of any party will begin or join with me in such a request to those that are our Superiors, better I presume to supplicate alone, than that no man of any calling should importune the Sovereignty, Nobility and Gentry of this Nation, in a business of so great and public concern, before the mischief spread too far, and the cure be desperate; which will then be, when there shall be few sound minds, honest hearts, and whole parts left in the Land, all or most being infected with Ignorance, Irreligion, Atheism, Profaneness, Popery, or indifferency; the inevitable effects that will follow the divisions, distractions and debasings of the Clergy, both among themselves and the common people. To you therefore, that are the highest and greatest, the honourablest and richest, the wisest and strongest, the most noble and generous, the most knowing and ingenuous persons, do I with all humble importunity recommend this real Cause of God and of Christ our Saviour, the cause of the Christian and Reformed Religion, the cause of this Church and Nation, the cause of your own and your posterities welfare. Is it not high time, after so many toss and Tragedies, in which this Church and its Ministers have had so great a share, at last to speak comfortably to Zion, Isa. 40.2. to tell her that her warfare is accomplished, to take off the filthy garments wherewith her Ministers of all sorts have been clothed, Zech 3.3, 4. to cover their shame, to bury their mutual reproaches, to restore the honour and authority of their calling, to encourage and improve in ways of public conspicuity and harmony those excellent abilities which are in many of them; which divided and at distance from each other, are either quite lost, or perverted to maintain popular parties and factions against each other? Many Ministers have been and are silenced, being thereby driven to extreme poverty; most are dispersed and despised, not only by vulgar insolences, but by mutual animosities, jealousies, distances and defiances. Few of us have that Christian courage and constancy, by which the Primitive Bishops and Presbyters, as an united Clergy, were still preserved entire among themselves, when most persecuted by enemies: we are so divided, that we are justly dejected and easily destroyed. Many of us have by our follies forfeited the honour of our function; some of us by our secular policies and compliances have prostituted the sanctity of it to the fedities and insolences of Laymen. We have digged those pits into which we are fallen, and filled those dungeons with mire in which we now stick. Jer. 38. It is a memorial of everlasting honour to Ebedmelech the Ethiopian, that he helped with great tenderness and humanity to draw the Prophet Jeremy out of the dungeon, where he was ready to perish. England hath now for many years had many Prophets in dungeons of disgrace and darkness, yea all are sunk into the dirt and mire of obloquy and contempt on one side or other. I beseech you, be not tediously or anxiously inquisitive, how we came there; but apply of your goodness and nobleness fit means to draw us out. Let not the Christian and Reformed Ministry of this Church, which was the most renowned in all the world (without any doubt, offence or envy I speak it) let not this be (like Elisha) the scorn of fools, the mocking-stock of children, the May-game of Papists, the laughter of Atheists, the object of fanatic petulancy and vulgar insolency, the wonder and gaze of all foreigners, the grief and astonishment of all sober men at home and abroad, who for some years have beheld the factious and divided, the disputed and despised state of Ministers, the poor and pitiful shifts they have made to keep their heads above the waters, not to be quite overwhelmed with Poverty, Anarchy and Contempt, while alone and solitary they signify not much, and jointly or socially they are now nothing at all; having no public harmony or fraternal correspondency, no concurrent counsel, no Synodical convention or Ecclesiastical Authority, being never summoned by Authority to meet or consult together, never so far countenanced as to have any thing of public concernment, to advise or execute in order to the general good of Religion: their names, their persons, their calling, their ordination, their preaching, their praying, their consecrating and dispensing of holy Mysteries, their censures and reproofs, or whatever discipline any of them affect or dare to exercise, according to their own fancy and private Authority, all they do with the greatest Gravity, Solemnity and Sanctity, is vilified, slighted, abhorred, and as it were spit and spewed upon by some bold foreheads and foul mouths, on one side or other, without any other remedy or redress, than what their private discretion or their patience, either willingly or perforce, supplies them. These, these (O noble Gentlemen and worthy Christians) are now your Divine Teachers, these are your ghostly Fathers, these the best and brightest of your Clergy at present; generally esteemed and treated as the filth and offscouring of all things by vulgar minds: yea many of your modern intruders into the Ministry are no better than the very scum and refuse of all Trades and Occupations: if necessity pincheth them, or pride provoketh them, or shame banisheth them from their first stations and mechanic employments, presently they dare to preach, when they can do nothing well. The most illiterate and plebeian spirits, who are fitter to serve swine than the souls of Christians, (ad haras magis quam anas apti) men that want all things befitting preachers of the Gospel, except only Lungs and Tongues, such as are quite broken and despairing as to any other way of living, these aspire to be your preachers: how enabled, how examined, how ordained, by what authority they are sent I know not; but I am sure they run amain, striving by all popular acts to outrun, yea and overrun, the Ancient, Grave and Sober sort of Ministers in England, whom they look upon as their sore enemies, eagerly persecuting them till they run themselves out of breath. Then being tired in one place, they ramble to some other, till use and confidence hath so completed them in boldness, that they dare own themselves in all companies, (but such as are grave, good and learned) to be Ministers of the Gospel, after any new mode and fashion that they list to take up. Nothing can be a work of more Christian piety, prudence and compassion to this Nation, than to redeem the Ministry of it from that pitiful posture and sad condition whereto it is at present condemned by that divided, despised, and on all sides either doubted or denied, authority, which Preachers challenge to themselves. All are represented by some or other to the people as Falsarii, Cheats, Impostors, Seducers. Certainly it were worthy of the Wisdom and Honour of this Nation, to remove (as all others, so) in the first place this great grievance, scandal and stumbling-block out of the way of all Christians; to take away this reproach of our Reformed Religion, whose God, and Saviour, and Spirit, being but one, its Faith, Gospel and Sacraments the same, its Ministerial power and Authority can be but one in the true Authority and Authentic Commission, both as to its Original and Derivation. There is no speedier way nor easier to sow up the rents of Christ's garment, to cleanse and close the wounds of his body in this Church, than to pour the Wine of healing and the Oil of Union upon the Ministers of the Gospel, by persuading, yea commanding and conjuring them to be of one heart and one mind in the Lord. Nothing is more worthy that Wisdom and Power, that Piety and Honour▪ (to which you, as Gentlemen, and Christians, and Reform, do pretend) than to advance by your counsel, industry and authority, so Christian a work as the settling of Religious Order and Unity, an harmonious Government and Uniform Authority among the Ministers of the Gospel. I know all the Gates of Hell will be against the design, and oppose it with what ever power and policy can be found among the Devils: But the work (like that of building the second Temple) is Gods. Honest endeavours will be their own rewards; how much more the desired effect, if attained? which is so good and great, that no minds truly great and good but earnestly desire to see that day, when they may behold the uniform face of a national Church among us, such a Reformation as is without any remarkable defect or deformity, specially so black and fundamental as these are, the Divisions, Distractions, Confusions among the Clergy, the vilifying and nullifying of all Ministerial Order and Ecclesiastical Authority; that such an Honour and Respect may be restored to your Ministers, as may exempt them and all religious Ministrations from profaneness, scurrility, contempt; that your Ministers may be such men of Learning and Worth, of Wisdom and Meekness, of Fraternal Love and Kindness, that they may both deserve and rightly use the just favour, supports and respects given them; the benefit of all which will most redound to your honour and the happiness of your posterity, when they shall behold such Religion, such Reformation and such Ministers, as they shall see cause to reverence, love and value in conscience. Religion is nothing if it be not esteemed as sacred; sacred it cannot be if it be once ridiculous; and ridiculous it will be, if once it appear either to have or make many strange and antic faces before the people, who have all this inbred principle in them, that as true Religion can be but one, so it ought to be Uniform, and its Teachers Unanimous, both in their Divinity and their Authority: for variety in Ministers breeds incertainty, inconstancy in holy duties, inconstancy breeds indifferency, indifferency breeds levity, levity futility, futility folly, folly presumption, presumption atheism and licentiousness among people, who from many Religions grow to any, and from any Religion to none at all; common people having neither capacity, ability or leisure to disentangle Religion, when it is offered them all snarled with the factions, disputes and janglings of their Ministers. They cannot wind up any great bottom of piety, who all their lives are untying the knots and undoing the snarls of the scaine of Religion, which ought by the wisdom of Christian Magistrates be presented to them in the most easy, comely, orderly, authoritative and well-composed form that can be, and all little enough. If the Christian and Reformed Religion, which hath been so famous and flourishing in England, be left to the coldness and indifferency of some, the looseness and rudeness of others, also to the inordinate fervors and contentions of a third sort, (which are the predatorious flames and Gangrenes daily mortifying the native heat and moisture of Religion, which consist in truth and love;) If all things of solemn Mysteries, sacred order and Divine Ministry, be still left to dissolve, first into plebeian ignorance and insolency, next into open profaneness and atheism, and at last to shift for shame into Popish Superstition and Roman Communion; must not the fate of your, either miscreant or miserable, posterity necessarily be such, that their teeth will be so set on edge by the sour grapes you have eaten and left for them, that they will not endure sound Doctrine, much less wholesome Discipline? Thus untaught and ungoverned, unbred and unfed in Religion, can you expect other from them than all debaucheries, immoralities, and such Atheistical indifferences and impudencies as the heart of man easily runs into, if left to itself, as the Horse and Mule, without bit or bridle of Religion and conscience to restrain them? May they not have cause, in their sad reflections upon the Beauty, Order, Honour and Happiness of Religion in England, which they may read of in former days, (besides the many afflictions and civil dissensions which have and will inevitably follow divided Religion, to an irreligion in any Nation) may they not in their doubting, dying and despairing retreats, have cause to count you, yea and to curse you, as their careless and cruel parents? who are never quiet or content, till you settle your honours, estates and civil affairs in some safe posture, as you imagine; but are wholly negligent as to any religious establishment, which many men fear, oppose and abhor, lest in clear waters their faces should appear the fouler; varieties and uncertainties of Religion being most fomented by those whose piety is wholly resolved into policy, who never tasted how gracious the Lord is in the ways, means and fruits of true Religion. But for you (O my noble Countrymen) that have seen and rejoiced in that glorious light of Reformed Religion which shined so long and illustriously in the Church of England, how can you with any conscience or comfort leave the world, and leave your posterity with your Country exposed to such variety, uncertainties, distractions, deformities and confusions, as to the Reformed Religion and its Ministry? which makes them look like the Temple of God in Jerusalem, after Nebucadnezzar and Nebuzaradan had visited it with fire and sword, so defacing and deforming it, that it was the pity of all good men, and the scorn of the wicked. As Augustus Caesar was wont in his most impotent passion of grief and vexation to tear his hair, and cry out (Rid, Vare, Legiones) O Varus, Sueton. in vita Aug. restore the Legions of brave and veterane soldiers, which thou hast so unadvisedly or unworthily lost, (when they were slain by the German surprises) so may you hear the soberest Christians and truest-hearted Englishmen in their grief and shame cry out, Reddite nobis Religionem Reformatam, Uniformem, Christianam, primaevam, Catholicam; Reddite Ecclesiae Anglicana priscam pietatem, pacem, ordinem, pulchritudinem, patrimonium, regimen, Majestatem debitam, & decus antiquum: Reddite nobis patres, fratres, filios spiritales; Episcopos atate, virtute, authoritate venerandos; Presbyteros literatura, industria, humilitate, unitate, ordine conspicuos; Plebem probe instructam, modestam, sobriam, mutua charitate amulam, non effr●nem, infrunitam, laceram, non erroribus lascivam, non novitatibus foedam, non scabie rigentem, non nimia petulantia deformem, non irreligiose Religiosam, etc. This was the voice of the Church of England, while it dared to speak Latin, which being now scandalous and reproachful to many, as the language of the Beast, not understood by them, She is forced to express her Prayer in English for men's better understanding. Restore, restore I beseech you to me, to yourselves, to your country, to your posterity, the purity, the peace, the sanctity, the solemnity, the sobriety, the order, the honour, the unity, the solidity, the stability, the power, the efficacy, the fruits and works of true Christian and Reformed Religion; Restore to us the happiness of living, not only united in one civil polity as men, but in one Ecclesiastical Correspondency, Combination and Communion as Christians. It is more for our honour and peace to be Members of one Church, than of one Commonwealth; to have the same Religion and Devotion, than the same Laws and Statutes. Restore to us those prime veins and Catholic conduits of Ecclesiastical order, of Church-power and spiritual authority (under Christ) those paternal Pastors, those Primitive Bishops, those successive Apostles: That so we may have such Presbyters as have the Catholic Character of due Ordination, and the most undoubted Derivation of Ministerial Authority upon them, being at once able and willing, duly proved and empowered by Christ's deputed Ministers and the whole Church, to consecrate and dispense holy Mysteries to us; not in the new names of Presbyters, or people, or Parliaments, or Princes only, but in the name of Christ and his Church, according to the commission he first gave to the Apostles, and they transmitted to their successors in a constant, undoubted, and uninterrupted succession to this day. Redeem this ancient Church and renowned Nation from those louse and flies, those locusts and frogs, whose importune malice and wantonness seeks to deface and devour whatever yet remains of the Reformed Religion in England. Redeem all sober Christians, whose little life affords them no leisure to play with Religion; redeem them from the Rents and Schisms, the rags and tatters, the breaks and divisions, the fragments and fractions, the chains and fetters, the childish and ridiculous janglings, the scandalous and pernicious liberties, with which pragmatic Spirits seek to poison and to imprison their judgements and consciences. Nothing is, at least ought to be, more pressive and urging upon your Honours and Consciences (who are persons sensible of these two great regards to God and man) than these concernments of true Religion; whose influence reacheth to the eternal interest of your own and your posterities souls. Nor is their lapsed estate to be helped by fair words and soft pretensions, by demure silences and ●ary reserves, by State-stratagems and politic artifices, by vaporing of reformations, and conniving at popular insolences, as if they were tendernesses and liberties due to conscience. No, the recovery of Religion is to be effected by potent convictions and impartial suppressions of all enormous opinions and actions, by serious trying of errors, and establishing of sound Doctrine, by just restraining all inordinate liberties, by encouraging an able and uniform Ministry, by discountenancing all fanatic novelties, by composing all uncharitable divisions, and by punishing all pragmatic arrogancies, which evidently vary from, or run counter against, that truth, order, ministry, authority and holy Discipline of Religion, which Scripture and all Catholic conformity to it have commended to all Christians as Christ's will and appointment; which being accordingly settled in this Church and State, ought not to be contradicted or rudely contemned by any new lights, by pretended inspirations, or the novel inventions of any man or men whatsoever, seem they never so holy, so devout, so well-affected, so sincere, so saintly. This and other true Churches of Christ did know very well what belonged to the unity, sanctity, charity and constancy of Religion, as Christian and Reformed, long before the new fry of any Factionists or Enthusiasts were known in the English or Christian world. Then will the honour of the Reformed Religion recover, take root, flourish and fructify again in England, when it is by due authority and just severity cleared of all that rust and canker, that mossy and barren accretion which of later years it hath contracted, chiefly for want of those Ecclesiastical Councils, sacred Synods and Religious Conventions, which (being called and encouraged by civil authority) will best do this great work of God and the Church; freely and impartially, solidly and sincerely, learnedly and honestly discussing all things of difference, disorder or deformity in Religion. These, these would (by God's blessing, and your encouragement) remove in a short time all that putid matter, from which the scandals, offences and factions do chiefly arise, and by which they are nourished in the licentious hearts and lives of some men, who dare do any thing that they safely may against Religion. These, as the ablest and meetest Judges of Religion, would soon discern between the vile and the precious, and separate the wheat and the chaff in Christ's floor, wisely using the flail and fan of his word and Spirit. CHAP. XV. Councils or Synods the proper means to restore lapsed Religion. THerefore is our Religion so miserably lapsed and decayed, through the ignorance, negligence and impudence of men, because it hath not for these many years been under such hands as are most proper either for its care and preservation, or its cure and recovery. Courts of Princes and Counsels of State, the Spirit of Armies and the Genius of Parliaments, are not (alone) apt agents or instruments for this work, though they may be happy promoters, and authoritative designers and contrivers of it. Saint Ambrose and others of the Ancients observe, that it never went well with the sound part of the Church, when the disputes of Religion (as between the Arrians and the Orthodox) were brought into Prince's Courts, and determined by their Counsellors and Courtiers. It was not more piety and modesty than prudence and generosity in Constantine the Great, when he had conquered Licinius with other enemies, and entirely obtained the Roman Empire, when he had power absolute and sovereign enough to have made what Edicts he listed for Religion, yet that he then called the Bishops of the Church throughout the Roman world, Euseb. vit. Const. and other venerable Teachers attending them, to discuss the differences in Religion, to compose the breaches, to allay the jealousies, to reform the disorders, to search and establish the true faith, to confirm the ancient Government, to add vigour to the just Discipline of the Church, and due authority to its true Pastors or Bishops. All which were happily done by the wisdom, piety and moderation of the famous Nicene Council, in which Constantine himself was oft present as to his person and Counsel, though he never voted or determined any thing of Religion among the Fathers of that glorious Assembly, lest he should seem to overbalance or over-awe the truth by his authority, or to eclipse the Church by the State. This, this was that Primitive and Catholic way of Ecclesiastical Councils and Synods, used first by the Apostles, and after by all their successors, the Martyrly Bishops and Pastorly Confessors of the Church, which endured the fiery trials of heathenish and heretical persecutions, who had Ecclesiastical Councils and Synods of Churchmen for their relief and remedy, before they had the favour of Christian Princes for their refuge or defence. To this proper method for Reforming of any Church and restoring Religion, Of Ecclesiastic Councils called by Christian Princes. all Princes that were true Patrons and Protectors of the true Church have applied their powers and counsels for the repairing of decays, rectifying disorders, condemning heresies, vindicating fundamental truths, composing differences, and restoring peace in the Church of Christ; calling together such Synods and conventions of the Clergy as did bear most proportion to those inconveniences or mischiefs which they sought to remedy, either in greater or lesser circuits, according as the poison and infection of Heresy or Schism had spread itself. The welfare of Religion and healing of the Church of Christ was never (heretofore) left to every private Christians fancy, or to particular Presbyters, nor yet to single Bishops, to act according as their opinions, passions and interests might sway them; nor was it ever betrayed into the hands of only secular men, either Civil Magistrates, or Gentlemen, or Tradesmen, who are as fit (generally) for Church-work, as Clergymen are to marshal Armies, or to manage battles. The building of God's Tabernacle and his Temple required men of extraordinary gifts and excellent Spirits, proper and proportionate to those works: As the levitical Priests of old did judge, not only of plagues and leprosies, Deut. 17.8. to v. 14 but of all controversies about the Law and Religion, to whose determination all men were to submit under pain of death. Numb. 16.48. And as Aaron standing between the living and the dead stopped the spreading of a plague and mortality among the people; even so hath the Lord ordained the Evangelicall Ministers to be as shepherds, feeders, defenders and rulers in his Church; also as Physicians and Fathers of the flock of God, whose lips ought to preserve knowledge so as to discern both the contagion and the cure, applying (as their duty is) such (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) sound Doctrine and Discipline, as are both wholesome food and healing physic. Certainly all other Lay-undertakers and tamperers with Reformation and Religion, are but as Empirics and Mountebanks, having neither that ability nor that authority which is requisite in Religious undertake: But after much pains and charge they always leave Reformation and Religion, Church and Clergy, more unsearched and unsound, unbound and ulcerous, than they found them: God never following those with the blessing of the end, who disdain to use those orderly means which his holy wisdom hath directed them to; who lay the Ark of God upon the cart, 1 Sam. 6.7. etc. and think to draw it by the beasts of the people, when it should be orderly and solemnly born by the shoulders and hands of those that are consecrated to that holy service as the Priests of the Lord: which method is not only more for the honour and solemnity of Christian Religion, than for the glory of the blessed God, that his name might be sanctified even before the world, in the managing of true Religion, not flightly or slovenly, not with unwashen hands and preposterous confusions, but with that holy respect and humble reverence which is due to the Majesty of that God and Saviour whom Christians profess to worship. 'tis ridiculous for Princes and Statesmen to have the best Musicians for their pleasure, the most learned and experienced Physicians for their bodily health, the most able and renowned Lawyers for their secular Counsels, the gallantest soldiers for their military officers, the best Mathematicians for their Engineers, and the best Mariners for their Pilots, that so these things might succeed to their worldly honour and happiness; and (yet) in matters of Religion to content themselves either with no idoneous Physicians and fit medicines, or with such quacking applications and applicators as are no way apt for the work, having neither skill nor dexterity to handle so tender, yet so dangerous, sores and wounds as those of Religion many times are, not only affecting the heads of men, but coming nearest the very hearts of them: yea and I may say these Church-distempers affect the very heart of Christ himself, both God and man. We find secular Magistrates and Judges many times (with Herod and Pilate) ready to set Christ at nought and condemn him; soldiers we know have mocked him, Mark 15.16, 17. Luke 23.11. buffeted him, crucified him, and parted his garments among them: But they were his choice Apostles, with other ordained Ministers, that professed and preached him. These, these first planted, fenced and watered Christian Religion; these preserved, propagated and pruned the Church of Christ to this day, as the husbandmen or labourers of Christ's own sending into his vineyard, as workers together with God in the great work of saving souls: with these Apostles and Ministers he promised to be (meaning them and their true successors) to the end of the world; as he hath been to this day, never failing to assist Godly Bishops and other faithful Presbyters of his Church, to do his work, as in private so in public, when they did orderly meet as his servants, in his name, to his glory and his Churches good, suffering themselves to be impartially guided by his word and Spirit, without serving the factious interests and sinister policies either of Prince or people. Then, then was it that Councils and Synods appeared to all sober-minded and humble-hearted Christians as the Star did to the wise men at Jerusalem, Mat. 2.9. guiding them to Christ with exceeding great joy, in orderly ways of truth and peace becoming Christian Ministers and people; which was the blessed effect of the first Church- Council we read of, Act. 15.22. where James Bishop of Jerusalem with the Apostles of the Lord (as chief) and other Elders or Presbyters, being met in the presence of Christian people, did so consult, discuss and resolve the dissensions then risen in the Churches, as to send their determinations with this style and title, It seemed good to the holy Ghost and to us: ver. 28. whose Canons were read and received not only with reverence and conscience, but with joy and consolation. So welcome and useful to all good Christians are those means which are fitly and wisely applied, after God's method and the Apostles pattern, to the relief and recovery of the Church. The care of summoning and convocating such Ecclesiastical Parliaments when need requires, is worthy the piety and Majesty of Christian Princes and sovereign Magistrates, in whom that Authority resides, as nursing Fathers of the Church: but certainly the management and transaction of Religious affairs in them by way of devotion, disputation and determination, is the proper work of Churchmen, that are Godly, Learned, Wise and Honest, both of Bishops as fixed and chief Rulers of the Church, and of grave Presbyters as the Representees of the other Clergy, chosen, deputed, entrusted and empowered by them, fully and freely to deliberate and determine in those great concernments, as God's word and their own consciences shall direct them, without any to over-awe them or to dictate to them. I am not ignorant of the jealousies and prejudices that many (even wise and good Christians) have of such Assemblies, Synods, Convocations or Councils, as are made up only of ecclesiastics or Clergymen: Whose oft unhappy successes Gregory Nazianzen (that great Divine, and good Bishop) complains of in his days, when the Arrian faction, by the partiality of Emperors infected with their poison, strongly vied in their Conventions against the Orthodox decisions, the ancient Faith and Catholic customs of the Church, setting up ever and anon in their junctoes and conventicles (as St. Hilary expresseth it) Diurnal Creeds and Menstruous Faiths, being many times but (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) thievish Synods, furtive Conventicles, suborned and slavish Assemblies, either transported by humane passions, or biased by partial affections, or levened with popular factions, or overawed by secular powers and sacrilegious policies, which made such conventions, as the hills of the robbers, predatorious oppressors of true Religion, pillagers and spoilers of the Church of Christ, of which too many sad instances have been in ancient and later days both at home and abroad. Especially when such Assemblies meet not summoned by lawful Authority, not chosen with Ecclesiastic freedom, not sitting with completeness of members, not voting or disputing with rational, ingenuous and Christian liberties: but all things must be carried not after the Nicene but Tridentine fashion, as if the holy Ghost were sent to the Assessors in a carriers cloak-bag, or a soldier's knapsack; the most learned and sober men must be mute, and not dare freely to speak their minds, without being posted and exposed to popular hatred, even to the outraging and hazard of their persons, unless they speak to that key and tune to which the organ of faction is set. These methods of Church- Councils and Assemblies, I confess, are so Mechanic, so Tyrannic, so Satanick, that nothing is more mischievous to the Church of Christ and true Religion, whose condition instead of being thus mended, is always marred and betrayed to further errors, factions and confusions. I pray God deliver his Church from such Conventions, where either Laymen shall over-number and over-awe the Clergy, or Clergymen shall vassalate their consciences to gratify any potent party and novel faction, to the prejudice of that truth, faith, order, ministry and government which were once delivered to the Churches of Christ. Not only England, but all Christendom hath cause to curse the day when such snares and stratagems of Satan began to be laid in Synods and Assemblies, from thence to take effect on the whole, or any part of the Christian Church; as eminently in the second Council of Nice, the last of Trent, and that at Westminster: the first setting up Images in Christian Churches, to the scandal of Religion; the other a thousand new imaginations never owned before as of Christian faith; the last, which is the first of any that cried down Episcopacy or Prelacy. But the abuses incident to good things, through the distempers of men and evil hearts, must not exterminate or deprive us of the right use of them; for than we should not only forsake our wits and reason, but our meat and drink, our clothes and sleep, yea and the light of the Sun, and breathing in the air, yea our very Sacraments and Scriptures, our frequent Sermons, and extemporary as well as set prayers, yea & our Presbyters as well as our Bishops; for in all these honeycombs or hives, do hornets, wasps and drones very oft shroud themselves; by these, as St. Austin observes, all errors, heresies and schisms seek to support and shelter themselves. But where such Ecclesiastical Synods and Councils as were the first so famous General ones, of Nice, Ephesus, Chalcedon and Constantinople (besides many other Provincial and national Synods, in Asia, Africa and Europe, also here in our Brittany, of which the most learned Sir H. Spelman hath given us a liberal account, as Sirmondus of those in France▪) where, I say, they were lawfully called by the chief Magistrate, or freely convened by the Bishop's consents, and impartially managed, with the fear of God and love of his truth, so as becomes men of learning, gravity and good conscience, in so grand concernments as import the peace of the Church, the satisfaction and salvation of men's souls: in these cases it cannot be denied, nor sufficiently expressed, with how happy successes God hath always blessed those meetings; their pious results and peaceable determinations being the votes of that public Spirit of Christ, to which the private Spirits of all true Prophets and Preachers, no less than of Christian people, will, as they ought, be subject: Truth and Peace have for many years after flourished in those Churches that have been most blest with the frequency of such Synods. As frequency of Parliaments, when they are as they ought to be, (the highest, fullest and freest Counsel of the Nation) is the best preservative of our civil peace, and of the vigour of our Laws; so would frequent national Synods (rightly constituted and managed) be, as I formerly demonstrated, the best Conservators of the purity, peace and proficiency of our Religion as Christian and Reformed. When Convocations of Ministers should meet and sit, not only for form and fashion, to be the Umbras of Parliaments, to put on their gowns, to tell the clock, and to give their moneys, but to look seriously and effectually into the state of Religion, that it suffered no detriment by any practice or pretention, by profaneness or superstition, by any defects or excesses, under the colours of affected novelty, or antiquated Antiquity; if the hand that held the scale and standard of Religion, were here fixed by Authority, that national Synods should be the Conservators of Religion, it is not imaginable how much all worthy Ministers would study to improve their studies and employ their parts to increase their gifts and graces, that they might be meet helps in so grand and public services for God and his Church: such as now are like bitten and over-dopped shrubs, would then grow to the procerity of tall trees and goodly Cedars. What is there so great, so glorious, so useful, The great use of national and frequent Synods. so advantageous for Religion and the good of the Church, that might not here by many acute eyes, diligent hands, able heads and honest hearts be effected? 1. How might all new opinions, which the luxuriancy of men's imaginations are prone to conceive and bring forth, (it may be with no evil minds, as honest women oft do monstrous births) be here timely and duly examined, and either smothered or allowed to live, being either fully confuted or seriously confirmed? 2. How might the purity, solidity and profundity of true Doctrine here be contained and maintained, as the waters for the Temple were in the brazen Sea? 3. How might the first catechistical principles or foundations, with the second and third stories of Religion, be here methodically digested and prepared for the use of all sorts of people, younger and elder? 4. How noble an appeal and impartial a Sanctuary would both Doctrine and Discipline here have; which none could in reason or modesty either wave or refuse? 5. How might the devotional parts of Religion be here admirably composed, and so disposed as might supply both the infinite defects which have followed the late indirect Directory, and the apparent wants which are found of a fitting public Liturgy? The disuse of which hath not only exposed the solemnity of public Prayers and Sacramental consecrations to each private Minister's Spirit and abilities; but to his defects, disorders, excesses, errors, indispositions and extravagancies: yea they have brought a very great neglect of public and private duties among all people, through the ignorance and indevotion which is grown among us. Further, they have occasioned infinite partialities, whisper, tumults, strifes, disdains and divisions among all sorts both of Ministers and people; who have not only the word of God, but the water and the blood, both the Sacraments of Christ, in great respect for men's persons, parts and gifts. One Minister will have Sacraments, another will have none: one is cried up, another cried down, as consecrating and officiating better or worse than another: one is very long, flat and tedious; another too short, obscure and concise: one affects such strange words and odd phrases in his consecration and distribution, as either amaze or scandalise the receivers, which I have known: some Ministers do all by their own either constant or occasional forms; others covet to imitate the patterns and expressions of leading and popular Preachers. I humbly conceive much good might be done, even in this particular, if all Ministers were tied to use some one grave, devout, complete and emphatic form, such as should be established with all due regard to the former Liturgy, and yet permitted with that, to use what further prayers and praises they thought convenient, or their fervent hearts moved them to, for their own and their people's occasions; of the discreet performing of which, they should have other judges besides themselves, who should not suffer them to be tedious, extravagant or impertinent. 6. By such Synods moving in a constant orb or fixed sphere, how easily might a noble Commentary upon the whole Scripture be composed and commended to the use of this Church, for the clearing of the Scripture-sense and meaning, and for confirming the Readers of them in the true faith; which many not understanding with the Eunuch, wrest to their own destructions for want of an interpreter? For neither Geneva notes, nor Diodates' touches, nor the late endeavours of some of the Assembly, do in my judgement come up to that light and lustre which would be required, and might be attained, in so admirable and useful a work, whereto much good materials are already prepared by the excellent labours of English Divines upon most parts of the Scripture. To this Commentary might be added such directions for Readers more at leisure, as might commend to them those excellent English or other Authors, who had wrote well on any one book, or chapter, or verse, with reference to the most remarkable Treatises or Sermons, which have been set forth in the Church of England, which beyond any Church, ancient or modern, had a fullness of such spiritual gifts or prophesying poured forth upon it; which are now generally shrunk and withered, much abated and quite buried, chiefly for want of such public employment, improvement and encouragement, as Ministers are capable of and aptest for. 7. By the concurrent influence of such public Counsels, all difficulties in Doctrine, Discipline and Church-Government might easily be maturely debated, gravely resolved, exactly stated, and wisely composed. 8. More compendious, clear, easy and constant ways of instilling Religion to common people's grosser minds might be prescribed, than those are of loose, rambling, arbitrary and diffused preaching, where after twenty years preaching (yea and with great applause many times as well as good pains,) yet poor people are most-what very ignorant or raw as to the very first and main principles of Religion; which I humbly conceive might be drawn up into so many short discourses and clear Summaries, as might every Lordsday take up one quarter of an hour, or little more, before and after noon, in the Ministers distinct reading some one of them to the people in such a constant order, as once in every half year might finish the whole series of them: which might be printed for the use of such as can read, and for others that cannot read, this frequent inculcating and constant repeating of those main points, so set forth, could not but much improve the sound understanding of plainer people in the doctrines, mysteries, graces and promises, precepts and duties of true Religion; which now they learn either not at all in some necessary points, or so rawly, raggedly, loosely and confusedly, that it comes far short of that judicious and methodical solidity which they might attain, if they were clearly, uniformly and constantly taught, so as they could best bear and hear, understand and remember. Nor would this be any hindrance to preaching, praying or catechising, but a great furtherance to them all; & what ever people had beside from the meanest- gifted Minister, they might be sure to have every Lordsday one or two heads of good Divinity well set forth to them, yea and one or two chapters of the Bible well explained to them, till the whole were gone through. Which would be a great means to prevent the odd, idle and addle senses, by which silly or pragmatick-spirited people pervert and corrupt the Scripture, not only by their private and weak, but by their ridiculous, erroneous and blasphemous interpretations: the variety and looseness, besides the easiness and flatness of most men's preaching, doth rather confound than build common people in Religion; all which by constant Synods might be amended. If the Church of England were so barren of godly, able, learned and honest Ministers, that a good and safe choice of fit members cannot be made every time such venerable Synods and useful Assemblies should meet; if we of the Clergy are all so degenerated as to become (of late years) either dunces and unlearned, or erroneous and corrupt in our judgements, or licentious and immoral in our manners, or partial and imprudent in our designs, or base and cowardly in all our dealings, that we are not to be trusted in the mysteries or managery of our own calling and function; truly 'tis pity we should be owned any longer as Ministers of Christ in this or any Church, being so unfit for our own sphere and duty. Nor can I understand how it should be that Mechanic Artificers, Merchants, Tradesmen and Soldiers should still be thought fittest to be advised with in their several ways and mysteries of life; only the Clergy should be thought so defective in all abilities and honesty, as not to be trusted with any advice or counsel in public matters of Religion, no more than with any place in any civil counsel or transactions. Parlament-men they may not be; while the most puny-gentry, petty Lawyers, and trivial Physicians, while Merchants and Milliners, Goldsmiths and Copper-smiths, while Drugster's, Apothecaries, Haberdashers of small wares, and Leather-sellers, and while every handy-crafts-man and apprentice aspire to be not only Committee but even Parlament-men, yea and it may be Counsellors of State. Only Clergymen must be wholly excluded, (as Monks condemned to their beads and bellies) while those lay-Masters challenge not only all civil Counsels and Honourable employments to themselves, but they further seek to engross even those great concernments of Religion; not allowing any Ministers, of what ever size their Learning, Wisdom and Worth be, to move in their own mystery or joint and public interests, further than as they are impounded to their parish-Pulpits, and tedered to their texts or desks. Every sorry and silly mechanic dares to arrogate as great, (nay far greater) Empire-influences and latitudes in the public management of Religion, than the best Divines in England may ever hope to attain, or adventure to use, in any sphere private or public, unless there be a more indulgent and equal regard had to the worth and calling of Ministers than of late years hath been had. O happy England, whose Laity▪ and Communality of late hath so excelled thy Clergy! or rather O miserable England, who either hast such Church men as are not fit to be advised with or not trusted in Religion; or which art so unworthily jealous and neglective of them, as not to trust or use them in those great and sacred concernments for which they were educated, and in which they were heretofore not only thought, but known, to be as able as any Clergy in all the world, till they were thus divided and shattered, thus disabled and disparaged, most of them rather by popular discouragings, prejudices and oppressions, than by any real defects in themselves either of Piety, Learning or Honesty! I cannot sufficiently pity and deplore thy sad and miserable fate (O my Country) which either abasing or abusing, at least not using thy worthiest Clergy for such public ends, deprivest thyself of the most sovereign, nay only ordinary means under Heaven whereby to recover thyself to the former Beauty, Honour, Lustre, Stability and integrity of true Religion which thou didst enjoy▪ everlasting divisions, deformities and confusions will be thy portion, without a miracle, if thou trustest to those Egyptian reeds, the novel pretensions and usurpations of ignorant and arrogant Laymen, of inspired and aspiring Levellers, which will pierce into thy hand and heart while thou leanest on them. Nothing can restore or preserve the health and soundness of Religion but those ways which are tried, Authoritative and Authentic, which have God's Image, Christ's Power, the Spirits Wisdom, the Apostles prescription, and the Catholic Churches Character upon them; which may first persuade men's judgements, and then oblige their consciences to obey for the Lords sake. All methods used in Religion that are perverse, popular, novel, arrogant or invasive, contrary to the sacred and venerable methods of God's direction and the Church's Catholic Custom, are like sluices and banks ill-bottomed, soon blown up, having neither depth nor weight, foundation nor superstruction to make them good. Nor shall I ever think the Laws of Parliaments more binding to obey in civil things, than such Canons of Church-Councils are obligatory as to submission in religious matters; where nothing is decreed contrary to God's express will in his Word, nor beyond those general latitudes and Commissions of Charity, Order, Peace, Decency and Holiness, which God hath indulged to his Church. Certainly the Wolves, Foxes and Boars, Heretics, Schismatics and heathen persecutors, had long ago scattered the several flocks of Christ into corners, and dissolved the face of any visible Church on earth, if after the several sad dispersions and vastations of them, the chief Pastors and Bishops of the Church, (succeeding to the ordinary power of Apostles) had not either in Oecumenick Councils, or in their particular Diocese & Provinces, taken care with their brethren to call together and settle in Holy Communion of faith and manners the remains of their dispersed Presbyters and disordered people. To which good work of calling Councils and Synods, for the rectifying and restoring of Religion, all good Christian Emperors, besides the Bishops, did cheerfully contribute both their favour and Treasure, as the most noble way in the world to employ them. Shall the Counsels and powers, the tributes and revenues of Christian Magistrates and people, be only laid out in making war at home and abroad, only to recover or keep up their civil peace, or to build their own houses? and is nothing to be laid out to maintain the Faith of Christ, to keep the fort of Zion, and to build the Towers and Temple of Jerusalem, to restore and preserve the Purity and Peace, the Sanctity and Solemnity, the Order and Authority of Christian, yea Reformed Religion? Must that be left (like Paul's) to impair or repair itself as well as it can? or only be committed to the care of such men as are commonly better at pulling down than building up Churches, who neither know how to begin nor how to end any Church-work, having neither heads nor hands, materials nor skill, line nor rule fit for such business? And when they have done all they can in bungling and new ways, neither the Clergy or Ministers under their power, nor the Laity or people under their command, will much more regard, as to conscience, what is so done by only laymen's magisterial decrees and imperial appointments, than they now do consider the Covenant and Holy League, or the Directory and Engagement, new models for Religion, cut out not so much by national Synods and Councils as by swords and pistols, and accordingly both esteemed and used by all men that are of sound and judicious minds, not corrupted with partiality, credulity, popularity and novelty. For how can those bind the conscience of the Nation in the most indifferent things of Religion, who never had the choice, counsel or consent of all Estates in the nation, either to advise, or determine, or enjoin any such things, which require (to make them valid and conscientiously obligatory) the Sovereign's call, the Clergies counsel, and the Parliaments sanction? CHAP. XVI. The method of restoring a settled Church and united Ministry. I Well know how hard a work it is for the best and wisest of men to stop the leaks of Religion, to repair a broken Church, or to buoy up a sunk and lapsed Clergy, when once they are either overwhelmed with the corrupt Doctrines and licentious manners of Preachers and Professors, or split with intestine Schisms and Divisions, or debased with vulgar usurpations and presumptions, or oppressed with the secular policies and sacrilegious injuries of violent and unreasonable men; who are always afraid lest the renewed light and restored vigour of true Religion, with the due Authority of its Ministry in the Church, should give any stop or check to their extravagant lusts and enormous actions. To which purpose such pragmatics will be sure either utterly to hinder all good means that may effectually recover the true interests of Religion and its Ministry, or else they labour impertinently to apply such only as they know will render them more uncurable, and set them next door to an impossibility. Which will be the State of the Church of England, if the Recovery of Religion, as to its visible Beauty, Order, Unity and Polity, be either managed by laymen's Counsels and activities only, excluding all Ministers from all public, equal and impartial consultations; or if, on the other side, Church-affaires be wholly left to the various heads, divided hands and partial designs of such as are now called Preachers, and pretend to be Ministers; among whom (commonly) the weakest heads have the most pragmatic hands, and men of least abilities are greatest sticklers, though it be but more to puzzle, confound and destroy themselves and others. On the other side, such Clergymen as have most of solid Learning, sober Piety, sacred Authority, and real Sufficiencies for such a work, will be either afraid or ashamed to act or assist in it, if they have not some public Commission with equal and impartial encouragement from those in power. For certain, mere mechanic and illiterate preachers, (such as some people now most affect) will never be able, if willing, to do any good in so great and good a work, no more than wasps are like to make honey: Ignorance and disorder, faction and confusion being for their interest, as muddy places are best for Eels. Other Ministers, though never so willing and able, yet, as tools that are blunt and have no edge set on them, can never carry on such a work handsomely, unless their late rust and dis-spiriting, their poverty and depression be taken off; unless their mutual contempts, distances and jealousies be fairly removed; unless they be restored to such Charity, Comfort and Courage, as becomes Learned and Godly Ministers. Such a constitution, as was heretofore most eminently to be seen in the Ecclesiastical Synods and Convocations of the English Clergy, while they enjoyed, by the favours of munificent Princes and the assistance of unanimous Parliaments, those many noble privileges both of Honour and Estate, together with their undoubted Ecclesiastical Authority, which were by ancient and modern Laws settled upon them; which kept up the Learning and Religion, the Credit and Comfort of the Clergy of this Nation, to so great an height both of Love and Reputation, that neither the petulancy of people nor the arrogancy of any parasitick preachers either dared or were able thus to divide and wound them and the Church, through the pretences of such Liberties and Reformations as knew no bounds of modesty or common honesty, so far were they from any true grounds of piety or Christianity. Nor will the divided and depressed State of Religion in this Church ever recover its pristine vigour, its due authority, its holy influence or its honourable esteem, unless you (O my noble and honoured Countrymen, who are persons of most public eminence and influence) be pleased to make it one of the chiefest objects of your Counsels, Prayers and endeavours, to revive the drooping Spirits, to raise the dejected estate, and to re-compose the shattered posture of the Clergy or Ministry of England; in whose ruin the Reformed Religion will be ruined, and in whose recovery true Christian Religion will be recovered to its just harmony, stability, and honour: for it is impossible that Religion as Christian and Reform should enjoy either unity, reverence or authority, while the chief Pastors, Preachers and Professors of it are in so dubious, debased and divided a condition. Since then the Religious happiness of this Church and Nation chiefly depends and moves upon this one hinge, give me leave with all humble and earnest advice to commend to your Christian consideration, First, the preservation of the very being or essence of a true and authoritative Ministry, upon which depends the visible polity and orderly being of any true Church, also the powerful dispensation and comfortable reception of all holy mysteries; Secondly, the (bene esse) well-being or flourishing estate of such a true Ministry, by which it may be kept in such order, honour and unity, as may redeem it both from vulgar arrogancies, contempts and confusions, also from mutual factions and divisions; by which means (of later years) the very face of a Church, as to any national harmony, fraternity, subordination and Communion in England, is either quite lost, or so hidden, deformed and disguised, that not only the sacred dignity and authority, but the very Name and Office of a true Minister, is become odious, infamous and ridiculous among many people, who either will have no Ministers at all, or only such as themselves list to create in their several Conventicles, which are, in respect of the true Church and Clergy of England, no more to be esteemed than the concubines of jealousy and harlots of adultery are to be compared to lawful wives, that are Matrons of unspotted honour. The essentials of a true Ministry. 1. The Essentials of a true Christian Ministry consist, First, in the person or subject fitly qualified for that callings; Secondly, in the commission or power by which the proper Form and Authority Ministerial is duly applied to any person so qualified. 1. The Subject matter of the Ministry must be able and apt men. 1. The person, subject matter or recipient of Holy Orders, aught to be such persons as are furnished with those Ministerial gifts and abilities, both internal and external, for knowledge and utterance, for unblamable life and good report, as may make them not only competent for that holy work in general, but likewise fit for that particular place whereto God by man doth call them. Of these real and discernible competencies, (besides those sincere and gracious propensities in charity to be hoped and presumed to glorify God in that service, not out of ambition, covetousness, popularity, or mere necessity, but out of an humble zeal and an holy choice) a judicious, serious, strict, solemn, public and authoritative trial and approbation ought to be made, as was appointed in the Church of England, by such Ecclesiastical persons as are in all reason most able, and so most meet to be appointed by law for the examining and judging of Ministers, both as to their personal sufficiencies, and the public testimonies of their life and manners. In this point I know some men are jealous that some Bishops in former times were too private, remiss and superficial, approving and ordaining Ministers only upon the Chaplains trial and testimony, which after proved but sorry Clerks; for which easiness they had (many times) to plead the meanness of those Livings to which such Ministers were presented, as could not bear an exacter trial. Poor people must have such preachers or none in such starving entertainments as were in many places, which, like heathy grounds, neither can breed nor feed any thing that is grand or goodly. Were the maintenance of Ministers every where made competent, nothing shoved be more severely looked to by the ordainers of Ministers than the competent abilities and worth of those to whom they transmit and impart that sacred power, charge and Ministration. For, not only the consciences of the ordained, but of the ordainers, stand here highly responsible to God and the Church, that God may be glorified, that the Church both in general and particular may be satisfied, that both other Ministers may cheerfully join with them in the work of the Lord, and that their peculiar charge may receive them with that due respect, love and submission, which becomes those that minister to them the holy things of God in the stead of Jesus Christ, as his Stewards, Lieutenants and Ambassadors. No men will conscientiously, no nor civilly, regard any Minister (when once the plebeian heat of faction is allayed) of whose sufficiency, and authority too, they have no just confidence, because no public trial, credible testimony, or authoritative mission: How much less, when men shall have pregnant evidences of a Ministers weakness, ignorance, folly, schism and scandal many ways? 'tis true, 2 Cor. 2.16. in the highest and exactest sense (as the Apostle says) none are sufficient for those things; but yet in a lower and qualified sense, none ought to be ordained who are not in some sort sufficient for them. Because none are by way of Divine equivalency worthy, we must not therefore admit such as are in humane & moral, or intellectual proportions utterly unworthy; since the Lord of his Church is pleased in all ages to give such gifts and blessings to men's tenuity, 2 Cor. 4.7. as may in some sense fit those earthen vessels to be workers together with God, by the help of the excellency of his Divine power, whose operations in this kind are not miraculous, as without any fit means, but moral, and proportionate to the aptitude of such means as God hath appointed and required in his Church for humane ability and industry. When the Material qualifications of one that is a Candidate or Expectant of the Ministry are thus examined by the ordainers, Secondly, The essential Form of a true Minister, right Ordination▪ & discovered to all those who are concerned, the next care for the Essentials of a Minister consists in applying that true Character, stamp and Authority, wherein the Essential Form and Soul as it were of a Minister of the Gospel doth consist; which (as I have in another work largely declared) doth not arise from any thing that is common in Nature or Grace, from any moral, civil or religious respects, for then all men, and women too, that have natural or acquired abilities, religious or gracious endowments, might presently either challenge to themselves the place, power, office and authority of a Minister of Christ and his Church, or communicate it to others as they please; which would be the original of all presumption and confusion in the Church of Christ, as much as parallel practices would be in civil States, if every man should put himself into what place and employment public he listeth, either magistratick or military, without any Commission or express authority derived to him from the fountain of civil or magistratick power. No, the true, valid and authentic authority of an Evangelicall Minister of any rank and degree, as Deacon, Presbyter or Bishop in the Church, consists in that Divine mission and Ecclesiastical Commission, which is duly derived and orderly conferred to meet persons, by those who are the lawful and Catholic conduits of that power, to whom it bathe been in all ages and places committed, and who are in a capacity to transmit or communicate and impart it to others by way of holy ordination, such as Jesus Christ received from his Father, such as he derived to his Apostles, such as they committed to their deputed successors, the Bishops and Pastors of the Church in all Ages and places; of which we have two express witnesses and great exemplifications in the commissions given by Saint Paul to Timothy and Titus, both as to ordination and jurisdiction; Such as hath been preserved in the Church through all times and places as a sacred depositum of Spiritual power, enabling Bishops and Presbyters to act as Ministers of Christ, in the Name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, in those holy Offices and Mysteries which are instituted by them for the calling, collecting, constituting and governing of the Church in a regular society and visible polity; which lest of all affects or admits any novelty or variety in its holy orders or authority. Which great Trust, Power and Commission for duly ordaining and sending forth Ministers into the Church of Christ, no man not wilfully blind but must confess that it hath been in all times, parts and states of the Church of Christ executed, if not only, yet chiefly, by the Ecclesiastical precedents or Bishops, in every grand distribution of the Church's polity: So as it was never regularly, warrantably or completely done by any Christian people, or by any Presbyters or Preachers, without the presence, consent or permission of their respective Bishops, in the several limits or partitions. Nor was this great, sacred and solemn work of Ordination ever either usurped by Bishops, as arrogant and imperious, or executed by them as a thing arbitrary and precarious; but it was always owned, esteemed and used by all true Christians, both Ministers and People, as an Authority Sacred and Divine, fixed and exercised by way of spiritual Jurisdiction and power Ecclesiastical, specially inherent, and eminently resident in Bishops as such, that is, so invested with the peculiar power of conferring holy orders to others, even from the hands and times of the Blessed Apostles, who had undoubtedly this power placed in them, and as undoubtedly ordered such a transmission of it, as to Timothy and Titus, so to all those holy Bishops that were their Primitive Successors; who did, as they ought, still continue that holy succession to all ages, by laying on such Episcopal hands as were the unquestionable Conservators and chief distributers of that Ministerial power, ever esteemed Sacred, Apostolic, Catholic, and Divine, being from one fountain or source Jesus Christ, and uniformly carried on by one orderly course, without any perverting or interrupting from any good Christians, either Presbyters or people. Nor were they ever judged other than factious, schismatical, irregular, impudent and injurious, who either usurped to themselves a power of Ordination, or despised and neglected it in their lawful and orthodox Bishops, Ordinatos suisse Presbyteros à solis Presbyteris, nullo exemplo, nulla authoritate probari potest. Sarav. Cont. Bez. de grad. Min. c. 22. upon any pretence of parity or popularity; as Learned Saravia proves unanswerably against Mr. Beza, when to make good the new Presbyterian Consistory at Geneva, he sought in this point to weaken the ancient, Catholic and constant prerogative of Episcopal Ordination; which never appears either in Scripture to have been committed, or in any Church-History to have been used by any Presbyters or People, apart from, much less in despite and affront of, the respective Bishops which were over them. This great power of Ordination, which the Author to the Hebrews signifies by the solemn ceremony or laying on of hands Heb. 6.2. is esteemed by that Apostolic writer as a main principle or chief pillar of Christian Religion, in respect of Ecclesiastic Order, Polity, Peace, Authority and Comfort; necessary for all Christians, both as Ministers and as people, in social and single capacities. For there is ordinarily no true and orthodox believing without powerful and authoritative preaching; and there can be no such preaching without a just mission or sending from those in whom that Sacred Commission hath ever been deposited, exemplified and preserved; which were the Bishops of the Church beyond all dispute, who did not ordain Presbyters in private and clandestine fashions, but in a most public and solemn manner, after fasting, preaching and praying, so as might best satisfy the Presbyters assistant and the people present at that grand transaction: both of them being highly concerned, the first what Ministers or fellow- labourers were joined with them in the work of the Lord, the other what Pastors and Teachers were set over them as from the Lord, and not merely from man, in any natural, moral, or civil capacity; whence the authority of the Christian Ministry cannot be, since it is not of man or from man, but from that Lord and God, Eph. 4. who is the great Teacher and Saviour of his Church, who only could give power as gifts meet for the Pastors, Bishops, and Teachers of it. These serious, weighty and undoubted persuasions, touching one uniform, holy, and divine ordination, being fixed in the consciences of all wise and sober Christians; it will follow without all peradventure, that true Religion, as Christian and Reformed, will never be able to recover in this or any Christian Nation its pristine lustre and Primitive Majesty, its ancient life and vigour, its due credit and comfort, much less its just Power and Authority over men's hearts and consciences, until this point of Ordination, or solemn investiture of fit men into Ministerial Office and Power, be effectually vindicated and happily redeemed from those modern intrusions, usurpations, variations and dissensions, which are now so rife among Preachers themselves, whence flow those licentious and insolent humours so predominant in common people, who by dividing, the other by usurping, both by innovating in this point of Ordination, have brought those infinite distractions, contempts and indifferences upon Religion and its Ministry, as Christian and Reformed, which are at this day to be seen in England beyond any Nation that I know under Heaven. It is most certain, that the major part of mankind, yea and of formal Christians too, do not much care for the power of any Religion, nor for the Authority of any Ministry, no nor for any serious profession or form of Religion, further than these may suit with their fancies, lusts and interests. If custom or education have dipped them in some tincture of Religion during their minority, if the cords of counsel and example have bound them up to some form of godliness in their tender years and tamer tempers; yet, as they grow elder, they are prone to grow bolder to sin, and to affect such refractory liberties, as may not only dispute and quarrel some parts, but despise and trample under feet all the frame of Religion that is not indulgent to their humours, or compliant to their inordinate desires and designs. Especially when once they find public disorders, distractions and disgraces cast upon that very Religion in which they were instituted; when they see contumelies and affronts cast upon that whole Church in which they were baptised, and all manner of contemptuous insolences offered to those chief Churchmen, by whom they had received the derivations and dispensations of all Holy Orders, Truths and Mysteries. When men see new Religions, new Churches, new Ministers and new modes of Ordination set up, to the reproach and defiance of all that went before, who, I beseech you, of most ordinary Christians (who are yet agitated by their youthful lusts and unbridled passions) will be so constant as to hold fast that profession which formerly they had taken up? Who will continue to venerate that Church and Clergy whose heads they see crowned with thorns, and their faces besmeared with blood and dirt, whose comeliness is deformed with the spittings, buffet and scorns of those that seek to expose them to open shame, and to fasten them to the Cross of death and infamy? Alas, they will not at all regard in a short time any orders of the Church, or any ordination of Ministers, or any sacred ordinances and mysteries dispensed by them; since no pleas, never so pregnant and unanswerable, for the Antiquity, Uniformity and Constancy of that way and method which was used in all ages and places of the Church of Christ, since no gracious and glorious successes attending such ordaining Bishops and such ordained Presbyters, since nothing prevails against vulgar prejudices and extravagancies, provoked by that impatient itch they always have after novelties. Many we see will have no Ordination, no Ministers, no Sacraments, rather than Bishops should have any hand in ordaining. The honour of that Ordination which was in all ancient Churches must be cruelly sacrificed with all ancient and Catholic Episcopacy, rather than some men's passions for a parity, or popularity, or an Anarchy in the Church be not gratified. All Bishops as such, and all Presbyters, and all Christians, and all Churches, and all holy duties performed by them in that station and communion, must be cried down, yea thrown down, as the adulterating and prostitutions of the Church's Liberty, and of the purity of Christ's Ordinances. The hands of Bishops and Presbyters too, though joined and imposed in Ordination, must be declared as impure, vile and invalid; yea a flat, novel and impertinent distinction must be found out to vacate the Bishop's eminency, and yet to assert the Presbyters parity and sole power, as resting in any three, two, or one of them, though never so petty, poor and pitiful men in all respects▪ natural and civil, sacred and moral. Yet these (forsooth) some fancy as Presbyters may still ordain, because a Bishop (say they) did so, merely as a Presbyter of the same degree and order, not as having any eminency of office, degree, authority or jurisdiction above the meanest Minister; which St. Jerom and all antiquity acknowledged as a branch of Apostolical dignity and eminency peculiar to a Bishop above any one or more Presbyters. Which reproaches against the persons, power and practise of Bishops in England, as usurpers and monopolizers in this point of ordination (which they ever challenged and exercised as their peculiar honour, office and dignity in this as all Churches) if they could by any Reason or Scripture, by Law of God or Man, by any judgement or practice of any one Church, or of any one godly and renowned Christian in any age or History of the Church, be verified, so as to make their power of ordination to be but a subtle or forcible usurpation in Bishops, it would have been not only an act of high Justice to have abrogated all the pretensions of Bishops to that or any power in the Church; but it will be a work of admiration, yea of astonishment, to the world's end in all after-ages and successions of Christian Religion, (which will hardly last another 1500 years) to consider the long and strong delusion which possessed the Christian world in this point of Ordination, as only regular and complete by Bishops, where their presence and power might be enjoyed. Nor will it be more matter of everlasting wonder to ponder, not only Gods long permission of such a strong delusion, but his prospering it so much and so long as a principal means to preserve and propagate the Ministry, Order, Government, Peace and Power of true Religion, and the true Churches of Christ, which were never without Bishops, as Spiritual Fathers begetting (as Epiphanius speaks) both Presbyters and people to the Church. Nor will it be the work of an ordinary wit, whether Presbyterian or Independent, to salve all those aspersions and diminutions of either ignorance and blindness, or fatuity and credulity, or weakness and impotency, which must necessarily fall from this account not only upon the wisest and best Churchmen, but upon the most Christian and wise Princes, the most zealous and reformed Parliaments of England, who in the grand Reformation of this Church, and ever since for near an 100 years, have after grave counsel and mature debate, approved and appointed, countenanced by a law, and encouraged by their actual submission, the ordination of Ministers chiefly by the authority of Bishops, never without them. And this they did certainly not out of policy but piety, not in prudence only but in conscience, convinced not only of the lawfulness of Bishops, but of the necessity of them (where Providence doth not absolutely hinder or deny them, as it never did in England, or elsewhere) by the example of the Apostles, by the ancient, constant and uniform practice of this and all Churches, by the suffrages of all Learned and Godly men of any account in all ages. To all which were added as great preponderating in behalf of Episcopacy, the many and most incomparable Bishops that have been in all successions of the Church; the many Martyrs, Confessors, excellent Preachers, Writers and Governors of that order; lastly the unspeakable blessings which by their Ordination, Consultation and Jurisdiction have been derived to the Church of Christ. If all Estates in the Reformed Church of England have been hitherto deceived, as to this point of Episcopal Ordination by Bishops; sure they are the more excusable, because they have erred with all the Christian world. Nor could they be justly blamed, if when they reform superfluous Superstition, they yet abhorred in this point so great and dangerous an innovation, which must needs shake and overthrow the faith of many, if the peculiar office and power of Bishops to ordain Ministers and govern the Church were either only usurped, or wholly invalid, as some of late have pretended, not with more clamour than falsity. But if all these jealousies and reproaches cast upon Bishops and their Authoritative Ordination (as a peculiar office and exercise of power eminently residing in them) be most false, and by some men's calumnies heightened to such impudent lies, that no eructations of Hell or belchings of Beelzebub had ever more blackness of darkness in them, or more affrontive to the glory God and the Honour of the Catholic Church, whence, I beseech you (O my Noble and worthy Countrymen) is that dulness, stupor and indifferency come upon us in England, so far, as not only connives at the arrogancy of some Presbyters, who without Scripture-precept or Catholick-patterne challenge this ordaining and Governing power as only and wholly due to themselves, discarding all Episcopal Eminency and Authority above them; but the very beasts of the people are so far flattered, as to be suffered with their foul feet daily to trouble and confound that clear fountain, and constant stream of Ministerial Authority and Ecclesiastical succession by way of Episcopal Ordination? which was ever of so solemn and conspicuous use in all Churches, of so venerable a succession, of so ancient and uninterrupted a derivation, from the very Apostles days and hands, that it never failed to keep its course (as some rivers do through salt waters) amidst all the confusions which either heathenish, heretical, or schismatical persecutions raised in the Church. Yea, no Heretics, no Schismatics, (except Aerius and his few complices, who, discontent for not obtaining a Bishopric which ●e sought, and turning Arrian, was the first, the only and the fittest engine to oppose Episcopacy, as Epiphanius observes) were ever so wild, so fanatic, so desperate, as to cast off all Episcopal succession & Authority over them, both in Ordination and jurisdiction; yea they knew no means to keep their confederacies and factions better together, than that which they saw had always been serviceable to preserve the true Church's communion. Though the Manicheans, Arrians, Macedonians, Nestorians, Pelagians and others, together with the Novatians, Donatists, withdrew from, or were justly excluded by the Bishops of the sound and orthodox profession; yet still these Heterodox Opiniasters had not only Deacons and Presbyters, but Bishops of their own: Some of which Bishops afterward returning to the Catholic Communion, were not degraded from their Episcopal power, but only suspended from the exercise of it in another Bishop's jurisdiction or Diocese without his leave; which being granted to some of them, gave occasion to those Chorepiscopi, which were Bishops without particular title and local jurisdiction, but yet enjoying and using this power of Ordination in some Country-Townes and Villages, by the permission of the Bishop or Metropolitan of the Diocese or Province, residing in the chief City: which indulgence was after (as the Church-Histories tell us) taken away from the Chorepiscopi, when it was found to occasion great inconveniences, by admitting two Bishops in one Precinct or Diocese. Certainly, what is so pregnantly Catholic and useful, that not only all good men, but even such as were evil could not but approve and use it, it were not only folly, but frenzy, to cast quite away: (if it were the full vote and free act of the Nation.) What Apology could be sufficient to excuse this Nation, either among Churches abroad, or to posterity at home, when they should see that by a rash, partial and popular precipitancy we have been hurried, against all Reason, Honour and Religion, to forsake or to stop up the ancient fountains of living waters, which have always flowed from Episcopal Ordination, (supplying this, as all Churches, in all places and offices with orderly Presbyters and useful Deacons) only to try what those pits will afford which novellers have digged to themselves, and which they eagerly obtrude upon this Church, notwithstanding they are already found by sad experience to hold no such clear and pure waters, either for Doctrine or Discipline, for Authority or Unity, for Order or Peace, as those were which the Apostles digged, and the Catholic Church ever used and esteemed for sacred? In this great point then of Right Ordination, and true Ministerial Authority (of which the Learned Mr. Mason professeth, Mr. Mason Preface to his Defence, etc. next his salvation, he desires to be assured) it is (as I humbly conceive) not only piously, but prudently necessary for our Reformed Church, Religion and Ministry to be effectually vindicated, and by all possible means fairly united. If there were ever any other way of Ordination used or allowed in the Church of Christ, let the Authors, Histories and instances be produced, either as to their grounds or their practice. If there were never any other either used, or approved, or thought of, besides that which was in the Church of England, managed by Bishops, as necessary and chief agents in it; truly it is but Justice, Reason, Conscience and Honour to own this Truth, to follow this Catholic precedent, to return to an holy conformity with pious Antiquity, which neither invented nor induced Bishops or Episcopal Ordination and jurisdiction as an affected novelty, or a studied variety, but they followed (doubtless) herein what was received from the very first Bishops, who succeeded to the Apostles, as authorized and placed by them. Tertul. l. de Praes. adv. Haer. l. 32, & 34. Cont. Marci. l. 4. c. 5. Euseb. hist. l. 5, 6, 7. Irenaeus l. 4. c. 6. lib. 5. c. 20. Cyp. ep. 52. & passim. Which authorities are afterward at large cited in this Book. So that as the succession of Bishops was lineally reducible to the Apostles, (which Irenaeus, Tertullian, Cyprian, Eusebius, Nicephorus, and others evidently prove, not only by their public Registers, but by their private memories, when the names of Bishops were fresh in Christians minds, and not very numerous, as in the second and third Centuries) No less may be affirmed of Ordination by Bishops, it had its precept and pattern from the Apostles, expressly committed and enjoined to some persons as chief Bishops, never trusted to mere Presbyters alone, much less to people in common, so far as any Record of the Church, Sacred or Ecclesiastic, doth inform us; whose constant silence in this case is a better Testimony against all innovation of Ecclesiastical Ordination, than all the Sorites, the Rhapsodies, heaps and scambling of I know not what broken scraps and wrested allegations out of any Scriptures or Fathers can be: by which I see some men have sought, with much dust, sweat and blood, to bring in their new, uncertain, unaccustomed and unauthentick forms of Ordination, exclusive of any Precedent or Bishop, who ever was as the principal Verb in a sentence, which cannot be wanting, without making the sense of all other words very lame, defective, incoherent and insignificant. These grand persuasions joined to the sad experiences made in England's late variations, do thus far command me to be more intent and earnest that in this point of valid, complete, undoubted and most authoritative Ordination we might be made uniform; that all Ministers, like currant money, might have the same image and superscription upon them. It is most certain that the Christian and Reformed Religion will never be able to shine either clearly, or constantly, or comfortably upon the consciences of Christians, either as Ministers or people, while it is in this great point of Ordination so darkened, clouded and eclipsed, that it looks like the Sun wrapped in sackcloth, or the Moon turned into blood. What Ministry, what Ministers, what Ordination, what Ordained, what Ordainers, what Ordinances of Christ will (in time) be much esteemed in England by the Nobility, Gentry or Yeomanry, when they shall see various ways of Ordination daily invented and obtruded, pitiful Novelties induced, uniform Antiquity discarded, Primitive Episcopacy exautorated, a subordinate Presbytery scorned, Veritatis praedicatorem unius diei spatio velut è luto statuam fingunt. Nazian. a popular parity and petulancy indulged every where to make what extemporary Priests and Preachers they list of the dregs and meanest of the people, as little (God knows) to their own soul's benefit as to the Church's peace, or to the honour of this Nation, though they do it with as much facility as children make little babies of clouts, or statues of clay, as Nazianzen alludes? For what I pray you will these new propagators, with all their progeny of new-ordained, new-fashioned, new-coined and new-commissioned Preachers, signify to the more sober sort of mankind, or indeed to the very plebs and vulgar, especially among people so curious, so querulous, so proud, so pragmatic, so petulant, so insolent, as are in England? Will sober Christians ever much care for any Ministers unless they be commended to them as meet to be such, not only by the highest wisdom and civil orderings of this Nation, but also as set over them in the Lords Name, and Christ's Authority, by an holy and solemn Ordination? such, of which they have the least and indeed no cause to have any doubting or slighting thoughts; which is the case only of Episcopal Ordination. English Christians of any estate, worth, weight, or wisdom, will never be contented to be taught and reproved, to have their children baptised at the Font, or themselves communicated at the Lords Table, by such Ministers as shall have only the petty tickets of an humane act or State- ordinance. No, they will, and justly aught to require the grand Charter of Divine Authority, conferred in the way of Catholic and true Ordination: That so Ministers may be able to justify their function and actions, not only in Law, but in conscience; not as Emissaries from men, but as Ambassadors from God, Commissionated by Christ and his Deputies, employed in his work, and armed with his power. There goes much more to make a Minister of Jesus Christ, than to make a Constable in an Hundred or a Parish, or to make a Captain in a Troop, or a Justice on a Bench; who yet cannot expect to be owned as such, unless they can evidence their Commission and Authority to be rightly derived from the sovereign original of civil power: no more may Ministers, unless they can show the right source and course of their sacred Authority. While Ministers preach and practise, Baptise and Consecrate with divided tongues, distracted hands and distorted heads, as to this point of their Ordination, they are likely to produce no better successes, either to this Church or Nation, than those morter-men did, whose work deserved the nickname of Babel or Confusion. The essential form and difference, the whole life and operation, the proper virtue and efficacy of a Christian Ministry and Minister, depending (as I have showed) upon the truth, sanctity and validity of that Authority with which he is invested, and by that enabled to do the work and office of a Minister; without which no man hath any more to do, than his meanest groom or footman, with the acts properly Ministerial, Military or Magisteriall, whatever abilities or call he fancy himself to have. So that if once your Wisdom and Piety (O worthy Gentlemen) could find a way to put the Clergy or Ministry of this Church (as formerly we were) into an uniform way of sacred, complete and undoubted Authority as to their Ordination, than (and not before) will they appear like the Angels of God ascending and descending in their orderly courses; then will they be enabled and esteemed powerfully to pray to God for you, powerfully to preach from God to you, powerfully to consecrate and exhibit holy mysteries to you: Then will they be like the Lamps of the Temple, or the shafts of the Golden Candlestick, (which were all of the same make and fashion, and supplied with holy oil from the same source) shining with a lustre more than humane in your several congregations: how much more will they appear like Angelic and Celestial Quires in their Ecclestastick Convocations and Synodall Conventions? Whereas now Ministers are in all Places, Cities and Countries wretchedly divided, monstrously deformed, and miserably disabled, mutually accusing and clamoring against each other, always barking, or biting, or howling, either tormenting or tormented, as the Devils in Hell. One superciliously abhors what another devoutly adores. One vilifies what another venerates. One Minister with his party pulls down what another builds up. One execrates what another consecrates. One nullifies what another magnifies. One formally officiates who is counted no Minister, and really is none; another is thought to be but half a Minister, or a kind of mongrel; a third is reputed for more than an ordinary Minister, as having his Commission by inspiration or conspiration. One is thought superfluous, yea superstitious, in his Ordination, because he had a Bishop with Presbyters to ordain him; another is judged defective and dwarfish for want of a Bishop; a third hath neither Bishop nor true Presbyters to ordain him, but either begets a body to himself as an head, or is chosen by a popular body to be their head. This makes both Preachers and people at such distances and defiances in Religion, that one counts that sacrilege which another boasts of as sacred. One is called a mocker of God, an usurper in holy offices, and a contemner of the Churches Primitive and Catholic Custom; another is derided as a doting Antiquary, a superstitious Priest, or proud Prelate, who can relish no bread but what is old and moldy, nor any drink but what is out of a Gibeonitish bottle. Thus are all holy mysteries and duties, which any Ministers perform, made either very disputable or despicable to the people, while all their authority on all sides, as dispensers of them, is so much questioned, doubted, divided and denied in the great point of their mission and Ordination; which is most essential to a Minister, and most fundamental to any Church's Peace and Polity, requiring (next the main Articles of Faith) to be settled in the clearest and most unquestionable way, with most uniform Authority, most conform to all pious Antiquity; whose ancient and Catholic pattern as to Episcopal (that is Apostolical) Ordination, is no more with prudence to be changed either into Presbyterian or Independent new forms, than the Church hath cause to exchange david's▪ Psalms for any such godly ballads or modern Hymns, as we see some Ministers, with more piety (I hope) than good poetry, have sometime commended to the harsh and unharmonious voices of ill-tuned and ill-stringed Congregations. Add to all these, not only the inconveniencies, but mischiefs, which are not more uncomfortable than pernicious to the interest of the true and Reformed Religion. For from the divisions of Ministers, as to their rise and descent or Ordination, follow not only strangeness, but strifes and emulations, evil eyes and secret feudes against one another, each being either jealous of, or contemptuous toward another. But furthermore, from this difference in their Ordination, they are tempted to affect, to broach and to preach different Doctrines. For those peeled rods which always lie before their eyes, as to their Orders or Characters, their Ministerial Admissions and Stations, do occasion their conceiving and bringing forth a ring- streaked and spotted kind of Religion, even as to Doctrine; that by the discriminations of their opinions either in faith or manners, they may more testify their distances from, and animosities against each other as Ministers. Men of very good parts, yea and of piety many times (as Saint Jerome and Ruffinus) from lesser disputes and differences, are transported to wide and sharp defiances; not only as to their persons, but as to their persuasions. Hence we see Ministers of different descents commonly affect to be known by some different points & Doctrines. Presbyterians and Independents are thought generally to follow Mr. Calvin in all points, as sworn to his dictates or determinations; who was a man, though of excellent parts, yet not of Divine and infallible perfections, but mixed with humane infirmities, passions and imperfections. Episcopal Divines are suspected most-what to have at least a tang and relish of Lutheran, Arminian, & Pelagian opinions; some are said to run out to a rankness of Socinianism: though the most and best of them I know do confine themselves to the Doctrine of their Mother the Church of England, which was neither inconstant, curious nor superfluous, but clear, necessary and constant, owning no Dictator but Christ, and no Canon of Faith but the Scriptures; doing and determining all things of Religion with great gravity, counsel, moderation, charity and circumspection, besides a just & sovereign Authority, which sways much with the Episcopal Clergy. As the Church of England did not despise Luther's, Melanchthons', or calvin's judgement, so it justly preferred its own before theirs, or any one man's, being always guided by the concurrent Wisdom and Piety of many Learned and Godly Clergymen, both Bishops and Presbyters, no way inferior to those or any foreign Divines, and in some things far their superiors, not only as to the eminent places they held in this Church, but as to the great discretion and temper of their Spirits; which made many of them fitter for the glorious Crown of Martyrdom which they enjoyed, than either of those two hotter-spirited, yet renowned men, who died in their beds, who had not only to contend with the Papal errors and superstitions, which then extremely pestered them and all Christendom, but with their own passions and transports, yea and with those many popular extravagancies which they rather occasioned, I hope, than designed among the vulgar, who presently fancied that they had the precepts and patterns of those great men, Luther and Calvin, to animate them to popular, seditious, rude, injurious and rebellious methods of Reformation; in which the very plebs or populacy imagined themselves better able to judge of Religion, than any of their Governors in Church or State, and because they had more hands, therefore they must needs have better hearts and heads to do that work, when and how they listed. Which mad methods as the Church of England never used in its practice, so it perfectly abhorred in its Doctrine, to which few Ministers do heartily, ingenuously and fully conform, who have forsaken its Discipline and Ordination; from which who so flies furthest, commonly wanders and wilders most in Enthusiastic, Familistick and Anabaptistick opinions. In order to this design of restoring an uniform and Authoritative Ordination, O how ingenuous, how religious, how prudent, how just, how charitable, how noble a work would it be on all sides, for wise and worthy men, to have some regard to those few clusters of Episcopacy which are yet remaining in England, as a seed in which may be a blessing; if the learned and venerable Bishops yet living among us were fairly treated and invited to such a concurrence and common union in this point of Ordination as might transmit both it and their Authority, without any flaw or scruple of schism, interruption, or fraction, as most valid, complete and authentic, to posterity, according to the Catholic and Primitive pattern! O how great a security and satisfaction would this conjuncture and derivation & completion of holy orders by Bishops with Presbyters give to many learned men's scruples, and to many good Christians consciences, without any injury or offence (that I know) to such of any party as are truly pious and peaceable, who (no doubt) would be glad to see that no disorder or discord might be in holy orders, from which (as from a good & well-tempered spring in a Watch,) all the regular motions of the wheels, and the true indications of the hand are derived, directed and depending! There can be nothing but clashings, enterferings and confusions in any Church, or society of Christians, where there are crosse-grained, contradictive, or counterfeited Ministers, as to their Ordination. Here must be laid the principal and corner binding-stone of our happy Constitution and Communion as a Christian Church, or Ecclesiastical polity. The affecting of novelty and variety in this (as to the main of the Ministerial Order, Power and Authority,) had been the way to have made at first a very crazy and weak Reformation in England, and is now the way to deform, yea to destroy all again, giving infinite advantages to the projects and policies of Rome, also to the licentious distempers of men's own hearts and manners: which considerations have made me the more large and importune, as in a point of no less consequence and importance as to the visible constitution and managery of any Church, than the unity and uniformity of civil power or Magistratick Authority is necessary for any Commonwealth or Kingdom, where divided magistracy doth certainly tend to distraction, and so to destruction, as our own late miseries do abundantly convince us, as to our civil peace and secular interest: And truly no less will a divided Ministry infallibly tend to the distraction first, and then the destruction of this Church and the Reformed Religion: a new Ministry portends either no Ministry, or no true one. And where most Reverend Episcopacy, (which hath so many glorious marks of Primitive Antiquity, Rare Piety, Signal Prosperity, Undisputable Universality, Apostolic Order, scriptural Authority and Divine benediction upon it; where this) comes after 1600. years of Christianity, and one hundred years of an happy Reformation, to be questioned, baffled, exautorated, there is no great likelihood that the novices and punies, Presbytery, or Independency, or Anabaptism, or Enthusiasm, should take any great root in the love and esteem of any Christians, who if Learned, Wise and Upright, must needs have greater confidence of and reverence for an Episcopal Ministry, than for any new-modes, which never yet had, at their best, any thing either very desirable or very commendable in them, as to Wise and Grave men's affections and judgements. And take them in their passions, pragmaticalness, popularities, partialities, novelties, varieties, inconstancies, confusions, and injuriousness and insolences, by which they have either begun or increased their parties, ways and designs in many places, many times against the will and Authority of lawful Magistrates and Sovereign Princes, no less than against the dignity & authority of the Bishops and Fathers of the Church; look upon the best of them (I say) under these marks, which are almost inseparable from them, (especially in the height of their lusts and hopes, which are as their rutting time, which secular ambitions and popular acclamations raise them to) I believe, as they will never obtain the conscientious respect of the wisest and best men, so, nor will they in conclusion constantly enjoy the vulgar flatteries and applaudings of weak or wicked men; who having not cast any anchor of fixation to their judgements and affections, either in clear Reason or sound Religion, in Equity or Charity, in Faith or Love, in holy Antiquity or Primitive conformity, but preferring factious and fanciful novelties before Catholic and Uniform Antiquity, they must needs be everlastingly fluctuating in their endless inventions, ambitions, inconstancies and vertiginous Reformations of Ministry and Religion, which are commonly biased by some private advantages, overswaying them to invent or embrace some gainful novelty, contrary to that due veneration and humble submission which all sober Christians owe to Primitive simplicity, and that Catholic Authority which is indelebly stamped upon the Universal Church's custom, consent and practise, agreeable to the Scripture-Canon or rule, which it ever was. All which are in no one thing more evident than in this of the Original constitution, derivation and transmission of the Ministerial Order, Office and Authority, by the way of Episcopal eminency; where Bishops with their Presbyters did ever rightly ordain Evangelicall Ministers, but Presbyters without any Bishops above them never did, by any allowed example or usual practice in any Church, from the Apostles days, till the last Century. CHAP. XVII. Of the well-being of the Clergy or Ministry. 1. In point of maintenance and support. THe Essentials or Being of true Ministers thus restored and preserved both in their Ability and Authority, the first to be searched by due Examination, the second conferred by lawful and Catholic Ordination; the next thing which craves your counsel, care and charity (most worthy Christians) is the (bene esse) well-being of your Clergy, both for their maintenance and their respect, for their single support and their social consorting. For poor and alone, or rich, yet scattered, like disjoined figures and cyphers, they will signify not much as to public reputation or gubernative influence: But together their Competency and Communion will make up that double Honour, 1 Tim. 5.17. which the Apostle by the Spirit of God requireth as due to such Evangelicall Bishops and Ministers as rule well, labouring in the Word and Doctrine, according to the place and proportion wherein God and the Church have set them. The personal maintenance of Ministers, by which they may comfortably subsist, diligently attend, and cheerfully dispense the things of God to their several charges, I put in the first place, not as the more noble in respect of the common good and joint honour of the Clergy, but as natural and most necessary: for as Ministers will have no great spirit or ability for private employment, so much less joy or confidence in any public Church-Government, if they have not such convenient support as may countenance and embolden them to appear in public. Without doubt, nothing is more unbecoming the Honour and Grandeur, the Plenty and Piety of any Christian Nation, than to keep their Clergy poor, indigent and dejected: so beyond measure is it vile for any Christian people to rob their able Ministers of that honourable maintenance which once they have been lawfully possessed of, and long enjoyed, as devout donations given to God's Church and his more immediate Servants, the Ministers of the Gospel, by pristine piety, for the public good of men's souls: but above all things to be abominated, is that Atheistical Hypocrisy, whose fraud pretends to Reform Religion, (as Herod promised to worship the babe Christ, when he intended to kill him,) by reducing the dispensers of it to sordid poverty and sharking necessity; by compelling Preachers to use Mechanic Trades and extemporary preachings; yea, and after all this, by laying the weight even of Church-Government upon such weak and low shoulders, either of such poor Bishops or Pygmy-Presbyters, who must (forsooth) live upon popular contributions and arbitrary Alms, after the Primitive and Apostolic pattern (as some men urge) even of St. Paul, and of other prime Preachers at first, who they say preached gratis, having no set salary, and exacting nothing as due from the people. Which Primitive and Apostolic pattern is not more impertinently and injuriously, than falsely and impudently, urged by illiberal men in sacrilegious times: For they may easily find that the justice and power of demanding hire or wages as due for their work, 1 Cor. 9.6. was urged and owned by St. Paul, as due by the Law of God under the Gospel as well as before it; though sometime remitted in tenderness to the temper of men's hearts and Estates in those hard, yet charitable, times, when there was so much of gratitude and charity in zealous Christians, that there needed nothing as of compulsion and necessity; and in which very cheap, though extraordinary, gifts did most-what enable the Apostles and others, beyond what Ministers may now expect under the rate of much Time, Charge, Study and Pains. Alas, those Primitive Preachers needed not to be very solicitous for their support or salary among true Christians; Act. 4.34, 35. when 'tis evident that Christian people had generally such largeness of hearts, as offered not only the Tithe but the Totall of their Estates, Goods, and Lands too, to the support of their Preachers and their poor. However it is not to be doubted, but that as the Apostles, so all Bishops and Ministers of the Gospel may with as much equity as modesty demand, receive and enjoy whatever was then or afterward, either occasionally or constantly, conferred upon them by any Christian people or Princes: the distribution of which was in Primitive times chiefly entrusted to the care of the Bishops, who appointed both rewards to Presbyters, and relief to the poor. So that it must needs be barbarously covetous and Judasly sacrilegious, for any Christian people violently and unjustly to take away from their Learned and deserving Clergy, either such other Lands and Revenues, or those very Tithes which people have once put out of their power, by giving them to God by an act of solemn and public consent, testified in their national Laws, Gen. 14.18. Num. 18.20, 21. Deut. 10: 9 1 Cor. 9.14. Gal. 6.6. Heb. 7.9. every way agreeable to the Will and Word of God, to the Light and Law of Nature, to the patriarchical Tradition and Practice before the Law of Moses, to Gods own proportion and appointment among the Jews, to the Apostolical comprobation and the parallel ordaining of the Lord under the Gospel, or to the right and merits of Jesus Christ, (beyond the type of Melchisedech,) whose Evangelicall Priesthood being to continue in the Church, surely deserves no less honour and maintenance than the aaronical and levitical, and much more sure than any Priestly office among the heathens. Yet who hath not either heard or read in all Histories, that the very heathens, out of an instinct of gratitude and Religion, did every where offer the Tenth of their Fruits, Corn, Spices, Gums, Minerals, Metals, and spoils in war, to the Temples and Priests of those Gods (as Ceres, Apollo or the Sun, to Diana or the Moon, to Mars, Jupiter, Bacchus, etc.) by whose Divine influence and bounty they believed themselves to enjoy those good things? And can any true Christian people have so base and penurious hearts, as to fancy that they then honour Christ most, when they part with least of their substance to his service? that of all Priesthoods which have ever been in the world (among civil or barbarous Nations) Christ's shall appear the most beggarly and necessitous? Can any true believer thus requite the Lord that bought them, and gave himself a ransom for them? will they compel the blessed Jesus, who while he was on earth became poor to make them rich, now he is risen and ascended to Glory in Heaven, to suffer poverty, hunger, thirst, nakedness, shame and contempt in his Ministers, to whom Christ professeth, Mat. 10.42. who so giveth aught in his name, as to his servant and Minister, giveth to himself? And no doubt, who so taketh any thing from them, taketh from Christ, and is a robber of his Saviour. So that nothing is or can be more impudent and abhorred in the sight of our God, our Saviour, and all good Christians, than for a Nation that is fat and full, ample and opulent in all plenty, foreign and domestic, to debase and impoverish their Bishops, Pastors and Ministers; to force them to live on popular pittances and vile dependences; to make them as mercenary and arbitrary hirelings; to expose them to all those sordid flatteries which attend sharking necessities. How must this abase that sacred Honour and Divine Authority, which is and aught to be highly regarded and reverenced in true Bishops and Ministers? Which of them thus haltred and tamely led by the vulgar, shall dare to speak the word of God with all comely boldness and Christian freedom? How can such poor and petty preachers have the confidence and courage, without being ridiculous, to reprove the faults of any men, great or small? Experience hath taught us, how miserably even poor Ministers must crouch and comply for morsels of bread, not only to good Lords and Ladies, but to very sorry Masters and Dames in Country as well as City; who all affect this glory, to be thought (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) patroness and benefactors to their preachers as to their servants, not of right and duty, but of alms and charity: so supercilious are these gratitudes of almost all sorts of Christians, when they count them not debts but gifts; not a legal or a Religious Tribute to God and their Saviour, but a contribution to their poor Minister, the stream of whose tongue must set the mill of his teeth on work; he shall feed little to his own pleasure in this, if in the other he please not his gracious and inconstant contributors. This station and posture of Ministers, as to popular dependence and arbitrary Alms, is the most intolerable turpitude and vilest dehonestation that can befall any ingenuous man in the world, and most of all incongruous to those who pretend to any public place of Government or employment, with conspicuity, and under any notion of authority, either Civil or Ecclesiastic. Do but make, for trial sake (O my noble Countrymen) your criminal Judges, your civil Magistrates, your country-Justices, your Committee-men, your Military officers, your Bailiffs, Majors, and chief Burghers in the meanest Corporation; make these of pitiful, poor, hungry, threadbare wretches, let them be always shifting and sharking, digging or thatching, spinning or weaving, scraping and begging for their subsistence, and living upon precarious salaries, such as people list to give them, for which they shall have no more legal right or claim than Mountebanks and Jugglers have for those rewards▪ from their gentle spectators and benevolous auditors; would any thing (I beseech you) be more putrid, abject, vile and despicable in the eyes of the people of England or any Countryman such mushroom Magistrates, such Go-by-ground Governors, no●tanding they may possibly have the formalities of a Broad Seal, a ●te Staff, a Paper or Parchment Commission? will they not in time be as noisome to a Country, and noxious to Justice, as the dead frogs were in Egypt? To avoid which deformed and ridiculous spectacles in civil-government, doth not the wisdom of this as of every Nation, either find those men invested with Honourable estates, whom it chooseth to or placeth in Magistratick place and power? or else, if their merits be beyond their Estates, are they not presently endowed with such salaries and pensions, either out of the Prince's Exchequer and public Treasury, or out of the emoluments and perquisites of their places, as may bear out their Authority with some form of Majesty and respect? At least, they may redeem both their place and persons from that popular scorn, scurrility and insolency, which is never more malapert, than when it finds want and poverty, like vermin, pinching the backs, and oppressing the bellies of those men who undertake to rule or restrain, to curb or control common people. Which is no very welcome office to the vulgar; among whom true Religion finds so much to oppose, so little to please or correspond, as to the humours, lusts, fancies and passions of men, that its Ministers must naturally and necessarily be subject and exposed to all manner of opposition, despite and despiciency; unless those so obvious and innate mischiefs be, as in all piety and policy they ought to be, avoided, not only by the conspicuity of Ministers, approved learning, good abilities, prudent demeanour and due Authority, conferred in their regular and uniform Ordination, but further, by that comely entertainment and competent maintenance, of which common people have a more lively sense and real taste (as the dunghil-cock had of the barleycorn) than of all their other internal jewels and ornaments intellectual: which will not signify much (as is evident in many hundred instances of worthy Ministers, both Bishops and Presbyters, in these times) if people find them clothed in threadbare coats, and almost starved by the straightness and tenuity of their worldly condition; which aspect makes even parents themselves, who are our natural Princes and Gods, very prone to be despised by their children. Nor can it but ill become any ordinary Minister that is worthy of that name and office, but worst of all will it suit with those who affect to be, or indeed are, or aught to be chief Governors and Bishops in the Church; whose public entertainment ought to be such as might extend beyond their private and domestic necessities, to something of public Hospitality, Charity and Magnificence: which were the proportions heretofore allowed by the noble and generous temper of the English Nation to its Clergy, both Bishops and Presbyters, the better to bear up their dignity and authority among the people. The words of a poor man, though wise, Eccl. 9.15. are forgotten or unregarded, as Solomon observes: boldness and freedom of speech in poor men seems impudence; an authoritative carriage in 〈…〉 counted arrogancy; their very zeal seems either impatient o●●●●●olent. All nations ever abhorred a beggarly Priesthood, as a blasphemous disparaging of the honour of their God. Nor is indeed (in my judgement) any thing at this day more worthy of the Wisdom, Piety and Honour of this Nation, after all its long war and vast expenses military, than to begin to think of doing their duty to God, by finding out, and effectually using some fit means to put on Christ's clothes again, to make every Church-living in England and Wales so competent as may maintain one, and in some great populous places two competent Ministers, that both Preaching, Catechising and Visiting, with other offices, may be more fully performed. Alas, what can twenty, or thirty, or fifty pound, or less than an hundred pound a year do, to supply the studies and families of any able and ingenuous Minister? to keep up his Spirits from rusticity and sordidness? to preserve his person and calling from contempt? to make him in some measure Charitable and Hospitable, cheerful and considerable? Much we know was once pretended for the settling and enlarging the maintenance even of the inferior Clergy, even then wh●n much was intended to be taken away from the chiefest of the Clergy, both of Lands, Houses and Honours. This last I am sure hath been sorely executed; the former is yet for the most part to begin: nay most Livings in England are abated twenty, yea thirty, in the hundred since those specious proposals, just as the burdens of the Israelites were sorer after the news of their deliverance. O when will that blessed day come, in which the just pity and generous piety of this Nation will by some most prudent and equable ways make either a just restitution or some moderate compensation to Churchmen; not only to maintain something of public Order, Polity, Honour and Government among them, but so as may support private and painful Ministers in their little Parishes, where unless they be able to live in some decent sort in their own Houses and Tables, they can never serve well at the Temple and Altar? They ought at least to be redeemed from biting and debasing poverty, though they be not tempted to grow rich; a blessing now denied to most Ministers beyond any that are public agents or officers, yea and the meanest Farmer's mechanic Artisans. Much envy, spleen and bitterness have by some popular and envious orators been heretofore vented against pluralities of benefices, when two or three would scarce make one competent living: A like censorious sharpness hath been used by some against Bishops ordaining, and admitting to poor and pitiful Livings some poor and pitiful Ministers. Alas, better Ministers cannot in reason be expected without better maintenance: Mend this, and then in God's name mend the other; good workmen will not be had, nor can they live upon small wages. This deep and old core of this Nation's sin and shame, its sore and suffering in Religion, ought first to be pulled out and cured▪ then will strength, health and beauty follow in all parts. It is poverty, tenuity and despair that commonly tempts Ministers, that are conscious to their neglected and unrewarded abilities, to be either factious and popular, or debauched and discontent. This Church had fared much better if some Ministers bellies had been fuller. Some were ready to flatter any factious spirit that kept but a good Table, and would feed them without an affront: others having an envy at some of their brethren's and Fathers preferments were ready to turn all to confusion; just as joseph's brethren resolved to make him away, because of his gay coat and his dreams of honour. Men are then most willing to be quiet when they are at their ease. There was scarce one Minister that had any dignity or Church-preferment, yea or a good Living in England, that was either forward or fomenting of our late troubles upon a Religious account. Men that have most wool on their backs will be most wary of the briers, and most obedient to Laws, both Civil and Ecclesiastical. As to the relief of Church-livings, much might in a few years be done, if the work were once well begun by public advice and consent; partly by buying in of Impropriations, which are usually little improvements to any gentlemen's Estates, and I believe no great cordial to their consciences, especially while they see the necessities to which poor Vicars and Stipendiary Incumbents are driven, besides the sorry provision that is made for poor people's souls in those Livings, where there is scarce bran enough left to make aloof of bread for the Priest, or a cake for the Prophet. Some advantage might be further made by uniting two or three little Livings that are contiguous or nearly adjacent; it being no sacrilege for two sixpences or three groats to give a good shilling to the Temple. Much help also might be by abolishing all injurious and defrauding customs, which ought not to prejudice Gods right, or the Church's Dues. Nor would it be a small comfort to Ministers moderate Livings, if their rights and deuce by Law or Custom were once so valued and stated by an equable rate in every parish, that there might be a power in some officer, as in other parish-rates, to levy them as they were settled and due, without any further vexatious and chargeable suits at Law. For if the Labourer be worthy of his hire, it is but just he should have it, without spending one half of it and much time to get the other; yea in most cases the charge of a suit at Law comes to more than that is worth which is detained. I know some petty Lawyers and progging Attorneys will not favour this motion, thinking it will take grist from their Mills; but such of them as are pious, just, and generous Christians, will as readily vote for and advance such an Act for settling Minister's rights, as they did that for treble damages. Last of all, it would be an act of great ease and favour, if Ministers might be exempted in part from public taxes and Town Charges, or at least be rated as for Goods, and not for Lands. Certainly these and such like as just as pious projects were not hard to be executed, as well as invented, if men had as quick a sense of their soul's interests as of those which concern their Estates: Greater matters by far have been done of late years, with far greater expense and far less benefit to the Nation. The value of one years tax laid in for a stock or foundation, together with the additions of private bounty (which I am confident would be cheerfully cast into this Treasury or Exchequer of the Church) would in a few years do this great work; I mean purchase in Impropriations, which the Learned and pious Bishop Bedel calls Badges of Babylon's captivity, and plain Church-Robberies, in his Sermon on Rev. 17.18. lately set out by Dr Barnard. This Redemption should begin there where is most need. We know that small stock, which was entrusted in the late King's days to some Feoffees for this use, had so attractive a spirit and diffusive an influence in England, that I believe by this time the work had been much advanced, if not well-nigh finished, in all probability, if it had been begun, carried on and nourished by as much public favour as it deserved in the design, if it was without any leven of faction, sincerely to God's glory, to this Churches good, and the Nations both honour and happiness; which will never so much thrive by the vast charges of any domestic or foreign war, as it would by one such noble benevolence and contribution, which would very much set the Reformed Religion on float again, which every where (now) toucheth ground, by reason of the low estate either of many Ministers, who have small and kill Livings with great Charges, or of the poor people, who must needs have lean and starving preaching: yea some people have no Ministers at all, others as good or worse than none; men whose sordid lives confute all that little they do or can preach, which God knows is very little, and little worth, full of froth and vapour, if they aim to make up their abilities with popularity, or very flat and dead, while they are at best very small, and run very low in their preaching, praying and living. And all this misery for want of such ingenuous means as should invite, entertain, encourage and oblige a Minister to be able, careful and painful among them; which is now more necessary than heretofore, because the fashion we see is to have all duties exposed to and performed by Ministers private abilities and personal sufficiencies, which are not to be obtained, nor maintained, nor increased at cheap rates. But this great and good work, so much to the honour, stability and advantage of the Reformed Religion, as it would be infinitely to the regret of the Roman party, who are glad with exceeding great joy to see the Reformed, Learned and Renowned Clergy of England thus foiled and cast down to the ground, licking the dust of men's feet, and trampled under foot; so it is a mercy which Satan hath hitherto envied and hindered to this Church and Nation by God's permission, who hath hitherto thought fit to deny such a blessing both to Ministers and people, from whom he hath suffered the policies and passions of men, in order to save their purses, of late to take away almost all that ancient Ecclesiastical patrimony or dowry of Estate and honour, which was long ago given to maintain the dignity and authority of this Church's Ministry and Government in the persons of its Ecclesiastical Governors, Bishops and others of the dignified Clergy; who, I think, might very well deserve as good salaries as any Major Generals, Colonels and Captains, being no less both useful and necessary for the eutaxy or good ordering of the spiritual Militia in the Church, than those are for the secular Militia in the state, if they were as duly impowered, paid and encouraged as the others are. Nor do I doubt but if ever this Nation be so happy as to know its greatest defects and miseries in this point, and heartily to resolve the speedy applying of meet remedies to them, it will be so wise and worthy, so just and generous, as to find out ways not only to provide a settled competency for all competent Preachers, but also to annex some comely and honorary reward to the eminency of those who shall be fit to be used and owned as chief Precedents, Moderators and Governors, that is, Bishops in the Church; without which all Religious polity will be as a body without sinews: For Rulers without some remarks of estate and respect upon them, will be like veins without blood or spirits. I have heard there are yet some such fragments remaining of the Bishops and Cathedral Lands unsold, which might serve in this case to good use. Theod. hist. l. 4. c. 4. Theodoret tells us that Constantine the Great gave provision of Corn out of the Imperial Granaries to Christian Bishops, the better to sustain their dignity; which allowance Julian the Apostate took away from them, but following Christian Emperors restored to them. That great and witty engine of Antichristian policy (Julian) well knew that neither the Polity, Order and Government of the Church, nor yet Christian Religion itself in peaceful and plentiful times, can thrive, increase or prevail among the generality of mankind, if it be not either loved or reverenced; neither of which it can be, if it be not publicly valued; valued it cannot appear to them, when they see the chief dispensers of it despised; despised of necessity they must be, if either their spiritual and sacred Authority be doubted and denied, or their civil condition be either necessitous or no way conspicuous: which posture will soon give great advantages to any contrary party and faction, never so deformed with error and superstition, against all pretensions that may be brought of such reformation as shall end in the beggary and desolations, in the disorders and distresses of its chief Preachers and Professors. Under which burdens of poverty and disgrace Reformed Religion and its able Ministry will soon decay and moulder away to nothing, while poverty and contempt shall be on this side, but plenty with honour shall attend the deformities of its enemies. I know there have been of late some petty projects offered by men of wary and thrifty piety, to level greater Livings, and to make such augmentations to one Minister as shall gripe and grieve another; so robbing Peter to enrich Paul: But (alas) so grand and heroic a work is not to be done any way except by public munificence, either of restitution and donation, or redemption & purchase; which may redeem the long captive Livings from Papal Appropriations, Regal Confiscations and Lay● Impropriations, which have a long time detained them from those Religious uses and ends for which they were at first by God designed, and by man devoted, which was the comfortable subsistence of preaching Ministers, that they might help both to save the souls and to relieve the bodily necessities of poor Christians; who will never learn or value true Religion very much, when they see the preacher one of the poorest men in the parish, jealous that when he dyeth, the parish must be charged with his poor wife and children. Alas, Ministers are sad Pastors of souls when they want food for their own bodies; they are pitiful Rulers of Christ's flock, who are in worse case than ordinary poor shepherds, who have their scrip as well their crook, and something in their bag to relieve, as well as in their hand to discipline their sheep, and defend themselves. But I leave this (to many men unwelcome) consideration of Minister's maintenance, either as governing or governed, to the wisdom of those who have largest hearts, purest consciences, and liberallest hands: None but such will lay to heart so great a concern as this is for God's glory, Christ's honour, and the good of souls. For other wretches, I know how their penurious, covetous and sacrilegious pulse doth beat; they are in nothing more envious and jealous: 'tis equally harsh and odious to them to hear of any thing to be given or restored to the Church, being much more sensible of any damage and injury done to their private purses and Estates, than of such public detriments and depressions as cloud the glory of their God and Saviour, eclipse the honour of this Church and State, vilify and, upon the point, nullify the dignity of the Ministry, and prostitute the souls of poor people for which Christ hath died to ignorance and Atheism, to licentiousness and hypocrisy; it being more with many men to save a penny than to save a soul, more willing to spare a sound tooth out of their heads, than one pound or shilling to advance Religion: they are for a cheap heaven or none; so willing they are to perish with their money, rather than live by lightning the ship a little. CHAP. XVIII. AFter the foundations of a true Christian Ministry are thus laid both for its Being, Of meet order, Government and subordination among the Clergy. which consists in real abilities discovered, and in valid Authority conferred after the most venerable, Catholic and authentic custom of the Church, 1 Cor. 11.16. which being conform to the word of God, aught in such cases to be as a Law sacred and inviolable; after I have further set forth the well-being of the Clergy, and in that of the whole Church, by sustaining able Ministers, in their several degrees and stations, with such ingenuous maintenance as may become not only the honour of the work and workmen, but the Glory of the Christians God, the love and value of their Saviour, and the beauty or majesty of the Church, in which they are employed in so sacred, solemn, public and constant services, which ought in all reason and Religion to be kept up by all good Christians to some outward conspicuity and decency, as far as God's indulgence affords men peace and plenty; The next thing I humbly commend to the Nobleness, Wisdom and Piety of my Country, for the further strengthening and preservation of the being and well-being of this Church and its Christian Reformed Religion, both in Ministers and people, able Preachers and honest Professors, is so to combine, cement and unite all worthy Ministers and other Christians in an uniform and holy harmony of due subordination, holy discipline and decent Government, as may best keep them (by God's blessing) from such fractures and factions, such schisms and swellings, such dashings and dividing against and from each other, as have of latter years not only battered themselves and each other to great diminutions, weakenings and deformities, but they have crushed this whole Church, and crumbled its former entireness and ampleness to so many broken bits and pieces, Episcopatus aemulatio s●h●smatum mater. Tert. de Bap. c. 17. through the impotent ambition of those Ministers or people, who being lest apt or able, are most greedy to govern of themselves, and loath to be governed by others: which refractoriness hath not only defaced the beauty, and broken the unity of this Church, but further threatens to shake the civil peace, stability and consistence of this Nation, whose honour and happiness is not only now at the stake, but much abated, and in hazard to be quite lost, if that public wisdom and courage be not applied which is necessary to recover the blessing of the Reformed Religion, and the unity of this Church, to such a posture of setledness, order and unity, as shall not need to fear either fanatic Confusion or Romish usurpations, which are the great plots and designs laid against this Church and Nation of England. I easily foresee, that nothing will be a more hard, knotty and flinty work, than the recomposing of this Church to any Ecclesiastical Uniformity, Charitable Harmony and Orderly Government, if either the late sharp passions, private interests, or mutual prejudices of any one of the parties so divided from each other in England be made the partial and scanty measures of Church-Order and Polity: For the animosities and Antipathies among them are such, that they will on all sides disdain to be forcibly cast into any one of the pretended models which are on foot. The only probable and feisable way to reduce all sober Ministers and honest people to a conscientious and charitable Communion is, for the wisdom and piety of this Nation to do as Constantine the Great did, when he burned all the querulous demands and uncharitable petitions of the ecclesiastics against one another, so reconciling them all, while he utterly silenced all their quarrels, and buried their complaints. In like manner the best and speediest method of our union will be, to lay aside all the earnest pleas and violent pretensions of all sides, either Episcopal, Presbyterian or Independent, which have occasioned or increased our late differences; and only to examine calmly, seriously and impartially, what was the Idea of Church-Order and Government for the first three or four hundred years, that is, twelve hundred years at least before these late contests and debates were raised, or indeed thought on in this or any Church. Reperiemus veteres episcopos non aliam regendae ecclesiae formam voluisse fingere ab e● quam verbo suo Deus praescripsit. Calv. Inst. l. 4. c. 4. Sect. 4. Certainly the Primitive, Catholic and Apostolic posture of the Church's Polity, Order and Government, must needs be the true pattern in the Mount, as Mr. Calvin confesseth: in which times there was less leisure for ambitious or factious variations, the Church being either persecuted most-what for 300. years, or miraculously refreshed, at its freedom in the fourth Century through God's indulgence, and the munificence of Constantine the Great and other Christian Emperors, who, as Princely nursing Fathers, studied the Peace, Unity and prosperity of the Church, as much as that of the Empire. In both which conditions, both calm and storm, it is most remarkable, that as no one Author, Father, Historian, Synod, or Council did any way doubt, dispute or divide about Church-Government, before the Great Council of Nice; so when that great and Oecumenick Council did come together to take a survey as of the Church's unity in sound Doctrine and Manners, so of its Discipline and Government, that it might gather together and recompose what ever the tempestuous times of persecution had shaken or shattered; yet this grand, most venerable and holy Assembly did neither begin any new Hierarchy or Government of the Church, nor did they in the least sort tax former times of any Innovation, Alteration or desertion from the Primitive, Apostolic and Universal pattern, which was still fresh in men's memories: but they began their Session and Sanctions with that solemn approbation & confirmation of the (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) former ancient Customs or Orders of the Church-Catholick, as holy and Authentic, which all men knew had prevailed from the beginning. Nor was there then any doubt or debate in the general as to the point of Episcopal presidency or jurisdiction; however, as to their respective Dioceses and particular distributions some disputes had risen: But as to the succession of chief Bishops from the very Apostles days and Seats, they had most evidently continued in all Churches without any interruption, or variation of the form or power, however the persons had been oft changed by mortality. Certainly it is most easy for all learned, honest and unbiased men to see what the uniform and Catholic form then was of all Churches orderly combinations. I dare appeal to Independents and Presbyterians as well as Episcopal men, to declare bona fide what they find it was in the first and best times, after Churches were once fully form and settled in their several partitions. No man not more bold than bayard, or more blind than a beetle, but must see and confess, Act. 6. 1 Tim. 3.8. Deacons. that according to the first platform which we read of in the Acts and Epistles of the Apostles, the Order, Polity and Government of the Church was completed, settled and continued, first in Deacons, who had the lowest degree of Church-office, order and Ministry, consisting in reading the Scriptures, in making collections for the poor, in distributing of charity, in visiting the sick, in providing things necessary, safe, convenient and decent for Christian Ministers and people, when they met to serve the Lord in one place; which place or house from hence was called Dominicum, or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Church, or House of the Lord. Next these in order, degree and office were Presbyters, that is, Presbyters. ordained preachers, to whom was committed, by the Apostles first, and after by Bishops their successors, the Charge and Office of Catechising the younger, of Preaching to the elder, of Baptising believers and their children, of consecrating the holy Elements of the Lords Supper, and of admitting worthy Communicants to receive them: besides, the grave and venerable Presbyters had, as brethren, the privilege of electing their Bishops also of counsel, confessions and assistance with their respective Bishop's in public concernment and grand transactions of the Church. Above both these, in eminency of place, Bishops. Act 1.20. degree and power as to gubernative Authority, were those prime Bishops or overseers of the Church, first called by the name of Apostles, as immediately set by Christ in that Episcopacy; next were those that were personally appointed by the Apostles to supply their absence, or to succeed them in that ordinary presidency and constant jurisdiction which was necessary for the Church's peace, union and good Government: of which we have two pregnant instances in Timothy and Titus, who to be sure had Episcopal power given them, not as Evangelists or Preachers, but as Ordainers and Rulers of many Presbyters. After these Bishops of a lesser size constantly succeeded, being first chosen by the Presbyters of each grand Church or Diocese to that power and office, and then consecrated to it or confirmed in it by neighbour-Bishops, who solemnly imparted to them, and invested them in that Eminency of Ordaining and Ruling power which is properly Episcopal, not only for the dispensing of holy mysteries, for the preaching of the word, and absolving penitents, as Presbyters (who were a minor sort of Bishops) but for confirming those who had in infancy been baptised, 1 Ep. to Tim. cap. 3. & 5. and Ep. to T●tus cap. 1. for solemn excommunication and absolution, for examining and ordaining Presbyters and Deacons, for transmitting that Episcopal and Ministerial power in a constant and holy succession, according as they had received it; so for judging of and inflicting public censures and reproofs, likewise for all Synodal Conventions and representations of the Churches; lastly for the authoritative enacting and executing of all Ecclesiastical decrees and Church-disciplines: all which things Bishops did as a Major sort of Presbyters, though a Minor sort of Apostles, Episcopi, quos & Apostoli▪ successores relinquebant, ipsis suum magisterii loc●m tradentes. Irenae. l. 3. c. 9 Habemus enumerare eos qui ab Apostolis constituti sunt Episcopi in Ecclesiis, & successores corum usque ad nos. Irenae. l. 4. c. 6. & lib. 5. c. ●0. Ordo Episcoporum ad originem recensus in Johannem stabit Authorem. Tertul. adv. Marc. l. 4. c. 5. Sicut Smy●naeorum ecclesia Polycarpum à Johanne collo●atum refert, sicut Romanorum Clementem à Petro ordinatum edit, perinde utique & caeterae exhibent (ecclesiae) quos ab Apostolis in Episcopatum constitut●s Apostolici seminis traduces hubent. Tertul. lib. de praesc. adv. Haer. c. 32. & 34. De Johanne Apost. Cl●m●ns Alexandrinus narrat, post mortem Domi●●an● & reditum suum à Patmo in Ephesum in vicinas gentes abiit, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Episcopos constituens, & Ecclesias in ordinem digerens. Lib. de Diu. Sal. Origeni falsò ascripto, ex judicio cl. Usserii Armachani. Jampridem per omnes provincias & urbes ordinati sunt Episcopi, etc. Cyp. ep. 52. if we may believe the judgement, practice and testimony of all Antiquity in the purest times, which are diligently collected, evidently set down, and unanswerably urged by many late writers, who have brought forth such a cloud of witnesses as to this point of Ecclesiastical Order and Government by Deacons, Presbyters and Bishops (a threefold cord, not to be broken,) that men may as well deny the Evangelicall History, as the Original, Institution and Succession of the Evangelicall Ministry, and the orderly constant Government of the Church by the service of Deacons, the assistance of Presbyters, and the superintendency of the Apostles, whom no sober man denies to have been, while they lived, the eminent Rulers, authoritative Overseers, and chief Governors and Bishops of all the Churches where they were fixed, or which they had under their particular care and charge. Nor may it with any more shadow of reason or truth be denied, that Bishops in a distinct place and eminent power were a successive and secondary sort of Apostles, inferior to them in their immediate call, in their extraordinary gifts, and the latitude of their power; but equal to them in that ordinary, constant and regular jurisdiction, which was and is ever necessary for the Churches good Order and Government. If all sorts and sides would look beyond their own later prejudices and presumptions to this holy pattern, this so clear, constant and Catholic prescription, they would be ashamed of such gross ignorance or impudence, such peevishness or partiality, as should beyond all forehead or modesty affect any novelty or variety from an Ecclesiastic custom and an Apostolic precedent, so undeniably Primitive, so famous, Successiones Episcoporum qui Apostolos sequu●i sunt 7. libris descripsimus. Euseb. l. 4. hist. cap. 1. So. Theod. hist. l. 5. c. 27. so glorious, so prosperous, so never altered or innovated (as to the main) that all true believers, all humble Deacons, all orderly Presbyters, all Confessors, all Martyrs, all Synods, all Councils, submitted and subscribed to the same form and kind of Government in its several stations and degrees, according as the wisdom of the Church saw cause to use its prudence, power and liberty (as Calvin, Zanchy, and Bucer tell us) in having not only Bishops, but metropolitans or Arch-Bishops, Primates and Patriarches (ad conservandam disciplinam, as * Calv. Inst. l. 4. c. 4. Sect. 4. Calvin owns,) for the better Order, Unity and Correspondency of the Church in all its parts, which were never quarrelled at, till pride begat oppression, and envy schism in the Church; till foolish and factious spirits chose to walk contrary to the true principles and proportions of all right Reason and Religion, of all prudence and polity, which are to be observed in all Societies, sacred or civil, which the Divine wisdom (as (a) Apud nos. Apostolorum locit tenent Episcopi. Hier. ep. 54. Ut sciamus traditiones Apostolicas sumptas de veteri Testamento, quod Aaron & filii ejus & Levitae in Templo erant, hoc sibi in ecclesiis vindicent Episcopi, Presbyteri & Diaconi. Hieron. ad Euag. St. Jerom observes) had exemplified in the ancient Church of the Jews, and directed us to (as (b) Episcopus ecclesiis regendis unicus praepositus est, qui plu●ibus unius ecclesiae presbyteris praeesser: Bono fine hoc institutum esse nemo negat, quum optima ratio fuerit ita instituendi. Salmas. Walo Messal. pag. 413. Salmasius confesseth) in all successions of Churches, by the Spirit of wisdom which Christ gave to his Apostles, and all their immediate successors the Bishops, who were conform to them, and impowered by them to be a kind of Tutelary Angels, of presidential Intelligences, in the larger circles and higher orbs of the Church, where (as in Ephesus, and the other grand Metropolitan Churches, which are denominated by the Spirit of Christ and the pen of the Apostle from the chief Cities in those Provinces) there were no doubt many Christian people, Presbyters and Deacons, yet all these subject (as (c) Neque enim Hieronymus quum diceret, ecclesias initio fuisse communi presbyterorum consilio gubernatas, ita desipuisse existimandus est, ut somniaret neminem ex presbyteris illi caetui praefuisse. Beza de Minist. grad. c. 18. Beza glozing on St. Jerom confesseth) to that one (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) Provost or Precedent, as their Bishop in that Precinct or Oeconomy, which either the Apostles had constituted, or the Church had digested itself into as it increased. Contrary to which meridian pattern and most manifest exemplar of Church-Government, if (as learned (d) De Episcopis & Minist. ordin. quid certius ex historiis, ex Conciliis, ex omnium Patrum scriptis? quis ego sum qui quod tota ecclesia approbat improb●m? Zanchi. Confess. p. 7. Zanchy acknowledgeth) any one instance in any age or place of any Father, Council, or Historian could be found, of any one Church in its grand Polity, or larger Communion, I confess I should then make some scruple whether Episcopal Government, however it might seem the best, were the only one to be used in all times and places; whether Church-Government were not a matter of Ecclesiastic prudence, rather than of Apostolic prescription, or Divine appointment. To which opinion St Jerom, that he might qualify and moderate the incroching of some Bishops upon Presbyters, or gratify perhaps his own passion and discontent, sometimes seems to have inclined, contrary to his cooler and more constant judgement, set forth at other times in many passages of his potent and vehement writings, as well as in his practice. Which alloy as to the Divine institution and absolute necessity of Episcopal Government as established by the Apostles, seems also to have swayed with Mr. Calvin and his followers, when they found themselves put upon such a necessity as they thought might justify their altering of it for a time, though not their rejecting or reprobating of it for ever, which he never did▪ however his reputation, interest and engagement carried him off from the more pompous and usual way of Episcopacy, as it was abused in the Church of Rome; but he well knew, ever judged and confessed that Primitive Episcopacy, which consists in a presidential eminency of power and jurisdiction in one Minister over many, appears to have been laid out by the wisdom and Spirit of Christ in the Apostolical pattern and prescription, as is evident in the Epistles to Timothy and Titus, not as a matter of arbitrary freedom, which might be lightly changed, as people, or Ministers, or Magistrates listed, for their conveniences, but as an holy method and wise proportion of Government, best in itself, fittest for the Church's Order, Peace and Communion, sacred by the Characters of God's direction, Christ's designation, constitution of his Church in the Apostles, execution and derivation of it, also in the Church's Catholic imitation: upon all which grounds it hath ever been esteemed by all godly and learned Christians, not only venerable, but (as to the main model and fabric of it) inviolable; so that they who first factiously, presumptuously and rashly change it, must needs highly sin against God, his Church, and their own souls, however others that are forced to follow such changes may be excusable. The superstructures of Episcopacy, as to civil Honour and Estate, may indeed be variable, by public consent, with times and manners of men; but the foundations I believe are not to be removed, which are laid upon the natural, civil and religious grounds of diversity, disparity and excellency of one man above many; proportionable to which Polity, Order and Authority are best settled and managed, and not upon the loose or slippery bottoms of parity or popularity, neither of which have either those principles, proportions or perfections of Government, which the Spirit and wisdom of God hath laid out by the Apostles practise, in Primitive Episcopacy, and transmitted by a constant succession for the Churches good, which cannot be preserved or advanced, where there wants comely gravity, due authority, and a diviner beam of Majesty in Government and Governors than can be found in any way of levelling and abasing them, which are the highways (as all wise men ever observed) to all faction, sedition and confusion both in Churches and States: of which truth no Age hath seen and suffered greater or sadder experiments than ours, since some pragmatic or ambitious Spirits have made miserable essays to alter and abolish the ancient authority and order of Episcopacy, only to bring in their various novelties; which are so far from the true Grandeur and solid Majesty of Government, that they are already found to be pitiful and petty projects rather than pious or profound inventions, confuting themselves as much as confounding others. Could we then on all sides in England be so ingenuous and candid, as to lay aside all modern designs, disputes and differences, which have made men's eyes so squinted, bleared or blood-shotten in the point of Church-Government; could we remove the fancy of secular pride, pomp and ambition in one sort of Ministers, the vulgar passions, prejudices and envies of a second sort, also the pragmatic and plebeian humours of a third sort, with the private designs and worldly interests of all; clear all our hearts of these prepossessions and distempers; no doubt the face of holy order and wise Government in the Church will easily appear, to the satisfaction of all wise and good men, who are either worthy to govern, or willing to be governed in a true Christian and charitable way. For certainly Church-Government or Ecclesiastical Polity, (about which we have had of late in England so great contests, even to much bitterness and blood) is no Scholastical subtlety, no intricate nicety, no speculative sublimity, no metaphysical profundity, which require either accurate Critics, or long-winded Divers, or Logical Disputers, or sceptical Sophisters, to find out the Primitive form, Suadente naturâ, & necessitate flagitante, seasim coierunt ecclesiae. Bez de grad. min. c. 24. Sect. 4. Hoc consentiebat legi Christi, & fiebat ex jure corporis Christi. Bucer. de vi & usu min. p. 565. the true proportions, or ancient pattern of it. It is plain (as Beza and Bucer observe) in right Reason, pregnant in the proportions of all order, natural, civil, military, religious. It is palpable in Scripture-patternes, as Mr. * Calv. on Tit. 1.5. For this cause I left thee in Crete, that thou mightest ordain, etc. Discimus ex hoc loco non eam tu●c fuisse aequalitatem inter ecclesiae ministros, quin u●us aliquis authoritate & co●silio p●aeesset. Calvin confesseth: it is most apparent in the practice of all Churches. It must be weakness or wilfulness, passion or peevishness, that hinders any man from seeing the true Idea of it. It is made up of wisdom and power, not only humane, but divine; of due authority cemented with true charity: a modest and moderate superiority with meek subordination, faithful counsel with equanimous commands, meeting together, these make up the holy Oeconomy or Polity of Church-Government. In which, first many humble Christians of one congregation do submit to one duly- ordained Minister, as set over them in the Lord, so far as concerns their private duties and relations: secondly, many grave and discreet Presbyters, with their people, submit to one venerable Bishop, as a Father or chief Pastor, chosen to be over them in things that concern more public relations and common duties, in which their joint counsel, assistance or obedience is required. The Bishop's office and work is, not only Ministerial, in common with their brethren the other Ministers, but Juridical or Judicial, declaring and exercising the necessary power and eminent acts of Ecclesiastical Discipline and authority with them, among them and over them: not in the way of secular dominion, gotten and kept by civil force or factious ambition, which our blessed Lord forbids to those that are chiefest or greatest of his Disciples and flock; but in a way of paternal authority, which chides with love, chastens with pity, being tenderly severe, and most compassionately cruel, when it is compelled to exert the sharpest authority, doing all things according to the word, example and Spirit of Christ Jesus, in Meekness of Wisdom, not to the destruction, but edification of the Church in truth and faith, in charity and unity. To these Presbyters, Bishops and Christian people, are Deacons subordinate and servient in all things necessary for decency, conveniency, charity, and carrying on of the Church's Authority, both in private congregations and more ample conventions; part of whole office we see time and custom had devolved upon our Churchwardens and Overseers for the poor. These ends and means, this order and proportion, this constitution and execution of Church-government by Episcopacy, as far as it is conform to Catholic Antiquity, and settled by the consent of any Christian Church and Nation by its Synods and Parliaments, I do in no sort conceive to be arbitrary, precarious or mutable as to the main; (however it may be reduced and reform in its deviations) (except in cases of invincible necessity, which may dispense with Sabbaths, Sacraments, and all public external duties of Polity, yea of Piety) so far am I from judging it any part of prudent Piety or true Reformation, for men rudely to baffle and despise, wholly to abrogate and extirpate it; because I cannot but look upon it as Scriptuall and Apostolic, sacred, and binding Christian's consciences to due approbation, obedience and subjection to it for the Lords sake, who undoubtedly intended the right constitution and constant regulation of his Church, with Order and Honour, no less than that of States and Commonweals, for whose peaceable Polity the Gospel hath set so many bounds and bonds of subjection. Sure neither Church nor State can be honestly or handsomely governed in any way of parity or popularity, where every one thinks himself fit to command, and so disdains to obey; according to those innate passions which are in all men, and oft in good men, and in good Ministers too, Ecclesiae salus in summi sacerdotis (i. e. Episcopi) dignitate consistit. Hieron. adv. Lucif. c. 4. who being many, are as prone to run into many distempers and dangerous exorbitances, if they be left to themselves. As Mariners are without a Pilot, or sheep without a shepherd, or soldiers without a Commander, or people without a Prince; even so are Christians without ordained Ministers, and Ministers without Authoritative Bishops, exposed to all manner of Schisms, Disorders, Factions and Insolences; Which must necessarily follow, where the Clergy is either not at all governed by any Grave and Worthy Ecclesiastical persons, or by such Ministers as have none but a popular and precarious Authority, or where Ministers are only kerbed and crushed by the imperiousness and impertinency of mere Laymen, yea and of such as are not fit to be Judges or Rulers in the least civil affairs, much less over Learned men, whose Place, Office and Concerns are properly religious as they stand related to God and his Church. Nor can the Clergy be in much better case, when they are by a Democratick or Levelling spirit cast into such spontaneous Associations and Confederacies as give to no Minister that orderly and eminent power, respect and due authority, which is fitting for the Government of the Churches; nor yet teach common people that modesty and submission, which are necessary for such as desire to be well and worthily governed. When all is said and tried that can be in point of Church-Government, I doubt not but it will be found true, as Beza expresseth it (in the happy State of England, Bez. de grad. m●n. c. 18. Sect. 3. ) that Episcopacy is (singularis Dei beneficientia) Gods singular bounty and blessing to this and any Church, which he prays it might always enjoy, where it may be rightly enjoyed and religiously used; Conf. August. de eccls potest. De ord. eccles. Apolog. Aug. Conf. ad art. 14. Melanch. epist. ad Camerarium. Calv. epist. ad Sadolet. sub finem de neces▪ R●f. eccles. which the Augustane Confession and all Reformed Churches with their most eminent Professors did desire to submit unto, as a most special means to preserve the Honour, Unity and Authority of the Church and its Discipline, which, as a great River, grows weak and shallow, when it is drawn into many small channels and rivulets. How suitable and almost necessary a right and Primitive Episcopacy is for the temper of England, I shall afterward more fully express: at present it may suffice to show how easy the restauration of it would be, if all sides would sincerely look to the Primitive pattern of Church-Government. First, if the Diocese committed to the presidential inspection of one worthy Bishop were of so moderate an extent, as might fall under one man's care and visitation, and be most convenient both for the private addresses and dispatches, & also for the general meetings of the Clergy in some principal place of it; it would much remedy the great grievance of long journeys, tedious expectation, and many tims frustraneous attendance at Westminister, to which all Ministers are now compelled to their great charge and trouble, many times for a small Living, and sometime for a mere repulse. Such Counties as Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Kent, Middlesex with London, may seem proportionable to make each of them one Episcopal distribution: greater Counties may be divided, and lesser united. Secondly, if the generality of the Clergy or the whole Ministry of each Diocese might choose some few prime men of their Company to be the constant Electors, chief Counsellors, Correspondents and Assistants with the Bishop; to avoid multitudinous, tedious and confused managings of elections, Ordinations and other public affairs. Thirdly, if in case of Episcopal vacancy, the generality of the Clergy meeting together, might present the names of three or four or more prime men, out of which number the Electors should choose one, whose election should stand if approved by the Prince or chief Magistrate; if not, they should choose some other of the nominated. Fourthly, the person thus chosen and approved on all sides should be solemnly and publicly consecrated by other Bishops, in the presence of the Ministers and people of the Diocese. By these means as there will be no crowd or interfering among the Clergy, so there will be great satisfaction to Prince and people, without any clashing between the Civil and Spiritual power, which must be avoided, considering that not only the exercise of all Church-power must depend on the leave of the Prince in his dominions; but also the honorary settled maintenance of the Bishops, as of all the Clergy, is but Eleemosynary in the original, from the pious concession and munificence of the Prince or State, who as they will not in conscience or honour deny competent allowances to all worthy Ministers of the Gospel, so no doubt they will not grudge to add such Honorary supports to every Bishop or Precedent, as may decently maintain that Authority, Charity and Hospitality, which becomes his Place, Worth and Merit: for certainly no men can do more good, or deserve better of their Nation and Country, than excellent Bishops may do, as by their Doctrine and example, so by their wise and holy way of governing the Church with such Honour and Authority as became them; which could not but be an excellent means to advance the Majesty, Purity, Power and Profession of Christian and Reformed Religion, as otherwhere, so chiefly in England, whose happiness and honour (in this point) might, as I humbly conceive, be easily recovered by some such expediency in Church-Government, whose excellent temper should answer all the honest desires and real interests of all Godly people, of modest Presbyters, of wise Bishops, and of just Princes; whose wisdom and authority might easily, by the advice of all Estates, both Civil and Ecclesiastic, so restore Unity, Tranquillity and Authority to the Church of England, that no worthy Christians of any persuasion, Episcopal, Presbyterian or Independent, should have any cause to complain of either neglect or oppression, which cannot befall any party in respect of their just pretensions and equable desires, if regard be had to the Primitive pattern of Episcopacy, which included the privileges and satisfactions of all degrees, both of Ministers and people. The complaints of oppression arise from the later innovations or invasions made by one party against the real or pretended rights and immunities of the other; which my design is on all hands to unite and mutually preserve by a regular, prudent, complete, moderate, and yet authoritative, way of Church-Government, which is no where to be found but in a well-constituted Episcopacy. In a design wholly for reconciliation and atonement between moderate and pious men of all sides, I know the way is not partially to over-value, or passionately to undervalue any thing that is alleged by sober men on any side conducing to the common good: Therefore I do not, I cannot in prudence or conscience so prefer the eminency of Episcopacy, as to neglect or oppress the just rights of worthy Presbyters, or the ingenuous satisfactions of Christian people; neither of which are to be despised or rejected, but cherished and preserved, no less than the Authority of Bishops, which at the highest must be as of one that serveth the Lord Christ and the Church, Luke 22.25, 26, 27. not insulteth against either; the Grave and Elder sort of Ministers ought to be treated by the Bishop as brethren, the younger sort as Sons. The real interests of all are, in my judgement, best preserved, when they are least scattered or divided, but bound up in the same peaceable Polity or holy Harmony; which I call the Primitive and complete Episcopacy, ever esteemed by the Catholic Church for its excellent wisdom, order and usefulness, to have been (at least) of Apostolical Edition (both preceptive and exemplary) in its Primitive impression: the erratas which, by long decurrence of time, through many men's hands have befallen it, are easily corrected and amended by men of Apostolic Spirits and Primitive tempers. For my part, I heartily desire, humby endeavour and unfeignedly advise for such a blessed accommodation as may satisfy the just designs and honest interests of all good men; I am infinitely grieved to see them threaten one another with eternal distances, and this Church with everlasting differences and distractions: of which I am the more jealous and sensible, by what I observe either of rigour or reservedness in some men of Episcopal, Presbyterian and Independent principles, who had rather lose the whole game of the Reformed Religion and this Church's Recovery, than abate one ace of their high fancies and demands. Where Episcopal Divines do remit much of modern advantages, and condescend to the most innocent models of Primitive Episcopacy, yet still they find many Presbyterians and Independents so died in grain as to their particular parties, principles and adherencies, that they will not yet endure any thing that hath the least colour or tincture, name or title of Episcopacy. Some viler sort of men study nothing more than to render the venerable Names of Bishops and Episcopacy odious, and the more there is pleaded for their innocency or excellency, Luke 23.22. (as Pilate did for Jesus, when he found no fault in him,) the more they clamour with the Jews, Crucify, crucify. And all this, lest (forsooth) some Godly Ministers of the new stamps and models should lose any thing of that popular gloss and lustre, whereby they fancy themselves to shine and glister like money new-minted among some people in their private spheres: hence some of them grow so cruelly cunning, that neither in Charity nor Policy they will endure any closure or treaty with Episcopacy under any notion, notwithstanding that they pretend to twist their Associations with the threefold cords of all moderate men, differing still in some principles, yet concurring in one grand end for the public peace, as they tell us; when yet nothing can entreat them to wish, to speak or think well of Episcopacy in any state or constitution. Some fervent or fierce men profess such a jealousy of Antichrist in Episcopasy, that they cast away all that is of Christ in it: They fear an Apostasy if they should return to the Apostolic Polity, which is Episcopacy. There are that urge it best for the Piety, Peace and Honour of this Nation to have no united Church, no Ecclesiastical Unity which should be national, no uniform or settled Religion, but to let every one invent, adhere to, and advance that party and opinion which they like best; so immovable are they by any experiences of our mischiefs, or any remonstrances of Piety, Prudence and Charity, for a public composure in Religion. From the restive temper of these men I can expect nothing more than that equanimity which will bear at least with Episcopacy in such as can bear with Presbytery or Independency in them. If they find it so blessed a Liberty to serve the Lord as they list in those new Church-ways, whereof they so much boast and glory, why should they envy, or how can they in conscience grudge to allow the Godly and honest Episcopal Clergy and other Christians, (who are in no virtue, grace or gift inferior to them) to partake of and use the like freedom, as is either granted to, or used and presumed by Presbytery and Independency? Why should they so spitefully obstruct and hinder that concession to Episcopacy, which is indulged or challenged to all sorts of novelties and varieties? Possibly God in time would decide which is the best way, if Episcopacy, 1 Kings 18. as Eliah, might bring its offering to the Altar, as well as others do. It may be in a few years' Providence would show which way pleaseth him most, by his inclining the hearts of good Christians to embrace and follow what hath most of God's Order and Wisdom, of Christ's Institution, of Apostolic imitation, of Catholic Tradition or Custom, and of the Church's union; all which meet (only) in Primitive Episcopacy. But this way as it may be dilatory and tedious, so it may be dangerous and pernicious as to the welfare of both Church and State; for there can be no division in Religion without emulation, no emulation without opposition, no opposition without ambition, no ambition without animosity, no animosity without offence, no offence without anger and studies of revenge, whence arise public seditions: therefore I rather choose a speedy and safe accommodation, than any dilatory and dangerous Toleration, which will but increase disputes and distances, animosities and asperities among good men. And because I find it is not any thing really burdensome, noxious or offensive in Primitive Episcopacy, which makes many so shy and jealous of it; but only the ignorance, errors and prejudices of some men, who have sought to make It (of later years especially) obnoxious to all manner of popular jealousies, calumnies and reproaches; which have endeavoured so to hide all the pristine beauty and true excellency of it, that many look upon Prelacy, that is, Episcopacy, as if it were in the same Form with Popery, and think (most sillily) that they may no more in conscience comply with any regular Episcopacy, than with the Pope's irregular Primacy, in that arrogant and imperious sense which he now challengeth, beyond the modesty and humility of his Primitive Predecessors, who were then greatest Bishops, when least in their ambitions: It will be therefore, as I suppose, not an act of partiality as to any one side, but of justice and charity to all sorts of Christians, for me a little further to sweeten the name, and clear the cause of Primitive Episcopacy, such as I have stated it, and as all Antiquity ever esteemed it to be, the chiefest support of Religious safety, honour and order; the Centre, Crown and Consummation of the Church's peace, authority, unity and prosperity. It is pity so Primitive, so Apostolic, so Venerable an Order, so universally used in this as all Churches heretofore, should any further lie under the dirt and disguises of vulgar prejudices, popular reproaches, or any men's personal faults and infirmities, especially when all wise men know that the usual distastes which have vitiated most men's palates do arise rather from their own or other men's choleric and revengeful distempers, and the diffusions of their redundant galls, than from any real defect or demerit of true Episcopacy, or from any just blame imputable to worthy men either of that place and office, or of that persuasion and Communion in the Church of England. CHAP. XIX. THere are several grand pleas in behalf of Primitive and Catholic Episcopacy, Several Pleas in behalf of Episcopacy. which I here crave leave to produce and urge in a way different from other men's pens, before all Learned, Godly and Conscientious Christians, Ministers and others; not only in order to relieve oppressed Episcopacy, but also to reduce them to an happy reconciliation, and this Church to the state of a settled and uniform Reformation or Religion, which will hardly ever be obtained in England by the violent and partial exclusion of the ancient Rights, pristine Power and evident privileges of Episcopacy, unless the antiepiscopal parties can take care to burn or smother all Monuments of true Antiquity, or to banish all excellent books, ancient and modern, which have asserted it, or at least forbid their new seminaries and all Scholars the reading of them. If they cannot rid the world of these books, than they must make some sharp Index expurgatorius, which shall blot out the words of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Episcopus, Antistes, Praepositus, summus Sacerdos, Pastor, Pater, with those of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, ●aternitas, Eminentia, Dignitas, Sanctitas, Authoritas, and other like expressions, setting forth the eminent dignity and ancient authority of Episcopacy in all Churches; which expressions are so frequent and conspicuous in all Ecclesiastic writers, Greek and Latin, that the stars in the firmament are not more numerous or more illustrious in a clear night, or the Sunbeams shining at bright noon. The Native, Primitive, Apostolic, Catholic and Divine splendour of Episcopacy cannot be eclipsed, without darkening the faces of all Churches and all Christians. Nor in effect will it ever be done, unless its implacable enemies can take care by their cunning activity, that none shall be Students, or Preachers, or Professors of Christianity, or of true Divinity in England, but such as will be content first to be blinded and hoodwinked as to all knowledge of Antiquity; next, that their Disciples shall take the measures of their Religion, Ordination, Church-order, Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and Christian Communion, not from Jerusalem, or Antioch, or Ephesus, or old Rome, or any other famous, Catholic, Primitive Churches, (which were all under Episcopal inspection, and in its Communion) but from Geneva, Francfort, Amsterdam, Arnheim, or Edenbrough; and this since they have pretended (of later years) to be wiser than their Teachers and first Founders in Christianity, grown more Eagle-eyed in Church-affaires than all Antiquity, and all Churches in the world: whose constant consent and Catholic Testimony in the point of Episcopacy, as an Apostolic institution, custom and succession, is (I conceive) as much to be credited for the certainty and fidelity of it, as it is for the Scripture-Canon received, preserved and delivered to us, or for the two Sacraments to be used, or for the Lords day to be observed, or for Presbytery itself, or for any ordained Ministry distinct and authoritative: for none of these, as to the Historick and Catholic attestation of them, is more ancient or more evident than Episcopacy. Sure, if the ancient Church were faithful in all other things of universal use and reception, it is not to be suspected as to this great depositum of Ecclesiastic Order for gubernative Power, Authority and Jurisdiction, in what hands it was settled and deposited for the Churches future peace and constant good Government to all posterity; it being equally impertinent to affirm, first, that Church-Government and Governors were needless for the Church, or that it was not ordered by the Apostles, (that is, by the Spirit and wisdom of Christ,) or that it is arbitrary and mutable every year, as men have a mind to novelty and sedition, or lastly, that those holy men who immediately succeeded the Apostles did vary from their rule and prescription, changing Presbytery or Independency into a presidential or Episcopal primacy; which is a thing incredible, considering the purity, exactness, and holy pertinacy of Primitive Churches, as to what was of Apostolical Tradition, as Tertullian rarely expresseth it in his book of Prescription against Heresies. 1. Plea, from the Catholic Antiquity of Episcopacy. So that my first pregnant consideration, persuading you (O worthy Gentlemen, with my brethren of the Ministry, and all my religious Countrymen) to look upon right Episcopacy with a more propitious and favourable eye, is taken from the great credit and just veneration which is due to Antiquity, there where we find a Primitive practice and Catholic consent; and this not only no way contrary to or divers from, but most consonant and every way agreeable to the mind of Christ and the wisdom of God, which the Church hath delivered to us in the holy Scriptures. It is not to be doubted but the stream of Christianity ran clearest, the nearer it was to the Apostolic fountains, as in purity of Doctrine, and simplicity of Devotion, so in the Discipline, Order and Government of the Church, as to that power and authority which is meet in all offices and Ministrations. Who can deny that the Primitive Churches and Pastors best understood the appointments of Christ and his Apostles in this point of Government, as in all things else, when they had such an anointing of the Spirit and Truth to teach them how to constitute and govern all Churches, Omnes enim illi valdè sunt posteriores quam Episcop●, qu bus Apostoli tradiderunt ecclesias. Irenae. l. 5. c. ●0. as needed not any Presbyterian or Independent Tutors to teach them new modes? who are, as Irenaeus speaks of some Innovators in his time, much younger than those Bishops who were the successors of the Apostles; who as they could not possibly be ignorant of the Apostolic appointment, so, nor probably could they be so impertinent, as presently to alter it even in the first Century, while some Apostles or Apostolic men were yet living, and not only preaching as Presbyters, but so ruling as Precedents or Bishops among them and above them, that they were far enough from the Incubus of popularity, or the Polypus of parity, among Ministers: Both which methods must have left the enlarged and numerous Churches of Christ either Acephalists, confused without any head, or Polycephalists, burdened with many heads, and divided into infinite fragments, far enough from any such influence and authority, God knows, as was capable to preserve such large combinations of Churches as then and after were combined, in any regular order, subordination and communion, wherein primitive Churches (as in all other things) most excelled; being furthest from any such distractions, defectiveness or deformities, as are monstrous in Christianity, because most contrary to those constant proportions of Modesty, Humility, Order, Wisdom, Peace, Unity and Polity, which God hath set before all sober men, and specially wise Christians, both in reason and religion, in the system of all bodies natural or social, in all communities civil and military, oeconomick or politic, yea in all magistracies or eminencies, which are either paternal, fraternal, or despotical. In the ordering of all which there ever is and must be some Parent or Elder brother, or Master, or Chieftane, or Superior, or Commander, who in a kind of Episcopacy oversee and overrule those that are under their several charges, and within the several combinations: which order strictly established by God in his ancient Church of the Jews, can never be made to appear either as Paradox or Heterodox from the wisdom and will of God in the several families, fraternities or polities of his Christian Church; nor may it be thought that in this Christ suffered his Church to err a Catholic error, which in all things else he ever preserved (according to his promise) from all general defection. Can it then seem other then Juvenility, Peevishness, Partiality, Pride, Petulancy, Love of novelty, and factious inclination, or some other impotent passion, (which may, as diseases, be sometime too popular, prevalent and Epidemic among Christians) so grossly to blemish, suspect, despise and discredit (as some do) the veracity and fidelity of the Church of Christ, in the point of Catholic Episcopacy, as most ancient and venerable? which is indeed, and ever was, both used and esteemed as he only crown and completion of all well- governed Churches, as in latter, so in primitive times; before whose grey head and reverend age it well becomes such Novices as we are to rise up and pay a due respect. Since (then) presidential or paternal Episcopacy is (beyond all cavil or dispute) the elder Brother by far to Presbytery or Independency; Britannorum inaccessa Romanis loca Christo subdita. Tert. adv. Jud. c. 7. since it had possession, as in all other, so in these British Churches (of which Tertullian, who lived in the second Century after Christ, makes mention) from the first Constitution of them in their just proportions (which St. Jerom calls Adultas ecclesias, adult or fullgrown Churches, Hieron. in vitá Malch. which had attained their due stature and dimensions;) since the quiet possession and long prescription of fifteen or sixteen hundred years, is a valid title in justice, and invincible prejudice against all novel pretenders, and violent disseisors of Episcopacy; it were but modest and ingenuous, reasonable and religious, equal and charitable, for all Ministers and others of any Learning, Worth and Honesty (as many I hope are of all sides) to make some handsome, if not retractations, yet retrogradations and returns toward this Apostolic and Catholic, Ancient and Primitive Episcopacy. O How well would it become Presbyterians and Independents, that have a due sense of things comely, honest, praiseworthy and honourable, in stead of making up their new Associations, which is but a marriage or medley of Presbytery and Independency, to offer, or receive some fair offers and fraternal proposals, in order to an happy accommodation with those Learned and worthy men, who are still firm to the Episcopal interests and just Authority, as Ancient, Primitive and Catholic; which are not to be slighted by any men of Learning and Worth, however the Cause may be more afflicted, and the men less favoured at present? It ill becomes any Grave, Godly and ingenuous men, still to take those poor advantages against Episcopacy which arise from popular ignorance, vulgar prejudices or covetous jealousies; much less from the plebeian petulancies used against all Bishops, and the undeserved depressions fallen on many Episcopal Divines, over whom disdainfully to triumph, and with a kind of scorn to crow and insult, is both base and barbarous: nor is it much more ingenuous, to pass them by with a supercilious silence and neglect; which I see some new masters affect to do, counting them all as unsavoury salt, not fit to be gathered from those Dunghills on which they have been cast, (God knows, not for want of savour in themselves, but of favour from others.) A third sort there are of Associaters, who that they might seem more civil and candid to Episcopacy, and to Episcopal Ministers, of whose worth they are convinced as much as of their sustained injuries, have sometime (yet not without the strictures of some brow and glorying) invited them to join with them, that is, to subscribe and submit to their new Associations. For in these (as the design and Opera is laid) those men whose judgement and conscience hath most confined and confirmed them to Episcopacy, must either as Ciphers signify nothing, and when they convene, but sit still and say nothing, (being only tame Spectators of other men's rare activities, who would fain christian their Presbytery and Independency with some drops and sprinklings of Episcopacy, and so have some Episcopal Divines as Gossips to their new Births;) or else they must first as good as openly renounce Episcopacy, and desert their former both opinion, Ordination and station in the Church as Christians and as Ministers; next, they must admit the rare and new invention of a particular Church-Covenant, as they call it, or an incorporating engagement, by word or subscription, contrary to what they formerly had explicitly passed to this Church and its Government in their ordination and subscription, yea and beyond that Baptismal Covenant, which every Christian professor owns as the badge or bond of his admission into Communion with Christ and his Church, both Catholic and congregational, general and particular. This (it seems) must now not at all be owned, or slighted, nulled and forgotten by the superfetation of a new form of Christian confederation more solemn, sacred and obliging (as they fancy) to Christian duties, than that was, which was solemnly made in the presence of the congregation, ratified in the blood of Jesus Christ, and testified in the Name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost: yea and after this the poor Episcopal Divines, if they will gently comply, and for fear Associate, must quietly permit either the community of the people, or the parity of the Presbyters (in their several lesser bodies and congregations, or in their greater classes and conventions) to challenge to themselves the plenary, sole, absolute, perfect and unappealable power of not only ordination, which of old they never had, as St. Jerom confesseth, but of all Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and Discipline, and this under the conduct and auspicious management of only some Diurnal Dictator, some temporary prolocutor, or extemporary moderator, who is (forsooth) to have the Image of a superficial Bishop, and the shadow of a short-lived superintendent; a thing merely occasional and unauthoritative as to any office or power inherent in him, or of right to be challenged or exercised by him, enjoying only an horary, arbitrary and humane presidency, for fashion and civility sake, without any Ecclesiastical, eminent or constant Authority residing in him as derived from Christ, the Apostles or their successors, or any Church's custom, designation and consent in former times. Such as was ever committed to, owned in, and used by the Bishops of the Church, as regularly succeeding to the Apostles in that ordinary eminency of power, which was necessary to keep both Presbyters and all Christian people and Churches good Order, Peace and Unity; which blessings they never more enjoyed, or more happily, than under a right Episcopacy. Whose cause, however of later years it hath been run down and trampled in a hurry under foot by some men in England, Scotland and Ireland; yet hath it suffered no real diminution as to the true Honour of its Apostolic Authority, its Primitive Antiquity, its Catholic succession, its high descent, and its holy Original: which was never denied or much disputed by any men of any considerable Learning and Piety, till these later Dog-days, in which not only some single Stars of nebulous and dubious light, but whole Constellations of them, like Sirius or the Canicular Juncto (erected under the new name and figuration of Smectymnuus, to calculate the Nativity of a new Reformation) became Lords of the Ascendent; being filled, contrary to their former Conformity and declared submission, with a very unbenigne, that I say not malignant, influence, not only against Episcopacy, but in effect against the whole visible Constitution of this Church, in which (as Goods in a sunk ship) all things are much wasted and abased by the ruin of Episcopacy. Their destructive fires (kindled from the colder parts of this Island) first flamed into strange Logomachies, threadbare cavillings, and trivial strifes about Words and Names; as if after sixteen hundred years, all the Christians and Ministers of England, its Princes and Parliaments, its Synods and Counsels, yea all the Christian world elsewhere, were to be Catechised by a few petty Presbyters (in comparison) and their Scot-English Assembly, what the names of Bishop and Presbyter, of Pastor and Teacher, of Elder and Ruler, of Helps and Governments, of Apostle and Evangelist, of Ecclesiastical Stars and Angels did mean: which not only all Writers, but all times and practices of all Churches had sufficiently interpreted, and cleared from the first promiscuous use of some general names (which called the chief Apostles Prophets, Evangelists, Bishops, Presbyters, Elders, Ministers and Deacons too; in whose offices, authorities and duties, there were real and great differences) to more proper and peculiar distinctions, according to the several ranks, degrees, orders, offices and powers then established in the Church. After the Squibbs and Crackers of paper had been lighted, and cast in the face of venerable Episcopacy, at last (as the manner is) things came to dreadful Chiromachies, such scufflings and fightings with hands and arms of flesh against that Government, (which is as the Ancient of days) that they looked more like that Gigantomachy, the Giants assaulting Heaven and the Gods, than that Good fight of faith, which ought to contend earnestly only for that which was once uniformly delivered to all true Saints, and received by all true Churches of Christ, in doctrine, order and government: among whom all lesser disputations and differences circumstantial (rising among good Christians) were wont to be fairly debated and determined in lawful Assemblies, in Ecclesiastical Synods, and National or general Councils; from which Christian and Orthodox Bishops were never either terrified or excluded, but principally called and admitted as the chief Fathers of those holy Oeconomies or Christian Polities: Nor was Episcopacy ever condemned by any of those Councils, Synods or Assemblies in any Age of the Church; much less was it ejected and extirpated as useless, unlawful and abominable, no not by any Synods and confessions of any Protestant and reformed Churches of note; notwithstanding they could not conveniently enjoy the blessing of it, (for so they accounted it) either by reason of the petulancy of people, or the impatience of civil Magistrates, or the Sacrilegious humours and designs of all against the Clergy. After all these prepossessions and just presumptions thus challenged to the cause and state of Episcopacy, in point of its venerable and undeniable Antiquity, I cannot but offer to its still scrupulous or implacable Adversaries these following Quaeres. 1. How sad (I beseech you) and wretched, how confounded and astonished must the awakened Consciences of those men be, who have been the chief Authors and Fautors of our late troubles, variations and miseries, chiefly upon the account of their Antiepiscopal Antipathies, if after all these combustions, perturbations and plunderings of Religion, which have rather pleased men's private passions and opinions, than any way profited the public welfare of this Church or State; if (I say) these great sticklers against Episcopacy should be either grossly mistaken, or maliciously perverted from the right path, that good old way, of which former Ages can better inform us, than those that are but of yesterday, and can know nothing but by their light? 2. What if it should be as true, as it is most probable (because generally so believed in all Ages, parts and places of the Church) that the cause of Primitive Episcopacy is indeed the cause of God, of Christ, and of the whole Church; the cause of all the Apostles, of all Primitive Bishops their immediate successors, yea the cause of all true Presbyters and all true Christians; a cause in which the glory of God, the wisdom of Christ, the honour of the Apostles, the fidelity of their successors, the credit of the Church Catholic, the comfort and authority of all true Ministers, the surest test and Character of due Ordination, the peace and unity of all good Christians, are bound up and mainly concerned? 3. What if these new masters, these sharp censors and imperious dictator's, (whom perhaps not Piety so much as Policy, not Religion but Reason of State, not reforming severities, but needless jealousies and imaginary necessities, have put upon such violent stickling against Episcopacy, and reprobating all worthy Bishops) what if they have been deceived themselves and deceivers of others in that point? which is much more venial to think and say of the very best of them, than to pass any such censure or suspicion of error or ignorance upon all Churches, even in their purest and Primitive Antiquity, when one spark of Martyrly zeal, which was as holy fire from God's Altar, had more divine light and heat in it, than all the blazes and flashes of Modern Zelotry. 4. I do in all Christian candour demand of the severest Presbyterian and sharpest Independent, whether, when they ask of the generations of old, and inquire of all Ages from the beginning of Christian Churches, whether ever they find any Christians or congregations at any time either Christening or Churching themselves, either by their own vote, choice and authority, or by separating from their ordained Presbyters and Bishops, which were sound in the faith, and regular in their administrations, who had duly taught, baptised, confirmed and ruled them in the Lord. When did any Presbyters or Ministers ever pretend to ordain themselves or one another without some Apostle or Bishop? When, where, and by whom was the first Schism, Rupture or Chasm of Ecclesiastical parity, as to Mission and Commission, begun? When and where was the first intrusion or encroachment upon the pretended authority of Presbytery made by Episcopacy? Did not all Presbyters owe & ever own their legitimate birth & breeding to their respective Bishops? whose Authority was ever as much above mere Presbyters in degree and office, as it was before them in the order of nature and causality, no less than in time and antiquity. 5. If (then) all the novel presumptions, pretensions and objections of either Presbytery or Independency against Primitive, Catholic, and Apostolic Episcopacy, should in earnest be nothing but passionate, false and frivolous mistakes, arising from ignorance and error, carried on by envy and arrogancy in many men; O what needless troubles, what heedless angers, what inordinate furies, what dreadful disorders must they all this while have been guilty of? what causeless contentions, innovations, confusions, vastations, have they brought into the Churches of Christ? what cruel and uncharitable contentions have they raised, as elsewhere, so in this famous and flourishing Church of England? without any just cause, God knows, and beyond the merits of Episcopacy, even in its greatest defects, declinations and deformities; to which as all holy Institutions may in time be subject, so they ought to be humbly, wisely and moderately reform by the prayers, tears, counsels, honest and orderly endeavours of all sober Christians, of all sorts and sizes, in their places and stations, with due regard to the first pattern and original. But certainly, as the whole order and office of Presbytery, (which may have had its personal depravations also) so the ancient and venerable Authority of Episcopacy, as to its Primitive Institution and Catholic succession, ought not on any hand to be utterly ruined, razed and extirpated root and branch, by any tumultuary rashness or popular precipitancy; which can never become any Church of Christ, or any wise and godly Christians: nor can such methods of sharp and sour Reformations ever end in the peace or comfort of good men; who, (if they find themselves guilty of excesses, so dangerous and destructive to the true Church, true Religion and true Reformation) have nothing less to do than to persevere in their extravagancies, or pertinaciously to assert their former transports: yea they have nothing more to do speedily and conscientiously, than humbly to recant, seriously to repent, and effectually to amend, as much as lies in their power, the affronts and assaults, the breaches and wastes they have made of the Church's Peace and Unity, Power and Authority, by returning to that duty which they owe to God, and that obedience they owe to their spiritual Governors, and that reverence which they owe to uniform antiquity; which so fully commends the presidential authority of Apostolical and Primitive Episcopacy. Their first errors may be weakness, but their obstinacy must needs be wickedness; who still sin when they are convinced, silenced and afflicted. 6. What if after all this dust and noise, which hath so blinded and deafened the eyes and ears of many Presbyters and people, that they cannot and will not see the Truth and Testimony of Antiquity, (which is no less clear for the presidential authority and eminency of Episcopacy, than for the subordination, counsel and assistance of Presbytery) what if it should be the mind of God, the order and Institution of Jesus Christ, the designation and direction of his blessed Spirit, evidently signified and settled in and by the blessed Apostles, in all Primitive Churches, and so continued to this day, according to the measures of Divine Wisdom and Order, (though not without mixtures of humane infirmities and disorders, incident to all holy Institutions?) 7. What if after all these seditious and schismatical distempers in Ministers and people, the Lord should say to these refractory and irreconcilable spirits against Episcopacy, as he did to the Jews when they revolted from samuel's Government, 1 Sam. 8.17. They have not rejected you (O my faithful servants the Bishops, whom I have constituted and used in all ages as vigilant Overseers, and wise Rulers of my flock,) but they have rejected me? who in this point of Episcopacy, have so sufficiently declared my will and pleasure to all the world, that no Church was ever ignorant of it, or varied from it, being manifested from heaven, First, in the evident instances of divine wisdom, among the Jewish Church and Priests; yea as it is an orderly and gubernative method in all societies, where right reason, and so true Religion, necessarily command and commend superiority and subjection: Secondly, in the pattern and Rules of Ecclesiastical Polity, set down by my Son Jesus Christ, and followed by his Apostles, who settled all Churches in such an orderly subordination: Thirdly, in the constant custom and Catholic testimony of all succeeding Churches, whose joint suffrages and uniform practices in cases of any darkness, dispute or difficulty (where Scripture-precepts may seem less clear and explicit) ought by all sober Christians to be esteemed as the safest measures of conscience, and surest rule of religious observance, especially as to things of outward Polity, Order and Government; nor may any novel inventions or pretensions never so specious be put into the balance against the Authority of the Catholic Church, which is the pillar and ground of Truth, 1 Tim. 3.15. the great Directory of Ecclesiastical prudence and practice. 8. What if the Great God of order, peace and truth, (as well as so many learned and godly men, so many famous and flourishing Churches in all Ages) should by beating or scaring men from their popular prejudices, pitiful subterfuges, and sinister designs, thus mightily plead the cause of true Episcopacy, against all those who have spoken and done so many perverse things against that excellent government? What if he should by some powerful means rebuke their confidences, as he did Jobs? justly demanding of these Destroyer's, Where is that Wisdom, that Modesty, that Gentleness, that Charity, that Moderation, that Humility, that Gravity and Christian Caution which became godly men to their betters, to such a Church and to such worthy Bishops as were the Governors of it under God and the King? Could you be ignorant of the learning, graces, virtues, merits and worth which were in Bishops, suitable to their lawful Authority? Did you not know, and with some repining see, how justly they were preferred before Presbyters and People, as every way fittest to be over and above them? Are these immoderations and injuries the ways of true Religion and Reformation? Can there be true piety without charity, yea without equity or pity? If evil men are not to be injured, much less good men, good Ministers, and least of all good Bishops, which were not wanting among you. May not thus the lightnings of God's rebukes be clearly seen, and the terrors of his thunders be justly heard, and the blast of his displeasure be felt, by all the unjust, tumultuary, malicious and implacable enemies of venerable Episcopacy? Methinks I hear the Divine Majesty thus uttering his glorious voice against them: Deut. 32.6. O foolish People! O unthankful Nation! O degenerous Christians or deformed Church, not worthy to be beloved of God, or happily governed by wise men! Do you thus requite the Lord, and thus despise all the ancient Churches of Christ, by forsaking, yea rejecting your own mercies and happiness? Is it a small thing that you have broken through all Laws, and the arm of man's civil authority, but will you also contend against the power of God, and the wisdom of Christ? whose outstretched arm in the way of Episcopacy hath been in all Ages a defence and refuge to his Church. Should you, beyond the boldness of Balaam, dare to curse what God hath not cursed, or to defy what God hath not defied, but signally owned with his blessing in all Ages and Churches? In seeing do you not see, and in reading do you not understand, the constant methods of Gods guiding and governing both this and all other Christian Churches? How hath a novel zeal, but not according to knowledge, blinded your minds? Who called the first Apostles to be chief Bishops over all Churches? Acts 1. Who supplied the Apostasy of Judas by the Election of Mathias to his Episcopacy? Upon whom did the power of the Holy Ghost first come? Who placed Bishops immediately after them in all completed Churches through the world? What planted, preserved, united and reform them, but that Apostolical, that is, the Episcopal authority, assisted by such Presbyters, whom they ordained to part of the Office, Labour, Honour and Ministry? Who were the chief Champions of the Gospel, but the venerable Bishops in all Ages? Who were the most resolute Confessors? holy Bishops: Who the most glorious Martyrs? excellent Bishops: Who were the most Learned and Valiant Asserters of the Orthodox faith, Primitive purity, sanctity, order and harmony, becoming Christian Churches, but admirable Bishops? Who were counted the prime Stars in the hand of Christ? Rev. 1. ult. Who were called by way of eminency Angels by him, but the chief Precedents and Bishops of the seven Churches? To whom was Divine Power first given and after derived, not only to teach and feed, but to ordain Presbyters and Deacons, also to rebuke, rule and govern both Presbyters, Deacons and People, (as St. Paul enjoins) but to holy Bishops, in the persons and patterns of Timothy and Titus, Archippus and others, whose Authority as such, no man ought to despise? 1 Tim. 4.12. Tit. 2.15. Who were they that wounded and destroyed the Great Behemoth and Leviathans of prodigious errors and spreading heresies in the four first Centuries, but incomparable Bishops, such as were Irenaeus, Athanasius, Epiphanius, Augustine, Ambrose, Hilary, Prosper, both the Cyrils, the Basils, the Gregory's and others? Who quenched the wildfires of Schism and faction among Christian people and Ministers, but excellent Bishops, such as Clemens, Ignatius, Cyprian, both the Dionysiu's, Austin, Optatus, Fulgentius and others? By whose sweat and blood, next after the Apostles, were the plantations and necessary Reformations of Churches watered and weeded, but by the vigilancy and industry of worthy Bishops, both in their single capacity and in their joint Synods or Councils? wherein Bishops, as the Representatives or chief Fathers of all Churches as the families of Christ, might orderly meet, duly deliberate, and autoritatively determine, what seemed good to the Spirit of God and to them, for the Church's Purity and Peace, according to the Scriptures precept and Catholic practice. Who were those renowned Pastors and Preachers of old that mitigated the Spirits of great Princes, that converted many Nations, that baptised mighty Kings and Emperors, that advanced the Gospel beyond their Empires, and set up the Cross of Christ above their Crowns, not in sovereignty or civil power, but in the Divine Empire of Verity, Sanctity and Charity? Who moderated the Spirits and passions of persecutors? Who convinced them of their errors, resolved their scruples? who condemned their sins? who terrified their consciences? and who either raised or restored them (through repentance) to the peace of Christ and his Church, but heroic, wise and invincible Bishops? Who have been the chief Luminaries in all Churches, in all Ages the Chariots and Horsemen of Israel, the prime Pillars of Piety and Peace, of Hospitality and Honour, of Order and good Government, but wise and renowned Bishops? Who furnished all Churches with fervent Prayers, devout Liturgies, convenient Catechises, learned Homilies, practical Sermons, accurate Commentaries and excellent Epistles; with sound Decisions of Controversies and Cases arising in the Church or any private Conscience? Who made up with charitable Composures all uncomfortable breaches and unkind differences among Christians, but pious and prudent Bishops? whose authority was ever esteemed as sacred, being experienced in all Ages to be sanative and sovereign to Religion and the Church, where they had freedom and encouragements to act as became the chief Pastors, Counsellors and Governors of the Church in all Ecclesiastic concernments. Sure if God would have them utterly destroyed, he would not so long have accepted such sacrifices from the hands of Bishops, both ancient and modern; nor thus mightily have pleaded the cause of Episcopacy in all Ages, and in this, both as to God's wisdom in, and his blessing upon, that way of Church-government and Governors. Obj. But possibly our later Bishops (especially in England, whose cause is here chiefly pleaded) were such degenerous persons, as deserved not to bear the name, or knew not how to use the Office of a Bishop. Answ. Doubtless (their Enemies being Judges) no place, no Age, no one Nation or Church in the world since the Apostles, ever exceeded the Bishops of England for piety and learning, for useful and exemplary virtues, of which I shall afterward give more exact account; no Church ever more happy, flourishing or prosperous, than the reformed Church of England was under such worthy Bishops, as some men so despitefully used. Could Bishops in this and all Churches be so blessed of God, and yet Episcopacy deserve to be so abhorred of men? Were the Evangelical labours of godly Bishops so plentifully watered with the Dew of Heaven, and yet doth their function deserve to be rooted out of the Earth? If Episcopacy in its secular riches and honours must needs be destroyed, in order to confiscate the Church's Lands; yet at least primitive, though poor, Episcopacy might have been preserved: whose ancient eminency would have been both authoritative and conspicuous among good Christians, through the Clouds of such undeserved poverty. Though some men might presume to deprive Bishops of their deserved and lawful Estates, yet sure they were too bold to rob the Church of all excellent and deserving Bishops, such as England ever afforded, both before and since the Reformation; which the Romish and Jesuitick policies never hoped more effectually to deform and destroy, than by helping to carry on the routing of Episcopacy. Certainly the excellent Bishops of England were the greatest Eyesore of the Pope and his Conclave; nor did they care to fight by their secret and open Engines against small or great Presbyters, so much as against these Prelates, who had so long stood in their way. They knew, when these chief Shepherds were smitten, the Sheep would soon be scattered: nor were Papists ever more gratified than when Episcopacy was extirpated out of England. What if the God, the Lord of his Church, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath laid the Government of it on the Shoulders of Christ Jesus, and he derived the external administration or dispensation of it to the Apostles, and they to succeeding Bishops, as spiritual Pastors and venerable Fathers of his Church; what if he should thus plead the cause of Episcopacy, in the eminency of its Apostolical order and primitive authority, against all those that have spoken, acted and written so many peevish, spiteful, popular, partial and perverse things against it? What if he should lay to their Consciences what is visible to their and all men's eyes, the sad divisions, miserable confusions, and horrid vastations of this Church and the Reformed Religion, which have followed the destroying of harmless, honourable, ancient, venerable, useful and necessary Episcopacy? Would they not be infinitely ashamed, and mightily confounded for the new Modes which they have taken up, for the Oaks which they have chosen to overshadow themselves, Isa▪ 1.29. yea for the Briars and Brambles which they fancy as fittest to rule themselves and the Church of Christ in this Land, either by way of parity or popularity, which are not fit methods to rule their own families withal? Will a few arbitrary precarious Presbyters, and unautoritative Preachers, or their new Associations serve their turn? Or will a few petty Congregations or Schismatizing Conventicles, here and there, scattered and scrambled together in Cities and Countries, be able to countervail the damage, or to recompense the unspeakable defects and detriments, which this Church and Nation, which all estates and degrees of Christian people have sustained, by the total loss and overthrow of primitive Episcopacy, which was as it were smothered to death in a crowd and huddle, never legally examined or fairly condemned by the free and full suffrages of all estates, so as its Antiquity, worth and honour did deserve. What learned, prudent and conscientious Ministers, or other Christians, can be fully satisfied with those new-fashioned ordinations and ministrations of holy things, which neither they nor their Forefathers, nor any ancient Churches ever knew, and wherein that Divine Authority which they challenge, is so justly doubted or disputed, as by no Catholic hand or regular course committed to them? If that Ministerial power, which is challenged and exercised upon such new accounts of humane policies and later inventions, if it should really be none at all, or as weak and defective as it is dubious, for Ordination as it is for Jurisdiction; (which is very much feared and suspected by very wise and good men; especially where not want and necessity deny, but wantonness and wilfulness seek to deprive Christians of their true Bishop:) O how vain, how invalid, how arrogant, how insignificant must those Ministers and all their holy Ministrations appear to many Christians, who have of later years set themselves up, by a Presbyterian Commission or Popular Election, not only without, but against their lawful Superiors; who were every way so able, so worthy, and so lawfully authorized for that office and eminency, not only as they were ordained Presbyters, but as they were further consecrated Bishops, that is, placed by Christ, and appointed by the Church in an higher degree, capacity, use and exercise of Ecclesiastical power and jurisdiction, than ever was in any Presbyters? Of which eminency Episcopal as that famous Council of Nice took such care to have it continued, after the cient mode and pattern of public Election and solemn Consecration, or the Church's Benediction; so all this formality must have been very superstitious and ridiculous, if it added nothing of authority and power peculiar to them as Bishops, but only what they formerly had received in common as Presbyters. Doubtless reordination, as rebaptisation, to the same office and degree in the Church, was ever condemned in the Church of Christ as impious, because superfluous, a mere mockery of Religion, a taking the name of God in vain; forbidden by the African Canons and many Councils, never practised by any but such as St. Basil the Great reports one Eustathius of Sebastia to have been, whom he calls an infamous Heretic, a notorious deserter of the Church's Catholic Communion. If St. chrysostom in the fourth Century had judged it enough to complete him in his Episcopal power and Authority, to have been once ordained a Presbyter, In vita B. Chrysost. as he was in Antioch, where he so lived twelve years, sure he would not have troubled himself to have been after ordained or consecrated a Bishop by Theophilus Bishop of Alexandria and others of that order, when he was chosen to be Bishop of Constantinople. In vita Aug. Nor would St. Austin, (a person no less pious and learned, who had been ordained Presbyter by Valerius Bishop of Hippo) been ordained anew by Megalius Patriarch of Numidia, when he was chosen to be Bishop of Hippo. In like sort was one Alexander a Presbyter ordained by St. Synes. ep. 66. chrysostom to be Bishop of Bassinopolis, according to the uniform method of Antiquity, which judged that the Presbyters choosing, the people's approving, and the next Bishops consecrating or blessing of the Elect Bishop, made up that complete power and eminent Authority, in which he that was formerly but a Presbyter, was now invested as a Bishop or Precedent of any Church: which made Epiphanius brand Aerius for a mad man, and subverted by the Devil (upon his discontent for being repulsed from a Bishopric, of which he was ambitious) because he made Episcopacy and Presbytery (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) of equal dignity, efficacy and authority; Hieronym. ad Pammach. in Epitaph. Paulae. In epist. ad Johan. Hieros'. ep. yet is Epiphanius often and highly commended by St. Jerom (who was but a Presbyter and lived in his Diocese sometime) as a person (sanctae & venerabilis memoriae) of holy and happy memory. This then appearing so pregnantly to have been the judgement and practice of all Antiquity, which preferred Episcopal dignity and Authority above simple Presbytery, I do not see how learned, modest and ingenuous men can lightly esteem or actually oppose so Ancient and Catholic an order in the Church; so useful, so necessary for any Church's well-being, which is unseparable from its good Government. Lay aside (then) passions, prejudices, partiality, love of novelty, and childish pertinacy; I cannot but hope sober men will cheerfully return in their judgements, desires and endeavours, to correspond with Primitive and paternal Episcopacy, acknowledging the ancient Rights of it as well as the use of it to be Catholic and Apostolic, so delivered to us in all Ages and successions, not only by Bishops, but by Presbyters and Deacons too; such as Clemens of Alexandria, Tertullian, Origen and others were: from all which wholly to vary and recede, cannot be other than shaking, and in great part subverting, the very foundations of Unity, Charity and Stability in the Catholic Church, as to its visible Order, Communion and Government; wherein all good Christians should not so much study the temporary satisfaction of particular parties and interests, as the constant and common good of the whole Polity and Society, wherein all honest men's private concernments are best preserved by such a public Authority as is most venerable and least disputable. What some have alleged to weaken and baffle the Catholic Antiquity of Episcopacy, Of Ignatius his Epistles. as to its Primitive and Apostolic plantation, by bastardising all the Epistles of Ignatius, as wholly supposititious, and so interpolated at best with the oft-repeated Crambes of Bishops, Presbyters and Deacons, to a kind of nauseous affectation, savouring (they say) more of later subtlety than Primitive simplicity: All this hath no weight in it, considering the high esteem was had of Ignatius in the Churches of the second and third Centuries, besides what the learned Usserius and Vossius do own in their late Examen, not only for his Martyrly constancy, but for his so holy and generous Epistles, so full of devout flames and sacred fervors of love to Christ, of Charity to his Church, and zeal for Martyrdom, that it were a thousand pities this lukewarm Age should want the warmth of Ignatius his spirit glowing in his Epistles, such as were often owned and cited by the first Ecclesiastic Writers, St. Jerom, Eusebius and others, as genuine. Nor doth it seem so probable that any in those or aftertimes, which had no dispute either for or against Episcopacy, should studiously add those frequent testimonies for it which are seen in the most unsuspected parts of Ignatius; but rather, that Holy man was directed by God's good Spirit in his Martyrly zeal and ecstasies of love to Christ and the Church, to reinforce and reiterate, as he doth, the validity of his testimony for Order and Unity in the Church, as foreseeing the quarrels which might be about Episcopacy, and that the Communion of the Church would be much dissolved, when the reverence and submission to Episcopal order and eminency should be so remitted, disputed or denied, that either Presbyters or people should run to parity and popularity, the certain highways to Anarchy. Truly Ignatius is not more frequent for the honour and eminency of Episcopacy, than for a venerable Presbytery in its due place and rank; which might make him seem less fulsome to some Presbyters, if they were not their own enemies, out of excessive transports against all Bishops. Vedelius of Geneva, who had as good a nose and quick a scent as most men, would not have so studied Ignatius his Epistles, and sifted them as he doth, if he thought them all dross or refuse: yea he is so evicted by them, that he cannot forbear to subscribe to many of them in many places, Libenter tales amplectimur Episcopos. Vedel. yea and to such an Episcopacy as that holy Martyr joins with the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a venerable Presbytery; which he hardly doubts, much less denies, to have been in that first Century after Christ when Ignatius wrote those Epistles, Phil. 4.3. being Bishop of Antioch after E●odias, constituted there by Saint Peter, when he left that Church to go to others. Obj. Of St. Clemens his Epistle. Nor is there any more force in the fancies that some men draw from St. Clemens contemporary with St. Paul, who in his Epistles owns no Bishops as distinct among or above Presbyters in the Church of Corinth, to whom he wrote that divine letter, upon occasion of Schism or Sedition risen among the Presbyters of that Church. Answ. Sure the enemies of Episcopacy are hardly driven to find testimonies in Antiquity against it, when they are forced to wrest them out of such Writers, who were undoubtedly themselves Bishops, as Clemens was in the Church of Rome, in whose person he writes that Epistle to the Corinthians, as Eusebius, St. Jerom, and all Antiquity before them do witness. Euseb. hist. l. 3. c. 12. Hierom. Catal. Scrip. Eccl. It is true, St. Clemens then wrote, when the Name of Bishop and Presbyter were not so distinct as afterward; Episcopal eminency being either in the Apostolical persons and power yet surviving, or conveyed under the Names of Bishops and Presbyters to lesser Apostles and Apostolic successors, Clem ep. p. 54. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. whom St. Clemens calls the first fruits of the Apostles, placed by them (as he saith) to be Bishops, Presbyters and Deacons in all Churches, to serve and oversee or Rule the Church according to Christian order and Ecclesiastical comeliness, as the State of the Churches required. Which * Clem. epist. p 53. he represents by those three orders among the Jews, which God had appointed, namely the (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) the chief Priests, the Priests and Levites: which Orders, as † p. 57 he says God confirmed by the miracle of Aaron's Rod, against the factious and seditious spirits among the Jews; so the Apostles, foreseeing the contention that would arise about the name of Episcopacy, did place those worthy persons to be their successors, whom others in like order might follow, to execute (as he expresseth) the proper ministrations and offices which are to be performed in the Church, not confusedly, but by such persons and in such times and places as the Lord had appointed. So that either the Corinthian Presbyters were then as so many particular Bishops attended only with their Deacons in their several Charges (which might be many and large enough in that ample City and Territory, after the Apostle St. Paul's death;) or they were still under some surviving Apostles general care and inspection, as St. John, who yet lived in Domitian's time, when Clemens wrote this Epistle to those Corinthian Presbyters, who possibly for want of some chief Bishop or Precedent chosen and placed among them, thus fell into emulations and factions: which afterward were remedied by Episcopal eminency in that Church, as St. Jerom tells us. This is certain, as no Primitive Church had more early factions and more carnal divisions, or more needed Episcopal Presidency, that is, Apostolical Authority, to repress the turbulent and contentious humours among both people and Presbyters; so none had more eminent Bishops, among whom one was that famous Dionysius, Euseb. hist. l. 4. c. ●2. whom Eusebius and all Antiquity so commend for a Bishop of most Primitive and Apostolic temper, full of Majesty and Humility, of Authority and Charity. To conclude, I find no disadvantage brought against Primitive Episcopacy (but much for it) by either of these most Ancient Writers, to which all others after them do so unanimously and clearly agree for asserting the Venerable Authority and Catholic Antiquity of Bishops above Presbyters, that for any man of parts to listen to the partial, novel and pitiful allegations, which some Presbyters have made against Episcopacy and all presidential Bishops, contrary to those ancient Authors, (who were most of them, yea almost all of them, of that Episcopal order in the Church) is certainly as senseless a superstition, and as vain a divination, as that was for which Hannibal reproached Prusias King of Bythinia, when being advised by Hannibal to fight with the Pergamenians, he refused, because the entrails of the calf then sacrificed seemed not propitious: Sure (Sir) says he to the King, you cannot be well advised in your wars, An tu carunculae vitulinae mavis credere quam Imperatori veteri▪ Cic. de Diu. l. 2. Valer. Max. l. 3. c. 7. who rather regard the entrails of a young calf, than the Counsels of an old soldier and veterane Commander. Nor is it less impertinent for any sober Christian to credit the pitiful Rhapsodies or scraps forced out of the Scriptures or Fathers, and corraded by a few neoterics, to wrest them against Episcopacy, and themselves too who were actually Bishops, rather than to believe that uniform concurrence, which makes wholly for it out of all Antiquity, as in persuasion, so in practice, so far, that not one person or Author, Father or Historian, Synod or Council of any Name or Note, Worth or Eminency, can be excepted: No not St. Jerom himself, whose judgement and practice is clear in many places for Episcopal Eminency and Authority; however as a Presbyter he challenged an interest, as in the Election, so in the Counsel and assistance of Presbyters to be joined with Bishops, which is as prudent as ancient, and not denied by any sober man who adheres to Primitive Episcopacy. For which St. Hier. epist. ad Euag. & in cattle▪ Scrip. Eccl. Jerom himself gives so pregnant and ancient a Testimony, as none clearer can be desired, in the person of St. Mark the Evangelist, who first planted and settled a Christian Church at Alexandria, where he died and was buried. After whom (by his advice and direction no doubt) the Presbyters of Alexandria chose Anianus as their Bishop (a man endeared to God and man, Virum tum Deo propter pietatem charum, tum in omnibus rebus admirabilem. Hieron. of admirable Piety and Charity) who (in celsiori gradu collocatus) placed and owned in a higher degree than any Presbyters, did govern that Church twenty two years as Bishop; whose succession continued, as St. Jerom saith, to his days, in Dionysius and Heraclas Bishops of Alexandria. One such testimony for a ruling and unepiscopall, that is, an unruly Presbytery or Independency, (without any Bishop) would be worth considering; but is not to be found in all Antiquity. CHAP. XX. A second plea for Episcopacy, from its Evangelicall temper as to civil subjection. MY second argument or plea, by which to reconcile sober men to Apostolic, Primitive and Catholic Episcopacy, is from that Evangelicall temper and true Christian spirit which is in it, and was ever both owned and used by it, as to the peaceable principles and obediential practices of all worthy Bishops and all Miinisters of that subordination, in all Ages and places, toward Civil Powers and Magistrates; who both in first planting and after in reforming of any Church (wherein they had a chief influence,) never applied any popular, rude and violent means, to set up their opinions or parties any Churchway or power, any Order, Discipline or Authority: nothing pragmatic, mutinous or seditious was prayed, preached or practised by them; contenting themselves with sober sermons and devout prayers, with doing well cheerfully, and suffering evil patiently. They never used any sinister policy or power, no fraud or force, nor any methods or engines to introduce Episcopacy, other than such as were necessary to bring in Christianity in the true faith and holy mysteries of it, which have ever been embarked with, steered by, and either persecuted, or prospered, together with Episcopacy; whose diligence and devotion, peaceableness and patience, both in their Dioceses and in their Synods or Councils, assisted by Presbyters of the same adherence and Communion, hath planted, preserved, propagated and best restored true Religion to all Nations, by such demonstrations of meekness and wisdom, as were loyal, just, pure, peaceable, gentle and easy to be entreated. They never did any thing menacingly and boisterously against their Superiors, with threatenings or tumults, with sedition or hostility, with faction or partiality: They did not presently let fly bitter arrows at the faces, hands, heads and hearts of all that refused their offers and motions; but only shook off the dust of their feet, and quietly departed, if need were, as Christ commanded his Apostles and Disciples. This was and is the temper of Primitive and true Episcopacy, as to civil peace and subjection. It is an observation not so strange as too true, that all Spirits which are antiepiscopal are in some respects antimagistratical, and most-what antimonarchical: enemies to Bishops are easily enemies to all Magistrates that are not of their own strain and way. The first and great instance of which truth was and is in the Papacy, since the Bishops of Rome forsook the first humble, holy and martyrly principles of their predecessors, and challenged in Christ's Name a Sovereignty, Monarchy and Tyranny above all Bishops; not content with a primacy of order, civility and precedency, which was anciently allowed as to other metropolitans, Primates and Patriarches, so principally to the Bishops of Rome: not for the honour of their first founders, St. Peter and St. Paul, nor for the renown and orthodoxy of the Roman Church's faith, (for these might be and were as remarkable in other Cities, as Jerusalem, where Christ in person had been, so in Antioch, etc.) but it was consented and yielded to for the secular honour and glory of that mighty City, which was as it were the confluence, summary and centre of all worldly greatness, as the Queen of all Nations, whence all Laws and sovereignty flowed to the civilised world, and terror to the other parts that were barbarous or enemies. The Imperial power and Majesty of that City induced all others to prefer it; and so the Bishops of all other Cities made no scruple to yield the precedency of honour and order to the Bishops of Rome, which was as lawful as it was orderly. But when the Papal arrogancy lifted up itself above its brethren, by a Luciferian height, through the subtlety and importunity of Pope Boniface, as Platina in his life tells us, he afterward sought to exalt himself above all that is called God; the Papal ambition very cunningly invading not only the Rights of Kings and civil powers, but of the Ecclesiastic Rulers also: for the Roman policy saw that unless it got above all Bishops, it could not easily get above all Christian Princes and Magistrates, which supported the honour and freedom of each other. Then Monastic and Jesuitick flattery following pride, the Bishops of Rome must be not only the chief Bishop, but the Father, the Fountain, the Lord, the Prince of all Bishops and all Episcopacy, indeed the only Bishop of Divine and Apostolic Authority: all other Bishops must be as his off-sets, his Suffragans, or his Chaplains; nothing without him, and able to do nothing as Bishops, but by a power derived from the Pope; forgetting the Primitive equality of all Bishops, as to their Episcopal Rights, Power and Office, which followed the parity of the Apostles as to their Apostleship, which all Antiquity with St. Cyprian, St. Hieron. ep. ad Euag. Ubicunque fuerit Episcopus, ejusdem est meriti & sacerdotii, sive Rom●, sive Eugubii, sive Constantinopoli, sive R●egii, etc. Omnes Episcopi sunt Apostolorum successores, etc. Jerom, Gregory the Great and others owned as (Unicus in solidum Episcopatus) but one Tree or source of Ecclesiastical Authority, first rooted in Christ, afterward derived to the chief Apostles, and from each of them to their successors in all the Christian world. This once laid aside, and buried in the darkness and insolency of warlike and superstitious times, the degenerated Bishops of Rome by degrees gained their process and design, which was to have no civil or Ecclesistick power in the world, but such as might derive from and depend upon them; all Princes and Prelates must be his vassals, or they must have no Principality, no Episcopacy. This axe was the first, and a very heavy sharp one, that was laid to the root of Episcopacy by the Papal arrogancy; after whose copy all those may be suspected to write, who first blot out Episcopacy, that they may blot and out-bolt, set up and pull down Magistracy, upon such principles and pretensions of Religion as they list to set up and fancy, for the advancing of Christ's cause, the Gospel, Religion and Reformation: words never more used by any than the Popes of Rome, since they used the style of Holiness and Servant of Servants, but intended Highness, and exercised Sovereignty over all, according to that Mystery of Iniquity, which was by some of them carried on, and is not to this day laid aside, though more tenderly and warily managed, being on all hands either despised or disliked by all Christian Princes, that are not forced by dependence or fear to be parasites to the Pope. I know in this point other novel Antiepiscopal parties on all hands, have sought with all artifices to captate Magistratick favour, as well as plebeian applauses, representing themselves so submissive and compliant to Princes and Parliaments, to all States and civil Polities, that they fancy to favour their side, as if they only studied to bear the cross of Christ, and not to wear any Crown of sovereignty. But how modest some of them have been in seeking to set up Jesus Christ and themselves, not only without, but against the express will and consent of the lawful Princes and chief Magistrates, no less than against the Laws in force, yea and against the far major part of the community of all sorts, I leave it to others, yea to themselves, to judge, who have any just, ingenuous or blushing principle in them. I am sure the Anabaptists at Munster first pretended to abhor all wars and weapons of blood, while their party was small, weak and frozen; but afterward they could find hands as well as feet. As for Presbytery and Independency, truly they have given not only terrible alarms and assaults to both Monarchy and Episcopacy, which were both of them their lawful superiors; but they have (even now) sharp rigours and ambitious rivalries against each other, which of them shall have most power and most hands, as well as most favour or indulgence. Neither of them are looked upon as making any great scruple to bring in the prevalency of their parties by force of arms, when once they presume of numbers sufficient: neither of them seem to make any great conscience to set up their new Sceptres by absolute power, where petition and agitation will not serve their turn; because both of them pretend to have Jesus Christ sure on their side, who is indeed King of Kings and Lord of Lords; yet I do not find that he hath any where made them his Lieutenants to Rule for him, upon the score and Title of any Church-power; notwithstanding that they entitle their designs with his cause, and inscribe their banners with his name, as Pontius Pilate did that Cross whereon he Crucified Jesus Christ. Many of them (I find) do hold all Men, all Christians, all Ministers, all Magistrates, all Princes, Kings and Emperors, enemies to Jesus Christ, that are not declaredly for them, and will not be subject to their Discipline or Government. Many Grave and Learned men heretofore and of later times have set them forth, not only in their occasional zelotries and transports, but in their meditated principles and declared designs, to be such strikers and sticklers, that they seem to be born with horns and hooves, at least with teeth and swords in their mouths; See Knox. hist. of the Church of Scotl. etc. And Buchan. de jure Reg. ap. Sco●os. preaching, as in Gods and Christ's Name, that if Christian Princes will not, Peers and inferior Magistrates may, if these will not, the common people may and aught to Reform any Church or Religion, after such a Form as their leaders list to fancy and prescribe. Nor is this to be done with gloves and mittens, with petitions and prayers, but with gauntlets and spears, with clubs and swords, if need be, and if they can get power into their hands; which (they say) is to be counted God's power, or a providential dispensation to his people, thus to carry on his glory, his word and his cause, as to Religion, though against his express Word, against all Rules of justice, against all Laws and bounds of civil order and obedience, yea against common honesty, even to the violating of just oaths, and superinducing of perjurious superfetations, yea even to excommunication and deprivation of the chief Magistrate or Prince of their place and power, in case they be refractory. Thus do many men tell us they have found the Disciplinarian pulse of Presbytery at least, if not of Independency, to beat almost ever since they were born: so that they have, and ever will give no small terror, jealousy and trouble to all sovereign and Magistratick powers, where ever they can by popular arts get footing; both of them bearing themselves high upon the confidence of Christ's Sceptre, Call and Kingdom, which (they say) admits no stop, delay or obstruction, whenever Providence opens a door, not to the Gospel which is already professed, but to such a Form and way as they like to have it in as to Discipline, Government and Church-Order: and this if not to be had by Prince's favour and consent, yet by the suffrages and assistance of common people, where they may be had; who in such cases are not to regard their obedience to any worldly Princes or powers, who stand in opposition to, or competition with Jesus Christ, or any thing that some godly men shall fancy to be an ordinance of his, though never heretofore owned or used as such in his Church. What is there so fond, so fanatic, so foolish, so mad, which such presumptuous fury will not bring into Church or State that is not of their mind? That these have been the principles, and in many places the endeavours or practices of many (for I dare not impute them to all) is not to be doubted, being evident by their writings, and the Histories of those who have truly told the world what their sense, agencies and aims are. Nor is there any great cause to expect that other petty parties or novel sects, (which are generally the spawn of Presbytery) should deny themselves that Gospel-Power and Liberty, (as they call it) since every one sees it hath been affected and acted, though with no very great or glorious success, by their grand-fire Presbytery; which, both in Scotl. and in England, besides other places, hath not been sparing to proclaim to all the world what zeal they have for their and Christ's cause, for his (that is, their) Discipline, even to the consuming of their foes, their friends and themselves (as Penry, Udal, Hacket and others did in Queen Elizabeth's days) of which Mr. Cambden and others give us sufficient account; as Sleidan and others do of the like agitations in Germany, by such as were first Schismatics from the Church, and then Rebels to their lawful Magistrates. But the true Episcopal principles are wholly Evangelical: they neither preach nor practise other than what they have learned from Christ and his Apostles in the Scripture: they know no voice of Providence ever calling them to act contrary to those Rules of civil obedience and good conscience, which are signal, express and emphatic in God's word, Rome 13. 1 Pet. 2.13. to be subject to every Ordinance or Law of man for the Lords sake; to obey Kings as supreme, and all under them for conscience sake: if in any thing they cannot freely and cheerfully act, there they must and will patiently suffer what penalties or pressures are laid upon them. Thus did all Bishops and all Presbyters of old both pray and preach, obey and suffer (as Tertullian tells us at large in his Apology:) whose example and Doctrine all good Christians followed in their constant subjection and submission to civil, though persecuting, powers, even then when Christians wanted not power and numbers to have invited them to have asserted themselves against both persecuting people and Princes. Yet still godly Bishops, with all Presbyters and people subordinate to them in Religious respects, followed exactly the precepts of the two great Apostles St. Peter and St. Paul, yea and of their great Master and Saviour Jesus Christ; rather suffering by many persecutions, than breaking out to any one act or thought of sedition or rebellion. No injuries ever made good Bishops forget their Duty and Loyalty to Sovereign powers: Mat. 26.53. though they might have had Legions to have sided with them, yet, as Christ, they chose the Cross as the best refuge of Christian subjects. Thus all holy Bishops both held and did in Primitive times. Yea, and since the later spring of Reformation in England, I am confident there is not one instance of any one Bishop or Episcopal Divine that either wrote or instigated any Christian Subjects to act, upon any religious pretensions, contrary to the Rules of civil subjection to that Prince or State under which they lived; no not to bring in or restore Episcopacy itself, which hath far more pleas for it from Catholic Antiquity and Universal prescription, from actual possession in all times and places, from the pattern of Christ and the practice of the Apostles, from the imitation and uninterrupted succession of after-Ages, besides the proportions of God's wisdom and man's prudence in all settled polities and good Government, together with its own Ancient, Catholic and national Rights, which aggravate its injuries, and exasperated men's spirits: yet these are not enough to animate or heighten Episcopacy so far as to make or restore its way into any Nation, Church, State or Kingdom, by armed power or tumultuary violence, against the will of the chief Magistrate, or the Laws in force: it humbly attends God's time and the Sovereign's pleasure, for its reception or restitution. So false and foul are the odious aspersions of Felonies, Treasons, Seditions and Rebellions, which the looseness and choler of a Presbyterian Gentleman's Pen (then more passionate and popular then now it seems) hath cast upon all the Bishops of England as such, in that rude, immodest and uncharitable pamphlet, which he then set forth by a preposterous zeal, when having surfeited of an immoderate revenge against one Bishop, he aimed so to disguise venerable Episcopacy, and to degrade all the most excellent Bishops of Engl. with their Clergy, as to expose them all to be the more cruelly baited and worried (even to death) by the enraged beasts of the people; even then when they were to be diverted from considering the actual combustions which then were raised by and for his Presbytery. Such Declamatory and partial papers were certainly very unbecoming a man of Learning, Religion or Ingenuity, especially toward such Bishops in his own Country, which were men most-what his equals in all things, and in many things much his betters and superiors, being Peers of the Kingdom, and chief Fathers of that Church with which he held Communion, vested in their Authority by our Laws, as well as conform to all Ecclesiastic ancient Constitutions; being persons famous (most of them) for their worth, every way answerable to the Piety and Learning of their best Predecessors, who were great Preachers, wise Governors, learned Writers, and valiant Martyrs, as well as venerable Bishops. I confess this one instance makes me see with horror, what a dreadful tyrant and temptation passion and faction, revenge & ambition, popularity and discontent are, when once they transport men of parts beyond the true bounds of Reason and Religion, of Charity, Patience and Civility; which is as apparent in that virulent charging of all Bishops for seditious & Traitors, as if one should condemn all Lawyers for corrupt and covetous, for bribery and oppression, as if all were Trissilians, empson's and Dudleys'; which were a reproach most unjust and false, there having been (and still are) many of them men of great justice and integrity. I well know, it is not to be denied and dissembled what he liberally reports to have been done by some Bishops, even in England, in the more pompous and superstitious times, that were, like stormy nights, blind and boisterous; when many of them, no less than other men of all sorts, Yeomen, Lawyers, Gentlemen, Judges and Noblemen, were violently engaged in those different interests, either Secular or Ecclesiastical, which set up two Supremes, (as two Suns in one firmament) either in the Church against the State (whereto the Papal pride and ambition then laid claim, seven hundred years after Christ, by an usurpation and pretention upon Christ's score too, at least St. Peter, not known to the Primitive Popes, or other pious Bishops, either of Rome or any other City) or else the distractions arose in the same civil State, by the several claims and Titles which Princes made to the Crown and Sovereignty, occasioning civil wars either in England or elsewhere. But here the sidings and actings of some Bishops, which we read of in our own and foreign Chronicles, were not as they were Bishops, upon any Apostolical rule or example, nor by any Ecclesiastical Canons, much less upon any real or pretended interests of Jesus Christ; but they acted either merely as persons of civil place and politic power, or as men of common prudence and justice, or of common passions and infirmities: sometime as they stood affected in the justice of the cause which they were commanded to assist; sometime for their own necessary preservation as well as their Sovereigns; sometime as they stood related by blood and adherencies to great and potent families, which were commonly the first movers in those civil broils and dissensions, which many times were begun and carried on contrary to the desires of sober Bishops, no less than the will of the lawful Prince, in order to gratify private men's ambitions, yet under specious pretensions, of either asserting the Laws or liberties of the people, more than the advancing the Papal power, and some Church-immunities; that it was no wonder, especially in the twilight and dimness of those times, to see some Bishops out of their way as well as other gowned men, who had naturally those civil and carnal principles of self-preservation, (common to even Judges and Lawyers, Nobility and Gentry,) as to go along sometime with a potent stream, and to symbolise with the strongest sword, not the justest side. But in dubious cases, as to the right of Rule, Bishops, as all good Christians, meddled not with factions; being neither Nigriani nor Albiniani, as Tertullian speaks. More venial and excusable may those verbal reluctancies, reserves and refractures (rather than any thing of open force and hostile rebellions) seem, which some Bishops are reported sometime to have been guilty of here in Engl. when they superstitiously asserted their disobedience and inconformities to their Princes, upon the point of conscience, and those religious persuasions which were then very plausible, and generally admitted both in England and all Christendom, as to the privileges of the Popes of Rome, or of the Church's interests and immunities distinct or exempt from the Authority of the Civil State: which very challenges arose not from the seditions, treasons and rebellions of Bishops and Churchmen, as such, but partly from the cunning encroachments of the Popes of Rome, and partly from the former indulgences of Princes, more superstitious and easy; also from the favourable Laws or Customs of the Nation to the Clergy, as men most useful and venerable in their Ecclesiastic Authority; which was esteemed sacred and Divine, as indeed it is in the right constitution and execution of it. But no Christian or Reformed Bishop (as such) did ever approve the stubborn and indeed insolent spirit of Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, who was slain as he was officiating in the Church, by a paroxysm more unblamable in the King, than that was in the Archbishop, which made him so stiff and refractory as to his and the Church's supposed privileges and immunities. What true Christian and Reformed Bishop doth not pity the distempers of Lanfranc and Anselm (both Predecessors to Becket in the same See of Canterbury) who so highly contended with their Sovereigns in behalf of the Pope's power as to investitures (contrary indeed to the just prerogatives and ancient customs of this Kingdom and Crown in those cases (as hath been sufficiently proved by Sir Roger Twisden and others) that they lost much of the lustre of their otherwise real worth and useful virtues, in the point of Learning, Piety, Charity, Devotion and Integrity; which were eminent, as then times went, in those two Archbishops, of which Eadmerus gives a very honest and full account? Yet did not these Bishops or their brethren proceed further than spiritual arms and Ecclesiastical censures, rather receding than revolting, much less actually rebelling: They never, that I find, did raise any armies against their Sovereigns upon those Church-quarrels, nor did they ever engage Ministers and People by Oaths, Leagues or Covenants, to a forcible asserting of any Episcopal power or Ecclesiastical privileges or pretensions, contrary to the declared will of their Sovereigns. No; look upon Episcopacy in the whole series of Bishops that were of the true Primitive temper, stamp and succession: as they followed the chief Apostles in their ordinary Ecclesiastical Power and jurisdiction, so they walked in the same steps and spirit of Humility, Meekness, Wisdom, Patience, Obedience and Loyalty, as the Reforming and Reformed Bishops of elder and later Ages have always done; coming into all Nations, Cities, Countries, Kingdoms, Empires and Commonwealths, at their first access and entrance, as Christ did unto Jerusalem, meekly riding upon an Ass, with resolutions rather to be crucified there, than to give any cross or offence to civil powers further than they humbly testified soberly & preached the Truth of God to them and their subjects; not with any Factious, Seditious or Rebellious spirits, they never preached any such principles, nor encouraged any such practices: They neither at first, nor afterwards (when the word of God mightily grew and multiplied) did make their way by any hostile invasions; they never called Horsemen and Footmen, Troops and Regiments of Armed Soldiers to assist them in the work of the Lord, or to set up Jesus Christ against Princes or people who did not believe them, or not willingly receive them. Yea, so Meek, Moderate, Just, Wise and Charitable was the zeal of Primitive Bishops and Churchmen, that they did not by force turn the Idols of the Heathens out of their Temples, till Sovereign and Imperial Authority either commanded or permitted them so to do: Nor did they drive out the Flamens and Arch-flamen here in England, (which were Idolatrous Priests) till Princes, converted by Bishops and other Preachers of the Gospel, did forsake and abolish those lying vanities. So far were Bishops from obtruding their opinion or party, merely as to gubernative order and power, upon any City, Nation or Kingdom, contrary to the will of the chief Magistrate: nor did they ever turn any lawful Prince out of doors, to make way for themselves and their Episcopal Authority or party. Which method (as I touched) appears to have been used even by the first Presbyterians in the world, even at Geneva, as some report, where popular fury violently expelled not only the Bishop, but the lawful Prince of that City, who had of right not only the spiritual jurisdiction, but also the civil dominion of that Place and Territory, Bodin. de rep. p. 353. Cal. ep. ad Card. Sadolet. as Bodin and Mr. Calvin confess. After this copy, in many places, turbulent spirits did endeavour (arte vel Marte) by power or policy, by hook or by crook, to bring in that new way into Cities and Countries; and no where I find more remarkably than in Scotland, during the minority of King James, and the reign of his mother. How little regard was had to the Laws or Religion then established, to the Will or Authority of the supreme Magistrate: how insolent, petulant, imperious, audacious were some Presbyterian spirits there against Princes as well as Bishops, is no news to those that have read the histories of that Church; among which none exceeds that of Dr. Spotswood Archbishop of St. Andrew's, set forth by the care of Dr. Duppa, the Learned and Reverend Bishop of Salisbury, a person of such Piety, Patience and Prudence under his undeserved sufferings, that not only his friends, but his and all Bishop's enemies admire the Christian gravity and heroic greatness of his mind, as well as others of his Order. How far the like spirit plotted, threatened, acted and attempted in England in Queen Eliz. time, so afterward in K. James his reign, and now at last in K. Charles his complete Tragedies, (full sore against his will and conscience, no less than against the Laws not then by any power repealed) both Mr. Hooker, Bishop Bilson, Bishop Bancroft, Archbishop Whitgift, Mr. Cambden, and many more of old, together with our own late sad experience, sufficiently inform us. They of old began with scandalous petitions, scurrilous libels, bold admonitions, rude menacings, cunning contrivances; which were followed at last with fire and sword, with blood and ruin, with sad division and great devastation to Church and State, to Prince and People. Which events are no wonder, when any new thing pretending to Religion and Reformation may be carried on by principles and practices of violence and force; and these, not because lawful, but because they are said to be necessary for God's interest, yea as instances of the highest zeal and most conscientious courage: as if there never were, nor could ever be, any truth or faith, any piety or sanctity, any Christ or Christianity, any Grace or Gospel, in the Church or any Christians hearts, unless Anabaptism, or Presbyterisme, or Independentisme, had, not gently contested, but rudely justled Episcopacy out of the Church of England as well as Scotland, though full sore against the will of the Chief Magistrate. Certainly military or mutinous methods of Religion and Reformation were never preached or practised, meditated or endeavoured by any worthy Prelates, Presbyters, or people of that persuasion. For they do not think that Secular Arms are fit Engines to set up Jesus Christ or his Kingdom in this world, which is not of this world, nor after the methods of worldly power and force: yea they hold that Sovereign Princes, as Christians, ought not by brutish force to compel, but by reason and due instruction to persuade their Subjects at first to the true Religion; much less are weapons in the hands of Subjects meet instruments to convince or convert Princes forcibly to yield to any popular presumptions and mere innovations in Religion, especially when contrary not only to the Catholic Customs of all Churches, but to the present constitution of that Church of which the Prince is a chief part; yea against that personal oath by which a Prince hath sworn to preserve the settled and just rights and privileges both of that Church and those Churchmen which are in his Dominion. What is more horrid than to have Reformation or Religion (never so good and true) thus crammed down the consciences of Kings or States whether they will or no? which is the way to make all secular powers jealous of all Christianity and Reformation; to set their faces and their forces against them, as seditious, injurious, mutinous and rebellious against the public peace, the civil Rights, Honours and Authorities of all Governors in Kingdoms and States. The Episcopal and Evangelicall methods have been quite other, (as I have said) by preaching and praying, by patient sufferings and frequent Martyrdoms, by attending God's leisure and their Prince's pleasures. Thus they obtained the protection and favour of the Laws: other projects or policies, other arts or arms, were never known to the true Gospel of Jesus Christ, or its unseparable attendant Episcopacy. Thus did Evangelicall Bishops and their Clergy conquer, by a meek, gentle and unbloody Conquest, the vast Roman world, and that part of it which was here in Brittany: no people were so barbarous, no Princes so tyrannous, whom they did not soften and sweeten by that Evangelicall way and spirit, which is called an anointing, because it is a sacred balm or oil, 1 Joh. 2.27. which breaks not heads, but hearts, wounds not the bodies, but the spirits of Princes and others with an healing stroke, with a soft and merciful wound. Thus did the Cross of Christ and the Crosiers of Bishops ever go together into all places; not pulling down, but exalting, not shaking, but settling the Crowns of Kings and Princes. Though they were Heathens, Unbelievers and Persecutors, as all at first were, yet did holy Bishops and their Clergy so far submit to their civil power, as to pray and preach not only faith in Christ, but fidelity to Kings, teaching not only Religion, but Allegiance; yea they made the Allegiance of Christian subjects and soldiers even to heathen Emperors (as Tertullian saith) a great part and note of true Religion, which perfectly abhors all rebellion against God or man, as the sin of witchcraft; 1 Sam. 15.23. it being as an apostasy from, and an abnegation of, the true God and true Religion, when upon any godly and specious pretensions of Piety or Reformation, as by so many charms and enchantments of the Devil, turning himself into an Angel of light, Christian Preachers or Professors do begin and carry on factious, tumultuous and rebellious motions against the civil Powers, Laws and Polities of any Prince or State. It is upon the point a denying of the faith, and setting up a new Gospel, a Judaic or Mahometan, not a Christian Messiah, whose true servants and soldiers were always armed with weapons that were spiritual, 2 Cor. 10.4. not carnal, ministerial, not military or martial; which in Churchmen rather stab and wound all true Religion and Reformation to the heart, by infinite scandals, injuries and deformities, than any way advance it, either to a greater power, or approbation and acceptance among men of any sober reason or moral sense of things. No violence and injustice can be proper to usher in true Christian Religion and Reformation: these methods have made them so stunted and ricketly, that they are come to a stop-game; so that in these last and worst Ages of the world, there hath been little or no progress made to the true propagating of the Gospel among any heathen Nations, or of any Reformation among the decayed Christians, because Religion is every where, even among many Christians and Reformers, too much managed (as the Spaniards did among the West-Indies) with force and fraud, with covetousness and cruelty, with faction and ambition, with regard to worldly interests of men more than to the true precepts and holy concernments of Christ and his Church. Who is there that will entertain Christianity, or any Reformation, when it comes in, like Turkism and Barbarism, with fire and brimstone, with swords and canons? pretending to convert and save souls, but to be sure it will first pervert the Laws, ravine men's Estates, and destroy at last men's lives, if they do not submit, even against their consciences as well as the Laws, to strange Innovations. Truly these are engines only fit to be used by such spirits as are Antichristian, Luke 9.55. who know not of what Spirit Christ and his Apostles, with their successors the Primitive Bishops and Presbyters, were. Nor did the Popes of Rome ever more stain the honour of that Apostolic See, and the glorious name of Catholic Episcopacy, than when they forgot to follow their pious predecessors, (holy and humble Bishops of that famous Church for 600. years, who were Martyrs, or Confessors, or true Professors of the Gospel) and betook themselves to such arts of secular policy and power, of sedition and ambition, as made some after-Bishops of Rome seem rather Monsters of men, as their own writers confess, than Ministers of Jesus Christ; imitators of Sylla, Marius and Caesar, more than of St. Peter, or St. Paul, or St. Clemens, 2 Thes. ●. 4. when they sought by Hildebrandine arts to exalt themselves above all that is called God in civil Magistracy, which justly claims under God, and from him, (as did the Kings of Judah) that supreme visible power, which within their respective dominions doth orderly and duly manage all ministrations Ecclesiastical as well as Civil, for the public peace and welfare. Certainly, since Christianity itself, in its grand Articles Ministry and Mysteries, must not thus be brought in by head and shoulders, by force and affronts upon any Prince or State whatsoever; much less may any Reformation never so desirable and just. As for some little defects or venial deformities, they ought not in any sort to be so urged as should carry Religion beyond good manners, or Reformation to rudeness. Not persecuting, but persecuted Bishops and Presbyters, are the ablest preachers and aptest propagators of the Gospel, such as while they lift up their voice like a trumpet, Isa. 58.1. (not to give the alarms of war, but to tell Judah of their sins, and Israel of their transgressions) do also lift up holy hands and pure hearts to God in prayer for all men, but chiefly for Kings and all in Authority. In the greatest depressions of Christianity and Episcopacy, (for they ever went together, as Truth and Order, Ministry and Authority, both of them being necessary for the being or well-being of any Church) never any godly Bishop or orderly Presbyter, (who were still the foremost and stoutest Champions for Religion,) did make any seditious appeals, scurrilous libels, or declamatory invectives against the powers that were, by whatever means they either obtained, or held, or exercised their sovereignty: They never thought it their duty, as Christians or Ministers, to stir up the spirits of any men, great or small, many or few, to any unlawful commotions: (and so they esteemed all to be, which had not the consent and Commission of those in civil dominion, who were supreme, and the present Powers ordained of God.) When any of those holy Bishops and Presbyters were necessitated, not out of revenge or anger, but out of charity and pity to their persecutors, to bring forth their strong reasons, by way of Learned, Grave and unanswerable Apologies for their Religion, (as many of them did, hoping thereby to buoy up the cause of Christianity, not only from unjust persecutions, but from false prejudices,) they did write them (indeed) with an heroic kind of freedom, yet with all due respect, dedicating their writings by way of humble supplications, or clear yet comely Remonstrances, to the Emperors or Senates, to the Princes and supreme Magistrates themselves: so did Justine Martyr his first Apology to the Senate of Rome, his second to the Emperor Antoninus Pius; so Tertullian his to the Emperor Severus and his Son; so Quadratus Bishop of Athens to Adrian the Emperor; and in like manner did others. But never any Primitive Bishop or Presbyter did use any Satanick Stratagems, or such seditious practices as were to advance Religion by any thing that tended to, or intended popular tumults and rebellion; no impudent libel and scurrilous pamphletings, to make either the persons of Princes odious, or their Government infamous. Episcopacy never used any such conjurations as would either bring down fire from heaven, or stir up Earthquakes; Luke 9.54: neither exciting the Optimacy and Nobility, nor the Populacy and Communality against any, either supreme or subordinate powers: they never made the waters above the firmament and those under it so to meet, by breaking up the great deeps of subjection, or by opening the fountains of plebeian Liberties, as to bring in terrible inundations upon Kingdoms or Commonwealths. No, they always by the word and Spirit of Christ (which were their only swords, and these two, as Christ said to St. Peter, were enough for that work) set bounds to the proud waves of that raging Sea, the tumultuating people, and rather repaired the banks and breaches that others rashness (as the Circumcellions and Euchites) sometime made, than either assisted or countenanced those horrid deluges of sedition. They never wrested the Revelation, or any other places of Scripture so, as to animate the earth, that is, the common and meanest people, Rev. 12. to help the Woman, that is, whatever some list to call their Church and Religion, in its agonies; that by their unlawful motions they might bring forth something that faction lists to call Reformation; a word that is never out of the mouths of John of Leiden and his complices, though far from their hearts. Godly Bishops and Presbyters never either taught or thought those practices to be any helping of the Lord against the mighty. No, they ever judged and preached after St. Paul's, St. Peter, and our Blessed Saviour's Doctrine and example, that such inordinate motions upon pretexts of Religion, are cursed and damnable resistings of those powers which God hath ordained by the civil Laws and customs of any Church or State. Rom. 13.2. The Lord and true Religion are only to be helped by laudable and lawful actions, the measures of which are not to be sought in every man's private breast and fancy, but in the public counsels and constitutions of every Kingdom, State and Polity. Nor was this more true piety and charity, than prudence and policy, in the Bishops and other Ministers of the Church, to whom, as to gowned and bookish men, and not as to armed soldiers, doth all the Christian world owe (under God) the planting, propagating and preserving, yea and the due reforming of true Christian Religion. For the arms of flesh, or any carnal weapons, going along with the Gospel, which is a spiritual warfare, as so many Pioners with pick-axes and spades, to demolish and overthrow civil powers, must needs have alarmed and armed all States and Princes, all honest and just, all wise and moral men against it, when they looked upon Christianity as coming not to preach and save, but to plunder and spoil: for all wise Magistrates know that there was no trusting to the moderation and justice, no nor to the mercy of any men who came with force against them. Though they profess (as Andronicus did, and Absalon before him) never so much to mend and reform things; yet they will at last rob, kill and destroy: and as the Sons of Jacob dealt with the Sichemites, they at first only pretend to circumcise men, yet at last they will not only geld, but kill them. Armed Religion, like Eagles and Hawks, is always terrible. Which considerations do justly harden all men's hearts (that have any thing to lose or to keep in this world) against all forcible and riotous entries of any Religion or Reformation whatsoever, which seldom fails to be sacrilegious as well as rebellious. Hence the present fears, jealousies and abhorrencies, which many Princes and States, as well as Bishops and Churchmen, that are of the Romish Communion, have taken up against any Reformation of Religion by such popular methods and principles, which they see are seldom begun, and never ended, without infinite trouble, confusion and ruin of all things, both sacred and civil; every wise man rightly judging, that when God is pleased to bring in the beauty and blessing of true Religion or due Reformation to any Church or Nation, he will (as he did in England most eminently) so stir up the spirits of Sovereign powers, (the method he anciently used in purging and reforming the Temple and Church of the Jews, by Hezekiah, Josiah, and others,) that the work shall go on, as without noise, like the building of the Temple, so with Order and Honour, to the glory of God, the safety of Princes, the honour of the Clergy, and the peace of the people, as well as the purity of the Church and true Religion. Till this may be done, a thousand civil burdens and oppressions, yea persecutions, are easier than any sinful presumptions; yea, true Religion will be beautiful when it is black with persecution, if then it be comely with patience. Scorching Reformations so burn the face of Religion, that they leave not only sad scars, but shameful Stigmas or brands upon it, which look very like rebellion and barbarity, engaging men and Christians into mutual hatred, bloodshedding, deaths and destruction. Let men pretend never so much to be Saints, godly, yea and inspired too, yet, as the purest water and the wholsomest flesh, when once they come to feel the heat of factions, and begin to boil up to civil perturbations, they will soon discover a very black foam and foul scum to rise in their hearts and actions, which (as Hazael) they hardly thought could have been in them, carrying them to injustice, immoderation, uncharitableness, presumption, rebellion, sacrilege and cruelty, and all unwarrantable actions, before they are aware of the folly, falsity or foulness of their own, as indeed all men's hearts; at whose bottom lies all manner of filth and villainy, which is then easily and constantly discovered, when they are passionately and inordinately stirred. Nor is it at all to be considered how pure men appear, as to that which is upward or outward in their Religious protestations and professions, when once they come to that Romantic and Errand spirit, which thinks it as much gallantry to fight for their Religion, as some do for their Mistress' beauties, which exceeds quarrelling and killing each other by civil and heroic murders, for no other offence but the glory of their opinion, and the preferring of their fancy. What did ever seem more holy than the Euchites and Circumcellions of old? what more precise and godly than John of Leiden and his crew? what more inspired than our Hacket and Coppinger? what less covetous and impartial than Massaniello? All of them were not very warm, but very scalding Reformers, yet came to nought. Add to all these, what was or is more titularly holy than some later Popes of Rome? who ever seemed more solicitous to advance Religion? Yet by their usurping both St. Peter's swords, by interpreting Arise Peter, kill and eat, in a sanguinary sense, by making the Bishop of Rome the greater light to rule the day, and Emperors or Kings in their dominions to be as the Moon and lesser lights; by challenging a power unchristian and inordinate, to depose lawful Princes, to absolve Subjects from ●●eir oaths, to expose their lives to their Subjects or any other men's swords, to dispose of their Thrones and Kingdoms as they please, in order to the Romish Churches or Courts interests; they have made all the world now very wary of them. Even those Princes that are of the Papal Communion are grown very reserved and vigilant as to their civil power, now their eyes are so opened, that many moderate men have highly suspected (as Padre Paulo, the Author of the History of the Council of Trent, and others,) this Papal arrogancy to be one of the shrewdest marks of the Papal Antichristianism; a Bishop thus enormously exalting himself by fraud and force, by blood and violence, in the Church or Temple of God, above all that is called God in civil Magistracy, directly contrary both to Christ's pattern, and the two great Apostles precepts, as well as practices: who though they laid (with the other eleven Apostles) the foundations of an Episcopal Hierarchy, by the parity or Aristocracy, as of the chief Apostles, so of Bishops, yet they never either exercised, or enjoyed, or dreamt of a Monarchy, in which one Apostle or Bishop should have dominion over all others, and over the whole Church. Episcopacy, as it is Primitive and Apostolical, exactly and conscientiously preserves to all Princes and Sovereign Magistrates whatsoever, their civil peace and safety of their persons, their laws and powers, with their just prerogatives, as well as it doth the Evangelicall and ingenuous Liberties of all Christian Subjects, which are always and only to do well, either in active or passive obedience. But, as the Papll claims and flatteries of former Ages did with full mouth and open forehead invade, yea and by force insult over, the just powers of Sovereign Princes, (however of late they have been more cunning, modest and tender;) so other spirits (which from Pigmies have fancied themselves to be swollen to Giants) are charged of old by many grave, learned and honest men, as very much treading in the Pope's steps, that is, either upon the toes, or heels, or hands, or necks, or heads of Kings and Sovereign Magistrates. The experience of which gave (it seems) to King James such dreadful apprehensions of that way, that he equally feared Presbytery and Popery, when they thundered with Excommunication and great guns too; which had so filled Scotland many years with great inquietudes, in his Mother's reign, and in his Minority, that he thought them no better than godly rebellions in order to promote private and partial, factious and deformed Reformations. Nor was Queen Elizabeth without her fears on this side, when she not only heard the Tragedies of Scotland, but saw and felt the menacings and agitations in England, even upon this account: which the event hath taught us and all the world were no childish terriculaments, nor brutish thunderbolts. So that both high Presbytery and low Independency are by many wise men judged inconsistent with a just and complete Monarchy, no less than with a right Episcopacy, See Sir— ashton's discourse to this purpose. standing in the same posture of enmity against these, as they pretend to do against the Papacy or Popery. It will be very well if Reformed Presbytery can wipe off those stains and suspicious as easily and truly as Primitive Episcopacy did avoid them, and our late Reformed and Reforming Bishops in England, who always joined together, fear God and honour the King, without any Ifs or Ands, without any reserves or salvoes; save only those which betray men to serve sin and Satan, rather than to suffer with and for a good conscience in the service of God. And however some Christian Bishops, as St. Ambrose, St. Vid. Theod. hist. l. 5. c. 34. chrysostom, St. Athanasius, St. Gregory Nazianzen, St. Basil and others, did sometime in weighty and exemplary cases vindicate the honour of Christian Religion, and the Authority of Ecclesiastical Discipline, before and against some Christian Princes, whose errors or passions had either swerved them from, or transported them beyond that Orthodoxy, Charity, Justice and Moderation, which became Christians; as in the revenge taken by Theodosius upon the Citizens of Thessalonica, and in other passages of State which tended to the public scandal of Religion, then countenanced by the Laws and professed by the Princes: yet still those great and good Bishops both preached and practised all civil respect and loyal subjection to them as their Sovereigns; they never divided what God had joined together; they followed Christ's Oracle, Mat. 22.21. to give to Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and to God the things that are Gods; the first were set out by the Imperial Constitutions, the second by the clear Canons of God's word, interpreted not by every private man's new imagination, but by the Catholic judgement and practice of the chief Fathers of the Church. All Orthodox Bishops, Presbyters and people ever held it to be a Vile, Unchristian, Antichristian, Diabolick petulancy, to speak evil of dignities, 2 Pet. 1.50. either Civil or Ecclesiastic, to curse the Gods or Rulers of Church and Commonweal, to use railing accusations against their Superiors. Judas 8. The rough garb of Satyrs was never thought comely for the Pens, Pulpits or hands of Churchmen: it was a Solecism in Christian Religion, to have Ministers tongues sharp swords, their mouths open sepulchres, their sermons sarcasmes, their prayers pasquils, their invocations of God invectives against their Governors; whose Authority was still sacred, though their exorbitancies might be unblamable. What good Bishops and Presbyters ears would not have tingled then to have heard those filthy and dirty ditties which were tuned in England to the pipe of Martin Mar-prelate, and Penry's Supplication to the Devil, to which some men danced, who were then thought zealous for Presbytery, making sport at such lewd and infamous scurrilities against their Governors in Church and State, as were fitter to have fetched tears from their eyes, when they saw not only worthy and Reformed Bishops, but the whole Reformed Church of England and the Majesty of the Prince so torn and bespattered by those Borborites, those unclean Spirits? The grave and modest sort of Bishops, Presbyters and People, who otherways much desired a just and orderly Reformation of Religion, yea and valued the notable parts and zealous industry of Luther, yet they extremely blushed at and disliked that outrageous reply which his overboiling heat made against our King Henry the Eighth, when he wrote for the defence of that which he thought true Religion; whose error (in Luther's judgement) did in no sort deserve so rude, so scornful, so scurrilous and uncomely a reply: in which sober men pitied Luther's native passion and rusticity, which were more like an unbred and unbridled Monk, than a meek Disciple of Christ, or a zealous Preacher of his Gospel, Acts 23.5. or an exact follower of St. Paul, who publicly checked himself for the reproach and disdainful speech he used ignorantly against the High Priest Ananias, who probably had attained that dignity (as then the fashion was among the Jews) by very sinister means; yea and had upon the place done St. Paul a palpable injury, commanding him to be smitten on the mouth, when he should have heard his defence. 'tis true, Luther afterward used some soft recantations to the King, but in vain; it being looked upon as his Policy, more than his Piety or Humility; hoping thereby to advance his party, to which he saw the King in some points was now driven, more than inclined, by the breach he had made with the Pope. But it is hard to wash the hands of any person or party clean, whose insolency hath once cast▪ dirt in the face of Sovereign Princes or chief Magistrates, who are the brightest visible image and glory of God among mankind, being the Lords anointed, as David called Saul, now forsaken of God for his forsaking God first. Although the actions or opinions of our Superiors in some things be less commendable (as were those of Constantius and other Arrian Emperors) yet are they not to be reviled in any case by those that will not deserve the name and fate of Shimei, 2 Sam. 16.9. whom Abisha's loyal zeal calls a dead dog, for his barking against his Lord the King now in his Eclipse and distress; whose cursing insolency that valiant Commander would presently have revenged with the less of his head: and however David's humility and clemency did pardon him at present, yet afterward vengeance pursued him, while he foolishly following his fugitive servants beyond his bounds and teddar, forfeited his word and life to King Solomon's just and wise severity; the royal pardon not availing to protect so petulant and insolent a disloyalty, which God would have punished, though it were by man pardoned. Yea some grave men have thought that those two learned and eloquent Bishops, St. Chrysostom and St. Gregory of Nazianzum, the one in his resolute, but rough, carriage to the Empress Eudoxia, the other in his sharp Steleticks against Julian the Emperor, did (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) as men suffer their native passions to carry them somewhat beyond tha discretion and temper which became grave and godly Bishops, while they did too much proscind and prostitute (as it were) the Imperial purple, vilifying that Majesty which ought to be sacred to Christian Subjects, although the persons wearing them may be Tyrants, Persecutors and Apostates; as the Censers were to be holy in which Incense had been once offered, though with strange fire. Bishop's Mitres and Crosiers ought in no case to clash with the Crowns and Sceptres of Sovereign Princes, however their discreet zeal may seasonably represent to them, and in God's name reprove, their misdemeanours as Christians: much less may any Presbyters pert upon them, who are of a far lesser size, and never had any ensigns of honour and authority as chief governor's of any Church. Be Bishops or Presbyters never so zealous and gracious, yet they are not beyond the ancient and best Bishops of Rome, and of other chief Cities, who (with Gregory the Great) owned the Emperors as their Sovereign Lords. So did St. Ambrose respect both Theodosius and Valentinian; so did the venerable Council of the Nicene Bishops reverence the Emperor Constantine the Great: Neither their number, being three hundred and eighteen, nor their public representation of the Catholic Church, did encourage them to do or meditate any thing beyond prayers and petitions, recommending all their Counsels to God, the Emperor, and all the Church. No Preachers or Christians warmth needs go beyond the pitch of Christ and his Apostles, who are so absolutely for obedience, respect and civil fear to Princes, whether heathen or Christian, that no supreme power whatever need to fear the overthrow or shaking of their Empire, Sovereignty and Dominion, by admitting true Christian Religion and true Christian Bishops: nor need they fear it as any sin, persecution or injustice in them, to curb, repress and punish by all means the inordinate, pragmatic and seditious zeal, as of Bishops, so of any Presbyters or people, who shall pretend to bring in any Religion or Reformation against their will and permission: it being the work and mark of true Religion and undefiled, to establish the Thrones of Princes, to preserve the public peace, to teach subjection, not only of purses and persons, but of souls and consciences, so far as Princes do not require them to disobey God; and in these cases they need not rack their wits to find out rebellious remedies or disloyal evasions; the only lawful and laudable refuge is near at hand, namely Christian patience, which sets men furthest off from railing or resisting, both which are but the scorchings and soot of black and over-burning zeal, which makes a kind of Charcoal of Religion. What wise, sober and humble Christian (then) can sufficiently love, honour and admire the modesty, humility and loyalty of true Episcopacy, ever expressed by the carriage of the best Christian and reformed Bishops towards all Princes? And who can sufficiently abhor the petulancy and insolency of those Novellers and Reformers, who shall dare to lift up either the Presbyterian virgula, or the Independent ferula, or the Anabaptistick flail, not only to threaten, but to chastise Sovereign Princes, that list not to admit their ways into their dominions, before they can approve them in their Consciences and Judgements; following the disciplining methods and penance used by some Monks of Canterbury against our King Henry the second? Surely Christianity and the Clergy are never so healthy and comely, as when their complexion is rather pallid with the fastings and prayers, the studies and pains of humble Bishops and Presbyters, than purpled or sanguine with blood and fury. The overhot breathe of Ministers, like the chaud of Charcoal, stifle and suffocate the vital spirits of true Religion. Godly Bishops and Presbyters ever abhorred, as Hell and damnation, to teach Princes their Religion, their Canons, Catechises and Directories, as Gideon did the men of Succoth, with Briars and Thorns, or to discipline Sovereign Majesty with Swords and Pistols, in order to persuade them to submit to the Gospel-Scepter and Discipline. No, they never did attempt so to do, either in the Primitive and persecuting times, when Magistrates were most froward and injurious, or in those times which were afterward more propitious and prosperous, when the Clergy fed highest, and was most indulged by the munificence of Christian Emperors and Empresses, devout Kings and Queens; who as good nurses never repined at the fullness of their own breasts, or the hearty sucking of their dear nurslings, joining the Prince to the Prelate, and adding Lordly Honours with Estates to Christian Bishops: never fearing hereby to make them too wanton or insolent, while they saw them keep to the sober principles of Christianity, conformable to that Apostolic and Primitive Episcopacy, which was always pure and peaceable, faithful to God, humble and loyal to man, so Ruling the Church of Christ, as not to be Masters of misrule in any Nation, State or Kingdom. Yea, in the amplest enjoyments of that pious munificence, and those generous liberalities which Christian Princes, Noblemen, Gentlemen and inferior persons devoutly afforded to Bishops and the rest of the Clergy, (as tokens of their gratitude to God, their honour to their Saviour, their love to their spiritual Fathers, and their value of their own and other men's souls,) however some few Clergymen among many might (possibly) surfeit sometime, and, as Jesurun, grow petulant, sensual and sottish, through fullness of bread, idleness and luxury; yet still the general face of the best Bishops and Clergy was comely and venerable: there wanted not in all Ages such Bishops and Presbyters, both in England and all Churches, for Gravity, Learning, Sanctity, Charity, Fidelity and Loyalty, as kept up the Office, Name and Honour of the Clergy and of Episcopacy, to an high degree of honour and veneration both with Princes and people that were good Christians. No men were more useful or more employed for the good ordering both of Church and Commonweal than Bishops were: none were better Counsellors to Princes, and greater Benefactors to their fellow-subjects; none further from faction, sedition, popularity, sacrilege and rebellion; none did greater service or better offices for their King, their Church, and their Country. How loyal, resolute and religious a Remonstrance did the Bishop of Carlisle make in Parliament, against the deposing of King Richard the Second, when the whole stream ran against him? Was not Morton (first Bishop of Ely, and after of Canterbury) the first designer and a principal effecter of the union of the White and Red Roses, the two great houses of York and Lancaster, to the blessed extinguishing of those long flames of civil war, which drank up the blood and consumed the flesh of this Nation, whose greatest miseries rise from its own bowels? Was not Richard Fox, Bishop of Durham, the chief Counsellor, Promoter and Actor of that other union between the two Crowns of England and Scotland, by treating and concluding a match with our King Henry the Sevenths' daughter, and James the Fourth King of Scotland? a foundation certainly of very great honour and happiness to both Nations, if wise and religious superstructures had been built upon it. Now by a strange revolution of Divine Justice, that holy Thistle which lately vied for an Equality with, if not a Superiority above, the Roses, is become not so much united in a Parity, as subdued to an Inferiority. Nor were the English Bishops less loyal to true Religion as Christian, yea and to the true Reformation of it, then to their King and Country. How notably did that renowned Lincolniensis (Grostest Bishop of Lincoln) assert the freedom of his Conscience against the Pope's unworthy commands? How many other Bishops, in the contests between the Popes and our Princes about Investitures, asserted the rights of their Sovereigns? After the Roman darkness and Tyranny vanished, and the light of an orderly and loyal Reformation appeared, how many godly Bishops than did abide the fiery Trial of Martyrdom? How many of them and their Clergy were banished and imprisoned as Confessors? How many of them, as Jewel, Abbot, Andrews, Davenant, White, Morton, and others, have wrote with incomparable study and unanswerable strength against the Papal Usurpations, Errors and Superstitions? and none beyond the last Archbishop of Canterbury, for clearness and exactness of the Controversies stated. With how great a resolution and loyal freedom did George Abbot, his immediate Predecessor, write a notable letter to King James against all toleration of Popery, when the Spanish match was hot in treaty? At which time with what thunder and lightning did Dr. Senhowes, afterward B. of Carlisle, preach the two famous Sermons against the great Diana of Rome as well as of Ephesus, to such a degree of eloquent zeal and becoming courage, that he pleased even those whom he offended? In the very last Convocation in England, anno 1640. (which gave occasion to so great flames in this Church, meeting with times and minds which had both wood and fire ready, and only wanted a Sacrifice) even this so decried Synod (which had in it as learned, honest and venerable Churchmen, Bishops and others, as ever were in England) had among other things concluded a full and firm defiance against Popery for ever, as well as an establishment for Episcopacy, which they then found tottering and shaken, but had not the happiness to use the right means of establishing it; which was not by building it a story higher, but by taking it rather a story lower, at least abating its Pinnacles, Turrets and Battlements; what it wanted in ornament and height, it might have enjoyed in strength and setledness. Yet their design and endeavour was very prudent, foreseeing, as was easy, that the overthrow of Episcopacy in the Reformed Church of England, would be the greatest gratification to Rome that could be at present expected by the Papists. And certainly the Romish party were never more pleased then with those Convulsion-fits, which so tortured first, and afterward destroyed, not only that Convocation, but all the former Stability, Honour, Peace, Plenty, Order and Government of this Church and its Clergy; which always feared and foretold no less danger from Scylla then Charybdis. I might add further the humble, yet resolute, Remonstrance made by the Bishops of Ireland to the Governors and Council of that Kingdom, in the Lord of strafford's time, fully and freely declaring the inconsistency of any open and avowed toleration of Popery with the honour of God, with the power and purity of the Reformed Religion, and with the peace of the Kingdoms. Thus when the Bishops of England were Capital or Dominical letters both in the Church and State, their Piety, Loyalty, Courage, Zeal and Constancy made (I think) as fair and as goodly ashew as any of their enemies have done; they were legible afar off, at home and abroad, and will be so to present and after-Ages: many an one of them signified more, as to exemplary Piety and useful Virtues, than one hundred of petty Presbyters or puny Preachers either then did, or now do, or ever will be able to do; who were indeed never so considerable or commendable, so useful to the Church, or serviceable to the State, as when they kept to an humble subordination and wise communion with their Bishops, whose honour and peace was the Presbyters honour, as the honour of the head is the honour of every member of that Body. Doubtless their temporal happiness was bound up together; neither could Bishops be happy without the assistance of venerable Presbyters, nor Presbyters without the governance of reverend Bishops; neither should be without other in the Lord's Church. I might here further add to the consideration of the obediential and peaceable principles and practices of true Episcopacy, its Charitable, Hospitable and Generous disposition, which are best expressed in times of peace and a state of plenty. As Bishops had a firm loyalty to their Princes, and obedience for conscience sake to their superiors, not examining their moral virtues, but their civil Rights, which are the only measures of duty; in like manner Bishops had generally great charity to their equals, and benignity to their inferiors: which is a great fruit of a subjects loyalty to his Prince, and love to his Country, relieving many poor people in their pressures, and thereby keeping them from those discontents which usually attend the distresses of men's conditions; the afflictions of Princes oft rising from the dust, the meaner sort of people, when necessities animate them to animosities, and such insolences as turn dust into louse, as Moses did to the plaguing of Pharaoh and all Egypt. None but evil eyes, and worse hearts, could with unthankfulness and uncharitableness grudge the excellent Bishops of England those Honours and Revenues which they highly deserved, while they worthily employed them rather for others good than their own private enjoyments, in any way of luxury, or gallantry, or debauchery; the frequent gulfs of many other men's great Estates and Honours, when they are enjoyed and abused by very small and sensual minds. Generally Bishops neglected their own private interests and gain to advance the public. How few of them, in many years of peace and plenty, raised any considerable fortunes to their particular families or posterities? I am sure not comparable to what Judges and Lawyers in all Ages, yea and Military men have done in a few years, whose thrifty swords have gathered better Estates in one seven year, than any Bishops or other Church-mens liberal words and works ever did or aimed at in twenty years, though their yearly Revenues were as good, or better, I think, than most Commanders pay, and I conceive as much deserved by them, in order to the public good and service, which they might do and really did in all Ages, both as to Church and State, to Superiors, Equals and Inferiors. For Bishops, beyond all men in their times, were guilty of building repairing and endowing many Churches, which other men pull down and rob, buy and sell, squander and embezzle. Bishops, besides their temporary, daily and occasional bounty, founded and erected many costly works of durable and Monumental Charity, in Colleges, Libraries, Free-Schooles, Hospitals, Almshouses, and the like: many noble endowments they began, many they increased, many they perfected, to God's glory, the Nations Honour, the encouragement of Learning and Religion, as well as the relief of many poor people. They took as much pleasure in their works of Charity, as others can do in their sacrilege or robbery; taking away those things from the Church, and all religious uses, to which neither they nor any of their progenitors ever gave one farthing: for they are commonly persons of the meanest blood and ignoblest descents, as well as minds and manners, who are most repiners at the Church's patrimony, which all persons of generous piety both fear and abhor to do, knowing that those penurious practices and sacrilegious principles which some men follow, are as much Antievangelicall as they are antiepiscopal, against Christ and his Gospel, as much as against the Clergy and true Christian Charity: It being impossible than Christian or Reformed Religion should ever flourish, except by miracle (as Aaron's dry Rod did, when it was nourished by no earth or dew) when the Ministers of it are such diminutives, kept always in a mendicant Minority, and in a plebeian parity, as well as poverty; when Pastors of the Church are so pitifully penurious and inconspicuous, that they are always driven like vermin to be creeping and biting, crying and whining, craving and coveting, crouching and complaining, rather than giving or distributing any thing with charity and cheerfulness to men, or consecrating any freewill offering to God, the Church, and their Country. O how perfect a Blessing, how complete a Reformation, how Triumphant a Church, how glorious a Ministry, how precious Predicants must there needs be then in England, when the visible order, social beauty, politic harmony and ancient Government of Religion being first deprived of all honours and amplenesses, Ministers are reduced to meanness and tenuity, either wholly scattered into fragments of Independency, or moulded up in the Mass and Chaos of Presbytery; where every Minister's principle and practice must necessarily tend either to rule in Common, or else to rend from the Community; where there shall be no further motive to any Loyalty, Subjection and peaceableness, than what either the terror and necessity of others power, or the tenuity and paucity of their own party and sides, imposeth upon such Ministers and their various Sectators, who thus leveled, or ravelled, or huddled up without any due Subordination to Ecclesiastical Governors of any Eminency or Authority, must needs sow all seeds of Faction, Sedition, civil Troubles and Disloyalty toward civil Magistrates, whatever Title or Majesty they affect to be clothed withal! They cannot avoid to be always exposed to and exercised with their people's mutual emulations, contrarieties, contradictions and contempts, which are raised and exercised upon the score of different Teachers and Religious disputes; for the determining of which there are no men of venerable worth and conspicuity appointed, such as Bishops and Synods of old were in all Ages. Men cannot long have a conscientious regard to Civil Governors, when either they have not or they will not endure any Ecclesiastical. They that see nothing deserving honour, love and submission to a Worthy, Learned, Grave and Godly Bishop, will hardly see much in any Justice, Judge or Prince; especially when Duty, Obedience and Fidelity shall be measured by men's parties and opinions in Religion, by their civil and secular interests: which is always expectable from any people that affect irregular liberties and formidable freedoms in any Church or State. As Princes that ever have been Episcopal do hardly suit with the novelties and intrusions of either Presbytery or Independency; so 'tis certain, Presbyterian Preachers will as hardly comply with an Episcopal or an Independent Prince as with a Bishop, and the like may be imagined of Independents; when neither of them enduring any order or subjection as to Religious polity, beyond their own fancy, must needs be less pliable to that obedience which is legal and civil, especially when it is exacted by those Princes that are not of their persuasion and way. Nor can there be indeed any aptitude in such men's spirits or tempers to any stability of loyalty, when their very conjunctions are like the first confused concretion of all things, rather an heap of contraries or novelties daily emerging, than a composure of any noble, orderly and constant harmony in Religion: which is never to be expected where there must ever be either a combination of folly and faction, of juvenility and simplicity only; (none being admitted to some confederacies that do not first renounce much of their Learning and Reading, if they have any, or of their credit and esteem as to all Ancient Churches) or else, like lumps of ice, they must be compacted and governed as it hits, by Gravity and Levity, by Age and Youth, by Weakness and Ability, by Steadiness and Giddiness, by Rashness and Wariness, by Passion and Judgement, by Prudence and Confidence, by Modesty and Impudence, Hemp and Silk, Course and Fine, Linen and Woollen, being twisted and jumbled together; these at the best must make up the associating and fluctuating methods of any leveled Ministry: or else they must be like sand and stones without lime, rather cast into several little heaps, than built up in a joint and grand fabric, by just Rules, Orders and proportions truly edifying; when there shall be nothing of Authority among Ministers proportionate to the different Ages, Capacities, Gifts, or Offices and Merits of any of them, (which make up the true harmony of Government and internal Majesty of all Authority,) but all things of Religious and Church-order must be left in such a popular and plebeian posture, as shall most encourage whatever is most Turbulent, Factious, Seditious and Rebellious in any men's spirits, who will be prone either to affect more Rule than is their due, or else be impatient that any should govern them in Church or State further than they list, or think is agreeable to those principles and persuasions of Religion or Reformation which they strongly fancy to themselves, and aim as strongly to set up and impose on others when they shall be able, not by the approbation and permission of the chief Magistrate only, where it may be fairly had, but in case he be so blind, wilful, obstinate and unconvertible, (as some have been for Episcopacy against Presbytery) they will find a call from God, and some special impulsives to obtrude their opinions and designs, without, yea against the express will of the Sovereign Governor; whose obstinacy against any such supposed ways of God, and pretended Discipline of Jesus Christ, is thought by many a sufficient Absolution and Dispensation from their civil Loyalty, Oaths and Subjection. Thus looking for God in fires and Earthquakes of civil combustions, they lose him, who is best to be found in the Evangelicall and still voice, to which the Priests and Prophets of the Jewish, also the Apostles, with their successors the Godly Bishops, of the Christian Churches, have always listened, and generally obeyed; judging nothing more diametrally distant from and opposite to true Religion than Rebellion (that is, the usurping of that power which is by Right and Law another's) upon any religious pretence whatsoever. Certainly the Jewel of Loyalty neither was, nor ever will be, safer kept than in the Cabinet of Primitive Episcopacy; as Aaron's R●d and the Tables of the Law were best preserved in the Ark of the Testimony, and in the most holy place, which were laid up with the pot of Manna; Emblems most lively setting forth the happy State of any Christian Church and Nation, while it maintains the Laws of God and man, while it subjects all men to the Rod or Sceptre of just Government both in Church and State, supporting, as the Princes, so the chief Pastors, Bishops and Guides of the Church with an honourable plenty, and all other Ministers both in Church and State with competent and ingenuous alimony. As Christian Kings and Queens have ever been, according to God's promise, the most indulgent, liberal and tender nurses of the Church of Christ in all Countries, every where retaining and reverencing Episcopacy as most agreeable with their Sovereignty and Monarchy; so have all true Christian Bishops, in all Ages and places, ever been the most Learned Assertors of, and the humble submitters to, Sovereign and Monarchical Authority of Princes, and no less to that of Aristocracy in Commonweals or Republics, such as Florence was, and Venice still is; who never yet saw any reason of State to move them to change the ancient and honourable Government of Catholic Episcopacy for any other, which hath, as more of parity, popularity and poverty, so less of honest policy, firm peace and religious loyalty. Certainly a Christian Prince or State that designs stability to their power and peace, will need these two swords, of Sovereignty and Episcopacy to keep himself, his people, and his Church safe. A wise Governor cannot but see and say of Episcopacy, compared to all other forms, as David said of Goliahs' sword, there is none like that, in respect of its principles, operations and influences, as to religious loyalty and public tranquillity. The loyalty and civil subjection of all novellers seems to be with so many salvoes and reserves of godliness and grace, of Religion, Christ's Discipline or true Church-ways, of Princes not being tyrants or persecutors in their subjects sense, that there is little certainty, much lubricity, and as many dangers as evasions. But the Loyalty of Episcopacy is positive and plenary, resolute and absolute, according to those clear Evangelical precepts and patterns, either to act or suffer with good conscience, owning no pensations as from God or Man, Pope, or Presbyter, or People, which some antiepiscopal Preachers and Professors seem to have found out, as the Gnostics of old did, being loath to be Carbonated or Crucified Christians if they can help it; pleading that Right follows Might, especially in Cases and Engagements of Religion; excusing the Primitive Martyr's softness and easiness to suffer, as Bellarmine and others do the Pope's pristine submission to the Emperors, by reason of their Minority, being then in their bibs and hanging-sleeves. CHAP. XXI. MY third Plea to recommend Primitive and Catholic Episcopacy to my wise and honoured Countrymen, Episcopacy most suitable to the genius and temper of the English. is taken from the consideration of the Genius or temper of the English Nation; in which the Spirits of people are (generally) so heady and giddy, so high and stout, that they cannot long bear any way of Government, or any Governors which seem levelling, popular plebeian and prostrate: however they may for a fit of novelty or discontent be pleased with such Pageants, yet these are not the Mansion-houses that English people will dwell in. They are too stiffnecked and stubborn a people ever to reverence or submit to such Magistrates in State, or such Discipliners in Church, as are but their Peers and Equals at best, and many times their Inferiors, as in estate and learning, so in all those things, Divine, Civil and Humane, which are proper to conciliate respect, and command submission upon the account of some eminency of merit or worth, set off with some conspicuity of riches, honour or power. The late Presbyterian design and defeat in England, as to inducing their Checker-work of Lay-elders to be Joynt-rulers and Partners with Preachers in Ecclesiastical authority, placing (as they must needs) even silly Mechanics in many places in a parallel jurisdiction with the ablest Scholars and Ministers, as to Church-government and Discipline, yea and above them in their numbers and suffrages; the speedy baffling (I say) and discountenancing of this pitiful project, with all its long train, baggage and ammunition, by a general dislike, difuse and neglect of it, sufficiently shows, that either Common people in England have more modesty yet left in them than to think themselves fit judges and rulers in the State or Church with their Magistrates and Ministers; or else that they utterly disdain to be Catechised and controlled by such as are their plain country-neighbours and trivial Comrades, of the same form for rusticity and simplicity, and many times as much below them in prudence as in estate, in civility as in solid piety, to which a factious and pragmatic ambition in any man adds very little. The speedy confutation of this incongruous polity and stratagem, which, to please the people, sought to besiege myself and all Ministers, both in City and Country, with four or five or more Lay-elders, made up of Farmers, Shopkeepers, Clothiers and Handicraftsmen, to be our Assessors and Assistants, as Censors and Supervisors of all the Parish, and ourselves too not only with us, but in some things above us Ministers both in number and popular influence; this hath really wrought such an abhorrence and disdain in most people of all such Lay-ruling-elders, and such a despiciency of all such Disciplining-plots as are neither prudent nor pertinent for the English temper, that even those Ministers who were at first most zealous to set up, in stead of the fair Temples and Cathedrals, those small Synagogues and low Consistories of Lay-partners in Church-government, even these Ministers find they have lost much of that pristine respect and influence they had among their own and all other people: so that upon the point neither great nor small will now be (further than they list) governed by such methods of imprudent men, who have reproached their own mother-Church, diminished themselves and their Order, blasted their Ministerial Ordination, soiled that fountain whence they sprang, disgraced those venerable Bishops who were lawfully and worthily their Fathers and Rulers, despised (as much as in them lies) the very Catholic and honourable name of Episcopacy, abolished its ancient honour and authority, which were ever established and preserved till now by the Custom and Canons of this as of all Churches, also by the ancient Laws of this Nation; thus splitting even their dear Presbytery in pieces, (which was best embarked with Episcopacy) while they ran this on ground, upon the Rocks & Quicksands, the oppositions of power and the despiciencies of people, between which all Church-government and public respect is now removed from both Bishops and Presbyters. Alas, how pitiful a part of any Government have any of these Ministers now to act and please themselves with, who affected to play a new game at Chess in this Church, only with pawns and rooks, without Kings or Bishops? whose unseparable fate, at least as to the Genius of England, King James very wisely foresaw would stand and fall together, (if he had as wisely prevented the danger and damage of both:) it being very hard for any Sovereign Prince to govern such an headstrong people, unless he have power over their minds as well as their bodies. This a Prince cannot have but by Preachers, who, as the weekly Musterers, Orators and Commanders of the populacy, do exercise by the Sceptre of their tongues a secret and swasive, yet potent, Empire over most people's souls. These preachers he knew were not easily kept either in good order, or in just honour (being men of quick fancies, of daring and active confidences, great valuers of themselves, and ambitious to be many Masters, yea popular and petty Monarches, in the Thrones of their Pulpits and Territories of their Parishes) unless there were some men over them, who are fittest to be above them (as being too hard for them) in their own sphere and mystery, best able to judge of Ministers Learning, Opinions, Preaching, Praying and Living; men for years of Gravity and Prudence, rewarded with Estates and Honours. Judges 1.7. And such were Bishops, without whom Christian Monarches are like those Kings who had their thumbs and great toes cut off; it being not possible for a Prince immediately to correspond with every petty Presbyter, nor is it comely to contest with them, nor can he be quiet from their pragmatic janglings, unless they be kerbed by some such Learned, Authoritative and Venerable Superiors as are properest for them; who were the fittest mediums between the King and his other Clergy, both to persuade Princes to favour the Church, and to persuade Churchmen to preach and practise loyalty toward their Princes, which tends to the honour of both Magistracy and Ministry. So that it was no other than an obvious conjecture to foretell, No Bishop, no King; since the same Scriptures and Principles of both reason and religion, piety and policy, lead men to obey both as rulers over them in the Lord, or to reject both, by affecting popular parities and communities, as in Church so in State. Which abatement of Kingly or Sovereign power in one person, as to its civil Magistratick and Monarchical eminency, hath by late experience been found so inconsistent with the Genius of this English Nation, that the Representatives of the People have not only importunely petitioned the restitution of Monarchical, yea Kingly, government, but they have actually settled the main authority in one person, under an other Name and Title; justly fearing, lest the dividing and diminishing of Sovereignty, Majesty and Authority, as to the chief Governor, should in time make a dissolution of the civil Government, by frequent emulations and ambitions, incident to any such Nation as England is, which hath so many great and rival Spirits in it, prone to contemn or contest with any thing that looks like their Equal. Nor do I doubt but Time will further show us, (if it hath not done it already sufficiently) that no less inconveniences and mischiefs, both as to Church and State, may follow the debasing and destroying of Ecclesiastical power and authority in England, dividing and mincing it: so diverting the ample and fair, the ancient and potent stream of Episcopacy, (which flowed from the Throne of Christ, and of Christian Kings) into the new rivulets, small channels, and weak currents either of Presbytery or Independency. The Sceptre of Government in Church or State, like the staff or rod of Moses, when it is cast out of his hand on the Earth or populacy, turns to a serpent, Democracy being a very terrible Daemogorgon: Exodus 7.9▪ until it be resumed into Moses his hand, (as King in jesurun) it doth not return to its former beauty, strength and use, which that did, after it had justly devoured the rods and serpents of the Magicians; as in time Monarchical Government will do all other kinds or essays in Engl. which are but the effects of popular passions and encroachments, carried on more by some Preachers Enchantments then by laymen's Ambitions. Strabo and others tell us, that the people of Cappadocia, Cappadoces munus libertatis à Romanis oblatum obnuentes, missis ad Romam Legatis, negabant vivere Gentem suam sine Rege posse. Quod mirati Romani, permiserunt illis quem vellent Regem. Strabo l. 12. p. 540. Just●n. l. 38. c. 2. when the Romans had conquered their Kings, and offered them their Liberty as a Province or free State under them; they refused the favour, affirming the temper of their Country was such, that the people in it could not live if they were not governed by a King: So pertinacious were they, as indeed most people in the world have been, and are at this day, to retain the sacred Tradition of Kingly or Monarchical Government, which being parental and patriarchal, is most natural and divine, derived to us by nature, and confirmed by good experience ever since Noah and Adam, who had their just Sovereignty as Fathers and Kings over all mankind derived to them from God the Great Father and Eternal King over all, from whom Monarchy and so Episcopacy derive their Majesty and Authority; Primogeniture carrying with it, as Princely, so Priestly power; which made the same name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (Gen. 41.45. Exod. 3.1.) to signify both Prince and Priest: The want of either of which, and the swerving from either of them, commonly occasioneth infinite distractions in any Nation and Church; especially if they have been in all times wont to be governed by them. To avoid which miseries among Mankind, the Wisdom of God hath guided, as most Nations to Monarchy, so this and all primitive Churches to the royal Priesthood of Episcopacy, from the very cradle or beginning of Christianity: At which time S. Jerom to Euagrius confesseth, it was (toto orbe decretum) a Catholic Decree and Order through all the Christian world, which could be no other than Apostolical at least. And however other Reformed Churches may make a shift to live, and some of them thrive, without the formal name and title of Bishops, (though most of them have the efficacy of the power, and the reality of the authority in their Superintendents) yet I am confident, till English Spirits are wholly cowed and depressed with war, and such exhausting as utterly dis-spirit and embase the Nobility, Gentry and Communality, nothing will be more inconsistent with them than what savours of parity and popularity in Church-Government. They will rather affect to have every one what they list, which in effect will be no Government properly Ecclesiastic, further than they may be commanded and possibly overawed by the civil sword, to submit to any such Triers, Ordainers, Committee-men and Censors, yea Tithing-men and Constables, as it is pleased to impose on them, while it exerciseth both a Civil and Ecclesiastical Episcopacy over Church and State, as supposing itself safest when it hath both swords in its hands, that by so eminent power it may both preserve Majesty and exercise Authority, which are inseparable. It is extreme vanity and folly to imagine that even the lesser flies, the rabble and vulgarity of the people in England, (naturally course, and now grown both base and ruder than ever, being insolent as to the presumptions of their liberties, both religious and civil) that these (I say) should easily be held by those fine new cobwebs of Church-Government, which some men have lately spun out of their own bowels and brains (for they are not of the ancient Web or Loom.) How much less can any wise man expect that the greater sort of people in the Nation, such as are either purse-proud (yet arrant Churls and Clowns) will be either catched or held by those imaginary toils? What then shall we think either Presbytery or Independency will do with the higher-spirited Gentry, and (heretofore) Magnanimous Nobility of England? Will not these Lords and Ladies think it ridiculously strange to find themselves cited and summoned, tried and examined, reproved and censured, excommunicated, yea and reprobated by a few petty-Presbyters, whom they look upon commonly as poor Scholars, pragmatic and pedantic enough for the most part, if they have any power, and be under none as to Church-Discipline? Or will these Gentlemen submissly venerate the Authority of Goodmen Lay-Elders, or a cold Vestry of a few honest Gaffers with their Elect Pastor, who is as a poor soul set to inform and move that poor Body of Parochial or congregated Christians, Isaiah 65.5. who are ready to say with the Pharisee to all that are not of their corporation and opinion, Stand by, we are holier than thou? Good God what stamps of eminency, in Reason or Religion, in Piety or Policy, in Civility or Charity, will any persons of Noble Birth, Good Breeding and Pregnant Parts, see in these Consistorian or congregational Conventions, to keep up their own Authority, and to keep down other men's spirits from despising them? Among whom there neither is nor can be (generally) any such conspicuity or sufficiency for any parts and abilities, of mind and body, of estate and quality, as may redeem them from the very contempt and laughter even of boys; to which many times their pitiful clothes, (which give either a great gloss or damp with vulgar eyes, as they are either rich or mean on the backs of men in Authority) besides their simple carriage, their senseless speeches, and very silly looks, are prone to expose them. Nor have they many times, as to the Lay-part of them, any thing without or within them to redeem them from this low and loose esteem, in all men's both judgements and consciences who are not very silly, superstitious or servile. Yet of this course bran and barrel (for the most part) are those men and Ministers who have been most eager to exclude Venerable Episcopacy, and to challenge to themselves, either as Ministers or Laics, the whole Height, Depth, Length and Breadth of Ecclesiastical Government in England; not only for ordaining Ministers, but for censuring, silencing, deposing, excommunicating, and wholly Anathematising or abdicating from Christ and his Church, all sorts and sizes of men, whatever Majesty, Sovereignty and Authority they have upon them. For these new Masters profess, (like God) to be no respecters of persons: all must fall under their lash and stroke who are either in the Parochial or congregational Communion and Jurisdiction. Possibly such small Monitors or Triobolary Discipliners, (who are justly of least esteem in a Nation and Church) might for a time, and in a humour, suit the spirits of some little Colonies or Conventicles in Arnheim or Amsterdam, in new England or in old and cold Scotland, where common people have much of the easiness or tameness of peasants: But certainly they are no way suitable to the Haughtiness and Grandeur of England. These manacles are so far from shackling the chief of our Tribes, and heads of our Families, that they are not capable to hamper the feet; so far from making good Pillories, that they will not serve for good Stocks and whipping-posts, for the due repressing and punishing even of vulgar petulancy and insolency; which we see prevails every where inspite both of Presbytery and Independency, for want of an Honourable and Venerable Episcopacy, justly constituted and honourably countenanced in the Church. The temper of the English Nation is not like that of Scotland, (which with so brotherly and unwelcome a zeal would needs obtrude upon us Presbytery whether we would or no.) There every petty Lairde of a Village in his High house, hath either a bit and bridle in the mouths, or a Cane over the crags, of all the poor Cotagers, and of the poor Clerick his Minister too; who are in a kind of Villanage (as underlings) to his Signiory, servilely depending on him, the one for his great Salary of an hundred Scotch punds or marks a year, (where every mark is thirteen pence halfpenny, and every pund is two shillings English) the other for their Cottages, Copy-Holds, Farms and Tenors. So that the common people there being generally over- dropped and under-fed, low-pursed and low-spirited, might easily be ruled, as to any religious Government and Church-Concernments, by such a Discipline as their gudd Lairdes and Sr. John pleased to put upon them; the ambition of Preacher and people being no higher than to eat and drink, and to beget children in their own likeness to poverty and servility, as the Peasants in France and Boors in Germany do. But the ruggedness and fierceness of the people of England, even of the very Commons and clowns, (who are higher fed, and bred to less slavery then in other countries) is such, that, like our English horses, cocks, mastiffs and bores, they are no where to be matched for the curstness and animosity of their spirit and mettle. How have we seen even mean men bristle against, not only their grave Ministers, but their great Benefactors and Masters? Tenants have risen against their Landlords, and Peasants against the noblest Peers: so Presbyters have contested with their Bishops, and subjects with their Sovereigns. Such tragical rufflings and disdains of their betters are no news in Engl. And shall we think that tradesmen, peasants and yeomen (not to mention gentlemen and noblemen, or such as shall govern as supreme) will, all or any of them, now be so tame, as to be kerbed, checked, ruled and managed by those minime- Ministers and members of Congregations, or those petty Presbyters in their Parishes or Associations, whom they have no visible cause or motive in the world to look upon or esteem as their equals or betters, no way likely to be their benefactors, and so not worthy to be their Rulers in the least kind? This submission cannot be expected, unless Englishmen are (now) to be subdued by fine words, and made obedient by the formal and supercilious looks of some men, who affect in their Churches and Parishes to govern all, and are not fit (alone) to govern any, unless they had been more able and willing to govern themselves, and to have kept within that compass of Ecclesiastical Order and subjection to their Bishops and betters, which the example of all Churches, and all worthy Presbyters, and true Christians in all Ages, commended to them, besides the particular Laws and constitutions of this Church and State. These considerations of the unproportionableness of any other Church-government than a right Episcopacy to the temper of England, moved the supercilious, yet very learned, Salmasius, in his advice to the Prince Elector then in England, and to some other of the long Parliament, and of the Scotized Assembly, (who desired his judgement upon the then hot and perboyling, Vide Vit. Salm. pag. 50. Postquàm comperisset Presbyterialem statum citra Episcopalem in Anglicanis Ecclesiis consistere non posse, (prout nata istic ingenia videret) in ea erat sententia, aliquam moderationem adhibendam, & Episcopos non omnino tollendos: m●lius illud regimen, & haud dubiè cum summa util●tate, processurum in illis Ecclesiis existimabat; m●ximè quum viderit, sublatis Episcopis, omne genus Haeresium & Schismatum gliscere: voluit ergo ut Episcopi essent moderatores perpetui Presbyterorum Collegii, etc. yea passionate and overboiling debates touching Episcopacy) to tell them, That as the Episcopal Government, rightly constituted and executed, is very agreeable to the Word of God, and most conform to all Antiquity; so it was of all other most suitable to the English spirit and constitution: The want of which he already foresaw was, and would ever be, the cause of much disorder and distraction, of infinite Factions, Heresies, Schisms and Confusions. Thus the great Dictator of Learning (as he esteemed himself) was pleased in this passage and otherwhere, graciously to express his judgement and pleasure, according to the humour he was in, Vindic. Car. & Walo Messal. or to the Interest which he was pleased to adopt. Sometimes he is Walo Messalinus, and ashamed to own his Name against Episcopacy: he was in that disguise to gratify the pretensions of Presbytery, and the adherence or dependence which he had to the French and Dutch Churches: otherwhile he puts off the vizard, and with open face owns the eminency, authority, antiquity and universality of Episcopacy; yea the incomparable utility of it, when joined with a grave and orderly Presbytery, besides a particular aptitude in it to the English Genius. For he well saw that all Government, and Church-Government as much as any, is a beam of Divine Majesty, and requires not only something of a Diviner sufficiency as to inward abilities and endowments, but also of a Diviner conspicuity and lustre for Authority, civil eminency and ornament. We read that God, besides his choice of Aaron and his Sons to be complete persons, to make them chief Priests according to his Command and Commission, gave also strict order for their garments, Exodus ●8. v. 2, & 40. to have them made with such comeliness, cost and curiosity, as should be for glory and beauty, even before the eyes of the people over whom they were placed. And we further read that God forbade to his people the Jews all birds that did creep and yet fly, they were unclean and abominable to be eaten. Deut. 14.19. An Emblem that nothing is less comely in God's Church, than to see those men ambitiously affect to fly high in governing others, whose condition is low and creeping on the ground. Indeed no Government can be carried on in Church or State, (especially in Engl.) but either by the absolute terror of the sword, and secular power commanding, or by such legal injunctions and religious persuasions as bind good men in conscience to submit, first, to God, and for his sake to those whom he, as Lord of all, is pleased to set over us. Then is government in Church or State most complete and constant, when it hath first that rational Empire and religious prevalency over men's hearts, which ariseth from the persuasion that people have of the worth, abilities, right and authority which Governors have (by their laws) as from God in the State, so from Christ in the Church. Which persuasion as it brought all Christian people, Presbyters and Bishops, to be so wholly subject to their civil Magistrates and Sovereigns; so it made all Christian Presbyters and Professors to be filially submiss to their Bishops, as to Fathers given them by Christ: even then when Bishops were rich in graces and gifts of the Spirit, but low as to worldly greatness, and under much persecution; yet then did the Majesty of Episcopal authority prevail, (on which the lively Characters and pregnant Memorials of the Apostolical pattern, designation and succession, were still fresh and most remarkable) then did it draw all true Believers and good Christians to venerate their Bishops or chief Pastors for Conscience sake; by so much the more, by how much Presbyters and People had more of the power of Godliness in them: whereas now it is made a new mark of Godliness and Saintship with many, to cast off, to hate, abhor, despise and destroy all Bishops and all eminent Episcopacy. Sure either primitive purity or modern dregs must be very much out of the right way: and which of them errs, I leave to all sober men to judge. As for other Christians of loser Consciences and Conversation, which were prone in all Ages to be as weeds in the garden of the Church, (especially in times of Peace, Plenty and Prosperity) the piety and wisdom of Christian Princes and other godly people ever took care to keep them in the more awe and reverence toward their Bishops and Ecclesiastical Governors, by investing these in such outward and visible enjoyments for estate and honour, which might add some outward respect and authority to them, (and that no small one) before those that had most need to be so restrained, overawed and dazzled. Hence the piety and policy of Constantine the Great not only gave liberal supports to the Bishops of the Church, but gave them places and honours equal to the Patricii, the Senators in order and degree, which were the Roman chief Nobility. It is not only an imprudent, but an impious presumption, and a tempting of God to needless miracles, for any people to invest those men in any Government, as in State so in Church, who are (as St. Paul saith) little esteemed, because deserving little; who have neither personal abilities for the Office, nor any clear and undoubted commission to authorise them in it from God or Man, from Christ and his Church: which, I conceive, can hardly, if ever, be found in any ways of Church-government, which are suspected for Novelty, or tainted with Parity and Popularity, contemners of Catholic Custom, Primitive Antiquity, and Apostolical Succession in an holy Uniformity. From all which depravations as venerable Episcopacy is sufficiently known to be farthest removed of any, so it cannot but seem to all impartial Christians to be, as every way best in itself, so fittest for the native temper of England; where men's spirits are more accurate and acute, more inquisitive and searching into the rights, foundations and grounds of all authority over them, then in other Countries, where meanness and easiness, servility and credulity of common people, makes them venerate for their Gods any Calf or Idol which their Superiors please to set up in the Church, to serve or secure the civil Interests. But in England, where people have much light and dare to use it, such policies and projects would (now) be not only preposterous, but vain and ridiculous. There is no putting (among us) Eagles wings or Feathers upon the bodies of Jackdaws, Rooks or Crows, which rather encumber them, than enable them for any orderly motion; much less do they make them Imperial birds, fit to rule or over-aw the other winged inhabitants of the world, which will be ready to scorn and despise them. And what indeed (for instance) hath more abased the condition, and abated the common honour of Ministers in England, of later years, than some of their unseasonable and unreasonable affectations to govern in common, as beyond their due proportion for Age, Gifts, Parts, Ornaments, so before they had complete Commission to empower them, either from God or any man in Sovereign power? Even such Presbyters as most affected, like Icarus, to fly above their Fathers, myself and the English world have seen to have so melted their own artificial wings, that they have miserably fallen into a Sea, a black and a red Sea of confusion, contempt and contention, both among their own people and all the Nation. Out of which Abyss they will never be able to wade or swim, in my judgement, unless they can (with such Unity, Pertinaci enim & animosâ perversitate priores suas sententias defendendo, in sacrilegium schismatis (quod omnia scelera supergraditur) ●aecitate impietatis irruunt. Aug. l. 1. cont. Parmen. Humility and Charity, (as St. Austin adviseth some Donatists) revoke their exotic errors, retract their Schisms and transports, returning from their pertinacious novelties to the true proportions of Ancient Church-Government; which I think are in no degree to be found either in Presbytery, Independency, or any way apart from Episcopacy: both which new: ways have so grievously blasted and singed themselves by the exorbitancy of those terrible flames which they kindled utterly to consume Episcopacy, that there is little likelihood either of these novelties should ever appear to be entertained with any public beauty, honour, esteem or approbation in England, where nothing is less tolerable than Governors that are contemptible, for want of Ability, Authority and Dignity, as to Estate and Honor. Amidst all which immoderate and merciless fires (destinated to consume all the pristine beauty and honour of Catholic Episcopacy, both root and branch, in one day) yet (to show not more the wonder of God's mercy, than the true temper of the English people) behold not only Primitive Episcopacy, but Primitive Bishops (that is, persons of Learning, Piety and Virtue, becoming that sacred Office & Dignity) have retained all this while, and will do while they live, (yea and when they are dead) so much of real honour and true respect due to their worth, that no Assemblies, no Armies, no Votes, no Ordinances, no Terrors, no Calumnies of inordinate Presbyters, no insolences of licentious people, nothing can ever deprive them of, or degrade them from, an high respect and esteem in the hearts and desires, in the loves and compassions of all unbiased, learned, sober and wise men throughout the Nation; Who are not yet grown so dull and degenerous, as not to prefer the Primitive, Catholic and Venerable Authority of Episcopacy, as to order and Ordination, so to Government and jurisdiction, as much before the novel inventions and ostentations of any Presbyterian and Independent models, as one would value the English Roses before the Scotch Thistles; freely to handle or feed upon which, is no such precious Christian Liberty as any wise men, Ministers or others, have either cause to envy in others, or to congratulate in themselves; since their former subjection to Episcopacy was far more to their Safety, Order, Plenty and Honour, than what they now enjoy in their petty Signiories. The lowest parts of that Mountain of God, Episcopacy, on which the Church of Christ for many Ages stood and flourished, were higher than the top of these new molehills; the skirts of Bishop's clothing were more venerable than the very Crowns of these Ministers heads, the unanointed corners of whose hair and beards are now so deformedly shorn or shaved by a sharp and popular razor. The renown and value of Episcopacy is much risen since Englishmen have seen added to the other excellencies of our English Bishops, the miracle and magnanimity of their Christian patience, who after their hard and long studies, attended with many meritorious and useful virtues, after they had lawfully obtained and many years peaceably enjoyed such Honours and Estates as adorned Episcopacy in England, after they had no way, and by no law, forfeited these, or misused them; yet, in the decline of their lives, in the colder and darker winter of their Age, these grave and gallant men can bear with Christian patience and heroic composedness of mind the loss of all, and that from their own Countrymen, Professors of the same Christian, yea and Reform, Religion: and this without any respect had either to their present and future support, or their pristine dignity. A fate so sad and Tragical, as is scarce to be paralleled in any Age or History: yet have none of them been heard to charge God foolishly. They say and write either nothing, or only the words of Soberness, Truth and Charity: they still possess their souls in silence and patience, when dispossessed of all things: wherever they live, their lustre shines through their greatest obscurity and tenuity, as the bright Sun through small crevices, far beyond the most sparkling Presbyters, or glittering Independents; whose new popular projects for Church-Government, compared to Primitive and old Episcopacy, are like Comets or blazing Stars compared to the Sun and Moon. The Gravity, the Constancy, the Contentedness, the Meekness, the Humility of these Venerable, yet afflicted, Bishops, (now reduced (God knows) to a great paucity as well as tenuity) yet still keeps up their price, and commands from all wise and worthy men a veneration both of their persons, and of that comely Authority which they heretofore enjoyed, and worthily exercised, in this Church. Who almost of any considerable people in England, that are not either ignorant, fanatic or sacrilegious, but either openly or secretly wish the happy restauration of Venerable Episcopacy to this Church and Nation? who, that hath sense of honour, justice or ingenuity, doth not deplore, and is not discountenanced to consider, the Crowds and Loads of indignities cast upon such excellent persons as for the most part the Bishops of England were; even then when they were to be sacrificed, by I know not what strange fire, as a peace-offering to the discontented Presbyters of Scotland, and their ambitious Symbolizers in England? I know some of those Lords and Commons who in the huddle helped to destroy Bishops and their Order, now not only pity the undeserved sufferings of such brave men, but repent of their own compliance; and so do many Ministers. The usefulness, worth and necessity of excellent Bishops and of true Episcopacy were never so well understood in England, as since the sad effects have showed us and all the world the want of them, if in any Nation, sure in this, where some of the very enemies of all Episcopacy heretofore, and the eager extirpators of it, do now express (which they have done to me) (as the other Tribes did to that of Benjamin, Judg. 21. when they had almost quite destroyed it) something of mercy and pity, of moderation and retractation. Alas, saving a few Ministers, most-what Lecturers, and some scrupulous people here and there, which had been a little bitten by some Bishops, either for their inconformity or extravagancy, and saving a few other men that had a mind to Bishop's Lands and Houses, (both which were not the hundredth part of the people of this Nation) saving these, I say, (who had and have most implacable picques and feuds and jealousies against all Episcopacy,) the rest, which are the most and best of the Nation, I persuade myself, have been and are so just and ingenuous, as not to take up vulgar & causeless, and yet eternal hatreds, against such worthy men as our Bishop's most-what were, and so Venerable a Function as they were invested with. Yea at this day (as much as I perceive) the Names of Episcopacy and of every worthy Bishop are like spices bruised, and like sweet ointment, (whose box is broken) more fragrant and diffused: just as an agreeable perfume would be after one hath been much afflicted with Assafoetida. The very stench which hath risen every where from the heaps and dunghills of factious confusions in religion, both as to men's minds and manners, since the routing of Episcopacy and Bishops, these have rendered that primitive Order and Catholic Presidency more savoury and acceptable then heretofore it was to some men, when their weaker brains were cloyed with the constancy of so great a blessing; as some are brought to fainting spirits by long smelling of the sweetest smells. Episcopacy, like the body of holy Polycarp Bishop of Smyrna, and (placed there by St. John) when it was burned, hath filled the English and all the world with a sweet odour. It is like the bodies that have been well embalmed many hundred years past, never capable to putrify, but will ever remain uncorrupt, as a sacred kind of Mummy, for a memorial to all generations. Though the Lands and Lordships, the flesh and skin which adorned Episcopacy by humane bounty, be either devoured by worms, or so wasted and dissipated (as the ashes of some Martyrs were, by which their persecutors hoped to defeat them of a blessed resurrection;) yet still the Divine donations and endowments, the Spirit and Soul of pastoral power is remaining to Episcopacy: and its honour will be both Immortal and Glorious, when all its enemies shall be ingloriously either forgotten or remembered. The Apostolic Antiquity, the Catholic Dignity of Episcopacy is not abated, nor ever can be: The Divine Wisdom, Beauty, Order, Authority, Usefulness and Blessing by it, in it and upon it, do still survive, and ever will, in all Histories, in all Times, in all Churches, and in none more justly than in this of England; where the experience of all sober Christians hath brought them to that sense which venerable Beda expresseth was had in his days, (that is, eight hundred years ago) of Episcopacy and good Bishops, That any Province or Church destitute of its Bishops, Provincia Pontifice destituta, divino pariter praesi●io ●estituta. Bed. hist. l. 3. c. 7. was so far destitute of the Divine protection and benediction. As this Age hath brought forth such as dare to despise, decry and destroy what all former Ages have happily used and highly magnified; so after-Ages, in the revolution of not many years, may admire, adore and restore with great devotion the primitive honour of Episcopacy, which some men have sought to lay in the dust, and bury in oblivion. Whose resurrection is not to be despaired of, even to its ancient glory, when sober Christians of all sorts shall seriously consider, and compare with former times in England, the present State of this Church and the Reformed Religion in it, full of divisions, distractions, disaffections, of animosities, envies and jealousies, of offences, murmurings and complain, running to ignorance, negligence, irreligion, and at best to Romish Superstition; where Ministers are multi-form, people mutually scandalised and scattered, Christians not so much united by any bond of uniform Religion or Worship, as overawed from doing those insolences and affronts to which their parties and passions eagerly tempt them. Nothing of Ecclesiastical Order, Discipline and Authority, further than a sword or a gun, or a private fancy afford; nothing of the Clergies authoritative convention, correspondency, or communion as brethren; no joint counsel, no blessed harmony, no comely subordination among them; all proclaim a Chaos and confusion. Compare (I say) all these deformed distempers into which we are fallen since we abdicated or lost venerable Episcopacy, with that Piety, Plenty, Harmony, Unity, Order, Decency, Proficiency, Respect, Honour and Authority, which were heretofore so eminent and illustrious in the Church and Churchmen of England, while it enjoyed the blessing of Episcopacy; in whose preservation and honour the honour of true Religion, the Majesty of any Christian Church, the dignity of the ordained Ministry, the validity of sacred Mysteries, the completeness of Ecclesiastical power, the Authority of all holy Ministrations, and the measure of all just Reformations in Religion, (besides the civil peace) were heretofore thought to be very much bound up, as in all Churches and Nations that are Christian, so in none more than in these of England, if we consider the native greatness and generosity of some men's spirits, the roughness and stubbornness of others, all of them disdaining to be either abused by the simplicity, or kerbed by the arrogance, of any men as their Church-governors', of whose Religious ability and Ecclesiastic authority they are in no sort satisfied. It is not good to tempt either the Sea or the Populacy, by keeping too low banks, which are easily overrun, and occasion much ruin to all sorts. I may further add, to convince my Brethren the Ministers, and all my worthy Countrymen, how agreeable and honourable Episcopacy, in its due place, posture & authority, was to the genius of Engl. by putting them in mind of that vast disproportion, for Love, Respect, Countenance, Maintenance, Encouragement and Honour, which now are paid, as generally to the function of the Ministry, so particularly to the person of any Minister, of whatever quality or preferment, title or party he be, comparing things to what the deserving Clergy generally enjoyed heretofore, while, under God and their Kings, their worthy Bishops protected them according to Law in well-doing. Heretofore (even in my memory) a grave, learned and godly Bishop was as the centre of his Diocese, the tutelary Angel of his Clergy, the good genius of every able and faithful Minister under him: He was the grand Oracle of the honest Gentry, the honoured Father and ghostly Counsellor of the truehearted Nobility; he was the admiration and veneration of the most plainhearted and peaceful Common-people. Notwithstanding all the scurrilous obloquys and affronts which sometimes either weak or wicked, foolish or factious men sought to cast upon all Bishops and all the Clergy under them, yet still the kindness of Parliaments, the favour of Princes, the worth of good Ministers, the discretion of wise Bishops, and above all the goodness of a gracious God, kept the Clergy of England in such a condition as was rather to be envied than pitied. No Minister of any worth was then so cheap & despicable, so obvious to injuries, and obnoxious to all indignities, as now he is, no not by an hundred degrees. Every grave and good Minister in his place then moved as wheels in an Engine, by that concurrent strength which then was in the whole Fabric & Juncture of the Church: the beams of Episcopal honour shined on the meanest Clergyman, whose own fatuity or factiousness, weakness or wickedness did not obscure him. The secular interests and worldly enjoyments of the whole Clergy were then much more considerable, both for profit and honour; their livings much better and more secure to them (as their Free-holds,) if they kept within the bounds which our Laws had set; their preferments more ample and more easy to be had; their reliefs, in case of any loss, burden or charge, more easy; their reputation more conspicuous, when they had something of authority and commission besides their Desks and Pulpits, when some of them were not only in Ecclesiastic Commissions, but assessors on Benches of civil Judicature; for which as they might well have leisure enough, without neglecting their spiritual employment, so I believe they might be as able to serve their Country and their neighbours in that way, as a great many Justices of latter edition, especially so far as to preserve the honour of the Church and true Religion from suffering any detriment in any County. It is evident that in all times since England was Christian, no Courts of Justice were ever had without some Divines at them and in them; our Forefathers always judging it to be of no less concernment to preserve Religion in authority, and Churchmen in conspicuity, than to preserve their Estates, civil Peace and Lives. Beyond this, how great a lustre (I beseech you) was added by the piety and generosity of the English-Nation to all the Clergy, when some of the Bishops were taken into the Privy Counsel of the Princes, when all the Bishops had the places and privileges of Peers in Parliament, having temporal Baronies; yea when the whole Clergy in their Representees had place and power in Convocation, both to consult of all things Ecclesiastical, and to give of their own Spiritual Estates a free-will-offering to the public Treasury? These and such like marks of public conspicuity looked indeed like the beams of honour upon the Clergy, making their faces to shine before the common people. This posture of the Clergy was manly, generous, heroic, becoming the Honour and Piety of the Nation, worthy of the munificence of Christian Princes, of the Devotion of Christian Parliaments, of the Learning and Merit of so excellent a Clergy and Christian Ministry as England enjoyed; which (of all professions) in any Nation should be least Eclipsed, and most illustrated with the tokens of public respect, because no men have to encounter with so many Devils of disdain and Spirits of opposition in private breasts, as good Ministers have, if they will be friends to men's souls, and foes to their sins. Now (poor wretches) wherein are any of us, as Ministers of the Gospel, considerable, for any public remarks of respect and honour either to our persons or callings? Are we not even ashamed of ourselves and one another, when we see the nakedness to which the justice of God, by our own sin and folly, hath exposed us and our profession? Not only all Bishops, under whose wings Presbyters were wont to be best sheltered, but even Presbyters, yea Presbytery itself, and all sorts of Preachers or Ministers whatsoever, are miserably disputed and despised by those many- faced parties in Religion which have been gendered of late in England, while people have looked upon that ring-streaked, py-bald and particoloured Ministry which hath been set before them, vastly different from that Candour, Beauty and Uniformity, which heretofore was both in Shepherds and their several flocks, agreeable to that Primitive pattern, which never had a Christian Congregation without an appointed Minister, nor a Minister without due Ordination, nor Ordination without a Bishop, nor a Bishop without great honour and respect among all good Christians: The Bishops of the Church being, as St. Jerom expounds that of the Psalmist, Psal. 45. 16· those children of the Church which are prophesied to be made Princes in all Lands under the Gospel, and in the Government of Jesus Christ. All these united together in an holy and happy correspondency kept up Christian Religion, its Doctrine, Ministry and Discipline, to some height and eminency; which is now fallen here in England to a very poor and pitiful, a plebeian and precarious, yea in many to a Parasitical posture, not daring to discommend what they dislike, nor to own what they desire, nor to desire what they approve, nor to complain of what they feel pressing and pinching them: yea some are such Cossets and Tantanies, that they congratulate their Oppressors, and flatter their Destroyer's, calling that a State of precious Liberty, which is indeed no better than a tamer slavery; boasting in their shame, and triumphing in the ruins and disparagings, as of their profession, so of the true Christian and Reformed Religion, which cannot but be darkened when the Clergy is Eclipsed, as now it is in England, where not any one Minister, great or small, can keep himself in any tolerable esteem with all parties, no nor avoid the contempts and reproaches cast from some hand or other on him: let his worth be what it will, for Learning and Integrity, for Piety and Pains, yet he wants not those friends to Reformation that seek to depress him, and would heartily joy in his utter ruin. Some poor Ministers may (possibly) now shroud themselves here and there under some particular shelter of some civil and less supercilious patron, or some more sober and good-natured people: but, to speak the truth, none of them have any proper Sanctuary, or any meet refuge among themselves, where they may equally expect protection for their Rights, Persons and Profession, as Ministers of the Church, or as men in holy orders. How many with scorn disallow and disavow any such Church or Orders as the best Ministers pretend? nor do they that are first Antiepiscopal, and then Antiministerial, think that there is any thing of right due to any of them besides poverty and contempt. Yet to such ports (many times) most Ministers put in, when tossed to and fro in the tempest of popular contests, forced thus to run themselves a- ground sometimes, to avoid utter Shipwreck: many have given over their Livings, to enjoy their Liberties, and to preserve a capacity either to get another, or by occasional preaching to get their bread. Ecclesiastical Courts we have none, nor any considerable or competent Judges of our own Cloth and Calling. To Convocations or Synods▪ we are never called, which I conceive might be as useful and necessary for the religious interests of the Nation, as Parliaments are for the secular and civil; out of which the Clergy are wholly excluded, Bishops being ejected out of the House of Peers, where they sat so many hundreds of years, yea, ever since there was such a great Council in the Nation, and long before there was any House of Commons. Neither Presbyterian nor Independent Ministers are admittable, (however they have either renounced their clerical Order, or Metamorphosed themselves both in apparel and in principles to a Laic form.) Other men, though they ordinarily preach, yet may be chosen as Members of the House of Commons, and sit there; only professed Preachers, though not in Orders, may not. So that in neither House the Clergy or Ministry (now) have any other Proxyes, Deputies, Representees or Patrons, than such as the meanest Mechanics or Tradesmen have, no nor so much; for these may have of their own Art and Calling there, to assert their Rights, which Ministers have not, as any spiritual Corporation or Fraternity, not so much as the meanest Burgess Town or civil Corporation. Nothing is left the Clergy but a Lay-Committee for Religion; which may in time be as great an injury and a grievance to the true Religion, as any they sit to inquire of; while all the Concernments of the Church, all matters Ecclesiastic, all the Doctrine and manners of the Clergy, all that concerns the Preservation or Reformation of Religion, all disputes and determination of controversies, yea and of cases of Conscience, all settling and asserting of true Doctrine, all confutation of dangerous errors, all Antidotes against the poisons and infections of Religion, all direction for the decency of God's public worship, for administration of holy Mysteries, for Ordination of Ministers, for execution of Church-Order and Discipline, all the Liberties and Livelihoods of Ministers, must be wholly left either to the Learning, Religion and Discretion of some plain Country Gentlemen, who (God knows) are most-what but very superficially studied in these cases, being better skilled in hawks and hounds, in their oves and boves, than in the deep studies or points of Divinity; nay 'tis well with many of them if they have not forgot their first Catechise and principles of Religion: or else the Clergies concernments must fall under the judgement of Lawyers, who finding no worldly profit to come by their Plead for Religion, do not much mind them, or enable themselves for them: or they must be exposed to the piety of Physicians, which was never thought very intense, nor much in the Road of their practice: or the cases of Ministers must fall under the tenderheartedness of Soldiers, who are more skilled in Swords than Books, in Military than Ecclesiastical Discipline; men of blood, as David himself, are not fit to build Temples or Churches, as God tells him: or at last the affairs of Ministers must be referred either to the formal gravity of some solemn Citizens, whose Shops and Counting-houses have been their most constant and profitable studies; or to the pragmatic activity of some confident Mechanics, who whetting each other by their disputes and janglings, are every where ambitious to be as thorns in the flesh and goads in the sides of poor Ministers, left they should be lifted up above measure. To the mercy of some of which sharp censors had the Ministers of England been (sometime) left, they had not left one Minister in his Living, nor one Church- Living in England for a Minister. But God then hampered them in their strange Vagaries, preserving still some Remains of this Church and its Clergy from being wholly left like Sodom and Gomorrah. And indeed, who almost is there of any profession never so sober, that ingenuously now or at any time sympathizeth with either Scholars or Ministers? who is there that by a native (as St. Phil. 2.20. Paul saith) and genuine affection careth for their affairs? All seek their own Profit, Honour, Pleasure. Any of them may invade the place and office of a Minister, if they list. Few are scrupulous to pinch or deprive Ministers of their profits: none expects any great good from them, but rather unwelcome reproofs and censures, according as every Minister is either severe, or supercilious and choleric, setting up his small Tribunal, and exercising his Discipline as he fancies best, scaring silly men and women sometime with the thunderbolts of his Excommunications, Examinations and Suspensions; that generally all people are jealous of Minister's peartnesse and ambition, which aim to rule them with a Rod of Iron, when they have but the Sceptre of a Reed in their hand. Hence is it that most Gentlemen, noblemans, Yeomen and Artisans, not only do not much care for Ministers that are weighty and steady, but they generally look asquint on them, and are afraid of them, as their Tetrical Reprovers and Moroser Monitors. In all respects all men are now tempted to despise them, as made every way inferior to all sorts of men, of small gains and uncertain Estates, of no public power, honour or influence; not worthy to be adopted to any friendship, nor to be feared for any distance and enmity; persons most safely to be injured of any men, having nothing to revenge or right themselves with but their sad looks and sharp tongues a generation of men rather filled as with wind, and swollen with their own airy speculations, than any way considerable for solid sufficiency and useful worth: yea, by very many and most illiterate persons, all Ministers are esteemed no other than their Leeches, Hangbies and Dependants, whom grudgingly they entertain rather out of formality than conscience, out of policy more than piety. Persons of some literature and ingenuous breeding have (many times) secret emulations and rivalries against their Ministers, judging themselves not only the better men in all other respects, but the better Scholars too, as it oft falls out now; so that they think it time lost to hear their Ministers preach, because they find them do it with little study or dexterity, and with less Authority. The meanest, poorest and plainest sort of people expect neither much good nor hurt by any Minister, whom they see every where reduced to such a tenuity and minority, that there is no spark of Majesty, or beam of Magistracy among them, since the ancient and honourable Chairs of the Bishops of England have been turned into Joint-stools, and their Jurisdictions or Courts, both Ecclesiastical and Civil, resolved into Lay-Committees. This blessing hath the Clergy of England gained, since Ministers affected to ride on Scotch saddles and Galloway-Naggs; which was once made an Article of accusation against Bishop Farrar, in Queen Elizabeth's third year, as a diminishing of his Episcopal dignity. Thus desolate, dejected and despised is the condition of the Clergy now in England, both in storms and in calms, ever since they have been beaten from, and denied Anchorage in, the fair Haven of Episcopacy, which ever was and ever will be the safest and best harbour, both for Religion, this Church and its Clergy. For no men will regard those Ministers who help to make themselves undervalved: Who will care to provide for or protect them, that cast off so fair a portion of Estate, and noble a proportion of honour, as the Laws of this Land had given them under the Episcopal covering? Whither now shall poor Ministers fly, unless they fly from their despised and distressed calling to some more easy, quiet and beneficial Mechanic profession; unless they renounce their former Orders, and take up a new standing, either upon their own tiptoes, or some Molehill which the Ants of the people have cast up? neither of which stations is either firm or comely. The vulgar favour is too flat, dull and shallow, for any man of Learning, Worth and Wisdom to launch into; he will presently be aground: for popular respect riseth to no higher a pitch than they see men have some public influence of favour, estate or power. Go to the Palaces of such as are Princes, and think themselves great persons, their Courts and Families are commonly full of deep and rough, rapid and dangerous motions: the courtesy of country-Justices and true Committee-men is very various, much as the Wind and Tide are either with or against the poor Clergy. Where are there then any proper Advocates and Judges, or any competent Censors and Supports of the Clergy, becoming men of Learning and Worth, beyond the ordinary rate of most men? Whom have they of their cloth and calling that is in any eminency of Place, Power or Honour, who might by their favour defend a poor Minister as with a shield, so as worthy Bishops did? without whom the Ministry in England may (I think) despair of ever recovering themselves to any great value or regard, while they are looked upon (even one and all) under a mere plebeian notion and proletary proportion; permitted indeed to marry, and beget children, but to servility, poverty and beggary. Few persons of any Worth or Estate will now either make their sons Ministers, or match their daughters to them, or contract any alliance or friendship with them: since no Clergymen can be great, they will not be much valued for being good. Thus hath the fall of Episcopacy, like a great and goodly Oak, crushed all the Under-wood of the Clergy; which was safe while those defensatives stood in our Druina: nor have those escaped the brush and crush who were most industrious to fell it. On all hands the honour of the Clergy is never like to revive in this Nation, till something like primitive and authoritative Episcopacy be either replanted or restored; the spirit of the Nation being such, that it cannot be governed but by those that have some public eminency and real lustre upon them, either as to military power, or civil honour, or religious presidency, set off with the ampleness of some estate, and the authority of some fitting jurisdiction. As Augustus said to the Egyptians when they desired him to visit their God Apis, I worship Gods, not Oxen; Deos, non Boves, veneror. so do the most people of Engl. in their hearts reply to all Presbyterian & Independent Ministers, who seek to win them to worship their ways, We were wont to venerate grave and honourable Bishops, not every petty Presbyter or Preacher, as our chief Church-governors', according to the custom and manner of all good Christians in all ancient Churches, and in this of England, ever since Joseph of Arimathaea or Simon Zelotes converted us, ever since K. Lucius was baptised, Britannica primogenita Ecclesia. and the British Church had the honour of Primogeniture to any National Church in the World; ever since either Palladius in Scotland, or Patricius in Ireland, or the latter Austin in England, by the mission and commission of the devout Gregory the Great, either restored or planted Christian Religion and Bishops in England; the shortest of which Terms or Epoches is now above a thousand years: In all which time England hath been famous for nothing so much as for the great regard this Nation had (till of late years) both to Christian Religion and to the Clergy, which never till now were made to live without the crowns and coronets of their worthy Bishops in every Diocese, which were the cover of power and honour upon the heads of all the Clergy; to whom the access of a poor Minister was short and easy, his hearing speedy, his trial legal and rational, his dispatch without delays, his dismission fatherly, and his submission filial and comely: insomuch that peaceable and good Ministers were never more blest, than when they had the sight of their worthy Bishop or Diocesan, who did not only as a good Shepherd oversee and rule them, but took care to feed and defend them, with Order, Plenty, Peace and public Honour; blessings of so great price in our mortal pilgrimage, that they had need be very precious Liberties indeed that are to be purchased by parting with them, or exchanging them for the dry Martyrdoms of Poverty, Contempt and daily Confusion. CHAP. XXII. A fourth plea for Episcopacy, from their true Piety and orderly Policy. IN the last place, I do with the more courage and confidence recommend the cause of Venerable Episcopacy to my honoured Countrymen, because no Nation or Church under heaven ever had more ample and constant experiences of that excellent worth which hath been in their Bishops, or of that excellent use which hath ever been made of a regular Episcopacy, both in respect of true Piety and Orderly Policy. I know it will at first dash with full mouth be here replied, how many Bishops have been superstitious, sottish, luxurious, tyrannous persecutors, and what not? especially before the Reformation, till their wings were so clipped that they could not be so bad as they would; yet some of them were bad enough. My answer is, I do not undertake to justify every thing that every Bishop hath done in any Age, late or long since: though I am charitably modest to palliate the shame or uncomliness of my Fathers, yet I am no Mercenary Orator or veneall Advocate to plead for their enormities, which are in no men less tolerable or expiable. There were (no doubt) among Bishops, as well as other men of all sorts, some weak, some wicked; as Ezekiel's figs, some very good, some very bad: yet take them in the general view and aspect, even in the darkest times, I am sure they were in England ever esteemed and employed both in Church and State, as Primores Regni, men of the greatest abilities and best repute for Learning, Wisdom, Counsel, Piety, Charity and Hospitality in all the Nation; nor were many of them in those times inferior by birth and breeding to the greatest Noblemen in the Land. I do not censoriously rifle men's personal or private actions, but I consider their public influence and aspect: It sufficeth to my design, if I demonstrate by induction of many particulars, that Episcopacy is no enemy to Piety, no way prejudicial to Church or State, yea a main pillar to support the welfare of both. Many Bishops may have been bad, yet is Episcopacy good; as many Priests of old were, like Elies' Sons, vile men, yet was the Priesthood Honourable and Sacred: many Judges and Justices may be base and corrupt, yet is Judicature good; many Magistrates unworthy, yet is Magistracy an excellent and necessary Ordinance of God. He that should sift all the Presbyters or Ministers of any sort that have been, or now are, even the greatest zealots against Bishops and Episcopacy, I believe he would find among them dross enough; yet must not the Office of Presbytery, or the Function of the Ministry, be cast off or abhorred. He that shall examine by right Reason, Religion, Conscience and Honour, what some Princes, yea some Parliaments, have been, and done, as to the persons of men, will find they have been neither Gods, nor Angels, nor Saints, nor Saviour's always, but poor sinful men, of common passions and infirmities; yet, is the honour and use of Sovereign power in Princes, and supreme Counsel in full and free Parliaments, of admirable concern to the public good. So is it in point of Episcopacy; notwithstanding that many Bishops were but men, yet some, yea many, nay I hope the most of them (especially since the Reformation) were as Mortal Angels, Faithful Pastors and Venerable Fathers. There are upon account reckoned up by Bishop Godwin and others 1479. Bishops in England and Wales, for above 1100. years; of which time some Histories remain, though Bishops were long before; but of these there are some Records both before and since the Reformation. Who will wonder that in so great an harvest, in so large a field, there be found some light, some empty, some blasted ears? This is certain, that till these last tempestuous times, Bishops in England had given so ample and constant experiments of their Prudence, Piety, Worth and Usefulness in all Ages and States, for Ecclesiastical and Civil Affairs, that they did abundantly conciliate and conserve those great measures of Love, Respect, Honour and Estate, both public and private, which their Persons and Function by Law enjoyed: Insomuch that as there were no where to be found better Bishops, so no where had they better entertainment, before and since the Reformation, while they enjoyed the favour of Princes and the love of Parliaments; who never heretofore listened to the plebeian envy or petulancy of those who sometime petitioned and prated against Bishops and Episcopacy, as Diotrephes did against St. John. The Wisdom, Gravity, Piety and Honour of this Nation never thought it worthy of them to overthrow so Venerable, so Useful, so Ancient, so Catholic, so Honourable an Order, merely to gratify the peevishness, or passion, or revenge, or discontent, or ambition, or envy of inferior people or inferior Presbyters; who were at their best every way, when kept in compass by wise Bishops. No men heretofore, never so much flyblown with faction, could so far prevail by their insinuations and agitations, as to have any Vote passed in England against Episcopacy: all men of Learning, Gravity and Prudence, for these thousand years and more, in England, (as in all Christian States) owned and highly reverenced, as Episcopacy in general, so good Bishops, as the chief Conduits that had conveyed to them, their Forefather and their Children, all Christian Ministry and Ministrations, all Christian Mysteries and Comforts, yea Christianity and Christ himself. Which Spiritual, Divine, Eternal and Inestimable blessings, this, as other Nations and Churches, ever owed, as chiefly to God's mercy, so instrumentally to the hands of Bishops, by whose Ministry they were taught, by whose Authority they had many other Ministers duly ordained and sent into the harvest, when it was great, and required many Labourers. These in their order assisted, as Presbyters, their respective Bishops in Teaching and Governing the Church; but without or against their Bishops they never acted, upon any account of Parochial or congregational pretensions of Ministers Equality, or people's Immunity and Liberty. Alas, what ground was there for either of these pretenders in England, Vid. Godwin. Epis. Ang in Honorio. when there were no Parishes divided (as now they are) till the year of Christ 634. when Honorius an Archbishop of Canterbury began that way, for the more easy and orderly carrying on of Religion among the Countrypeople, who had now generally received the Christian faith and Baptism? Till then the Pagani or Countrypeople either repaired to their Bishops and his Clergy in the Cities and chief Towns where they resided, or they occasionally attended their Bishops in their visitations of them, or such Presbyters as were sent out by the Bishops to officiate among them. There was then no fancy, nor many hundred years after, of any petty Churches, either of Associated Presbyters or Independent people, without, yea against, the Episcopal Ordination, Inspection and Jurisdiction: still Bishops and Episcopacy were preserved and honoured in England. And this not only by private persons of all ranks and qualities who were considerable for their honesty or Devotion, but by our most admired Princes, our noblest Peers, our wisest Parliaments, who did ever keep up the use and honour of Episcopacy in England: nor did they ever disdain to have Bishops their Assessors and Assistants in Parliaments, esteeming it a rustic and plebeian temper, to admit men to public Counsel and Honours for their Valour and Estates, and not for their Learning and Religion; by which all worthy Bishops did as much ennoble themselves in all wise men's esteem (if they wanted that of blood and descent, which many of them had) as those who most swelled in the conceit of their great Ancestors, who left them great noble Estates, but many times ignoble minds, little wits, and less honesty or virtue: which hath been the fate of some who have most puffed against Episcopacy, and despised those Bishops who were in all Moral, Rational, Religious and real Excellencies not their equals, but far their betters. What Prince was ever more sage in her Counsel, or more solemn in her Government, more advised in her favours and frowns, than our Augusta, Queen Elizabeth? what Sovereign ever more reconciled Empire and Liberty, or held the balances of Justice more impartially and more prosperously between all interests and degrees of men, both in Church and State, between Clergy and Laity, Nobility and Communality, for near half an hundred years? In all which time she had no greater blemish, than her yielding sometime too much to the sacrilegious importunities of begging Courtiers, who terribly fleeced, and sometimes flayed, the Estates of some Bishoprics in England and Wales; not so much out of her malice or covetousness, as out of her mistaken munificence. For never any Prince did more really, religiously and constantly honour her Bishops as Fathers in God: one of whom She had for her Godfather, namely Archbishop Cranmer; another (I think it was Archbishop Whitgift) she called her black Husband; most-what preferring such men to be Bishops as were worthiest of her favour, fittest for Gods, the Churches, and her Majesty's service. Did this wise Princess ever listen to the insinuations, pretensions, petitions and charms of those men in her days, who so much importuned and molested the public peace and patience by their despite against Episcopacy, and their scurrility against Bishops? Some of them (possibly) might be well-meaning men; but I take the best of them to have been popular and superstitious in this point, others very pragmatic and juvenile: none of them were any great Politicians, while they would either have no Church-Government with any Eminency, or wholly reduce it to such a parity as they designed for their ambitions, which would have made themselves and all the Clergy (as at this day) more divided and despicable, than ever they could have been under Bishops, though Bishops had had no more power than an High-Constable, or a Country-Justice. Besides this, the simplicity of those zealous men in those days who most maligned Episcopacy, and disparaged the Church of England, (having been terribly scared by some Popish Bishops in Queen Mary's days, whose sad pictures still frighted them in the Book of Martyrs,) did then by their needless Divisions, Distractions, Oppositions and Separations, greatly advance the Papal interests, Cambdens Elizabeth on Dr. Whitgift: Dum Praesidum conniventiâ & Novatorum pertinaciâ Schismata oriebantur; plaudentibus interim Pontificiis, multosque in suas partes pertrahentibus, quasi nulla esset Ecclesiae Anglicanae unitas, nulla uniformitas. as learned Mr. Cambden wisely observes, writing of the contests between Archbishop Whitgift and Mr. Cartwright with his Associates; whose unhappy Successors could (we see) never carry on their designs now at last, but with the infinite troubles & miseries of this Church and State; by which they have advanced their Presbytery in England so little, so not at all, that never any men got so little, or lost so much, by so dear a bargain, which cost not only much money, but much blood, many lives, many souls and many sins. After this renowned Queen had left Episcopacy not only standing, but fixed and flourishing in England, to the content and happiness of the most and best of her Subjects, in Court and Country, in Parliaments and out of them, King James succeeded as supreme Governor in Church and State. What Christian King was ever crowned with more learning, and a larger heart in all Knowledge, Divine and Humane, Ecclesiastical and Civil? This Prince had been nursed with the milk of Presbytery, he had been long dipped and died in Presbytery; if any, sure this King might have seen, at least fancied, the beauty that Presbytery added either to the Reformed Religion, or the Imperial purple: His education by Buchanan, and his castigations by Mr. Knox and others, might in all probability have much devoted him to Presbytery, and prejudiced him against Episcopacy; of which I believe he seldomer heard one good word, than he did Faction, Treason and Rebellion, from those warmer Presbyters, who, as his swadling-clouts, so straight wrapped him up in his minority, that he could hardly fetch his breath with freedom, yea, and in his majority too, when they made themselves as his chains and fetters, to bind Princes, as all men, to their good behaviour. Yet notwithstanding these Presbyterian Prepossessions for so many years, did not this great Monarch heartily rejoice, when he came to a Church handsomely and honourably governed by learned, grave, orderly and venerable Bishops? (the only Catholic Government of all Churches, of which he had read so much, and so much good in the Ecclesiastical Histories, and nothing of any other) Was it not an infinite content to him, to see himself freed from the vexatious Thistles and provoking Thorns of some Presbyterians in Scotland, (for others were grave and modest men) that he might enjoy the fair and sweet Roses of Sharon, such Bishops as had ever been the chiefest flowers in the Garden of Christ's Church? Was he ever satisfied, until he had reduced the Kirk of Scotland from some Presbyterian extravagancies, to such Episcopal Order and Constancy as was indeed very excellent, and nearest to the primitive pattern of paternal Presidency, fraternal Assistance and filial Submission? (But few people are ever so happy as to know and value their own happiness.) When this great work was done, of restoring Episcopacy to so ancient a Church as Scotland was, and confirming it in England, contrary to the vain hopes, childish presumptions, and self- flatteries of some popular men, who could never with reason expect that so learned and wise a Prince as K. James would exchange the Ark of God for Dagon, Episcopacy for Presbytery; did he not as seriously triumph in the blessed alteration of his Ecclesiastical Station, as he did to remove his habitation from, and extend his dominion beyond, that Hyperborean horror of Scotland, to this Southern sweetness and amaenity of England? These things thus well settled as to the Order and Honour of the Church of Christ in his Dominions, although this King were a Prince of most profuse, Orat. pro D●iot. Rege. and indeed prodigious, munificence, (thinking no Epithet became a King less (as Tully says of Deiotarus) than that of homo frugi, thrifty or illiberal) yet did he never incline to devour the Church's patrimony, to keep the Episcopal Seats vacant, that he might enjoy the Revenues. He once refused the offer of Cathedral Lands, Bishop Andrew's. which some had projected as very feisable, because (as a grave Bishop then suggested to him) God was twice every day publicly and solemnly worshipped in every Cathedral, and his Majesty there publicly prayed for in his greatest necessities: whatever hunger seized his royal appetite in the (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) sharpest famine of his Exchequer, yet he never, waking or sleeping, thought of Confiscating Church-Lands, or making Bishops to be superstitious, or superfluous in the Church, because his condition was necessitious. No, whatever failings as a man that Prince had, yet, as a King and a Christian, he had this justice and generosity, to preserve the honour of Bishops, and the Rights of the Clergy. Indeed, as he was the greatest Scholar of a King in all the world, so he was as great a patron of good Scholars as the world had. Nor will those that have most quarrelled the Memory and Reign of King James, easily mend the condition of Church or State; which he left in Peace, Plenty and Safety. Nor was it so much policy or reason of State, as strength of true Reason, and the prevalencies of true Religion, which so counterbiassed that King's judgement against Presbytery, as a partial popular novelty, or confirmed him in Episcopacy, as an Apostolic and Catholic Antiquity; between which he thought there was no more compare as to Church-Government, than there is between the Majesty of goodly Lions and the subtlety of little Foxes. After this great pattern of King James, (whose learned arguments were more prevalent than his arms in Religion) followed his unfortunate Son, the last King, who amidst all his reproaches and improsperities cannot be denied this Honour, than he seemed not inferior to any King that ever lived in his regard to the Churches ancient Order, Estate and Honour: although few Princes ever sustained greater difficulties and necessities as to his Estate, yet never any had greater Antipathies against what he thought Sacrilege, nor a less longing to taste of the Priest's portion; which he esteemed sacred, because it was Gods, dedicated to him, and so vested in him both by Law and Conscience, by true Divinity and just Humanity, that he judged no power on earth could, without manifest sin and robbery, alienate it from God and his Church. This made him so zealous not only to preserve Bishops, upon his Father's principles, but their Rights and Estates also, because he thought them to be Gods and his Churches; to maintain whose right he remembered himself to have sworn in the first place at his Coronation, and so was no less bound to them than to the rest of the people, as to their civil Properties, Laws and Privileges. Certainly, however some have denied this King the Title of Pater Patriae, yet he seems to have deserved that of Filius Ecclesiae, both Alumnus and Patronus, of which he appeared more ambitious than of any earthly glory, or Kingdom, or Life. For whence, I beseech you before God, Angels and Men, do you think arose that his Princely and Christian pertinacy, even to the death, in the point of Episcopacy and Church-Lands? Henry the Fourth of France could change the whole scene of his Religion from the Reformed to the Roman, merely upon reasons of State, dispensing with conscience to preserve his Kingdom and his short-lived greatness; yet is he cried up for Henry le Grand: how much greater is that King to be esteemed, whose conscientious constancy (which some counted obstinacy) lessened him to nothing, when to the very last he maintained those sharp Agonies, Contests and Disputes he had as to the interests of the Church and Episcopacy, which he counted his greatest concerns as to Religion, Justice and Honour? How did he encounter Mr. Henderson, Mr. Martial, and others, upon this point chiefly? how indeed did he confound them by scriptural grounds, by Ecclesiastical precedents, by Catholic consent, by the sacred, venerable and unanswerable custom of all Churches till his days? What answers, what offers of moderation and conciliation did he make as to this point of Church-Government, to the admiration, yea astonishment of his Antagonists? Although as to Military successes and Civil concessions, he yielded much to an over- powering power; yet as to this rock of Ecclesiastical affairs, like the Ark upon mountains of Ararat, where he rested there he fixed, there he continued rooted, unmoveable, invincible, choosing rather to be dashed in pieces than to renounce his principles, or to move contrary to those conscientious persuasions, for which he thought he had such clear and valid grounds, such ancient prescriptions, such constant presumptions, that he thought nothing in Religion could be safe or certain, if in this point of Church-Government the Catholic Church were not to be believed or imitated in Episcopacy. Good God whence should it be that a Prince so knowing, so sensible of his dangers, when he saw the Presbyterian proposals, power and interests so pressing upon him, (for Independency, that little stone, was not then cut out of the Mountains) whence had so great a restiveness and obstinacy seized upon so great a Prince, in a posture of so great storms and danger? which would in all likelihood at first have been appeased, if he would have cast this Ionas, Episcopacy, overboard, and swallowed the Church-Lands into the Sea of the Exchequer. He that could, as to civil and Regal concernments, much deny himself, why should he choose, upon the Church's account, to suffer so long a war, so many wounds, so tedious prisons, so sad Tragedies living and dying? For however differences at last were inflamed upon other accounts in the procedure of the war (which necessarily multiplies offences on the conquered party) yet certainly the main propose and motion, first of the Scots, and then of the English Presbyterians, was this, Destroy the Temples of Episcopacy, and set up the Synagogues of Presbytery. Which any politic Prince would speedily have done, at least when he saw so terrible a tempest in present pressing upon him, yea and prevailing against him. What Prince was ever so in love with any Bishops or any Churchmen, as to love them better than himself? which in Reason he could not, and in Religion he ought not to do, nor would certainly have done so far as he did, if he had not had such persuasions deeply rooted in his conscience, of a justice, gratitude and duty he owed to God, to his Saviour, and to the Church, more than to the persons of a few Clergymen; which he solemnly avowed, as in God's presence, to Mr. Martial of Finchfield in Essex, after a long conference at Newcastle, as I take it, had with him touching Episcopacy, (as Mr. Martial himself soon after told me) assuring him, and conjuring him to assure others, of his Majesty's uprightness and resolvedness in this point of Episcopacy, as to matter of Conscience, and not of State or Policy: else, in point of secular advantages, his own peace and preservation, the public tranquillity, the increase of his revenue by the Confiscation of Bishops and Cathedral-Lands, would have amounted to much more benefit than ever he or his could expect from a few Bishops, Deans and prebend's. Thus riveted was the King's Conscience to Episcopacy, unable, upon any terms, till convinced not by Arms but Arguments, to consent to the utter extirpation of it; although he offered & condescended to many moderations, which were from him as much in vain, (for nothing but root and branch would serve) as all the Extirpators Allegations to his Majesty against Episcopacy, to prove it not to have been the Primitive, Catholic and Apostolic Government of the Church, were in vain: for indeed nothing was produced new; all were trivial and threadbare arguments, which had been answered ten times by learned men in this Church, and had for ever silenced all sober and modest men, if they had had so great regard to the Church's Catholic and constant Testimony, or to the Scripture-rule and Apostolic pattern, as indeed they should have had. Besides this insuperable difficulty, fortifying Episcopacy in his Conscience, his Majesty no doubt had prejudices enough against Presbytery, as to its novelty, its first violent intrusion, his Father's vexation, it's now armed obtrusion upon himself, a Sovereign Prince and chief Governor of Church as well as State: to these were added all the former Troubles and Tragedies in Scotland, by the scufflings of Presbytery against Episcopacy; besides, he saw the destroyers of Episcopacy already divided among themselves, neither Presbytery nor Independency could agree whose the child should be; yea, he lived to see Presbytery, when it had been set up in the House of God, fallen, like Dagon, with its hands and head broken off, before the captive Ark of Episcopacy. Mean while His Majesty, and all the World at home and abroad, saw the miserable Distractions, Confusions, Luxations and Licentiousness which broke in daily upon this Church for want of that vigour and authority of Episcopacy, which had been the great defence, under God, the King and the Laws, against those foul and filthy inundations. A state of Church-religion and Reformation which his Majesty saw was at present, and was ever likely to be, far distant from that which was enjoyed in England under his Princely Predecessors, and in some part of his own reign, when England was filled and overflowed with good Christians, good Scholars, good Presbyters and good Bishops; of which order England ever afforded, and specially since the Reformation, so many learned and commendable, yea some rare and admirable instances: Insomuch that this Church had cause to envy none in the World, ancient or modern, as for other things, so for this, the blessing of excellent Bishops, as well as orderly Presbyters and sincere Christians. Indeed no Nation for many Ages (if we may feel the temper of any people by the pulse of their Parliaments) either had more cause, or seemed to have more disposition to value, and actually did venerate, its excellent Bishops, than England did: yea, I have known those Noblemen, Gentlemen, Ministers and other people, who were, as to some Ceremonies, less satisfied or more scrupulous than the Church and State was, yet these men how have they commended, how courted, how almost adored such Bishops as they thought godly and grave, good Preachers and good Livers, as well as good Governors? But as to the general sense and vote of the Nation, which was audible and legible in its Laws and Constitutions for above a thousand years, it ever did itself this honour, and its Clergy this justice, that no where in any Christian or Reformed Church Bishops were more ample, more remarkable, more reverenced, more honoured, even to the highest honour of Peerage; yea the Archbishop of Canterbury had place next the Royal Blood, never diminished or degraded by any Prince, or by any Parliament in any Age. Nor is it the least of the Riddles of Providence, how Bishops and Episcopacy, having so resolute a Prince, and so great a King to be their patron and protector, should now in England fall under so great diminution, dejection, yea utter destruction; considering that there never had been worthier Bishops in any time of the Church, than have been in England this last Century; nor in any part of that Century were there more excellent Bishops, than were to be found among them at that very time when all their Palaces, with Episcopacy, were pulled down about their ears, and the best of them buried in the dust and rubbish: by which some men hope that the Names, Merits and Memories of all Bishops, and the ancient honour of Episcopacy, shall be for ever smothered in obscurity or obloquy, in scorn or oblivion; whose Resurrection, Reputation and Eternity, as to their deserved honour▪ and to the public honour of this Church and Nation ever since it was Christian, and ceased to be either barbarous or unbelieving, I do here endeavour; which if I cannot recover to life, ●et I have brought these pounds of Spice and sweet Odours for the Enterrement, and leave a fair Inscription or Epitaph upon the Grave-stone or Monument of Episcopacy, if it must be ever buried in England: an Office of Piety in a Son to his Fathers, being myself a Person every way as free from suspicion of flattery or partiality, as can well be found, never either injured or obliged by any Bishop, as to any public advantages, further than my Ordination as a Minister; which I count a great and holy Obligation, because by no other hands, I conceive, I could have lawfully received Holy Orders in the Church of England. Free therefore from all biassing either for against the Episcopal Order, which hath now no sinister temptations attending it, I do affirm that Episcopacy could never have fallen into its terrible Fits and Convulsions, into such excessive and mortal Agonies in a worse time, as to the undeserved ruin of so many worthy men; nor yet in a better time, as to the eminent worth of those Bishops, and other Churchmen of their subordination, who might well have born up the Cause and Honour, as well as the weight of the Contest and Ruin of Episcopacy. A wise man would wonder how in a full, free and fair hearing, before competent, complete and impartial Judges, it was possible for Episcopacy (which was founded and supported by so strong foundations and supports; to which all Churches, all People, all Presbyters, all Princes, all right Reason, all due Order, all politic Honour, all Scriptural Patterns and Divine Precedents gave concurrent aids, besides the Laws and ancient Customs of this Church and State) how it should suffer such a rout and reprobation, (instead of due Reformation where aught was amiss,) when it was able to bring forth such Armies at that time in England of learned, grave, godly, venerable and incomparable Clergymen, Bishops and others of their persuasion, which like so many Heroes and Atlases were capable to have born up the falling Sky, if it had not been overcharged with the Sins of the Nation. Doubtless the whole world did not afford in any National Church more excellent Bishops, or more able Divines for any Ecclesiastical Convocation, Synod or Council: singly they were mighty men both of Stature, Virtue and Valour, higher by head and shoulders than most of the Presbyterian Champions; but socially they had been invincible, if they had not been encountered with the sword, which regarded not the greatness of their Learning, or the soundness of their Judgements, or the gravity of their Ages, or the sanctity of their Lives, but jealous of their firmness to Episcopacy, presently set up a new Assembly, no way representing, because not chosen by, the Clergy of England, according to the wont custom, in which the Clergy of England had their privileges as well as the Commons of England, to choose their Deputies, according to Law and the King's Commission: yet these were to do the Journeywork of Presbytery as well as they could in broken times, undertaking to Directorize, to Unliturgize, to Catechise, and to Disciplinize their Brethren, their Fathers, their Countrymen and their Sovereign without any contradiction; there being none among them that either would, or could, or dared to plead the cause of primitive Episcopacy, which had so resolute a patron, and so many able defenders at that time in England, as among the inferior Clergy, so among those of the Episcopal Degree. Among whom we have only to excuse the indiscretions, frailties, defects or excesses of two or three later Bishops, (who possibly forgot the Counsel of Phoebus, to use less stimulations, and more restrictions.) Do but consider with compassion the great temptations of these Bishops, by that favour, place and power they had, besides their native tempers, which might be too quick and passionate, also the Scholastic privacy and bluntness of their education, not having taught them so well to dissemble, at least not to moderate their passions; take all together, it may be their greatest enemies in their place, posture and provocations, would not have been much more moderate and calm than they were. But let these Bishops pass, who, as the highest trees, have suffered first and most the battery of the storms raised against Bishops. These few were abundantly counterpoised by those many other Bishops, both in former and later days, whose worth and abilities every way were such, that it is hard to find any of their adversaries in all things equal to them, nor could they have stood before them in the combat, if no weapons but books and arguments had been used: certainly some one Bishop had been able to have chased an hundred Presbyters, these last being seconded by none of the ancients, the first having all antiquity on his side. 'tis true, I well know, that many of the Presbyterian party were men of very fleet pace, of voluble tongues, pregnant parts and plausible appearances, which did very well while they kept their ranks and stations, but yet (under favour) they did not any of them attain to the first three. There were many pounds, yea talents difference, between a spruce Lecturer, or a popular Preacher, and a wel-studied Bishop, whose great Learning and Experience had made him every way grave and complete: there was as great a distance between some Bishop's sufficiencies, and the ablest antiepiscopal Presbyterian that ever I knew, as there was between their honours and revenues. Take them in all latitudes, for writing, speaking and doing; that I say nothing of their prudentials in governing, wherein Bishops drove the Chariot tolerably well at all times, sometimes very well, during a thousand years and more in England and Wales. But the Presbyterian wisdom and Policy hath not only overthrown others, but themselves too in a few years, together with the unity, order and honour of this national Church. Yea, as to that part of a Clergyman, which is not more popular and plausible than profitable and commendable, when well performed, I mean preaching, no Presbyterians exceeded the Episcopal Clergy, or some Bishops, in this particular; if they preached oftener, yet not better; no nor oftener, considering the Age and infirmities of body which might attend some Bishops. Nothing was beyond the thunders and lightnings sometime, or the gentle reins and softer dews otherwhile, which distilled from the Tongues of Learned, Godly and Eloquent Bishops. How oft have I heard them with equal profit and pleasure? Such apples of Gold in pictures of silver, such wholesome fruit in fair dishes, were their sermons, many of which have been printed, and many hundred more never published. Doubtless none of the Primitive Bishops and Fathers went beyond ours in England, if we may judge of their Preaching by those short and most-what plain Homilies or Sermons which we read: Few of which were preached before great Princes and their Courts, as ours oft●were, whose Court-sermons, since Queen Elizabeth began to Reign, if they could be collected together, I doubt not but they would be one of the richest Mines or Magazines of Learning, Piety, Prudence and Eloquence in the world. For those Sermons, both for the present Majesty of the Prince, for the curiosity of the Auditory, and for the abilities of the Orator, were the Quintessence or Spirits of many sermons and much study, commonly as much beyond ordinary preachments, as oriental pearls are beyond the Scotch Pallors of those Jewels. Not but that it is the commendation of ordinary Ministers to preach plainly, yet powerfully, to ordinary hearers, so as may most profit them. For he is the best Archer, not who shoots highest or furthest, but nearest and surest as to that mark at which he is to aim, which in preaching must be the saving of souls, not pleasing men's ears. Nor did the others preach less honestly or usefully, because more elaborately, at Court, considering the (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) nauseous wantonness, of most Courtiers, and their curious expectation, who needed as much as they expected, sermons that savoured, not only of the Lips and Lungs, but of the heart and head too. For Court-hearers will never get profit unless the Preacher take pains. And Queen Elizabeth very smartly once said, when she heard a warm and earnest, but a very plain and easy Country-preacher, who was brought to preach before her in her progress by some of those Courtiers who then seemed to favour the Nonconformists, She that had been wont to drink strong-waters rarely distilled and compounded of many excellent spirits, which were very cordial in lesser quantities, did not well relish any drink that was very small, though it seemed scalding hot: which is rather a culinary than a celestial heat in preaching, whose true warmth lies in the weight of the matter, not in the noise or heat of the speaker. I am not ignorant that some of our later Bishops fell under great obloquy and odium among many people, specially the last Archbishop of Canterbury, who being a man naturally active, quick, rough and choleric enough, less benign and obliging than was expected from him, had brought upon himself so great a weight of envy, jealousy and disdain, that there was no standing before it: when once he was left to stand by himself, he was easily overrun by a multitude, being but low of stature, of no promising, winning or over-awing presence. As for his politic or civil Demeanours, upon which account he suffered death, I have nothing to do with them in this place, both he and his Judges are to be judged by the Lord. As to his Religion, I shall afterward express my sense whether he were Popish or not. But first I would a little consider that sudden cloud which covered the face of many of our brightest Bishops at once, confining them to prisons, who were esteemed persons of great Candour, Prudence and Moderation; yet was their discretion much called into question, when twelve of them were snared and twice committed, most of them to the Tower, for a Remonstrance or Protestation which they made in order to assert their ancient and undoubted privilege, to sit as Peers in the House of Lords, to which they had by writs been summoned. Some State-Criticks thought they forgot what became their years, their wisdom, their dependence, and the distempers of the times. My answer is, possibly those goodmen might, through discontent and indignation at the vile and vulgar indignities they suffered, (even a Parliament now sitting, of which they were Members) pen the form of their intended plea less conveniently; passion being an ill Counsellor or dictator to the wisest men: yet, I believe, few of their severest censurers would have been more cautious in their expressions, if they had been under the like tumultuary terrors and insolences, which, repeated and unremedied, were capable to provoke men of very meek spirits and mortified passions to speak or write unadvisedly, as Moses himself did in a case of less personal provocation than at other times he had given him from the petulancy of people. Nothing scares sober men more than to be destroyed by vermin, About the year 1375. as that brave man Simon of Sudbury, Archbishop of Canterbury, was, whom the rabble at seven or eight blows hacked in pieces. A valiant man will not cry out for assistance when he is to encounter with his match; but if many beasts of the people unprovoked run upon him, he may without cowardice call for succour where he thinks it may be had. Such was the case of those Bishops at that time, when they not only fancied, but actually found, promiscuous and rude heaps of people, not only threatening, but offering indignities to their persons as well as to their place and function; through whose sides they saw the malice and insolency of such Riotous Reformers sought to strike at the whole frame and constitution of the Church of England, which they, as all good men, had great cause to value more than their lives, if they might lay them down in an orderly & deliberate way, not in a tumultuary and confused fashion. Whatever miscarriage those Bishops were guilty of in that particular, yet I am sure it was somewhat excusable by the greater Misdemeanour of those who gave them occasion so to complain: Nor doth it any way blemish that excellency which in their more calm and composed actions they did discover, worthy of themselves and their Predecessors; to whom Erasmus long ago, Sola Anglia doctos habet Episcopos. Erasm. in Archbishop Warhams days, gave this commendation, that England of all Churches had learned Bishops. I will not go beyond the Reformation of Religion to find worthy Bishops in England; it may suffice (here) to register some of the well-known names of them, which possibly the vulgar never heard of, though men of reading and breeding cannot be ignorant of them. What was more gentle, ingenuous and honest-hearted than Archbishop Cranmer, whose native facility made him in rough times less fixed, till he came to be tied to the stake of Martyrdom? where he took a severe revenge on his inconstancy, by burning his right hand first, but his sincere, though frail, heart was unburned amidst his ashes. What was more downright good than Bishop Latimer, who joyed to sacrifice his now decrepit body upon so holy an account as the Truth of Christ? What was more holy than Bishop Hooper, or more resolute than Bishop Ridley? What more severely, yea morosely good than Bishop Farrar? All of them Martyrs for true Religion, by whose fires it was fully refined from the Roman Idolatry, dross and superstition. This foundation laid by such gracious and glorious Martyr- Bishops in England, God was pleased to build a superstructure worthy of it in other most worthy Bishops, even to our days. Time would fail me to give every one of them their just Character. It may suffice to place an Asterisk of honour to some of their names. What man had more Christian gravity than Archbishop Parker? who had more humble piety than Archbishop Grindall? who more Christian Candour, Courage and Charity than Archbishop Whitgift? who overcame his enemies by welldoing and patience, deservedly using that triumphant Christian Motto, Vincit qui patitur. Who had more of pious prudence and commendable policy than Archbishop Bancroft, who did many Ministers good that never thanked him for it? Who had more of an honourable gravity and all virtues than Archbishop Abbot? to whom I may join his brother Bishop of Salisbury. All these were as chief of the Fathers, metropolitans of Canterbury, Primates of all England, as to Ecclesiastical Order and Jurisdiction, according to the ancient pattern of the Church of Christ in all Ages and places. Nor were the Archbishops of York inferior to them, such as Sands, Hutton, Matthewes and others; men of great and good spirits, Learned, Industrious, Hospitable, Charitable; good Preachers, good Livers, and good Governors. After these came those other Bishops, who were equal to them in Gifts, Graces and Episcopal Power, but so far inferior to them in Precedency and some Jurisdiction, as the good Order and Polity of the Church required. No Age or History of the Church can show in any one Century a more goodly company of Bishops, than here I could reckon up. To omit many that were worthy of honourable remembrance, who had been some of them Confessors and Sufferers, others constant professors of the true reformed Religion; these I may not smother in silence without sacrilege, robbing God of his glory, this Church of its honour, and these Bishops of their deserved praises; most of whose works do yet speak for them, and loudly upbraid the ingratitude of those that cast dead flies of indignities upon such Bishops, whose names are as a precious Ointment poured out. What was ever more precious, more resplendent in any Church, than Bishop Jewel, for Learning, for Judgement, for Modesty, for Humility, for all Christian Gifts and Graces? What one or many Presbyters ever deserved so well of this Church and the Reformed Religion, as this one Bishop did, whom God used as a chosen arrow against the face of the enemies of this Church and the Reformed Religion? What man had more of the Majesty of goodness and Beauty of holiness than Bishop King? Who was more venerable than Bishop Cooper, though much molested by factious and unquiet spirits? Who had more ampleness and compleateness for a good Man, a good Christian, a good Scholar, a good Preacher, a good Bishop, than Bishop Andrews, a man of an astonishing excellency both at home and abroad? How shall I sufficiently express the learned and holy Elegancy of Bishop Lake, whose Sermons are so many rare Gems? or the holy Industry and modest Piety of Bishop Babington? Or the Nobleness, by Grace, by Gifts, by Birth and by Life, of Bishop Montacute? How acutely profound are the Disputes and Decisions of Bishop White? How full of equanimity & moderation was Bishop Overall? How clear, compendious and exact was Bishop Davenant? How fragrant and florid are the Writings, as ●●s the Life, of Bishop Field, whose Labours God did bless with the Dew of Heaven, he long ago asserting the honour of this Church by an unanswerable Vindication? What can be more beautiful for Learning, Judgement and Integrity than Bishop Bilson, whose excellent works if some in England had more studied, they had not so easily opposed the perpetual Government of the Church, which he proves to be Episcopacy? Was there any man more Saintly than Bishop Felton, who had been a good Patron to some Ministers that since have helped to destroy his Order? What could be more devout and thankful to God than Bishop Carleton, who hath erected a fair pillar of Gratitude for the remembrance of God's mercies to this Church and State? How commendable for ever will the learned Industry of Bishop Godwin appear to impartial Posterity, who hath with equal fidelity, diligence and eloquence preserved the History of our English Bishops for above a thousand years from oblivion? Nothing was beyond the courageous and conscientious freedom of Bishop Sinhouse, whose eloquent tongue and honest heart were capable to over-awe a Court, and to make Courtiers modest. Add to all these the famous Bishop Hall, who had in him all that was desirable in an excellent Bishop, for Learning, Meekness, Patience, Peaceableness: his eloquence both in speaking and writing was transcendent, yet the least of his excellencies. Lest any rust or soil should grow upon so great graces and abilities, he was (among other Bishops) polished by the Grindstones and roughness of these times; yea, there wanted not to his dying day some men, who gave him a greater lustre by their insolences. Who had ever more of the Dove and less of the Serpent than Bishop Potter, a man severely good, and conscientiously, not factiously, scrupulous in some things, but not as to Episcopacy? What shall I speak of the Meekness and Tender-heartedness of Bishop West field, who frequently softened his auditor's hearts, not only with his excellent Sermons, but his unaffected tears? yet was he forced among other Bishops to lie down in sorrow, though no doubt he now reaps in joy. Nothing was more mild, modest and humble, yet learned, eloquent and honest, than Bishop Winniffe. I conclude this goodly Regiment of Church-colonels, of Ecclesiastical Rulers, of venerable Bishops, with Bishop Prideaux, who was a Miscellany or Encyclopaedy of all Learning: after he had by many years' diligence honoured the Divinity-professors Chair, and the University of Oxford, together with the Nation, by his vast pains, and was deservedly made a Bishop, (though somewhat too late) he was at last so squeezed to nothing by the iron hand of our times, that he had nothing left to maintain himself and his children, See Bishop Prideaux his last Legacy. but dying bequeathed them Piety and Poverty as their Legacy. May we not cry out, as he did of old, Bone Deus, etc. Blessed God, to what times hast thou reserved us? what terrors hast thou showed us? If it be thus done in the fruitful, sound and green trees, what will be done with those that are hollow, barren and rotten, dry, twice dead, and pulled up by the roots? All these Heroes of Learning and Religion, these renowned Bishops, the honour of Episcopacy, the glory of this Church, the just boasting of this Nation, (together with many others) have, some long since, some of late, died in the Lord, and are at rest from the sore Labour and travels they in the evening of their lives met with under the Sun. Many of them were exhausted, distressed, despised, destroyed, as to all worldly enjoyments; yet not miserable, not so afflicted as to be forsaken of God, or despairing of God's mercies, though they found little from man. Nor is the English world, heretofore so full, so famous, so flourishing with rare Bishops, as yet so drained, but there are some such left as are worthy to bring on the Rear, and close up this gallant Troop of gowned Generals and mitred Commanders. If I might without offence to the Modesty and Gravity of such Bishops as are yet living and best known to me, I would tell the erring and ingrateful Age, that, as it was said of Gonsalvo, whom Guicciardine calls the great Captain, an Age is scarce able to breed or match such a Scholar, such a Writer, such a Bishop as Bishop Morton is. A most illustrious and invaluable Jewel, yet shut up now in a little box; a great and rich Vessel driven in his old Age to a small harbour, where his safety is tenuity and obscurity. Nor may I give a less tender touch of Dr. Juxon, whose modesty, fidelity and exactness was such, that when he bore the great envy of being at once a Lord Bishop of London and Lord Treasurer of England, yet he never had blame for either of them: his Government as a Bishop was gentle, benign, paternal; his managing of the Treasury was such, that he served his Prince faithfully, satisfied all his friends, and silenced all his enemies, of which he had enough as a Bishop, though as a man he was so meek and inoffensive, that I think he could contract no enmities with any. Some men wished they might have oftener heard him preach, and truly I was one of those; not only because preaching was so much in fashion at London, but because that City needed good preaching, and was to be much taken by it. Nor could any preacher in my judgement exceed the Bishop of London. I confess I never heard any man with more pleasure and profit, so much he had of Paul and Apollo's, of a Learned plainness and a useful elaboratenesse: when he preached of Mortification, of Repentance, and other Christian practics, he did it with such a stroke of unaffected eloquence, of potent demonstration and irresistible conviction, that few Agrippa's, or Festus', or Felixe's that heard, but must needs for the time and fit be almost persuaded to be penitent and mortified Christians. I will yet be so modestly and honestly impudent, as to mention two or three Bishops yet living, not because I know them, but because they are worthy to be known, loved and honoured by all good men. Such as Dr. Duppa the Bishop of Salisbury, a person of singular Prudence and Piety, equally Grave and Good, Learned and Religious, so eminent in many things, that he is worthy to be not only a Tutor to a Prince, but a Counsellor to a King, and no less to be a Bishop in the Church of Christ. Next I crave leave to mention Bishop King, of whom I need say no more, but that I think him a Son worthy of such a Father. I cannot forbear to conclude all with a mighty man, Dr. Brownrig Bishop of Excester, whose name and presence was once very Venerable to many Ministers, while they were orderly Presbyters; now he is a dread and terror to them, since they are become Presbyterians or Independents, such Grassehoppers they seem in their own eyes in comparison of his puissance, who so filled the Doctor's Chair in Cambridge, and the Pulpit in place where he lived, and had filled his Diocese, had he been permitted to do the office of a Bishop, that it would have been hard to have routed Episcopacy, if he had sooner stood in the gap, being justly esteemed among the Giantly or Chiefest Worthies of this Age for a Scholar, an Orator, a Preacher, a Divine, and a prudent Governor; so much mildness there is mixed with Majesty, and so much generosity with gentleness. But I earnestly beg his Lordships and the others pardon, since the iniquity of the times have compelled me thus far to transgress, as to commend such persons yet living, who though most commendable, yet are in nothing more than this, that they are more pleased to deserve, than to hear their just commendation; the best consciences being always attended with the most tender, modest and blushing foreheads. But I will trespass no further. CHAP. XXIII. A Review of our late English Bishops. BUt thus far I have set forth the worth of some (I am sure) of our English Bishops, even in those days which damned them all, that the world may see upon what men's heads the total ruin of Episcopacy and all Cathedral Churches have fallen; how there wanted not many good Bishops then, when worse and harder measure befell them and their Order than since England was Christian. Indeed many, yea most of our Bishops were as Noah's, Sems and Japhets; yet have all these been drowned in the Presbyterian Deluge. Even these made up the so odious, so unpopular, so decried Bishops in England. The pest and contagion of whose fate as it came first from Scotland, (where (no doubt) there were many Bishops of equal virtues, though inferior revenues to the worthy and well-known Dr. Spotswood Archbishop of St. Andrews, and Lord Chancellor of Scotland) so it reached to Ireland, where there wanted not Bishops worthy of the fraternity of Bishop Usher, Bishop Bedel and Bishop Bramhal, all cruelly persecuted first by Papists, and after by Antipapists though persons of the highest form for all excellencies, yet must all these be destroyed & their whole Order, with the destruction of Sodom. Although more than ten righteous Bishops, I am sure, were to be found in each of these British Churches, yet all must be routed, all rooted up, as guilty of the unpardonable sin of Prelacy; a new sin, and unheard of in the Church of Christ, but now to be put into the black Catalogue of scandalous sins, when Heresy, Schism, Sacrilege and Sedition must be left out. These, these and such like Bishops are the men whose fate I passionately pity; men famous in their generation, either for solid Preaching, or weighty writing, or grave counselling, or holy living, or prudent governing, or charitable giving (all of them for some, and some of them for all these excellencies.) These are made the most unsound, the most infamous and superfluous parts of this body politic and Ecclesiastic; these must be, one and all, represented to vulgar simplicity and scurrility as the Popes, the Antichrists, the Bite-sheep, the Oppressors, the Tyrants, the Greedy and dumb dogs, the Cretians, the Slow-bellies, the Devourers, the Destroyer's of all godliness and true Religion. These foul glosses, first made by Martin Mar-prelate of old against Episcopacy and the Bishops of England, are now set forth in a new and second edition, with larger notes and exquisite Commentaries upon them, intimating that these are the men who have by their Learned, Grave and Godly Misdemeanours, as Bishops, forfeited (not by any Law, but by absolute will and pleasure, merely as Bishops) all their Houses and Revenues, all their Honours and Preferments, yea their good Name and Reputation, which by Law and desert they had obtained and enjoyed, yea all the Ancient Dignity, Apostolic Authority and Constant Succession of their Place and Function in the Church; which had not more of eminency than of necessity, nor more of necessity than of Primitive and Catholic Antiquity. For the real faults of some, and the imaginary of other Bishops (whose name was their only crime) must all Ages after them be for ever punished with the want of such Grave, Learned, Godly and Venerable Bishops, as have been destroyed, (for better cannot be had or desired:) and posterity must be ever exposed in these British Churches to all those Factions, Fedities, Divisions, Disorders and Confusions, which follow the want of due Episcopal order and Government in the Church. But Bishops (qua tales) were enemies to the power of Godliness: Obj. the worst of them and the best of them were men too much devoted to empty forms of Religion; they urged Ceremonies so far as to neglect substances, straining at gnats and swallowing Camels; they justled out preaching by Catechising, and overlayed Ministers private prayers by their long Liturgies; they did not kindle, but quench, damp and resist that spirit of Zeal and Reformation which for many years hath burned in the breasts of many godly Christians, by whose flamings and refining at last all Bishops, as dross, with all their ornaments and adherents, have been justly consumed. I confess I cannot tell how to answer for all the actions and expressions of every Bishop; they were of age, Answ. and able to have answered for themselves, if any of them as offenders of our Laws had been brought to plead for themselves, which not one of them was, as to Ecclesiastical matters, that I ever heard of; for the weight of the Archbishop's charge was chiefly upon civil or secular affairs. Who knows not that Bishops were but men? that if left to their private spirits and single Counsels, they might as easily over or under-do, as their Adversaries have done, beyond or short of what becomes wise and good men? The greatest blame that I perceive among any of them, was, that they would enjoin, or exact, or remit any thing as to public Order, Discipline and Government of the Church, without a joint agreement and uniformity among themselves, according to what the Law allowed or commanded. This fraternal concurrence and mutual correspondence had been worthy of Grave, Wise and Learned men: for all private fancies obtruded by any one or two Bishops in so tender a case as Religion is, and upon so touchy a people as the English now are, do but breed variety, this differences, these disputes, these dissensions, these despites, these oppositions, these breed confusions. All the actions and injunctions, all the Articles and disquisitions of Bishops as such, should have been as exactly consonant and uniform as possibly could be. But as to the crimination, That Bishops, like Hernshaws, abounded in the wing and feather of Ceremony, but had little substance or body as to the power of Godliness: First, Scripture and Christ's example teach us, that decent and apt Ceremonies, public or private, are not in their nature enemies, but helps, to the power of Godliness; as putting off all Ornaments, eating the bread of Sorrow, putting on Sackcloth and Ashes, Fasting, Weeping, Smiting the breast, Bowing, Kneeling, Prostrating to the ground, being all night in Solitude and Darkness, lying in the Dust, etc. all these were and are helps to an humble, broken, contrite, penitent and devout temper of Soul. Contrary, Company, Wine and Oil, Singing and Music, Dancing, Discourse and Laughter, were and are helps to holy joy and thankful jubilations; so are lifting up the eyes and hands to Heaven, Sighing and Groaning, to fervency of Prayer and Praises. It is but a rude, affected and fanatic imagination of clownish Christians, that decent Ceremonies of Religion, wisely appointed in any Church, or fitly applied by any private Christian in his private devotions, these cannot stand, but the substance and sincerity of Godliness must fall; that there can be no forms of Godliness, but the power of it must vanish or be banished. They may as well imagine, that they cannot put on their clothes, or dress themselves handsomely, but they must presently cease to be wise men, or honest men and good women, but must turn either spectres or dishonest. Do we not find that many such Christians, who have of later years cast off all the former decent and wholesome forms of Godliness, (either by Profaneness, or Preciseness, or Peevishness, or Faction, or Atheism, or Superstition) are most apparently now removed from the real power of Godliness, which mortifies all inordinate lusts, moderates all passions, brings the thoughts, words and deeds of Christians to the exact conformity of true Holiness, Justice and Charity? Who are more vain babblers and endless janglers, who more unholy, unjust, uncharitable, unmerciful, implacable, immoderate in their passions, presumptions and revenges, than many of those who have most stripped themselves, as to their Religion, of their clothes and cover, that they may prophesy with Saul quaking and naked, enjoying what immodest and insolent freedoms they list to use and call Christian Liberties and Simplicities? Certainly, the power of Godliness is most seen, when men having most power in their hand to do good or evil, do choose the good and refuse the evil. No men were more gracious and spiritual, none did more good, than many of the Bishops of England in their prosperity, both publicly and privately; yea no men have suffered more evil in their adversity with more silence and patience. They only once cried out, when they durst not go to the Parliament by Land, and going by water, they were, with St. Stephen, assaulted on the shore with a shower of stones, and could not land with safety of their lives: Since that time, though fleeced and flayed, yet they have held their peace under the shearers hands, both singly and socially, as far as ever I have heard or read. It is no great sign of the power of Godliness, that men can endure no power, civil or Ecclesiastic, but in their own hands, and think no power is of God which other men lawfully enjoy. Since Bishops, and Episcopacy, and Liturgy, and Ceremonies, and constant Catechizing, and all uniform celebration of Sacraments are discarded; since nothing but Ministers private breasts and brains must serve the Church, with their formed or informed, constant or extemporary conceptions, Praying, and Preaching, and Celebrating; is the power of Godliness, as to true grace, or the fruits of the Spirit, much advanced? Is there more constant hearing of sound Doctrine? Is there more of sober and settled Knowledge? Is there more Modesty, Humility, Equity, Charity, Obedience, Unity, Proficiency, Patience, Love and Fear of God, or Reverence of Man, or Conscience of Duty to both, than was formerly? If these Antiepiscopal men (who so much pretend to the bare sword of the Spirit, that they scorn to wear any scabbard of Form or Ceremony) have with Saul utterly destroyed the Amalekites of Immorality and Hypocrisy, what means the bleating, crying, complaining, biting and devouring of one another which are among us? what mean the factions, divisions, envies, animosities among both Ministers and People? what means the contempt of the Word of God, of all public Duties, and of the best Ministers, who are most able, most humble, and most constant? what means the Uncatechisedness, the Sottishness, Profaneness, Impudence and Irreligion which are so much spreading and prevailing? How many rich and poor people neither have, nor care for, any Preachers at all? No Sermons, no Prayers, no Catechises, no Sacraments, no Morals, no Civilities almost are left among them. All the Religion of many is resolved into disputing and denying Tithes, into paying their Taxes, into the fear of Soldiers, the Sword and Laws, the Prisons and Gallows or Men; lastly, into enjoying what liberties or looseness in Religion they fancy best, as far and as long as they list. But are there, in earnest, generally more or better Scholars, or Ministers, or Christians, now than there were under Bishops? I trow not; scarce the half part for number, & scarce the half part so able for Learning as they were heretofore: as our Timber for great Oaks, so our Ministry in England for grave Divines, is much wasted. Whatever the matter was and is, I am sure, if it was not the Wisdom and Piety of Bishops, it was the undeserved Blessing of God, that made the power of Godliness, in sound Knowledge, Humility, Faith, Repentance, Love of God, Justice and Charity to men, in unity amongst Christians, in good Lives and good Works, appear much more to me and others under Episcopacy, than ever it hath done since its dissolution. Undoubtedly, true Religion, both as to its profession and power, as Christian and as Reformed, as opposite to Profaneness and to Popish Superstition, did, among the generality of the Nation, both Nobility, Gentry and Commons, thrive better when it fed on the pults and water (as some esteemed of the Liturgy, good Catechising, sound Preaching, frequent Communicating, and orderly Governing under Bishops) than since it hath fed of other men's dainties, who left a lean Church and Clergy, while they have been filled with Kings and Bishops portions. The garden of Christ's Church was much safer and better among those Ceremonious Briars and Thorns (as some count them, yet good senses of religious Order and Honour) under Episcopacy, than since it hath been laid so open and wild, without ancient boundaries or defences. Alas, poor Ministers (even all upon the point) have no authority among the Common-people, but what is precarious and despicable, which people contemn, cast and kick off as they list, unless so far as a Soldier may perchance smile upon a Preacher. Object. But to avoid these just Ironies and retorted Sarcasmes, the more grave and modest antiepiscopal Spirits do now profess, That their fierce wrath was intended only against such Prelates as were indeed Persecutors, Proud, Idle, Superstitious, Imperious, Luxurious, Court-Complyers and Flatterers, Answ. etc. I reply, first as to persecution, First, Many Bishops were blamed as too remiss and indulgent by some of their own Order who drove more furiously. Secondly, all were not equally such persecutors in their enemy's sense; yet all of them equally complain of being no less persecuted. For their Court-Complying, they had been very ingrateful men, if they had not owned with all loyal respect and service the fountain of their Honour and Estates; yet good men could not love their King without loving their Country, nor their Country without their King; which all godly and honest Bishops did: if any others did not, why did not Justice separate between the good and the bad, the precious and the vile? Why should good Bishops, yea and good Episcopacy itself, suffer? As Abraham said to God, Gen. 18.25. so doth God say to every good man's conscience, Far be it from thee to destroy the righteous with the wicked. Why should not all Presbyters, yea & Presbytery itself, as well suffer a final and total extirpation, (which some men have designed and desired) since (no doubt) there were and now are many, yea as many, nay more for the number, of insufficient preachers and unworthy Presbyters, as there were of Bishops; and few, if any of them, so able, so worthy, so well-deserving of the public, both Church and State, as some Bishops were? Why should Presbytery be preserved alive, and Episcopacy, which is the elder, be slain? Since Episcopacy in all Ages hath preserved Presbytery, why should Presbytery ingratefully extirpate Episcopacy? Was it not because Episcopacy was fatter than Presbytery, or had a better fleece, and therefore was fitter for a sacrifice? O no; but Presbytery (they say) is a plant of Jesus Christ's, which Episcopacy is not; and therefore to be weeded out. Truly, it may as well be said by the partial Presbyterian, that the seventy Disciples were of Jesus Christ's appointment, but the twelve Apostles were not; that God created the lesser Stars and Planets, but not the Sun and Moon; that God made people, but not Princes; that he form the feet and hands, but not the eyes and heads of natural bodies. This is the great question, which is not to be thus begged or supposed, but should have been solidly proved, before judgement had been so severely passed against Episcopacy: we should have seen the time and place, when and where Episcopacy usurped, when and where Presbyters ruled, in this or any Church, by way of parity, without any Bishop, Precedent or Apostle above them. The constant stream of this Jordan, which hath flowed from the first springs and fountains of Christianity, ever flowing and overflowing in the Catholic Church, this should have been miraculously divided, before that Presbytery should have boasted of its passing over dryshod, and of its drowning all Bishops and all Episcopacy (as the Egyptians) in a Red Sea, between the returnings and closings of the waters of Independency and Presbytery. Whenas it is well known, even by their own confessions that have any grains of Learning in them, that Presbyters were ever as Ciphers in all Churches, insignificant as to Church-Government, without Bishops being set over them and before them, as Capital Figures. Bishops were ever esteemed as the chief Captains of the Lords host in this Militant State, principal Stewards of Christ's household, head-shepherds of his flock, the (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) first-ordained and first-ordainers of the Evangelicall Ministry, the first consecrators and distributers of all sacred mysteries, the prime Conservators and Actors of all Ecclesiastical Authority: These were in all Ages, next the Scriptures, the Church's chiefest-Oracles and Interpreters; these were the grand Divines in all Times and Places, not superficially armed with light armour, only for the preaching or Homilisticall flourishes of a Pulpit, but with the weighty and complete armour of veterane and valiant soldiers, who were to stand in the forefront of the Lords Battles, to receive the first charge and impressions from the Church's enemies of their force, cunning and malice; these were the fairest transcripts or Copies of Apostolical Mission and Evangelicall Commission; these were the great Magazines of sound and vast Learning; these the Centres, Refuges, Sanctuaries & Succour of both Ministers and people in all Churches; these gave, as holy Orders to Presbyters and Deacons, so decent Ceremonies to all the Church, also fatherly Counsels and friendly encouragements to all worthy Ministers, when young and novices, weak and defective, when fearful and dejected; these gave Vigour and Authority to that Discipline which was necessary to punish and repress scandalous livers; these, these worthy Bishops (such as we had good store in England, even now at the last cast) were the Chariots and horsemen of Israel; these always (by the help of God) recovered the Ark of God, after the Philistines had taken it; these recollected the flocks of Christ, after they had been worried and scattered by grievous wolves and foxes; being persons of more public influence, of more eminent example, of larger hearts and greater spirits (commonly) than most or any private Ministers; most men's spirits shrinking with the tenuity of their place and condition, and enlarging with the ampleness of them: God usually giving of that spirit of Government and Authority to those that are placed justly in it, as he did to Moses, Aaron, Joshua, Saul, David, Samuel and others, both Princes and Prelates, Judges and Magistrates, who but equal (it may be) to inferior persons in sanctifying Gifts and Graces, (as the Bishops of England might be to the many godly Presbyters) yet in this they exceeded them, not because placed above them in worldly Place and secular Honour, but because they, from the Apostles pattern, were particularly appointed and commissioned by the Church of Christ, and so fitted to execute those eminent Offices of Church-government in Ordination and Jurisdiction, beyond what was ever given to any Presbyters without their Bishops. Having then such a cloud of Witnesses both at home and abroad, of former and latter times, by which to justify the deserved eminency of Episcopacy, and to condemn the insolency of Presbytery, I cannot forbear with St. Paul to demand in the behalf of our worthy English Bishops, who have been so disinherited, so discountenanced, so dejected, so despised, so desolated, so depressed. Wherein did they come short of the very best of those Presbyters, (who were known sufficiently to myself) who h●●e so studiously sought their ruin, and so ambitiously usurped against them? Were Presbyters good Preachers? so were Bishops. Were Presbyters able Writers? Bishops were more. Were Presbyters zealous Opposers of Popery? so were Bishops. Were Presbyters devout Men? so were Bishops. Were Presbyters unblameable Livers? so were Bishops. Were Presbyters Martyrs and Confessors? so were Bishops. Were Presbyters Instruments for a just and orderly Reformation of Religion? Bishops were more. Were Presbyters useful to Church and State, by word and example, in their petty Parishes? Bishops were more in their primitive Parishes or larger Dioceses, which were long known and of force in the Church of Christ, before lesser Parishes were in use or in being. Were Presbyters hospitable and charitable, (without which all Religion, Faith and Fervency is nothing?) Bishops were more; equal in their Affections, beyond them in their Liberalities as much as their Revenues. Are Presbyters that were able, faithful, humble and orderly, gone to Heaven? so (no doubt, through God's mercy) are those holy Bishops who have been cast upon Dunghills, as Lazarus and Job, by the cacozelotry of some men in our times, who have so much houted and outed, despised and destroyed them. Many Presbyters have done well and learnedly, but many Bishops have exceeded them all; who were so far from losing or abating the Gifts and Graces they had when but Presbyters, that they increased them and improved them when made Bishops, above other Presbyters, who were then at their best, when they most kept within that place and station in which God, and the Church, and the Laws, and their own proportions had set them, in an holy and humble, a rational and religious, a pious and prudent subordination to their respective Bishops, as their lawful Superiors and reverend Fathers, whose names are, and ever will be, precious to all those that understand what belongs to excellent Learning, to eminent Virtue, to Christian Courage, to admirable Patience, to what is Primitive, Catholic and complete in the Order, Honour, Polity, Government and Happiness of the Church of Christ. No Learned or Worthy Writer, Foreign or Domestic, who can fly above the Parasitisme of popular Pamphlets, (which will soon be condemned to Chandler's shops, to Ovens and to Privies) no pen (I say) that hath any genius of Learning, Life and Honour in it, will blot its paper, or blunt itself, with the names of those that have been or are the unjust, malicious and implacable enemies, the insolent despisers and injurious destroyers of such Primitive Bishops, and such Primitive Episcopacy, as these British Churches plentifully afforded. But every worthy Author will be ambitious to adorn his works, and enamel his History, with the illustrious names of such meritorious Bishops, who have not only been worthy doers, but unworthily, yet worthy, sufferers, very patiently though very undeservedly; knowing, with Paulinus Bishop of Nola, how to lose all things but God and a good Conscience, which are the true Honour and Eternal Treasures of good Christians. If the most of, or all our Bishops had been vile men, and fit to be destroyed, why was not their wickedness and unworthiness publicly and personally charged? Why were they not legally Summoned, Accused, Tried, Witnessed against, Convinced, Condemned? Might not many, yea most of our Bishops have said in their proportion as our Blessed Saviour, Who is it that can accuse me of sin? what evil have I done? for which of my good works, John 10.32. in Preaching, Praying, Writing, Giving, Living, do you stone me, or seek to destroy me and my function? They were neither evil men, nor evil Christians, nor evil Preachers, nor evil Bishops; 1 Pet. 4.15. yet nothing must be left them, but the grace and opportunity to suffer (not as evil doers, but) as became Learned, Grave and Good men. Which Episcopal glory and Christian grace they have in an high degree attained, many of them saying with more truth than the Stoics were wont (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) I have lost nothing that was mine, yet I have all that is worth having; notwithstanding that they were deprived of all their Ecclesiastical Estates, not allowed, according to the mercy of Henry the eighth to Monks and Friars, to Nuns and Votaries, (which were grown the superfluous Leeches and Wens of the Nation) any pension during their lives. Some Bishops could never get the Arrears due to them before the dreadful Act of dissolution: many of them were spoilt, as of other goods, so of their good Libraries; where their best company, faithfullest friends, and surest comforters were to be found amidst those afflictions, desertions and solitudes, which they were sure to meet with both from foes and friends; most men being friends to men's fortunes, not to their persons or virtues. With these dark foils and deep shadows hath the brightness of our best Bishops been set off to after-Ages. O what admiration, what astonishment, what horror will there be, when impartial Posterity shall read, together with their excellent writings, the plentiful poverties, the illustrious obscurities, the honourable contempts, with which the excellent Bishops of these British Churches have been at last rewarded; even then when indefatigable studies, incomparable endowments and holy improvements, had both fitted them for and preferred them to those honourable employments, rewards and encouragements, which they lawfully obtained and worthily enjoyed! being persons for their Graces and Gifts, for their Learning and Judgement, for their Gravity and Prudence, much more worthy (if God had seen fit) to have been continued in their Golden Candlesticks, and to have shined to their last in this Church, than to have been so shut up in dark lanterns, or to be put under such bushels as not only hide, but quite extinguish their personal and public lustre; so burying, as much as may be, while they are yet alive, their excellent abilities, which did not consist only in good preaching, but also wise Governing their Churches, in keeping both Ministers and people in good Order and Unity, in being not only Monitors and Fatherly Correctors, but Refuges and Defences to their Clergy and others, as Fathers to Sons, in ordaining and encouraging able Ministers, in continuing a Catholic succession of a complete and Apostolic Ministry to this as all other Ancient and Renowned Churches, in preventing that great Scandal and Schism (to the Papists (now) most desired and welcome) which is and will ever hereafter be imputed to us with unanswerable reproaches, while, by Apostatising from Primitive Episcopacy, we do not so much forsake the Roman party, (which in this point, as in many others, is Orthodox and sound) as the Catholic Church, and that Authoritative order which began with Christianity, and aught as much as may be in providence for ever to continue with it. An ordained Ministry, a right Government, and good Order in the Church, being (as I have demonstrated) no less necessary for the Church's well-being, than the Word and Sacraments are for the being or beginning of it. Religion and Christian Churches soon moulder to nothing, where there is not an indisputable, Authoritative and complete Ministry. Nor is this to be (ordinarily) had without Episcopacy; lest of all with the violent and undeserved extirpation of Episcopacy, if we will follow the judgement, custom and practice of all Christian Churches from the beginning, rather than modern novellers, who will never be able to make up the breaches, or to patch up the Rents, which they have either rashly or unnecessarily made in this particular, not from the Roman only, but indeed from the Christian and Catholic pattern, to which the Reformation of the Church of England studied exactly to conform, as in other things, so in the point of Episcopacy, until the fatal fury of these later times: which is the more unexcusable, because no Church in the world had less cause either to complain of, or to reject, its Bishops or Episcopacy; for certainly no Church since the Apostles days was ever more flourishing under Episcopacy (for other Government was not known till of late) nor had any Reformed Church either more worthy Bishops, for the most part of them, or more able Ministers, even at that time when all Bishops, with their Order and Succession, were devoted to utter destruction. Not that I here forget how some Bishops in England were under very great Jealousies, as if they were Popishly affected and inclined, as if they were underhand Factors for Rome, and secret Traitors to the Reformed Religion: Thus most (if not all) of them were censured by some men of very sharp noses and severe tongues, yea and condemned before they were tried, for superstitious and Super-ceremonious Prelates. Hence that popular Odium and Indignity of joining Prelacy and Popery together: which Sarcasm and reproach, I confess, aught by all wise Bishops and other Ministers to have been seriously avoided, so as no way justly to deserve any such suspicion, taunt or proverb; there being nothing less advancing, or more diminishing, the true respect and honour of Christian Ministers and Reformed Bishops, than unworthily to comply with or conform to the Bishop and Church of Rome, in those things where the distance is as just and necessary as it is great, and grounded on God's Word, being founded upon that eternal distance which is and ever will be between Light and Darkness, Truth and Falsehood, Error and sound Doctrine, between the Institutions of Christ and the sacrilegious Inventions of Men, between the infallible Rule and Oracles of God's Word in the Scripture, and the variable Canons of poor men, between the Catholic Custom of pure and Primitive Churches, and the particular practices of later Usurpations, brought in in the twilight of dark and depraved times. These diametral distances ought ever to be preserved by all godly Bishops, who may not come nearer to Popery than Popery is near to Christianity, or than Antichristian policies may correspond in some things with Christian piety. Which just bounds, as far as ever I could understand, our pious Bishops in England, from the first Reformation till now, have religiously observed; not one of them (much less all) deliberately or openly owning any communion with the Church of Rome, where they saw the Church of England had made a just, clear and necessary separation: yea, the learned Bishops of England have, generally, so fully confuted the Falsity, Injury and Indignity of that calumny, both by their Preaching, Writing, Living and Dying, that men must be blind with despite, mad with malice, or drunk with passion, when they vomit out so foul calumnies against all Bishops and Episcopacy in England, as if they were Panders for Popery, and Pimps to the Whore of Babylon; for this is the language of some men's oratorious Zeal against our Bishops and all Episcopacy, which will in time much more agree with Presbytery and Independency, I fear, than ever it did with Episcopacy. But it will be demanded of me, whence then arose this smoke of Jealousy, which was so popular and spread abroad, that it made so many pure Eyes to ache and smart, yea to grow watery and blood-shotten, not only among the vulgar, but even among our greatest Seers and Overseers? Was there no fire where there was so great a smoke? My Answer is, these jealousies of some Bishops (and other Ministers who most imitated them) being Popishly inclined, never had, so far as ever I could discern, any farther ground than this: Some Bishops pleased themselves, beyond what was generally practised in England, with a more ceremonious conformity than others observed; first, to the Canons and Injunctions, which (they thought) were yet in force in the Church of England, being not repealed, but only antiquated through a general disuse; next, being aged and learned men, and more conversant in the Antiquities of the Church than younger Ministers, they found that such ceremonious Solemnities in Religion were then very much used, without any sin or scandal; no godly Bishop, Presbyter, or other good Christian, ever making scruple of using the sign of the Cross in Baptism, and at other times of Bowing, Kneeling, Prostrating himself, or of putting his mouth to the ground and kissing the Pavement when he came to worship God, or to celebrate holy Mysteries, expressing thereby that Humility, Faith, Fervency, sense of his own sinful Unworthiness, and that unfeigned Reverence which he bore in his heart toward God and his Service. This, I suppose, made some of our Bishops hope that they might with the like inoffensiveness add such Solemnity to Sanctity, and such outward Veneration to inward Devotion, and yet be as far from Popery or Superstition as the ancient Christians were; yea, as those Ministers and others now pretend to be, who make so much of lifting up their eyes and hands in Prayer, or who are pleased to be uncovered in Praying, Preaching, Singing, or Celebrating the Sacraments. Besides this, many Bishops found a secret genius of Rusticity and Rudeness, of Familiarity and Irreverence, strangely prevailing among Country-Preachers and People so far, that they saw many of them placed much of their Religion in affecting a slovenly rudeness and irreverence in all public and holy Duties; loath to kneel, not only at the Sacrament, but at any Prayers, or to be uncovered at any Duty, enemies to any man, and prejudiced against all he did, if he showed any ceremonious respect in his serving God: They saw some were grown so spiritual, that they forgot they had bodies; and pretending to approve themselves to God only as to the inward man, they cared not for any thing that was regular, exemplary, orderly, comely or reverend, as to the outward celebration, in the judgement and appointment of the Church of England. Hence some men grew to such great applaudings of themselves, (as if this were the only simplicity of the Gospel) that they thought every man went about to cut the throat of Reformed Religion, who applied any Scissors or Razor to pair off rudeness and rusticity, or to trim it to any decency in the outward Ministrations, according to what seemed best to the Church of England. Many Bishops thought that Religion would grow strangely wild, hirsute, horrid and incult, like Nebuchadnezars hair and nails, if it were left to the boisterous Clowneries and unmannerly Liberties which every one would affect, contrary to the public appointment of the Church. If some Bishops pleased themselves in using such outward and enjoined Ceremonies, beyond what was ordinary to some men, yet certainly a thousand decent and innocent Ceremonies, such as those enjoined by the Church of England were declared to be, do not amount to one Popish Opinion; nor are they so heavy as one popular & erroneous Principle, which tends to Faction, Licentiousness and Profaneness. Ceremonies may possibly be thought superfluous, because not of the substance of the Duty; but they are not to be charged as superstitious where the Devotion of the heart is holy, and the Duty is sincerely performed for the Essentials of it, as it is instituted by Christ, & enjoined by the Word of God, who hath left the ceremonious part of Religion, more or less, very much to the prudence of his Church, according to the several forms and customs of civil respect and decency used in the world; which St. Austin and St. Ambrose with all the Ancients declare, placing no further Religion in any Ceremony of humane invention and use, than it served aptly to excite or express inward sincerity of Devotion, and an outward conformity to the decent customs of any Church: Which keeping to the Truth, Faith and holy Institutions of Christ, for the main, were not unblamable for that variety of Ceremony, which was and might be observed without any damage to Truth, or breach of Charity. As to the main charge then, that Bishops in England were Popish, that is warping from the Reformed Doctrine of the Church of England, as it was and is stated opposite to the Romish errors and corruptions, I do believe that the Bishops of England were in all Ages since the Reformation, and in this last, as much removed, and as free from Popery, as the most rigid censors of them, who dare accuse every man for Popish, who is not boiled up to the same superstitious height and Ceremonious Antipathy with themselves, or who do not presently adopt every man's new fancy, opinion and form of Religion, (though private, foreign and impertinent to us) rather than the public Authority and wisdom of the Church of England in its religious determinations and injunctions; which were not more Moderate than Orthodox, Orderly and Comely, not partaking of the Romish contagion, though it did not abhor the Roman or any Christians Communion, so far as Rome kept any Communion with Jerusalem, I mean with the Primitive, Catholic and true Church of Christ. I do not pretend to search the hearts of any Bishops, nor (it may be) should I have approved some things which some of them said or did, as to the unseasonableness, rigour and excess: yet this I affirm, that those men must have foreheads of flint, hearts of brass, and pens of Iron, who dare to charge with Popery any one of those excellent Bishops whom I have mentioned with honour; besides many more whom I have omitted, who better knew the true Medium of Religion and Measures of Reformation, between Superstition and Profaneness, Affectation and Irreverence, Indevoutnesse and Rudeness, than any of their fiercest opposers and unjust destroyers. And since I have thus far undertaken, not the Patrociny (which is a work far above me) but such a parentation at the Funeral of my Fathers as may (I hope) not misbecome me, I shall further adventure to do so much right to some Bishops, to whom I was most a stranger, as to this foul suspicion of Popery, which being first fixed upon them, was easily diffused to all the Bishops of England, by the wont spreading of all envious and evil reports, which easier find entertainment in men's hearts and tongues, than any that are good: For these seem to men to lessen themselves by commending others; the others help either to cover or excuse men's own faults, or to set off their seeming zeal and virtues. The first and greatest was the last Archbishop of Canterbury, who was by many suspected and charged not only as Popishly affected himself, but as a poisoner of the whole stream and current of the Reformed Religion in England; at last he was treated either as a Heretic or a Traitor, or both, to Church and State. It becomes not me to sentence either the sentenced, or sentencers that adjudged him to death, his and their judgement is with the Lord; only as to the aspersion of his being Popish in his judgement (which reflected, in the repute and event, upon all the Bishops of England,) truly his own Book may best of any and sufficiently, vindicate him to be a very great Antipapist: great, I say, because it seems by that Learned dispute, that he dissented from Popery not upon popular surmises and easy prejudices, but very learned and solid grounds, which true Reason and Religion make good, agreeable to the judgement of the Catholic Church in the purest and best times. And in this the Archbishop doth, to my judgement, so very impartially weigh the state and weight of all the considerable differences between the Papists and the English Protestants, (not such as are simple, futile and fanatic, but learned, serious and sober) that he neither gratifies the Romanist, nor exasperates him, beyond what is just; neither warping to a novel and needless super-reformation, which is a deformity on the right hand, nor to a subreformation, which is a deformity on the left, but keeping that golden Mean which was held by the Church of England, and the greatest defenders of it. As to his secret design of working up this Church by little and little to a Romish conformity and captivity, I do not believe he had any such purpose or approved thought; because, besides his declared judgement and conscience, I find no secular policy or interest which he could thereby gain, either private or public, but rather lose much of the greatness and freedom which he and other Bishops with the whole Church had: without which temptation no man in charity may be suspected to act contrary to so clear convictions, so deliberate and declared determinations of his conscience and judgement in Religion, as the Archbishop expresses in that very excellent Book. I am indeed prone to think, that possibly He wished there could have been any fair close or accommodation between all Christian Churches, (the same which many grave and learned men have much desired:) And it may be his Lordship thought himself no unfit instrument to make way for so great and good a work, considering the eminencies of parts, power and favour which he had. Haply he judged (as many learned and moderate men have) that in some things between Papists and Protestants, differences are made wider, and kept more open, raw and sore than need be, by the private pens and passions of some men, and the interests of some little parties, whose partial policies really neglect the public and true interest of the Catholic Church and Christian Religion, which consists much in peace as well as in purity, in charity as in verity: he found that where Papists were silenced and convinced in the more grand and pregnant disputes, (that they are novel, partial, and unconforme to the Catholic Church in ancient times; as in the Cup withdrawing, in the peremptory defining of Transubstantiation, in public Latin prayers, such as common people understand not what is prayed or said, in praying to Angels and Saints, in worshipping Relics and Images with divine worship, in challenging of a Primacy of Divine Power and Jurisdiction to the Bishop of Rome over all, in their adding Apocryphal Books to the proper and ancient Canon of the Scripture, in their forbidding marriage to the Clergy, and the like) when in these points the Romanists were tired, discountenanced and convinced, than he found they recovered spirits, and contested afresh against the unreasonable transports, violences and immoderations of some professing to be Protestants, who, to avoid Idolatry and Superstition, run to sacrilege and rudeness in Religion, denying many things that are just, honest, safe, true and reasonable, merely out of an (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) excessive Antipathy to Papists. Hence some are run so far that they will have as no material Churches built, or used, or consecrated, so no Liturgy, never so sound, solemn, and easy to be understood; so as no Bishops, never so holy and Orthodox, so no Ministers rightly ordained by them, no orderly Ceremonies or decent Rites whatsoever used by the Papists, though they first had these from those Churches which were yet beautiful and pure in their Primitive health and integrity. The truth is, it would make a wise man mad to fall under the sinister censures and oppressions of all vulgar opinions, who still urge in things indifferent that unsociableness which is between light and darkness, truth and error, Reformation and Superstition, never suspecting themselves for superstitious in being so Anticeremonious, Antiliturgicall and antiepiscopal: nor are they jealous lest any thing that hath the heat of their zeal might want the light of true judgement, and be like a Tailor's goose or pressing iron, hot and heavy enough, but neither bright nor light, neither seeing nor shining. Truly I find the calmeness and gravity of sober men's judgements is prone to improve much by Age, Experience, & Reading of the Ancients, hereby working out that juvenile leaven and lee, which is prone to puff up and work over younger spirits and less decocted tempers in their first fervors and agitations. Possibly the Archbishop and some other Bishops of his mind did rightly judge, that the giving an enemy fair play by just, safe and honourable concessions, was not to yield the cause or conquest to him, but the more to convince him of his weakness; when no honest yield could help him any more, than they did indamage the true cause or courage of his Antagonist. For my part, I think the Archbishop of Canterbury was neither Calvinist, nor Lutheran, nor Papist, as to any side and party, but all, so far as he saw they agreed with the Reformed Church of England, either in fundamentals, or innocent and decent superstructures: yet I believe he was so far a Protestant and of the Reformed Religion, as he saw the Church of England did protest against the Errors, Corruptions, Usurpations and Superstitions of the Church of Rome; or against the novel opinions and practices of any party whatsoever. And certainly he did with as much Honour as Justice so far own the Authentic Authority, Liberty and Majesty of the Church of England, (in its Reforming and Settling of its Religion,) that he did not think fit any private new Masters whatever should obtrude any Foreign or Domestic Dictates to her, or force her to take her Copy of Religion from so petty a place as Geneva was, or Francfort, or Amsterdam, or Wittenberg, or Edinburgh, no nor from Augsburg or Arnheim, nor any Foreign City or Town, any more than from Trent or Rome, none of which had any Dictatorian Authority over this great and famous Nation or Church of England, further than they offered sober Counsels, or suggested good Reasons, or cleared true Religion by Scripture, and confirmed it by good Antiquity, as the best interpreter and decider of obscure places and dubious cases. Nor did his Lordship esteem any thing as the voice of the Church of England, which was not publicly agreed to and declared by King and Parliament, according to the advice and determinate judgement of a national Synod and lawful Convocation convened and approved by the chief Magistrate, which together made up the complete Representative, the full sense and suffrage of the Church of England. His Lordship (no doubt) thought it (as indeed it is) a most peddling, partial and mechanic way of Religion, for any Church or Nation, once well settled, to be swayed and tossed to and fro by the private opinions of any men whatsoever, never so godly, contrary to Public, national and Ecclesiastical Constitutions; which carried with them, as infinitely more Authority, so far more maturity, prudence and impartiality of Counsel than was to be found or expected by any wise men in any single person, or in any little junctoes of Assemblies, or select Committees of Laymen whatsoever. And truly in this I am so wholly of his Lordship's opinion, that I think we ha●e in nothing weakened and disparaged more our Religion, as Reform in England, than by listening too much to, and crying up beyond measure, private Preachers or Professors, be they what they will for their grace, gifts or zeal; who by popular insinuations here and there aim to set up with great confidence their own or other men's (pious it may be, I am sure) presumptuous novelties, against the solemn and public Constitutions or determinations of such a Church as England was. These, these agitations and adherencies have undermined our Firmeness and Unity by insensible degrees. What was Luther, or Calvin, or Zuinglius, or Knox, or Beza, or Cartwright, or Baines, or Sparks, or Brightman, (not to disparage the worth which I believe was really in any of them or their Disciples) to be put into the balance against the whole Church of England, when it had once Reform and settled itself to its content, by joint Counsel, public consent and supreme Authority? Which hath had in all Ages, and eminently since the Reformation, both Bishops and other Ministers of its Communion, no way (singly) inferior to the best of those men, and jointly far beyond them all; whose concurrent judgement and determination I would an hundred times sooner follow, than all, much more any one of those men: yea possibly I could name some one man, whom I might without injury prefer to any one of those forenamed persons; such was Melanchthon abroad, and such was our Bishop Jewel at home. And indeed the Church of England had (blessed be God) so many such Jewels of her own, that she needed not to borrow any little gems from any foreigners; nor might any of them, without very great Arrogancy, Vanity and Immodesty (as I conceive) seek to strip her of her own Ornaments, and impose theirs upon her or her Clergy. Which high value, it is probable, as to his Mother the Church of England and her Constitutions, was so potent in the Archbishop of Canterbury, that, as he thought it not fit to subject her to the insolency of the Church of Rome, so nor to the impertinencies of any other Church or Doctor, of far less name and repute in the Christian world. No doubt, his Lordship thought it not handsome in Mr. Calvin to be so far (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, rather than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) censorious of the Church of England, as to brand its devotion or Liturgy with his tolerabiles ineptiae, who knew not the temper of the Nation, requiring then not what was absolutely best, but most conveniently good: and such not only the Liturgy was, but those things which he calls tolerable toys. This charitable sense I suppose I may justly have of this very active and very unfortunate Prelate, as he stood at a great distance from me, and eminence above me; against whom I confess I was prone in my greener years to receive many popular prejudices, upon the common report and interpretation of his public actions. In one of which I was never satisfied, as to the Piety or Policy of it; that when his Lordship endeavoured to commend the Liturgy of England to the Church of Scotland, (which was a worthy design, as to the uniformity of Devotion) yet he should affect some such alterations as, he might be sure, like Coloquintida, would make all distasteful. Such was that in the Prayer of Consecration and Distribution at the Lords Supper, which was after the old form of Sarum, and expunged by our Reformers as too much favouring Transubstantiation; besides some other changes in that and other things, of which possibly his Lordship could give a better reason than I can imagine, or have yet heard. Toward his decline I had occasion to come a little nearer to his Lordship; where I well remember, that a few days after his first confinement, when he seemed not at all to despair of his innocency or safety, having occasion to wait on him, and being not only a stranger wholly to him, but under some prejudice with him, as to some relation I then had, yet he was pleased, after some accesses to him, to invite me to some freedom of speech, ask me (among other things) what the sense of people generally was of him and his actions. I freely told him, the vulgar jealousies and reports were, that his Lordship, by secret approaches, did seek to betray the Reformed Church of England to the Roman Correspondency and Communion; which was so tender and just an apprehension in all people, out of their zeal to their Religion, that I humbly conceived it were great wisdom to avoid all suspicion of it. Nor did it seem an hard matter so to do, in ways, as much to God's glory and the Church's Honour, so less exposed to people's jealousy or obloquy; common people being easily won or lost by persons of public place and eminent Authority, whose actions as they could not be hid, so their wisdom or weakness would be exposed to every censurer, according to that party and side which he most adopted or opposed. I added, that people were not taken generally so much with grand and severer virtues, as with things more plausibly and seasonably, yet piously and prudently, adapted to their capacity as well as their good; that as they were not to be unworthily humoured, so nor too roughly neglected or offended; that it was much easier not to raise, than to allay the Spirit of jealousy in the Populacy; that it was no hard matter for a good and great man honestly to make himself gracious with the best and most people, by doing them as much good as they could expect, without any wresting of his or their consciences, without diminishing his lawful Authority, or their ingenuous Liberties; that in some cases and posture of times, a wise man was not bound to do people more good than they would or could bear, nor was he to surfeit and tyre them by overdriving them to better pasture; that it was possible to serve the times, and yet to serve the Lord, as the Pilot, that in a rough Sea humours the winds and waves, yet saves himself, his ship and goods; last, that it was no hard matter for his Lordship, and other Bishops of great parts and preferments, to outdo in Preaching, Praying and well-doing all those that most maligned Episcopacy. To this purpose I took the boldness sometimes to speak to his Lordship; which as he heard at first with something a severer brow, so he at length very gravely and calmly thus replied: Protesting with a serious attestation of his integrity before God's Omniscience, that however he might mistake in the mean and method, yet he never had other design than the Glory of God, the Service of his Majesty, and the good Order, Peace and Decency of the Church of England: that he was so far from complying with Papists, in order to confirm them in their errors, that he rather chose such methods to advance the honour of the Reformed Religion in England, as he believed might soon silence the cavils of fiercer Papists, induce the more moderate Recusants to come in to us, as having less visible occasion given them by needless distances and disputes to separate from us; which he thought arose much from that popular Variety, Inconstancy, Easiness, Irreverence and Uncomeliness, which might easily grow among us in the outward profession of Religion, for want of exact observing such uniformity and decency in Religion, as were required by the Laws and Canons of this Church and State. He added, that he had (further) a desire, as much as he could, to relieve the poor and depressed condition of many Ministers, which he had to his grief observed in Wales and England, where their discouragements were very great, by reason of the tenuity and incompetency of their Livings; that in his Visitations he had sometimes seen it with grief, among twenty Ministers not one man had so much as a decent garment to put on, nor did he believe their other treatment of life was better; that he found the sordid and shameful aspect of Religion and the Clergy gave great advantages to those that were Popishly inclined, who would hardly ever think it best for them to join with that Church which did not maintain either its own Honour or its Clergy to some competency and comeliness. Much more discourse his Lordship was pleased to use at several times to this purpose, which commands my charity to clear him, as far as I can judge, of any tincture of Popery, truly so called, or of any Superstition, which placeth a Religion in the nature and use of that thing which God hath not either particularly commanded, or in general permitted. I suppose he thought that where God hath allowed to his Church and to every private Christian, (so far as may consist with the Churches good Order and Peace) a liberty of ceremonious and circumstantial decency as to God's worship, there neither himself was to be blamed, nor did he blame other men, if they kept within those discreet and inoffensive bounds which either the Churches public Peace required, or its Indulgence to private Christians permitted. And thus I leave this Archbishop to stand or fall to his and our great Master, who will judge our confidences and infirmities according to our sincerity. Doubtless this Prelate had more in him of Charity, Liberality, Munificence and Magnificence (as appears by the works he undertook to found, to build or to repair) than ever I saw in any of those who are the having and getting, not the giving enemies to Episcopacy. And what if I have the like Charity for Bishop Wren? to whom I am wholly a stranger, further than I have sometime heard him preach, with great evidence of pregnant Intellectuals, set off with notable Learning and Acute Oratory. I never heard that he was actually charged, or judicially convinced of any one Tenet or opinion that was formally Popish. I know his Lordship was terribly decried, as if he had stung his Diocese, both Ministers and people, with serpents, (as Hannibal did the Romans in a Sea-fight with the Bithynians) when some thought he only rubbed some tenderer skins with nettles; which might sting them shrewdly, but they could not deadly ●●yson them: for, mustering up, as it seems, all that his Lordship found in the old Injunctions or new Canons of the Church of England, (rather abolished many of them by disuse, than legally repealed) his Visitation-articles seemed as an Army of Ceremonious punctilloes; which he urged and exacted beyond what had been wont, judging them to be as Bees, which might each of them bring a little wax or honey to the hive of Devotion, when others took them to be either as Flies, that did only buzz and fly-blow Religion, or as Wasps and Hornets, which stung so grievously some tender consciences, that many of them (as the Canaanites of old) were driven by them out of this good land, to seek their liberty and ease in horrid and desolate plantations. I confess, things of this nature, which being obsolete are urged afresh upon the public practice of Christians in Religion, ought (as I conceive) to have their revived and renewed Authority from the joint Counsel, pblick prudence and consent of the Nation, else rigorous remedies, even of disorders, may prove worse than the supposed or real diseases. For many antiquated Ceremonies in Religion, though they be not quite worn out, yet, as garments long ago made and now out of fashion, are rather to be kept as Monuments in the Wardrobe and Records of Religion, than to be on the sudden put upon men's backs, and urged to be worn; especially when they seem antique to the most, and uncomely by their unwontedness to be commonly worn, though the stuff be never so good, and the state of them not unhandsome. Although all these might not amount to any thing that is properly Popery, no more than a thousand shadows can make one substance or body, yet many did judge them as a cumulative kind of Popery, which cloys Religion with such a Mass of needless Ceremonies, that it is like a tree too much overgrown with moss, even to a barrenness; or like a garment not adorned and set off, but wholly hidden, encumbered and buried with a superfluity of lace: which is either a great Prodigality, or as great a Vanity and Affectation (especially considering the matronely gravity which best becomes Christian and Reformed Religion,) as that sancy was of our Henry the Fifth, who when he was Prince of Wales, came one day to the Court and his Father's presence with a suit all cut and embroidered with eyelet-holes, having a needle hanging out of every hole, that he looked more like a Porcupine than a Prince. But as that Prince afterward proved a very brave King, very pious and valiant, besides successful, (which adds much to any Prince's piety in the opinion of common people,) when he left his needless needles, & betook him to his Victorious Sword; so it is probable this Bishop, if he had received so grave an admonition as the wisdom and meekness of a Parliament could have given him and other Bishops of his mind, would easily have amended any such luxuriancy of Ceremonious observations; which if they would be a means to induce any judicious Papists to change their opinion as to these points of Doctrine which most divide us and them, truly it were a very great uncharitableness in us, not to comply very far with them in whatever the Church commands as innocent and decent ceremonies. But sure they must be very silly birds, and scarce worth the catching, which will be taken only with the chaff of ceremonies or pictures in a case of Religion, (which so highly concerns their consciences and salvation) so as to change their side upon these formalities, until their judgement in the main matters of Doctrine be convinced and satisfied: nor do I know how we can well lay such strong lime-twiggs among such chaff as would hold any Papists firm to our party and persuasion. Not that I would have them scared or scandalised the more against us, for want of that reverence and decency which becomes us in the worship of God, and in holy mysteries, by the dictates of Reason, as well as the Indulgences of Religion; but considering that just and vast distance in some grand points between us and the Papists, as to outward worship, grounded upon inward persuasion and devotion, I think it becomes the wisdom and wariness of Protestants, (according to the admirable temper and moderation of the Church of England in its Reformation) as not to deny themselves the use of any things enjoined as decent, because Papists had abused them, so not to affect by any particular modes to symbolise so far with them, as may confirm them in any thing that we judge Superstitious or Idolatrous. This made many sober men so much strangers to the Policy and Piety of those who so much urged to set the Lords Table Altarwise, to adorn it with the Crucifix and other pictures, and to bow with adoration toward it. Though these might be lawful in the abstract, yet sure not expedient in that state wherein the Reformed Profession stands opposite to the Papists superstitious veneration of a Creature transubstantiated to a God. Though I have no conscience of duty toward an Idol, so as to worship it, but only to the true God, who is every where; yet I think it best for me not to go into an Idols Temple, there to worship the true God, when I may do it otherwhere, without any such appearance of evil, or scandal to those that see me, and know my principles against it. But as to the true and real discriminations between the Religion of the Church of England and Popery in Doctrine, I conceive the best dimensions of this Bishop are to be taken, by those that are wholly strangers to him, as I am, by that notable Book which was lately published and dedicated to his Lordship by Dr. Cousins, his well-known friend and successor, than whom no man ever fell under greater popular jealousies for Popish, yet no man it seems less deservedly, as appeared when he came to the Test before the Committee of Lords, who then cleared him as to Mr. Smarts accusations for Superstition; and since that he hath further cleared himself, no man more handsomely, before the best Protestants in France, where his long exile and sufferings have not so exasperated him as to make him yield any way to the Papists: yea no man hath at home or abroad been a more stout Defender of the Protestant Religion, as it was established in the Church of Engl. which the testimony of Mr. Daillé, one of the Protestant Ministers at Charenton near Paris, Tuus Cousins, imò noster (intercedit enim nobis cum illo suavis amicitia atque familiaritas) admodum probatur. Bestiae sunt, & quidem fanatici, qui eum de Papismo suspectum habent, à quo vix reperias qui sit magìs alienus. Ex autographo test. Dr. Bernardo Hosp. Grai. fully and freely confirms, telling all the world, That they are either beasts or fanatics who count Dr. Cousins a Papist, from whom no man is really more removed; which his very excellent History touching the Canon of the Scripture fully assures us, being a grand and fundamental point in difference between the Papists and us; wherein he having so irreparably battered and shaken their Apocryphal Babel, by solidly proving the Church of Rome to be erroneous and pertinacious in that point, all sober men will soon suspect her honesty, fidelity, and pretended infallibility in other things which do as little agree with the pristine Practice and judgement of the Catholic Church. Truly it is pity so great and able a vindicator of the Reformed Religion should longer suffer a pilgrimage among Papists, being forced to dwell in Mesech, and to have his habitation in the Tents of Kedar, and not have leave to return in peace to his native Country, of which he hath so well deserved in this learned undertaking: which piece sure he would not have dedicated (being so Antipapistical, that it peels the very bark of the Church of Rome round) to his friend the Bishop of Ely, if he did not intend him a collateral security, or a vindication from any such aspersion of being either a practical or dogmatical Papist, wherewith many have more pleased themselves, than proved it against that Bishop. But no Net plays with wider wings or larger bosom than that popular Drag, which sweeps as it listeth into its bosom all men for Papists, Pelagians or Arminians, who are not just of some men's private opinions in all things; taking what freedoms and latitudes they please themselves in their opinions and actions, but allowing none to other men, no not in points that admit of dispute, without scratching the Conscience, violating the true Faith, or breaking Christian Charity. It is a wonder of wise and just men, how this Bishop, if he were so evil a doer as was voiced, hath not been long ago publicly heard, and sentenced according to his deeds, but is punished beforehand by a long imprisonment; when as he was committed to prison, not as his sentence (I think,) but as his security, to be forthcoming at his lawful trial, to which in eighteen years he hath not been brought. If then neither of these two Prelates, whose eminency and activity drew so many eyes of envy upon them, were really popish, which was not very probable, when they knew the Prince, whose favour they enjoyed, to be so steadfast and able in his judgement against Popery, as I have oft heard the Earl of Holland and others affirm; I presume the other late Bishops of Engl. upon whom the Tower of Siloam fell, may find so much justice and charity as to be freed from that suspicion, and not to be thought greater sinners, as to that particular, than many Presbyterians who joyed most in their destruction. Never any of them, that ever I heard, gave any occasion to be thought a Papist, except only the last Bishop of Gloucester, Vide G. G▪ his Quaeres to Dr. Hackwell about the Decay of the World. Dr. Goodman, (Vir sui nominis) as some report; a man of good learning and good life, who having suffered in his old age (almost to a distraction) by the storm and distresses of times, (which wet many other men to the skin, but it stripped off the clothes, & flayed off the very skins of many Clergymen, and all Bishops especially) was driven, it seems, beyond his pace, & something beyond his patience: for thus provoked beyond all measure and merit (as he thought,) by those who much professed Reformation (and yet so much, in his sense and experience, did deform and destroy the Church of England,) it is no wonder, if, dying and dejected, he chose rather to depart in communion with the Church of Rome, than to adhere to the Church of England, 1 Kings 19.10 which (as Eliah) he thought now decayed and dissolved, (at least as to its visible Order and Polity) if not quite destroyed. Not that he owned (I hope) a communion or Conciliation with the Roman Church as Popish, but as far as it was Christian; not as erroneous in some things, Vide Bishop Bedels' Sermon on Come out of her my People. but as Orthodox in many others; from which (as Bishop Bedel saith) no good Christian doth, or aught to separate. And since we hold Baptism among the Papists to be valid, which is the sign of a Christians new birth, and first admittance to the Church's Catholic Communion, he might hope, that dying in that Communion so far as it was Catholic, would be no hindrance to his admission to the Church in Heaven. At worst, it seems his discontent and despair drove him rather to think of returning to the Confines of Egypt, where he believed there might be found some Bread of life in an orderly way of House-keeping, than to die in the Wilderness of a Church which was now howling and starving, and self-desolating in his apprehension; that, as Lot's Daughters were so far excusable for their incests with their Father, as they believed all men were destroyed besides, so may this poor Bishop (now made poor, when he had been very rich) have this to plead for his resting at last in the bosom of the Church of Rome, that he knew not any other so visible and conspicuous a Church, either fit, or worthy, or willing to receive one that had so long lived a Protestant and a Bishop in the Church of Engl. and was now no longer permitted either to live or die, either a Protestant or a Bishop, according to the constitution of the Church of England; from which at its best, many of those have more separated themselves living and dying, who are the sharpest Censurers of this Bishop for dying a Papist, which is but a greater kind of Separatist from the Church of England and the Church Catholic in some Opinions and Practices. But I have done with this Bishop, who was dying most declared, and with the other two, who living were most dubious and ambiguous, in the censures of the world, as to their Religion. What their Morals, Prudentials or Devotionals were, (who had so long and so great an influence of power and favour) I must leave to the Supreme Judicature of God above them, and that subordinate or lower Bench of their Consciences within them. If we should take their dimensions by the successes and events, truly they have been very unhappy: after-Counsels are prone to think it had been easy to have prevented such calamities; but the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong. Though true Piety is always the best Policy, yet it is not always attended with Prosperity. No doubt the sins of all sorts were ripe for wrath, and in common calamities the best may suffer as well as the worst; the afflictions of the first being their trials, of the second their punishment. My concern is only to examine the ground of that Charge cast upon them, and for their sakes upon all our Reformed Bishops, as if rankly popish, as if Prelacy and Popery were no more separable than Gehezies' Bribery and his Leprosy; which I justify to be as false a calumny as it is foul, and no way becoming the mouths or thoughts of those who aim to judge righteous judgement, or consider the account they must give to God of what they say and do, in truth or falsity, in justice or iniquity. This I am sure, if our Bishops, and many other grave Divines, had no inclination to Popery in their Prosperity, their Adversity might have been a great temptation to them, less to approve that Reformed Religion, not for which, but from which, they have suffered so hard measure, as untried and unconvicted to be condemned, punished, destroyed, beyond any men that lived orderly and peaceably. CHAP. XXIV. THat I may for ever silence the harsh braying and tedious barkings of all Antiepiscopal Pens and Tongues against our Godly Bishops and Venerable Episcopacy, Bishop Usher, Primate of Armagh, an unanswerable vindication of Prelacy, not Popish, but pious. (which is as much, or more, an enemy to Popery, than either Presbytery or Independency) I crave leave to insist a little more largely upon the name, worth and memory of one of our Bishops, very well known, not only to the British Churches, but to all the Christian world that hath any correspondency or commerce with Learned men. It is Dr. James Usher, late Archbishop of Armagh, and Lord Primate of Ireland; whom I reckon as ours, because not only his ashes and mortal remains are deposited with us, but he lived his last years of exile, and ended his mortality amongst us in Engl. where besides his constant pains in Preaching, even to his last, he hath left us many of his Learned works, which are enjoyed by, and highly esteemed of, all worthy men who were blest with the example of his great and unspotted worth, which no envy, no malice can (I think) be so impudent as to blemish. With this rare and Reverend Prelate, this great and gracious Bishop, I was rather happy than worthy to be acquainted many years, so far as to be able more nearly to discover his genius and temper, both before and after the storm of blood and Massacre in Ireland had driven this holy man to fly from that (Terra irae Dei) land of God's wrath, and to take such Sanctuary or shelter as then he hoped might be had in England for Protestant Bishops; where he little thought (good man) he should have found some Protestants in England as fierce to undo and destroy their Bishops (though of the same Reformed Faith, and of unblameable Profession) as the most Jesuited Papists were in Ireland; who were and are sworn enemies against them, not as Christian Bishops, but as of the Reformed Religion, which had nothing in it more Primitive, Illustrious and Honourable than this, that in England it shined with the glory of those Apostolic Stars, Godly and Venerable Bishops, which did not depend on the Pope of Rome. The real excellencies of this Bishop every way were such, that they exceeded all ordinary measures of humane commendation and capacity, extending to something of admiration or ecstasy: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Admirationi quam laudi proximus. None but those whose minds are enlarged to some proportions of his accomplishments can be able to comprehend his worth and amplitude: so vast, so transcendent, so astonishing was his Learning and Understanding in all kinds of knowledge, Divine and Humane, that he was as the Cynosure by which all great Divines steered, and as the sun-dial by which all great Scholars set their watches. Much of this Treasure was discovered in his writings, printed, and not yet printed, of all sorts, both of greener and riper studies, in all which he was exact and complete. He wrote, as he studied, not in the beaten paths of Plagiary Compilators, or systematical Collectors, (as Scriba doctus ad regnum Caelorum;) but he brought forth out of his large heart and vast reading new as well as old, things of rare, hidden and untrodden observation, even out of Manuscripts which scarce any but his Eagle-eye had seen, and but few could read. All which he judiciously collected, methodically disposed, clearly explained and aptly applied: yet it was with him as with copious and living springs, the least part of his innate, acquired and unexhausted fullness was to be discerned by any of his outward emanations. So accurate was he in all useful and Learned Languages, Occidental and Oriental; so clear a prospect he had of all History and Chronology, of all Controversies ancient and modern, that nothing escaped him: nor was he only as a Reader and Spectator, but as a Judge and Censor, as an Arbitrator and Dictator in Disputes, as one that sat in a Tribunal of Sovereign Learning above all. Nothing was new or hidden to him in Philology, Philosophy, Geography, Astronomy, Mathematics, and least of all in Theology or Divinity; he had conquered all others, but in this he Triumphed, which was the Trophy, Crown and Centre of all his other studies. There was scarce any Book, printed or Manuscript, worth reading, in private or public Libraries throughout all Christendom, which he had not read, either in the Copy or Original, and digested into the method or design of his studies; yea, and to a miracle remembered, as to the main contents of it. To the Immensity of his Learning there was added excellent principles of Politic prudence, as a Governor of the Church, and as a Counsellor of State; wherein he was conspicuous, not for the crafty projects and practices of policy, or for those sinister ways of Artifice and Subtlety, which are the usual unreasonable Reasons of State, the so admired depths of devilish Hypocrisy, but (indeed) the flats and shallows of all Truth and Honesty: no, the Measures and Rules of his Politics and prudentials were taken from that great experience he had gotten, and many excellent observations he had made, out of all Histories, as well Humane as Divine; though he always laid the greatest weight upon the grounds and instances of holy Scripture, which gives the truest judgement of wisdom or folly. These great abilities, managed with so much Piety, Prudence and Integrity, could not but make this Bishop as fit to be a Counsellor of State, (for so he was in Ireland) or a Privy Counsellor to his Prince (which other Bishops were who lived in England) as any of those Misepiscopists were, who most envied and denied that honour to this or any other Bishops; with whose sufficiencies few of their enemies (the chiefest of whom I well knew) were to be compared, either for Wisdom, Gravity, Goodness, Learning, Experience and Eloquence, or for that Sanctity, Severity and Integrity, which make a complete Counsellor. All which are hardly learned by the juvenile Gallantry of a little travelling, or by seeing many Men, or by courting many Mistresses, or by passing through many Cities and Countries in a negligent way, or by wearing ample plumes on men's heads, or by showing fair clothes on their backs, or by fanciful and affected conformities to all the modes and fashions which may be observable in foreign places: all which Leven do usually so puff up many young Gallants (who glory most in their Nobility and Gentry) with Amorousness, Futility, Vapouring, Vanity and Folly, that it is a long time before they can throughly decoct them, or settle themselves to that clear and serious study of Piety and Policy, of Wisdom, Divine and Humane, which only can furnish out fit and able Counselors of State, who are to be not only as the Eyes, Guides and overseers of the Public, but even of the Prince; whose hand of power (if he be wise) will steer according to the Card and Compass set before him by his Council; which cannot be good, if it be not godly, nor prudent, if it be not pious So that it is not only my wonder, but it will be so to all Posterity, what should move any sober and religious wise men to exclude all Bishops and Clergymen from all capacity of being either Members of the great and Parliamentary Council, or of the Privy Council of any Prince or State: When 1. Religion ought always to be as much under the care, counsel and inspection of Christian Princes, Parliaments and Councils of State, as any secular or civil affairs; which never prosper where Religion is put in the rear and Crupper of business, or where the Clergy, beyond all men, must be excluded. Do we not read in one Melchizedek (the Type of Christ) both Prince and Priest joined together? Afterward, were not Aaron and Moses, the one as King, the other as Chief-priest, appointed by God as the leaders of the Church of God? From this example, Abiathar the Priest also Gad and Nathan the Prophets, were Counselors as well as Confessors to King David; so was Azariah the son of Zadok the Priest a chief Prince and Counsellor to King Solomon; so Jehojadah the Priest was a Father, a Protector, and a chief Director to King Joash, 1 Kings 4.2. 2 Kings 11. who ceased to prosper when he wanted such a Counsellor. 2. When no men may be presumed, or indeed generally are, and in all times have been, so able in managing and advising of matters religious, as eminent Bishops and well-chosen Church men, certainly none were so fit as they to give account to the Prince and State of the true estate of the Church and Religion, which are miserably misrepresented by other ignorant or envious Informers; none so much lays to heart the true concerns of Religion, or the interests of men's souls; none will so much take care that these suffer no prejudice and detriment by any laymen's disorderly insolency or covetous encroachments. 3. As for the preaching part of a Bishop, or his residence and inspection to his particular Diocese, it can be no hindrance (as some men have pitifully pretended) sometime to attend the general good of their own and all others Dioceses: they may not be thought to neglect their own Cabin, who are sometime employed for the reparation or conservation of the whole Ship; as my Lord Viscount Newark very honourably, learnedly and eloquently expressed himself in the House of Peers, where it was briefly disputed touching Bishops sitting as Peers in the House, which they had done ever since there was an House of Christian Peers in England. So that the pretended damage, as to their particular care of their Diocese, is abundantly compensated by the good they may do to the public; which may easily be as much as that was of the English and Scotch Presbyters, who were dispensed with for many months Nonresidency, as to their particular Livings and charges, when they were to attend the Assemblies great service of making a Catechise, a Directory, and helping to extirpate Bishops out of this Church and State. 4. The retortion upon these Ministers especially who were so much enemies to Bishops being in any Council, Civil or Ecclesiastic, must needs be a most smart and severe conviction of their Partiality, when we have daily seen so many petty Presbyterian and Independent Preachers as busy as Bees, and every where eager Sticklers in all secular Councils and Affairs. How did some of them haunt some Lords and Commons in the long Parliament? How did they ply all Committees, specially that for Religion, which had swallowed up the Convocation? How prone are they still, uncalled, to crowd or insinuate into all public, yea into Cabinet-Counsels, both military and civil? What of concern in Church or State, for these last eighteen years, can move or pass without their suggestions, whisper and agitations? Many public Declarations savour much of their strain and form, both for fancy and phrase; especially if they regard any religious business of State, as Fast, Humiliations, Thanksgivings, and the like; which heretofore were managed by the counsel of great Bishops, as able I believe as any of our new and little ones. But it is not strange that some men should think themselves fit to be at both ends of all public Counsels, either laying or hatching them, and yet be so eager against all Bishops, who were full as honest, and in all respects as able and worthy, as the best of these Sticklers: for nothing makes men more presumptuous of themselves, or more envious against others, than want of true knowledge of either's dimensions. 5. And lastly, the very light of Nature makes it seem very preposterous and impolitic to exclude all Churchmen, of which Bishops were ever the chief Fathers, out of all public Counsels: for all Nations have taught us, that they did so far venerate their Gods and honour their Religion, as never to carry on their chief Counsels & public Affairs of War or Peace, for Religion or Civility, without taking some of their Holy men and Priests into their Councils: so King Balak calls for Balaam in his greatest exigencies; so were the Pontiffs or Flamens ever among the chief Roman Counsellors and Senators; so were the Druids ever among the British and gallic Parliaments; so were the Magis among the Persian Princes; so at this day are the Muftis among the Turks chief Counsel: All Mankind knowing this, that the best counsels are those which rise nearest to Jupiter's Throne, and are drawn from the clearest fountains of Divine Wisdom. If the true God, and the Son of God, the Christians Saviour, have justly the Titles of the All and Only wise, yea the wonderful Counsellors, how (I beseech you) can it stand with any Christian sense, or reason of State and true Religion, to exclude those men, beyond any, from all public Councils of Church and State, who are most in Gods and Christ's stead, best studied and acquainted with the Divine Will, Wisdom and Counsel in God's Word? I am sure (so far as I am versed in any Histories) neither this Church or State (nor any other) did ever flourish without Bishops among the prime Counsellors, both in Parliament and otherwhere; nor did they ever more flourish in Piety, Peace and Plenty, than when these had as great an influence as any other Men of Learning, Worth and Wisdom. How things may hereafter thrive, where the Clergy are so nipped and frost-bitten, time and success will best inform the survivers: yet it is no very promising omen, when neither Clergymen are encouraged to be fit and able, nor, if fit and able, are at any hand to be admitted to such public use and honour; when any others may, whatever extraction, rise and education they have had: for they are not always noble Rivers and ancient Springs of Virtue, Wisdom and Honour, but many times small Brooks and very inconsiderable Rivulets, which aspire to this honour of contributing their small drops of Counsel into the great & public Cistern of Government. And such were they (as far as I understood) men, for the most part, who with least patience could bear any Bishops to sit in counsel with them, lest they should be miserably outshined and eclipsed by the others improved parts and well-known learning, which vastly exceeded the small shreds and short ends which many other men were so highly conceited of in themselves, whose Estates laid the greatest foundation of their Honour. But I here crave the Readers pardon for this digression, no way impertinent to my design, which is, to demonstrate the merit, and so far to recover the public esteem and honour, of good Bishops and all the Clergy, such as they ever enjoyed in this and all other Christian States, till these darker days in England; which pretend to seek a greater light, by putting out of Prince's Courts and Counsels the chiefest Lamps and Stars of Learning, Religion, Counsel and Wisdom. To return then to this excellent Bishop and able Counsellor, the Primate of Armagh: as to his personal policy, domestic subtlety, or private cautiousness, truly he had little enough of the Serpent; but as to his harmless innocency, he had very much of the Dove, ever esteeming Piety the best Policy, and Sanctity the safest Sanctuary. If any thing might seem to have been as a venial allay in him, it was a kind of charitable easieness and credulity, which made him prone to hope good of all, and loath to believe evil of any; especially if they made any Profession or shows of Piety: he did not think, there could have been so much gall and vinegar mixed with the shows, or realities, of some men's graces, until he found by sad experience some Godly people, and Presbyters professing much Godliness, who formerly were prone to adore him as a God, or an Oracle, were (now) ready to stone and destroy him with all his brethren the British Bishops. He was most prone to err on the right hand of charity, and to incline to those opinions in things disputable which seemed to set men furthest off from Pride, Licentiousness and Profaneness; of which he was better able to judge than of Hypocrisy, being more jealous of Irreligion than Superstition, which is the right hand, and more venial extreme of Religion. He had not, till of late years, felt the scalding effects of some men's overboiling zeal, or the dreadful terrors of their righteousness who affected to be over-righteous, who despised his Learned, Wise and Moderate Counsels, touching the settling of Peace, Order and Government in the Church. The rare endowments of this pattern of a perfect Bishop were both wrapped up and set forth, as occasion required, with such Tender Piety, such Childlike Humility, such a Saintly Simplicity, such an Harmless Activity, such an Indefatigable Industry, such Unfeigned Sanctity, such Unaffected Gravity, such an Angelic Serenity, and such an Heavenly Sweetness, as made all his Writings perspicuous, though profound; his Preaching plain, yet most prevalent. He had an Eloquent kind of Thunder of Reason mixed with Scripture-Lightning, which together had a pleasing potent terror: his praying was fervent and pathetic, without affecting either too diffused a variety or too circumscribed an Identity: his fervency, discretion and sincerity, always set his prayers far from any thing either of a verbal and vain repetition, or a flat and barren invention: he ever highly esteemed, and devoutly used, the Liturgy of the Church. Indeed he Prayed, or Preached, or Practised, continually the Scholar, the Christian and the Divine: his whole life, as to the conversable part of it, was so Civil, so Sacred, so Affable, so Amiable, so Useful, so Exemplary to all persons of any Worth, Ingenuity and Honesty that came to him, that (in earnest) nothing Ancient or Modern that ever I knew or read of in these British Churches, or any foreign Nation, was more August, Venerable, Imitable and Admirable than this blessed Bishop; such Candour, yet Power, such Largeness, yet singleness of heart, such Majesty with meekness, appeared in all that he seriously said or did. I never saw him either morose or reserved, much less sour or supercilious. If he were sad, it made him not silent, but only more solemn, as night-pieces, which have admirable work of perspective in them, though not so much light with them: if he were cheerful, he abhorred not such facetious and ingenious elegancies of discourse as showed that Risiblity was as proper to Religion as Reason, that Holiness was no enemy to Cheerfulness, but great graces might safely smile, and innocent virtues sometimes laugh without offence. He was indeed (as the Church of Smyrna testifies of holy Polycarp, their first Bishop, there placed by St. John the Apostle, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. ) a most Apostolic person, a true Divine, a most exemplary Christian, and a most Venerable Bishop, equalizing (without doubt) if not exceeding, any one of the ancient famous Bishops and chief Fathers of the Church, not only in his Primitive Piety, but in his great literature; for he was jointly excelling in all those things wherein they were severally most commendable: he was, as our Saviour saith of John Baptist, a Prophet, yea, greater than an ordinary Prophet; for among the children of men, or children of God and of the true Church, Mat. 11.11▪ there hath not since the Apostles days been born a greater than Herald If I, or any man, were able to reach the Height, Length, Depth and Breadth of his Gifts and Graces, his acquired and infused endowments, some taste or essay of which his faithful friend and servant Dr. Bernard (as Timothy to this St. Paul) hath given, and is daily further imparting to the world, yet no Epitomes or little Volumes are able to contain so ample a subject, nor give that satisfaction to Learned men at home and abroad, as is justly exspectable from so copious and complete a theme. Whose humble and holy industry was such, that besides his vast designs for Writing and Printing, he never failed, since he was Presbyter, Prelate or Primate, to preach once every week, if health permitted him, besides many times on the weekday upon occasion; which was so far from being his reproach, as if he made himself too cheap (as some men of more pompous than pious spirits have calumniated,) that, like David's dancing before the Lord, it turned not to his diminution, but to his great honour among all People, Presbyters, Prelates, Peers and Princes, that had any knowledge what was the true dignity of a Divine, and the commendation of a Christian Bishop: nor was it any great pains to a person of his fullness, who did not pump for, but pour out his Sermons like a pregnant spring, with a strange Plenty, Clarity and Vivacity. Certainly, if all our Bishops had so honoured God according to their Places, Parts and Strength, by imitating the best of their Predecessors, yea the Apostles, and our Lord Jesus Christ, the greatest Bishop and greatest Preacher, it is very probable, not only Bishops but Episcopacy had at this day suffered less diminution and dishonour: if all Bishop's hearts and mouths had been as open as his, sure they had stopped the mouths and silenced the tongues of all their adversaries. But by this and other, either real failings or supposed defects, of some few Bishops (as in Sea-banks where low and weak) the horrid inundation hath broke in upon Episcopacy and all Bishops with such a torrent of violence, that we see the best of them could not keep out nor stand before the impetuosity of the times; which if any Bishops, in any Age or Church, might have merited and hoped to have done, this excellent Primate, and other Bishops then in England and Ireland might have done it, who were persons of so great Learning, Piety, Moderation, Humility. For besides the many other most accomplished Bishops then in England, Scotland and Ireland, who is so blind as not to see this one illustrious Bishop, the Primate of Armagh capble, as to the true cause of Episcopacy, to have over-shined, both as to his Learning, Judgement and Life (as the Sun in the firmament,) all those Comets and Meteors, those blazing and falling Stars, which either than did or since have appeared eccentrick or opposite to Primitive and Catholic Episcopacy? Take them in their straggling novelties, or in their associating confederacies, or in their congregational conventicles, however they may seem by false glasses, or grosser mediums, to be magnified in some men's imaginations, and so set off to vulgar admiration among weak and womanly apprehensions; yet neither for Scripture-proportions, nor for Catholic practice, nor for right reason, nor for true prudence and Christian polity, are they any way to be compared either to the Antiquity or Majesty of true Episcopacy: For which the Judgement, Humility, Moderation and Integrity of this excellent Bishop is so clearly set forth, both by his constant practice and all his writings, (wherein, for peace sake, he willingly joined an orderly Presbytery with a Venerable Episcopacy; that neither grave Counsel, nor comely Order, nor just Authority, nor Christian Unity should be wanting in the Church's Government) that it is an error worse than the first, for men not yet to return from their Paroxysmes and Transports against all presidential Episcopacy, or not to close with so great a judgement, so grave an Oracle, as this holy Bishop was. Who, however he held a Fraternal Correspondency and Actual Communion (as occasion offered) with those Reformed, Churches and those Ministers who approved, yea desired, Episcopacy, though they could not enjoy any Bishops properly so called after the custom of all ancient Churches; yet, with St. Cyprian, he flatly condemned, and branded with the sin and Scandal of Schism, Sine spe sunt, & perditionem maxim●m Dei indignatione acquirunt, qui Schism●ta serunt, & relicto Episcopo suo, alium sibi for●s Pseudo●●iscopum consttuunt. Cypr. Epist. 61. lib. 1. all those who wilfully cast off, and injustly separated from, their lawful Bishops, who professed the same Orthodox Faith and Reformed Religion; affirming, as I have been further most credibly informed, that he would not (because with comfort and good conscience he could not) receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper from such Ministers hands, whose Odination he esteemed irregular and incomplete, or for their consecration inauthoritative, because partial, and schismatical against that Episcopal power which ever was, and still might be had, in this Church. Nor was this his censure heightened or sharpened by any anger or vindicative passion, though he was unhandsomely used by some men who heretofore much applauded him: from such distempers his Mosaic meekness was most remote, especially in cases of Religion and the Churches public concernments; for the advance of which he could have cheerfully sacrificed all his private interest of honour or profit, and have been reduced to teach School in a belfry, as his phrase was. But he ever held to his pristine and constant judgement in the most prosperous times, which enjoyed him the same as did his adversities; no losses and distresses, to which the Fatality, Fury, Folly or Ingratitude of this Age reduced him, being able to cloud his judgement, or discompose his tranquillity, in any other, or in this sharp controversy touching Episcopacy. And indeed, to add to the further weight and crown of this excellent Bishop, (who deserved to be esteemed one of the Primates of all Learning, Piety and Virtue in the Christian world,) he was (by God's wonderful dispensations) to be made a Primate in sufferings, and to be more illustrious by those darken which on all hands were cast upon his person and profession, as a Preacher and as a Prelate. He lived to see, yea to feel, his Venerable person by some men shamefully slighted, (who saw more brightness in a sharp sword than in all Learned virtues;) his function, as a Bishop, exautorated, decried, depressed, despised; his Revenues first stopped, then alienated and confiscated; his moderate stock of moveables (all, except his excellent Library) and at last a reserve of some moneys, about 2000 pound, seized and swept away by the Irish. The news of which last (as I was witness at the first coming of it,) he received with so no trouble or emotion, that it made me see in this holy man, that the patience of Job might well be a true history, and not a Tragic parable. After this the profits of the Bishopric of Carlisle (then vacant) being conferred upon him by the late King, for the support of his age and exile, even these were taken from him by those that took all Church-revenues from all Bishops: yet, (for shame) a Pension of four hundred pounds a year, as his Lordship hath told me, was promised him when he was forced to yield up his Interest in the Revenues of Carlisle; which Pension, after a year or two, was never paid him. At last this great Personage, the Primate of Armagh (whom Cardinal Richelieu, with many other great Princes and States, had invited with very honorary propositions to make only his residence with them, as an honour to their Country) was reduced to a small stipend or salary of about two hundred pounds a year, which he was to earn by preaching, as long as his sight and strength served him. These failing him, (and in him all the learned and better world) he lived upon God's Providence and the Contributions (for the most part) of some noble Personages, (wherein I was happy to do him some service:) among whom none hath merited, and erected a more lasting Monument of Honour, than the Countess of Peterborough, under whose grateful and hospitable roof this Mortal Angel, this incomparable Bishop, left, as the English, so all the World, which was not worthy of him, having of later years treated him with so little public value, that while Merchants, Military men, and mean Mechanics, either get fair Estates, or have good pay, pensions and gainful employments, while young Presbyterian and Independent Preachers possess themselves (some by dispossessing others) of the best Livings they can seize, this aged Bishop, this inestimable Jewel of men, this brightest Star of the British Churches and Christian World, this Paragon of Prelates, this Glory of Episcopacy was suffered to be so eclipsed, that, with St. Paul, he knew what it was to want as well as to abound. He had not, with our Blessed Saviour, any house to rest his head in, nor a foot of land which he might call his own: He seemed to live, as St. Chrysostom says of St. Paul, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, only with a naked soul, or a sublimated Spirit, as much above the glory of the world, as he had been stripped of it and by it; being careful in nothing save only to discharge a good conscience to God and men, as he did both living and dying, esteeming this the greatest Treasure and Honour to those that are daily dying to the world, even while they live in it. He was equally remote from Lucifer and Mammon, from Haughtiness as from Covetousness: as he complained not of Tenuity, so he owned not that deserved Eminency which he had by any outward token, never appearing of later years in any other than a plain Gown and Cassock, as an ordinary Presbyter. A person so rich in all excellencies, and yet so poor, even to an annihilation, in his own Spirit, Mat. 5.3. partakes (no doubt) of that first great Beatitude, The Kingdom of Heaven. But, as if all that burden, while this blessed Bishop lived, had no been sufficient to depress this Atlas, this Job, this Elias, there wan-tted not some men, (who go for Ministers) who, to show their despite and insolency against all Bishops and Episcopacy, durst own and declare their scorn and disdain against this excellent Lord Bishop and Primate while he lived, by not vouchsafing to own or call him by any of these most deserved Titles, nor enduring the style of Armachanus to be added to his name. O pitiful Parasites! most obsequiously courting other men with the nauseous and repeated Crambes of Your Honour, Your Lordship, My good Lord, etc. whose neither place nor personal worth and merit in Church or State, is, or ever can be, (without a miracle) comparable to this renowned Lord and Bishop, if pious Impartiality, and not secular Flattery, might be judge. Ask all the Christian and learned World, what man of any Learning, Honour and Ingenuity, from home or abroad, ever wrote to him, or made mention of his name, without exquisite Prefaces and studied Epithets of signal honour and respect; which attributes of Lordship and Grace given to Bishops are no news, nor any way offensive, save only to Mechanic Ignorance or Envy; there being nothing in all Antiquity more frequent on all hands, than the honourable compellations and additions of (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) Domine, and Multùm venerande, of Dominatio, Dignitas and Paternitas, of Honourable Lord and Venerable Father ascribed to worthy Bishops: Among whom none was more worthy of all Attributes fit to be given to a mortal man than this Bishop; whose greatest diminutions (like the seeming Eclipses of the Sun) did not lessen his light, but only hide him more from the World. He was as truly worthy to be Honoured, Emulated, Admired, Magnified and Imitated of all good men in all Ages, as any one person that ever I knew in all my life; which (as Plato said of Socrates) I think much the more blessed of God, because I lived in those days which gave me the opportunity, honour and happiness both to know and be known to this great Exemplar of all learned worth, this grand pattern of Bishops, Preachers, Scholars and Christians. Nor was it the least cordial I had in the difficulties and horrors of later years, to remember that I was not far from such an open Sanctuary, that I might have frequent recourse to such a full and free Magazine of all Christian Graces and Gifts: nor did I think we could be completely miserable and utterly desolated, as to the Church, while this great Genius was yet alive and in England; in whom, by a rare and wonderful conjunction, such high abilities were mixed with unparallelled humility, such Candour and Gentleness did temper his Gravity, and such Serenity did sweeten the severer Sanctity of his life, that he seemed to me not so much a man, as a kind of miracle or prodigy of humane perfections: especially when I remember, not long before his death, those unfeigned tears which I saw, and those humble complaints which I heard, not for his losses, but for his sins and omissions, earnestly deprecating God's displeasure, and dreading his exact Tribunal. Who will not fear and tremble, who will not wax wan and discoloured, when he sees a Ruby of so great price and orient lustre contract pallor and amazement? As for the many sufferings or indignities he had sustained, I never perceived the least regret or sigh, much less any bitter and revengeful replies. A very great sense indeed he expressed, and very often with sadness and compassion, for the distractions of this Church, the deformities of our Religion, and the feared future desolations, which he oft and earnestly seemed to presage as near at hand, always jealous that our Religious feuds and factions would at last end in Papal Superstition and mutual oppressions: Against both which this good Bishop, and so many, yea most, of his Brethren, were, I believe, as much enemies, and as far removed, both in their judgements and endeavours, as the most antiepiscopal Presbyter or Independent in the world; being much better able to give a reason of his distance from them, than they can for their defiance of him and all Bishops. Against the deluge of whose partiality and passion I have thus opposed the Barricado or Peire, this one great instance of a most unblameable Bishop, purposely to vindicate, against all men's impudence, ignorance or malice, the consistence of Episcopacy with Piety, and the vast distance between Primitive Prelacy and after-Popery. Tru●y, in my judgement, this one Bishop outweighs all that ever was or can be alleged against Episcopacy; who not only while he lived mightily justified the function, but before he died his earnest desire was, that such a due succession of Episcopal Authority might be regularly preserved in England, as might keep up the completeness and validity of Ecclesiastical and Catholic Ordination, first against the Calumnies of Papists, who infinitely joy in the advantages they have got of such a Schismatic reproach upon us; next, against the rage and impertinencies of other factions, who will in time bring all Reformed and Christian Religion to a consumption, if they either quite obstruct, or utterly destroy Primitive and Apostolic Episcopacy, which that great Bishop esteemed as (vena porta,) the great vein, which hath from the Apostles conveyed, in all Ages, all Ecclesiastical Order, Power, Authority and Jurisdiction. Which undoubtedly was the judgement of all Antiquity; otherwise all Churches would not have been so impatient of being without their Bishops at any time, nor would Bishops have been so careful, in the times of persecution, to propagate an holy succession of Bishops, without any remarkable or long interruption, never failing in any Church till this last Age, nor in England till of late years: Primitive Bishops not considering the pleasures or displeasures of men, great or small, in so grand a concern as what they believed was pleasing to God, profitable for the Church, and necessary for Ecclesiastical Authority; which they thought could no more stand without Episcopacy, than a body can without its legs. Nor did Antiquity either use, or know, or want the late Crutches of Presbytery, or the stilts of Independency, which, to make themselves seem useful, have sought to cut off the native pillars and proper supports of this Church to the very stumps, not without infinite pain to some parts, and those principal ones too, of the Body, besides constant diminution and deformity to the whole. Which will in my judgement, which willingly follows so great a guide as the Lord Primate, never in England be well at its ease, or in any posture of Stability, Unity, Beauty and Honour, until Episcopacy be beheld and embraced in its native lustre and Primitive posture: First, as designed by the Orderly Power and Wisdom of God; Secondly, as instituted and actuated by the Spirit of Christ and his Apostles; Thirdly, as received and used without any scruple in all Primitive Churches, when once they were fully planted and established in Ecclesiastical Polities or Spiritual Corporations; not one Church, in all Ages, either denying, or doubting, or disputing the Catholic Authority of Bishops; Fourthly, which they saw every way most agreeable, as to the nature of mankind, so to the different stations of Christians, and to that necessary order which ought to be among Ministers as well as other people; Fifthly, and to none more than to the English Nation, where the blessings by Episcopacy are now the more remembered and remarkable, by the Miseries, Disorders, Divisions, Insolences, Horrors and Confusions which have befallen us since we took away the chief buttresses and pillars of the Church, as if they were burdensome and superfluous, when indeed they were not less ornamental, than useful and necessary to the well-being of it at least, if not to the very being of it in us integrality and completeness. Hist. Theod. l. 5. c. 34. I am sure, the ejection of Episcopacy, like the banishment of St. Chrysostom out of Constantinople, hath hitherto been attended and followed in England with great Earthquakes and terrible shake of other men's Palaces and Houses as well as those of Bishops; whose turning out of the House of Lords by the Vote of about twenty Lords, made so wide a door and breach to that House, that none of those Peers (who were more impatient to sit with such Learned and grave men under the same roof, than St. John was to be in the same bath with Cerinthus) could long stay within those walls; the justice of Heaven (as some conjecture) so far retaliating men's passions with speed upon their own heads: the Divine wisdom (I doubt not) seeing and approving as much of Beauty, Order, Prudence, Unity and Stability in true Episcopacy, as he sees, and abhors, much of Novelty, Weakness, Fatuity, Partiality, Deformity and Confusion in any other ways of Church-Government, which cannot but be as defective and dubious, as they are novel and partial, no way conform to the Catholic Custom of the Churches of Christ, nor any way either invented, approved or authorized by the social wisdom and joint consent of all those in this Church and State, who were concerned as highly in all change of Government, as any of those men are who have been most forward to make strange alterations, and to remove the ancient Landmarks. CHAP. XXV. BUt it is high time to take my last Farewell of this long and oft-debated Cause of Primitive and Catholic Episcopacy; Commending this Church of England, with the Reformed Religion, to the Piety and Wisdom of all Persons of Honour and Honesty. which truly I think in my Conscience to be the Cause, First, of God, as he is the God of Order and Wisdom, and not of Folly or Confusion; Secondly, the Cause of Jesus Christ our blessed Saviour, whose Spirit constituted & guided the Apostles, with all their holy Successors, in this Method of Ecclesiastical Communion and Subordination; Thirdly, the Cause of Christ's Catholic Church, which we ought not, in modesty or charity, so highly to reproach, as to impute ignorance or perverseness to it, that either it knew not the way of Christ at first, or it wilfully and presently forsook it by an universal Apostasy, to gratify some few men's ambition. Fourthly, I esteem it the special Cause of this Church and Nation: first, because it was never blessed with any Church-government but that by Bishops; secondly, it hath been, and is, miserably shattered and abased by the casting off and want of Episcopacy; and thirdly, for the native temper of the people, who are not apt to be governed by any men not duly invested with the Majesty of some eminent Worth, adorned with special Power, Honour and Estates, which together give Authority. Fifthly, I think it the Cause of all good Ministers, that desire to keep themselves in a true Church-Order and Catholic Communion; who will find themselves, and leave their Posterity, at a great loss, (as to the Honour, Setledness and Safety of the Christian and Reformed Religion) unless they be restored to some such uniform way of public Subordination and Unity, as hath most safety, consistency and authority in itself, also most satisfaction to all learned, wise and honest men. All which things are no where (that I see) to be found but in a regular and primitive Episcopacy; which owes its late total ruin and shipwreck in England, not to its own age and leakinesse, (as if it sunk of itself) nor to the general dislike and weariness of it, as if the wisdom and power of the Nation, Prince and People, of all estates, had, upon serious, free and impartial advice, concluded to sink it, having provided a better Vessel: but its ruin is the effect of a terrible and fatal storm, which came first out of the North upon us; this ran Episcopacy so, aground, that many despairing of her ever coming off with any entireness, betook themselves to the Cock-bote of Presbytery and the Skiff of Independency; when yet, I conceive, it were no hard matter to recover Episcopacy, as to the primitive structure of it, although much of its Ornaments and Gallantry be lost. Certainly, the Restitution of primitive Episcopacy, for the Unity, Honour and Happiness of the Nation as well as of all the Clergy, seemeth a Work, as of far more prudence, justice and piety, so of much less charge and trouble than the Ruin of it hath cost us all: nor can it be strange to see some men change their minds in religious concernments, who we see have soon done it in our civil settlements. This and other Blessings of Church-order and Unity will easily flow in upon us, by a kind of Tide or Reciprocation of providence, beyond expectation, when once the God and Saviour, the King and Bishop, the great Protector and Precedent of his Church, shall please to breathe a spirit truly Evangelical and Christian upon this Nation; when all of us accepting of our punishment, and repenting of our sinful follies and presumptions, the Lord will also repent of the evil which he hath brought upon us all, and think thoughts of Mercy toward this languishing, afflicted, divided and deformed Church, whose Order, Peace, Honour, Unity and Happiness, some of us weakly, others wantonly, and not a few of us wickedly, have sinned away, to a state (in point of Ecclesiastical Government) deplorable enough, and almost irreparable. For it is not new Associations, or Confessions of Faith, or pretty Paraphrases on the Heads of Religion, which do salve our sore; blessed be God, the Church of England needed not these Crambes: It is only the God of Love and Father of Mercies who can allay the spirits of Men, and bring them out of those contentious and cruel dispositions which are divisive, and so destructive to each other. True, we have been three days dead and buried; yet no Corruption, no Dissolution, no Dissipation can hinder the hand of omnipotent Goodness, when he shall please to command a Resurrection, even to dry bones and scattered dust. Then may we hope that this salvation of the most High draweth near to us, when those that are in highest place for power and Counsel, shall by impartial advice, both of States men and Churchmen, in Synods as well as Parliaments, deliberate and determine such things as shall gratify no one or more Factions or Parties, but the community or public; with regard not so much to the present pregnant and pugnant interests, (which are not without passion prosecuted and urged) as chiefly to the future blessings of their Country and Posterity; which no Government, as to the civil State, will make long happy or peaceful, unless they be combined in religious regards as Christians, no less than as men: For though Christians properly do not fight and contend, yet the men and beasts will, if their hearts and hands be not bound with mutual Charity and Religious Harmony; which are the surest bonds of Unity, Perfection and Peace. To let the concernments of this Church and the state of the Reformed Religion alone, to leave them as now they stand (or fall rather into daily Decays, Divisions, Distractions, mutual animosities & abhorrencies between Ministers and other Christians,) to let them take their course, and work out themselves by an irreligious tolerancy and imprudent indifferency, is (as St. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Basil. Aturbio, ep. 181. Basil the Great observes) like the leaving of a desperate Consumption, or a spreading Cancer, or a venomous Gangrene, or a contagious Plague, to the cure of good nature and providence, expecting what Time will do; (which is indeed a Catholicon that either cures or consumes, mends or ends, all things.) A method far short of that Prudence and Conscience which ought studiously and industriously to apply all those seasonable and apt means, which both Reason and Religion, Piety, Charity, Policy, and Humanity do dictate to us, and require of us; which being in the power of our hands, not to use them, must needs be such a supine negligence and sottish laziness, as neither becomes wise men nor good Christians; savouring more of an earthy dulness and an Atheistical indifferency, than of any quick sense of Honour or Conscience in behalf of our God, our Saviour, our Religion, our own or other men's souls. In all which to be careless and stupid, is the less venial in us as men, because in other things, like Spiders, we have a very quick sense and most acute resentment of any thing that in the least kind toucheth or threateneth our civil, worldly, and momentany concernments, for Estate, Honour or safety: here we are vigilant to prevent, speedy to consult, diligent to endeavour, desperate to adventure. Which high activity in matters Momentany, renders our coldness and lukewarmness in Religion most unexcusable before God and man; being more afraid of an Enemy than an Heresy, of civil Sedition than of Ecclesiastic Schisms, of a sharp Sword than a damnable error; more solicitous to save our Carcases than our Souls, and to sleep in whole skins, than to keep good Consciences; pretending (as some do) that nothing is more Religious, than to urge, enjoin and require nothing in Religion, that the highest Christian Liberty is an Indifferency or toleration left to all men toward all Religions, especially if they do but pretend to any smack of Christianity. I know that this indulging of an equal toleration to all parties and Sects in Christian Religion, (by which, as Cocks in a pit, they may fight it out till they have got the Mastery of each other) hath a popular show of Equanimity and tenderness; being much applauded by those that have had of late years the real benefit of it, though they are the most supercilious and severe suppressors of others, who do but crave an equal and inoffensive share of freedom, as to their Judgements, Consciences and Religion: yet if we look to the bottom of such indulgences as gratify men's endless Novelties, Varieties, Vanities and Extravagancies in Religion, we shall find they have little of true Charity, less of true Piety, and least of all of true Policy, either in Magistrates or Ministers; whose duty (I humbly conceive) is not so much to build their own several nests, and to feather them with their private fancies, where to lay and hatch up their various opinions; but they should all agree to build God's house, to advance that common salvation, according to the Catholic Order and Example of Christ's Church. They should speedily, faithfully and impartially set themselves to settle and maintain, by all fit means, such a way of true Religion, as to its public Profession, solemn Ministration, and paternal Government, as shall be found, by the joint Wisdom and Piety of the Nation, in Learned Synods impartially convened▪ and in free Parliaments peaceably disposed, to be most consonant to God's word as to the substance of duties, and to Primitive Custom as to the manner or Circumstances of them. A work certainly not more necessary than easy, if men's hearts were as upright as they are able, with God's blessing, to attain so good a design. Nor would men fail to be warm and diligent in it, if they had a true perception either of the great advantages which attend the Unity of any Nation in Religion, or of the mischiefs, public and private, which follow their distractions, while every one, out of a childish and inordinate delectation, is indulging their own private humours and opinions, to the injury and neglect of the public. I see that in Terrors of fire, shipwreck or inundation, even devout people will fly from their Prayers, Sermons and Sacraments, to secure themselves or their neighbours: with how much more zeal and earnestness should wise men dispense a little with their private interests, secular Counsels and civil agitations, and sometimes apply to the reliefs and securities of Religion, if they did apprehend and lay to heart the pernicious consequences which are inseparable from the Divisions and Distractions of Religion? whereof I have given in the Second Book so many and so miserable instances. If the work were but once well begun, it would be half done: lesser disputes would fall of themselves, if once, as to the main of Doctrine, Worship, Discipline and Church-Government, sober men were agreed: if the main sores of Pride, Passion, Prejudice and Presumption were well searched and cleansed, Charity, like a precious balsam, would soon work out, close and heal all uncomfortable jealousies and distances among good Christians. However, some public standard owned & established for the settled Truth and Order of the Reformed Religion on all sides, would (by casting Anchor as it were) give some good stay at present, beyond what the particular Confessions of several parties are like to do, such as I see both Presbyterian Associations and Independent Congregations daily bring forth; and so will every new form do, till we all agree in something uniform, as to the main Rule, End and Order of Religion. This once done, however there might still be some toss and dis-satisfactions as to private men's opinions; yet, as to the main interests of Religion as Christian and Reformed, also as to the grand concernments of this Church, in its Unity, Honour, Purity and just Privileges, these would by such Ligatures and limits of Truth and Love be much preserved from running into endless factions and sacrilegious confusions, which cannot but tend to civil combustions, and end at last in the Romish usurpation, which, as the Dam of Romulus, never fails to make its prey of any Churches that are divided and any Christians that are scattered, dissatisfied or scandalised with their Religion; by which means either our Thames will run to Tiber, or Tiber will come to our Thames. This will be the last result these the dregs and bottom of our Religious distractions and unsettledness, if they be not wisely remedied. Mean time, for want of some such sober fixation and equal standard of Religion in its public profession, to which both Prince and people of all sorts might both wisely consent and conform, First, there cannot be that mutual Christian Charity and neighbourly Communion among subjects; Next, there cannot be that kindness or correspondence, that Love and Fidelity between Prince and people, which would be if they did say Amen to the same prayers, and serve the same God in the same manner. Civil disaffections do infallibly follow between Sovereigns and Subjects upon any Diversity in Religion; as is evident not only in Germany, Poland, France, Ireland and Scotland, (where the greatest popular dis-satisfactions and asperities against their Princes were still raised by the jealousies which some people had of their Religion) but also in England, while Subjects suspected as if their Governors in Church and State did daily warp from that Religion which was Reform, and established in the Church of England: from which, at last, it appears none varied less than those that have been most destroyed, none more than those whose jealousies and passions for Reformation have overborn them and this Church to as great deformities as there are novelties, and to as many distractions as there are divisions; which in Religion, as wounds, do not only divide, but deface the beauty of any body Natural, Civil and Ecclesiastic. Nor can there be any public discrepancies of Religion between Prince and people, but either the Prince cries out of Faction, Sedition and Rebellion, against his subjects; or subjects complain of Tyranny and Persecution, as to their Prince's injunctions, at least of superstition, as to his profession, if it be with more ceremony or less solemnity than they fancy, or are wont to. Yea, we find by some men's interpretation of their Covenant, the clause for allegiance thus limited in the preservation of true Religion▪ that is, say some, as far as we think the King preserves what seems to us true Religion, so far we will be faithful to him; if he varies from that, we may fall from him. Besides these mischiefs, which are either imminent or incumbent, and indeed unavoidable, where Prince and People are still left to choose their several Religions amidst the Varieties and Uncertainties of different Modes and Forms, of opposite Preachers, Parties, Professions and Churches, (such as now divide not only England, but all Christendom) in time the Prince or chief Magistrate here in England, or any Christian and Reformed Church, may be either an Atheist, as unsettled in any Religion, because he sees so many; or else he may be an Idolater, an Arrian, a Socinian, a Papist, an Anabaptist, a Familist, a Seeker, a Quaker, any thing or nothing, as well as a Protestant, or Professor of the true Reformed Religion, which is never well Reform, if it be not well united and established, no more than a diseased body is well cured or purged, which is daily breaking out in boils and botches. And since experience shows us in England, that many Subjects, by the scandal of our Divisions, are turned Atheists, Papists, Socinians, Anabaptists, Familists, Seekers, Ranters, Quakers, any thing, yea nothing, as to true Religion, which consists in Piety, Equanimity, Charity, the Love of God and our Neighbour; what shall hinder those that hereafter may be in Sovereign power, and exposed to many temptations, to take the same freedom when they list, and to profess Popery or any thing, when Religion is left to their choice and Indifferency? there being no public Worship, Catechise, Articles or Canons to which all agree as the Card and Compass of Religion, by which both Prince and People may safely and unanimously steer their course towards Heaven, in a Christian consent and harmony, much more punctual and explicit than that is of owning only one God, (which the Turks do) and one Lord Jesus Christ, (which all Heretics and Schismatics do.) Which sad fate of a Prince and People who are every day to seek and choose, or change their Religion, cannot befall England without sore conflicts and many bloody bicker; the temper of the English being not so dull, and phlegmatic, and overawed, as that which possesseth some Dutchmen and Almains, whose zeal for trade and gain (besides their social drinking, which begins and ends all their differences) makes them more capable to endure different professions of Religion among them, so far as they do not endanger the civil peace, nor obstruct their blessed commerce: yet even these Churches and States have some settled form and profession of Religion, in Doctrine, worship and discipline: yea, they in the Netherlands have a very handsome Liturgy, and other public boundaries or Symbols of their Religion, from which when once their Magistrates perceived such variations to grow, by the Remonstrants' party, as might shake their civil peace and the stability of their Church, they did, to their no small cost and pains, stop the breach, both by the Synod of Dort and the power of the Sword, not permitting those whom the public sense counted Innovators in Religion, to enjoy any such freedom or toleration as might endanger any public perturbations, which would have grown easily from such parties as wanted not Learning, Wit and Pretensions of Piety, on each side, to carry on their Opinions as far as their passions and interests listed, which is to have Empire and Dominion, not only over all men's bodies, but their souls too, either by fair or foul means: for no Opinion or Sect is content with the Trundle-bed or Footstool, but affects the Throne and Sceptre, of State and of Religion, that it may have a complete sovereignty over men; which is never well managed by private men's petty activities, and therefore best prevented by the public Wisdom, Moderation and Setledness, which ought to be in every Nation, State, Kingdom or Commonwealth that owns itself as a Church of Christ, who is but one Lord, and hath taught all his Disciples but one Religion. All sober and honest men (whose fishing and harvest lies not in our troubles) do sufficiently see that Religion, as Christian and Reformed, hath suffered very much in England, when it was best settled: we have upon us the wounds both of peace and war. As our former long peace and undeserved prosperity treasured up much morbific matter, so the civil war, by mutual chafings and exasperating, did breed higher inflammations and festrings; yea, and our late truce, rather than tranquillity, hath been so far from a serious consideration and well-advised settling of our distractions in Religion, that many men have had but more leisure and liberty to scratch their own and other men's scabious itchings, and to make wider the gaping corifices of our religious Ulcers. Indeed, private hands can do no other, who besides their petulant passions, being under no public restraint and modesty, have infinite partialities, both as to self-flatteries and designs. It must be the Gravity and Majesty, the Nobleness and Ampleness of public Wisdom and Authority, which must by prudence and impartiality, both in counsels and actions, reach the depth, and equal the proportions either of our maladies or our remedies: to which if wise and worthy men do not in time contribute their counsels, prayers and endeavours, for the help and healing of our Religious Affairs, doubtless the disorders and sinister policies of either weak or wicked men will utterly ruin the very remains and ruins of this Church. Nor can the Civil State be ever steady or permanent, where Prince and Subjects, Preachers and People are so divided, (in their principles and practices of Religion, both as to their Ministry and Ministration, as to the original and exercise of all Ecclesiastical Authority and Communion) that they still think it a great part of their Religion either to reform or ruin each other. It is observed to be one main pillar of the Turkish Polity, Peace and Empire, which is so vast and diffused, yet generally so peaceable and unanimous, that their Religion or Holy Law (as they call it) being once settled, is never permitted by any man to be shaken or disputed, much less altered or innovated in the least kind. I know it is not fit for Christians to follow all Mahometan rigours and severities, no more than their follies and simplicities; yet, if the setledness of so wild a Rhapsody of Religion as the Alcoran contains, (which is made up of Truth and Falsehood, of Fables and Fancies, of Dreams and Dotages) be of so great moment to preserve their civil peace, where no wise man can be much concerned what is believed or disbelieved by him, or any man, in such a mere Romance of Religion, of how much more consequence and conscience would it be to all Christians, in any Polity or Nation, to have their Religion well fixed and settled, which is so Ancient, so Holy, so True, so Venerable, so Divine, so in its Nature, Centre and Circumference but one, so deserving to be most United and Uniform, both as to its Doctrine and Profession? It is a shame to see Mahometans wiser in their generation than Christians, who are, or aught to be, the children of that Wisdom and that Light which shines upon them all by the Scriptures, as the Beams of the Sun of Righteousness. It is childish for us, who are cunning & careful enough to preserve civil peace, to be so careless of religious Unity and Harmony, as to be tossed to and fro with every wind of Doctrine, according to the sleight of men, who lie in wait to deceive the hearts of the simple, Rom. 16.18. serving not the Lord, but their own bellies. We should rather study to be rooted and grounded in the Catholic Truth, which is according to Holiness, Justice, Order and Charity, after the primitive pattern and constant practice of all true Churches, Preachers and Professors; whose Authority and Reverence ought to sway more with us, than any new and private men's Inventions, which no man will admire that well understands the old, which were so founded upon Verity, so fortified by Charity, so edified in Unity, so reverend for Antiquity, so permanent in their Constancy, according to the particular constitutions of every Church, which still kept the great and Catholic Communion, as to the main, amidst some little varieties of outward profession, not as to substance, but only in Circumstances or Ceremony: For, as to the main, every Christian, Layical or Clerical, Catechumen, Penitents and Communicants, Deacons and Presbyters, kept the stations in which God and the Church had set them. Every member kept to its Congregation, every Congregation to its ordained Presbyter or lawful Minister, every Presbyter to his own Bishop, every Bishop to his Metropolitan, every Metropolitan to his Patriarch, every Patriarch (not to the Pope, but) to the General Councils, and every General Council to the Scriptures, and those Apostolic Traditions which were Catholic, and so agreeable to them. All which orderly gradations were, certainly, in the Catholic Church as lawful as those which the policy of Presbytery hath invented, for congregational, Classical, Provincial and national Consistories: I am sure they were much more useful. For those of old preserved every private Christian, every Family, every City, every Country, every Province, every Nation that was Christian, not only in a Churchway or Ecclesiastical Communion and Correspondency, as to their particular bounds and nearer relations in every Parish, or Congregation, or City, or Country; but as to that Catholic bond of Charity which binds up all Christians in all the world in one fellowship of one body, and one Church, whose head is Christ; to whom every true believer and visible Professor in the whole latitude of the Church being, by the Word and Spirit of Christ, fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, doth both edify and increase itself and others in Truth and Love, without which all Churches, all Religion and all Reformation are but like parts or members separate from their body, not without flesh, sinews, substance or bones, but yet without blood and Spirits, Life and Soul. For, as the particular parts and members of the natural body do not live, thrive and move, only by that particular substance, spirit, That all right Excommunication is by the Authority, and out of the Communion of the true Cathotholick Church. life and aptitude which is (apart) in them, but by a concurrence with, an influence from, and a participation of, that common Spirit, Life & Virtue which they have from the whole, while they are in Communion with it: so is it with Christians, singly and severally considered their virtue is small, and separated none at all, because they want so much of Authority and Validity, as they want of Catholic Unity and Ecclesiastical harmony, which keep Christians and Churches entire to Christ and to each other, by that one and common spirit, which runs through all true Christians; by virtue of which, and not of any private spirit, all public transactions, which concern any nobler part or portion of Christ's Church, are to be carried on, and anciently were in all orderly Churches as branches of the Catholic. This, this great and public Communion in the same Faith, Spirit, Power and Authority, Concil. Nic. Canon 5. De Communione privatis, sive ex clero, sive laico Ordine, ab Episcopis per unamquamque Provinciam. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Concil. Nic. Canon 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. was it that made the just and valid sentence of Excommunication in Primitive times so terrible, and that of absolution so comfortable, to all good Christians, even as the sentence of Jesus Christ at the last day; which Tertullian, Cyprian, the first Council of Nice, and others tell us of: Because it was no private spirit of any Christian, or Congregation, or Church, or Presbyter, or Bishop, or Metropolitan, or Patriarch, that properly did excommunicate, but it was the Spirit, Power and Authority of Jesus Christ, given to, diffused among, and shed abroad in, his whole body of the Catholic Church, and in that name dispensed by the particular Bishops and Pastors of it in their several Stations or Places; as the visual and audible powers or faculties which are in the soul are exerted and exercised only by the Eyes and Ears. Hence was it that whoever was by any one Catholic Bishop with his Presbyters and his people excommunicated, was thereby cast out of that and all other Church's Communion in all the world; nor was it lawful, as the Nicene Council and African Canons tell us, for any Bishop, Presbyter, or Christian people, to receive into Church-fellowship or to the holy Communion of the Eucharist any one that was thus secluded. Then did this great and weighty Thunderbolt of Excommunication seemingly lose its Primitive virtue and value, (not really, for it holds good still, according to the Original Commission, when lawfully executed in binding or losing, in opening or shutting, as Christ deposited it with his Apostles and their successors) when Factions or Schisms being risen in the Church, contrary sentences of Excommunication were on all sides passionately bandied against each other; not from that unity of the Spirit, which kept the bond of Truth and Love, but from the private Passions, Presumptions, Prejudices and Opinions of such as either openly deserted, or occasionally declined from, that Catholic Community and Unity of one Faith, one Lord, one Baptism, one Spirit, for gifts and graces, for the Authority and Efficacy of Christ's holy Ministry. After these preposterous and partial methods, not only many particular Christians, but some Presbyters and Bishops, yea whole Synods and Councils, have sometimes passed the sentences of Excommunication, both as to declaring the guilt and merit of it, also to the act and execution of it, very precipitantly, partially, passionately and uncharitably; even against such Doctrines, Practices and Persons, as were orthodox and peaceable, really in Communion with Christ and with the Catholic Church: of which one early, great and sad instance was that in the second Century, of Victor Bishop of Rome, who in the case of Easter grew so zealously exasperated against the Greek and Eastern Churches, as Quartadecimans, that he thought them worthy to be excommunicated in the name of all the Latin Churches; notwithstanding that many grave and Learned Bishops, with their Churches, testified, that in observing the fourteenth day of the month they followed the Primitive Custom and pattern delivered by the Apostles to them; wherein St. Irenaeus (according to his name) with greater Moderation and Charity sought not only to appease, but to repress the inordinate heats of that Pope and his adherents, who had a zeal, but not according to Charity, breaking Christian Communion while he urged too much conformity in all outward things, beyond the liberty which was granted, and had been long used in the Church: concluding, that difference of times or days (not divinely determined) in the observation of the same duty, ought not to make any breach of Catholic Unity & Christian Charity, but rather assert & exercise that Christian Liberty which may, in circumstantials as to outward Rites, be in the several parts of Christ's Church, until all think fit to agree in that Circumstance of time, as well as they did in the substance of the duty, which was the Eucharistical Celebration of Christ's Blessed Resurrections which was the reviving of the Christian faith and hope. After this example did St. Cyprian in Africa, excommunicate those that would not rebaptize, or did communicate with, such as Heretics and Schismatics baptised; herein being contrary to the sense of the Catholic Church. At length these and the like passions or surprises even of some Orthodox Bishops, were made patterns and encouragements to any pragmatic Heretics and arrogant Schismatics: These, as they grew to any bulk and number, (like Snowballs by rolling) ventured to handle this hot Thunderbolt of Excommunication, when they had most cause to fear it; because their Petulancy, Obstinacy and Contumacy against the true and Catholic Churches Judgement and Communion most deserved it, if their first error did not. Hence Excommunication was at last every where reduced and debased to private spirits, full of pride, revenge and partiality; the Catharists or Novatians, the Donatists and Arrians feared not, by their Pseudoepiscopal Conventicles and Schismatical Assemblies, to denounce these Terrors and anathemas, and to use the sharp sword of spiritual curses against the soundest parts of the Church; as some dared to do against Athanasius, and all the Orthodox, both Bishops, Presbyters and People. This made in aftertimes all Excommunication very much slighted and despised, while it either served to little other use than to execute the Pope's wrath, for many hundred years of great Darkness and blind Devotion, or afterward, in times of more Light and Heat, it was used as Squibbs are, rather to scare and smut, than much to burn or blast, those who either used it or abused it rather to gratify their own private spirits, than to execute that public power and Authority which Jesus Christ hath committed, with his Spirit and Word, to his Church and the Rulers of it; by which who so was justly cut off, cast out, and given over to Satan, was looked upon as separate from the comfort of Communion with Jesus Christ and the true God, as well as the true Church in all the World. Nor was this only a declarative act, as to the merit of that fearful doom and state, confirmed by the consonant suffrage of all the Church as damnabl● without Repentance and Reconciliation, (of which every private Christian might easily make a verbal report and oral denunciation;) but it was an authoritative and effectual act, executive of the just and deserved judgement of God, so as to be ratified in Heaven, according to the original tenor and validity of Christ's Word and Commission, without Repentance: just as what is by virtue of their Office done by any public Judge, Notary or Herald, is not only declarative, but also executive of the Will and command of the Prince, specified in the authentic Commission or mandate under the Broad seal, which is not only the voice of the King and his Council, but of the Law and public Justice itself, yea of the whole Republic or Community; as every man lawfully condemned by any Judge, or cast by any Jury, is virtually cast and condemned by the Will, suffrage and consent of the Body politic, who are all consenting to the Law, and concerned that justice be duly executed on some evil Members for the good of the whole. So that the several degrees and subordinations in the ancient Church of Christ, Canon 6. even long before the first Nicene Council (as there is expressed) among Churchmen and Bishops, (against which some have made so loud and ridiculous clamours) were chiefly for this end, as Mr. Calvin and others have as ingenuously as truly observed, that the holy correspondency of all Christians and all Churches in one Faith and Truth, in one Spirit and Power, might not only be most evident to the world, but most aptly carried on and preserved against all Factions, Variations and Divisions, that they might by these means be known to be of one heart and mind in the Lord, that they might all speak the same things, and walk in the same steps; that what one condemned all might in the same spirit condemn, what one forgave all might forgive; that none might, upon any private passions, either excommunicate others by injurious abscission, or themselves by voluntary separation, or make new confederacies and associations with those who are either deserters of the Catholic Communion, or justly excommunicated from it: which distempers of Ignorance, and Impatience, and Imprudence among Christians have brought, as we see, this great power of the Keys, and this exercise of Christian Discipline, so far into contempt, that no man almost regards it from any hand; every one daring to make what retortions they please, and to excommunicate any one or more, yea and whole Churches, that do excommunicate them for any the most notorious errors and insolences. Thus, as the Popes of Rome heretofore, so the people now in many places challenge to themselves this power against their Neighbours and Brethren, yea against their Preachers and Bishops, against the Fathers that begat them, and the Mother- Church which did bear them. So that, I confess, there is not so much cause of terror as of pity in most Excommunications, as they are now managed by private and unauthoritative spirits. O what sorrow, what shame is it to see so Sacred, so Solemn, so Divine, so Dreadful an Institution, vilified and nullified, which was designed for the health and welfare of the Church of Christ, by just and necessary severities, when it was, as it ought to be, soberly applied by wise, holy, and impartial Governors of the Church in the name of Christ, & in the Catholic Spirit or consent of all Orthodox Bishops, Presbyters and people, which was able to shake Heaven and Hell, to open and shut the Everlasting doors of Salvation or Damnation, according as the penitency or impenitency of offenders did appear! To see this flaming sword, which was put by Christ into the Cherubims' hand (those that were the Angels of his Church) to keep the way of the tree of life, to see this made the scarecrow and scorn of vile men, the sport of petulant and peevish Spirits; who neither fear to inflict Excommunication upon whom they list, as much as lies in their impotent malice, nor yet to suffer it from the most Just, Impartial and Authoritative hands in the world; from whom being once proudly separated, they fancy they are (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) out of the reach and danger of this just terror, and the others true Authority, as lawful Bishops or Governors of the Church! whose heavy sentence if I should incur so far, that any one true Bishop with his Clergy should pass it against me, upon just grounds of my scandalous and obstinate sinning against God and his Church, (according to the ancient, rightful and lawful way of such proceedings in the Name and Spirit of Jesus Christ, to which all true Christians in this Church and in all the world do submit and assent,) I confess I should much more fear, living and dying, to lie under such a censure and sentence, than to be condemned in my Estate, Liberty or Life, by any Court of humane Justice, which reacheth not to the Souls eternal estate, as Excommunication rightly managed doth; it being a most undoubted Oracle of our Lord Jesus Christ, that whose sins the Apostles, and their lawful successors, as Rulers of the Church, do bind on Earth, they are bound in Heaven. Who their lawful and authoritative successors have been, are, and aught to be, in all Ages and places of the Church, is evident to all that have any fear of God, or reverence of his Catholic Churches Testimony. This is certain, as Excommunication carries with it the joint spirit and suffrage of the whole Church, and every true Member of it, either explicitly or implicitly; so the regular and authoritative managing of it was ever from the respective Bishop's Authority and Order, as chief Pastors in every Church, to whose fatherly care and Inspection, with the counsel of their Presbyters, the Flock of Christ is committed; especially as to the discreet use of such Discipline as highly concerns the salvation or damnation, the hopes or despair, the binding or losing, the abscission or restauration of any part: which ought not to be judged, determined and executed by every private spirit of Minister or people, but by such venerable Bishops and their Presbyters, as have the authentic transmission of the Apostles ordinary governing power delivered to them as from Christ; being in this like the Judges in commission for Life and Death: though the Sentence be the Laws, and the power the chief Magistrates, and the transaction or publication in the Face of the County, to which all the Bench of Justices, the Jury and other honest Men do tacitly give their votes and assent; yet is the Cognizance and Examination of the merits of the Cause, and the judicial solemn Declaration of the Sentence, committed specially to the Judge, both in respect of his learned Abilities and known Integrity, also for the Honour and Order which are necessary to be observed in proceedings of so great concernment to Mankind as are matters of Life and Death. Such is the power, such aught to be the procedure of all due Excommunication; such they were in the purest and primitive times, when all Christians, all Congregations, all Presbyters, all Bishops, all particular Churches, were so united, that, as many Spokes make but one Wheel, and many Stones one Building, and many Members one Body, so these made but one Church, in the same Faith, the same Baptism, the same Ministry, the same Spirit, the same Order, the same Power, the same Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. From which Blessed Harmony and Spiritual Communion if any Christian, or any particular Congregation, or any part of the Church, (as those of the Donatistick party and the Novatians in Africa, with others) either proudly, passionately and peevishly did separate themselves, or were deservedly separated by the just censure of any part of the true Church, and thenceforth falling to mangling of all by mutual Excommunications, so as to fly in the faces of their lawful Bishops and Pastors, or else turn their backs on them and their Communion; certainly there could nothing hence be expected but such sad effects as always follow the dividing or any part from the whole, whose integrity is the common Safety, Beauty and honour. All break, severing and dissociating among any Christians, or in any Church, are the fatal forerunners of much misery, decay and death, as to that Truth and Love which are the life and vigour of all Christian societies. And such, I fear, in time will be the state of this languishing and lamenting, this broken and bleeding Church of England, where every man's hand of late years hath been and still is lifted up against his brother, and the Sons against their Fathers, wounding and tearing, destroying and devouring one another; where none are afraid either to Excommunicate themselves, or others whom they list, or to deserve any the justest sentence of Excommunication from any others in whom the true power and judgement under Christ resides. This, this seems to be the state of the Church of England, which heretofore was ever justly esteemed as a Noble, Ancient, Renowned and Principal part of the Catholic, Militant and visible Church of Christ, until it came to be thus torn and mangled into many Churches, thus wounded and divided by uncharitable factions, thus swollen and inflamed by proud and passionate separations, thus deformed and dying by continued and uncured Distractions; which will destroy the whole, as to all Honour, Beauty, Unity, Integrity and Authority, while men study to foment and advance their private and several parties, contrary to the real and public interests of the whole Church of England, both as national and as a Member of the Catholic. In whose behalf I know not how to express (before I die) a greater zeal for God's glory, or love to my Redeemer, or Charity to my Country, than by thus recommending to your Pious, Princely and Generous care (O my Worthy and Honoured Countrymen,) the state of the Church of England and of the Reformed Religion, sometime so professed in her, that she was the Glory, Crown, Rejoicing and Triumph of all Christian and Reformed Churches. CHAP. XXVI. BEseeching You again and again, A further Caution against Sacrilege, upon the occasion of D. B his Case lately published, about purchasing Bishops Lands. as persons of Wisdom and Power, of Piety and Honour, of Grandeur and Candour, first by all means to redeem the Interests of this Reformed Church, of true Religion and its true Ministers, from those undeserved diminutions and sacrilegious depredations, to which they are still exposed by the Envy, Malice, injuriousness, Presumption and unsatiable Covetousness of many men of later years grown up in England. Alas, poor and despicable men will as certainly make poor Ministers, as lean hackneys in long travelling will tyre; you may as soon mix Oil and Water, Day and Gold, as fix any Honour or Regard upon that Ministry or Clergy which is depressed, in these last and worst, these brass and iron times, to popular dependence, and its necessary consequents, Poverty, or, which is worse, Flattery. Such as make no scruple to take away from Ministers, even from the best and chiefest of them, one part of their double Honour, a settled, competent and honourable maintenance, will never make conscience to deprive them of the other part, which is civil respect and verbal value, which are but the shells and shadows of Honour; men will make no bones to take away fleece and all, who will venture to steal the carcase of the sheep. You cannot but (with me) see that there are many men of a new light, and sight too, who look upon nothing which hath been given to the Church, either for its Instruction or Government, for its Minister's Education or Entertainment, for Charity or Hospitality, for Decency or Honour, under any notion, I do not say of sacred, as devoted to our God and Saviour, (alas! this is blasted for superstitious and superfluous, as neither needful nor acceptable to God,) but not so much as just, in any civil Right or common Equity, so far as the proprietors have the use and possession of them, according to as good law as any man hath his Lands and Goods; of which they cannot in justice be disseised, unless they are convicted by law to have forfeited them, by Felony or Treason, or such Misdemeanour as the law thinks fit to punish by such deprivation. Who almost is there of these new Illuminates that makes any scruple or conscience to shark, to defraud, to detain, to delay, to deny any thing that belongeth to th● ●ergy or Ministry, comply they never so much with the popul●●ther what they requ●re as their Right, by Law as well as 〈…〉 ●ewish, or Superstitious, or Popish, or Pompous, or Super● 〈…〉, or Abused, and so may better be turned to other 〈…〉 other men of civil Trades and Professions, 〈…〉 essary to the Commonwealth than any Ministers 〈…〉 ●riledge is in every corner, yea and in Marketplace 〈…〉, yea oft in Churches and Pulpits; Murmuring, 〈…〉▪ Rep●ing, Coveting and Plotting how to eat up, not only all the Houses of God in the Land, but all his chief servants, the Rulers and Ministers of his Son Jesus Christ, the Pastors and Teachers of his Church. We have already seen, if some men like to have no Bishops, as chief Fathers, Precedents and Governors, nor any Deans and Chapters, as their constant Presbyteries and Counsel, (which all Reason and Religion, all Policy and Order, all Practice and Custom of the Church of God, old and new, all Wisdom, Divine and Humane, either commands or commends in all Polities, Societies and Fraternities of men,) presently away with all these Amalekites, their Revenues, Houses and Honours must be sold and converted to other uses. If others, or the same genius, like to have no Presbyters or Ministers, as set apart and ordained for that Office and Calling, will not, nay do not, their Teeth ache, and fingers itch, to take away all Glebes and Tithes from all Ministers, though never so industrious and deserving, and by Law invested in them, as to all civil Right? Would not some men either have Ministers fall to Spinning and Carding, to Thrashing and Digging, to Begging and Stealing, to Starving or Hanging, as well as to Preaching? or else they will bring Diggers and Thatchers, Combers and Weavers, with other Godly Mechanics, who will preach all things, and demand nothing as due, however no Tithes; which are to some as abominable as feeding upon Mice and Rats. So, if others like to have no Scholars bred to Humane Learning, (which, they say, doth but obstruct the teachings of God's Spirit, and puff up Ministers with the leaven of Philosophy, Arts and Sciences, above the simplicity of the Gospel, and above the Ploughs, Carts and High-shoes of their silly neighbours) O how do they grieve and pine away day by day, (as Amnon did for love of Tamar) or as Ahab did for Naboths Vineyard) that they might once seize upon the Lands and Colleges of both Universities, and all Free-Schooles which go beyond Writing, Reading and Cyphering? O what fine Estates, what pretty Dwellings might be picked out of those needless seminaries of Scholars, Priests and Preachers? If others like no local Churches, as Superstitious, Popish, Jewish, Heathenish, who had all such like gross and material Temples, which are needless to those that are themselves living Temples of the holy Spirit, and need not that any men should teach them in Piles of Wood and Stone, or out of Desks and Pulpits; down, down even to the ground with these Steeple-Houses, these Hornets and Wasps nests: the rubbish, if it will not sell, will at least mend the highways to Markets, and spare the Town or Country Charges of digging gravel; the Bells, Stones and Timber will turn to good money, the Commonwealth may need them, they will save taxes a while. Thus will some men boldly dare, if they might have their will, to take away both the Foal and the Ass, with (Dominus opus habet,) or rather (Dominus opus non habet) the Lord of Heaven needs not these things, so much as some that long to be our Lords on Earth. Last of all, (that I may search this Fistula to the bottom,) if any that are young and lusty, full-fed and frolic, shall dislike to have any lazy poor people to be maintained as Moths and Leeches, Teeks or Vermine, gratis, upon the public Alms and Charitable Foundations, presently (as if they quite forgot that themselves might be so Aged, Poor and Feeble, that they might be glad of such constant relief; or as if they did not remember how many of their Fathers and Mothers, their Grandsires and Grandames, have lived and died, either in some such Almshouse and Hospital, or have been kept at the Town Charges,) away with all the Lands and Houses of Almshouses and Hospitals, those drones nests, where they neither have daily service of God, nor frequent Prayers, Sermons and Sacraments, as Cathedral Churches had; which either are most-what demolished, or in a fair way to drop down and be destroyed. Whither, I beseech you, will not this Gangrene of covetous and sacrilegious Humour spread? Who will give any thing, living or dying, to any good work of durable Piety or Charity, when he shall see nothing is like to be secure? Were it not high time to examine what the Sin of Sacrilege is? whether there be any such Sin, since so many holy and learned men affirm it in word, and yet so many others of godly pretensions in deed own no such thing? If it be found to be a Sin, it must needs be a dreadful Monster, like Python or Hydra, with a very great paunch, and many wide mouths; a Gigantic Sin, that fights against God, defies Heaven, devours things sacred, dares to rob the Poors bellies, and starve their souls. It is not to be checked or stopped, but by some public Censure, Decree and Detestation, declaring it to be a Sin injurious to God, reproachful to any Religion, as Heathenish, Jewish, Christian and Reformed, dishonourable to any Nation, desolating to the Church, destructive to Ministers and people, to Piety, Charity, Learning and Industry. No Bank or Rampart is sufficient to keep out this black and dead sea, when once it hath undermined the common principles of Gratitude, Reverence and Worship toward God, of Justice and Righteousness toward Men; which it is very like to do, when I find D. B. a man of my own Coat and Calling, a professed Presbyter or Minister heretofore according to the Ordination of the Church of England, who hath the character of holy Oders by Bishop's hands still upon him unrenounced, when (I say) such men come to be proctor's and promoters, patroness, pleaders and solicitors (in any case) for alienating of those Church-lands which belonged to the Bishops, Deans and Chapters: the issue indeed of difficult, distressed and turbulent times, which, it may be, Necessity rather than choice drove some men to; yet this in cool blood must be applauded by a grave O, that so he, a late purchaser, may have part of that bl●ssed Corban, which, he knows, did sometime belong to his Mother this Church, and to his Fathers the Bishops of it: whose right to keep what they had by Law was, I suppose, once undoubtedly as good as any that thisor any man can plead, for what it seems he never yet had possession of. Sure it was as just for those to have kept their Estates, as it can be for him to get part of it: he cannot strengthen his own private and purchased Title, but he must justify theirs more, who had received and enjoyed them as public Ministers, Governors and officers of the Church, upon a public, both civil and sacred, Title; First, from the pious Donors, who doubtless had, as St. Peter tells Ananias, a power to give what was their own, as they did to God and his Church, by valid Acts in Law, and such deeds as expressed their last Will and Testament, which, St. Paul tells us, no man ought to disannul; Secondly, especially considering, in the next place, that what was so given, was no way to the prejudice of the public; Thirdly, yea by public Permission, Approbation, Confirmation and Acceptance; Fourthly, wherein the whole Nation, Church and State, hath a public right and common interest, as things given for the good Order and Honour of the Nation as it is Christian: Fifthly and lastly, add to the personal right of the Donors and Possessors, also to the public right of the whole Nation, that highest right (paramount) which all learned and impartial men have ever judged to be in God; either in such things as he is pleased precisely to demand of us, as he did the Firstborn, the First-fruits, many Sacrifices and Oblations, besides the Tithes of all, and some Cities with their Suburbs for his Ministers of old; or in those things which he hath left in our free Will and Gratitude to Vow, Offer, Give & Dedicate to his Service, or to his Son Jesus Christ, (as the wise men at first did their Myrrh, Gold and Frankincense, which certainly no men would have taken from that holy Babe, who would not, with Herod have taken away his life.) By which holy Liberalities we Christians may honour our God and Saviour with our substance, and not serve them only with that which costs us nothing: nor is God in these to be mocked; if once we have vowed and devoted them to him, as we ought to pay our Vows, so we ought not to break and frustrate either our own or others Dedications to God who is (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) the great Asylum of all, not to be violated in the least kind. Who ever doubted but that God accepted and owned as his peculiar, those things which any men consecrated as means fitting to advance the good ends of his Glory and public Service in the right Teaching, Ordering and Governing of his Church, in instituting and supporting his Ministry, and in relieving his Poor? All which being so very necessary for the Church, and so agreeable to the Word of God, they must needs be strangely avaricious who think it superstitious for any man to give of his Lands or other Estate to these Uses, and to invest in God's name his Church or Ministers, as a holy Corporation, in such a right, as is hard to imagine how it can be ever justly alienated, till the free consent of all parties concerned be had and declared. First, the present possessors, they must freely resign their personal and temporary Right, which they had no way forfeited. Secondly, next, the whole Nation, as Church and State in Parliament and Convocation, Prince, Peers, Clergy and Commons, for themselves, their Heirs and Successors, must fully and freely remit their public Interest. Thirdly and lastly, God's Mind must be known, that he is willing to be deprived either of that Service and Honour he and his Son Jesus Christ had, or of those means for the Maintenance of it which were devoted to him. Nor can any power (that I know) but only God's Omnipotence, absolve the living and survivors from that right which the Donors had when yet living, and that Bond which from them, though dead, yet still lies on the Consciences of those survivors, who for ever stand bound to discharge their trust, by observing as sacred the Will of the Dead, which, if once lawful, is not to be made void wilfully and presumptuously. If at any time public necessities do drive men to some temporary dispensations and seizures, yet these must be so recompensed afterward in quiet times, as may keep them from being made, beyond inconveniences, intentional and eternal Injuries to God and his Church, that it may be but a Borrowing, and not a Robbing of God or his Church. If neither the Ministers of Christ, nor his Church, nor the State, nor God, nor the Dead, nor the Living, have any right, claim or Interest in such things, whose they either once were, or at present are, as to the Possession, Property, Use and Enjoyment, which way can any men that are mere strangers to them and had no special right in them, make such claim and power to them, as to dispose of them? unless they were things so relinquished as none owned them, or had never been in any man's rightful possession, and so fell to those (jure occupantis) who first could seize on them, without dispossessing any of them who had a right to them, and challenged that right in Gods, the Churches, and their own name, as by legal possession: which, under favour, is not the case whence this great pleader either draws his Title, or their supreme and superdivine right, who undertook to alienate Bishops and other Church-lands, which were neither relinquished, nor resigned, nor forfeited by God or Man. Doubtless those supreme Disposers of that part of the public Patrimony, had either some other principles, or higher dictates and dispensations, than this Advocate either understands or can bring forth, or else they will have much ado to answer the Dead or the Living, the Church or the State, God or their own Consciences, the present Age or Posterity. For to pretend that Bishops and Episcopacy were but a superfluous and superstitious superstructure added to the government of Christ's Church, raised by Ambition and Superstition, is not only very untrue, but very immodest, considering the purity and sanctity of those primitive and catholic Churches, which (he knows) had Bishops even from the Apostles days, for the well being of all Churches: To allege that their Estates and Lordships were superfluous, ill bestowed and ill used, is to calumniate or envy so many worthy persons (every way his equals at least) that were Bishops, Deans and prebend's in England; who, without peradventure, were every way as Learned, as Liberal, as Unspotted, as Useful, as Beloved of God and man, as Deserving their Estates and Preferments, as ever this pleader (without disparagement) was or is, by any men on any side, thought to deserve his Doctorship, or Wa●ford, or St. Magnus, or Paul's Lecture, or any part and portion of Bishop's Lands, or Deans and prebend's Houses If this complaining Champion bring not forth greater spears and shields to defend that from Sacrilege, which some men have not only suspected in all Ages, but shrewdly charged, actum est, this Goliath will be overthrown by every little David that can but distinguish his right hand from his l●ft, or knows what belongs to meum and tuum, to the doing to others as you would have done to yourself, agreeable to Laws in force and principles of common justice. If his weak and impotent allegations may go for current, contrary to the sense of Jew and Gentile, of Law and Gospel, of the greatest Divines and ablest Lawyers, of the wisest Princes and soberest Parliaments that ever were, besides all Synods and Councils of the Church, (which he may suspect as partial to their own interest;) if the little wax and small shot which this pleader claps to the bowl may over-bias the case against all those so many ponderous prejudices which have on all sides been alleged to secure Gods right and Religions interests, actum est de Ecclesia: such popular (that I say not parasitick) Pleas will in time so spread among the heady, easy and greedy sort of common people, that we may bid farewell to all things given for public encouragement and reward, to Learning and Religion, to Preaching or Ruling Ministers, yea to relieve the poor and Aged: all these things will seem loose and free hereafter, whenever any men that have a mind to it shall have it in their power or pleasure, to take away all as superstitious or superfluous, and to apply them to civil or secular uses. A work (to speak freely) fitter for Mahometans than any Christians, for the Ruiners rather than Reformers of Religion. I wonder that this Pleader, who is thought so great a Politician, doth not see that his Estate as a Presbyter is no less maligned and quarrelled at by many, than the Bishops were and are by him. Such as have seen the Master's Cabin made prize, will they spare the Master's mate? A small Prophet may, without any great inspiration foresee and foretell, that if some men's Spirits were left to their own sway, they would not only buy and sell, or pull down, Bishops Palaces, Deans and prebend's Houses, and Cathedral Churches, but all Chancels, and Churches, and Steeples, all Parsonage and Vicariage-Houses, in fine, all settled maintenance would be stripped, and Religion, with its Ministry, exposed to its Primitive nakedness: which were no shame, if it were attended with the Primitive innocency, liberality, gratitude, love and chari●y which were in the first Christians, who differed as much from the modern temper, as giving all to, and taking all from, the Apostles, the Governors and Ministers of Christ's Church. If the Plea be good in conscience before God and good men, that whatever any men shall think given superfluously or superstitiously to any pious or public use, may be honestly alienated, farewell all, when every party in England hath acted its part according to its principles, whereto the stimulations of this Pleader may contribute much with vulgar and Mammonitish minds: nothing will be left in a few years, unless some potent stop be put to the progress of Sacrilegious impulses, by some public Anathema of utter detestation, grounded upon principles of most evident justice, divine and humane, to be declared against all such Alienations for the future as the Wisdom, Piety and Honour of the Nation shall think to be sacrilegious, unlawful and abominable to God and good men. Possibly such Parliamentary terrors may work more upon this and other men's purchasing consciences, than all those ancient execrations, which were not, as he fancies, causeless, but deserved, curses; not rashly imprecated, but justly denounced, against all unjust Violators of such Donors' Wills, who knowing (that Auri sacra fames,) the audaciousness of covetousness, even against God as well as man, in all Ages, sought piously and prudently, as much as in them lay, to fortify and defend their Just, Religious and Charitable gifts to God, his Church, or his poor, as it were with Thunder and Lightning, with Flaming Swords and Hell-fire, upon which they thought none would adventure but such as were either very blind or very foolhardy; since their righteous Deed and Invocation being allowed and recorded in the Court of Heaven (as much, no doubt, as the charge of the Father of the Rechabites upon his children,) the Estate and Gift seems so inseparably entailed together with the Curse, that they certainly concluded, the God who graciously accepted the one would also ratify the other, and infallibly execute his wrath and vengeance upon those who should break this strong bar, set against all alienation as an odious (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) violation of the dead, who are under Gods more immediate custody and protection. It were very good therefore that we might at length know the public sense in the case of the remaining Church-Lands and Revenues, especially of such men who are no purchasers, nor like to be, of any Church-Lands: because I now find not only some great examples of Laymen, but even of Clergymen, (sometime very conformable ones,) who once professed to me their utter dislike against extirpating of Episcopacy; yet such an one I find teaching men his rare Art, how to crack such Thunderbolts like nuts, how to make mincemeat or wholesome pottage of those curses which others count as Coloquintida or deadly bitterness in the Prophets as well as the people's pot: but he, like Leviathan, scorns those spears like bulrushes; like the Italian Lithophagus, he can feed upon stones, and without a miracle answer Satan's demand of turning them into bread; yea more, he can turn darkness into light, and cursing into blessing, making that a step to Heaven and Reformation, which was judged (heretofore) by many Learned and Godly men, as the very gate of Hell and high way to most sure Damnation, without repentance and restitution to a satisfaction. Whether this party wear a Crown of Imperial bays, or have some other charm which is capable to disarm any such Thunderbolts, I know not: But I find him (while I was even now concluding my last request for the Church of England,) boldly and openly justifying from all suspicion of sacrilege the late taking away of all their Revenues, Lands, Houses and Dignities from Bishops, Deans and Prebend●; of which fact, I believe, few knowing men that Voted and Acted in it, but had at first some scruples & secret grief for the tyranny of the necessity urging them to act against many of their jealousies and scruples of conscience, till they were, it may be, salved and solved, but by better solutions (I suppose) than this Pleader produceth, only to make way for his own Title, and to corroborate his new purchase. But doth any wise man think that this Pleader for his own Title, and sin-absolver of all men's consciences, would have been of the same mind, and have judged such alienation to have had no tincture or smell either of sacrilege or injustice to God or man, if himself had been a Bishop, a Dean or a Prebend? Were not the Ecclesiastical estates which those worthy persons had, as lawfully theirs as two good Livings could be his, or the way-bit of a morning-Lecture, greater in Salary than Auditory at Paul's? Were not these as much and as superfluous as some Bishoprics and Deaneries? If he had been deprived of these, when once lawfully possessed of them, and having no way forfeited them, only by will and power, would he not have been very impatient, and as studious of either recovery or revenge as Samson was for the loss of his two eyes? Yet not content with these, I have heard from a person of Honour and Valour, that a D. whose name began with B. offered at least a thousand marks for another Living which was better than either of those. Certainly Simony will seem but a mote where the mountain of Sacrilege shrinks to a molehill; which if it be a sin, must needs be of a very high nature, and so may (as the highest stars or planets) seem but little to some eyes on earth, however they are very great in themselves. If this great Casuist have no sense of other men's rights to their Estates as Clergymen, how comes he to take it so ill that himself, in a Lay-capacity, as a Purchaser, cannot get quiet possession of what he fancies to be his by purchase, yet not so much of choice (belike) as of Necessity, nor as an emption (forsooth) so much as a redemption? For he needlessly deprecates the Odium and Envy of being forward in giving the Handsel, unless he had at first some grumble and cold qualms about his heart, as either unsatisfied of the Lawfulness, or fearing that Bishops might recover their places and Estates again: till he thought them as good as dead, and past recovery, (as the Amalekite that dispatched King Saul) he would not put forth his hand against them, or the spoils of them; but being (it seems) embarked in a fair adventure of some thousands of pounds (at 8. per cent. I suppose) in the safe Castor and Pollux of the public faith, (for which the honour of the two Houses of Parliament was engaged) he was loath to perish with his money, principal and interest too, or to be saved without it, as many an honest man is fain to be. Alas (good man) his Charity, it seems, hath great sympathies for himself and his own concerns, but little for others: if others lose all, (which was once theirs by as good right as what he seeks most to secure as his) he cries, Euge, factum bene; if he be in danger to lose, not all, but some, not of what he ever had, but only hoped for, how doth he bestir himself? Flectere si nequeat superos, etc. O What a vociferation and outcry would he make to all the English world, which he now doth, (as if all men were mightily concerned in so eminent and leading a case of a rich Presbyter purchasing Bishops and other Church-lands) if what he now presumes he hath purchased of Bishop's Lands should by any Act of peremptory and powerful resumption be taken from him, not as forfeited or evicted by Law, but ex mero placito, out of Will and pleasure, to relieve some public necessities, or to advance some godly design? Would not he lift up his voice like a Trumpet, beyond any Stentor, against Parliaments, House or Houses, and Committees, seem they never so zealous and reforming, as very unjust, unreasonable and injurious to him, his Family & children, no less than now he inveighs against the Town or City (whether Town or City it is dubious now they have no Bishop, whose seat of old made a City, however an ancient Corporation) for not letting him have quiet possession of his precious Purchase? In which, it seems, they are not satisfied of his right, no more than I or any man can believe that he hath better cards now to show for this Estate, than the Bishops had in Law, Conscience and Merit, when they were deprived of them: yet they are and have been long silent, they make no public complaints or proclamations, which are a kind of alarm to parties to divide men's judgements, and to provoke to war, (all suits of Law being but civiller warrings, and must at last be executed by the posse comitatus, by open force, if the sentence given be obstructed.) Which public Motion and Commotion against a whole city or Town, is more than ever the Bishops jointly or severally did, as to begin that which he calls, by a vulgar mistake and calumny, Bellum Episcopale: which if it were only se defendendo, in order to defend themselves, not from any judicature or just punishment for their faults, but only to preserve what they had honestly gotten, and lawfully enjoyed for some years, and never forfeited any more than their pious Predecessors, who many hundred of years had them in quiet possession; possibly it might have seemed to some men as lawful a War in Bishops, under lawful authority, as any Presbyterian War could be to dispossess them of their legal rights, as unforfeited enjoyments; of which this plaintiff having purchased a good buccoon, and craving for more, we see makes so loud and great a noise, as if the Earth must be moved out of its place, and Jupiter might not take his rest in Heaven, till this complainant have right done him according to his mind, who seeks to retain even whole Parliaments, three Nations, and all Mankind to be his Counsel of his Advocates: yet would he be most impatient not presently to stop the mouth of any Bishop, Dean or Prebend, if, as St. Paul, they should begin to plead, yea but to peep, or mutter their losses and indignities; which they must not call injuries, but public justice done upon them before they had sinned, as Sacrifices propitiatory to appease some angry Presbyterian brethren, and to make way for this Purchaser. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Quis coelum terrae non misceat, & mare coelo? Clamet Melicerta perisse Frontem de rebus— No Satiric centoes are sufficient to perstringe so great partialities. I see some men are so black that they cannot blush. Are not those Ministers justly ensnared in the briers and thorns of secular Conflicts and Lawsuits, who dare to entangle themselves, yea and to justify that as done to others (every weigh their betters) which they cannot endure should be done in the least measure to themselves? May I not call God and Man to be Judges, and Heaven and Earth to be Witnesses in the case? Hath D. B. a better title to a part, than L. B. had to the whole? Is money and purchase a better title and surer tenure, than merit and public gift, as a reward of Learning and Worth? Haddit L. B. possession by fraud or force any more than D. B? or had L. B. any more forfeited his Estate then D. B. hath? unless long and undoubted succession, and present lawful possession were crimes deserving Confiscation. Were not those Laws which were heretofore made, and for many Centuries confirmed, in the most serene and peaceable times, by unanimous Princes, Peers and people, (nemine absente aut contradicente) as just, valid and complete, in point of right, as any new Acts or Ordinances could be, which were made, as all the world knows, in broken and bleeding times, and to which the supreme Magistrate (as the Plaintiff very well knows) never gave his consent, first or last, because in conscience (as he told them) he could not; fearing, it seems, the sin of Sacrilege, yea and of Perjury, having sworn at his Coronation to preserve the Rights and Liberties of the Church and his Clergy as much as any men's? What pity it was this Casuist had not in time been the last poor King's Confessor? How blest, large and benign a soul hath this pleader, that can presently resolve all conscience into power, and right into might? whose rule seems to be, not the Word of God, or the Laws of men, but the Will of those that have the strongest sword; upon which presumption, no doubt, he went, when he so eloquently and effectually declaimed against Deans and Chapters. I know his grand Asylum is the Plenipotency, if not Omnipotency, as he supposeth, of the two Houses of Parliament, guided by the honesty and integrity of their intentions. I will with him presume that they did intend all things for the best; that finding the North wind had raised a great storm, they thought it necessary to lighten the Ship of what they thought might best be spared, in order to the public peace, and that which they counted the Supreme Law, Salus publica: And being all Laymen, much acted at that time by Presbyterian Influences and Interest, who promised to steer the Ship much better and with more right from God than any Prelates had done, they cast Bishops, Deans, prebend's and Chapters, etc. with their Houses, Lands and Revenues overboard, in the present distress and tempest, not for that they disliked them so much, as because they could not safely keep them, and carry on their other interests of public safety. These and the like reasons of State may possibly be alleged in behalf of those Laymen, who had then work enough upon their hands, and who were to get wages to pay their Workmen with the least grievance to the public. But this plaintiff, as a Learned Doctor & Grave Divine, must pass a stricter scrutiny & finer sieve. There is usully made a great difference between such as take interest, and those that are necessitated to give it; so there may be between these sellers and this purchaser, who makes himself so peremptory a Casuist in so great and disputed a Case, concerning the Rights of God, his Church and his Ministers; towards whom all men should have always a most tender regard, and Clergymen chiefly, so as to do God's Prophets, and their Brethren or Fathers, no harm, since their injuries do more immediately redound to the reproach of their profession, their Saviour, and their God. As in all cases of common justice, so specially in the Rights of Churchmen, (who are always as pupils and minors in the world, Gods, the Kings and the States Wards, as Sir Edward Cook calls them) power never so prevalent aught to be either limited by present Laws in force, or by common principles of equity and righteousness, which are set down in God's word, and written in all men's hearts: which is, To do as they would be done unto; Not to be punished further than they have offended; To be heard and fairly tried before they be condemned and executed. These limits ought to be observed by all men in their greatest power and passion, so far as no one man may be notably injured, to gratify many (without any after-amends;) nor may Paul be exposed to present death or danger, in order to appease the furious multitude of the Jews. Let this great pleader and plaintiff answer; Are they not poor and pitiful Gods, who in their supposed supremacy of power may sin, must die, and be judged by the most high God? may not many men sin as well as few? and wise men as well as simple? and choice Laymen as well as all the chiefest Clergymen in England? (which they must all be supposed to have done in a very high nature, to be justly and so grievously punished.) Have not all men cause to be jealous of their own hearts, lest at any time, and in any case, they offend God or man? Ought any Prince or Parliaments, whatever they be, forget they are but men, or to flattered by themselves or others that they cannot err or be deceived? Have we not read of Parliaments, though great ships, yet tossed to and fro in a few years with several winds of Doctrine? one while to renounce and cast off the Pope's yoke; a little after, as Camels on their knees, to stoop down and receive that burden again, as in Queen Mary's days, with the less scruple (as one notably observes) because the Legal Cardinal Pool made no mention or demand of restoring the Abby-lands? Though Parliaments should be as the Assemblies of the Son of God, may not Satan come in among them? May not Parliaments as well repent before God, as oft revoke before men, what they Vote and Enact? Doth any thing betray wise men more than to have too great confidence of themselves? If Ecclesiastic Synods and Councils (except perhaps such as are truly Catholic and free) may be subject to err, and have erred, why not civil Senates and Parliaments? Have they any porter that can keep sin out of their doors? or any walls that keep out infirmities from surprising them, which they carry always not so much about them as within them? But what if there be such a sin as Sacrilege, yea and in the case which the D. puts it? (which his equals, and far his betters in all respects, have earnestly affirmed, and the more impartially, because long before this particular case of the Bishops of England was put,) may not many men, yea whole Nations, be guilty of this sin, and infected as with an Epidemic plague, so far as they act, abet, approve or applaud? Doth not God himself (when the Priests and Levites were overawed, and durst not complain against the general vogue) charge the whole Nation of the Jews with robbing him, and denounceth by his Prophet an heavy curse against them for robbing God? Although they reply with great confidence, (as commonly there is least brow where most guilt) wherein have we robbed thee? God answers them, in Tithes and offerings. Was the detaining, or denying, of these from the Priests and Levites a robbing of God? and had it been no such matter, if every Tribe had taken away those Houses and Lands, those Cities and Suburbs, which God had appointed them by the ancient distribution, not only for a bare and necessitous subsistence, like Micahs Levite, but for such an honourable entertainment as became that Tribe, and that service they did to the God of Israel? If it be a mocking of God as well as man for any man to keep back, or to resume what once he hath by a valid and declared Act given to any pious and charitable use, or to any one poor man as an Alms, how dangerous is it in public cases to be done, without very clear and sure grounds? No wise men are so vain as to think themselves in any capacity inerrable and infallible: nor may any good man fancy, that at any time, or in any case, he hath God's dispensation to commit, no nor to permit, if he can hinder, the least sin, much less so great an one as Sacrilege is esteemed by many men who are no children in understanding. Let this pleader ask Jews and Gentiles, old and new Testament, Vid. Mr. Bazier his excellent treatise against Sacrilege. Papinian and Plowden, Justinians Institutes and Justice Cooks, Canon and Civil, Imperial and Municipal Laws: yea he cannot be ignorant what the great Reformers, Luther and Melanchthon, with the Augustane Protestants, say, what the grand Masters for Presbytery (whom I suppose he hath not of late believed in that point) Calvin, Zanchy, Bucer, Knox, Cartwright and others; did they not first or last suspect, condemn and cry down as sin and Sacrilege, the Confiscation or Alienation of such Lands as were properly Church-lands, (for the maintaining the Ministry, Order, Government and Honour of the Church, to a Charitable, Hospitable, and Honourable ampleness?) Their Testimonies are every where extant, diligently collected, easily perused: and possibly they would have been more speedy and severe in their censure of it, if they had seen it done against any Bishops and Clergymen who sincerely professed, diligently preached, and mightily maintained the Reformed Religion against the Roman Superstition; which they were loath to nourish with such full breasts of Plenty and Honor. But sure, they would never have envied or denied them to so Learned and Godly. Bishops, with other Churchmen, as were here in England; whom Mr. Calvin would have much honoured, as he professeth so earnestly, that he Anathematizeth all that would not; who might easilier have been Reform, and it may be at a cheaper rate to the public, than by being so terribly fleeced and flayed, as they were, of all their Ecclesiastical dignities and revenues belonging to them. I will put a Case or Quere to this great Vindicator; what he would have thought of those men who Voted or Created themselves a Parliament, that is, the Supreme Power as Deputies or Representative of the English People, (though not chosen by the people, nor any way such an one as some men had so zealously covenanted to maintain in their Freedom and Privilege,) if these Grandees had gone on (for they were as near it as two Groats are to nine pence) and had peremptorily Voted this good D. with all other Beneficed Ministers in England and Wales out of their beloved Glebes, Tithes and Mansion-Houses, (after the Precedents which they had lately seen acted against green Trees, the Learned Bishops, Deans and prebend's, as to all their Ecclesiastic Revenues annexed to their dignities;) who would have cried Sacrilege with greater contention of Voice and Lungs, than this Venerable resolver of No Sacrilege in selling Bishops Lands? O! but this he tells us freely, and with some earnestness (as concerned) had been horrid Sacrilege, because of those he hath a good share, those he hopes to enjoy together with his Bishop's Lands. Thus this irrefragable D. resolves, that to rob the lesser Gods is Sacrilege, but not to rob the greater Bishops were but Egyptians, whom the Presbyterians, as true Israelites, might strip and spoil. So it were a sin to take any thing from an ordinary Citizen and common soldier, but not from an Alderman or a Colonel. It is lawful to deprive Governors in Church or State of what they have, but not the Governed. Presbyters must (jure divino) have meat and drink and clothes to maintain them, that they may eat and preach; but they need no Overseers or Church-governors to take care they preach no strange Doctrine, nor live scandalously: They must have victuals as beasts, but they need no Government as Men, Christians and Ministers. O thrifty project! O Blessed Paradox! If it hold in all societies, Civil and Military as well as Ecclesiastic, it will spare the State many thousands of pounds upon the Civil account, as it hath got it many upon the Church-account, by taking away Bishops and their Revenues, there being no need of such Governors and such Maintenance of Honour in the Church; no more will there need any Judges in the Law, nor Captains and Colonels in the Army; their places, their pensions, their pay may be spared: if these be necessary, why were not Bishops so, for Order, and Honour, and Government, and Judgement among the Clergy? But he fancies that himself and other doughty Presbyters can do the work, and govern without Bishops. Possibly he may do it the better, not only for his grave carriage and reverend fashion of Living, for his moderate, meek and quiet Spirit, for his great Learning and rare Endowments, for the high Esteem that is had of him, but especially because he is rich, and hath a good part of the old Bishop's Lands; it may be a Spirit of government may go with them, as a Spirit of prophecy did with the High-priests Office in Caiaphas: but as for other poorer Presbyters and petty Rulers of his brethren the Antiepiscopal Ministers, how fit they will be to govern in common, & how well they have managed Phoebus his Chariot since they undertook to drive it, I leave to all wise and sober men to judge. But it may be this purchaser is not against Bishops, but against landed and Lorded Bishops; he would have primitive and Apostolic Bishops, which had no Revenues, or Lordships, or Lands, or Palaces. How sad is it that so good a man should have so evil an eye against the good hand of God, and the bounty of good Christians, only as to their munificence to the Bishops and chief Pastors of Christ's Church? But why so blind and partial against Bishops, when it is as primitive and Apostolical for Presbyters to have no Tithes, or Glebes, or Livings? These were the settled blessings of the Church after the glory of Constantine's time, whom the Revelation seems so much to set forth, to the Beauty, Rest and Honour of the Church. If this Pleader will be honest and impartial, let him conform himself a Presbyter, as well as Bishops, to the primitive pattern. They have not left, but forcibly lost all: let Presbyters leave also their Livings; let this great Example begin, let him turn sportulary Presbyter, as well as he would have beggarly Bishops; let him and others depend upon the Basket of Charity, and the Bishops Distribution, as was of old, both for occasional contributions of Decimal Oblations and Imperial pensions, of which Presbyters at first had no parochial portion or right, which now this Pleader so much challengeth, as if it had been his purchase or pennyworth, and not the Alms of the Nation, excited hereto chiefly by the piety of primitive Bishops and other Ministers, in imitation of God's ancient portion, which they thought still the right of Jesus Christ, Lord of all, as to his merit and priestly portion, to be kept in his Church's possession for his Minister's enjoyment, especially since it hath, by the devotion of the Nation, been legally dedicated to his service, and the support of his Servants: which may be as well said of Bishops and other Church-lands, as of Presbyters little Livings; unless this Pleader think that those were too much for Christ and any of his chief Ministers to enjoy; or that there was less of Law and public consent, as well as of private gift, in them than other Donations; or lastly, unless he fancy there is not as much need of Government, Order and Discipline, and consequently of meet Bishops, as chief Pastors or Shepherds for Christ's flock, as there is of pasture. It seems he is more for the Bag, Scrip and Wallet, than for Crosier, Crook or Shepherd's staff. O! but his blessed Tithes, his rich Glebe, his fat Parsonage, these, these he challenges as his right in God's name, as (patrimonium Crucifixi) Christ's patrimony, the Presbyterian Church's Dowry, the Priest's portion, the Levites wages, the Labourers hire, the most holy things, and utterly unalienable: even Impropriations seem to him sacrilegious Alienations, derived from no other title than the Pope's Usurpation, annexing them to Monasteries, and by a continued succession of Sacrilege given to the Crown, and so at last become Lay-fees. Thus he seems to make Princes and Parliaments guilty at the second hand of this foul sin of Sacrilege; which only lies against Tithes, Glebes and Parsonage-Houses, the only preferment it seems that this plaintiff hath been capable of, or now aspires to. O how far is reason from some men's Religion, and justice from their Consciences? And what (I beseech all wise, sober and upright men) were Bishops Houses and Revenues, but greater Glebes and Livings, given to men of the same calling, for the same holy and good ends, for the service of God and the Church, though to some higher degree of Duty and Dignity, of Office and Authority? not only to preach the Gospel, and administer the holy Sacraments in common with Presbyters, but further to preserve a right succession of Ministers, and to dispense the power of holy Orders by a Catholic Ordination, (which ever was Episcopal:) also to manage duly that Ecclesiastical Discipline and Government, which ought to be carried on, as by men of greater Age, Gravity, Ability and Authority than ordinary Presbyters use to be, so with a proportionable conspicuity for Honour and Estate, for Hospitality and Charity; all which are as lawful, just, and becoming a Bishop or chief Governor among the Fraternities of Ministers, as a greater pay or Salary is to Judges, Colonels and Captains; not for their doing more drudging work and duty than common men or soldiers may do, but for that eminent worth, and prudence, and sufficiency which they are presumed to have in order to Rule and Command others, who are men equal as themselves, and possibly as Valiant, Pious and Moral: yet Wisdom being the highest humane endowment, and politic or gubernative prudence being the noblest exercise of wisdom in this world, for the public and common good of mankind, (few of whom are fit to govern themselves or others) it is but fit that greater public encouragements and preferments of Honour and Estate should be given to these, than only to strength, which alone is but brutal, the endowment of a body, which men have common with beasts; but the other is proper to our reasonable souls, by which we are not far from Angels, and near of kin to God. In which excellencies since some Ministers may and do exceed others, (which makes these want Governors, and the others fit to govern,) what is there of Humane or Divine Law that can be against so prudent, so necessary an Order and Polity in the Church as Bishops are and ever have been? Whose so envied Estates and Dignities were still no more than that double honour which the Apostle challengeth from all Christians as due to those that rule well, and labour in the Word and Doctrine, not only by teaching and writing themselves, but by taking care that others do so too, within the limits of sober Life and sound Doctrine; which works many, yea most, I hope, of our Bishops did, and all might, yea should have done▪ since the Reformation, with as much pains, and to as much public good, as this or any other Antiprelatist can pretend to. So far was the case of Bishops and Deans and prebend's different from that of Monks and Abbots, which this great D. seeks to parallel, as equally needless, idle, odious and pitiless; when he cannot be ignorant, that Bishops being immediate Successors to the Apostles, with whom were anciently resident in Cities the Venerable Colleges of Presbyters, which were Deans and prebend's, as their ordinary Counsel, these must needs be much elder than any Monastic Orders; unless he think Jo. Baptist began those. Bishops were, as placed by the Apostles, ever owned in all Ages and Places, and reverenced by all orderly Presbyters and Christian people, yea and by all Christian Princes; by whose pious munificence they were endowed with Revenues and Honours long before ever Presbyters had their Glebes apart, and Tithes appropriate to them: yet were these Bishops and the Colleges of Presbyters more severely used than the Monks and Abbots, who had pensions for life allowed them if they stayed in England. I appeal to all that are not Levellers in Church or State, Is not Government, good order and comely subordination as necessary in the Church, among all men, both of the Laity and Clergy, as the family of Christ, the Household of faith, and an holy Polity, City or Commonwealth, as it is in all civil Fraternity's Companies and Communities, or in this paintiffs family? Where, besides food and other necessaries which he provides for himself in common with his Servants and Children, yet (doubtless) he still reserves for himself a Benjamins' portion, as to the eminency of his Estate and Authority above them as a Father and Governor. Were it robbery and violence to take away any thing unjustly from his children, and not so to take all from him as a Father? Let this great advocate (who pleads, I suppose, without his see, uncalled and unhired, against the poor Bishops) let him freely declare next bout to all the world, whether if he had been a Bishop (which honour few men are of the Heresy to think he would have refused, being a double-Beneficed and very Conformable man) he would have been content that measure should have been offered to him, which he thus justifies and triumphs in as offered to his Fathers the Bishops, men much his betters every way; some of whose shooe-latchets he was not worthy to unloose, unless he have more worth in him than ever yet he discovered to the world, whose agitations have (yet) been as various, as many, and as importune to and fro as any Presbyters in England. Besides that, he endeavours for ever to obstruct any generous return of this Nation to put the Church and Clergy into any Estate of Order, Honour and Estate, worthy of such Learned and Worthy men as might be bred up, if such public encouragements were not wanting. I do in no sort doubt of his Tenderness, Touchiness and Impatience if the case had been his own: I find how he is nettled for a little portion of Bishop's Lands, to which he pretends a right of purchase. I have ever heard this character of this plaintiff, that he was ad rem satis intentus, nor was he among Pharaohs lean Kine, that needed to have fed upon the fatter. Quo teneam modo? How partial are the principles of some Protestant Preachers, of some Quodlibetick Presbyters! They may well be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who are so far 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, self-tormenting who are self-condemned, who seek to ingratiate and corroborate with men of power, by an absolute commending of that for lawful, just and good, without any peradventure, which hath always been a case scarce disputable among Learned and Godly men in all Ages; so much did they ever not only incline, but generally resolve the case, quite contrary to this great Casuist. However, it is the safer side (no doubt) not to alienate any Church-lands; and in dubious cases a Divine, yea a Doctor, and a great one, that undertakes to be Confessor and Sin-absolver to Parl. and people, he should rather advise in tutiorem partem, to the safer side, than adventure upon, or encourage to that which hath any thing dubious or dangerous in it as to sin, yea and a sin of an high nature, as Sacrilege is esteemed by all Nations, by all Christians that have not buried Christianity and Christ in the Mount Calvary of covetous hearts, the Golgotha's or places of skulls, where no Helena will ever look for the Cross of Christ, in hope to find it. They, are far enough from being true Christians, who dare Crucify the Pastors, Preachers and Ministers of this Crucified Savour. O how glorious and gracious an example to all sorts of men, in the present and after-Ages, hath this Rabbi, this great Master now in our Israel given! Prima est haec ultio, quod se judice, etc. May not all men hereafter venture, in any case, never so doubted, to follow this one Doctors opinion, if any way plausible or probable, against the general stream and current of all Learned men? (A latitude which of late I find some Jesuits have allowed in cases of conscience.) Truly, it might seem venial for secular and military men, In the Mystery of Jesuitism. in cases of civil urgencies, and, as they imagined, necessities, of self- preservation, to seize upon the show bread, the Priest's portion, and Goliahs' sword too, as David and his men did by the good leave of the Priests: but it had become a Clergyman and an eminent one, who still owns I think his Academic degrees as deserved, and his Ecclesiastic Orders, which sure were from the Bishop's hands and Authority, as holy and valid (else the Tithes, and Glebes, and Spiritual Livings cannot be so sacred and inviolable in his use and possession, as he affirms them to be) I say, it had become such an one at least to have been silent, who is too rich and knowing to be a Liveller, or an Anabaptist, or a Quaker, or a disowner of all Order and Office Ministerial. He should not have cast oil, by his eminent example and eloquent plea, on that fire which he sees is ready to consume even all Presbyters as well as Bishop's settled maintenance. However if he could not avoid this rock of purchasing Bishops Lands, his modesty had been some expiation, and his silence a great abatement of the scandal; he might have swallowed those holy (but now desecrated) morsels in secret, and not have proclaimed on the housetop to all the world, the roast-meat he hath gotten, the Venison (or part at least) which he hath taken, together with his great appetite and good digestion. The world is not much concerned to know all these things, nor much pleased at his swallowing down without chewing any bit of Bishop's Lands or Deans Houses, or a whole College or a Cathedral Church, if he can compass them by his purse or policy; for where a crumb of this kind goes easily down, in time a loaden cart with six horses may follow. Were there not others, Statesmen, Laymen and Military-men enough to have bought those Bishops and Church-lands, if they must needs have been sold? They might possibly have some Reasons of State, and solutions of deeply Learned Lawyers, which such an one as I and other simple Divines know not of, and therefore may not censure: But as to the principles of Scholars, and the conscience of all Churchmen generally, we resolve, that if it be but a disputable case where sin lies at the door, if there be but any notable appearance of evil, we are (above all men) to abstain from it. If it may be venial in others pleading their ignorance or urgent occasions, yet it must needs seem a most uncircumcized act for a grave Minister, and of the Church of England, In aliis vitia, in sacerd●tibus sunt sacrilegia. Chrysol. de Ebrietate. a great Doctor and a Reverend Divine. Churchmen ought in any things of pregnant scandal to be most circumspect and cautious, because their example is most contagious, allowing, as it were of course, many grains of further liberty to Laymen, who never think that their girdles ought to be so straight as Ministers; if ours be loose, theirs will be unbuckled, and at last quite thrown off. Hence many of our Domestic and new- started Presbyterians, whom I well knew, Mr. C. Mr. W. Mr. S. and others, with all the Smectymnuan Legion, who were earnest enough at first for the pruning of the overgrown, or sear, or too much over- dropping boughs of Episcopacy, and afterward they so far served the times and their Lords, as to conspire to the felling down of those ancient and stately Standards in the Church; yet I well know, they never intended that Laymen should have gone away with the Bark, Tops, Timber, Bodies, Chips and all: no, they (good men) intended very honestly and zealously, that these superfluities of Bishops and Deans Estates, etc. should have been applied to buy in all Impropriations, to augment poor Livings, to put Presbyters generally into so good a plight and habit for back and belly, that they might be fit to rule in common, and have some Majesty (as Aldermen of Cities and Burgesses of Towns usually have) in their Cheeks and on their Backs; for starveling and thread bare Governors, like Consumptionary Physicians, discredit their profession and deprecate their dignity. We other poor Ministers, who follow the sense of all the ancient Fathers and Councils, of the Canon and Civil Laws, of Schoolmen and Casuists, of Reformed and not Reformed Churches, both Greek and Latin, we wonder what Angel from Heaven hath whispered to this purchaser and pleader, to tell him of God's non- acceptance of Bishop's lands, Persons or Profession, of which he was pleased to make so much and so good use, to his glory and his Churches good, both in England and all the Christian world for a thousand years, yet now he is content (it seems) they should all be Alienated, Extirpated, Destroyed, Possessions, Persons and Function of Bishops, as unnecessary, yea pernicious to the Church and Ministry, in Honour, Order, Government, Charity and Hospitality; all which are better Reform to Parity, Popularity and Poverty. This he reports as from the Cabinet-Counsell or Committee of Heaven, where it seems he hath been since he purchased Bishops lands. Truly, if an Angel from Heaven had told some Divines and other Gentlemen thus much, they would not have believed him, because they are persuaded so much of the Evangelicall Order, the Apostolic Authority, and the Catholic Succession, the prudent necessity, the honourable decency of Bishops in the Church of Christ▪ upon which presumptions (if not sure persuasions) they conceive it had been a modesty in all Learned and weighty Ministers, who had received their Ordination from Godly, Orthodox and Reformed Bishops, (such as Calvin, and Beza, and Vedelius would have honoured and submitted unto, without any envy or diminishing of their Estates and Honours,) not to have touched so much as a shooe-latchet of what by Right, Law and Merit had been theirs; that it might at least have been upon Record to after-Ages, for the Honour of the English Reformed Clergy in their lowest ebb and depression, Ecclesiae & Episcoporum bona inter Presbyteros Ecclesiasticos non invenerunt emptorem. There is no doubt there would have been buyers enough beside, men of larger Estates, yet not of stricter consciences: even this great and glorious purchaser, (who though he hath paid his money, yet hath not so put off his Armour hitherto as to have any great cause to boast,) seemed not at first so satisfied as to be forward, (not coming at the beginning of the Fair, when sure the best pennyworths, for example sake, would have been sold to so eminent a D. the better to decoy on other purchasers;) but alas, he seems (obtorto collo & renitente Minerva,) against his genius to be drawn in, driven and necessitated at the fag end of the Market, to take such eggs for his money as had been sat upon by a Bishop so many hundred of years, and may (as it seems) be either addle, or eggs of contention to this purchaser, now so resolved and triumphing in his conscientious freedom, to buy and sell in the Temple; when other poor Scholars are still wind- bound and narrow-soled, as imagining that Christ long ago drove all such kind of Merchandise out of the Church, as ill becoming Christians as it did the Jews; yea and St. Paul teacheth Believers equally to abhor Sacrilege as Idols. To conclude this long digression, (whose scandalous occasion lay so high in my way that I could not avoid it) this one great instance telling to all the world what this purchaser hath swallowed, and how well he hath digested these Bishop's Lands, (which now seem as a Lay fee to nourish the Beast and Man, not the Presbyter, Minister or Bishop as him) will give the world cause in after-Ages to look as narrowly to him and his posterity how they thrive, as the Roman Soldiers did to the Jews Guts and Excrements, Josephus de Excid. Hiero. when they searched for the Gold which they had swallowed, as Josephus tells us. Some are so superstitious as to imagine that Bishops and all Church-lands or Revenues, properly such, (as pertaining to the support of that Order, Government, Authority, Ministry, Charity and Hospitality, which ought to be in Clergymen) are like Irish wood to Spiders and venomous beasts, prone to burst them, so that vix gaudet tertius haeres; nay, though they possess them, yet they do not enjoy them, for nothing temporal can be enjoyed without a serene Mind, an unspotted Fame, and an unscrupulous Conscience: all which if this gallant purchaser enjoys, together with his Bishop's Lands, and other fine things which he hath bought, truly he is an object of most unfeigned Envy; where I leave him and his Vindication. This I am sure, some men, Ministers and others, are so scrupulous in such a case, that they never think a good pennyworth can be had of Bishops or Church-lands; nay, they would not have them gratis, to stuff their Featherbeds fuller, lest they should lie and sleep less at their ease, highly magnifying that one thing recorded as commendable among the Jews in their greatest Hardheartedness, Madness and Sedition, that during the siege, straitness and famine of Jerusalem under Titus-Vespatian, yet they were not wanting to furnish the Temple, Priests and Altar of God with that (juge sacrificium) daily sacrifice, Vide Usserij Annal. Chronol. Morning and Evening, which God had once required, till the great sacrifice of Messias had finished all by his once Oblation of himself; which their blindness and unbelief would not understand. Nothing can be too much for his Service who is the Giver of all. But I return whence I was forced to digress. CHAP. XXVII. BEsides the Preservation of the Church's patrimony and Ministers maintenance, Further commending the Unity, Honour and Support of the Religion and Ministry of this Church. which needs more an honourable Augmentation than any sordid Diminution; there is in the second place great need (O my worthy and honoured Countrymen) of your redeeming this Church, its Reformed Religion and its worthy Ministers, from plebeian Arrogancies and Mechanic Insolences, from private Usurpations and popular Intrusions, whereto both some People's Petulancies and some Preachers Pragmaticalness or Easiness are prone to betray them, to the utter dissipation and destruction of that Order, Honour, Power and Authority of Religion, which ought by wise men to be preserved as much as in them lies. It is certain that the Ministers of the Church of Christ, (which are made up of Bishops, Presbyters and Deacons duly ordained and united in an orderly Subordination) are as the Arteries of the Body politic in any Nation, State or Kingdom which is Christian: these carry from the Head, which is Jesus Christ, the vital and best (that is, the Religious) spirits to all the parts; as good Laws do in respect of civil Justice and Commerce, like veins, convey the animal Spirits, with the blood and grosser nourishment▪ from the Heart or Supreme power. Once check, abate or exhaust those vital Conduits of Piety and true Religion, all parts of Church and State, both noble and ignoble, will soon be enfeebled, abased, mortified; neither Common-people, nor Yeomen, nor Gentlemen, nor Noblemen, nor Princes, neither Governors nor Governed will ever have either that Esteem, Love and Honour for Religion which becomes it and them, nor will they receive that Vigour, Influence and Efficacy from it which is necessary for them; while in the general Levelling, Impoverishing, Shrinking and Debasing of Scholars and Clergymen, none shall have either discreet Tutors for their Children, or learned Chaplains for their Families, or able Preachers for their Livings, or grave Reprovers for their Faults, or prudent Confessors for their Soul's relief, or reverend Governors to restrain them, or spiritual Fathers to comfort them for none of their petty Pastors, Preachers or Ministers, will appear to them much beyond the proportions of Country-pedants, not under any such character of eminent worth, either for their personal Abilities, or any such beam of public Dignity and Conspicuity, as may either deserve or bear the love, respect and value of either Nobility, Gentry or Communality in England, which are all high-spirited enough. Not only the civil and visible Complexion, but the inward Genius and religious Constitution of this Nation, will extremely alter in a few years, (as it is already much abated and abased) by reducing all Scholars that are of the Clergy or Ministry to a kind of public Servility, Tenuity and Obscurity, beyond any men of any ingenuous profession: none of whom are so excluded, but that, by their industry and God's blessing, they may attain such eminence and encouragements, as may make them most useful both to Church and State, both in Policy and Piety: neither of which can thrive or flourish to any Respect, Power or Splendour of Religion in any Nation, where the Clergy are made the only Underlings and Shrubs, condemned everlastingly to the basest kind of Villeinage, which is a sneaking and flattering Dependence: which posture not only streightens and shrinks, but aviles and embaseth the spirits of any men; there being nothing left them as to public Favour, Employment or Reward, under any notion of hope, which might heighten their parts, or quicken their spirits to any such generous industry, as might at least seek to merit them, though they never attained them: for still the Public will hereby have the benefit of Ministers improved abilities, however few Ministers obtain the deserved eminency, the merit and capacity of which is many times better than the real enjoyment. Having thus commended to you the public interest of Church and State, as they are very much depending upon the Honour and Happiness of your Clergy; in the last place I beseech all persons of sober sense and judgement, not to suffer themselves to be so far scandalised against the true Reformed Religion, or this Church of England, by its present distempers and sufferings, as to abate of you former value and esteem of Her, or of your present pity for Her, nor yet of your prayers and endeavours to repair Her. O give not such advantages to your own innate corruptions, or to other men's fond Innovations, or to the Papists Triumphs, or every Jesuits Machination, or the Devil's Temptations, as either to discountenance, or desert, or decry, or distrust the former excellent Constitution and Reformation of true Religion in the Church of England; in which I am fully persuaded in my conscience there was nothing wanting to the being and well-being of a true Church and true Christians. The first (your own inordinate Lusts) will be well enough content with no Religion, or at least such an one as shall most find fault with the Church of England and all its Religion: For I have found by experience that no men have proved move factious, affected and fanatic, than those men and women who have been most conscious to their youthful Enormities. They presently apply to the gentlest Confessors and easiest Repentance; which is rather to quarrel with and forsake the Religion they have most violated, than seriously to repent and amend: without which severities Papists and Separatists think their Converts sufficient, if they do but turn to their side and party. The second (Novellers) will be content with any mere fancies or factions in Religion. The third (the Jesuited Papists) with no pure, united and well-reformed Religion among us. And the fourth (the Devil) will be content with any Religion that is called Catholic, Reform and Christian, so it be not true, or not pure, or not well-reformed, or not orderly settled and uniform, or not charitably united, or not authoritatively managed and governed: Any of which will in time very much unchristen any Christians, and unchurch any Church, by deforming and dividing them from the Beauty and Communion of the Church Catholic. Take heed of betraying yourselves and your posterity to Atheistical, licentious, immoral and irreligious courses, by your Apostasies from and despiciencies of the Learning and Piety, Gifts and Graces, Ministry and Ministrations, Order and Government, which were happily settled in the Church of England. Go over all the world, search all successions of the Church from the Apostles to our days, you shall not find any thing more worthy your Love and Esteem, your Veneration and addiction. Have you found any thing comparable to it in all the new vapours and flourishes of Reformations, in any new Inventions, Conventions, Associations, Separations, Distractions, Distortions, Confusions? Which may make you giddy by turning you round, but they will never make you any progress in Wisdom, or Piety, or Charity. The Church of England was a most rare and Paragon Jewel, shining with admirable lustre on all sides. First, in its Doctrine, or Articles of Religion, which were few, clear and sound. Secondly, in its Sermons or Homilies, which were learnedly plain, pious and practical. Thirdly, in its Liturgy or Devotions, which were easy to be understood, very apt, pathetic and complete. Fourthly, in its paucity and decency of ceremonies, which adorned, not encumbered Religion, or over-laid the Modesty and Majesty of a comely Reformation. Fifthly, in the Sanctity and Solemnity of its public duties, which were neither excessive nor defective. Sixthly, in its Ministry, which had good Abilities, due Ordination and divine Authority. Seventhly, it its good Government and Ecclesiastical Discipline, where good Presbyters and good Bishops had leave and courage to do their duties and discharge their consciences, whose Fatherly Inspection, Catholic Ordination and Ecclesiastic Jurisdiction, being wisely managed by worthy men in their several stations, did justly deserve the name of an Hierarchy, an holy Regiment or happy Government, when it was exercised with that Authority, yet Charity and discretion, which were ever intended by the Church for the common good of all those Christians that were within her bosom and kept her Communion. If others do forget her, through fatuity or faction, covetousness or ambition, pride or petulancy, as undutiful and ungrateful children, yet you may not, you will not, you cannot so far neglect your own and your posterities happiness, or forfeit your own honour, or violate your consciences, as to neglect the relief and recovery of your Spiritual Mother: But if you of the better sort of men and Christians, from whom all good men expect all good things, should slight and neglect Her after the vulgar rate (which God forbid) yet must I never so far comply with you or all the world, as to call her former light darkness, or her present darkness light. Precious with me must the name of the Church of England ever be, whose record is in Heaven, and in all gracious hearts, who were Born and Baptised, Instructed, Sanctified and Saved in her. To this Church of England, as I owe, (with many thousands) so I return (with some few) the Charity of a Christian, as to all Christian Churches; the duty of a Son, as to a deserving parent; the order of a part or member, as united and devoted to the whole; the obedience of an Inferior, as to a Superior▪ the gratitude of acknowledging Her Worth and Merit, the love of adhering to her unity, the candour of approving and conforming to her decent ceremonies, the modesty of preferring her Wisdom before my own or any other men's understanding, the Humility of submitting to her Spiritual Authority and Governors, the Piety and Prudence of relieving and restoring (as much as lies in me,) Her Catholic Order, Polity, Peace and Government: all which I believe were allowed of God, and I am sure have been approved by as Learned, Wise and Holy men as the world affords. I am deeply sensible of the many and great obligations which I have to this national Church, and to its Ministers and Bishops, for my Baptism, Instruction, Confirmation, Communion and Ordination, not only as a Member, but as a Minister; which I account my greatest Honour, notwithstanding the great depression of the times in which I have late ward lived. I am ambitious to do not only what becomes my private station, but to preserve and express the public respects which are due to this Church; whose Despisers and Destroyer's have never appeared to me with any remarks of Beauty or Honour for Learning or Grace, for Modesty or Charity, for Prudence or Policy, comparable to those that were the first Founders, Reformers, Defenders and Preservers of this Church▪ I must ever profess that I find nothing like her Adversaries, nor any thing exceeding her friends, in all that was commendable in Catholic and true Antiquity. In behalf of this Church having offered many things to the consideration of all good Christians which are my worthy Countrymen, I hope, as my infirmities may exercise their Charity, so my integrity may expiate my infirmities, if I have in any thing expressed myself less becoming the honest and holy design which I undertook, and have now by Gods help finished; which was to set forth, First, the Tears and Sigh● of the Church of England; Secondly, the original of her Disorders and Distractions; Thirdly, the dangers and distresses, if not remedied; Fourthly, the probable ways of cure and recovery, by God's blessing, to such Order, Honour, Unity, Purity and Peace as becomes so famous a Church and so renowned a Nation, whose greatest Crown was Christianity. I know there will be many who cannot well bear that freedom of soberness and Truth which either myself or others may use in speaking or writing for the Church of England, and its pristine Honour, Order and Government, (although themselves use never so great Liberties, Reproaches and Injuries, in Speaking, Writing and Acting against them.) For my part, I appear in this only as wrapped myself in my Scholastic and Ecclesiastic Gown; I meddle not with any civil affairs, or Military transactions, properly such: Those are of an other sphere, and of other principles, which I neither censure, nor, it may be, understand. I quarrel with no particular men's persons; I encounter only that colluvies of factions, parties and novel principles, which, like the sewers collected from many sinks and kennels, have met together to besmear or overbeare the Church of England. I despise no man's Religion, so far as it is Religion, deserving that holy name in any Catholic and Christian sense: But I abhor an unreasonable, immodest, unjust and licentious way in any. I esteem and embrace with all Charity whatever of God's Spirit, of Christ's Truth, of Grace and Virtue, of Gifts and Parts, of Moral Honesty and Humanity I find in any men of any side: But I am too old and serious to be abused with vaporing, with affectations, with popular pretensions, with rude and rash Reformations; I am for solid, sober, orderly, humble constitutions, or restitutions rather, of Order, Honour and public encouragement to Religion, the Church and Clergy. No man hath justled or offended me in all these turbulent times worth owning, nor have I an evil eye or an ill will against any man: What I write as to my Ecclesiastic Calling, Honour, and the Church of England's common concernments, may (possibly) have something of salt, but nothing of gall; there may be some corrosive to mortify and meet with the diseased and proud flesh, but no venom to poison or hurt either the diseased or the whole parts. It extremely grieves me to see how far the contagion of Ignorance, Impudence, Profaneness, Irreligion, Faction, Division, Levity, Popularity, Disorder and Uncharitableness hath spread among some of my brethren of the Ministry and many of my Countrymen, without any present advance, that I can see, or future hopes, (I say not as to their own Honour or Profit, but) as to God's glory, or the public interests of the true Christian and Reformed Religion, or the good of men's souls, or the improvement of any grace and virtue. What any side offers as really good or convenient I allow; what they partially cry down, and causelessly condemn or change, that I defend upon the account of this and all Church's Wisdom, Honour and Happiness. If what I have written may do any good to the present or after-Ages, I have my design; if not, I shall, by God's help, hereafter redeem this waste of time and labour, by applying to studies more suitable to my Genius, Spirit and Age, which may more improve those graces which are least in dispute among good Christians: yet in this I have not wholly lost my labour, because I have hereby further discharged my own soul, my conscience and reputation, from any approbation of what I judge to be either the sins or imprudencies, the wickedness or weakness of this Age, in which I do not so much live as die daily, weary that my soul finds so little hope of an happy rest or composure, unity or harmony in our Church; which I had rather see and enjoy before I die, than to have the greatest preferment in the world. I envy no men that have wrapped up their worldly interests in their religious policies, and daily gain by the shrines of godliness they have made. I do indeed boldly rifle their godly principles and pretensions, as to their novelties; for I see no reason as yet to yield to any of them, no not for an hour, though they seem never such pillars, while they import as if the Church of England had heretofore consisted of a company of silly people and silly Priests, whose either ignorance, or superstition, or sottishness, or baseness, had hidden the beauties and blessings of true Religion from all people's eyes, so that neither Bishops, nor Presbyters, nor Princes, nor Parliaments, nor Convocations, ever till now saw what was fit to know and do in Church-matters, which are now to be taught and brought to light by the new methods of Presbytery and Independency, or by Anabaptism, Quakerism, and other rarities of Religion, untried and untamed Novelties, every way as short of the Piety, Prudence, Unity and Majesty of the Religion and Church of England heretofore, as they are wide of or beyond the true ancient bounds and Catholic grounds of Order, Government, Unity and due Authority, I may add, and of the Blessings or Prosperities, internal or external, spiritual and temporal, which attended Episcopal Order and Paternal Presidency; which I profess to value, as now it is in its rags and ruins, far beyond the others in their silks and sprucenesses. Episcopacy is now far from being the object of any sober men's Flattery or Ambition; yet I cannot but look upon it with such an eye of pity and reverence, as primitive Christians were wont to do upon their Bishops, such as Polycarpus, Ignatius, Irenaeus, Cyprian, and other Martyrs, when they saw them imprisoned, beaten, tormented, destroyed. I know, yet I plead for those men and for that cause, which was once strong, 1 Cor. 4.10, 11. but now is weak; was honourable, and is now despised; was favoured, but is now frowned upon by many (yea, I fear, most) men of ordinary spirits: yet I plead for that reverend Order, and those reverend persons, who have been made a spectacle to Angels and Men, such as to this present hour suffer both hunger and thirst, are naked and buffeted, having no certain dwelling-place; which being reviled do bless, being persecuted have suffered with patience, being defamed do entreat, and being the Glory of all Churches, as to Order, Unity and Government in all Ages, are now looked upon by many as the filth and off scouring of all things: yet am I one of those Angels which attend Lazarus on his Dunghill; I have chosen to follow the clear, though now more exhausted, stream of Antiquity, rather than the troubled torrents of any Novelties, which may be as short-lived as they have been suddenly started. I have looked upon all men's principles and pretensions, as to Ecclesiastic affairs, with what Candour, Equanimity and Sincerity I could. If in any thing I was inclinable to be partial, it was neither for Presbytery nor Independency, I confess, which I never was catechised in, nor accustomed to, nor convinced of, as to any such Piety or Policy, Wisdom or Worth in them, which might make me see cause to desire or esteem them; but I was swayed against some things, not in the constitution so much as some men's administration of Episcopacy. I was originally principled to no small jealousies of Bishop's actions, when they were in their greatest glory and power; nor do I yet think but that some Bishops might have been greater Masters of pious Arts than they have proved: yet I find now that in many things people were more afraid than hurt. For the main I conclude, no Ministers or Governors, no Superintendencies or Presbyteries, in any Reformed way, exceeded the Usefulness, Merit and Excellency of our English Bishops and Presbyters; nor is any thing as to Church-government comparable to a primitive Episcopacy, which includes the just Rights, Liberties or Privileges both of Presbyters and People. I neither dispute nor deny any men's Morals, Intellectuals, Devotionals or Spirituals, further than they seem much warped and eclipsed by their over-eager Heats and injurious Prosecutions against their Antagonists the Episcopal Clergy and Church of England: but I absolutely blame those Ministers want of politics and prudentials, who by their Antiepiscopal transports have so far diminished not only themselves and their Order as Ministers, but the whole state of this Church, as to its Harmony and Honour, its Peace and Plenty, its Unity and Authority. In whose behalf since all wise and worthy men are highly concerned, I cannot conclude with words of greater warmth and weight, than those of the blessed Apostle St. Paul, Phil. 2.1, 2. who was not more solicitous to plant Churches in truth and purity, than to settle and preserve them in Order and Unity: If there be therefore any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of Love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any bowels of Mercy; Let us all fulfil the Apostles joy, this Church's joy, the Angel's joy, yea Christ's joy; in being like-minded and of one accord, in having the same Love, in doing nothing through strife or vainglory, but in Lowliness and Meekness, looking every man not only to his own things but also to the things of others; that the same mind may be in us which was also in our Lord Jesus Christ. That in the expectation and experience of holy, wise and united hearts and hands on all sides, the Church of England (from whose head the Crown is fallen, from whose eyes Rivers of tears do flow, while she lies weeping under the Cross) may take up the words of Zion in the Prophet, Micah 7. Therefore will I look to the Lord, I will wait for the God of my salvation: my God will hear me. Rejoice not against me O mine Enemy: when I fall, I shall rise; when I sit in darkness, the Lord shall be a light unto me. I will bear the indignation of the Lord, because I have sinned against him, until he pleas my cause, and execute judgement for me: he will bring forth my light, and I shall behold his righteousness. To the King Immortal, the only wise and blessed God, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, be all Glory for ever, Amen. In Oratione Constantini Magni ad Concilium Nicenum. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Mihi quidem omni bello pugnave gravior atque acerbior videtur intestina in Dei Ecclesiâ seditio, quae plus doloris quam externa omnia mala secum affert. THE END. The Names of Books written by Dr. Gauden, and printed for Andrew Crook, at the Green Dragon in St. Paul's Churchyard. HIERASPISTES. 1. A Defence of the Ministry and Ministers of the Church of England, in Quarto. 2. The Case of the Ministers maintenance by Tithes, in Quarto. 3. Three Sermons preached on public occasions, in Quarto. 4. Funerals made Cordials, in a Sermon prepared and in part Preached at the solemn interment of the Right Honourable Robert Rich, heir apparent to the Earldom of Warwick, in Quarto new. A CATALOGUE OF THE NAMES Of all the ARCH-BISHOPS and BISHOPS of England and Wales, ever since the first planting of Christian Religion in this Nation, unto these later Times: With the year of our Lord in which the several Bishops of each Diocese were Consecrated. CANTERBURY, Arch-Bishops. 1 AUGUSTINE the Monk. A. D. 596 2 Laurence. A. D. 611 3 Melitus. A. D. 619 4 Justus. A. D. 624 5 Honorius. A. D. 634 6 Adeodatus or Deus dedit. A. D. 655 The Sea vacant 4. years. 7 Theodor. A. D. 668 8 Brithwald. A. D. 692 9 Tatwin. A. D. 731 10 Nothelm. A. D. 736 11 Cuthbert. A. D. 742 12 Bregwin. A. D. 759 13 Lambert. A. D. 764 14 Athelward. A. D. 793 15 Walfred. A. D. 807 16 Theogild. A. D. 832 17 Celnoth. 18 Atheldred. A. D. 871 19 Plegmund. A. D. 889 20 Athelm. A. D. 915 21 Wulfelm. A. D. 924 22 St. Odo Severus. A. D. 934 23 St. Dunstan. A. D. 961 24 Ethelgar. A. D. 988 25 Siricius. A. D. 989 26 Alfric or Aluric. A. D. 993 27 St. Elphage. A. D. 1006 28 Living or Leoving. A. D. 1013 29 Agelnoth, alias Aethelnot. A. D. 1020 30 St. Eadlin. A. D. 1038 31 Robert Gemeticensis. A. D. 1050 32 Stigand. A. D. 1052 33 St. Lanfranck. A. D. 1070 The Sea vacant 4. years. 34 St. Anselm. A. D. 1093 35 Rodolph. A. D. 1114 36 William corbel, al. Corbois. A. D. 1122 37 Theobald. A. D. 1138 38 St. Tho. Becket. A. D. 1162 39 Richard the Monk. A. D. 1171 40 Baldwin. A. D. 1184 41 Reginald Fitz-Jocelin. A. D. 1191 42 Hubert Walter. A. D. 1193 33 Steph: Langton Card. A. D. 1206 44 Ri: Wethershed. A. D. 1229 45 St. Edmond. A. D. 1234 46 Boniface of Savoy. A. D. 1244 47 Robert Kilwarby Ca A. D. 1272 48 John Peckham. A. D. 1278 49 Ro: Winchelsey. A. D. 1294 50 Walt. Reynolds. A. D. 1313 51 Simon Mepham. A. D. 1327 52 John Stratford. A. D. 1333 53 Th: Bradwardin. A. D. 1348 54 Simon Islip. A. D. 1349 55 Si: Langham C. A. D. 1366 56 Will: Wittlesey. A. D. 1367 57 Simon Sudbury. A. D. 1379 58 Will: Courtney. A. D. 1381 59 Tho. Arundel. A. D. 1396 60 Hen: Chicheley Car. A. D. 1414 61 Jo: Stafford Car. A. D. 1443 62 Joh: Kemp Car. A. D. 1452 63 Tho: Bourcheir. A. D. 1454 64 John Morton Card. A. D. 1486 65 Henry Deane. A. D. 1502 66 Will: Warham. A. D. 1504 67 Tho: Cranmer. A. D. 1533 68 Reginald Poole Car. A. D. 1555 69 Matth: Parker. A. D. 1559 70 Edm: Gryndall. A. D. 1575. 71 John Whitgift. A. D. 1583 72 Rich: Bancroft. A. D. 1604 73 George Abbot. A. D. 1610 74 William Laud. A. D. 1633 Beheaded on Tower-hill, Jan, 10. 1644. S. ASAPH. 1 Kentigern. A. D. 560 2 Saint Asaph, and after him many hundred years 3 Geffrey of Monmouth. A. D. 1151 4 Adam a Welshman. 5 Reiner. A. D. 1186 6 Abraham. A. D. 1220 7 Howel ap Ednevet. A. D. 1235 8 An●anus I. A. D. 1248 The see vacant 2. years. 9 Anianus II. of Schonaw. A. D. 1268 10 Lewellin of Bromfeild. A. D. 1293 11 David ap Blethin. A. D. 1319 12 Ephraim. 13 Henry. 14 John Trevaur I 15 Lewellin ap Madoc ap Elis. A. D. 1357 16 Will. of Spridlington. A. D. 1373 17 Laurence Child. A. D. 1382 18 Alexander Bach. A. D. 1390 19 John Trevaur II. A. D. 1395 20 Robert. A. D. 1411 21 John Low. A. D. 1493 22 Regin. Peacock. A. D. 1444 23 Thomas. A. D. 1450 24 Rich: Redman. A. D. 1484 25 Dav: ap Owen. A. D. 1503 26 Edm: Birkhead. A. D. 1513 27 Henry Standish. A. D. 1519 28 Will: Barlow. A. D. 1535 29 Robert Parfew alias Warton. A. D. 1536 30 Tho: Goldwell. A. D. 1555 31 Richard Davies. A. D. 1559 32 Thom: Davies. A. D. 1561 33 Will: Hughes. A. D. 1573 34 Will: Morgan. A. D. 1601 35 Richard Parry. A. D. 1604 36 John Hanmer. A. D. 1622 37 John Owen. A. D. 1629 BANGOR. 1 St. Daniel. A. D. 516 many hundred years after. 2 Hervaeus. A. D. 1109 3 David. A. D. 1120 4 Maurice. A. D. 1139 5 William. 6 Guye. 7 Alban. A. D. 1195 8 Rob: de Salopia. A. D. 1197 9 Caducan I. A. D. 1215 10 Howell I. A. D. 1236 11 Richard. A. D. 1250 12 Anianus. A. D. 1267 13 Caducan II. A. D. 1306 14 Griffith. A. D. 1306 15 Lewis. A. D. 1320 16 Matthew. A. D. 1334 17 Thom. of Ringstead. A. D. 1358 18 Geru. de Castro. A. D. 1367 19 Howell II. A. D. 1370 20 John Gilbert. A. D. 1374 21 John Bishop of Clone in Ireland. A. D. 1376 22 John Swaffam. 23 Rich: Young. A. D. 1400 24 Lewis II. 25 Benedict Nicols. A. D. 1408 26 Will: Barrow. A. D. 1418 27 Nich: or John Canon of Chichester. 28 Thomas Cheriton. A. D. 1436 29 John Stanbery. A. D. 1448 30 James Bishop of Achaden in Ireland. 31 Thom: Ednam. A. D. 1464 32 Henry Deane. A. D. 1496 33 Thomas Pigot. A. D. 1500 34 John Penny. A. D. 1504 35 Thomas Skevington. A. D. 1505 36 John Capon alias Salcot. A. D. 1534 37 John Bird Bishop of Ossory. A. D. 1539 38 Arthur Bulkley. A. D. 1541 39 William Glyn. A. D. 1555 40 Rowl: Merrick. A. D. 1559 41 Nic: Robinson. A. D. 1566 42 Hugh Bellot. A. D. 1585. 43 Rich: Vaughan. A. D. 1595 44 Hen: rowland's. A. D. 1598. 45 Lewis Bailie. A. D. 1616 46 David Dolbyn. A. D. 1631 47 Edm: Griffith. A. D. 1633 48 Will: Roberts. A. D. 1637 BATH & WELLS. The Bishops of this Diocese were first Bishops of Wells, and afterward of Bath and Wells, as followeth. Bishops of Wells. 1 Adelm. A. D. 905 2 Wulfelm I 3 Elphege or Alphege. 4 Wulfelm II. 5 Brithelm. A. D. 955 6 Kineward or Kinewald. A. D. 973 7 Sigar. A. D. 985 8 Alwyn or Ealfwyn. A. D. 995 9 Burwold. 10 Leoning. A. D. 1002 11 Ethelwin. 12 Brithwin. 13 Merewith. 14 Dudoco alias Bodeca. A. D. 1031 15 Giso. A. D. 1059 Bishops of Bath and Wells. 1 John de Villula. A. D. 1088 2 Godfrey. A. D. 1123 3 Robert of Lewes. A. D. 1136 4 Reg. Fitz-Jocelin. A. D. 1174 5 Savaric. A. D. 1192 6 Jocelin of Wells. A. D. 1205 7 Roger. A. D. 1224 8 William Bitton, alias Button I. A. D. 1247 9 Walter Giffard. A. D. 1264 10 William Bitton, alias Button II. A. D. 1267 11 Robert Burnell. A. D. 1274 12 William de Marchia. A. D. 1292 13 Walt: Haselshaw. A. D. 1302 14 Jo: Drokensford. A. D. 1310 15 Ralph of Shrewsbury. A. D. 1329 16 John Barnet. A. D. 1336 17 John Harewell. A. D. 1366 18 Walter Skirlaw. A. D. 1386 19 Ralph Erghum. A. D. 1388 20 Henry Bowet. A. D. 1401 21 Nic: Bubwith. A. D. 1408 22 John Stafford. A. D. 1425 23 Tho: Bekinton. A. D. 1443 24 Rob: Stillington. A. D. 1465 25 Richard Fox. A. D. 1491 26 Oliver King. A. D. 1495 27 Adr: de Castello. A. D. 1505 28 Tho: Wolsey. A. D. 1518 29 John Clerk. A. D. 1523 30 Will: Knight. A. D. 1541 31 Will: Barlow. A. D. 1549 32 Gilbert Bourn. A. D. 1554 33 Gilbert Barkley. A. D. 1559 34 Tho: Godwin. A. D. 1584. 35 John Still. A. D. 1592. 36 Jam: Mountagu. A. D. 1608 37 Arthur Lake. A. D. 1616 38 William Laud. A. D. 1626. 39 Leonard Maw. A. D. 1628. 40 Walter Curl. A. D. 1629 41 William Peirs. A. D. 1632 BRISTOL. One of the 6. new Bishoprics erected by K. Hen. 8. 1 Paul Bush. A. D. 1542 2 John Holyman. A. D. 1554 3 Richard Cheney. A. D. 1562 4 John Bullingham. A. D. 1581. 5 Richard Fletcher. A. D. 1589 6 John Thornborough. A. D. 1603 7 Nicholas Felton. A. D. 1617. 8 John Scarchfield. A. D. 1619 9 Robert Wright. A. D. 1622 10 George Cook. A. D. 1632 11 Rob: skinner. A. D. 1636 CHICHESTER. The Bishops of this Diocese were first Bishops of Selsey, and then of Chichester, as followeth. Bishop of Selsey. 1 Wilfrid. A. D. 711 2 Eadbert. A. D. 711 3 Eolla. 4 Sigelm, Sigfrid or Sigga. A. D. 733 5 Alubrith. 6 Osa, alias Bosa. A. D. 790 7 Giselhor. 8 Tota. 9 Wighthun. 10 Ethelulph. 11 Beornege. A. D. 906 12 Coenred. 13 Gothard. A. D. 960 14 Alfred. A. D. 970 15 Eadelm. A. D. 970 16 Ethelgar. A. D. 980 17 Ordbright. A. D. 988 18 Elmor. A. D. 1019 19 Ethelrick or Agilred. A. D. 1019 20 Grinketell. A. D. 1039 21 Heca. A. D. 1047 22 Agelrike. A. D. 1057 Bishops of Chichester. 1 Stigand. A. D. 1070 2 William. 3 Ralph. 4 Seffrid I. A. D. 1125 5 Hillary. 6 Jo: of Greenford. A. D. 1174 7 Seffrid II. A. D. 1187 8 Simon of Wells. A. D. 1199 9 Nic: of Aquila. A. D. 1209 10 Richard Poor. A. D. 1215 11 Ralph of Warham. A. D. 1217 12 Ralph de Nevil. A. D. 1223 13 Richard de la Wiche. A. D. 1245 14 John Clipping. A. D. 1253 15 Stephen de Berksted. A. D. 1261 16 Gilbert de S. Leofando. A. D. 1288 17 John de Langton. 18 Robert Stratford. 19 William de Lenne, alias Lulimore. A. D. 1362 20 William Read. A. D. 1369 21 Tho: Rushock A. D. 1385 22 Richard Mitford. 23 Robert Welby. A. D. 1395 24 Robert Read. A. D. 1396 25 Stephen Patrington. A. D. 1417 26 Henry Ware. A. D. 1418 27 John Kemp. A. D. 1421 28 Tho: Poldon. A. D. 1423 29 Jo: Rickingale. A. D. 1428 30 Sim: Sidenham. A. D. 1430 31 Richard Prary. 32 Adam Molyns. A. D. 1445 33 Regin: Peacock. A. D. 1450 34 John Arundel. A. D. 1458 35 Edward Story. A. D. 1477 36 Ric: Fitz-James. A. D. 1504 37 Rob: Sherborn. A. D. 1508 38 Rich: Samson. A. D. 1536 39 George Day. A. D. 1543 40 John Scory. A. D. 1551 41 John Christopherson. A. D. 1557 42 Will: Barlow. A. D. 1559 43 Rich: Curteis. A. D. 1570 44 Thom: Bickley. A. D. 1585. 45 Antho: Watson. A. D. 1596 46 Lancelot Andrews. A. D. 1605 47 Samuel Harsnet. A. D. 1609 48 Georg●●arleton. A. D. 1619 49 Ric: Mountagu. A. D. 1628. 50 Brian Duppa. A. D. 1638 51 Henry King. A. D. 1641 COVENTRY and LITCHFIELD. The Bishops of this Diocese were first Bishops of Litchfield, and then of Coventry and Litchfield. Bishops of Litchfield. 1 Dwyna. A. D. 656 2 Cellach. 3 Trumhere. 4 Jarumannus. 5 St. Chad or Cedda. A. D. 669 6 Winifrid. A. D. 672 7 S. Sexulf or Saxulf. A. D. 672 8 Headda alias Eathed. A. D. 692 9 Aldwyn alias Wor. A. D. 721 10 Witta. A. D. 733 11 Hemel. 12 Cuthfrid. A. D. 764 13 Berthum. 14 Sigbert alias Higbert I. A. D. 785 15 Aldulph was Archbishop of Litchfield. A. D. 793 16 Humbert I. 17 Herewin. 18 Higbert II. 19 Ethelwold. 20 Humbert II. A. D. 857 21 Kinebert alias Kenferth. A. D. 864 22 S. Cumbert or Cymbert. A. D. 872 23 Tumbright all. Bumfrith. A. D. 928 Florent. Wigorn. hath this order of succession from Berthun to Tunbright, as followeth. 1 Berthun. 2 Higbert. A. D. 785 3 Aldulf. A. D. 793 4 Herewin. 5 Ethelwald. 6 Humberht. A. D. 857 7 Cineforth. A. D. 864 8 Tunbright. A. D. 928 Bishop Godwin follows the order set down by Matthew Westminster from Tunbright, thus, 1 Ella. A. D. 928 2 Alfgar. A. D. 928 3 Kinsy. 4 Winsy. 5 Elphege alias Ealphege. 6 Godwin. 7 Leofgar. 8 Brithman. 9 Wulsius. A. D. 1039 10 Leofwin. A. D. 1054 11 Peter removed the See to Chester. A. D. 1067 Bishops of Coventry and Litchfield. 1 Robert de Limesey. removed the See to Coventry. A. D. 1088 2 Robert Peche alias Peccam. A. D. 1117 3 Roger de Clinton. A. D. 1119 4 Walter Durdent. A. D. 1149 5 Richard Peche. A. D. 1161 6 Gerard Puella alias la Pucelle. A. D. 1182 7 Hugh de Novant alias Nunant. A. D. 1186 8 Geffrey de Muschamp. A. D. 1191 9 Walter de Grace. A. D. 1210 10 William de Cornhull. A. D. 1215 11 Alexan. de Savensby alias Wendock. A. D. 1220 12 Hugh Pateshull. A. D. 1240 13 Roger de Wescham. A. D. 1245 14 Roger de Longespe alias de Molend. A. D. 1257 15 Walter de Langton. A. D. 1295 16 Roger Northborough alias Northbrook. A. D. 1322 17 Rob: Stretton. A. D. 1360 18 Walter Skirlaw. A. D. 1385 19 Rich Scroop. A. D. 1396 20 John Burghill. A. D. 1399 21 John Keterich. A. D. 1415 22 James Cary. A. D. 1419 23 Wil: Heyworth. A. D. 1420 24 William Booth. A. D. 1447 25 Nicholas Close. A. D. 1452 26 Roger Butler. A. D. 1453 27 Jo: Halse alias Hales. A. D. 1459 28 William Smith. A. D. 1492 29 John Arundel. A. D. 1496 30 Geffrey Blyth. A. D. 1503 31 Roland Lee. A. D. 1524 32 Rich: Samson. A. D. 1543 33 Ralph Bayn. A. D. 1555 34 Thom: Bentham. A. D. 1559 35 Will: Overton. A. D. 1578 36 George Abbot. A. D. 1609 37 Rich: Neile. A. D. 1610 38 John Overall. A. D. 1614 39 Thom Morton. A. D. 1618. 40 Robert Wright. A. D. 1632 41 Accepted Frewen. A. D. 1644 S. david's. Dubritius Archbishop of Carleon in Wales resigned his Archbishopric to S. David, who removed his See to S. David's A. D. 519. who was the first Archbishop of S. David, the rest follow. Archbishops of S. David's according to Giraldus Cambrensis. 1 S. David. A. D. 519 2 Conauc. 3 Eliud or Teilon. 4 Ceneu. 5 Morwall. 6 Haerunen or Haernurier. 7 Elwaed. 8 Gurnuen. 9 Lendivord. 10 Gorwyst. 11 Gorgan. 12 Eluoed. 13 Anian. 14 Eluoed. 15 Ethelmon. 16 Elanc. 17 Molscoed. 18 Sadermen. 19 Catellus. 20 Sulhaithnay. 21 Nonis. 22 Etwall. 23 Asser. 24 Arthuael. Another Catalogue of the Archbishops of S. David's, different from Gyraldus, taken out of an Antiquity belonging to the Church of S. David. 1 S. David. A. D. 519 2 Eliud. 3 Theliaus. 4 Kenea. 5 Moruael. 6 Haernurier. 7 Eluaeth. 8 Gurnell. 9 Lendymyth. 10 Gorwist. 11 Gorgan. 12 Cledanc. 13 Eynaen. 14 Eludgeth. 15 Eldunen. 16 Elnaoth. 17 Maelschwyth. 18 Madenew. 19 Catalus. 20 Sylvay. 21 Namys. 22 Sathuency. 23 doth wall. 24 Asser. 25 Athuael. A. D. 906 26 Samson. Bishops of S. David's using archiepiscopal power. 1 Ruclinus. 2 Elgum. 3 Lunuerd all. Lyward. 4 Norgu alias Vergu. 5 Sulhider alias Hubert. 6 Eneuris alias Euerus. 7 Morgena. 8 Roderic. 9 Nathan. A. D. 961 10 Jevan. 11 Argustel. 12 Morgenueth all. Urgeney. 13 Eruen alias Hurnun. A. D. 998 14 Tramorin alias Carmerin. A. D. 1038 15 Joseph. A. D. 1055 16 Blethied. 17 Sulheim. A. D. 1070 18 Abraham. A. D. 1076 19 Rythmarch. 20 Wilfrid alias Griffri. 21 Bernard. A. D. 1115 Bishops of S. David's after Bernard, Suffragans to the See of Canterbury. 1 David Fit. Gerald. A. D. 1148 2 Petrus or Piers. A. D. 1176 3 Geffrey. 4 Sylvester Gyraldus or Gyrald. Cambrensis. A. D. 1198 5 Jorworth or Edward. A. D. 1215 6 Alselmus. A. D. 1228 7 Tho. Wallensis. A. D. 1247 8 Thomas Carrion. A. D. 1255 9 Thomas Beck. A. D. 1280 10 David de S. Edmundo. A. D. 1293 11 David Martin. A. D. 1320 12 Henry Gower. A. D. 1328 13 John Thorisby. A. D. 1347 14 Reginald Brian. A. D. 1349 15 Thomas Fastolf. A. D. 1353 16 Adam Houghton. A. D. 1361 17 John Gilbert. A. D. 1369 The See void 4. years. 18 Guy de Mona alias Mohun. A. D. 1401 19 Hen. Chicheley. A. D. 1409 20 John Keterich or Cataricus. A. D. 1414 21 Stephen Patrington. A. D. 1415 22 Benet nicols. A. D. 1417 23 Thomas Rodburn. A. D. 1424 24 Will: Lynwood. A. D. 1435 25 John Langton. A. D. 1446 26 John Delabere. A. D. 1447 27 Robert Tully. 28 Richard Martin. A. D. 1482 29 Thom: Langton. A. D. 1483 30 Hugh Pavy. A. D. 1485 31 John Morgan alias Yong. A. D. 1503 32 Rob: Sherborn. A. D. 1504 33 Edw: Vaughan. A. D. 1509 34 Rich: Rawlyns. A. D. 1523 35 Will: Barlow. A. D. 1536 36 Robert Ferrar. A. D. 1549 37 Henry Morgan. A. D. 1554 38 Thomas Young. A. D. 1559 39 Richard Davies. A. D. 1561 40 Marmaduke Middleton. A. D. 1567. The See vacant 4. years. 41 Anthony Rudd. A. D. 1594 42 Rich: Milborn. A. D. 1615 43 William Laud. A. D. 1621. 44 Theophi▪ Field. A. D. 1627. 45 Roger Manwaring. A. D. 1635 ELYE. 1 Hervaeus Bishop of Bangor. A. D. 1109 2 Nigellus. A. D. 1133 3 Galfridus rydal. A. D. 1174 4 William Longechamp. A. D. 1189 5 Eustachius. A. D. 1198 6 Jo: de Fontibus. A. D. 1219 7 Galfr: de Burgo. A. D. 1225 8 Hugh Norwold. A. D. 1229 9 Will: of Kilkenny. A. D. 1255 10 Hugh Balsam. A. D. 1257 11 John de Kirkby. A. D. 1286 12 Will: de Luda. A. D. 1290 13 Ralph Walpool. A. D. 1299 14 Robert Orford. A. D. 1302 15 John de Keeton. A. D. 1310 16 John Hotham. A. D. 1316 17 Sim: Mountacut. A. D. 1336 18 Thomas Lyde. A. D. 1344 19 Sim: Langham. A. D. 1361 20 John Barnet. A. D. 1366 21 Tho: Arundel. A. D. 1375 22 John Fordham. A. D. 1388 23 Philip Morgan. A. D. 1425 24 Lewis Lushbrough. A. D. 1435 25 Tho: Bourchier. A. D. 1443 26 William Grace. A. D. 1454 27 John Morton. A. D. 1478 28 John Alcock. A. D. 1486 29 Rich: Redman. A. D. 1501 30 James Stanley. A. D. 1506 31 Nich: West. A. D. 1515 32 Tho: Goodrig. A. D. 1534 33 Tho. Thirlby. A. D. 1554 34 Richard Cox. A. D. 1559 The See vacant 20 years. 35 Martin Heton. A. D. 1599 36 Lancelot Andrew's. A. D. 1609 37 Nich: Felton. A. D. 1618. 38 Jo: Buckeridg. A. D. 1628. 39 Franc: White. A. D. 1631 40 Matthew Wren. A. D. 1638 EXETER. This Diocese was at first in two Bishoprics, viz. Cornwall and Devon, and afterwards united into one, viz. Exeter. Bishops of Cornwall. 1 Athelstan I. A. D. 905 2 Conan. 3 Ruydocus. 4 Aldred. 5 Britwyn. 6 Athelstan II. 7 Wolfi. 8 Woronus. 9 Wolocus. 10 Stidio. 11 Adelred. 12 Burwald. Bishops of Devon. 1 Werstan or Aedulph. A. D. 905 2 Putta. A. D. 906 3 Eadulph II. A. D. 910 4 Ethelgarus. A. D. 932 5 Algar. A. D. 942 6 Alfwold. A. D. 952 7 Alwolf I. A. D. 972 8 Sideman. A. D. 981 9 Alfred al. Alfric. A. D. 990 10 Alwolf TWO or Alfwold. A. D. 999 11 Eadnothus. A. D. 1014 12 Livingus. A. D. 1032 This Livingus after the Death of Burwald Bishop of Cornwall, united the two Bishoprics of Cornwall and Devon into one Bishopric, removed by his successor to Exeter. Bishops of Exeter. 1 Leofric removed the See to Exeter. A. D. 1049 2 Osbert or Osbern. A. D. 1079 3 Will: Warewast. A. D. 1107 4 Rob: Chichester. A. D. 1122 5 Rob: Warfwast alias Warwast. A. D. 1150 6 Barth: Isanus. A. D. 1159 7 Jo: the chanter. A. D. 1186 8 Henry Martial. A. D. 1191 9 Simon de Apulia. A. D. 1206 10 Will: Brewer. A. D. 1224 11 Rich: Blondy. A. D. 1245 12 Walt: Bronescomb. A. D. 1257 13 Peter Quivill. A. D. 1280 14 Thomas Button. A. D. 1293 15 Wal: Stapleton. A. D. 1307 16 James Barkley. A. D. 1326 17 Jo: Grandison. A. D. 1327 18 Thom: Brentingham. A. D. 1370 19 Edm: Stafford. A. D. 1395 20 John Ketterich. A. D. 1419 21 John Cary. A. D. 1419 22 Edmond Lacy. A. D. 1420 23 George Nevil. A. D. 1455 24 John Booth. A. D. 1466 25 Peter Courtney. A. D. 1477 26 Richard Fox. A. D. 1486 27 Oliver King. A. D. 1492 28 Robert Redman. A. D. 1495 29 Jo: Arundel. A. D. 1501 30 Hugh Oldham. A. D. 1504 31 John Voisei alias Harman. A. D. 1519 32 Miles Coverdale. A. D. 1551 33 James Turbervil. A. D. 1556 34 William Alley. A. D. 1560 35 Will: Bradbridge. A. D. 1570 36 John Woolton. A. D. 1579 37 Gervase Babington. A. D. 1594 38 Will: Cotton. A. D. 1598. 39 Valentine Cary. A. D. 1621. 40 Joseph Hall. A. D. 1627. 41 Ralph Brownrigge. A. D. 1641 GLOUCESTER. One of the 6. new Bishoprics erected by K. Hen. 8. 1 Jo: Wakeman. A. D. 1541 2 John Hooper. A. D. 1550 3 James Brooks. A. D. 1555 The See vacant 3 yearts. 4 Rich: Cheney. A. D. 1562 The See void three years. 5 Jo: Bullingham. A. D. 1581. 6 Godfrey: Goldsborough. A. D. 1598. 7 Thomas Ravis. A. D. 1604 8 Henry Parry. A. D. 1607 9 Giles Tompson. A. D. 1611 10 Miles Smith. A. D. 1612 11 Godfrey Goodman. A. D. 1624. HEREFORD. 1 Putta. A. D. 680 2 Tirtell. 3 Torteras. 4 Walstold alias Walstod. 5 Cuthbert. A. D. 740 6 Podda. 7 Ecca. 8 Cedda. 9 Albert. A. D. 857 10 Esna. 11 Celmund. A. D. 885 12 Utellus. 13 Wlfhard. 14 Benna. 15 Edulf. 16 Cuthwulf. 17. Mucel. 18 Doorlas. 19 Cunemund. 20 Edgar. 21 Tidhelm. 22 Wulfhelm. 23 Alfrike. 24 Athulf. 25 Ethelstan. A. D. 1055 26 Leovegard. A. D. 1055 The See vacant 4. years. 27 Walter. A. D. 1060 28 Rob: Lozinga. A. D. 1079 29 Gerard. 30 Raynelm. A. D. 1107 31 Geffr: de Cliva. A. D. 1115 32 Richard Clerk of the Seal. A. D. 1120 33 Rob: de Betune. A. D. 1131 34 Gilb: de Foliot. A. D. 1149 35 Rob: de Melun. A. D. 1162 36 Robert Foliot. A. D. 1174 37 Will: le Vere. A. D. 1186 38 Giles de Bruse. A. D. 1200 39 Hugh de Mapenore. A. D. 1216 40 Hugh Foliot. A. D. 1219 41 Ralph de Maidston. A. D. 1234 42 Peter de Egueblank. A. D. 1239 43 John Breton the famous Lawyer. A. D. 1260 44 Tho: Cantilupe. A. D. 1275 45 Richard de Swinfeild. A. D. 1282 46 Adam de Orleton. A. D. 1317 47 Tho: Charlton. A. D. 1327 48 John Trillock. A. D. 1344 49 Lewis Charlton. A. D. 1361 50 Will: Courtney. A. D. 1369 51 John Gilbert. A. D. 1376 52 John Trenevant al. Trefnant. A. D. 1389 53 Robert Mascall. A. D. 1405 54 Edmond Lacy. A. D. 1417 55 Thomas Polton. A. D. 1420 56 Tho: Stofford. A. D. 1422 57 Richard Beauchamp. A. D. 1448 58 Regin: Butler. A. D. 1450 59 John Stanbery. A. D. 1453 60 Tho: Mylling. A. D. 1474 61 Edm: Audley. A. D. 1492 62 Adrian de Castello. A. D. 1502 63 Richard Mayo. A. D. 1504 64 Charles Booth. A. D. 1516 65 Edward Fox. A. D. 1535 66 Edm: Bonner. A. D. 1538 67 John Skypp. A. D. 1539 68 John Harley. A. D. 1553 69 Robert Parfew alias Warton. A. D. 1554 70 John Scory. A. D. 1559 71 Herbert Westfaling. A. D. 1585. 72 Robert Bennet. A. D. 1602 73 Franc: Godwin. A. D. 1617. 74 Augustin Lyndsell. A. D. 1633 75 Matth: Wren. A. D. 1634 76 Theoph: Field. A. D. 1635 77 George Cook. A. D. 1636 LANDAFF. 1 Dubritius. 2 St. Telian alias Eliud. A. D. 522 3 St. Oudoceus. 4 Ubilwynus. 5 Aidanus. 6 Elgistill. 7 Lunapeius. 8 Comegern. 9 Argwistill. 10 Gurvan. 11 Guodloiu. 12 Edilbinus. 13 Grecielus. 14 Berthygwn. 15 Trychan. 16 Elvogus. 17 Catgwaret. 18 Cerenhir. 19 Nobis. 20 Gulfridus. 21 Nudd. 22 Cimeliauc. 23 Libyan. 24 Marchluith. 25 Pater. 26 Gucanor alias Gogwan. A. D. 982 27 Bledris. A. D. 993 28 Joseph. A. D. 1022 29 Herewald. A. D. 1056 30 Urban. A. D. 1107 The See vacant 6. years. 31 Uhtrid. A. D. 1139 32 Geffrey. A. D. 1148 33 Nic●ap Gurgant. A. D. 1153 34 William de Salso Marisco. A. D. 1183 35 Henry. 36 William. A. D. 1219 37 Elias de Radnor. A. D. 1229 38 Will: de Burgo. A. D. 1244 39 Jo: de la Ware. A. D. 1253 40 Will: de Radnor. A. D. 1256 41 Will: de Brews. A. D. 1265 The See vacant 9 years. 42 John de Monmouth. A. D. 1296 43 Jo: de Eglescliff. A. D. 1323 44 John Pascall. A. D. 1347 45 Rog: Cradock. A. D. 1362 46 Tho: Rushook. A. D. 1383 47 William de Bottlesham. A. D. 1385 48 Edmond de Bromfield. A. D. 1389 49 Tydeman. A. D. 1391 50 Andrew Barret. A. D. 1395 51 John Burghill. 52 Tho: Peverell. A. D. 1399 53 John la Zouch. A. D. 1408 54 John Wells. A. D. 1423 55 Nich: Ashby. A. D. 1441 56 John Hunden. A. D. 1458 57 John Smith. 58 John Martial. A. D. 1478 59 John Ingleby. 60 Miles Saley. A. D. 1504 61 George de Athequa a Spaniard. A. D. 1516 62 Robert Holgate. A. D. 1537 63 Anthony Kitchen all. Dunstan. A. D. 1545 The See void 3. years. 64 Hugh Jones. A. D. 1566 65 Will: Blethin. A. D. 1575. 66 Gervase Babington. A. D. 1591. 67 Will: Morgan. A. D. 1595 68 Franc: Godwyn. A. D. 1601 69 Geo: Carleton. A. D. 1618. 70 Theoph: Field. A. D. 1619 71 Will: Murray. A. D. 1627. 72 Morgan Owen. A. D. 1639 LINCOLN. This Diocese at first contained two Bishoprics, Dorchester and Sidnacester, which were afterwards united into one Bishopric of Lincoln. Dorchester Bishops. This Dorchester is about 7. miles from Oxford, out of which was taken the Bishopric of Winchester, by Kenwalchus' King of the West Saxons. 1 Birinus. A. D. 635 2 Agilbertus. A. D. 650 The See vacant a long time. 3 Tota. 4 Edbert. A. D. 764 5 Werenbert. 6 Unwora. A. D. 768 7 Rethunus. A. D. 816 8 Aldred. A. D. 851 9 Ceolred. A. D. 873 10 Halard. 11 Ceolulph or Kenulph. A. D. 905 12 Leofwin. A. D. 959 In this last Bishop's time Sidnacester was united to Dorchester. 13 Ailnoth. A. D. 960 14 Ascwin alias Aescwy. 15 Alshelm. 16 Eadnoth I. 17 Eadhericus. A. D. 1016 18 Eadnoth II. A. D. 1034 19 Ulfus a Norman. A. D. 1052 20 Wulfinus. A. D. 1053 After this Bishop's time Remigius his successor removed the See to Lincoln. Sidnacester Bishops. Sidnacester was a Town in Lincolnshire near Gainsbrough, its Diocese taken out of Dorchester, A. D. 678. 1 Eadhed. A. D. 678 2 Ethelwin. 3 Edgar. 4 Kinebert alias Embert. 5 Alwigh. A. D. 733 About this time A. D. 737. another Bishops See was erected at Leicester, but soon after removed to Dorchester. 6 Eadulfus I. A. D. 751 7 Ceolulf. A. D. 764 8 Eadulf II. A. D. 787 The See vacant many years. 9 Brightred. A. D. 872 This See having lain vacant almost 80. years, was at last united to Dorchester by Leofwin Bishop of that Diocese, as before, and so continued till Remigius the last Bishop of Dorchester removed the See to Lincoln. Lincoln Bishops since the removal by Remigius. 1 Remigius. A. D. 1070 2 Robert Bloet. A. D. 1092 3 Alexander. A. D. 1123 4 Robert de Chesney al. de Querceto. A. D. 1147 The See vacant 17. years. 5 Walter de Constantiis. A. D. 1183 6 St. Hugh. A. D. 1186 7 William Blesensis or de Blois. A. D. 1203 After the See had lain vacant three years, 8 Hugh Walls. A. D. 1209 9 Robert Grosthed alias Grouthed. A. D. 1209 10 Hen: Lexinton. A. D. 1254 11 Bened: de Gravesend. A. D. 1258 12 Oliver Sutton. A. D. 1280 13 John Aldberry alias Alderby. A. D. 1300 14 Thomas Beak. A. D. 1319 15 Henry Burwash. A. D. 1320 16 Thomas Becke. A. D. 1341 17 John Synwell. A. D. 1351 18 Jo: Bokingham. A. D. 1363 19 Henry Beaufort. A. D. 1397 20 Phil: Repindon. A. D. 1405 21 Will: Fleming. A. D. 1420 22 William Grace. A. D. 1431 23 Will: Alnwick. A. D. 1436 24 Marmaduke Lumley. A. D. 1450 25 Jo: Chadworth. A. D. 1452 26 Thomas Rotheram alias Scot A. D. 1471 27 John Russell. A. D. 1480 The See vacant 5. years. 28 Will: Smith. A. D. 1495 29 Thom: Wolsey. A. D. 1514 30 Will: Atwater. A. D. 1514 31 Jo: Longland. A. D. 1521 32 Henry Holbech. A. D. 1547 33 John Taylor. A. D. 1552 34 John White. A. D. 1553 35 Thom: Watson. A. D. 1557 36 Nic: Bullingham. A. D. 1559 37 Thom▪ Cooper. A. D. 1570 38 Wil: Wickham. A. D. 1584. 39 William Chaderton. A. D. 1594 40 Will: Barlow. A. D. 1608 41 Rich: Neile. A. D. 1613 42 Geo: Mountain. A. D. 1617. 43 John Williams. A. D. 1621. 44 Tho: Wynnyff. A. D. 1641 LONDON. This Bishopric was first an Archbishopric, erected by Lucius the first Christian King of the Britan's An. Christi 180. the archiepiscopal See was removed to Canterbury, and London made an Episcopal See by Augustin the Monk, A. D. 604. There are only 16. names of the Archbishops, which are these. 1 Thean, who built and made S. Peter's Church in Cornhill London, his archiepiscopal See of London under King Lucius. 2 Elvanus. 3 Cadar. 4 Obinus. 5 Conan. 6 Palladius. 7 Stephen. 8 Iltut. 9 Theodwyn al. Dedwyn. 10 Thedred. 11 Hilary. 12 Restitutus. A. D. 366 13 Guitelnius. 14 Fastidius. 15 Vodinus. A. D. 436 16 Theonus. A. D. 553 After the Archbishops succeeded the Bishops of London following. Bishops of London. 1 Melitus, placed by Augustin the Monk. A. D. 608 2 Ceadda. A. D. 654 3 Wina. A. D. 666 4 Erkenwald. A. D. 675 5 Waldher. 6 Ingwald. 7 Egwolf. 8 Wighed. 9 Eadbright. 10 Eadgar. 11 Kenwalch. 12 Eadbald. 13 Hecbert or Heathubert. 14 Osmund alias Oswyn. A. D. 801 15 Ethelnot. A. D. 833 16 Ceolbert. 17 Renulph al. Ceorulf. 18 Swithulf. 19 Eadstan. A. D. 851 20 Wulfius. A. D. 860 21 Ethelward. 22 Elstan. 23 Theodred the Good. A. D. 898 24 Wulstan I. 25 Brithelmus. 26 Dunstan. A. D. 961 27 Alfstan. A. D. 962 28 Wulfstan II. 29 Alhun. 30 Alwy. 31 Elfward alias Alword. 32 Robert. A. D. 1044 33 William the Norman. A. D. 1050 34 Hugh de Orival. A. D. 1070 35 Mauritius. A. D. 1087 36 Richard Beaumes alias Rufus I. A. D. 1108 37 Gilbert Universalis. A. D. 1128 The See void 7 years. 38 Rob: de Sigillo. A. D. 1140 39 Richard Beaumes alias Beauvys II. A. D. 1151 40 Gilbert Foliot. A. D. 1161 41 Rich: Nigellus. A. D. 1189 42 William de Sancta Maria. A. D. 1199 43 Eustachius de Fauconbridg. A. D. 1222 44 Roger Niger. A. D. 1229 45 Fulk Bassett. A. D. 1244 46 Henry de Wingham. A. D. 1259 47 Richard Talbot. A. D. 1261 48 Henry de Sandwich. A. D. 1263 49 Jo: de Chisal. A. D. 1247 50 Richard de Gravesend. A. D. 1280 51 Ralph de Baldock. A. D. 1305 52 Gilb: Segrave. A. D. 1313 53 Rich: Newport. A. D. 1317 54 Step: Gravesend. A. D. 1318 55 Richard Bentworth al. Wentworth. A. D. 1338 56 Ralph Stratford. A. D. 1339 57 Michael Northbrook. A. D. 1355 58 Simon Sudbury alias Tybald. A. D. 1361 59 Will: Courtney. A. D. 1375 60 Rob: Braybrook. A. D. 1381 61 Rog: Walden. A. D. 1404 62 Nic: Bubwith. A. D. 1406 63 Rich: Clifford. A. D. 1407 64 John Kempe. A. D. 1421 65 William Grace. A. D. 1426 66 Robert Fitz-Hugh. A. D. 1431 67 Robert Gilbert. A. D. 1435 68 Thomas Kemp. A. D. 1449 John Martial mistaken for Landaff. 69 Richard Hill. A. D. 1489 70 Thom: Savage. A. D. 1497 71 Will: Warham. A. D. 1500 72 Will: Barnes. A. D. 1505 73 Richard Fitz-James. A. D. 1506 74 Cuth: Tonstall. A. D. 1522 75 Jo: Stokesley. A. D. 1530 76 Edm: Bonner. A. D. 1540 77 Nich: Ridley. A. D. 1549 78 Edm: Gryndall. A. D. 1559 79 Edwin Sands. A. D. 1570 80 John Elmer. A. D. 1576 81 Rich: Fletcher. A. D. 1594 82 Rich. Bancroft. A. D. 1597 83 Rich: Vaughan. A. D. 1604 84 Thomas Ravis. A. D. 1607 85 Georg Abbot. A. D. 1609 86 John King. A. D. 1611 87 Geo: Mountain. A. D. 1621. 88 William Laud. A. D. 1628. 89 William Juxon. A. D. 1633 NORWICH. This Diocese originally was the Bishopric of the East-Angles, which was afterwards divided into two Bishoprics, Elmham and Dunwich: this of Dunwich being extinct, that of Elmham in Norfolk continued till Herfastus removed his See to Thetford, and Herbert Losinga afterwards removed his See from Thetford to Norwich, where it hath since continued. Bishops of East-Angles. 1 S. Faelix a Burgundian. A. D. 630 2 Tho: Diaconus. A. D. 647 3 Bregilfus Bonifacius. A. D. 652 4 Bisus. A. D. 665 This Bisus divided the Bishopric of East-Angles into Elmham and Donwich. Bishops of Elmham after the division. 1 Bedwin. 2 Northbertus. 3 Headulacus. 4 Edilfridus. 5 Lanferthus. 6 Athelwolphus. 7 Alcarus. 8 Sibba. 9 Alherdus. 10 Humbertus al. Humbiretus. Bishops of Dunwich after the division. 1 Acca. 2 Astwolphus. 3 Eadforth. 4 Cuthwin. 5 Aldberth. 6 Eglaf alias Algar. 7 Heardred alias Hardulf. A. D. 747 8 Aelphunus. 9 Tidferth alias Todfrid. 10 Weremund. 11 Wilred. These two Bishoprics by reason of the Danish wars lay vacant 100 years: afterwards An. 955. Athulfas' was ordained Bishop of the East-Angles by Edwin King of the West Saxons, who kept his See at Elmham, Dunwich being quite extinct, as above. Bishops of both Sees after the vacancy of 100 years abovesaid. 1 Athu: al. Astulfus. A. D. 955 2 Alfredus. 3 Theodredus al. Theodoricus. 4 Theodred. 5 Athelstan. 6 Algar. 7 Alwin. 8 Alfricus. 9 Alifreius alias Alfricus. A. D. 1038 10 Stigand. 11 Grinketell. A. D. 1044 12 Egelmar alias E●helmar. A. D. 1047 All these till the time of William the Conqueror had their Sees at Elmham. After Bishop Egelmar King William the Conqueror caused Arfastus or Herfastus his Chaplain to succeed Egelmar, who removed the See from Elmham to Thetford, where it continued three successions. Bishops of Thetford. 1 Herfastus or Arfastus. 2 Gul. Galsagus. 3 Herebertus Losinga al. Gul. Herbertus. A. D. 1088 This Losinga translated the See from Thetford to Norwich, where it hath since continued. Bishops of Norwich since the removal of the See from Thetford. 1 Herebertus Losinga al. Gul. Herbertus. A. D. 1088 2 Everardus. A. D. 1120 3 William Turbus a Norman. A. D. 1151 4 Jo: of Oxford. A. D. 1177 5 John Grace. A. D. 1200 The See void 7. years. 6 Pandulfus the Pope's Legate. A. D. 1222 7 Thomas de Blundevile. A. D. 1226 8 Radulphus. A. D. 1236 The See void 3. years. 9 Will: de Raleigh. A. D. 1239 10 Walt: de Sufeild. A. D. 1244 11 Sim: de Wanton. A. D. 1253 12 Roger de Skerwing. A. D. 1268 13 Wil: Middleton. A. D. 1278 14 Ralph Walpool. A. D. 1288 15 John Salmon. A. D. 1299 Robert Baldock elected, but refused it. 16 Will: Ayermin. A. D. 1325 17 Antho: de Beck. A. D. 1337 18 William Bateman. 19 Thomas Percy. A. D. 1354 20 Hen: Spencer. A. D. 1370 21 Alexander Prior of Norwich. A. D. 1408 22 Ric: Courtney. A. D. 1413 23 Jo. Wakering. A. D. 1416 24 Will: Alnwick. A. D. 1426 25 Tho: Brown. A. D. 1436 26 Walter Hart. A. D. 1445 27 Ja: Goldwell. A. D. 1472 28 Thomas Jan. A. D. 1499 29 Richard Nyx. A. D. 1500 30 William Rugg alias Reps. A. D. 1536 31 Tho: Thirlby. A. D. 1550 32 John Hopton. A. D. 1554 33 Jo: Parkhurst. A. D. 1560 34 Edm: Freak. A. D. 1575. 35 Edm: Scambler. A. D. 1584. 36 Will: Redman. A. D. 1524 37 John Jegon. A. D. 1602 38 John Overall. A. D. 1618. 39 Same Harsnet. A. D. 1619 40 Franc: White. A. D. 1628. 41 Rich: Corbet. A. D. 1632 42 Mat: Wrenn. A. D. 1635 43 Rich: Montague. A. D. 1638 44 Joseph Hall. A. D. 1641 OXFORD. This was one of the 6. Bishoprics newly erected by K. Hen. 8. Bishops of Oxford. 1 Robert King last Abbot of Oseney. A. D. 1541 2 Hugh Curwyn, the See having been vacant ten years. A. D. 1567. 3 John Underhill, after the See vacant 20. years. A. D. 1589 4 John Bridges, after the See vacant 11. years. A. D. 1603 5 John Howson. A. D. 1619 6 Rich: Corbet. A. D. 1628. 7 John Bancroft. A. D. 1632 8 Robert skinner. A. D. 1641 PETERBOROUGH. This was another of the 6. new Bishoprics erected by K. Hen. 8. Bishops of Peterborough. 1 John Chamber, last Abbot there. A. D. 1541 2 David Poole. A. D. 1557 3 Edm: Scambler. A. D. 1560 4 Rich: Howland. A. D. 1584. 5 Thomas Dove. A. D. 1600 6 William Peirs. A. D. 1630 7 August: Lyndsell. A. D. 1632 8 Francis Dee. A. D. 1634 9 John Towers. A. D. 1639 ROCHESTER. 1 Justus. A. D. 606 2 Romanus. A. D. 622 3 Paulinus. A. D. 631 4 Ithamar. A. D. 644 5 Damianus. A. D. 656 6 Putta. A. D. 669 7 Quichelmus or Gulielmus. A. D. 676 8 Gebmundus, Godmundus, or Godwynd. A. D. 681 9 Tobias. A. D. 693 10 Adulfus. A. D. 717 11 Dun or Duina. A. D. 741 12 Eardulfus. A. D. 747 13 Diota. 14 Weremund 15 Beornmod all. Beornred. A. D. 800 16 Tadnoth. 17 Bedenoth. 18 Godwin. 19 Gutherwulf. 20 Swithulf. 21 Buiricus. 22 Cheolmund. 23 Chineferth. 24 Burrhicus. 25 Alfanus. 26 Godwin II. A. D. 984 27 Godwin III. 28 Siward. A. D. 1058 29 Arnostus. A. D. 1075 30 Gundulph. A. D. 1077 31 Ralph. A. D. 1108 32 St. Earnulphus. A. D. 1115 33 John Arched: of Cant. A. D. 1125 34 Ascelinus. A. D. 1137 35 Walterus. A. D. 1147 36 Gualeranus. A. D. 1183 37 Gilbert de Glanvile. A. D. 1185 38 Benedictus. A. D. 1214 39 Hen: de Sanford. A. D. 1227 40 Rich: de Wendover. A. D. 1238 41 Laurence de S. Martino. A. D. 1251 42 Walter de Merton, founder of Merton College. A. D. 1274 43 Jo: de Bradfield. A. D. 1278 44 Tho: Inglethorp. A. D. 1283 45 Thomas de Wuldham. A. D. 1291 46 Haymo de Heath. A. D. 1319 47 Jo: de Shepey. A. D. 1352 48 Wil: Wittlesey. A. D. 1361 49 Thomas Trillick alias Trilley. A. D. 1363 50 Tho: Brinton. A. D. 1372 51 William de Bottlesham all: Bolsham. A. D. 1389 52 John Boltsham alias Bottlesham. A. D. 1400 53 Rich: Young. A. D. 1404 54 John Kemp. A. D. 1419 55 John Langdon. A. D. 1422 56 Thomas Brown. A. D. 1434 57 Will: de Welles. A. D. 1436 58 John Lowe. A. D. 1443 59 Tho: Rotheram. A. D. 1467 60 John Alcock. A. D. 1471 61 John Russell. A. D. 1476 62 Edm: Audley. A. D. 1480 63 Thomas Savage. A. D. 1492 64 Richard Fitz-James A. D. 1496 65 John Fisher. A. D. 1504 66 John Hilsey. A. D. 1536 67 Nich: Heath. A. D. 1539 68 Henry Holbech. A. D. 1544 69 Nich: Ridley. A. D. 1547 70 John Poynet. A. D. 1550 71 John Scory. A. D. 1551 72 Maurice Griffin. A. D. 1554 73 Edm: Guest. A. D. 1559 74 Edm: Freak. A. D. 1571 75 John Peirs. A. D. 1576 76 John Yong. A. D. 1578 77 Will: Barlow. A. D. 1605 78 Richard Neile. A. D. 1608 79 Jo: Buckeridg. A. D. 1611 80 Walter Curl. A. D. 1627. 81 John Bowl. A. D. 1630 82 John Warner. A. D. 1637 SALISBURY. This Diocese was formerly in two Bishoprics, Sherborn and Wilton: out of Sherborn Wilton wast aken: which were afterwards united together into Salisbury by Bishop Herman A. D. 1045. Bishops of Sherborn. 1 Aldhelmus made the first Bishop of Sherborn by Ina King of the West Saxons. A. D. 705 2 Fordhere. A. D. 709 3 Hereward. A. D. 730 4 Ethelwold. 5 Denefrith. 6 Wilbert. 7 Eahlstan. A. D. 817 8 Eadmund. A. D. 868 9 Ethelrage. A. D. 872 10 Alfsy. 11 Asser Menevensis. 12 Swithelm or Swigelm. A. D. 883 13 Ethelwald or Ethelward. The See void 7. years. A. D. 905. Three Bishoprics were taken out of the Diocese of Sherborn by Plegmond Archbishop of Canterbury, one for Cornwall, another for Devon, of which see Tit. Exeter, the third at Wells for Somerset-shire of which see Bath and Wells, and a fourth afterward at Wilton for Wilt-shire, of which see afterward. Now to proceed with Sherborn Bishops next after Ethelwald. 14 Werstan. A. D. 905 15 Ethelbald. A. D. 918 16 Sigelm Il. 17 Alfredus. A. D. 934 18 Wulfsinus. A. D. 940 19 Alfwold. A. D. 958 20 Ethelricus. A. D. 978 21 Ethelsius. 22 Brithwin al. Brithric. 23 Elmor. A. D. 1009 24 Brynwyn alias Brythwin. 25 Elfwold. After the death of Elfwold, Herman the last Bishop of Wilton was Bishop also of Sherborn, and joined both Bishoprics again into one, and then removed the See to Salisbury. Bishops of Wilton. Whose Sees were sometime at Wilton, sometime at Ramesbury & otherwhile at Sunning, and thereupon sometime named Bishops of those places. 1 Ethelstan at Ramsbury A. D. 905 2 Odo, there also. 3 Osulphus at Wilton. A. D. 934 4 Alsstanus. A. D. 970 5 Alfgarus or Wolfgarus. A. D. 981 6 Siricius. 7 Alfricus or Aluricius. A. D. 989 8 Brithwoldus. A. D. 998 9 Hermannus Chaplain to King Edward the Confessor, whom Cambden calls Bishop of Sunning, from his Episcopal See there: he being after the death of Elfwold Bishop of Sherborn joined that and Wilton into one, and then removed his See to Salisbury, since which time they have been called Bishops of Salisbury. Bishops of Salisbury after the removal of the Sees thither by Bishop Herman as above. 1 Herman the last Bishop of Sherborn and Wilton, and first bearing the Title of Bishop of Salisbury. A. D. 1045 2 St. Osmond. 3 Roger. A. D. 1107 4 Jocelin. A. D. 1139 The See vacant 4. years. 5 Hubert Walter. A. D. 1189 6 Herebert or Robert Pauper. A. D. 1193 7 Richard Poor. A. D. 1217 8 Rob: Bingham. A. D. 1229 9 Will: of York. A. D. 1247 10 Giles of Bridport. A. D. 1256 11 Walter de la Wile. A. D. 1263 12 Robert de Wikhampton. A. D. 1274 13 Walt: Scammell. A. D. 1284 14 Henry de Braundston. A. D. 1286 15 Laur: de Hawkburn. A. D. 1287 16 Will: de Comer. A. D. 1288 17 Nich: de Longespe. A. D. 1291 18 Simon de Gandavo. A. D. 1298 19 Roger de Mortivall. A. D. 1315 20 Robert Vivill. A. D. 1329 21 Ralph Erghum. A. D. 1375 22 John Waltham. A. D. 1388 23 Rich: Metford. A. D. 1395 24 Nicholas Bubwith. A. D. 1407 25 Robert Halam. A. D. 1408 26 Jo: Chandler. A. D. 1417 27 Robert Nevil. A. D. 1427 28 William Aiscoht. al. Hacliff. A. D. 1438 29 Ric: Beauchamp. A. D. 1450 30 Lion: Woodvill. A. D. 1482 31 Tho: Langton. A. D. 1485 32 John Blyth. A. D. 1493 33 Henry Deane. A. D. 1500 34 Edm: Awdley. A. D. 1502 35 Laurence Campegius Card. A. D. 1524 36 Nicholas Shaxton. A. D. 1535 37 John Salcot alias Capon. A. D. 1539 38 John Jewel. A. D. 1559 39 Edm: Gheast. A. D. 1571 40 John Peirs. A. D. 1578 The See void 3. years. 41 Rich: Coldwell. A. D. 1591. The See void 2. years. 42 Henry Cotton. A. D. 1598. 43 Robert Abbot. A. D. 1615 44 Mart. Fotherbie. A. D. 1618. 45 Rob: Tomson. A. D. 1620 46 John Davenant. A. D. 1621. 47 Brian Duppa. A. D. 1641 WESTMINSTER. There was an Episcopal See erected at Westminster by King Hen. 8. one of the 6. new Bishoprics by him ordained upon the suppression of Religious Houses, whereof Thomas Thirlby was the first and last Bishop, Consecrated An. 1641. He being thence removed to Norwich, the Diocese belonging to this new Bishopric (which was Middlesex) was restored to London, and the Bishopric of Westminster ceased. WINCHESTER. This Bishopric was first taken out of the Diocese of Dorchester by Kenwalchus' King of the West Saxons, and conferred on Wina the first Bishop thereof A.D. 650. Of the Bishops of Dorchester See Lincoln. Bishops of Winchester or Winton. 1 Wina or Wini. A. D. 650 2 Eleutherius. 3 S. Headda. A. D. 673 4 Daniel. A. D. 704 In this last Bishop daniel's days Ina King of the West Saxons divided his Province into two Dioceses: in the one he placed Adelmus at Sherborn, whereof see in Salisbury; in the other this Daniel at Winchester, whose successors follow. 5 Humphrey. A. D. 744 6 Kinchard. A. D. 756 7 Athelard or Hathelard. 8 Egbard. 9 Dudda. 10 Kenebert. 11 Alhmundus. 12 Wightheinus. 13 Herefridus. 14 Edmund. A. D. 834 15 Helmstan. 16 S. Swithun. A. D. 837 17 Adferth or Athelred. A. D. 863 18 Dunbert. A. D. 871 19 Denewulsus a Hogheard under King Alfred. A. D. 879 20 S. Athelmus alias Bertulphus. A. D. 888 21 Bertulph. A. D. 897 22 Fristan consecrated by Archbishop Plegmond An. A. D. 905 23 Brinstan. A. D. 931 24 Elpheg: Calvus. A. D. 946 25 Elffinus or Alffins. 26 Brithelmus. A. D. 958 27 S. Ethelwold. A. D. 963 28 S. Elphege. A. D. 984 29 Kenulph. A. D. 1006 30 S. Brithwold. A. D. 1008 31 Elsinus alias Ealsinus. A. D. 1015 32 Alwinus, accused to be naught with Emma, Wife to King Edward Confessor but acquitted. A. D. 1038 33 Stigand afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury An. A. D. 1047 34 Walkelin. A. D. 1070 The See void 10 years. 35 Will: Giffard. A. D. 1107 36 Henry de Bloys or Blesensis Card. A. D. 1129 The See void three years. 37 Richard Toclive alias More. A. D. 1174 38 Godfrey: de Lucy. A. D. 1189 39 Peter de Rupibus al. de la Roche. A. D. 1204 40 Will: de Raley alias Radley. A. D. 1243 41 Ethelmar alias Adelmar. A. D. 1249 The See void 4. years 42 John Gernsey alias John of Oxford. A. D. 1265 43 Nic: de Ely. A. D. 1268 44 John de Pontissara al. Pontois. A. D. 1280 45 Henry Woodlock A. D. 1304 46 John Sandall alias Kendal. A. D. 1316 47 Reginald de Asser the Pope's Legate. A. D. 1320 48 John Stratford. A. D. 1323 49 Adam d'Orlton alias Tarlton. A. D. 1333 50 Will: de Edington al. Edendon. A. D. 1345 51 Will: de Wickham founder of new College in Oxford. A. D. 1365 52 Henry Beaufort Car. Son of John of Gaunt. A. D. 1405 53 William Waynflet founded Magd. College Oxford. A. D. 1447 54 Peter Courtney. A. D. 1486 55 Tho: Langton. A. D. 1493 56 Richard Fox. A. D. 1502 57 Tho: Wolsey Card. A. D. 1530 58 Stephen Gardiner. A. D. 1534 59 John Poynett. A. D. 1550 60 John White. A. D. 1556 61 Robert Horn. A. D. 1560 62 John Watson. A. D. 1580 63 Tho: Cooper. A. D. 1584. 64 William Wickham. A. D. 1595 65 William Day. A. D. 1595 66 Thomas Bilson. A. D. 1597 67 Ja: Mountagu. A. D. 1617. 68 Lancelot Andrews. A. D. 1618. 69 Richard Neile. A. D. 1627. 70 Walter Curl. A. D. 1632 WORCESTER. Ethelred King of Mercia An. 679. divided his Country which had but one Diocese into five Bishoprics, whereof this of Worcester was one, and consecrated Boselus the first Bishop thereof by Theodore Archbishop of Cant. 1 Boselus. A. D. 679 2 Ostforus. 3 S. Egwin. A. D. 693 4 Wilfrid. A. D. 714 5 Milred. A. D. 717 6 Weremund, others say Denebertus. 7 Tilherus. A. D. 778 8 Enthored. A. D. 781 9 Devebertus. A. D. 799 10 Eadbert or Hubert. A. D. 822 11 Alwin. A. D. 844 12 Werebert, Werefrid or Herefrid. A. D. 872 13 Wilferth I. A. D. 911 14 Ethelhun. A. D. 915 15 Wilferth II. A. D. 922 16 Kinewold. A. D. 929 17 S. Dunstan. A. D. 957 18 S. Oswald. A. D. 959 19 Adulfus. A. D. 971 20 Wulstan. 21 Leoffius. 22 Briteagus. A. D. 1033 23 Livingus. A. D. 1038 This Livingus was Bishop of Devon and Cornwall, which he united together and held it with his Bishopric of Worcester. 24 Aldred. A. D. 1049 25 S. Walstan, built the Cathedral of Worcester. A. D. 1060 26 Samson. A. D. 1097 27 Theolphus. A. D. 1115 28 Simon. A. D. 1125 29 Alured. 30 John Pagham. 31 Roger. 32 Baldwin. A. D. 1281 33 William of Northale. A. D. 1189 34 Robert. A. D. 1191 35 Henry. 36 John de Constantiis. A. D. 1196 37 Maugre. A. D. 1200 38 Walter Grey. A. D. 1212 39 Silvester. A. D. 1216 40 Will: de Blois. A. D. 1218 41 Walter de Cantilupe. A. D. 1237 42 Nic: de Ely. A. D. 1268 43 Walter Gifford. A. D. 1269 44 William of Gainsborough. A. D. 1302 45 Walt: Reynold. A. D. 1308 46 Walter Maydeston. A. D. 1313 47 Tho: Cobham. A. D. 1317 48 Adam de Orlton. A. D. 1327 49 Simon de Mountacut. A. D. 1333 50 Tho: Hennyball. A. D. 1337 51 Wulstan de Bransford. A. D. 1342 52 John Thursby. A. D. 1349 53 Reginald Brian. A. D. 1352 54 John Barnet. A. D. 1362 55 William Wittlesey. A. D. 1363 56 Will: de Lynne. A. D. 1368 57 Henry Wakefield. A. D. 1375 58 Tidecomb de Winchcomb al. Rob. Tideman. A. D. 1395 Will: Badbury about this time, as Bale writes. A. D. 1380 59 Rich: Clifford. A. D. 1401 60 Tho: Peverell. A. D. 1407 61 Philip Morgan. A. D. 1419 62 Tho: Polton. A. D. 1426 63 Tho: Bourchier. A. D. 1435 64 John Carpenter. A. D. 1443 65 John Alcock. A. D. 1476 66 Robert Morton. A. D. 1487 67 John Gigles. A. D. 1497 68 Silvester Gigles. A. D. 1499 69 Jul: de Medice, after Pope Clem. 7. A. D. 1521 70 Hieron: de Nugutiis. A. D. 1522 71 Hugh Latymer. A. D. 1533 72 John Bell. A. D. 1539 73 Nich: Heath. A. D. 1543 74 Jo: Hooper in Commendam. 75 Richard Pates. A. D. 1554 76 Edwin Sands. A. D. 1559 77 Nic: Bullingham. A. D. 1570 78 Jo: Whitgift. A. D. 1577 79 Edm: Freak. A. D. 1584. 80 Rich: Fletcher. A. D. 1593. 81 Thomas Bilson. A. D. 1596 82 Gervase Babington. A. D. 1547 83 Henry Parry. A. D. 1610 84 John Thornborough. A. D. 1617. 85 John Prideaux. A. D. 1641 DIOCESE of YORK. York is the ancientest Metropolitan See of Engl. first erected with two other Archiepiscopal Sees, London, and Carleon in Wales, by Lucius the first Christian King of the Britan's An. Christi 180. The first Archbishop seated here by King Lucius was Samson, and Tadiatus the last in the Britan's time. The Names of the other Archbishops of the Britan's (by the injury of the times) are lost: Therefore we must be content to begin with Paulinus sent hither by Pope Gregory the Great to convert the Saxons. Archbishops of York. 1 S. Paulinus. A. D. 622 The See void 20. years. 2 Cedda. A. D. 666 3 Wilfrid I. 4 Bosa. 5 St. John of Beverley. A. D. 687 6 S. Wilfrid II. A. D. 718 7 S. Egbert. A. D. 731 8 Adelbert. A. D. 767 9 Eanbald I. A. D. 781 10 Eanbald II. A. D. 797 11 Wulsius. 12 Wimund. A. D. 832 13 Wilfer. A. D. 854 14 Ethelbald. A. D. 897 15 Redward alias Lodeward. 16 Wulstan I. 17 Oskitell. A. D. 955 18 Athelwold. A. D. 972 19 St. Oswald founded Ramsey Abbey. A. D. 972 20 Aldulf. A. D. 999 21 Wulstan II. A. D. 1003 22 Alfricus Puttoc. A. D. 1023 23 Kinsius. A. D. 1050 24 Aldred. A. D. 1061 25 Thomas I. A. D. 1070 26 Gerard. A. D. 1101 27 Thomas II. A. D. 1109 28 Thurstan. A. D. 1119 29 Henry Murduc. A. D. 1141 30 St. William. A. D. 1153 31 Roger. A. D. 1154 The See void ten years. 32 Geffrey Plantagenet brother to King Rich: I. and King John. A. D. 1191 The See void 4 years. 33 Walter Grey Lord Chancellor. He bought White-hall and called it York-place, which K. Hen. 8. got from Card Wolsey. A. D. 1217 34 St. Sewall. A. D. 1256 35 Godfrey de Kinton. A. D. 1258 36 Walt: Giffard. A. D. 1265 37 William Wickwane. A. D. 1279 38 John Roman. A. D. 1285 39 Henry Newark. A. D. 1288 40 Thomas de Corbridg. A. D. 1299 41 William de Greenfield. A. D. 1305 42 William de Melton. A. D. 1317 43 Will: Zouch. A. D. 1342 44 John Thursby. A. D. 1352 45 Alexand: Nevil. A. D. 1373 46 Tho: Arundel. A. D. 1388 47 Robert Walby. A. D. 1396 48 Richard Scroop, beheaded. A. D. 1397 49 Henry Bowet. A. D. 1406 50 John Kemp. A. D. 1425 51 William Booth. A. D. 1453 52 George Nevil. A. D. 1466 53 Laurence Booth. A. D. 1477 54 Thomas Rotheram al. Scot A. D. 1480 55 Thom: Savage. A. D. 1501 56 Christopher Bambridg. Card. A. D. 1508 57 Thomas Wolsey Ca A. D. 1515 58 Edward Lee. A. D. 1531 59 Rob Holgate. A. D. 1544 60 Nich: Heath. A. D. 1553 61 Thom: Young. A. D. 1560 62 Edm: Gryndall. A. D. 1570 63 Edwin Sands. A. D. 1576 64 John Piers. A. D. 1588. 65 Mat: Hutton. A. D. 1594 66 Toby Matthew. A. D. 1606 67 George Mountain. A. D. 1627. 68 Samuel Harsnet. A. D. 1628. 69 Richard Neile. A. D. 1631 70 Jo: William's Lord Keeper. A. D. 1641 There was an Episcopal See in Northumberland in the Saxons time, destroyed ●fterwards by the Danes, named Hexam, Hagulstad and Hextold, which was afterwards united to York, the Names of ten Bishops thereof follow. X. Bishops of Hexam. 1 St. Eata the fifth Bishop of Lindesfarn. A. D. 655 2 St. John of Beverley. A. D. 685 3 St. Acca. A. D. 709 4 Frithebert. A. D. 734 5 Alhmund. A. D. 769 6 Tilhere. A. D. 781 7 Ethelbert. A. D. 789 8 Heandred. A. D. 797 9 Eanbert. A. D. 800 10 Tidferth the last Bishop of Hexam. CARLISLE. Carlisle at the first was part of the Diocese of Whithorn or Candida Casa in Galloway in Scotland, then belonging to the Kingdom of the Saxon Northumber's. But after the Scots had regained Galloway with the Bishops See, Carlisle A. D. 679. was bestowed by the King of Northumberland upon S. Cuthbert Bishop of Lindisfarn or Holy Island, and so it continued till An. 1133. at what time a Bishops See was there first erected. Bishops of Carlisle. 1 Athelwolf, Adelwald or Athelward. A. D. 1133 2 Bernard died A. D. 1186 The See void 32. years. 3 Hugh. A. D. 1218 4 Walter Man. A. D. 1223 5 Silvester de Everden. A. D. 1247 6 Thomas Vipont. A. D. 1255 7 Robert Chanse. A. D. 1258 8 Ralph de Ireton. A. D. 1280 9 John de Halton. A. D. 1288 10 John de Rosse. A. D. 1318 11 John de Kirkby. A. D. 1332 12 Gilbert de Welton. A. D. 1353 13 Tho: de Appleby. A. D. 1363 14 Robert Read. A. D. 1396 15 Thom: Merkes. A. D. 1397 16 William Strickland▪ A. D. 1400 17 Rog: Whelpdale. A. D. 1419 18 Will: Barrow. A. D. 1423 19 Marmaduke Lumley. A. D. 1430 20 Nicholas Close. A. D. 1450 21 William Percy. A. D. 1452 22 John ●ingscot. A. D. 1462 23 Richard Scroop. A. D. 1464 24 Edward Storey. A. D. 1468 25 Richard Dunelmensis or of Durham. A. D. 1478 26 William Sever. A. D. 1496 27 Roger Leibourn. A. D. 1503 28 John Penny. A. D. 1504 29 John Kite. A. D. 1520 30 Rob: Aldrich. A. D. 1537 31 Owen Oglethorp. A. D. 1556 32 John Best. A. D. 1561 33 Richard Barnes. A. D. 1570 34 John Mey. A. D. 1577 35 Hen: Robinson. A. D. 1598. 36 Rob: Snowdon. A. D. 1616 37 Rich: Milborn. A. D. 1620 38 Rich: Senhouse. A. D. 1624. 39 Francis White. A. D. 1628. 40 Barnaby Potter. A. D. 1629 CHESTER. This is one of the 6. Bishoprics erected by K. Hen. 8. upon the Dissolution of Religious Houses. 1 John Bird. A. D. 1541 2 John Cotes. A. D. 1556 3 Cuthbert Scot A. D. 1556 4 Will: Downham. A. D. 1561 5 Wil: Chadderton. A. D. 1579 6 Hugh Billett. A. D. 1595 7 Rich: Vaughan. A. D. 1597 8 George LLoyd. A. D. 1604 9 Thomas Morton. A. D. 1616 10 John Bridgman. A. D. 1618. DURHAM. This Bishopric of Durham was erected there by Aldwin Bishop of Lindisfarn or Holy Island A. D. 990. That ancient Bishopric being destroyed by the Danes about An. Christi 800. and till that year 990. wand'ring up and down unsettled; which Bishop of Lindisfarn was first erected by Oswald King of Northumberland, A. Christi 637 Bishops of Lindisfarn or Holy Island. 1 St. Aidanus. A. D. 637 2 St. Finanus. A. D. 651 3 Colmannus. A. D. 661 4 Tuda. A. D. 664 5 St. Eata. A. D. 665 6 St. Cuthbertus. A. D. 684 7 St. Eadbertus. A. D. 687 8 Egbertus I. A. D. 698 9 Ethelwold. A. D. 721 10 Kenulph. A. D. 738 11 Higbald. A. D. 781 12 Egbert II. A. D. 802 13 Egfrid. A. D. 819 14 Eanbert. A. D. 845 15 Eardulf. A. D. 854 16 Cuthard. 17 Tilred. A. D. 915 18 Withered. A. D. 927 19 Uhtred. A. D. 944 20 Sexhelm. 21 Aldred died A. D. 968 22 Alfius. A. D. 968 23 Aldwin. A. D. 990 This Aldwin first settled the See at Durham, where it hath ever since continued. Bishops of Durham after Aldwin last Bishop of Lindisfarn. 1 Eadmund. A. D. 1020 2 Eadred. A. D. 1048 3 Egelricus. A. D. 1049 4 Egelwinus. 5 Walcher Earl of Northumberland. A. D. 1071 6 William de Carilefe alias Cairliph. A. D. 1080 The See void 4. years. 7 Randall Flambard. A. D. 1099 8 Geffrey Rufus. A. D. 1128 9 William de S. Barbara. A. D. 1143 10 Hugh Pudsey Earl of Northumberland. A. D. 1154 11 Philip de Pictavia. A. D. 1197 12 Rich: de Marisco. A. D. 1217 13 Rich: the Poor. A. D. 1228 14 Nic: de Fernham. A. D. 1241 15 Walter de Kirkham. A. D. 1250 16 Rob: Stichell. A. D. 1260 17 Rob: de Insula. A. D. 1274 18 Anthony Beck Patriarch of Jerusalem. A. D. 1283 19 Richard Kellow. A. D. 1311 20 Ludovicus Beaumond. A. D. 1317 21 Rich: de Bury. A. D. 1333 22 Tho: Hatfeild. A. D. 1345 23 John Fordham. A. D. 1381 24 Walter Skirlaw. A. D. 1388 25 Tho: Langley Card. A. D. 1406 26 Robert Nevil. A. D. 1438 27 Laurence Booth. A. D. 1457 28 Willi: Dudley. A. D. 1476 29 John Sherwood. A. D. 1483 30 Richard Fox. A. D. 1494 31 Will: Sevier. A. D. 1502 32 Christopher Bambridg. A. D. 1507 33 Tho: Ruthall. A. D. 1508 34 Tho: Wolsey. A. D. 1523 35 Cuthbert Tunstall. A. D. 1530 36 Ja: Pilkington. A. D. 1560 37 Rich: Barnes. A. D. 1577 The See void 2. years. 38 Matth: Hutton. A. D. 1587. 39 Toby Matthew. A. D. 1594 40 Will: James. A. D. 1606 41 Richard Neile. A. D. 1617. 42 George Mountain. A. D. 1628. 43 John Howson. A. D. 1628. 44 Tho: Morton. A. D. 1632 Of the Bishops of the ISLE of MAN. This Bishopric of the Isle of Man was first erected by Pope Gregory 4. The Bishops See is in Russin or Castle-Town, and the Bishops are termed in Latin Episcopi Sodorenses. The Western Islands (now belonging to Scotland) who have now a Bishop of their own, did anciently belong to this Bishopric. The new Bishop (upon a vacancy) is nominated by the Lords of the Isle (who have been the Stanleys' Earls of Derby) and presented to the King, and then consecrated by the Archbishop of York. And this seemeth to be the cause why the Bishop of Man is no Lord of the Parliament, because it is not at the King's disposing, none having Suffrage in Parliament but those who hold immediately from the King. The Names of the Bishops of this See are not exactly known, having (as yet) no means to procure a Catalogue thereof: such as are extant are these. 1 Machilla. A. D. 518 2 Michael. 3 Nicholas. A. D. 1203 4 Reginald. A. D. 1217 5 Richard. A. D. 1257 6 Robert Walby. A. D. 1396 7 Henry. A. D. 1556 8 John Merick. 9 George LLoyd. A. D. 1604 10 Forster. 11 Richard Parry. A. D. 1641 In the Catalogue of the Bishops of Bristol, p. 695. add 12 Tho: Westfield. 1642. 13 Tho: Howel. 1644. ADDENDA. In the Marginal Notes. PAge 321. Propter Ecclesiae bona ubique bellatur; Romanenses, ut retineant, Reformati, ut obtineant. Grotius Pacific. Pag. 326. Sir H. Spelman values the L. Cromwel's estate in K. Hen. 8s: days worth 20000 l. sterling. MS. of Sacrilege. Pag. 329. Piaculum olim, nunc lusus Principum & profanorum sacra profanare; & adhuc quaerimus cur bellis tam atrocibus vastamur Christiani? Grot. Pacif. Pag. 337. Procopius in vita Justiniani tells of the vessels of the Jews Temple, which at last were sent by that Emperor to the Church at Jerusalem. ERRATA. PAg. 16. l. 4. read, growing up. p. 92. l. 13. r. flagrancy. p. 132. l. 39 r. Proteustant. p. 244. in the title, for descending r. deserving. p. 282. l. 29. for sand r. saw. p. 326. l. 20. r. 20000. p. 418. l. 39 r. abated. p. 419. l. 4. deal next. p. 449. l: 17. r. evident by. l. 27. r. unsubordinate. p. 643. l: 25. for them read those. p. 682. l. 16. for part, r. park. p: 684. l. 14. for as him, r. in him. In the Catalogue of Books written by the Author, p. 692. add, A Treatise of Christian Marriages to be solemnly blessed by Ministers, in Quarto. THE END.