i^h /r^2S r t f ^"~\l 7.a(r?v,ry64/ya Go - 1 yh^ I CHRIST I ON HIS I THRONE. *^ ChriftsChurch-government brief- ly laid downc ; and how it ought to bee fet up in allChriftian Con- gregations. Refolvcd in fiindry Cafes of Confcicncc. t I E R. 6.16. Thw fdith the Lard; Stttndje in the VAjet , Mirei^i ofke ftrthetld p occafion him fo think of msny o- iher5 liU untohiir : uch as M.Decrirg.M.Mcrr M. Green* ham, M.PcrkinF,M.Ro^crs,M.(:a.-wrfglu,M FeDncr, M, Bnghtman, M.P.)ikcr,M. Philips, M.Hjcicn.ai:d M.Brad- flvJW &c.tc)fpcaT< nothing of ihofc whicii yet live, nor of 1)»R. inoldst^.ft)^ .and DWhital wirh many others. Foi nil hefe t^c ir^' .pprrl c jcd as n.c agreeing in ore fpirir, & having l.aaif deed the fp-' ic o( glcryrcftingon thcm,as thti^ works (^t rhew,rog' htrwifhthofclcittjis icfiimo- fiial w' u h t> ' y Icfr wi icc n in tl c hcartj» of mar.y rLoL-fand Cbriltuntui mull ii^cd. caule 1 1 the IcaU an inq-i;! y, what A 2 the The Prefdee, thcfcaConflioald be whac fach famous men of God,coaI4 never like wcl of our Biflioply couries in EngUnd,nor ever be favoured-of them.The cafe is plainc to all : and checaufe is as evident to thofc that have eyes to (ee : but no where more apparant then in theperfbnot M.Baines, and the place where be , and othtrj like him were made (igncs of this antipathic. Cambridge is or flioald be, as an eye to all our land : fo that the alterations that fill oat there cannot but be felt of all parti. It is the place of light; thefpiriruall oppreffions which in other corners are covered with dark- ncde ( as all the wo^ks of darknefle would be ) whtn pad all fliamethey come to confront the Sunneitfelfe , how can they then be hidden ? When M.Pcrkins had there for many ycarcs held forth a burning and /hining light,thciparks wherof did flicabroad into all corneri of the land,and after he had icrvcd his time was taken up into heaven , there was none foand fo meet for to receive,as it vvcre,the torch out of his hand, and (uc- cced him in that great office of bearing it before (uch a pco- ple,asthis M.Bains,upon whom alfothe fpiritof that tlias, was by experience found to be doubled, Inthiiflatfon ha fodenaeancd himlclf for fome years,that impictieonly had caufc to complaint sfor all that favoured the wares ot God, n joyced and glon'ed in him and his Miniftery,asa fpiricisn all trcafure. But at length the howcr of darknes came from Lambeth, when Arch.Bancroftfenc M. Harfenet to^ Vifite as they call it^that is^if tcrmc5 may be interpreted by common praflife) to pick tf-.e purlcs of pqote men, and to fupprefic thofc that are not friends to the B,fhopj King- domcTor though in that circuit tl ere wcreainuhicudeof unable snd nororioufly fcandalous Miniftcrs, yet none were foiid worthy ofccnfure^Hin only M. B3inc?,oF whom the world was not worthy , and one other Preacher like unto him. Now it is hard to lay , whcthjir thefilencingof him was more odion5,or the manner of it rhameJes. There jrufl be a Scrmon(yc know)at (uch Vifications/or faftiioa iake, though the Vifiter himfclf can fcldoji find Icafurc to p^rake ir.Tliis part was therfore appointed to M. Bains by the die Vlfitcrs.that he might cither be inlnared in his words ,- if hedid not ivhicb was in the fentencc, urged him about fufafcription and ccn- rormity;and fo to naake iurc work»(i!enccd hioi over a^ain i In which bufincflc he was fo confcious unto himfclf )t un- reafonable and ridiculous dealing, that when M B inrs ftanding to receive the fentencc of a corrupt man, did lift uphis heart and eies unto Cod with a heavenly fuii.ing countenancc,a8 heufcd, he interpreted that gcflurc :o be a skorne of his authority. This being don,M. Baines w^5 per- fwaded by his friends to try the ArcnbiiLops co»jac!ii , unto whom,wben heprcfcnted himftlf.ar the very lirft (a- luration ; the gravity and (cvtrity of B. Barcrolt kd hini (harply to rebuke the good man foraiiale black- -a o kc , which was upon the edges of his ciiffc^ , asking him tow he durft come bebre him with (uch cufls, tdiin^; iiiiu vcrs^ bifhoplike,thatit wcreagood turn ro lay him by ihr net Is for fo doing. After this he would have no more roclo wiih fachabriirclunreafonablemcn-.butp-caci^ediom.tiinc wher hemight haveliberty, ashis wcakcntfle of body would iaffer;and ipent the reA ot his time in reading, rr.ediraring, praying and wtilbgi bviog that upon occafion heedid' A 3 iaftruc^ The Prefdct. inftruft or comFort thole which catnc to hi« fn private J wherin hehad a heavenly gift. He was indetd all his life af- rcr,b€fidc the weakens ot his body predcd with want.no having(as he ottcn cooiplained tohii friends)! place to reft his head in : which me thought w^as an upbraid ng of the age and place where he h'ved with bale regardlcfnes of piety & learningtyec he never lo much as confuked with hiiriclfc ef denying his fincericicbypleaiingtheBifliops, o(whom and their courfeshe was wonr to i^^yj'hey are a generation. of the earth^earthlj.andfat/OHr not thiwaies ofGod^Nhich laying of his, they, and (omc Doiflors of Cambridge have fiiice made good , in that they could not indurc, that the place frooi whence they thrufi; himjfhould be fupplicd by other honeft men,though they were c6formable,but with abfoluce authority at length forbad it, alledging that Puri- tanes were made by that ]edure:wheras the truth is, thac one lecture hath done more good to the Church of God in England, then all the dcdors of Cambridge: though 1 doc not dcny,but lome ot them have wrought a good work. B/ this one inftance ( of which kind I would there were not a 100 in our land) itmay eafilyappearctotheundcr- ftandinc^ Reader, that here is as much agreement betwixt our Billirps in their managing of Religion (except lome « or 3 , which went out of their elements, when they vente- red on thofe places) & tholelpowerful P/eachers who have bin the chief means ot revealing Gods arme unto lalvarion, as tb.ere is betwixt the light \Ahichcommeth down from hcaven,& that thick mifl: which arileth from the lo weft pic. But weencfdnot feek: for demonft rations of the Ipiric which workcth in our Hierarchic from this oppofition, look but at the fruits of it,whcr it hath all fulncs oFconlent, as Cathedrall Pallacts, or Pariflics of Bilhopsand ^rchbi- fhops re(id€nce,ruc 1 as Lambeth is, where ail their canons are in force, a' d have their full fway without contradidi- on : nay come neerer unco them, and take a view of their families, even to them that wait in iheir chambers, and fee Vi\\n godlineile there U to be found Have there not more of God and bis Kingdoaic appeared in foxnc one Congre- gado^ TheFrtfdCil ^cBifbopiyChanceliours, Archdeaconsj&c' bemgiU icwcrc, their promotors, informers, and cxccucioncrf, in ail matcers of jurildidion and government, for to hring in mony into their purfes : {or performance alio of which (erviccto them, the Church- wardens upon crery occafion are enforced to take fucb corporall oathes as not one of them doth cverkeep. What other ground of thif, bcfiilc the fore- mentioned, that particular Congregati- ons are no fpirituall incorporations , and thcrcbrc muft have no officers for government within themiehres } Now all thefeconfufioni with many othtrs ofthcfamc kindihow they arc condemned inthcvcr/ foundations! themjM.Bains here Qiewethinthe firA quedion.by main« taining the divine ccnditution of a particular Church, ia «ne Congregation. In which queQion he maiatainetha^ gainfl his adversaries a^ourfe not aniike to that which Armachanu£, in the daicsof King Edward the third, con» tended for againft the begging Fiicrs in his bocke called Thtdefertee ofCttrausiVot when thofe Friers incroachf d upontheprivilcdgesof Parccbiall Miniflers, he with- flood them tJpon thcfc grounds: Efc/e/t4 PArochiMthJMX" tA verb A Mofis Dent, ii.efi Ucm eleEim 4 ^eo^m^ma de^ kemui Accifere xunU^ ^nt, frtcipit Dom$f$M tx Sacru* mentU. Furothm efi ordinsrim PAmhtdni: tfl ferfon^ ^ A D€9fr€Cept4^ velmAfidato Dei ad illmdmtmfttrit4tn eX" i flendumeleEiM: whichif they begrantedjouradverfaries caulc may gos a begging with the forefaid Friera. Another fort ot'corruprions there arc, which though J they depend upon the fame ground with the former, yec I immediately flow out of the Hierarchie. What is more dilFonan: from the revealed willofCbrifl in the Gofpell, ( even alio from the (late of the Primitive Church^t ^en that the Church and Kingdomt of Chrid HiQuld be managed astheKingdotncsofthcworld , by a Lordly authority, with exceruall pompc,commandiDg power, contentious courts of ; udgc menr,f urni(hed with chancellors, ofiRciaIsp commillaries,advocates, pro^ors, paritors, and luch like humane devices? Yet all this doth ncccflarily folio wup- B en The fnfAQe. en the 5dn)itapg of (tigh Bifli.^ps*? purs gf^ia Bo^latiiji who nQSoaely are Lv)r4s ov^r fh^,fl ock,but rfac pro^rfp lo muc'n in the high^d 4^grqe,wliei^ th»?y teil us plainly, that their Lavvesor Canons Joe bin^e tncn^ confcicnccj. Fvriierein vv.^ ?felike tfee people qt li'rael, who would ijothav:; Godfor tb Jr icQa^tcJUre King,hiit w^^uldhave luchK.ng§asochcr Niru>AJ>:{;Ye.p foc-^e Papifts, anJ wc after theai, r^iuU to h^ve Chriftan iinqieidiate King in thcicniBediatc gpver.-'.mentof theChufch^ but muft have Lordty RuUt« with ftacc in Ecckfjafticjil affaires, (uch as the wjorid hactJ iaciviil. Whau milcra,ble pickle are the pioft of our Minifters in, when they are urged to give an account of cheir cal- ling? To a P^pift indeed they can give a fhifting anO^cr, that they have orJinJtien from Bifliops , which Bifhop* were ord:^incd by other Bilhps, and they, or their or- dainers by Popi(h Bifliops : tnis ia part tnay ftop the mouth ot a Papi'hbjt let a Proteftant which doubccth of thefe matters move the q ie{lion,and what t|?en will they fay/Ihhey flic to popifli Bi(}iops,is they arc popifli^thea let them goe no longer nia;^kc^ under the name of Pro- teftmts. It they alkdgc fucccflion by them from the A- poftles, then (co (ay nothing oftbc appropriating of this fuccelTion anro the Popes chaire,iii whofc name, and b)^ whole authority ojr Englifli Bifliops did all things ia times paft) chen I fay they muft take a great time for the iatisfy ing of a poore man concerning this qaeftion, and for the juftirying of their ftation. For uncili that cue of good records they can flif- w a pcrpetuall [ucceflion from the Apoftles unto their Diocefan which ordained them, and unti/l they can make the po.^rc man wHich doubtetb, perceive the truth and certainty of thole records, ( wliich I wiff:- they will doe at Icafurc) they can never make chat fiicccflion appeare.If they flyc to the Kings authofiry,the King himfefc will forfake them, and deny that he taketh upon hisi to make or call Miniflers. It to the prefenr Bi- fhops and Archbifliops, alas they are as farre to feeke 33 themftlvesjind much further. The proper caule of all this mifery Thi Prefdce. mffcry li tlie lifting Up of a lordly F*/eUcy,upon tht fmii« of the Churches liberties. How intollcrable a bcndagc xi it, that a Minifler beiflo' called to a charge. may not preach to his people except he hath a licence from the Bffhop or Archbifli6p : Cannot receive tNe beft of his Congregation to conamunion if'he be cenfured in the fpirituall Courts, though it be but for not paying of fix pence vVhich they reqaired of him in any name, be the man othcrwife never fo innocent : nor keep oncfrom the communion, that is nor prefrnted in thofe Courts,or being prefented is for money abfblvJd, thcKij^ he be never fo Tcandalous : arid mufi often tirtiei (ifhee will hold his place)againft his conkiencc pat backe thofe from communi©n with Chrift, whom Chrift doth call unto it (asgoodChriftiansif they Vvillnot knecle) and receive ihofc that Chrift putteth batke, at the command of amortallman. What a burthen are poorc Minift though they be large, I will here fetdownc for the Rca- di, efiejfeftiMlid & inftpArahiiU Freshjterio in ^ttantHm freibyter efi. In hac authoritAte^ Epi/eepw a SuctrAote hok differtytefteBieronynioJim0verim Apoftoh^CHJm etUm efi apertafententU, Iti^Htt enim Hieronymnifuper M^t, 1 6i Hdhnt ^uidem eandemjHiicidrUm p^tel^Atem aUiApofl^^ iifiahet omnes Etcleftain ?rtsbyteris^ Epifcopi^: pr^p$» nensinhvc PreskyteroSf ^MonUm antborittts hdtc debetur Fresbjter§^in qHAntHmfrtsbyttr.primo^&fecundHm e^H9d ipfHm,(^c. Many things are there dKcourfed to the iaai€ purpofCjdifl.a.c. ly. It were too long to recite alL Yet one thing is worthy to beob/ecvedhow he intcrpreteth a phrafe oF leromc fo much aliedged, and builc upon by the Patronsof our Hierarchy. lerome faith ad Evagr.that aBiiliopdoth nothing, excepting ordination, which a Presbyter may not doe. Ofthistcftimony D.Downana-. vouchetb, that nothing can be more pregnane then it, to- prove that Bifliops wcrcluperiour to Presbyters in pow- er of ordination. But hcare what this ancient Writer 6ith, Ordinatio nonfignifieM ibi p^te^Atim^onfereHdi^ etf^ toUationem (act or urn §rdinum: fed ceconomkampatiftam. tern reguUndi veldirigendi Ecclefia ritHiiAtqHt psrfoftai^ qHAfitum ad exsrcitium divini cnltm in templo ; unde ab Aniiqfiis legHmUtoribm voeantnr Oeconomi reverendi. It would be over long to declar eall the ufe which may be made of this Trcatife, which being it (elfc lo lhort,for=. biddeth prolixity in the Preface. If the Aothor had lived to have accomplifhcd his purppfein pcrfcding of this worke> ho would (it may be j have added fuchconfide** rations as thefe s or a t leali he would have left all io clear^ tb«t any attentive Reader might eafily have concluded them from his premiffcs. For fopply ofthatdefeC^, thcfc pradlicall obiervations are noteds which with the difpntc itfelfc) I leave to be pondered by the conCcionabte Rea^ der, ^^t/imfs» Tg€ THE FIRST QVESTION IS. WHETHER CHRIST DID INSTI- TUTE OR THE APOSTLES frame any Dioccfan forme of Churches^ or Parifhionall oncly. O R dctcrmfning this Queftion, we will firft fetdown ihe Arguments which affirmcir. Secondly, ihofc which dtnyj Thirdly, lay down fomcrefponfivcconclufions, andafifwcr the objcdiont made againit that pare w« take to be ih« F ermh, Thofc who affirme the frarrc oF Dioccfan Churches , vowch their Arguments ; partly from Scripture , partly from prefidencs, ormftanccs facred aad Ecclefiafticall. Finally, from the congrui- ty it haih with reafoo, that fo ihey thould be conftitute. The firft objeftion is taken from coaaparing thofe two Scrips tures, Titus i. f. Aft. 14. ^^ Ordiine Elderi CUybyCltf. Tbejurm daiftei Eltkft Cbnrcb hyCbuftb, Hence it is thys argued. They whoofdained-thataCity, with the Suburbi and regions about ir, fhouid make but one Church , they ordained a Diocefan Cliurwh. But ihe Apoftles, who ufc ihcfe phrafes ai acquipollcnc, To orchmt PfUbjttrnn tvet} CitJ^ zndtotrdaint tbem in every Chmch , appoia- ted, that a ciiy with the fuburbef and region about it, iliouU make but one Church, Ergo, the Apoftics conftituted a Dioccfan Church. The rcafon of the propofiiion h , becaufe Chtiftians converted sn a City, with the (uburbcf, villages, and cowniries about it, could not be fofew,asto make but a PanlhioRall Church. The AlVump- tion isclearC) for ihefe phrafes are ufcd, as(UJ$ into one church. z. They argue from examples* Sacred and Ecclefuftictll. Sacred .ire laktnour of -h« old and new Ttftamenr. Ecclcfiafticall, frorti the Pffmiuve times, and from Patternes in our ownc times i yea, even from futh clv.rchcs , as we held reformed, at ihoCc in Belgia nnii Gencvi- To beginnc wiih the chareh of the Jcwcs in the old Tcftament, whence they reafon thus. That which many particular Synagogues were ihen(becaufc they were all hut one Common-wealih,and had ail but one proftffi n) that m^y many thriftian churches now bee upon the 1 k^ grounds. But th^ y ihen, though many Synagogues, yet becaufe thv-y were all but one Kmgcome , and had all bdt one profefli on, were all one nationall church. Ergo, upon like grounds many church s with aSjin a nation or city, may be one 0ationallo^ Diocefan churth. Secondly, the chtrch of Jerufalem in the New Teftanlcht is ob- jeSed. I T hat which the Apoftles intended (hould be a head churcb to all Chnftians in J udea, that was a Diocelan church.But this they did by the church of Jerufalem. Ergo : i. That which was more number{ome,then could meet Parifliionally,wa8 no Pariihionalbuc Dioccfan church. But that church wasfuch. Firft, by growing to ^ooo.then 5000. Ad. 1.41. & 4.4. then to have milhons in it, Adt. 21.10. Ergo, the churchof Jerufalem was no« a Pariftiionall, bma Dioccfan church. Thirdly, the church of Corinth is objeded to have bccne a Me- tropolitan church. He who writing to the church ofCorimli, dbili write to all the Saints in Achaia with it, doth imply that they were all fubordinatc to that church. But this doth Paul, i Cor. i.i.ErgO* Secondly He who faluteth jointly the Corinthians and Achaianj, andcalkththe church of Corinth by the name of Achaia , and names it with prcheminence before the reft of Achaia, doth imply that the church of Cormth was the Metropolitan church to whick all Achaia was fubjcd. Bui the Apoftlc doth this, 2 Cor.^.t.Sc 1 1. 11.8.^,10. Ergo. Fourthly, iha'c which was the mother city of all Macedonia, the church in that city muft be, if not a Metropolitan, yet a Diocefan church. But Philippi was fo. Ergo. The fifth is from the churches of Afia, which are thus prtved, atleafttohavc becneDiocefan. i. Thofefeven churches which containcdall other churches in Alia ftriftly taken , whether in city orcountity ; ihofe feven were for their circuit, M«'tropolitan, 6c Diccv fan churches. But thofe fcyen did containe all other in A» fji. Ergo. a. He who writing to all churches in Afi a, writethby nane, but to thtfe feven, he doth imply , that all the reft were contained in ihefe. But Chrift writing to the feven, wtiteth to all churches (3) churches in Afia , not to name that five of theiewcre Metropo- litan cities,vi2. Philadelphia, and Pcrg >m\is, two Dio;cfan at icaft. 5. He who mak.th tht fin Juiar church he vvritethtOjto be a mul- titude of churches , not ojic oacly (as the body is not one mem- ber one ly^ hce doth Bi/ke that one church, to which he wriccth in Cngttlar, to be a Dioccfan chuich. ButChr.tt ii\his Eptphancma- cicall coiKlufion to evety'hurch, which he hiifpok'.n com finguhr, doth fpeakc of the fame as of a multitaJe. Ltt btmibat hdlbaresy bcBn what tbt Spiritjaif) to the Chunbei. Ergo. Thus leaving fa:red examplcs,\ve come to Ecclefiafticall. Ficft, in regard of thofe ancient churches, Rome, Ale«andria. It IS impoflible they fhould bee a Panlhionali congregation 200. yearcs after Ch.ift. For if the multitude of chriftians did inHicru- ialem fo iecrcafe within a little time , t!i it rhey exceeded the pro- portion of one congregation, how much more likely 1$ it chat chri- fttansin Rome and Alexandria dii foincrcafe m ioo.ycares, thnt th^y could not keep in one particular Afl'embly? But the firfi is true. Ergo,alfo the latter. Which is yet further co..hrmed by chit wh.ch Tertullian and Cornelius teltifie of their times. To come from thefe to our moderne reformed churchf s , thefe prove a Diocefan church. Thatrefpe^ which many con^rcgiti- ons diftind may have now affembled in one place , that thty m;y have fevered in many places. ¥or the unity of the plr.ce is bur cxtrinfickc to the unity of the congregition. Butmary diftmd congregations gathered in one ciiy , may make , w^e fay, one church, as they doe in the Netherlands. Ergo, diftind congre- gations , fevered in divers places may make one church* If macy churches, which may fubjcft ihemrdvcs to the govcrnmcBt of one Presbytery, may fo make one , they may fubjed ihemfelvcj toabifliopand cathedrall confiilory , andfom^kc one. But the 24. chur«hcsofGe?Tft;fe. Ergo, city churches were DiOccfan, dillingu>(hed from Parifliionall thiri-hes. The Aftumption is proved firtl by Scriprure, Titus i. 5, Ad. 14. ij. Sicondly , this isproved by EcclcGifticall Stojy. Thty who are given to hbour the convcrlion of the Regions , ruber then icnJ ihcfc already converted, ihty wercnoi ^ivcn ;o a PanikionaU church- But the Pccilyia* ^4) Pi-esbytcrs planted by ihc Apoftlcs were Co. Ergo. Tlicy wh(j were fee in a church before Parifl\:s were , could not be given to 3 Parifliionall church. Butfuch were the Pccibyterf of the Apo- i\Us inftuu:ion. Ergo. For i: isplainc in the pradicc of all agej, Crom the firft'diviHon, that no church but the mother church hidiPrcbyteryajadabiihop, but Presbyters oaely. Nay, it wis fvcr by coanccU condemned , and by the judgement of the anci- fnt forbidden , that in Townescr Villages, anybuc aPresbyter fliould be planted, j.Thisisalfo proved by rcafon, for it was no more pofTiblc to have bifhops and Presbyters in every Parifti, then to have a Maior and Aldermen (fuch as we have in Loncori) in every Towne, 2. If every PariHi had 1 Presbyter , then had ihcy power of ordination, andfurnifliingthemfclves with a Mmifter, when now they were dcftitutc. Butthcywerc alwaies in this cafe dependant on the city. Ergo, there was then a Dioccfas church having goyemmcni of ojthcrs. Presbyters could not ocdaine, fcdtvaantty though they did at fitft, as in the church of Alexan- dria. Let any fhcw for 400. yearcj ^Parifliionallchurch wiiha Presbytery in It. Now wcmuilmufter ihofc forces which oppofe iKcfeDiocefan churches, allowing onely fuch churches to bee inftitutcd of Chrift, wh^ch may meet in one congregation ordinaiily. The word which without fomc modification fupcr-4idded, doth iignme onely fuch a company as called forth , may affcmble Poli- tically , that wordbeing alone, doth fignijfic fuch a church a$ may to holy purpofes ordisarily mectc in one. But the word Cbtffch, which Chrift and his Apoftles didinftitute, 1$ ufed indefi- nitely, and fjgnifietk no more. Ergo. vbiiexn§ftdi(lingMt,non c{l 4li(linguendum. 7,. The Scripture fpeakeih of the churches in a King- ^ome or Province,^alwaies in the plurall number, without any note ofdifFcrcnce,ascquilloflc with the other. Ergo, it doth not knoar ProvmcialljNacionalljOr Diocefan churches. Let areafonbcgiven, why It {houia never fpeake m the CnguLar nuinber,had they becne a Angular church. Secondly , Ice us come to examples : the churchcf the Apoftlcs planted were fuch as mi^ht and did congregate. Tirft,th3tofHierufalcm,thongh there -were in it toward joo. Sy- }ifigoiHeSy yet the chriftian church was but one, and fuch as did tongrcgatc into one place ordinarily after the accefle of f 000. to It. Ad 2.4^ & j.i2.&^.i. & 15.25. & ai.a2.& 25.22, Tor their ordinary meeting,as it IS, Ad. 2.46. dni/J, could not be a Pancge- ricallmcctmg. Againe, ifihey might mccte Synodi^ally, why might they not roeete then in daily coorfe ; though the univerfall mcciingofachurchiiflotfo fitly called Synodkali : And though (5) they arefaid to Be millions of beleevcn, yet that was by accident oi" a circumftancc, happily th€ Pafleover. VVc muft not judge tbc greataelTc of a water by that it is, when now it is up and fwelleih by accident of fomc inundations. ThcyhaJ nota fcEled ftate there, by which they did get the right of being fet members. Yea, it is Ukdy, they were and continued but one congregation. For forty^yeeres after they were not fo great a multitude, but that Tella^ like to ihi Zcksr of Lot, t little Towne could receive thenu Sut more of this in tha^anfwcr to the objedion. Secondly, fo the Church of Antiochia, was but one Church, Adg 14. 17, they are faid to hive g:\thered ihe Charch togcihcr, Objed. That IS, the Minifters,orrepre{cntative Church. Anf.i.ForMmifters oncly, the Church 18 never afed. 2 By analogic, A^s 1 1. Ftttr gate account before the whole Charch, even the Churc*h of the faithfully Ergt, J. They made relation to thit Church, which had fentthem forth with prayer and impefition of hands,and ihis Church ftood of aJ( ihofe who affcmbled co the publiJse fervice and worfhip of God, 4. The people of the Church of Ar.tiochwere gathered together to confider of degrees fcnt them by the Apoftles from Hierufalem. Th.rdly, the Church of Corinth wai one congregation, which dii for the fervice of God, or cxercife of DA'cipline meet togcTher,! Cor, 5.4. 1 Cor.I4.l^ verf.26. 1C0r.11.i7.verr.2j. ituno&iodtmlHi, That whole Church which was guilty of a (inner uncaA forth, could notbeaDiocefanChurch, nci'her can the word ojA'^x^^ amminf^ tggttbir, ever be fhewed to fignihe any thing elfe,belides one^articular Alfembly, Founhly, the Church of Ephefus was but one flcckc. Firft, it ii likely that it was of no other forme then the other. Secondly, it was but one flockc 5 that fljcke which Presbyters might jointly f.ed, was bjt one. They had no DiOctfan B flnp. If Presbyters o.c]/, then none but Parilhonall Churches in and about Ephefus. There may. be many flocks, but God ordained none, but fach as may STholiy meet with thofc, who have the care of feeding and governing of them. Ptta indeed, i Pet. 5. a. calleih all thole he wiiteth to, one fiocke ; but that is in regard cither of the myftkall clUtc of the faithfull , or in refped of the common nature which is in all Chur- c'lcs one and the fame : but properly , and in cxternall adunition, one fiocke is but one congregation. Thirdly, Parillics according to the advcrfe opinion, were not then divided. Neither dot'i ih.- lon^ and fruitfull labours of the Apoilles argue , that th^rc fliould be PariOi Churches in Diocefanwife added j but a j;rcater number of 'iltcr Churches. Bu: whvn it is faid that all Aiia did heaie : the C - meaning Aitanlngls, ttiat from hand to hand it did runne through Afia, foil Churches were planted every where, even where Paul came not, as at Coloffe. There might be many churches in Afia, and naany conver- ted by Teur and others fruiifull labour without fubordination of churches. '^ ■ . Examples Ecclefiaftic-^H. i. 7g»4///w exhcrtcih the church of the Ephefims , though mimbetleire , to nieetc together often in one place, Epift. to theEphcfians, and to the Philippians : where the Bl« (hop is, let the people be gathered to him, as where Chiift is, thcie is the whole hoft of heaven. He calltih his church of Anti©ch a Synagogue of God, wh:ch cannot 3grec to a Dioct fan church : For ihcfe were particular congregations, oppofed as to thit Nationall church, fo to all Provinciall and D ocefin. Neither doth he cjU himfelfe Bjfhop of Syrii, but as he was, BiOiop of the congregjti* pn in Syria, as a Miniftcr ftileih himfelfe a Mmifler of the church of England. , z Jufiine and lyeneui knew no kindc of chur h in the world which did not Effem.ble on the Sabboth.. But a D.octfan church cannot. - 5 KrfuUian Apol. cap, 59. doth (hew thit all chur«;hes in his time did meet, and did worlhip God, in which pray(fr«f, readings, exhortations, and all manner of cenfurei were performed. He^ knew no churches which had not power of cenfurcs within them- ftJves. 4 Ch.irthes are f.»id at firil to hivebeene Parifhes^and Pariflies v/ thin oities, in E'lftb. lib. j 44. lib, 4. cap, 21, lib.i.c3p.6. Iib.4.c3p. 2>-. zndSum lo'm lib 5 c.ip.a^. fmhro the Bifliop, redde juvtncffi qucm Libi ega & Chi'i^m tefii EccUfia tua tMiiiiwu^, lint church m whofo prefence John might commie his dtp ^tiim, or truft, was tut one congicgacionj !ib.4. cip.if. Uygnm r^^dTlui a/e faid to have undert.vk.n tlie M niftcry of the chinch of Rome : which church was fuch therefore, as ihey might minsfter urato, lib 7. 7, Dk7nft' Us Alex, writcth to A'»^rgtf. The foule may be faid to be in the head, though it be inotherpirtsj and God in heaven. Go(^, becaufc of his moil infinite and indivilible nature ; Andfo ihefoule, becaufc it is indi- vifiblc, and is as all of it ineveiy parr, not as n thing placed in a pbcc containingit, but as a forme in that which IS informed by it. Bu: iw things which have c}aantny,and are part out of 3nothcr,thtre is not the like reafon. 4 From the adjunfts.That Church which hith no time (ct, whrre- in to aflemble, is no Church. I f.ippofe the ground above, ihac no- thing but union of a Dioccfic in woilliip,can m.ikc a Diocefan Church. But this Church hath no ti.nc. Ordinary it cannot have : ex* traordinary folcmnicics God huh not commanded. E^go^ there is no fuch Church. For if it be a reall DiOcclan Church, it muft have a re- all aftion according to that nature of which it is. The aftion forinall of a Church indcfanuc is to meet and comnauiiK.ue in woiihip. Of Cj aNati^. (10) a Nattonall Cburch, is to meet nafionalljandcommuhlcllc in or**^' (hip. If thcnitmuft meet, it maft have fomc time fet downe rch^*' nary or extraordinary, Buc God hath done neither. The Chu which the Apoilles planted, were in their times moft pcrfca and tiiurifliing. But Diocefan Churches were not •, for in thofe times they were but in fetfiiftAli infolded, not explicated, as the adverfariei confeflc. 4 That which maketh Gods difpenfation incongruous to his mmifters, is abfurd. But a Diocefin frame of Church doth fo £r_go. That which msketh God give his extraordinary gif.s to mi' nifters of churches m the Apoftles times, when now they hid but one congregation, and give ordinal ygfcsoncly when now they h.icl 800, churches under them, is abfurd. But this doth the Diocefan frame. Ergo, J The churches throughout which a Presbyter might doe the othce of a teaching Presbyter, and a Deacon the office of a Deacon were not Diocefan. But every Presbyter might minifter in the Word and Sacraments throughout the Church to which he wis called • fo might a Deacon tend to the poore of the whole church , whe*reof he was a p.acon. ergo, thefc were not Diocefan. The reafon of the propohrion is j No Pcsbyter can through many congreaitions performe ordinary miniftery. In which regard the Canon la^w for- bjddeth Chat Presbyters (hould h^ve many Churches, cap. lo.qjsft 2 Vm plms Ecclefta vni mqioqum commmnntuf Petbyters ; qu'u fiit^ per Ecdefioi nee officium vjltt pcrfolvm, nee nbta earum mQ'Sarim mm impf'tidere. • 6 \i God had plamed D.ocefan churches, that is, ordeined thic all withmcitie,fuburbs, and regions, fhould make but one D ocefarj Church, then may not two Diccefl>s be united into one Church of another Church and BifliDp be fn within the circuit of a D ocefan Church But neither of th:fe arefo. The judgement of the African fathers fhc w the one, and the Canon law doth fhew the other, paa 2 cap. 1 6_ 41. Ergo: » V o-"-' 7 If God .appointed the frame of the church Diocefan ftandia^ ofonechiefe church, others united in fubjedion: thtn can there no^'t be the perfeftionofa church in one congregation : But where there may oc a fufficicnt multitude deferving a proper Paftor or Bifliop, rc- guinnga number of Presbyters and D.-acons to minifter unto them there may be the perfedion of a church But in fome one congregation maybe luch a muhitude. €^0 : ^ ^ ^r?^ j^^^a''"*'^" which maylawfuIlyhaveBifliops,arefuch churches ss God mftituted : But churches in Townes, populous Vrila^e* hiv* had,andmayhiveiheirB.(hops. Ergo. Thisisprovcd by xcfTriWr every populous Towne,fuqh as our market toivmrs, and others 5 yaa by (II) » zjjnicdtcbtiy'\lU2,ti ; for there they taught as well as in Cities. There were Syoagogues in Villages, as well as in Cities. They excepted a- gainft ihcm afterward in unconformity to Law. The tcftiroony of Zi- ^men flieweth what kinde of congregations were ihcy of which Epi- p/?'5«r;eihe great. But here were thurchcs from be- foic ItrtulUnn^ AftenhefiamcGodccquircth, atlcaftimhar juc^gc- mcDts. E'go, Now.to come to open the tctmes, and lay downe conclufions : .whctlier Diocefan or Parilluonall ChurJus were at the firll con- iliftttce. r Eirft, the word Ci^^rcfc.we undcrftindbere, not fignratlvtly i t-ken Mctonpniial') for the plac.e,Syntcd.fnr Minifttrs adminiftring ordinan- * ces : bur^ «,(»/;, for a,boJy poht-cJc, ftindiygof people to be taught •andgovermdjMid of te.Tch.r$and governours. Secondly, it may be asked, What is meant by a Diocefan church ? /iri[r9. Siith a frame in which many Churches are united wiih one had Church, as pariakii g in holy things, or at leaft in that power of government whic'i is in the chicfe Church, for all the other with- in fucii, or fuch a circuit, Th-.fe phrafes of a T)iect[[ey a Ditftf/*?; B [hop, or C^mchy are all (Jnce the time of CovftAntiTie , yea the two lall much later. A Diortfle fcemcih from the common-weahh to have beenctak:n up m ihj Church , from what time B ihcps h.id Territories, ample dcm-imes, ad fome degree of civiU junfdidion annexed to ihim. FornD:octfle by the Lawyers^is a circuit of Pro- vinces, fuch as the Romans Pixfidents had : or i^/we, an admini- flration ot thofc Provinces wnhjurifc^idion. L. unka. c. ut cmnts judittt. And in ih^ Canon luv, fomctime? Prcvificia and DuiX^is are iifed piomifcuouily, D:il.5o. cap. 7. But the annentcft ufe of this word was to note the Territory, or Coimtrcy circuit, oppofed to the Citie. Thus the Countiey churches are called VUc^ejaHU Bu'tfid, conr tur.c'p.B. Thus Bipt'ifffia'ei Eul'li/t were contra c'iftij.guiflied to Pariflu'o- nall. Thtfc had everyone a •'ioccif^, and ihc inhabitants wtre cal- led DiocmfM'rii : thcfe Churches had a moity of hoiifcs dwelling m neighbourhood thn belonged to them ; b ir at length by a Synec- doche, the whole Church was called a Dioccfic; thou«^,h ihe Cano. nifts difputc whether it may ke fo called, Aeing the DiOCtH.' » ili: the meaner pirt by much, in comparlfon of the CiticjantliliouWnoc g'vcihe denomination CO the whole. So ac length the Biftiop was cal- led Dioidjjifju^ and the Church which had beene called EcdejU CiviU- tii,mttnx, nutrix, CttbtdraliSy grew to be called Ditce[a9. But here wc take a Diocefan Church for fuch a head Chuwh, with which all Chur- ches in fuch a circ u t hith reall union, and comnmnion in fome facrci things. Now a Diocefan Church may be put p6ji5ii/^, that is, for a Chir.hin which are minillcrsand miniftery for^hc good of the wliolc Dicceflc, though they fliould never aflemble, as the worfhip in the Church of Jcrufalem was for all Judea, and profitedjihough abfcnt, Oi it may be pat formally for a body politicke, a coftgregation of bc- Jeevers th-oiigh a Diocefl'e, with the miniftcrs of the fame, having fome reall union and communion m facred things. Wc deny any fuch Church. AParifhionall Church may be con G^eredW4f«ria/(y or Tarmd'j; MrCiially, ai itii a^Church wiihinfu:h locall bounds, the members whereof dwell contiguoufly one bordering upon the other. This God mftituted not, for it is accidenrall to the Church, may dbeffe and adiffe, a Church remaining one. If a Parifhionall Church in Lon^ don (hould dwell, as the Du;ch doe, one farre enough from the ochcr, while the fame bcleevers were united with the fame govcrnours, the Church were not changed, tliough the place were altered. Second- ly, It IS pui formally, for a multitude which doe in mannerof a Pa- tiih ordinarily congregate ; fuch Churches,and fuch oncly -wc (ay Goi crcded. Now for fome Xondufions, what wc agree Jn, then what fe- vers us. ComiIhC. I. Churches of Cities, Provinces ,Kingdomcs, miy be called DiOccCan, Provincinll, Naiionall Churches ; as the Churches of the world are called Occumenicall, yea haply not without warrant of Scripture : As i Pet.i.i. writing to all thofe difperfcd Churches, fpeak-ng of ihem finguhrly, as of one flockc, x Pct.^.i. The reafon is , things may be cAkd not onely as they are really in themfelves, but a:cording tolomercfpeft of reafon, under which we may apprehend t'lem. Condnf.z, That I here may be a rcall Diocefan, Natfonall, orhead Church, wherewiih others fliould be bound to communicate more fo- lemnly in Word and Sacraments, and in fome more referved cafes con- Cwrnin« their government. This was done in the Church of Judea. Our men arc too fhie, that feare to come to this propofic:on, de p^t. I aro furc our adveifaries wil' grant us , that our Parifliionall frame might have bcene fo conftituced. Con-itf ^. That there cannot be fuch a frame of Church, but by Gods inllituiion. No Miniftcrs can take this honoufj but ihcy mull (as (13) (jiiA0iM)^C2Mtdtoit. WKen nothing la namre cia htvefurthM degree of pcrfcdion, ihcn the author of nature pucteth into it j how much more muft the degree of perfedion and eminence in things £c- clcfiafticall, depend or) God ? We may reafon from the Church of Judea, as d pMfi, to prove^ That there cannot he fucb a Church, boc that all fubordinatcs mufi communicate "with the chicfeft head Churdi in fomcfacred things^ which may make them one Church. Thus there would not have bcene a Church Nationall of the Jewes, but that aH the Nation had union and communion together even in the worship and ordinances of worfliip. The men onely went up , (o the male onely werecircumcifcd : but the female reprcfentatively went up in thera. Ob'}^, It is enough if the comnunion be in government, which dU our oppofites grant nccf (Tary. ^Iw. This maketh then rather one ifj tertk quodam feparablli^thcn one Church : government being a thing that commeth co a Churck now conftitutcd, and may be abfcnt, the Church remaining a Church. Thefirft Churches of Bifhops , when now they wcw: drvidcd, did ^koep all other,who were thcBifhops presbyters ftridlyfo'caUed,and the ^^f ople alfj in fooae communion with the head Church j for in greater folemnities one and other went up thither. Sec dscrtt. dilt*%, Corjcluf.^, We agree in thi$,rhit Churches were in iheir fr.ft plant- ing, either not adually Dioccfan,bcin| one congregation without any other fubordinate, orifthcyhadany, yet were thty impcr fed, want- ing many parts or members of partiailar Churches^ which be4onged t« ihem. That wherein we contradid one another, is, we affirmc tliat no fijfhhead Church was ordained cither virtually or aftually, but that all Churches were finguhr congregations, equall, mdcpendent each of other, in regard of fubjeft ion. Secondly, we fay, were there a D:o- cefan granted, yet will it not follow, that Paridi churches (hould be without tlveir government within thcrafelves , but onely fubjeft in fome more common and tranfcendcnt ctCei. As it was with the Syna- gogues and that Nationall Church of the ]ewes, and as it is bctw>¥t Provincial! and Dioccfan Churches. If any fay there is not the fame reafon of a Dioccfan Church and Panfliionall ; for that haih in it all the perfedion of a Church. I anrwcr,not ; taken in comparifon to a Provinciall Church, it is but a part and member, and hath nut perfedion, no more then a parochiall Church hath, compared with a Dioccfan. Now followcih to anfwer the Argumcnts'firft prcpofed. To the firft, I anfwer to the propofitioo by diftindion. Thofe who ordained that the C^vi^Jiand ^rbi people taken m rc^^rdofthc D " whole (14) livhole multitude of the one, and locall bounds ef the othrrj ihould make but one Church, they did inlHtutc a Diocefan thurch* But ihofc who fo inftituted a Church in Ci.y , Suburbs, Coun- trcy that their number migkt bee compared fitly to one congregation , they did not therefore ordaine a Diocefan Church, vAgaine to the aifumption. But thofe who ufc Ciiy by City ^ and Chutcb by Church as equivalent (which the Apoftles doe) they or- dained that Cny, Suburbs , and Countiy (hould make but one Church. lanfwer by the like-diftinftion. They who ufc Citybf Cityy people being taken fer the whole multitude within the extent cfthcfe locall bounds, as equivalent with CburchbyCbuHb y they may be faid to have ordained that city , fuburbs and territories', ^liould make but one Church. But thus the Apoftles doe not ufe them , as of equall fignification. For the City had a reafon of an ample continent, the Church of a thing contaiaed. Thcfc phrsfes are, the one proper, the other metonymicall, and are therefore to bee expounded the one by the other. Hcc placed Presbyters jcccTri TjBAfK, Uft wc {hould underftand it of the multitude and locall bounds, it is faJd in the Aftsof the ApoVx flics that they placed them ^g^r' IjtH^wo-ti/^ daunh by Church :^ becaufe Presbyters were not given but to Djfciples and Chriftians now converted cut of the multitude and locall li- mite; wherewith cities were bounded. Secondly, there is an gd" €qHite acception of thefc phrafes per Mccidem i not becaufe the cirie and church was to make but one church , but becaufe the Chrifti- ans by occafion of their number , net being then too great , wete framed into one church \ or becaufe by occafion there was yet btic one church, not becaufe there was to be but one. Nowhec who thus ufcththem promifcuoufly , doth imply that one church was as yet conftituted, not that there was to be but one through the cir- cuit of city , fuburbs , andcoantrey. Thus Iikcwifc it is eafi'y'an- fwercd totheproofe of the propofition ; For thus the multitude of citizens converted and unconverred , could not be a church of one congregationyet the number of ihofe who in city, (uburbs, and terri- tories, were adually converted , was no more then might be ordered into oo€ church^nd the :Apoftles framing thefc into one on the prcfenc occafion, did not exclude the after conftituting of any other wirhin the fame locall bounds. To the fecond Argument : and fir ft , the objedion from the' Nationall church of the Jewes. lanfwer, denying the afltimp- tion. That the Synagogues being many , made one church j be- caufe they were all one Kingdome, one pofl&fiion. For thus there was one Oecumcnicall church , when the world wai under one Empcrour (IS) Stiiperour, and o^ one profeflion. It is accidcntili to-ihe uiir^ of a Church whether the kiogdome be one or no. IfHrael , wiicn God had divided the kingdomc into two, had gone uptoHic- rtifalem, and kept there under one head and Monarch, and Piovinces have becnc diverfly divided from time to time. From this Monarcliic arofe the Popes plea againft the Grecke churches for his Oecumcni- callfoveraignty. Whit forme of churches muft we have amongft them who never received any fuch government, nay any conftanc govern- ment at all. If I were a conformitant I ftiould ohjjft otherwifc for a Provincial! church in Philippi : viT thus. Thit ch itch which fiid many B fhops in it could not be Panihionall nor Diocefan, but Provmciali. For the PrGVinciall chunh huh ihc MctrcpoU- tan and Suftragm B flicps in it, and no orh'.r. But Philippi hid To. Ergo. Bur the Propofition is true cne!y when it is underflood of Di- ocefan Bifliops , not of Panfhionall B fhops. Paul writeih not to the Biiliops io the church, but in the citie : Now mary Bifliops arc not in the Provincial! citie, though many arc in a Provmeiaii. • tharch. Now to come tt) the churches of Afia. I anfwcr to the propofi- tion of the firft Syllog. by diftinftion. One chinch msy contcinc •thmi as an example 'doik conteine in it a thing exemplified ; or Pi aia « aKead Church dath Churches united in fubjcdion to it. Thofc Churches which coatcinc all other in the Utter fence, it is true, they were at lead Diocefan : but in this fcnfe the a0umption isdenyed. The fame anfwer fitteth the Profyllog. He that writing. to thcfe, writeth to all other by vertue ei their fubjcftionall fubordinaticn , he doth imply that all others are conteined m thcfe as member Churches under one head. But he who writing to ihefe, writeth to all other as exemplified onely in them , he doth not imply any fuch things Now this is manifell , becaufc he writeth to feven Churches : whereas this were fupcrfluous, if Chrift did intend his Utter one- ly to head Churches conteyning other. For then five Churches fkould havcbeene written to onely , feeing in them all others were con- teyned, as they fay. For by law o? this virtuall contincncy, PhiU- delphia and Thiatira were included in two of ^he other, vi2. Sardis> and Pergamus, which were their mo:her cities. What needed he hive named Philadelphia and Thyatira, which by Ifiw of this virtuall con- linency did intend to dited his letter oncIy to h?ad l^hurches ? A- gaine,the aflumption isfalfct/For he doth write principally to the feven, and to all other Churches in Ada no further then he writetji to all the Churches in the w-rld. There were other Ch'jrchcs in /^. fia,fuch as were Colofle, Hierapolis, Troas, the Church at Milc- tum, and Aflos, which the Centuries mention, which depended not on thofe feven. If Colofle and Hierapolis were not, as Laodicaca, reedified when John did write the Revelation, yet thefe other Chur- ches were not extant. Not to name Magnefii and Trallcs, the in- dependancy whereof is fuUy cleared whatfoevcr Dof^. Downatn ob- jedtth. To the third reafon J fromChrifts manner of concluding his E- piftles, it is anfwered by denying the aflumption. For Chrift ck)th not ufe the plurall number in refped of that one Church preceding, but in refped of the feven colledivefy taken, it be* inghis will that the members of each fingular Gburch fhould laytio heart both feveral.Iy and joyntly, what ever was fpoken to them and toothers. Now to cpmc to the Ecdefiaflicajl examples , as of Rome, and Alexandria, two hundred yearcs after Chrift. And firft to anfwer the reafon brought for their increafe , fuch as could not keepe fiill in a Parifliionall meeting. The proportion is not ©f ncceffary confcquencej for there were very extraordinary rea- fons of that which was efFeded in the Church of J^rufalcm ; From Chrift himfelfe, from the refidence of all the Apoftlesj "com the ft ate of the people there affcmbled 5 from the ftate of »at Church 5 from the time in which ihefc were done. Chrift had (19) iad prayed for them particuJarly , to which fome attribute the firft miraculous converfion by Peters preaching. Agame, it was fir, that beirg now afcended into his gloiy , he fliould there more a- botindamly difplay his power, and more confpicuobfly fwallow up the fcandall of his croflV. Againe, this Church had ihc labour of all the Apoftlcs for a time in it : v^hofe care and induftry we may gucfle by their ordination of Deacons, that tiicy miglit not be ^fiftndcd. Thirdly, the confluence and concourle to Hierufilcm was of much people, wk) though cxplicately they did not bc- lecve in Chrift ; yet had in ihem the faiih of the Meflhih , and therefore were ncerer to the kirgdomeof God then the common Heathen, The ftate of this Church was fuch, thitit was to fend out light to all other, a common nurfery to the world. Finally, the time being now, the beginnings of planting that heavenly Kingdome , leeing beginnings of tilings are difficult , no won- der if the Lord did rcveale his arme more €xiraordin2rily. It doth not therefore follow from this part-cuLir, to the fo great encrea- fing of ihefe churches in trad of time. Nay, if thefc other Churches had enjoyed like increafe in their beginnings, it would not follow, as thus. Tbolt Cbunbes which wtbin a fiw jcara bsd tbtu piany m them, btvf aumber fome w.rt tbiy man} )*cres after? Becaufe the grow- ing of things hath a Period fee, after wh'ch, even thofc things which a great while cncreafcd, doc decrcafe and goe down war cf, as it was in Jernfalem. Not to memion , that we deny the af- fumption. Bac though the Argument Is but Topicall, and can but breed an opinion onely, yet tne tcftimonics feemc irrefragable, Tertulliail teftifying that hilfe the Citizens*in Rome was Chriftians. And Cor- nelius, that there was befidcs himfclfe, and 4j. Presbytcri, a numbcr- fomc Clergie. I anfwer, That Teftaltians fpccch fccmeih to be fome what Hyperbolical! : for who canbeleete that more then halfe the Cii tic, and world, after a forr, were Chriftians ? But he fpcakcth this, and truely in fome regard, becaufe ihey were fo potent through the world, that ifthiy would have madehcad they might have troubled happily their perfccutori. Orclfe he might f.y they were halfc of thcnn Chriftians, not becaufe there were fo many mem- bers of the Church : 6ut becaufe there wert fo many who did beare fome favour to their caufe , and were it as fafe as otherwife. would notfiicketo turnetothem. ButTertulUan knew no Chur- ches which did not meet , having prayers , exhortations , and mini- ftcring all kindes of ccnliucs : If therefore there were more Churches in Rome inhis cmie, ic will make little for Dioccfan Churches, Touching (^o) ' Touching Ctrneliui t wc anfwcr.It is not unlike but atiditof ies were 4i^iut iK)c\tijicL po/Mfjt^ j^ aeAO-^ikvin* Such a conpany therefore as congregate decently to facred purpofes is a Church by tranflation. icfides the iadcfinite is equivalent cotheumverfalljas, x,a]:t TfoA/ris »ct9' 6^'?uv mhfrfo icAT iTotKit^ittif is jt a9' iKd^f ^xx.\»i(rica'. Now ihcir interpretation bcggeth everything without any ground. For when Presbyters may De taken but three waics : divifm^t9n]unRm, zaddhififfif and con jim^im: diviMonc Presbyter in one , another in another, c^njun^im, diverfe Presbyters in every Church , neither of ihcfe will ferve their turne, the latter onely being trues for Scripture Making two kinds of Presbyters, without v hich the Church cannot be gevernedjic is fuieit did give of both kinds to evcy Church they pi'ai- teds ted. Now tlicy feeing feme Churchci In ourtiiTjes to ha?e «any, inl fome one coolier it both waics Coi/. Ergo. The anumpiion proved. Thofe who w^re of finguhr prehemmcncy aniongft other Paftcrs,andhad corredive pow- er over all others in iheir Churches, tht v were Diccefan b fhops. But the Angcis were fin? ular perfcns in cvei y Chtirch^hivmg EccI*. fi ifticall prthtmineRce and luperionty of power. Ergo, they were Dicccfan bi- (hopf. T he affbipption is proved. Thole who were ili?.dowed by feven liiigular Starres, were fcven finguhr perCcrs. But the Angels were fo. Ergo. AgainejThofe to whom, onely Ghrifl did writejWho oncly b^ire the praife,€lifpraife, threatnmg, in regard of what was in ch: Church amili'cjOrothcrwife : thcyhzd Majority of power aboveoihets. But thefe Angels are written to onely , they arc onely praifed , difpraifed, threatned. Ergo. &c. Aajw. 1, Inthctwonrft fyllogifmcsthe affumption is denyed. Se- condly, in the firft Profyllcgifme the confcquence of the prcpcfi.ion is denied, That they muft needs be fevcn fingular perfons. For fc- ven«fingular ftarres may fignifie fevcn Vnites, whether fingular or .^g • gregative i feven pluralities of peifonswho arc fo united as if they were one. And it is frequent in Scripture to note by a unity, -a uni- ted multitude. Thirdly, the confeqaencc of the propofition of the laft profyllogifme is denyed. For though we (hould (uppofe fingular per- fons written to, yet a prtheminency in order and greater authority, without majority of power, is rcalon enoagh why thty (hould be writ- ten to Angularly, and blamed, or praifed above other. Thus the Ma- tter of a Colledge, though he have no negative voyce, might be writ- ten to, and blamed for the mifdemcanours of his Colledge, not that he hith a power oicr-ruling all : but becaufe fuch is his dignity, thjt did he doc hil endeavour in dealing with, and pcrfwading others, there is no diforder which he might not fee redrcflcd. Fourthly, a- gaine the affumption maybe denyed ; That they are onely written to. F©r though they are onely named, yet the whole Churches arc written to in them; the fupercminentmcn bcrof the Church by a Sy- necdoche put for the whole Church. Poritwasthc cuilomeinihc A- poftlcs times, and long aher, that not any fingular petfons, but the whole Churchci were written unto, as in Fault Epillles is manifcft, and in many examples Ecclefiafticall.And that this w3s done by Chrirt here, the Epiphonemaes tcftific. UttvvjoticbctH wbtt tbt [piritjpei{~ ttb to tbi Cburibes* The third Argument, Thofe whonn the Apoftlcsordainfcd, were of ApoftolicalJ lnflit(i"- E 3 tion. (26) on. Bmihfy ordained Bifliops. Ergo. The alTumption is fHTOted by indadion. Firft, thfy ordained /hercthey >^'ere j fo jt was with Itrrnt. This might happily make the phrafe to be more founded out of lames, that he did in this circumttance of re/iding, more neercly exprelTe an ordinary Paflor then any other. It IS p aine. Antiquity did hold them all Bifhops, and ga- ther them fo to be, a Pnori & Tdfimori : the Author de quafi. tet tuHZ'l'n "^-^J- i^'""' '^""''^^ ^^'f'^P'' fdvatorem Ecdefiu ia- (tuui^e pmjquam afcendtm : mpmm nunm Ap^Uu , ord'mvit eot - E^tjcoju^ Neither did they thinke them Bifhops becaufe they received a limited junfd.dion of any Churqh ; but becaufe they were enabled to doe all thofe ihings which none but Bifhops could regularly (IP) regularly doc Ctium,cap,zi,'t»A&. Ici«robcen«tci,fiiith hcc, tKat 74«/ and Btrnabas had rhe dignity of Bifhops : for they did not maiceBtfliopi oncly , but Presbyters alfo. Now ^cc muft conllcr the ancient, as taking tfcemonely eminently and virtually to have been Biihops,or elfe wee muft judge them to hare been of this minde^ That^ihe Apoftlcs had both as extraordinaric Lcgats , moft ample power of teaching and governing futing thereto , as ilfo the ordinary office of Bifliopsand Paftors, with power of teaching and govern- ing, fuehasdoe effentially andminift:rully agree to iliem: which indeed DoAor T)6iv?inn hinfelfe ccnfuteih , as Popiih, and not without reafon , though while bee doth flrive to have lemti both an Apofilc and a B>ihop properly , hiBiTclfe doth confirme iz not a liitle. Wherefore it will not be unprafitabk to (Kew fome reafooi whjr the Apoftles neiiher were nor might be in both thefe callings. Firft, That wiiich might make us doubt of all their teaching, afi4 writiAg, is to bee hiffed forth as amo(l dangerous aCTertion. £ut to make lam For if hec taught them as an ordmarie biHiop , and did write bis Ep.ftle fo, then certainly it might crre. If he did not teach them fo, then did hfe not that hee was ordained to , neither was hec properly aa ordi- nary Paftor, fe:c taught as an extraeidinjtrie Erabaffadour from Chrift. Secondly , Thofe offices which cmnet bee exercifcd by one , but the one muft expell the other , were ntvcr ky God conjoyned in one pcrfon. But thcfc doe fo. Ergo. The alTumption is maiiifeft. ^ecMife it is pi tine, none can be called r© teach as a Lcgat extraord:- naric , with infallible affirtance,and anlimited jurifdiftion, but he it made uhcapable cf being boofni to one Church , teaching as an or- dinary pcrfon, w th jurifdiAim limited to that one Church. A- ga»ne,one can no fooncr bee c^Urd to doe this , but at leaft the exer- tifeof theoiher isfufpeaded. Thirdly, that which is to no end, is ifcottobee thought to bee orJaiticd of God. But to give one aaor- ^ dinaric auihority .whereby to d^ this or tkat ma Ctuirch , who V ' had hid aWghcrand more excellent power of office, whereby to doe lUafe fame things in. the fame Church, is to no end. Ergo, Objt^. But KV/ill be denied that any odier power of order , or to teach and adminitter factaments was ^iven , then ihit he had as an V^poftle : hutonely .jurifdidion ox right to this Church as his Church, ii; ArifwiY- To this I reply, firft, that if hee had no new power of order, hecoald not be an ordinaiy Bifliop properly and for- mally fo called. Secondly , I fay power of governing ordinary wa? not needfuU for him who hid power as an Apoflle in any Church where heelhoulci come. 0-je^, But it was not in vaine , thitby afiGgnation.hee {Iiould-have^ight to rciidc in .this Church as his Church. 'AnfwiT. If by the mutuall agreement in which thty were guided by the fpiru , it was Chought raeete , that ]amti fhould ab;de in Jcrufalem, there tending boh the Church of the Jewes, and ihe whole circwmcifion, asihey byoccafion reforted thither, then by.vertue ofhis ApoUlcflup hee had no Icffe nght to tcrd thofeofihe circumcifioii by refiditig^here , then the other had right to doe the fame in the Provinces through which they walked. But they did ihinke it meetc that hee {hould there tend that Church, and with that Church all the Circumcifion, as they occaConally reforted thereto. Ergo. For though hee was afligned to refide there, yet his Apoftolicke Paftorall care was as Jthtil and ?«- ttfi^ towards the vyholc multitude ofthc difperfed Jejves., Galath. z. Nowifit were aflignedto him for h's abode, as hee was an ^poftolKkc Paftor, whatdid hee need aflignatioti under anyo- ther title. N sy he could not h ave it oiherw ife afllgned , unlcfle wee make hJmto fuftaine another perfon, vii. of an ordinary Paftor, which hee could not bee who did receiveno fucli power of order as cirdinary Paftorshive. : Fourthly, that calling which hee could not exercife wiihotit being much abafed, that hee never was ordained unto, as a point of honour for him. But he could not excrcifc the calling of an ordinary Blhtp, but hee wiuft bee abafed. Hee muft bee bound by office to meddle with authority and jurifdidi- on but in one Church, hee muft teach as an ordinary man lia- ble toerrour. Ergo, hee was never ordained to bee a Biftiop properly. If it bee facriledge to reduce a Bifhop to the degree of a Presbyter, what is itiohring an Apoftlc to the degree of a Bifhop ? True it is , hee might have beene afTignedto refidecon* ftantly in that Church without travelling , and be no whit aba- fed ! but then he muft kcepe there a Paftor of it with Apoftolicall authority, caring not for that Church, but the whole num^ &cr ofihe Jcwesj which hee might doc without travelling. Bf- 1 caufe taufc whofo kecped- in that Church,' Hce M ' nctdcto pdt' fonh as the reft ; for the Jewcs from all parts ccmc to him» Bnthe could not make his abide in it as anordinary teacher andgovernour, without becomming many degrees lower ihen hec Tva*. For to live wiihout goirg fonh , in ihe mother Church of all the world, as an ordinary Paftcr, was much leffe honour then ro rra- vaile as p£tcr one while inro An'yria , another while through Pon- tus, Galatia, Bithinia, as an Apoftlc. Even as to fit at home in wor- fhipfull private place is leiTe honourable then to goe abroad ai Lord Embjfladour Wither or thither. Honour and cafe arefeldome bed- fellowcs. Neither was ^#/wj his honourinihis circumflancetrf the reft, but in having (isch. an horrourable place wherein to cxercife his Apoftolicke calling. As forrliat quelhon , who was -.heir ordinary^ Paftor,it IS eafily anfwtrcd. Their Pfcsbytm, fuch as tinui, or CU"- mem in Rome , loch as Ephefus and ether Churches had. umet wai ' their Pallor alfo , but with cxtr.iordinary authority, \^hat needed' they an ordinary Bifhop, which grew needfull(^as ihe favourers of the' Hierarchy fay) tofupply the abfente of Apoftles,when now they were* to deceafe ? What needed then here an ordinary flifliop where the A-' poftles were joyntly to kee pc twelve yeares together, and one to rcdde * during his life, according to the current of the ftory > Thus much a- bout the firftinftance. To the fecond inftanceof Efaph^ed'ituiy and the argument" dra- ' wen from it. Firft,we deny the popofition. Forbad fome ordina- ry Paftors bcrncfoftilexl, it might- imply: but a prchemincncic of' dignity in th^m abcrve other: wherefore unleffc this be latcrfer-' udy itisunfound , \'iz:-lbofeordiMatjPt[iors ^ rvbi art called A po- Pies in iomf*rif9H of others , bectufe the Ap(iUs did give to them fa- n^r oferdiwtion , ]unfdiSlion , and peereU^'c p7themir.enc) , tvnich tbty did net gme toot berfy tb'.y are above others. Secondly, the Aflump- tion isfalfc altogether : Firft, thn Epaphroiitm was an ordinary Piftor; Secondly, rhithec Wascalled an Apoftleincompanfon of inferiour Paftors of that Church. Ohi. But the judgement oiUrom^ Tbiod§ret, C hryfoflomet is thn he vf2s. W«/w. The common judgement is^ that he was an egregious teacher of theirs , but further then this,' many oftheteftimonicsdoenot depofe. Novv fo he might be : for he was an Evangelift , and one vho had vifited and labosred among them, and ihcreforeynight be called their readier , yea an egregious- teacher, or Doftor of thtfm. Nay, Saint /^fry6r#/« doth plainely insinu- ate , that he was an Evangelift : for he faith he was made their A- poftle by the Apoftle, while he fcni him to exhort tliem, and becaufc he was a good man, he was dcfired of the people. Where !iecmak:th himfem, not for pcrpeiuall refidcncc amongft them, butforihcf trifffint exhorting of them , and makeih him fo ileCred of the i » Philippiaus (30 P4^ilippians, bccjiuCchce was a good man, notbcc^uTc h«^ W3is ihcir ordinuy Piftor. Uromt teftimony on thispUcedoch notcviricej^' For the n^me of Apoillcs and Dodors is largely caken , and $s ^p.-' pliable to one, who as an EvangcLft did inftruft them, as to any o- thcr. Thiod, doib plainly take him to have been as their ©rdinanc bifliop, but no oiherwifc then T'mot^ff and Tituit and other Evange- lijls are faid to hare been b lliopi : which how tf ue ic ij, in Uae next argucneiitlhiUbcedilcuiTed. Vot cy znTbeoibrct doib tai^c him to have bccnc juch an- Apoftolicke pcrfon as Timoi^Jf ?nd Titui were. Now thcfc were as truly called bifhops as ihs- Apojllcs thenafclves. Neither is the rule of Tbeofhni to bee admitted : for it i^ nnlike thac thcnamcof Apoftle fhould bee co;r,mumcaied then with ordinaric Paftor^, where now there was danger of confounding ^hofc eminent Miniftcrsof CUrift, with others , and when now the ApoJ^lf* wecf dcceafed , that then it {hould ceafc to bee afcribea to them, Agame, , how iiiaU wee know ihit a bifhop is to bee placed in a Citic, that hec muft beeapcrfon thus and thus (according to Patth Canons) c^uali-, fied : all is voided, aad made not to belong to a bifliop. For thoCe wba arc called bifhops, were Presbyters and no bifhops, bifhops being" then to be underflood onely under the name of Apoftles and Angel^, Thirdly, antiquity doth teftific, that this was an honour to bifhapf, . when this name was Ecdefiaftically appropriated to them. But if thryever had becntcarmedby thenameof Apoftles before, this had bccnadcbafingof them. Neiiher.is there rcafon why they fhould bee called ApolUcs. In junfdiftion Apollolicall the Apofiles were not fu^ceeded. Jufifdidion Epifcopall they never rter<;ifcdr nor ha^^ , and thercfcre cpuld not bee fuccceded jn it. The Appillcs give ta Pies^cerstha^t which Chnft gave them out of his powers even the ppwer pf ordinary government. They are bid TTitjuauvHV ^ z^d /Soo-KMf, to feed as well by government aj dodrinc. They arc bid net to pUy the Lords over the flock. What feare of tyranny where there is no power of government? f ut by authDriries afiie, coofider the thing fiomthe lext it fclfc. Pirfl, T*ui fecmcth but ocpafitnally to ftad him, hce having parpofed to have fent Twadifc;, wh« asyct could not bee imployed. I tboHghtU nutSMt} a fend ep:^pbrQdttm f» you, Se<:ondly, hcc doth imply, that Epdpbrod'uui had no: retwned to them, but that hec fent him j and that therefore hec wa« not the ordinary bifhop of It. Itislike, bee was b»t fent till T«»fl-i thf might bee difpajched to them. Neither is it any thing probable h« fhoiild bee called an Apofil? , a« their ordinary and eminent Pa^ ^or. In the Scriptures, none are faid to be Apoftles further then they -: arc in habitude to fomc fending ihcm. Now this is undoubted, the Philippiaw had fcm him to P4ul. It i* ib.ei> i^9& probable when he is called (33) railed their Apolllc , it is inrfgard he was Tent by them , which the Apoftlc poimeth at in the next words, ^hoh^ta miniflHif m{ ibt ilfiwgt tUiafnU wkkhyou jtntbyhm. Objca. Butitis urJiktIy liiu this word appropriited to the Twelve , (hould be ufcd of ihofc feiic civihc. Noc fo, for while the pcrfoiis fending nre figmfitd, th?y are fufficientU contraqiiUfiguifhtd ; it being the PfivJedgc of the Apofllcf, thstihty wjtrerh; Apoftlcs of Chnli J -fas, notfimpy ihitthey were Apofllfs. Secondly, Lhn i^. It is made common to ail that arc ftnr. For though Chriftmeanc it of himfelfe, yet he implirt it by a difcoutfe, ageyert»dry:c:em. Thirdly, we fee the like pJirafe, i Cor. 8. The A^Uioftht Oyurcbfs. VorChfyhft f« there un- derftandcih thc^ whoiB the Churches liaJ fcnt for thac prcfent. That doth not hinder , ihty were by p/ui/ to ih? Churches, theref re the c^iufches ©ighc not fend ihtm with their contributions. Neither is thif an argument that he w:$ their biiliop , bejaufe thtir church fen: hiw : for they Cent Afsftles thcmfelvcs and Evangelifts alfo more or- dinarily, it being their office to goe from church to church , tcr the edification of ihem. Fof theinftancc of.^^«bijp^wT finde it not brgcd. Nqw to come to the lai^ inftaiKcs od'imtkeut and TititL Firft, wc deny the Antecedent , that tkcy were inflitiKed bishops hy PiU$*, And in the fuft prcfillcgifme wec«nythe Aflumption : that the Epillitiebcprtfuppo/ifcmtub. And to the profiUogifme , ten- ^ng to prove this a flVit on denyed, wc anfwer r firi^, tothepropo- ficion, by diftingutfliiog the Epifcopall avuhoiity, which is confi- dered both in regard ©f that which is mntcrisH, and in regard of the formall reafon which doth agree to it. The Propofition istrue, ui- derftaoding it of authority in both thcfe regards j ihofe wlioare prc- fu ppofed to h .vc hadaurhority Epifcopall given thtm , bothfocthe fubOance of it, ind the fortnall reafon whi.h doth agree to it In an ordinary bifiiop, thty JrepreGippofed bifliops : bdtthii is dcnyed. For thfyare prefuppofed to hive andexcicife power Epifc pill for ihc matetiall ofit, as ApoftUs hidaifo*, Uot nor to have and •rxer- cife ir» that maaaer and formallity wiiich doth agree to a B Ihop, but which doth agree to an Evangclift , and therefore they arc bid- dentodocthe wotkc ofan Evangelift , to excrcifc allthn power they didcicrcifc ai Evangel«fts. There is iioihiiig that *?/!«/ writeih to Timothy to cfoc in Ephcfiu , or to Tilui Cute, which himfelfe prc- fent inperfon m'ghtnot arul v/ouM not have done. If wee fl;oulJ reafon then thus : Hce whodidcxercifc Fpifcopal\ power in tlufc iburchcs, he isprcfuppofci tohave beenc bifliopinihem. This pro- pofition is not t roc, but with limitation : Hce who cicr«.ifcd Epif- copall power aficr that formall raafincr , whi.hdojh agree lo the officcofaBi&op, hce wa» Bilh'^p ; but no: htewKo cxcrcifcth vhe E 3 power ■ pQwtrftcundum alkm ntlonem & nudum : viz . afcer fuch a manner as uDth agree to an Apoftle. To the fccond mame proofe , wee deny the propofition. If pattern es for Biftlops, then written to Biftiopj. The reafon is, Apo- ftlcs , Evangelifts, ordinaiy Paftors , have many things cofnmon in their admini^ration. Hence is it, thit the example of the one m:«y- be a patiernc to another, though they are not identically and fornnal- ly of onecalling. CounceUs hive cnjoyned all Presbyters to be well fecne inihefc Epi(Ues,as being pitternesfor tht m^ridt A ug,Dedi^f hi* Cbrifi.cap, i6.ltb.^. To the third reafon. ^J^bo Jo prtfmbiffg them thtlr dfttiet doth pre* fofe thivery duties of Bijhops , beedoth t*\ttbtm tohave bune Bijhofs. The Propofition is not true without a double limitation. If the A' poitlc fhould propofe fuch duties of Bifhops as they in later times- iifurped, he ioih not therefore prefuppofe them bifhops, bccaufc ihJe are duties of Evangelifts, agreeing tobiflnps onely by ufur- pation. Againe , {houldhe propofe thofe duties which, fay they, the w ord doth afcribe and appropriate to bifhops , yet if he doc not prefcribe them as well in regard of matter as forme exercifedby them 3 it will not follow that he doth take them for bifhops : nor thit Taul dothpurpofe the very duties of bifhops, bothin fubftance and manner of performance. Secondly, we deny him to purpofc for IV. bftance the duties of bifliops. For hec doth not bid him or- daine^ as having a further facramentall power then other Mmifters, nor governe with power dircftiveand corredive over others. This exceedeth the bounds of all miniileriall power. Thirdly, Timothy is not bid to lay on hands op doc any other aft , when now churches wereconftituted, but with concurrence of thoCe churches ; idvouni'' pfcmfqui EccUfiaiurey iheApoftles did not otherwife^ For though !*««/ wrote t® him alone , that was becaufehe was occupied not one- ly in churches'perfeftly framed, butalfoin the erefting and framing- of othirs, Sccon^jly , bccaufc they were in degree and dignity above all other ordinar governours of the Church , which their Conful- like prehcminencye was fufficfient, ,-why iKey fhould be written :a alone. To the fourth reafon : Thdfe things yvbicb yfi^ire mitten to informe; ntt onely Timothy Mnd Tit tiSi but aQ their fttcct If ottrsy wbonfBfs Vioceftn tilhips^ thjff^eremmeiito DioBefoft Bijhops. But the fe were fo, Ergoi The Propofuion is not true , becaufeit pr€fuppofeth\hat nothing written to any perfons, caninforme Diocefan bifhops, unleflethe perfons to whom it is written be formally in thatfelfe fame order. For if one Apoftle fhould write to another touching the duty Apo- iiolique, it might inforrae any Doft or or Paftor whnfoever. Second- ly, wcc dcay Diocefan bifkops arc^f iurt) fucccflburs. As for the c^uivocall (3?) cquivocill Catalogue which maketU all who are reaci bifiiops to have bcene DioccCan, we fhillfpeake of them hereafter. The biftiops bc- twctncTimotbj ind Stfphanui in the time of theCM«rf*»Xounccl], were not all of one cut : and there are no churches read in Grefe whicK were not Congregations. Theriisno moic to prove Pibi/!/i;j ofG^r- tina a Metropolitan , then to prove /^>7byter« knew he ftiould never fee the Ephcfians more. Aft. 20. ]f wee fay he doth foretell it for likely, fo we may fay, thu of wolves aifingwas, and call all into qncftion. Neither 1$ it likely, but that ceires would have broke his heart, and made h m ycdd in the percraptories ofhisfpccth, had not hisfoulc becnc divinely per- lTvaded,Thirdly,hc had no meaning when he left them locouftituic limtlj Tlmtby tobe dicic Bifhop : for he would rtot Ikive omitled foe h an argument ok confohtionto hearcsfo heavy. Nor he doth iioi men- tion any (uchpurpofe when he did write to them hii Epiftle, Hec tcllcth Churches uCmlly when himfclfchath meaning to fee them, or to Tend oxdeis. Fourthly , Timothy was with Paul while hce was inbondsat Rome, as witnefle thofc nifcriptionscf the Epiftlestothe CoUffimi i^6 pbilippiaTts j yea ri«w/fc)' was fo v/ith him , aatabee ifnplcyed by kim, Tent forth, and returnc to him, which is maoifcftc l^hilip.r. If he were after this placed in E/>l;ff/«*, yet he was not ph- ccd to le refident , foe in the end of the Epiftle , he doth bid TiWA- li?;comc tohim, and bring ^/tf^f, that ;hcy might miniftcr to him. Againe when hce dtd write ihe 2. Eptftle, Timothy wzi not Epbtfi0^ for he doth bid him falutc ^qwU and FrifclllA and Onc^fiwm, Objcd". But is like ihefe were at Epbtfm, forihere r«<^lcft AquUg and Pri* fiiid. They came occpfional!y, they did not fixe there , ^WdiCbrf* /oflome alfo judgeth. And the hou^cof Omfipborus y ^mwrd takcth it, wasatlconium inLycaonia, foihatic is Idee he was in his ni' tifecoumrey at this time, evenlconium, Liftra, Dei be, which hap« pily s thecaulc why ihi Scholafticall ftory doth make himBifliop of Ly ftra, becaufe hither he was lad Tent. He was fo here, as ihat the Apoftle didbutfcnd him 10 fee them, forhee biddeth him come btfcre winter. Btfides, there aremany probalitieshe was not ac Mpb^jUii for he fpeakeih of it through the fpiftie, as a place now re- mote from him. Ibouliaiivift what Qvefjpbffrm didfsr mtettt Epbtm /fi», not where r,oi» tbou Mtt, I havt fent Tycbius t$ Bpbefm, nH td tbH , to C»pp\y ihy place while thou (li.ilt bee abfent. finally^ after P*«/ci death hee did not rcturne toBphefus, but by common confcnt went to lohnxhi Apoflle, andvety little before his de »;h tame to Ephefusjif evcr.As for th: Fathers therefore in this pfint, if ihcy teftifie ordmary refidencc, which they doe not, wee have iibu'iy to renounce them J butthty tef^.fie cnely that he re- mained in that Church, becaufe his flay was longer there then Evangclifts did ufe to mske, and,he is thought to have fuffcrcd mar- lyrdome there. So for Tirw, when Paul feat him to Crete to doc that worke isuncertaine j 6utthis iscertainc , it was before his wri- ting to the Corinths the fecond time, and going to Rome. This like Wife: that r<:;y/ wss then in travelling, and as it is like being in the parts of Macedonia did mean to winter at 2itC9poUt, When he did write ihcEpifllche doth (hew it was not hismeaniag thatT«l« ihould ftiy there , for hec doth bid him to mcetc him at Nicopolis^ where he meant to be as it is likely, but Ti/«Jcomming did not mcetc _him there, but at length found him in Macedonia , whence Ptitd di4 fend him to the Corinthians , thin l(kg God for huptBmptntffttvintt hk mm mord u U imflayed amcng^ tinm, i Cor, 9, 16, which doch (37) Hiew hc^hid not becnc mude an otdinary bifliop any whcrc.Wc Gn^ mat he d.d accompany P,ul at Rome, z Tm. 410: anci ^h,np^^ writ Imfecond Epiftle ioTm.thf , he was in D.I.ntn. wtncc Aqumasdoth thinke him to have becnc b.fliop of that pbce WW fore wee.hi.ke him that will bee carried from fuch pt.fumpnonr (yea manifeft arguments^ by Hcg.fipp^^Clemm, and hiftory Lounl ded on them to be too much afFefted to fo wcakc authors, and wi(h not credit with him, who counts him unworthy credit, that will nor fweare what fuch men depofe. ^ ' ^ °' i;,Jw^«'"7/^',P'''°^' '^'' followeth, That either furM'io^wji fig'-^ediothofeChunhiwas mtextraordmary. We der.y this PiTumrt. on with chcproefeof ,t. Tb^t the funSlion tbatthtfe exmifedasaU J%eZT^'u^"''^c' ('^'f'''^'^>^r'^ r,^mu(l'anto tbebdg t>nbeCKurch. Thcrcafonis,becaure they were nffigncd to Joe thofe thtngs which are to be done for ever m the church afcer a more tranf- cendcntm inner j v.z.asEvangeliftijind affignation of ihem to doe thole things in certaine Chwrches after this manner , was not ne- cefl2ry to perpetuate the being of the Church. Affignation to chur- chestodoethcworkcofordin.iyPaftorsis indeed necefTary : not allignation to dot the worke of hvangrhfts. To that fiaall reafon , what aatiquity doth teftifie nprecina with Scriptures is true, and Co to be taken. What they fpeake fo aorwin., mact isvrtuallycontcincdinthem, andmaynghrly bededtice'd tromthem istobce bcleived andreceivcd by adivine faiih. But What they |pe;,ke not plainely comradided, but yet no wny included. maybeadmtced//4^fe«w;d, if the firft relatt^rs be well qu.hlicd witnenes. But whu they fpeakcfrom fuch as Ciemm a^Hcg^p^ ;*«, It IS If .neflea of light credulity. A corrupt confcence bent 10 decline is g.ad ofcvciy colour whi.h it mr.y pretenj to jufiifie it Iclfe HI declining. To the aflump-i6 we anfwer.What do not fomc ancient enoueh cal Timothy? Ambitfe (aith he was a Dcrcon one while, a Presbyter ano- ther Mrh,lc,& m like fenfc others a Primate & a BilLcp. Lyra provcth h.m horn mar y authorities to have been an Arch-b.-lliop, and Tittti a 1 rieft. Btd» callcth him an Apoftle. But to oather on ihcfe, th u he was in prrpricty of fpeech all ihefc, were al fiird. Obj. d. I,but tht'y call hinj biihop on other grounds, btcaufe afTigncc: to this Church. Arlw. Thtycall h^m b.-fh-'p bccnifc he w.i$:fligned to this Church, not ondy to teach, butalfo tocrd.iinc Deacons, Presbyters, For wheresoever they found this doae,and by whomfocver, iluyuidcali them b.fliops,ni { noted bcf.te fiom O'uumn. The fathers thcrforc maybe well confttucd calling ihcfc biniop$,bccaufc thty made lon- ger ftay in ihefc Churches ihen JEvangehfti did nfwally, «c did preach G and (38) and orJamc , and doc in ihtfc Churches all fuch things which Bl- fn^pes in thtir ti.iic ufed co doc. But that he was not an Ev^ngclift, and n^ore then an ordinary bifhop ihcy do not deny. Salmeron him- fclfe in his fir ft Difputation on i i tm.pag.j^o^, f^idtiut if go quodfuerit ftitfqutm EpifcopWietimfi ad tem^iu in ea cwunte ut pofttrfrtiicavtrit &liitroi mdiniipft>niwmt,undc quidem vacant eum epifcopum> Finall}?,: lliculd they in rigour and formallproprieiy make him an ordinary Pallor from the firft time Vaitl did write to him ordinarily refidenc to his end ; they ft»ould tcftific a thing , as I hope 1 have (hewed, contrary to Scripture, yiaconiraiy to thst text which maketh him to have done the woikcofan Evangclift. Asbr the (hew from ihc Subfcriptions we have fpcken fuSiciemly, Now to (View that ihcy were not properly b fKops. Firft^wchavc fticwcd that they were butfubrogated to doc ihofe Cuppcfed Epifco- pali duties a while, but were not there fixed, to make their ordinary abode. Therefore not billiops properly. Secondly, th.y who did the worke of an Evangelift iivall that thty did,did not perform formally- the woike of a bilhop. But ihefe did fo. As is vouched of TiCTj/fcy, 'Dot thttvorlii of An ivanidift, hroo. The Propofition is proved. If an Evangelift and b fliop cannot be formally of one office, ihen tkc aft ofnn Evangelift, and the aft of an ordinary Paftor or bifhop cannot be formally one. For when every thing doth agire (tiuadutn quod aiih e(i , thole things which arc not the fame formally , their worke andeft'cft cannot be formally the fame. But the Evangilift • and the ordinal y Paftor or bifliops, are not fornaally the fame. Er- go. The airumpticn the Apv>ftle proveth, by that diftinft enumerati- on cfihofe whomChrift gwc noA\ afccnding.bythe the worke of Miniftcry to gather and build his Church, For as an Apoftleis diftingujflied from a Prophet, a Prophet from an Evangelift, fo an Evangelift from an ordinary Teacher. Objc^. But it may be faid, they were not diftinft , butihatihe fupcnour contained the infcriourjand Apoftlcs might be Evangelifts properly, as Matibiw^ndlih)! were. Arfw. That former point is tobeunderftood with a grainecf flit. The fupeiiour contained the inferiour virtually and eminently, in as much as they could doe Mori ttmn ttLiUne^ what the inferi' our did. This fenfc is tollerable. Butthat formally tke power of all otf er offices fuices which the Apoftles is falfc. My Lordchieft Ju- fti c of England i$ not formally a Conftable. As for the latter, true, anApoftle might be alfo a penmen of the Gofpcll, but this auketh not an Evangelift mere then an Apoflle , but doth ptr escidens, come to them both. And even, as a Preacher or Paftor, writing CoFrin-.cntaries, and publifliing other Treat ifes, this commeth f e/* 9Uidt»s to his calling, it doth not make kitn a Paftor , but more iU. Iqflrious icftrioMf and truJtfull in that regard ihen another. So M^i^i and Lul^ was not therefore Evangclilts becaufe they dd write the Gof- pcls, for then none Hiouid hive beene Evangelifts that had not writ- ten , but in this regard ihcy were more renowned then other. Cu» dome hath fo prevailed, Taiih UaldottiLtt in h:s Pr(f :ce on Mtttbiw, that wee call ihem Evangchfts, (t;*^. the Writers of the Gofpells) whom the Saiptuies cever call Evargelifts. Thefe Evangeljfts paid fpeakeihof were given at Chrifts ^fcenfion , bo: the firit writer ot the Gofpelj, heing an Apoftle , was at leaft eight yeares jfrer. Se- condly, they were a diftmd order of workc;men from the Apoflles, but two of the penmen of the Gofpels were Apoflics. Thirdly, they were fuch as by labour of minifteiy (common for the oener:ill of It to ail other) did gather Saints, and build Chrifts Bor'y. New writing the Gofpell was not a labo^ir of Minifteiyccmmon to Apo- ftles>Prophct5,EvangeIifts,Paftors,but the publishing cf it. Thofc degrees which Chrift did diftindly give to otherfome, and o herfome, thofe he did not give conjoyned'y to one and the fame perfons. But thefcr callings he give to fome one, to others another. Elk he muft have faidjhe gave the fame men to be ApoIiUs and E- /angelifis, the fame to be Evangclifts and Paftcrf . Ei go. 1 hatcalling whc h is not compatible with ihc calling of an E- vangelift, thatT^w/never annexed to an Evangel; ft. But the callyng ofa bifhopisfuch. Forabifhopif tyed toapirticular Church. The calling of an EvangeUft is a calling wherebyone iscalled tothe worke ohhc Miniltcty, to gather Saints, and cd:fie Chriflsbody, without any limitation to ai^y particular Church, Ergo, Pri*i never annexed the c.^llmgof a billiopto an Evangelift. The calliHg of an Evangclilt is not to wnte the G jfpell , nor to preach it (imply r for then every Min;fter of the Wordlhould be an E'/angelif}. Bat this doth diffore nee t'p.cni , top-eichit without li- mitation or .liiignariontoany particular ihurch. Thus P/bi///p thus all thofe who were :he Apoftlej helpers, working the workcf ih: Lord as thty did were Evang of which fort fome continued to the time of Ctmmtiiti the Emperour, asff*/(t^iwreporteth, fia/t^. bifi. It ^.itf.^. Now a calling whereby I am thus called to puhliih the Gofpel,with- out fixing "my leli'c in any ceitaine pbcejand a calling which bindeih during life to fettle my rife in one Ci.urch, are incompatible. Laftjy, ih It which would have d.bafedri/wtf/o; and T»:«4, that Tanldid net puiup^nihem. Buito have bronth: iliem from tiic honour of ftrringthe Gofpell , os CnUgurgU comp'.moni of ihe A- poftles to be ordinaf y Pal^or$,hjd abafcd them. Brgo,thi$ to be or- dinary Paftors Pgiildid not put upon them. OojtU. T he affj mption isdenytd, itw.if noabafcment. For before ih«.y were but Prcf- b>ters, and afterward by impoG. ion of hinds wcic made biftiops. G 1 Why (40) why (houldiii?y teceivs impofi tion of hands, and a new ordini- lion, if they did not receive an ordin^tjy calling ? wc mcane if ihey were not admitted into ordinal y funftions by impofition ofhinds. I anfwcrjThis deny all with vill whercos it is builded i; grofle : For tabling ihem from aSuperiour order to anlnfenour, is to abafe them. But the EvangehQs office vvasiuperioar to Paiiors. E'go. The allufnptfon proved. Firft , Every otfice is fo much the greater, by how much the power of it is of ampler extent and iefie'reftrai' ned. Btr. the Evangelifts power of teaching and governing wasil- liniiied. Ergo. The alVumptioR proved. Where ever an Apoftle did that part of Gods wo^e whieh belonged to an Apoftle 5 there an Evarigelift mighj^doe that v/hich belonged to him. But that part of Gods worke which belonged to an Apoftle he might doc any where without limitation. Ergo. Secondly, every Mmiftcr by^ h'Jvv much he doh more approximate to the higheft , by fo much he is h'gher.]iut the companions, & coadjutors of the Apoftles,werc re:r€r ihcnordinary Pftftors. Ergo. Who are next the King, in his Kingdoihe , butthofe who are Rigii Comites. The Evangelifts were Comim of ihcfe Eccltfijfticall Cheiftaincs. ChryfdfioMC doth cxpreflyfayon Bpher.4. That the Evangelifts in an ambulatory courfc fpreading iheGofpell, were above any bifhop or Paftor which refteih in a certaine Church. Wherefore to make them Pr ef- byters i« a weake conccite. Vca every Prsbytcr (properly fo called) was conftituted in a certaine Church to doe the worke of the Lord in a certaine Church. But Evangelifts were not, but to doe the worke of the Lord in any Church as theyftiould be occafio- red. Ergo, they were no Prcsbyccrs properly fo called. Now for their ordmation ; Ti/»;w£;y received none as the D. dor conceiveihj but What bee had from the hand of the Apoftle and Presby- ters, when now he was taken of Paul to be his companion, Forno doubt but the Church which gave him a good teftimony, did by her Presbyters concurre with Paulin his promoting to that office. Obj. What, could they liy on hands with the Apoftlts,which/»fo;//ip cQuidno^j and could they enter one into an extraordinary ofticc > Anfw, They didlay onhandj with the Apoftles, as it is exprcfly read, both of the Apoftles and them. It is one thing to ufe preca- tory impofition , another to ufe miraculous impofition, fuch as the Apoftlcsdd, whereby the extraordinary gifts of the Holy Ghcft were conferred. In the firft. Presbycers have power. Neither is It certaine, that iP/?i//

Oik of an Rvangelift. Ergo, that calling he was ordained to. That worke winch exceedcththe calling of an ordinary bifhop, was notput upon an ordinary billiop. But yi^^ahis workcdidlo: for it w?s to plant Presbyters Towne by Tor/iie through a Nation, Ergo. For the ordinary pi intation and ereding of Churvhes to their due frame, exceedeth the calling of an ordinary bilhop. But this was TitUA h:s wotke. Ergo. Bifiiops arc given to particular Churches when now they are framed, thnttheymsy keepc them winde and wether tight, they are not to by foundations, or to cxc- difiefomc imperfed beginnings. But fay ri.'W had bee nc a bifliop : He is no warrant for ordinary bidiops, but forPfimites whofcau- thoriiy did rc3«h through wl^.ole Il.inds. Nay, ifihe Dcdorsrulc out oiTbeedtnt were good , it would ftrvc for a J^ifriop of the plu- rality cur. Por it it faid he placed Presbyters city by city, or Townc by Towne, who are in namconcly bifliops, but not that he placed Angc/s or ApolUcs in any part of it. He iherefore was the folc bi- •Ijopof them , the reft were but Presbyters , fuch as had the name, not ihe office and government of Bsflicps. Finally, were it granted thitthey were ordinary bKhops , and written to doe the things that bifiiops due , yet would i: not be a groundforihcir majority of power in matter facramcniall and junf- diftioH,asis above excepted. The ffth A'luwent, The Minifters which the Church Ind generally and perpetwal'v ihc fiift 300. yearcs after Chrift and his Apoftlcs, and was not or- dained byany geneva'l Ccuncell, wcreiindoubted'y of Apofiolic-ll inftitat!on. But the Church ever b.ad Dioccfaii bilLops in firigu- Jarity of prcheminence during life , and in majority of power of ordination and jurifjifition above others, arid ihcfc nctinftitutcd by gcnerall Connctlls. Ergo, Thepropofition isplaine both by^«- l^indt iapt.toutrtDonAt. lib,^. & Ep (i 118 snd by TiruK CcMflar, id tb Ap-iHtiii t/t'iitumiaod fip:iiE:At(i.ii .-iptftoldnim fui> fiitofAn- Cium. For whocm ihiiikc thic -ill the Churikcs gcncial'v, woaM confpirc to abolifli th : order of Ci.rid planted I y\hc Apollles, and G I kr fet up other Minifters then Chrift had orcJained. The affumption it phme : for if the Church had Metropolitans anciently, and from the beginning, as the Counccll of Nice teft.lieth, much morcbi- Ihops. For Dioccf in bjfliopsmuft bee before them , they rifing of combinition of Cities and Dioces^. Aadthe councell of Ephefaj tcrt>fiefh, the government of tUofe bifhops of. Cyprus, to have been cvsi from ihc b^^inning, according to the cultonve of old received. Yen, thit the attempt of the bifli jpof Antinch,\vas againft the Ci- nons of the Apultlcs. Agame, Cyprian doth tcftjfie^hat long before his t;me,b fh ;ps Wvre phced in all Provinces and Cities, belidcs the r.icC' (Tion of biihaps fiom the Apoflles timesrFor ihcy prove iheic orig nail to have^ene in th^ Apoftles times. Neither were they in" ihtuted by any gencrall councell. For long before the firft gencrall councelijWe read Metropolitans to have becnc ordained in the Chur- ches. Yea, 7^rcw hitnfelfe is of opinion , th u no councell of aftec" times, butthe Apoftlesthemfclvcs did ordaine biihops 5 forcven fince thofe contcntion^wherein fome faid, 1 am TjhIs, otben^ Itm Apalldi, they were fet up by generall deace : which could not bee made, but by the Apoflles therafelvcs. And in Pfai,^^ hee maketh Darvid to prophecy of bifliops , who ihauid be fct up as the Apoftlcs Succtffors. I^irftjwe.deny the propofition. For firft,this doih prefuppofe fuch an afliHance of Gods Spirit with the Cfiuich, that fa^ cannot gene- rally take up any cuftome , or opinion, but what kach Apofiolicall warrant, whereas the cor trary may befhewedin many inftanccs. Keepingofholy dayes was a generall pradifc through the Qiur- ches, before any councell enatted it, yet was no Apoftolicall tradi- tion. SocfarJib.^.cap.i 1. Evawgelium nen impojuitMc^tirclieyfefti okfer- vsntufy fed hemiaei ipfijm quiqite UcU ex more qusdtm htroduxtrunt. Taking the Euchariilfafting,the fafts on Wcdnefday, and Saturday, falling in fomc f^fhion before Eafter j ceremonies in baptifing, the government of Metropolitans were generally received before any coancellcftablilhed. z. It doth prefuppofe, that the Church cannot generally iwnfpire in taking up ary cuftome, if (lie be not led into i^ by fome generall proponent , as a generall rcpreftntarive counccll , or the Apoftlcf, who were Occumenicall Dodors, but I fee no reafon for fucha prc- fumpticn, ?. TIrs doth prefuppofe, that fomething maybe which is of A- polliicall auih^rity, which neither diredly nor confequcmly is included in th-j woidwiicten. For when there are fome cuftomfS which have bcene gencr.iil , whuh yet canotbe grounded in the word written, it is iicctlTary by this propofition, that fomc things may (45) asay be in the Ch uch having aathoriiy Apoftolicati, as being cfeli- vercd by word unwritten. For they cannot have wrtrrant frcnn the Apofilcf but by word written or unwritten. To he rroofe we anfwer : 1 hit n(TefrulIi*M mjketh not to the purpi Gr, for hcc rpcakcth ofthat which was in Churches Apoftolicall . as ihcy were now planted by them , which the fcntencc at Urge let dov/ne w i! makedeare. Sicoyfl^tidb^bumqnodpiiM, & idpfi»sq:iodijlM'' ivi- tio , tb initio qiMftiibi! id (ffi Mb /1}>o^i4U traduuf»qu»dipudEccle(tM ^pfjithrttm fitttitfacro'anSum. Touch- ing /i«/?>w$ruie we would aike what is the meaning ofiheftr words, Tionnifi ApofiUk* (Mtboritate traditum nCiighni criduur. Ifih y fay his meaning is, that fuch a thing cannot but m iheir writings b z de- livered , th?y doe pervert his meaning, as is apparent If thir,^wr. D9nM.'^*^7'C9nfMtuduitmtx /Ipofldiortm tud.mAi vtn^imew, fnnt wulta?ioiihvemu?ftt0UCrterut(frum, & nmev quid cuftodlu^'m? per u- nivtrfivt EccUfidtn , vbti nifi Mb ipfis rndtyi & cmme^isTA en- dnvtur. And we with ihcm to lliew from Scripture what >hcy f:y ts contained in it. If th'y yeeld, he doth mcaiie as he doth of u* writ- ten tradition, we hope ihcy will not jiifiifie hin) in this;,wc will take that liberty in him , whichhimfelfe doth m all others , and giveth us good leave to ufc in his ownc writings. Now count him in:h i to favour Traditions, as fome of the Papifts do not caufch i\y raaktf this rule the mcafuring cord , which doth take in the luitudc of ail traditions : y:t wee appeale to Aufiinti jucigement otherwhere, who thoug?^ by this rule hcc makcth a uiivi^rTall pradife not bcgunne by Councells, an argument of Divine and Apoftolicall au. thority, yet dealing ag^inft Donatifts, Lib. i. Don. cap. 7. hec faith, he will no: ufe this argument , becaufc it was but humane and MfxctTiMncytii videar btminis MriumtmU iUudpr9bMre,ex Evt;tidi$ fTffen ctrta duumtnta. Wee anfwer to the alTumption two things: Firft, it canotbce proved, thit umvcrfally there were fuch Diocefan bilhips as ours. For in the Apaftles times ic cannot be proved , that Chur- ches which they planted were divided into a mother Church, and fome Parochiall Churches. Now while they goyerncd together in common with Presbyters, and ihit butone congrrgatron , ihcy could notbchke our Dioceian b flumps. And ihoMuh ihcre bcc coubtfull relations, that Rome was cJivided under €vAn(iu$, yet this was not common through the Church. For Tr/^/ir* ltorytcft.fi- eth, that till the time o( Soytmih^ they did in fome puts continue together. Trip. hiU.lib. i.cap. 1 9. Secondly, thofe Bfli ps which hid no more but one Deacon to heipe them in their miniltery to- ward their Churchrs,ihiycouId not be D.occfan B fljop?. Burfuih iQ many parts the Apoltlcs pUuued,'\s /-f if fciiiMJ doth writifio. Hr«4©. ('44; Thitdly , fuch Countries aj did uCe to have bifnops in villages and little townes, could not have Diocefau b iliops. But fucli there were after the Apoftles times in Cyprus and Arabia, as$#;;p«i. in his 7. booke, cap. 10 tcftifietb. Ergo, Dioccfan bifhops were never fo u- ni^erfai'y received. Secondly, bjfli ops came to be common by a Counccl I, f.Mfh Amb/cfii PrgjpicUnte Comllio, Amb. m 4. ad Sph. or by a Daiee p. fiing through the woiid .* tato orbe decrttum f/?, faith /erow ad Bviig, w h.:ch is to bee conflclered not of one Oecumeniall Couiicell, butdiiicibutively, in thit (ingular Churches did in their Presbyteries decree, and that fojthatone for the moft part followed another in it. This ini€rprfi' tionli vc/ttAte. If ihe Djd, do except, th.u cuftoroc is here put fpr.<4' f9JliliCA(i hftiLutkn i let him put in one for the other, and fee how well it will become the fen fe. Ut Bijhipi tfncw tbty are greater then prii (is rathif by the Decree dj the Apo^le , then by the ttuth of Chrifti dU fp'/ition. Is it not nnc, that ths Apoftles fhould be brought in as op- pofireSjfacingChrift their Lord ? And this conclufion oUerotndoth make me th.nke that detretum e/2 imported no more, thenthcat it was tooke up in time ivn cullome through the world. Which is elegant- ly faid to be a decree , bccaufe cuftomc groweth in time to obcaine v'm ^tgWjthe force of a decree. But Amb ofe his place isp]ain,Pye^i«- €^te 6V'»a/io,he meancth not a counccll held by ApoUles. For he ma- keih ih:s provifion by counceli to have come in when now in Egypt & Alexandria, Presbyters according to the cuftome of that Church, were not found fit to fnccccd each other, but they chofe out of-their presbyteries men of beft defa-t. Now to Her^ilas and D4nyfim, there were afucccflion of Prvshycers in the Church of Alexandria, as £«- febim and leromhoih nffirmc. Wherefore briefly, feeing no fuch u- niverfall cuftome can be pr ved , all the godly tathers never confpi- red to abohlli Chr.fts inilitution. Secondly, could a cuftome have previiled with all of .hemj whom we have to Cow/2 , when the time fcrvcd for ic ThtfxtAmmm. Such as even at this day are-in the reformed Churches, fuch Mf^ nlftcrs are of Chrifts inftitution. But Minifters hiving fingulari- cie of preheminence and power above others, arc amongtt them, as the Superintendents in Germa»y. Ergo. Aniw. The alTumption is utterly denied. For Superintendents in Germany arc nothing like our B I (hops : they are of the fame degree with other Minifters, they areonely Prcfiients while the Synod lafteth j when it jsdiff.ltcd, their prerogative ceafeih ; they hive no prerogative over their fel- low Minifters ; tQ^ are fubjeft to the Presbyteries, Zepp. lib.i cap^ lo.pag.j 24. The Synodended, they rcturnc to the care of their par- ticular Church es, Thefeveitth Argumefft, If it were nccclTiJry that while the Apoftles livcd,there fliould bee fuch Minifters as had preheminence and majority empower above oikers, much more after their departure. But they thought it ne- ccflTjry, and th<^rcfore appointed riw»ffc> and Ti^w, and other A- poftolicke men furniihed with fuch power. Ergo, much more after their departure. ^»/>p; The aflumption isdcnyed, and formerly difprovcd : for they appointed no fuch Apoftolickc men with Epif- copall power,in which they ftiould be fucceeded. ThttiihthArgumnP. Such Minifters as were in the Apoftles times not contradified by them, were lawfull. For they would not hate held their peace , had theyknowne unlawfull Minifters to have crept into the Churches. But there were before J9hm death in many Churches a fucccffion ef Diocefan Bifti6ps, as inRame» LmuA^ CltmeMy at Jerafalcm Uwttt Simean^M Aitioch, EvoinUi at Alexandria, S.Mifi»l; ErgOjDiocefan Bilhaps be lawfull. ^^(rvsr* The afiumption 1$ denyed : for thefcBiftiopj were but ' Pcef- , ('47) Presbyters, Paflors ofonc congregation ordinarily meeting, gover- ning with common conUnt of their Presbyteries. It they were af- feding om biiliops majority, they were in Digtrofbtt fufficiinily gon- Tbtmtb Argument Thofc who have bcenccvcr held ofa higher order then Prejby. tcrv , the y arc before Presbyters in prehemincncc , and majority of rule. But bifliops have becnc held in a higher order by all antqui- ty. Ergo. The affumption ismanifcft : In the Counccllof Nice, Ancyra, Sardica, Antioch, Miniflers are diftinguiflied into ihrc c or- ders. Jgnttm y CUmens in his Epiftle to JimeSf DionjJ. Are§p^g. 4t Ca'efi. hiitrom, cap j. TtrtnU, cUfug§ 'w pirftctaiine , &deBtptif- mo. /^Mr/Ki doth often tefti fie it. No wonder, when the Scripture it felfe doth call one of ihefe a ftcp toanoiher , i Timoth. 3. i ». Cyprian. Lib. 4. Ep. 2. Counc. Ephcf. Cap. x, a. 6. Yea the Councell of Chalccdon counteth it facriledge, to reduce s Bifhop to the degree of a Presbyter. This Hieromt himfclfc confirmcth , faying : That from Matki to HeraUas and Dj- §H)lii0 3 the Presbyters did fee a bifliop over them in higher de- gree. Jnfmr, ♦ The Propofition is not true in regard of majority ofrule. For no Apoftle had fuch power over the meaneft Deacon in any of the Churches. But to the Aflumption we anfwer by diftindion. An order is reputed higlier, cither becaufc intrinfccally I'c hath a higher vertuc , or bccaufe it hath a higher degree of dig- nity and honour. Now wee deny that ever antiquity did take the bifliop above his Presbyters to be in a higher order tiien a Presbyter, further then a higher order doth figaifie an order of higher dignity and honor , to^i; or jSa'Bp.^ ia-}4tfytp$lloltu id tfi Epijapos & pit^oftrosy that is, erd'tnu ratUnt prtpofites miitaruM Excltfurum, as ulufilfi fpeakcth , clfeit fliould bee all one with the former ; when hce makcth the Presbyter as well as the Biflinpto bee ordained in the Apoftles. Finally, ihefc Fa- thers whotakc ihc7i. 10 have becne Apoftles, as wtU as the o- ther j cotild not imagine this pcrportion of diverfc or- ders let up in them. Secondly, if Cluift in thcfe inftitutcd ihofc other, it muft bee one of thefe waics. Firft , hee did make thefcnot onely Apoftles , butBiftiops, and fo the 71, not one- ly his mcflengers for the time, but Presbyters alfo. Or, fccondfy, elfeheedid ordaine thcfe as he didrame Manna , noting and pre- figuring as by a type, a further thing which hee would workc : vir« that he would inltitutc Bfliops and Presbyters for Teachers oidi- naryinhis Church ; liutbotn thcfe are j»rjri« fpckcR without ir.y foundation or reafon. For the £ift , wee h ive fiiewed that the A- poftles fOuWnot bee BiAops ordinarily j nor yet the callioj^of thefe feventy two (which was topoc throw^h all Cities Evjugc- liiing) ftand with Presbyters, Presbyters being given to Chuuhtt xcsT ir<4(,Kma¥^ and there ^cd. >^ciiher can ibe laitcr be true- for then J then Chrift ftiould have given a Sacrament , when he ordai■el^his Apoftles , and fern forth his 72. Secondly, the type or the (hidow h lefle then the thing typified, the fubftance of it. But the giving Apoftles WIS a greater thing then giving ordinary Paftors.. Ergo^ Thirdly , I fay, that Chrilt did never ordainc that any ftiould fuc- ceed the Apoftles,or the 7 a. in regard of their order. There is & doa- ble (occciTion/ing^adnmyOV in Caput, as the JLirifts diftingaifh. /« graium eundzm , as when one brother dying , another brother doth hicceed him in the inheritance. In CapHt^ as when one not of the fame degree and line doth come after another , as when a brother dying another doth inherit after him, not a brother, but a cofia to hi m. Thus the ApoGles have no fuccefl'ors fucceeding them in gU" fium J hut fuch onely as follow them, being of other degrees ^and in another line, as it were , in which fortevcry Paftor doth fucceed them. But then they are fiid to fucceed them , bccaufe they follow them , and after a fort refemble them , not becaafc they hold the phces which the Apoftles did properly, Apa^oioin q^^tntam efi d" poiliHu non fmiiiitur , legat§ quiteTJiu i[l Ug*tm non fitcceditur. Fourthly , thit the Presbyters doe as perfons of a diverfeorder fuc- ceed the Apoftles no leffe fully then any other, ^irft , they muft needs fucceed them who arc fpoken to in them , whofc duties arc laid downe in that which the Apoftlts received i n commandement* But the Presbyters were fpoken to both in the Kcyes , in the Sup- per, in the commandcment of teaching and baptiimg. Ergo, Pref- bytersjmuft needs fucceed the Apoftles. Secondly, thofe whom the Apoftles did inftitute in the Chuxhes , which they had planted for their further building them wp, they were their next fucceflorj. But the Apoftles did commend the Churches to the care of Presbyters who might build them up, whom tkey had now converted. Ergo, thefe were their fuccefl'ors moft proper and immediate. Thirdly, thefe towhornuow taking their farewells they rcfigned the Chur- ches , thefe were their fucccflbtirs. But this they did to Presbyters, Paul now never to fecEphefus more, AQ.zo, peter neere death, 1 PeJ. f . z. Ergo. Fourthly , if one Paftor or Minlftcr doe more properly refemble an Apoflle then another , it is becatsfe hee hath ibme power Apoftoliqae more fully conveyed to him then to ano- ther. But this was not done. Ergo. The affumption israanifeft : forfirft, their power of teaching and miniftring the Sacraments doth as fully and properly belong to the Presbyter as to any,UBleflc we count P. caching not neccflarily connexed to a Presbyters olRcc, but a bi(hops;or at leaft that a more rudimentall preaching belongs to a Prcs by rer, the more full and cxaft leaching being appropriate to the Bi (hop, which are both too abfurd. SecoiulLy, forgoverne- ment, the Apoftles did no more give the power of govcrnement to one (53) rrw?f»rf^«, A£li 20. and that that there were Bifli ops at Phidppi, True it ii, the Saipture doth not diftinguifli how maay of the one fort, nor how mary ot the o- ihcr, becaiifc no doabt for the number of the Goi;grcgat;ons, a fir\- gle Presbyter labouring in the Word,orcwo,the one eoadjutor to the other might be placed. Sccondlr, it is tcflified by Epiphanimi that ordinar ly all Cities but AUxandr'u had two. Thirdly, lertm on 1 Tim. J. doth fey, that now indeed there m:.y be but one Bifliop, meaning Canonically, making a difference twixt the prefent time and time Apoftojique. Fourthly, Aufm did not know it was un- lawfuU: Ye3,hedidoneIy in regarj of the decree of Nice^ account it fo,£^. 1 10. neither did Church or people ever except againll the contrary,but as a point againft Canon,which m ghc in fome cafes be difpenfcd with, as the ftory cfT^arci^us^ and Altxtndir^ aijd Liberies, and Fa'ix did more then manifcft. For though the people of Rome cried out, one God,one Chrift,onc B:lhop,yct ihcy yecldcd at their Emperours fuite, whereas had it becne a thing they had all thcwjghc to have Ween agiinft Chnftsinftitution, thty would not havcd6ne. VidiStT^,lib.^.ctp,i^. Fjft]y,ffrflWipcerelcfle power, is nothing but Corful-like prefidcncc above othersjfor this he plea^d for, writing againfti»vi«itf>i,/ifr.i. amongft the Apoftles themfe^Bjihatrchifmc might be avoided. Wherefore we yccld the condufion in this fenfe, that the Bi(hop;«refc»»f«»fl,hath a (ingulaniy of prcheminence be- fore others, as by Eccltfialiicall law there might be but one onely Archbjflaop. 15 Ariiimtftt. Tkofe who had peercleffe power above othert in ordination ani jurifdiftion, thty were fuch as hid preheminencc and majority of rule over others. But the former is due to Biihops. U dcfle thisfin- gularity of power were yeeldcd, there would be 3$ many fchifmes asPfiefts. Erg*. The aflfumption proved, riw/fwbo fc^i/f a^ow/w p$wtrif§/dtMMiit>i»boweihert, thty are in fnhtwuntnce Mnd fowtrlH' fore§ibefS. But Bifhopibive^ £r^^, iheyarein, &c. The aflumptjon proved. That which was not in the Presbyters of Eft* /w and Crete before limothj and Tifw were fent, but in the Apoftles, and af- ter in riwoli*; and Tif«i and their fuccelfoms, that is a peculiar of Bifliops. But ordination was not in the Presbyters, &c. Ergo. The aflumption proved. That which ihcfc were fcni 10 dec, Presbyters had not power to doe. It was therefore in them, and fuih as fuc- cstded th<.m, the Bifliops of EphcfHS and C:cre. Agiinc, the Scripture*;, Councels, F-ithers , fpcake c f the ordtynor as one. Ergo, It was ilie peculiar r^ghc of the B:lliop , and tht Bi- fliop onely. He onely by Canon was panilhiisle for irregula- rity in ordination. Atul Epipbgniui mikcth this the proptr power of a Biflio)^ to beget fjihcrf by grJinatioB , as ihe^ I i Prcf- (56) Presbyters Joth fonncs by baptifme. And Jerem doth except ordt- watjon as ihe bithops peculiar , whcrem he is mod unegu-ll to khem. Anfwtr. I anfwerthepropofitionof the fiift fyllog-fone by diftinftion, Thofc who h iMz pcerekflc power in regard of the fimple right to oraeme: vix. in regard of txcrcifing the aft, and fole performing ihc rite of It , thole who have a right to thcfe things ©riginally from Cknft and his Apoftles, which no others hive, th^y arc .ibovc' others in degree. Againc,pecrelc{l'c power m a biih ip ever Pref- byters m'y be faid in comparifon to them diftributively or collc- ftivcly coniidcred. He th .i hath pcercleflc power given him , which no one of the ether hath , is not prcfauly of a greater degree , nor hath not majority of rule amongft others , as a Conful in the Scaate t but if be have a pecrcLffc power, fucb ss they all colledivcly confidered, can»oc controulc , then the Piopolittonis true J but the Ail'umption will then be found to halt. To the pr^)fife of the afl'umption. The Propeficion is trie of power in ord^io the thing 11 fclfc, not to miniftring the rite, and executing thea^, which m^y berefervcd for honour fake to one, by chofe who otherwUe have eqaall power with him. That b (hops have this power in order, the thing itlelfe agreeing to them,^/^i»- prlhffii'ti, not by commiffion from others, we deny. The a^'umpti- on is wholly denyeA, As for the proofe of it. Firft^ we that deny that EvangelilU hid not power toordcme, as well :ii Apoftics. Se- condly^ that Presbyters had not this povxerin a Ch.ircL planted as w<:llasihey. Every one as fellow fcrvanrs might coufpire inihe fame ordiBation, The Ev^ngt lifts power did Hot derogate from the Appftles, the Presbyters from neither of them. But power of im- pofing hands folitarily, whereas y t Churches were not coniiftu- ted , this may happily be appropri ued to the Apoflles and E? ar>- gelifts, whofc office it wis to labour in creAing the frame of Churches, Secondly, the afiumption is falfe ; in denying thit it was in the power of Presbyters to lay on hands, contrary to that in Jmnby ; Tht gran g: vin rhee b) Ujing 9n of tlx hands of tkt Prnbjiery. Thirdly, tt is falfe, in p-cfuppofing others then Presbyters to have beene Tiimtkj and Titu& their fucccflburs. To the proofe of this af- fumprion. Th: propolition is not true ; For it might be convenient that the fame th ng (hould be done by Evangelifts, and by ordinary Paftors, each concurring in iheir fcverall orders to the fame fcr- vice of Chrift the Lord. Secondly, I anfwer to the aflumpcion. Thu Presbyters were to be placed in Charches framed where rhcre were Presbyters, or where there were ai yes none. In the firft (J7) firft Churches , they arc bid orJainc, if any need ftirthei, but /ulv« ji4rtEai€^€f not Without the concurrence of others. In thclactcr Churches which were to be conftituted, they may be conceiveci as tvangelifts, with fole power otfcttmg Prcibycers fxth by ihisnit of impoficion of hands. We hold Apoftles inigh: doe it, Evange- lifts might, aiid the Presbycciiesalfo. Y<;a, Prcstyrcrs m Aicxu\~ dria when now their firft Presbyter W3S dtccaftd, did ordair-e the following : For the Canon of ihrec bifliops, ar.d Metr^pohtans, added b;r the Niccnc C«unccU,wasnot knownc y^t. Ntverthcltfle it grew timely to be retrained to biih-^ps, the pcrtcrmitvg I mejnc oi the outward rite and ligne j but oncly by Canon, a> Coifi^nation wasalfo, for which there if .is ancient tuLtimomes as th's,thitic was appropriate to the Bifh, VVe grant therefore that antiqjity doth fomecimc (jpfake of the ordainer as one. In the Churches of Atfrica one did not lay on hands, yet mfome other Churches the rite was by oneadminiflrcd.Andit isio be noted byihe w.^y,thaiHf iTrlTKoT^^ in feme Canone i« not oppcfeJ to the Coordammg of Prrsbyters, but to the number of Ttri#, or many biliiops re rary graces, A As 8. 5econdly,were it a facramentjit fho.ild conferee the grace of cfEce, as well as grare fandifyir^gthe peifon to ufe it hol.Iy. But we fee that this it couW not do As tor p£ul%nd Bmmbas the Church did fcpirate them at the command of God, and by hands on them, and pray for them, but they were alrtaJy before shrt,rmmeiiiately cbofcnby God to iho grace cf their ofBce. It could be Rothiug then bu a gcfturc Kcompamcd wub prayer, ferkmg grace in their behalfe. For the facramentall colhting of grace fan- difying all calling?, we have in thcfe two facramcnts of Chrifis in- ftuution. Thirdly, there are many kindes of impofition of hands in the old and new Teftament, yet cannot it be provedjthat it is ariy where a proper facrament. It is then a rite, a gefture, a ceremony, {ignifyn gathingorpcrfonfeparate, prefemedto God, prayed for to God. Thus Antiquity did thinke of it, as a gcfture of one, by pr3)'^r to God, kekii g abltflingon every one chofen to this or that place of niiniilery. So Ecclefiiltically it was ufed in baptifing, in confccrating, in reconciling penitentSvas well as ordaining ; but ne- ver granted a* a facrament in thole other cafes by grant of all. It is thenarite orgeftareofone, praying Tirtui, de b»pt. flieweth this f?ying, MA71HS impomtur per benediCthtumtdvHins & invtUm ^'iri- turn (a'fjdum. lerom alfo c$ntra Lucifcranos, lipn almusy bine efft Ecclt- (ig Cbtifuetudirem at Spifctpui mannm imp»fifurui excurrtt ad invi* catmitm JpirUM fan^i. Ambr, dlhops impalition was properly Cenletrtuive and facramen- tall, xhiisDtp utttive onc[y. AnfvHr. Befidcs that thif^is fpo- ken Without foundation, how abfurd is it, that the very fclfc- f-ime facramentall rite flieuld be a facrament in one miniftcrs hmd, and Bofacrame/it performed by another ; Yea, when the Bifhop doth it to a Presbyter, or Deacon, then a faaamentj vvhtn to a Subdeacon, and other inferiourofficas, then oone^ let any judge. Aufiin did account no other of impofition of hands, ihena prayer over a man, accompanied with that gefture. Secondly, they doe not thinke that the B fliop ordaineth by divine right, it being excepted to him as a miniflcr of higher facramentall power : but that he onely doth ordaine quoad fi^num & fUum extrin- fccum, by the Churches commiffion, though the right of ordaining be in all the Piesbytery alfo. As m a Colledge the focicty^avc right to choofe a fellow, and to ordaine him alfo, though the maimer doth alone lay on ha [ids, and give admiflion. Thviilertm fpeakcth of confirmation, that it was referred to the Bifhop for honour fake, rather (59) rather then any ncccflity of Gods law. Wlience by analogic and proportion, it followeth they thmke not ordination, or iholc other FpjicopiJI royalties to hive beene rtfcrved to him by divine righ:. Befidc^ there are more ancient proofcs for Cmonicili appropruciag f oi.firmation, then f^r this imp jfitioa of hands. CornUuA fpeakeih thus of2^ci>ifla, he wnnicdth)fc things whicU he fh ^uU have h^d after Baptifnae , according to the Canon, ihc fealing of our Lord from a Bifhop, Eufib. Lib 6. cap.i). So Cypmn to !ul. Ncver- ihelefie, lertm judgeih this alio to h.ivc becne yeelded ihem for ho- nourfake. And we know that in iht Bdhops abfence , Presbyrcrs through the Eaft didCo^^fignifCi through Grecia, ilirough Arme- nia. Neither would Gjfgo^ the grcac h.we allowed Presbyters m the Greeke Churches to hjvecofihrmed, had he judgr-d u oilur- wife then Canonically to belong co the bi{li)p$. Ihit therefore which is not properly a fjcnmcntall adion , and that which is not appropriate to a bjfhop further then Presbyters hive comnitted Jt to him, that cannot make him in higher degree of minillcry the/i Presbyters are. Thirdly, in reconciling penitents-, the Presbyters did it in cife ot the bi{hops abfence : as is to be gathered from the third Councell of Carthage, j i. And who thmkes bleflino fo appropriate to a bi- fliop, that Presbyters may not folemnly bleffe in the name of the Lotd« though antiquity rcferved (his to hin, Thefe therefore were kept to him, not as afts exceeding the Presbyters power of order,but for the fuppofed honour of him and the Church, For as.-^w- krofe faitk, Vt tmnes Cidem ptffunt vrv4aionAU^& vulgar U nsvUi/q^ vide- fiticr. It pleafeih arftiquity therefore to fee up one who flioulu qitond txtrcmum doc many things alone, not becaufe that Presbyters could nor,but it focmcd in ihcir eyes more to the honor of the Cnucch,iu u fbme one (heuld be intercfl'ed in them. VomrhXy yAmalMifm\n a certaine booke offacred order$,doth-co!j- futc the dodrine of an uncertain author,who taught th u oiic bilhop oncly was to lay hands on a Deacon r bccaufc he was confeintcd not to Priefthoodjbutto miniOery and (txiict.7{unc{mdfCi\^tiriibeUi d0CU9r& fMM^litr^pofiitii quifoluirunr glutei mmuA (u^rDnconQi /jfMv- io icn/icrtbiyitur^&propttie* foliu EpifcoftumarM ftMi [u^irDinoH-4m^ atfifUuipoffiCpyecMrivirtutemgrttmumqittmp'urti ^{r (idli p'tia'tj^n tur» Op imufiefl b'ttot ducti feqah 7«i itruvtrunt ufq, id pkmm vuImi- am. Whence it is plaine,he did know no further thing m iropofitiou then piayer,which the more impofed.is the more forcible. The Jour teintb .^rz,umait . Thofe who had jurifdiftion over Presbyters jflifting them, and Presbyters affixed to Cures, they had afupcriority of power cvcrp- ibci: miniilers. But bifl)op$ had lo. Ergo, ?cc The (60) Tkc Affumption is manifeft. JgMtm defcribeth thc^lilhop from this, that he Ihould be ihe gcv:rnour of the Pfcsbycery and whole Church op.(?A>4tv af 5*^^. And uyom and Aujlin on the 44. Pfalnlc, call them ihe Princes of ihe Church, by whom (he ^is goTcrned. The affumpcton is proved pitticularly. Thofc who had dircftive power above others, and corredivc, thty had mjjoriry of rule. But B {hops had. Ergo. The aflumption proved. Firft, for diredivc po*ver, the Presbyters were to doe nathing without them. lgn%, li Mig. ad. Smy, They might not minifter ine Cicrament of the fup- pcr but under ihe B (hop, C^fm. Sptfl. i.ad Jtcch.ttrt.Ub. At haptXtn, Apofi. 3 8, Con, Ca^mg. 4.58. Con. iur, 2. Can. 9. Co». ^tn, 1 6, Cone, Secondly, thnt they had cerredive power,it is provcd,^^W.2 & j. The Angel oi Bpbefus did not fufter falte Apoftlci, and is commen- ded for it, the Angelof Tfcidfiriiis reproved for fufter ing the like* Therefore they had povcr over other minifters.Cypr.lib. j.Epift.^. t«;IiethKf^«ha»hc had power to hare cenfured his Deacon. Itrom, Mdvetfud f^igUantiitm, marvelleththat thcBilliop where f^tptavtm . was, did not breake the uaprofitable vcflTcU. Ep'pbemm faith Bi- ihop> governed the Presbyters themfelveg, they rt\e people. The Presbyters affixed to places and Churches, were fubie^ tothejBi- ihop-., fcr when they were vacant, the biftiop did fupply them. A- gaiac, the Presbyters hid their power from him,aiid therefore vvctc isnder him, and they i*erc fubjeftto the ccnfarc of the biihop. Thofe of his Cletgie were under him j for he might promote them, they might not goe from one Dioccffc to another witfcont him, nor travell to the citie, but by his leave. The bifhop was theic judge, aad might excommnnicaie them,Cypr.li,x.Epift j.Concil. Carth.4« (;ap.59.Conc.Chal.C2p.9.conc.Nicc.cap.4,conc.Ant.cap.4.ibid. cap. ^. cap.i 2. Cart.2.c3p.7, cone Afric.cap.ip.concEpheV.cap.j. cone. Chaf.cap.2j. The examples o^Aiex^mdir and Cbrrfificme prove this. All Presbyters were counted «

iy from them againc by the bifhops : that it was ftinted and limited fometimcs as to the cpe- ning of the Lords Praicr , the Creed and ten CommanJemcnts : as it isplaine to him ih it is any thing converfant in the ancieHt, Se- condly, let us account item as Mmiilcrs of .he word given by God to h s Church:then I fay,they could not have any dJr*:Ction,but fuch as the Apoflles had amoi;glt Evangclift^ : and this p- wer is g ven to the b;fhops oncly I y canon fwerving from the firll ordinance of Chnft : for it makeih a Minifter of the woi d becrme as a cy^^hcr, without powerof lr$con(ecration,as /erowfpcakethjbcingfointtr- prcted by fii^w himfclfe. Theledcciees wtie nsjullifijble iS th .t which forbiddcih any to baptilc, who hath not 'gotten chrifme from the bifliop^*». Ctfr/h.4.Ctf^.;{6. unlcflethe phrafesdoe notcontly a precedence of order in the b ihop above Presbyters , requiring pre- tence and .Tircnr,a£ of a fellow and chiefe mcmber,not oihcrwifc. To ihe proof of thr; fcconi'. p-irc ot ihc formtr aflumpiionji.wc de- ny ihis majority cf corrcA.vc power to hive bcenc in the Apoftles thcrr-fclves'.ihtyhad onljra miniftry executive jnflidii eihjt ivhich - - ^ K ^ Chr.rts Chtift^ correlative powies I have to pirfwadet^n bmbrtn to pxtUmc^So againe, / bwdty pufi^idt tbe psoplejea even »mg it from tbem,tbat fuch fmld he received. Neither did he take upon him toord.iine Presby.ers alone ; but propouqdedjraidercqueft for them, confcffing, thit fur- ther then God did extraordinarily prevent both hiro and them, they^ had the right of fuffrage, nolcfle then himltlf^r, as by thefe epiftles m.Ty .ippeare,/ii.i.r/ji/^.20. llb.z»ep'ifl.$'iib./^Apift,io. Urem (though grandilcqucftc fometimesj did never thinke a Biihop could lawfully without nis Presbyteries concurrence, excommunicate. If he were as Mftiy yet he would have- thefe as the feventy. Againe, Itrom Joth write cxprcfly of all in gencrall, Et net femtum hnbtmm , (wum Preibfterethmy fins quorum confilio nihil Mgi k qurqusm ti- uti (tut Ro'mni babucrunt ftnatam cujin conftlio ciih^m genbintur, SftpbAnm faith. Bifliops governed Presbyters : but it doth not fol- low, that therefore they did it alone without concurrence of their com Presbyters.. As for the fixed Presbyters, the proofes are more ui.r.iBrient. The Bifhopfupplyed them, therefore they were under him. For Colleges fupply Churches, yet have they no jurifd dion over them. Secondly, the canons did provide m pUbi invito Pmby' ter nbrruitrttur, Th5rdly,we ci-linguilh majority of rule from fome }urifdidion . We grant the B:ihop had fuch a jurifdidion as conccr- iiina the Church, fo farre as it was in fociety withothers, fuch as an Arch-bifliophaih over a Province: but this did Hand with the Re - dors power of jurifdiftion within his owneChurch. Fourth lyjthough"' they hid power by his minifteriall interpofition , yet this doth not prove them dependant on him. For bifhops hive their power from Qihers ordaining them, to whom notwiihftanding they arc not fui>w (»0 Jfft in tlieir CKufchcii Infafcof dclinqiiency tKey were fubjed f3 the bifhop with the Presbytery, yetfo ihit they could not be pro- cccHed againft till confcntof many other bjlhops did ratific the tentencc. Thus inCjprians judgement ; bifTiops themfelvci delin- quentjtamifig-woIyfiSj^as StmofattfrttiiUbermyScc. are fybjed to their churches and Presbyteriej, to be depofed and rclinquiOicd by ihem. As for thofe that were pare of his clerks, it is true, th^ y were m grea- ter meafurefubjeft to him,abfolutcly m a manner for their diied- on: but for his corredive power he could no: without confent of hij Presb)'ters and fellow bifhops.do any thing. The bifiiop indeed rs oncly named many times : but it is a common Synecdoche, familiar to the Fathers, who put the primary member of the chunh for the »f prelentative church, as Aufiini faith, PUrura prt^pter Apsfio'atui fimptkitMtem figtfam Eulfpt g'jjiije. See concil. Sardicen. cap. 17. conc.Carth 4.cap.2.^.Tol.4 cap.4.Socr.lib, i.g.Soz.lib.i.cap 14, As for fuch examples as Alex^ndtrSy it is ftrange that any will brin^ ir, when he did it not without a Synod of many bifhops, yea Without his Clergie, as fitting in judgement with him. Cbryjffiofucs iid is not to be juftified : for it was altogether irregular, favouring of the impetuous nature to which he was inclined, though in regatd of his end, and unworihincffe of his Presbyters, it may be cxcufed, yet it is not to be imitated. As for thofe headiefle Clerkes,it m ke h no- thingforthc Biftiops majority of rule over all Churches and Pref- byters in them. Forfirft, it feemeth to be fpokenof thofe thac lived under the conduft of the BilTnp, a ccllegiat lif<; together, £ode i reft^orlo & dormitcri utcbanmr, c> Ctnoyiue v'lvctiui ab Ep'ifopo in- fifHtbn,tur. Now when all fuch Clerkcs did live then as numbers of a Collcdgc under a mafter, it is no wonder if th:y be called head- iefle, who did belong to no Bifliop. Secondly, fay it were alrke of all Presbyters, which will never be proved (for ill Presby crs in the Dioceflc were not belonging to the Bifliops Q\. rkcsj fay it were, yet will it not followj'hat thofe who were under fome, were fubject to his authority of rule. For there is a head in regard of prehviency of ordf r, as well as of power. Biihops were to finJc out by Canon the chiefe b'ftiop of their Province, and to affociatc thrmfclvjs with him. So bifliops doc now live ranf,ed under their Archbiiliopjas heads. Priefts therefore ns well as Clcrkes, di ' live under fome )u- rifdiftion of the bifliops ; but fuch ?s did permit them coercive power in their o.vne Churches, fuch as made the bifliop a head in rt^ard of dignity, andfiotof any power, whereby he might fw y .til at hisplcafure. Thirdly, if the bifliops degenerate to challenge Monarchy or tyranny, it ij better to be without fuch heads thenUo have them : as we arc more happy in being withJrawen trom the headflvpof ihe bifliop of Rome, then if he ftill were head over us, K z To C^4) To the laft irfinuation profingihit bifhops had the govcrmmenrof ihofe Chui'chcs which I'rcsbyccrs hadjbccawfc neiiheir Presbyters a- lonc had it, nor with sflillencs.I anfwerjthey had as well the powet of govcrnmcnt,a« of teachiag ; and though ihty had not fuch afli- ftams as are the presbyters of a cathedral church,yct they might have fome,:\s a deacon,or other peifonfufficicnt in fuch fmall Churches. When the Apoftles planted a bifliop and D2acon onely , how did this bifhop excommunicate ? When the faihersof Africa did give a biftiop untothofc now multiplied, vrhohidenjoysd bucaPrcsby- ter,what afliftanis did they give him ? what afliltants had the Cbort* pifcopt,vfh.o yet had government of their Churches? The fifietftth Argurmnt, * That which the orthodoxe churches ever condemned as herefie^ the contrary of that is truth. But in Avrltu they have condemned the denial! of fuperiority in one Minifter above oihsrsJErgo^he contra- ry is truth. Anfvfier, To the propoGtion, we deny that it muft needs be prcfent'y t^oe, the contray whereof is generally cotidemncd for herefie. As the re- prefentativecatholicke Church may propound an error, foflie m-jy condemne a particular truth, and yet rcmaine a catholicke church. To the alTumption wee deny that the Church condemned in Amm every denyall of fuperiority, but thatoaely which Amm ruane intOo Now his opinion I t^kc to have been this. i. He did with lerom de- ny fuperiority of any kindcas due by Chrifts ordinance : for thiso- pinion was never counted herefie, It was/^r#2«fplainely. z.Hcc did not deny the faft,th:it bifViops were fuperiour in their adiuall admi- flration; he could not be fo mnd. If he had all that a bifhop had ac- tually , how could h Dcniall of fuperiority Juclr as ccnfifteth in a further power of order then a Presbyter hith, and in a kingly monarch icall majjnty of rule, this denyall is not here condemned : for all the fathers may be brou£^hc as witneffes agiinfl this fuperiorty of the Church. VVh it then was condemned in him ? A dcniall of all fuperiority in one mr- nifler before another, though it were hut of honor and dignity : sdJ fccondly, the der ying cf this in fchifmaticall manner, fo as to for- Dke (OTimunion with the Church wherein it is. For in thefe words, uviiv\ivou S)di(^(j^aTi^:-v k-siiTKOTicv 7V TTfio-BvTifn, it ftemcth ' unfiv fliould bee read fx/j/nj', that there ought to be none.How- (oever hsc is to bee conceived as appofing praftically the difference of honour & dignity which was in the Church by Ecclefiafticall in- iiitution. What is this to us ? Dcniall of fuperiority in regard of ho- nor & dig:iuy, joyned with fchifme, was condemned ! Ergo, denial! offuperiority inpower of order andkingly majority of rule, kee- nin« the^ bond of love was condemned, ' " The The aflVimption therefore if it aflume not of th»$ laft denian,thcn can it not conclude againft us.Ergo,it is a truth thit feme Mmiftcrs may be above oiherfome,inorder,honor,and dignity. But -M.y un- derftand not by order fuch an order onelyasis d'itindl, bccnufe fome degree of dignity is appropriate to it , which is not to othrr. Though this argument therefore touch us not, yet to fpcake a Iitrle further about It, this opinion of ^fri»j is not to be handled too fe- vertly : neither our authors, D. Whitdl^inis , D. Rc^nvtd^y^ Dintttis^ to be blamed, who doe in fome fort excufc him. For bifliops were growne fuch that many good perfons were oficnded at them, as the AudUni. Yea, ic was fo ordinary, that Jet»m difhnguifheth fchifme from hcrefie , becaufcihe oncconteined affcrtions agairdt the fiirh , the other ferved from the Church by rcafon of dil- fenting from Bifhops. See him on Tir.g.io. Neither is it plain that htvi^i2t\AvudiX\. Epipbamm reportethit, but no other, thougli writing of this fubjcd and ftory of thefe times. Sure n is, Eufit- thm was a ftrong Arian, yi\\om A mm didoppofe. Nciiher is it ftrange tobifhopsto faftenonthofe which diflenc from them in this point of their freeholdjany ihing whereof there is but ungroun- ded fufpicion. Are not we traduced as Donatifts, Ar.abaptiils, Pu- ritanes? As for this opinion. th ythoughtitratherfchifmaticall^ihca beretic3ll:& thcrfore bippily called it hercfiejbecaufe it included cr- rour in their undeiftanding, which wiihfchifmaticall pertmacy wjs made hercfie. Neither is it like that Epiphawui doihcthrrwife count it hcrcfic, nor /?«/?/» following him. For thou.h Au\iint was aged, yahe was fo humble, that hce faith , Augu^wm ftntx h pucra mndumanmculopantusfumtdocerl Neither was ic prejudice to hs worth for to follow inen more ancient then himfelfc, who in like- lihood fhould know this m :ttcr plfo better. As for his caliiroit lierefie, it is c«rtainc he would not have this ia rigour (hciDcd. F. r he doth proteft (m his preface uato that bookc of hercfie) i!iat nunc to his thought, can in a regular definition comprehend whu that it which mnkcth this or that to be hercfie. Though :h reforc be doubted not of this, thrt /fcfWi wasin errcur, fuch as Citho- lickes {liouid decline : yet it doth not argue that hee thought t!iis errour in rigour and former propriety, tohave beeneherefie. Thus much for ihvs laft Argument^ On ihccontr.iiy fide 1 propound thcfe Argument: followir g to be fenotfly confidcred. Argument, i. Thofc whom the Apoftlcs placed as ch-iefe, in their firrt confl i- tuting of Churches, and left as their fuccc flours in their hft farc- wcls which rhcy give tothe Churchrs , they hid none fipciiour to ibem in the Ch Jrchcs, Biu they firU placed Pres' y^e s , fiedm?» K 3 w:/h (66) with the Word ind g^verniwg : and to thofc in theif laft dcpartrftgs they commendtd ihe Churches. Ergo. The aflumption is denied :: they did not place ihem , as the chicfe ordinary Paftors in ihofc churches , but placed them to teach and govcrne, in fore inttrm ; with a reference of fubordination to a more eminent Paftor, which when now they were growen to a juft multitude fliould be given to them. The Apoftkshadall power of order and jurifdittion : they %\yc to Presbyters power of order, power to teach, rainifter fa- cramc.us, and fo gadier together a great number of thofe who were yet to be converted 5 but kep: ihe coercive power m their owne hands, meaning, when now by the Presbyters labour, the churcheg vvere growne to a greater muhitude , meaning (* I fay) then to fee over them fome more eminent Paftors, Apoftolicall raen,to whom ihey would conimit the power of government, that fo they might rule over both the Presbyters and their Churches ; and to thefe with their fucccllours, not to the Presbyters, were the churches recom* mcndeJ. All which is an audacious fidion, without any w.irrant of Scripture, orfhew of^ood reafon. For it isconfefled thatPrcf- byters were placed at the tirft conftitution, as the Paftors and tea^ chersof the Churches, Now if the Apoftles had done this with reference to a further andmore eminent Paftor and Govcrnour,thcy would have intimated fome where this their intention: but this they doe not ; yea, the contrary purpofc is by them declared. For Peier fo biddeth his Presbyters feed their flocks, as that he doth infinuatc ihcm fubjeft to no other but Chrift , the Arch (hepheard of them all. Agame, the Apoftles could not make the Presbyters Paftors without power of government. There may be gcyernoyrs without paftorall power 5 but nor a Paftor without power of governing. Foe t'lepowerof the Pf«/«OTjOr fhepheards ftaffe, doth intrinfecaliy fol- lov/ the Paftoralloftice. What likelihood is there, that thofe who were fetas parents to beget children , ftiould n«t betrufted with power of the rod wherewith children now begotten are to be nur- tired and kepti Kiwebeftemirg them ^ Ifitbefaid, everyone fie for the office of a Teacher, was net fit for a Govcrnour : I anfwer, be that is fit to be a Pjflor teaching and governing in foro iaterncis much more fit to be a Governour externally : he who is fie for the greater, is fit for the Icfll-r. It was a greater and more Apoftolicall worke to labour converfion, and brmg the churches a handful! in tl e plantir.g (3s (ome thinke) to become numberfome in people, then it is to governc thera being converted. And iris abfurd to thinke thatthefe who were fit to gather a church, and bring it to fulnefle from fmall beginnings, ftiould not be fit to governe it, butftandin need to have ft m: one fent, who inight rule them and the chur- ches they had coUefted. Sccond'y, thefe Presbyters were (as them- fclves (^7) (tlver coDfcfle) qualified with the extraordinary gift? cf rhe ho- \y Ghoft, and chofen by fpeciall defignation : fo that to impure in- fi.fficiency unto ihem, is har(h, and injurious to Gcd, as well as to man. Finaily,by the twenty of ihe Aftt,and the firft Epiftlc of Parr, cha.j.it isplame,thtydoein theirlait farewcU, commit ths Chur- ches unto the Presbytcrs,notfuggefting any tiling of a further Pi- ftor to be fenf,wh© would fupply their roomcsjwhich yet they wouM not have fcrgotten,being a thing of fo ^rca: confolation, had it been intended by ihem. Argument i. Thcfc who have the name and office of Bflnpscommon to them, thty have no fupcriour Palters over them: but the Presbyters Pa- ftorallhave that name and office attribute J to them. For firft they arcfaidto govcrnein general). Secondlyjtherc is nothing found be- longing to the power of ihckcycs in faro extmio, but the Scripture doth afcnbe it to them, power of fulFrage in counccll. ABi i j. pow- er of excommunication, which is manifeft to have beene in the churches of Corinth when it had no bifliop j power of ordination, X riw. 4. Ifanyfsy, that this their power was but bycommiffion inthem, and that they were fubordinate CO the Apoftles in exercile oi It, being to reteine it onely untill fuch time as more eminent Pi- ftors Ihould be given : I anfwer, all this is Cptkcn fratii, withcuc any foundation,and therefore no more eafily vouched then rejeded: The Presbyters fo had this power, that they did commie it to the bifhops,as welhallfhcw after: and therefore it muft have beene in them, not by extraordinary comnnflion, but by ordinary office. Se- condly, ihcy were fubjeft in exercife to none buc Chrili and the ho- ly Ghoft* who onely had out of authority trulkd them with it. If theApoftles and they didconcurre m doing one and the fj'?je thing, ihey did it as infcnour to the Apolllcs, and fervants of a lower or- der, not with any fubjedioi co them, as heads of derivation, fcr- vingChrift their onely Lord, no Itfle immediately then the Apo- ftles ikemfclvss. That which is found in all other orders ©f MiniHers inftituted by Chrift, maybe prcfumedLkcwifc in the order of Paftors and De- hors : but ;n all other orJcr?, there were none that had (Angulari- ty of prchemincncc and majority of power above other : NoA- poftle. Prophet, Evangelift had this rule one over another. If the propofitioii be denied, upon fuppofill of a diflerent rea- fon , becaufc that though patJty in a few excraorduiary Mt- niftcrs might be admitted wuhaut d:forifer, yet in a multi- tude of crJinary Mmiftcis, it could not but breed f».hifmc and (OfifuGon^and therefore as the ucdri of Pnciihood was dwidcd into a high (69) « high Pilcft, and other fecondary ones, fo U it fit that the Presby- ters of the new Tcftament fhould be devidcd , fomc being in tha firft , and foinc in ihe fecond ranke. To this I anfwcr, the parity is the more dangerous > by how much the places are fupereminenr. Secondly, though Paflors fhould be equal), yet ihis would not bring parity into the Miniflns of the Church, fome wheieof fliouldbee in degree inferioar to other , the governing Elders to the Paftorj, and the Deacons to them. Thirdly, if every Church being an Ec- clefiafticall body, (hould have governours every way cquall , there were no fcareof confufion , feeing Ariftocracy , efpecially where God ordainethit, is a foimeof gouernment fufficienttoprefcrvc order, -fiut every Church might then doe whit ever it would with- in it felfe. Not fo neither 5 for it is fubjed to the cenfure of other Churches O/nodically aflVmblcd, and to the civill MJgilirate, who in cafe of delinquency, hath dir^tlive and correi^ive power over it. Parity doth not fo much indanger the Church by fchifme, as impa- rity doih by tyranny fubjed it. As for the diftindion of Prieft$,wec -g^rant it i biit as man could not have made that diftidion , had noc God ordained it in time of the old Teftamenr, no more can vvc un- der the new. Howbeit, tbstdifiindionof Priefts did bringinno fuch diftercnce in order and majority cf rule , as our Bifliops now - challenge. Argument 4, If fome be infcriour unto oiherfome in degree of power , it muft be in regard of their power to teach, or their power to govern, or in the application of this power to their perfons, or in regard of the pccpie whom they teach and governe , or finally in regard the cx- crcife of their power is at the diredion of another. But uo Pafioc or Teacher dependeth on an other but Chnilfor anyof thefc. Ergo. The propofition ftandeth on a fufficient enumeration : the alTumption may be proved in the fevcrall parts of it. The former branch is thus cleared. Firft,the power we have, is the fame efl'en- ■ tiallywiih theirs i yea, cveiywzy the fame. Secondly, weehave It asimediately froinChvift asthcy. I fhew them boih thus : The p«'.wcrof order is the power which inableth us to preach and deli- verthe whole counfell of God , and to minifter all Sacraments fealing Gods covenant. Now unlefle we will with the Papifts^fay that preaching is no neceflaiy t«»i to the Presbyters office , or tjhathis power is arudimentall limited power, as to open the creed, Lords puoitr, r^nd commandemcnts oreiy , or that be hath not the full power facra nentall , there being cthcrfacraments of ordina- tion and conhrm uion which wee may not mmifter , all which arc gro'ie , wee muO yc eld their powcrof order to be the fame. Yea, were ihcfe faaaments properly, they arc both grounded in the power (69) power >ft'e$tytct h^J^V* ^-^p^^io^ in Jos tbit in remmbrDjee^f mez cpnhrm«jon in powei* to'bjprize. The p.«wtr being the Ume it is Hop^.ily ib, oiie imrricdiately, and id ihe other by derivation frOm!iim. >^othing lefe. All grant iha: thrift doth wiaiediateiy ;g/v^ir,cyen as.the ^m..r(l|^rjicetf every Sacumciucomnaeth jpnn- ci^^Tly from'lijm'. Trve ,Chprcti,. did ft'..gvc ihisfowcr, mighc inslcp the C^cfarafe.nt'injprf aching, v/hich oik; do.U^uordtri no fi- (rramcnt^ no pieiching. |hc^t pe doiH aot (i£ wetolluw thccom- trtpri tcnci.t) chailcngeCojiiHch asio.^ive ths power of order to airv b;llicp or pnell wha.roever. If you Ay, the Picsliycer ts ordjiu^ ttiilit'it froirf rijfi: groands. t^i it wiftbeXii^thre Pf^b>K«Hd<(*-' IVtiSiirin jiririfdj^iOii, and caoliave none but vyhat is detivcj tD liuii ^rbm ihcbrihop, wKoha^li t^c fulncfle of it, within his Dt6- ccfan Church. But ihii is falfe^ antl grounded or^ many f*ir< ^d- fempt'onslr. As ffrfi, i\\:^t Minifie'r^ of t^e. Vypr^ are not pre^I^ •itcKal'y t^Tfibrs -for to n ake a fcflor^nd g;v4 trjf^ Vio b^lpi^a^oit thAV6!fei is ^o |iu:n i^Jiimfoitfi I roper ffiSji^ S£coiidly,-K(K«ft^ {)0feiti'i1ieipowec of jiVr'irdl(^ioi^ to be given ongrnally ^nd ]^irdiy,tlij»^)^fcA^ poflith ^heplenfCud'eofregiBici^to be mchcjb^/liip^ aM/jii^Vf) ^ui tolftcdcnyct^/tboiKetV wf>icI\maJ^«th hirn,a hiad.of vix^tt^ior flhehcc^that ^nliis Chui;cli,>vhicH the Pope doth cijallcngc in regard of all biftiops. "For his ticadfliip and fpirituall foveraig ityftariikth ^tcoriin^ lo SeDarwme intUii, ihatthegovcrnnacntof all in ftr§ tnt^na^ ii committed to him, l^Jot to mention,, hoiv bi{hopi,while they w^re bin)pps,glpried of their i}:iMf^ and tei^^Mng,as the flow- er of thcfr gar ^d, preferring it: farrc before gc-^ff?in;butu'hen they were fallcnTrom their fpiniuall felicity, and infe^d wKhfo- cularfmoke, then they recommended the labonrof teaching to the Presbyters, then ihtirjutifdiAion and confillory did cariyall the credite, every office in the Church being counted 4 ^igmiy, as it had more or IcfTe jurifdjdion anncf cd j as thofe ai'e most or Icflib Fioriourabfc jn the Common- wealtk ,wtHivh hive :cw\\\ amhoriry in Icffe or greater, mcaCure conjoyncd. The nuth 15, ictannot be lhewc(i that God- ever made Paltor wiihoucthis jurifdiAjon ; for whether it do agree to men as they are P«ftors,or asthey itcPrclatt in the Church,it c;innot be avoided but chat oftles,^doing that to which they direfted them ? To thiti anf\v€r,i hit the helps God hath put -in his Church Jtfped ihe caUmg of Peacdns, an^ fu^h is miniftne^ to the rtuficmponMS v As for Bfjngehfts,ihdy' wer^ comp^ioiisan^ affi ftaftcs tio xkz Apoftles^ bat iq was <»n ord^r to-ihe w^k -of God in ikeir hinds, which they were: loferve, not iri order to thefr perfons, asiftkey had beenfubjeftifd to ehem in any rervileinfferioriiy. Ob-. fcrve how ZMw^fpeiketh of them, r^or.S.sj. T*f;Mwishis ^cdmpa* nion and- heifer tow-a*djthemj'Pfej/.i.i5. g^^pkrod^iti vi^ai Iti^^yi-d^ thv^r and Jjelpej» m hi(i W(?rke,atoifclJov9^rotM';er; * 7*^(f: jrE** IV»w- thy was hiscoJiajutot m the Gofpeli of Clwift, 2 rm.i.i^tys^ifl^ W3S helpefuU in iie M.niflcry , The truth ^ks fhrVwas foi/Hia ^nM ftrfomihftdreaHs^ th4 Evangilifts didferve the woi^is the A^^ftici Hid inh.vnd,with^utbcina fervanw to their perfons.- When hrick- layers vvorke, fome mrxe tinei and m.vkt mort^r/ome btartf 'tip rrld and rtiortar, ronnie (It on the houfe a^cJ ffe.Ye lay'thUt Avhich f$ b OB^ht them . Thefe are a)l felilow (Irvrfntg, yet the orte )^oth Fcrvc to fet forvvird the W(>rke ©£the other, 6ut were thf^ not left^o rh^ diredion of rhe Apoftles^whoUy in exercife of their calling? I an- fwcr,3$ Cfi ili givcfomc to be Evang^iftsj fo he made them know from himfelfc what belonged t® their office,and whit was the admi- nifiration to which he called the m. He did ncrt thetefcyrc wh:^!!^ have them to the diredionof any. Th^re is a doubtc d?riftion,one pHfiativa^ wSich is made from majority of rule 6: Av^i'^jua^ die other (r.iilUy fuch as one fervant , having fit kiowledgc of his mifters will, and ripe (experience, may give to another. The latter kmde of direftion it was, not the former,by which the Evm- gclifts were direfted. Which though comaionlypii*^ uTcd, yet no: fo univerfally hut that thejweij fometime of their OkYne accords hither .4»ftfi«raiidthrthcf, J'fm:>ybcg4iheX€4-, ttirik.'W/ffyiU 2^-7. • • That whick the ApQfUes ha\i no'c' pilcr' fni^'t^,' Evangclrffj, "Prtsbytcrsjiwr Deacons rhemfclves that p:iWet\^hych r'ha Lliuidi hath not over any membtr, the bflion hath' noi \)vtrdDth r m'^- niders. Bi^t i}iey.had nor over afiy irtftnor i,lfficervary. 911^014^ of ^ireftivc dV corrcihvc oawer : n?j»K<;r lKa;fi yv{e^CF^u?/A.'jt'felfe^ any fnch power, ^^roo. 1 ne airumption is pcovcd : 'for hiajorUy'ot ditcdive andcoKrcA;vepowcr IS aLord-l^e and; Re^:^!! JJdvJcr': now there iis no'dich power in the Church, or in the A^rtlts, or in •aiiy butpntW^H that one Lord : alloJier p^ot^er ban^'b-u a ^dU- irtrtivr aiittd^f'tciiiive mimflerx W %i^fi^^fnd'txeXut« 'yv'lilt jt^^ 'e^ V^4^oj"if}i of pQW^r'woVjW^^^^ 'ifignift(3 'i'nd jJu'r'^A^ ^ie- 'cbt^if.,'', 'r*'- ■'' . '" ■'■• _'^ ' ' •' ". Tiiit wSicji^mbree3an Anticl>fiftian ururpatioh^ never was jwcr, bu* fte^afdlike and min»fteriallone!y.If ©ne dog QAvrpe a kirg.'y ps)w- «'in Kent onely, he v/c:e ao Anti kipj to our Sovtraigne. no IcfTc a Synod : forihebeft ofthc PipWUh Uf,in,(^ it is the nioll ^pinmon tenent, thAihcis fubjcft to an Qpcumenc:!! Ct urxtll. Sccof»(i.'y, thoiiph he befubjcd, yet that I'pih not hmvUr b^.th: mry u^'oip. a kini;^ tinveromcnt : lox a. Kins? may hi(vc ^kcpjy p^wcr. .niic ycc ^nfc^c hiimulifc accountable 10 all hii people coM^ciivtly confiJc- L 3 «d; (74) icd; neither doihthiJ m^ke the Biihcps lawful! in ont Clmrcfc, becau(e one iniy manage Ir/an^ the Pop£:s unlawfuti, bf canfe Jnoic is fufficicnt lofvray fuch a pwcr through the whole Churcli : for then ale ihc power the Pope doth challenge, is not ft¥ f^, bqt ftf aciiitvi^ ttnliwfull, by reafon of mans ut^rLiificicn^y^ w^o caiyiat v^ildfo great^ matter; ■. . ^ , '^ .. ; ^ ^^r^^: JTbofcMinifteKs yvho^te made by one patent in the (j^rne.worjf, hive cquall authority : ,but aU*Miiuficr8 of the Word arc made by the fame patent, in the fame words, Rtceive the bol) Ohefl^ wbq/e fhu J€. forgive, &c. Ergo. The propofition is denied ; bccauCe the fcnfc of the words is to be underftood according ai the petfontgive leave to \ji*f^om tht-y areipoKeh. Tbefe words Ippkcn to Ap^ftlcs, they gave them larger power then to a Bifhop : and To fpojc^n to a Prcf- byttr they give him teflc power then to a'Bifliop,w/f»/w.If the Scrip- ture had dillingui{hed of Presbyters Paftoral feeding with iheWerd, and made ihem diveri degrees, as it hath made Apoftles and Evan- gelifts, then we^wvuld g^antthc exception : but the Scrjitarc doth notrkr^ow this diyifion of Paflors and'. Doftors into chie/c and Sif^- fic(^f : liMtTpe.aknh of d^^^ of \Apoftle« and £vafigcl|l]$, wHq \v€i c^anK ng tljc.nil'eivcs equal) ii\ deoycc|, ^'l^creiforc as fip Apoftlc received by ihetc words greater power then another : fo no Pafter orTc3(her,.bii,t muff tc^eivciheQme power, as who are among th mfrlvcs of the fame decrf c.Sccondly,werc they difFcrcnt degrees, yet jt fliould give the Pfespytcffor. kind, though not of fo ample ex- tenc as.thc Bifhop ha»hj as it gjvcth the B'^op the Umc power for kif dc, which the Apofljcs Jiad, though hot ^Ib Mniycrfair, but con- traftc d to p3it;cufar Churches. Now to come unto fome conclufions or afleriions which may lend light unto tlic deciding of this queftion. CtftclHl I. Let this be the firft. NoM>nift«" of the "Word hatb any power hut minifteiiari in the Church. Power is natunalJor mo* rail Moral! is Civill orEcdefiafticall. CiviU is either Lord- like and ruling^o mnifleriall and fervile. So ^ccle(iafticall,taken large- ly for all power fubjeftivcly in, or obje^ive)y about the ChHrch, is either Lord-like andRcgill, fuch as is in Chrift,or it isminifieriall and ftrvile, fuch as is in the Church .md the principall members of it. The power therefore ofthe ApoftIe$themfc!vcsandEvanfi;cliftj, 1$ c. lied JictKo/icCy Ad. 10. iTim.4 yea fuch a fcrrice,ai doth make the rainlftcr^ hiving ic,fofervari(s,ihac they are noway Lords. JW^i- B) miniltefii 6m Lorg ; we pnacb Chrifi, cur fclvet yoHrfetVMnti far It- Jtuf*l^£. S,r»4«/maketh hig power Oc ward Tike, not regal 1. Now as that is rcgall power which doth anything from the authority one licKh iii himfelfcpr from onesplca^ifre : fo.ihit is min>ftfriall power which (750:; which doth nothing but tying, thewrll anJi power of jj-m that Is principal! : a power which H^nth^^tli or exccuceth this or ih .t txpi9' MMlieruuobfiqiiit, CenciH,!, i hisminineriaU power is no fupcrnaturall v«r{u« or quality inherent in the foulc : bucarcIativerefpeiS founded on this, tbarl am called by God to thisorthat aaualladinuiiflration in his ^ijrch.Foritisnocapowcr lirap»y,whcreby a man is raidcatlcto cloc fome fupernatural aft, which he could not before in any manner pctfornne;but it isrifpc^ively (aid a power,in as mu^h as ic doth in- able faim to doe thofc ads in the Chjaich of CoA lawfully, and ex 9pci0ywiih which before he mighc not mtcrmcddle. The power of a Deacon, Paftor,Evangelj 11, Apoftle, belong to opk: predicament in regard of that which is ^he genus or common nature of them : the power of the Church cannot be other. Naturalland civill -power doth with tertue and effica y reach thofc cfftdh and ends to whuh they arc dcfigned : becaufc thty are proportioned to thcra, and ex- ceed not their adJvity; but Ecdefiafticall power cannot thus concur tpthc end and tffiffts for which it is ordained : becaufe thty are fuch aijhc omnipoicmy of Gpd onely can.produce,asthe convey tsni^ or creating grace in the heart of ^ finner, to which no fup( rnacucorU vertue m man can by any reali, though wltrumentary efficacy, con- duce ariy thing. Ctatiuf* J. God hath not give* minifteriall power to any, which (vimlclfe is no^ j)erronally to difcharge, nor in fut:ther plenitude r^en that!)/ himieifc it may be pciformcd. The rcafon is, beceufc Cod canhot givc^nc the charge of doing more then x mans proper indufhy can atcfi^eve, buthemuft withall put ipa a mans power to take others, a^d toimpart with them power of teaching and go- verning, fo fajrrc as may Cupply chat defed which is in his flrtn^th toperformeit alone. Hethitwill have the end, will have that withou^ which the end cannot be attained* If God would ha/ve any oncanuaiV'rfallpaftor to all the Churches pf>thc woild» he ipullrvJjeds allow h m power to fubftitute Paflors here and there, deriving unto them power both to teach and govcrne, fo far »s may fdpply his abfcnce in the Pallorall cure. If I will have one kecpc my. flocket which goe in twenty (Jiccpe- gates, if I commit them to o u, Itnuftnecds togf'thcrgivehimUavc to aUu^ne unto himfclffuclv as may be under,, Hie pbeardi to him. Thus if Gotl give a Biflnp the plenitude of PiHorali care aiid government over all the Pin- fliionall Churches through a Dioceffe,*he muft needs togcihtr al- low him this powtr^ cf being aheadofiiiicrhalli" fliicncc, even a head Virtually communicating w.ih other* pjrtof pjltorall powtr, whether teachfng or government. Thuvihouldnotic bui Biihops be tx officio fcrY4nts in paftoiall cure «c Qod . all others ihould be . luiaic- temoce fcnfe the fcrvaius of God : as in the former tdtrip^tffJm^br' on€ feiivujc'f eeeifing fconi'h is iiwfter the car-e of al4 the fl'.n:kts>ttt is n¥5a,a)»p Paftor,'h^t lii.it he wil hkewift'tfiat thcrt bfpirifh^ Piite:f u,-\cibrh:n3^Ancl helpiftf gdv€rntrtemi Tothtttitiftvei:, if' Gojd vyjil h,ive dht«>,th«nioiiherafieirhis owne ckfi^iie^etVc,bt'elfej ieavji.o iPEo ih€-brfho|x:3ii)itTbmem ; if he l^a?c4»tO'W.6i^o6$j; arbsirti^eijti, tiieo tiirobjeftion befete iS m forde^ 'tj'od v?iff lofejfc" f^r jhejC(lJianid as tH^|TrticJi^ly-fr lore as 00 ordinary Churches powcc could reach to them. C9mi.9. Tkat ordinarily thispower is not given to any one fingu- lafly by himfclfc toexercife the fame,but witU the company of others coniftitutiag areprtfentati^ Church:wbich4s tVie point next to bcc (Htwed. Yea where Churchci were coD{lituted,tl)e Apo{llcs did noc offer te elcrcitc their pewfcr , without the minftfriall concurrence of dbc Chutchcs^as in the fiory of ikc Corimhians u tnanifelt M THE mm THE THIRD QVESTION Whether Ghrift did immediady commie or- dinary power Ecclcfiafticall, and the cxcrcifc of it, to any Angular perfpn , or to united multitude of Presbyters* T Hough thisqueftipo isfo coincideatwith the f ormer,that the grounds hatji in a foit been ciif^uiTed.yet.fpr fome new ,conSderatioBS wbieh may be fupcr-jadciedy jye w.iU briefly iiandle it in ihc-JVleihpd pccmifed* . , . . .u .r.-: r j Fir ft, it 1$ argued for the affirjijaiijVCci , • ,7 f,; -r, . jtr^m. I. Thai which is cpajmitted %6 ihe Qw^h ACOB(»nittcd ito the principal )memj?mwd to be frxerfiifed by the whole Church , QX^p ;^fty, Charch in the Chjurch. ; E^o, to one who is in efFcd as the churchjhaying all the authority of it. S€- condly,if one perfon may be reprefentatively a Church,whcn jurifdi- 6ion is promifedsthen one perfon may be reprefentatively a Church whenjurifdiftion andpower of eitercJingis committed. Butonc lingular perfon, pttn fignified the Church, when the pr©mifc of ju- rifdiftion is madc.Ergo. Cjpmnto fubam faiih,thatihe bifiiop is in theChurchJ, and the Church foin thebi{hop,»that thcycannotbe -feyesed. Finally, as the kingdpmc of England may be put for the kiing in whom is all the power of the Kingdomc : So the Church for the chiefc governour in whom is the power of it. The ficottd Argument, That which the Churches had not given tfiem when they were conftituted, that was not promifed to them as their immediat right; But they had not coercive: power given them when they were con- Siiuted, Ergo, Chrift did npt commit it to the Churches er Pres- byters (79) hjtert. For theft tlic Apoftlct would not hate withhtU it front ihcfc.But they did. For ihc Apoftlci kcpc it with ihemfelves. Af intheinccftuousCorimbianis^manifcft, whom rChurch to which he'rn'uft bring th: ma cter,m'4il beoiha* then.himfelfe. Thirdly^the gradation doth (htw it. F irft,by thy kiiz^Thin flitw a w'tnes 9r twi. Then to thi CbH%h^ asthefmne inrrcafcth , tlie number oftV5oreby whom it is to be rebuked and ccnCured, increafeih alfo* If one fay, though the Cnurrh figtiifie o:\egoveinour, yet the gradation hoi- deth 4 for 10 ..tell. .It .to the gi^vernDur ia open. Court., is more then to telVji: .tQ.i;svintyi Wee grant that this is true , and were th^ W3rd Church tafenh^re to note fome eminent governour, it mighc be brought in as a funlier degree, though one onely were enforced, B^Ji how can Pittr Be compjamajntjif Per/r the Pr^fulnncly be the ju^getLo whom lh^th5ngtn,vft^^|^eno'unce^c^.^f^u^thly,■lKe chare in'the Corifvthiahs whi^h'^/^i^(;fI^rrc^Vu)5^to. c^n{i^re-ihc inccfluourr- pv'rfoti, , was ipot^ny onejb^ut'rpary. T-hUr r^oulsf ^^p:^n w^ich it js : like he repented, w^sja're^bakeofn^my, z Cqrl t.^, Jiftly, if the churcti.h'id been one^^He vvovild noi have (i:ih'iofi\cdiforwhityeJhiU hifidonisiflbjbilihe bMiiitnhsn>cnSiTit[yi\l the church did notnotCx: an afiemblyihovv coul^t aflTurethein Irom hence. f^if Gidr»Qu'.dt^i '3»hitthty i^mi ov^^''bec^cp:^^ uypl^bjbf^fl a^emlOes^ gHbff€diii[~; hiinim. U ilcff: the Church, me a nt^ wVk ai> afleni&ly;, th;s argu- ■}_ ment eo-il^hot be (o cdrrcfpondent. jWherc two or twoor three are ; ^fl):mShd in <3ois narne', p>p>i is Tn t!>e midftofthem to4oe thac d)cy agree on. B JC whsre 'the Church i> bin^io^'or I6efi;\g , th^rc (8i) Ibiifome affcmblcd inthe »ame of Chrift. Ergo. Lafi[y,iiK (hwjV in the old Tcftamcnt never noiethihe high Prieft virtually, ^utaa alTembly of Priefls fi.ting togciher, as Judges in the caufcs ofGo J, Wkcrcfore as ChriiJ doih iniiilhndly preluppofe evciy put/c ul at' Church: So he doih here onely prefuppofe the joint auih :)rity, aoci '. 'joint execution of a rep. clentativc Church , a Prcibyttry of Bidets who were Paftors and Govcrnours. ..V ' ' , Argum, ^. Wee argue from the practice of the Giurchcsj Thic power which ii not in ope, nojtobee exercifcd byohe, ^b.u.Ki many, andto/becxerafcd by mainy in ti^ Church of the Corif^tki-, ans, that power with the cxercite of it,^ was commi'tted by Chrift'tp . many, liot to one. But ih: power of EccUfiafticall cenfure was iq. many, and to be performed by many aflembled. Ergo. The propo-* (itionisplaine. ¥or Paul would nothavi; called for, nor hjvtflik.d ^ any conltitution or exercife cf power Ecclefufticall , other ih.n,. Clirifl had ordained. The ^flijrfion is denyed by feme : but it if a r, plaine truth by many invincible arguments. For firft,>ldt;f f many, writing to them ihit th*y v/ould not proceed, a Cor, a 6.L\{\» iy, PahI doih attnbrte power to them to forgive him, and to rcec ve... him to the peace of thechurch.Which would not hjVw* been i'Mlum,' had they not had the p<,wer to excommunicate. Such as hivcj.o power to binde, h:iYeno power to loofc. Son migh' be picv.d by , iht Church of the TbtfTilpnianSjzTbrJ". i.\/^.]f atjmanwi'nind^' y diodtly^ittublmytbaiotbtnmtj nf'aiue Hm Noiing.beirgnot a (Tgni. , ficatjon by IcttctjwhichdothwrcU the word againil all cop:tj, and the current of all Creek intciprcters:bur judicially to note h:n3^'hic .' all may avoid himjtlnt is,excommunicate him.F*n3lly,»ljc churJves ).' cf Afiajasit is plaine, had power»f government wi'.hin thcmrelvej,' ^Argum. 5. That power whicW the ApoiUes did not exercife' ' in the churches, rior Eyangelifls, but with concurrence of ihc churches and Presbyierics , ihit power is much Idle to be tx crcifcd by any ordinary P.iftour, but by many. Kut ihcy did net ordamc, nor by on hands alone, they did not determine ^ucftions ^y ike power of the key:$ alone, but with concurrence of tht Pi-eT^ bytcrs of the church, firgo, much Icil'c may ?ny ordinary ' ^ ^" M 5 , ■ Mir-iIUi. . MinHlefdoeitilonc. Timtbf rccflvcd 'grace by tkc %e#}flf«o-<4 ©fthe Pttsbytery. For that pcrfons mull be under ft ood here if apparant by the like place 5 when it is faid, by the laying on of my hands, (4»notcth apcrfon, andfo here a Presbytery. Secondly, t^ take 7rj8^iSw76e/or to fignifie the order of Priefthobd, is agaiift til Lexicons, and the nature of the Greeke terminatioit. Thirdly, Timotb} nt^ti received that order of a Presbyter, at before.we hate proved. Fourthly, it cannot fignifie as Greeke Expofiters take it, i company of bifhops. For neither was that Canon of j^ bifiiops ani the Metropolitan , or all the biihops in a Province, in the A^ofllc^ lime, neither were thefe who are now called biihops , then called P^e$byters,as they ray,but Apoftles, men that had received Apofto- lick grace, Angels,&c.Finally,it is very abfurd to thiak of companies of other Presbyters in Churches then Paul planted -, buthe placed Presbyteries offuch Presbyters as are now diftinguiihcd frdm-bi- (hops, which is the. grant of our adverfaries. Not to mentfoti how Artnacbtnu* doth cenfure the other as afi interpretation from ontt privat fence,befidcs teftimonie of Scripture. Thus the Apoftle$ did not ©ffer alone to determine the queftion Aft. ij. buthad thejoyrtt fuftrages of the Presbytery wuhthem, Kot becaufe they could notalorte have infallibly anfwcred, but bc- caufe it was a thing to be determined by manyjall who had received power of the keycs,doing itejf oj^w,and others from difcretion and duty of confeffion the truth. Yea the bifliopi called Priml T^resbyte- ri, hadnoordmation atthe firft which the Prcby.:ery did not gnrc them. Whence have bifliops of other Churches power to minifter the facrament to the b. (hop of this Church ^ But Tiwo/fcy and ri- tus are faid to have ordained Minifters. As Confuls and D dators are faid 10 have ere ated Confuls, becaufe they called Senates, pro- pounded and together with others did it. No otherwife doe Jtfuits themfelvc« underftand it. Salmeron on the firR o(TUMj &e» And it is manifcft by Ecdefiafticall writings of all forts,th it Presbyters hid right offujrage, notonely in their owne Presbyteries, but in Piovinciali Synoci?,and therefore in O^cumenicall Synods, whicfc doih arife from a combination of the other, to which their mindcs went in the inftrufti n of bifliops received from their Chirches, And A binafwi yet a Deacon, is read to have btenc at ih. Counfcll of Nkc, aed to hive had right of fufFrage in it, FinalJy,ihe Presby- teries tiid a long time execute jointly ill adions of Church govcrn- mt nr, as is b fo-^e declared. Other arguments wt fli ill touch I'n an- fw'T ' f theie wh fh hive beenc objected. Now to come lo'the con- clu'io ^,let this be firft, Cm^miy f . ExcraQidinary power was committed co feme Hngu- lar lir pctfonJ > f* that in fomc cafe they might llngularly excrcifc ft wiinout concurrence of other. This 1 fpeake in rtgard of Apoftks and Evangelifts, whofc power in many things could not have con- currance of patcicular Churches , which in the former 4ueUioiiis fufficiently declared, Conciuf. 1. That ordinary power, and the eiecution iherof was net committed to any Angular governors, whereof there was to be one onely in each Church. This is againft the Jefuits, who make account (the moft of them) that as all civill power ofgoycrnmcnc is given toKlngstobee executed by them within their common- wealch, (o Ecclcfiafticall power (fay they) is given to the Pope and to biftiops in their particular Churches to be executed by them,and derived from thcni to the whole Church* Cotuluf.i. Ordinary power with the execution thereof , was not jiven to the community of the church , or to the whole multitude of the faithfulljfo that they were the immediate and firft receptacle, receiving it from Chrift, and Virtually deriving it to other'. ThisI fetdowne agunft thel>ivine$ of Conlhnce;our prime Divines, as Luthennd HtlMnCihon yind the Sorbonif^s, v\ ho doe mamtaine tt at this day. Ye3,thisfeemeth to have beetteTrr/tt//i«;jJcrroiir j form his booke : depudkiiU, he maketh Chrirt to have left all Chriftians with likepower, but th^ church for her honor, did difpofe it as we fee.The propofitionof a poilitick body,andnaturall deceived them, while ihiy will apply all that is in thcfe to Chriiis myfticall body, not remembring that gwUogon is not i» ^mnifimlle^ for then fhould it bee the fame with the tn^ogttum. True it is , all civill power ii inihe body politicke , the colledions of fubjeds, then in a King Iromthcm: And all the power of hearing, feeing, iheyareinthc whole man, which doth produce them effedually, though formal- ly and inArumentally ihty arc in the earc and eye. But the reafon ef this is, becaufc thcfe powers are naturall, and what ever is natu- -.rall, doih iirft agree to the community or fo/M0, and afterward to a .particular perfon and part, but all that is in this body, canpnot hold in Chrifts myfticall body. In a politick body power is fufi in & community, to the King from them, but all Ecclcfiafticail po*' firft in our King before any in the church from him, ^»* ibould he firfl commit this power, but to his Quec fideringibis power is not any Lordly power, bu* fcrvicc to the church for Chiift his fake. Thcrcf be committed to fome perfons , and not to th which are the Qucene of Chtift. For it is not 6' nit power to his Quecne to fervc herfelfe f|erfons wko in regard of bis relation ^ sram hfic; Sccqndly, in naiMitll bot* imm?JUtety in the man , from the mm in thecye and farticulat hiembct'j': Imtie mylticall body , the faith of a beleever isnot firft jfnme'ctrn^if in alF; then inihe beleever, biicfirft ofiali and inime-di- 'btfy^iri^e pCfro^Ml%'eltt>fer •,■ 'for whofc gt^od iirfet^feth^o^e pro- perly then fcr ih;: whole, eveiy man being to litcByhis dwnc faith. The power of Priefthood was not&rCt in the Churchof Ifrael , - fo dcrnredto tht Pneft r but immediatly from ChriS feated in Aaron andhisTonRCs. -O^jf^?. Yea they were given the chtifc h ;'»/«?/'« «- jufdemk-dTfqumfif'is & toim. A"Jw. I but this'is ruld the church have a true Lordlilce power in regard of her Mmifteis. Bcfides, there are many in the oommtt- nity of Chnftians uncapable of this power regularly, as women and ch'.ldren.Th'sconclufion in my jtidgemen t^/^ii,.S^/a& others de- ny with greater ftrcngch of reafon tlicn the contrary is maintained. '■CQttduj: 4. Fourthly, ordinary power of minifteriail government is committed with the executionof it , tothe Senator Presbycery ^fihe church. If any fjile in any office, the church hathnot powec Gf.'upplyirgthu, but a miniftery of calling one Whom Chrift hath ^defcribed, that from Chrift he may have power ofoffice given him in the pl,ice vacanr. I ' C§mli/f, ^. Laftly, thoHgh the community have not power given JJ^7, yet fuch ellate by Ch rift her husband is put on her, that all po- **: Hi Vo bee executed infuch manner, as ftandeth with re^eft '**^' '/.Hence it is,that the gorernours are in many chmgf '^"> » "•? to take the confent of the people with the m.Not 3 ;. power of the kcycs with them, but becaufe they •■ f rhe fpoufe of Chrift, and therefore caonot bee 'u wwhout open difhonour in fuch things, which »r{|^o>,e whole congregation, . ," '3 5ci vTients firft propounded,/ 3*t: >. vllogifme if dcnycd. Tbitmbit wgi "^ r;ai:/ . rj i^dfct^prinapMBmtmiir, Ani t^o i ■ r^ Uogifow, pcftingtfiispafi dcnycfil. itnytH. for the fmfr htitxmthn wm cmmittedto a Chgrcb in i Cburcb. Which is fo farrc from abfur4ity,that he is abfurd who ioth nocfecitinCifillandSacrad. Doc wc not fee inParliamcnca rc- prcfcntatifc Common-wealth within our Common- wcaltb, hiving the greateft authority ? Not to mention that a Church within a Church fliauld not be ftrangc to them who itcigine many Parifluo- nail churches within one Diocefan charch. To'the proofcs, which prevent as it were an objeaion,{hewing that the church,Mjr.l8,i/. may be put for one chicfc Governour. The propoficioa is dcnycd. Ifthtt Tettr oni Gtvernew, may be in typt gijd figure the Church ta wbM the jmfdiSlm u pnmifed^ then tb: CburcbrecetvmgaudixetiiciMgitmayb£one» A moil falfe Propofiti- on whofc contrary is true. The reafon is, bccaufe the church typi- fied by P«rir is properly and really a church, not figuratively and improperly : for then ptter ftiould have becne a figure or type, of a type or figurative church.The figure therefore and type bejng of the church which is properly taken, and the church properly and really taken, being a company affembled, hence it is that {^attb,i 8.1 7.} the church cannot fignifie one J for one is but figuratively and im- properly a ch.irch. There is no^ the fame reafon of the figure and the thing that is figured. Nay hence an Argument may be retor- ted, proving that by that church whereof peter was a figure, is not meant one chiefe Governour, Peter as one man or Governour was properly and really a virttiall church and chiefe Governour. But Teter as one man and Governour was in figure onely the church, Mmb.iS. Ergo, that church ^ttth.iS, is not a virtuall church, noting forth one chiefe Governour oncly. As for CjprUnt fpeech, it doth nothing butfhew the conjindionof Paflour and people by mutualllovc,which is fo flreight that the one cannot be fchifmati- cally left out, but the other is forfaken alfo. Othcrwife I ihinkc ic cannot be (hewed to the time oi immerU the third, that rheBifliop was counted the church ; or this dreane of a vircuall church once Imagined. The Clctkes of the church of PUcentk did in their oath of canonicall obedience fweare thus : Tbgt tbty rvould obey the Cbureh of fldfeutUy and ibe Lord their Bijhop, Where the Chapiter doth carry the name of the church from the Bifhop. Yea, even in thofe times prepofed, or fct before him, when the Pope was lifted up above ge- nerall couocels, then icis hke was the firfl nativity of thefe virtuall churches. As for a Kingdome I doubt not, but it may be put for a King figurauvely : but the church typified by Ttter^ mufl needs be a church properly. And it will never be proved that any one Gover- nour was let up in a church proportionable to a King in a Com- mon- wealch,in whom i| all civillpowct nhetcbythc whole King* dome i< adnCiniilrcii* N Tf (8tf)" Tothefecond Argdmentfrom the Apoftlei h&m the Church tion 17 '"'^'''j"""y ^^Y'"'i '■"teneedhiseTcom.^unTa- O.U „V '/"""*';."' "■ ""e'l,. living nothing to the Church but out of the.r obed.encc to dedmc htmr*. in the z. Epift." he huh r«r tbu it„r, i have miuen tcyw, tbit I mti .«.« «Ip,4» !. place kft for the Churches judgement dfo Thd-r«e uL?J ^" « not free , i,'. n,.^h"a, tetn^n'o I 'vtlbbu^dt^hlf '."''if Jyeth on her 5 when new it is efpecially fhewcd her anH I, "''"* p^ftee.s p,ovoked. Yea . where L Sd fee/ufl cf ufe n?"- communicat.ng {he is not ^though none call on heVi fr/. °^ "' communicate. Neverthe cffe fh^ioTl X , "°''° «- lawfuliynotexcomSe yJtSfi r'u"'''?''*'"'' =hfoIute!y and fimply, S n" feould no? 5^'*""^ °f ft«dome hre ihould remaine not excomm^^^^M T ""'"""'"'"te him , chiefejud^ement/y^r^rrnr felt^rb^^^^^^^^^^^ vour of a particu ar Church Ac r=.v c. / r ' I " "nifter fa- and the pe%I« favour h"di,ef„Vu^:^'iLXThd'te""' ^5 cuDdemn^Jtion . butexpnni^n k,j u ' 'onaiuan hid beenc under i^e-dfirong =flefi,o"n :S"h ^ "^ f XTwhlt ''T^'" thtyd,dncrjud,c.ailyexcommunicate 2r Zrh°°^>''<''''«' notexercfe powerofgorernment bymannt ^f ob-df """.'^ exhortation of a fuper^or TouchinoTh, „l, ."''l'''^"" 'o the ««...hoTe,hatread,'^«iJ?3i''''i'''''" '^' Tjefaloni. fent of all Greeke InurpretTrs Anfrt' g°'/«,«nfl the con- i'f judtciary noting oT^'f^'ch «caufdTr',«°£^'^'^' '''='' '' othu. , and tended°to bre'edftame "him As 2't T^"^ ^^ mun.cat,ngH^^^„„d^4,„,^^^J^; Asfor;.,«h^ *c .holeprocccding Beno.n^e^aru^^^SSt"^^^^^^^ tbtm r87) Ibem. So he faith, grace was given Timtby by impofition of hi« handi, iTim.i.6, when yet me Presbytery joyned, i rim.4.14 Tkirdly, it may be they were no fixed members in any conftituied Church. The third argument of Timotbf and Tiim hath bccne fufficicntly difcuffcd. To the fourth, That ene is fiiur far executb:* tb'>i mtny. To which we may ad. Yec :h fe have execution of mjny ihingiconr.muted lothcm. The afleition. v.z.Thi: mi^:) ari iefe fit for txtcutUn, we deny. Tnar order is frtcrt which God la- ftituced. But he doth commit the kiycs to the Church, toraai.y, that they ro>j;hc exercife the authority of them ; when that mean is tnoitfir, whch God will moft blcfl'c, and his blc (Ting doth follow hisowiie order , this is the Htteft. Secondly, in the ApolUes times, and in the times after, almoit fourc hundred yceres expired, Presby- ters d:d continue with B finps in govern ng and executing what ever was decreed. Thirdly, this deprivation from the firft order, ont to execute for a Dioztfan, one tor a Piovinciallj th' decrees of aDiocefinand PfOvmciall,drc'.v on are:- fli:yuf one to execute the decrees of the Oecumenicail Church or Pope. Foutihly, Let them (hew where God divided the power of making lawes for govern- ment of any Church from the power to execute them. Re:^ul.irfy they who have the greater committed, hive the kfier alfo. Fif:ly, we fee even in civjTI governments many pacts by joync Counccll and adion are as happily governed as others are by a fingubr go- YCrnour. Trucly/h it th^ Aftrican Fathers write to Cdefilne is ciue : It is unlikelf tbu Gadrvill it prefenc with ouf , 'in£>.ritg him with bit (pi- ritiind not l epreftnt With maw) who are In ha yume^and wuh hu wmt- unt ^tmhUd. As for thofe companfons they hold not in all : ihey hcUin ih^t wh'ch the Confuildoth in calling the aflembly, pro- pounding t'.iingt,&c, Y^t the Confuls never louk the power to cen- fure their fellowes without the concurrence of their fellow Sena- tor!, nor to withdraw themfelvcs from being fubjcAtothccen!^urc of the reft of ihc Senate. To the fift argument, to the propofition by diftinftion .* if they have all power both of mmtftcnill applicmon, and mlhtutmc/ others out of vertue and amhonty, then Paftours derive. But this is drnyrd. She hath no power but of Miniflcry, anii no plenitude but fofarrc as they in their ownc pcrC»ni can difcharge. Itprcfup- pofcth therefore we affirmc in lur t]Ucftion what we doe iK)i. Bu< to let the propo.'iiioo pjflc, bccaufe ofome derivation, it is true. If (he hare but all power of MiBifteriall application, then Biihops N % derive (88) derive from htt. But they doc nor. We fsy i>j«y But he is given the onely judge m Chrifis roome, and though they eled him, yet as you have faid, aad truely, they have not the power of th t authority in them to which he is clcded. No more then the Eledors of the Emperour have in them power of the Impcriall dignity. Anfwsr, We fay therefore, th^t as rhe Church hath onely mmifleriall power of application, that is,as they cannot out of power caU a Paflour, but onely call one whom Chrift pointcth out, and to whom Chnfloutof power glvcththc place of Paflour. So fhe cannot cenfure or dcpofe, but onely mioi- fietially exec*iting the cenfure of Ghrifl, who will have fuch a one turned out, or otherwife cenfared. ButthcBifhop never wasfolc judge, thoHgh>wtrj«5&;;^i^r he may be faidfo. Chrifl inflituced a Presbytery, in which all had equall power of judgement. ^j>fw» Ep, 6i. in the cafe of Bifiides and MntiaUSy doth ihew that the Church had power ag of choofing worthy, fo of refufing unworthy. He fpeakeihofan ordinary power, asbychoofing is mai\ifefl, not if y^A^y-c^ i.^ ^nm^ttm Wk ^mm^m '^^■^ %^. fiDi<^r •■ "^>