JOHN BUNYAN ON THE TERMS
OF
COMMUNION AND FELLOWSHIP OF
CHRISTIANS
AT THE TABLE OF THE LORD;
COMPRISING
I. HIS CONFESSION OF FAITH, AND REASON OF
HIS PRACTICE;
II. DIFFERENCES ABOUT WATER BAPTISM NO
BAR TO COMMUNION; AND
III. PEACEABLE PRINCIPLES AND
TRUE[1]
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE
EDITOR.
Reader, these are extraordinary productions
that will well repay an attentive perusal. It is the
confession of faith of a Christian who had suffered nearly
twelve years' imprisonment, under persecution for
conscience sake. Shut up with his Bible, you have here the
result of a prayerful study of those holy oracles. It
produced a difference in practice from his fellow
Christians of ALL denominations, the reasons for which are
added to this confession; with a defence of his principles
and practice, proving them to be peaceable and true. In all
this an unlettered man displays the acumen of a thoroughly
educated polemical theologian. The author was driven to
these publications to defend himself from the slanders
which were showered down upon him, by all parties, for
nearly eighteen years, and by the attempts which were made
to take away his members, injure the peace of his
congregation, and alienate him from the church to which he
was tenderly attached. His first inquiry is, Who are to be
admitted to the Lord's table; and his reply is, Those
whom God has received: they have become his children, and
are entitled to sit at their Father's table: such only
as have examined themselves, and by their conduct lead the
church to hope that they have passed from death unto life.
The practice of those who admit ungodly persons because
they have submitted to some outward ceremonies, he severely
condemns. The mixture of the church and the world he deems
to be spiritual adultery, the prolific source of sin, and
one of the causes of the deluge. The Lord's table is
scripturally fenced around: 'Be ye not unequally yoked
together with unbelievers'; 'what communion hath
light with darkness; Christ with Belial; the temple of God
with idols? be ye separate, touch not the unclean thing,
and I will receive you.' 'Receive ye one another,
as Christ also received us to the glory of God, not to
doubtful disputations.' 'Withdraw from them that
walk disorderly, working not; but busy bodies; unless with
quietness they work and eat their own bread. If any are
proud, doting about questions and strifes of words, evil
surmisings, perverse disputings, supposing that gain is
godliness; from such withdraw.' Bunyan rests all
upon the word,--the characters are described who are to be
excluded from the Lord's table; but in no instance is
it upon record that any one was excluded because he had not
been baptized in water. And who will dare to make any
addition to holy writ?
The practice of making the mode in which
water baptism was administered a term of communion, existed
among the Independents long before Bunyan's time.
Crosby, in his History of the Baptists, makes some long
extracts from a book entitled, 'The sin and danger of
admitting Anabaptists to continue in the congregational
churches, and the inconsistency of such a practice with the
principles of both.' In America, Cotton and the
Independents severely persecuted their Baptist brethren,
even to deportation. As the Baptists increased in numbers,
they refused to admit any to the Lord's table, even to
occasional communion, who had not been baptized in water
upon a profession of faith: in fact, the difference between
those who consider baptism to be a relative duty to
be performed by parents in having their infants sprinkled,
and those who deem it a personal duty to be immersed
in water, as a public putting on of Christ, is so great, as
to require the utmost powers of charity to preserve peace.
Thus it was in the primitive churches, where great
differences prevailed even as to the duty of preaching the
gospel to the Gentiles; the keeping of days probably
extending to the Jewish sabbath, and to the abstaining from
certain meats, with other ordinances of the Jewish
law.
Bunyan saw all the difficulties of this
question: he was satisfied that baptism is a personal duty,
in respect to which every individual must be satisfied in
his own mind, and over which no church had any control; and
that the only inquiry as to the fitness of a candidate for
church fellowship should be, whether the regenerating
powers of the Holy Ghost had baptized the spirit of the
proposed member into newness of life. This is the only
livery by which a Christian can be known. Bunyan very
justly condemns the idea of water baptism being either the
Christian's livery or his marriage to the
Saviour.
We do well, in our examinations into this
subject, to note carefully the various applications of the
word baptize, and not always attach the use of water to the
term. There is a being baptized in a cloud, and in the sea,
to protect God's Israel from their deadly foes; a
baptism in sufferings; a baptism in water unto repentance;
a baptism in fire, or the Holy Ghost; a baptism into the
doctrine of the Trinity (Matt 28:19). Bunyan had no doubt
upon this subject; he deemed water baptism an important
personal duty; and that a death to sin, and resurrection to
newness of life--a different tint, or dye, given to the
character--was best figured by immersion in water: still he
left it to every individual to be satisfied in his own mind
as to this outward sign of the invisible grace.
'Strange,' he says, 'take two Christians equal
on all points but this; nay, let one go far beyond the
other for grace and holiness; yet this circumstance of
water shall drown and sweep away all his excellencies; not
counting him worthy of that reception that with hand and
heart shall be given to a novice in religion, because he
consents to water.'
For these catholic principles he was most
roughly handled. Deune, in a pamphlet in the Editor's
possession, called him a devil; and likened him to Timri,
who slew his master. The most learned of the Baptist
ministers entered upon the controversy. They invited him to
a grand religious tournament, where he would have stood one
against a legion. A great meeting was appointed, in London,
for a public disputation--as was common among the
puritans--and in which the poor country mechanic was to be
overwhelmed with scholastic learning and violence; but
Bunyan wisely avoided a collision which could have answered
no valuable purpose, and which bid fair to excite angry
feelings. He had appealed to the press as the calmest and
best mode of controversy; and to that mode of appeal he
adhered. Three learned men undertook the cause against
Bunyan: these were, D'Anvers, W. Kiffin, and T. Paul.
When these lettered, able, and distinguished disputants
published their joint answer, it contained much scurrilous
abuse. Their brother, Bunyan, was in prison, and they
visited him with gall and wormwood. He closes his reply
with these remarkable words, 'Thine to serve thee,
Christians, so long as I can look out at those eyes that
have had so much dirt thrown at them by
many.'
The late Mr. Robert Hall, in his controversy
upon this subject with Mr. Kinghorn, in which--having
demolished Kinghorn's castle in a few pages--he, in
order to make a book, amused the public by kicking the
ruins about, thus adverts to these treatises: 'The most
virulent reproaches were cast upon the admirable Bunyan,
during his own time, for presuming to break the yoke; and
whoever impartially examines the spirit of Mr. Booth's
Apology, will perceive that its venerable author regards
him, together with his successors, much in the light of
rebels and insurgents, or, to use the mildest terms, as
contumacious despisers of legitimate
authority.'[2]
We cannot have a more decided proof of
Bunyan's great powers, and of his being much in advance
of his times, than by the opinions of which he was the
Christian pioneer having spread so extensively through the
Baptist denomination. In this his predictions were fully
verified. It is surprising that pious dissenters should
ever have made uniformity in outward ceremonies of more
importance than inward holiness, as a term of communion.
Such sentiments naturally attach to state churches; and
ought to be found only with those bodies which exist merely
for political purposes, and for it are rewarded with
earthly power, pomp, and wealth. I close these observations
by quoting the words of Bunyan's learned antagonists,
published within a few years of this controversy, and
during his lifetime. his sentiments appear to have had a
hallowed effect even upon their minds, and produced an
apology for their conduct. It is in the appendix to the
Baptist confession of faith, republished in 1677: 'We
would not be misconstrued, as if the discharge of our
consciences did any way disoblige or alienate our
affections or conversations from any others that fear the
Lord: earnestly desiring to approve ourselves to be such as
follow after peace with holiness. We continue our practice,
not out of obstinacy, but we do therein according to the
best of our understandings, in that method which
we take to be most agreeable to the scriptures. The
christening of infants, we find by church history, to have
been a very ancient practice; still we leave every one to
give an account of himself to God. And if in any case
debates between Christians are not plainly determinable by
the scriptures, we leave it to the second coming of
Christ.' In 1689, the year after Bunyan's death,
this appendix was omitted from the Baptist confession of
faith.
May the time soon arrive when water shall
not quench love, but when all the churches militant shall
form one army, with one object,--that of extending the
Redeemer's kingdom.--GEO. OFFOR.
A CONFESSION OF MY FAITH, AND A REASON OF
MY PRACTICE;
OR,
WITH WHO, AND WHO NOT, I CAN HOLD CHURCH
FELLOWSHIP, OR THE COMMUNION OF SAINTS.
SHEWING, BY DIVERSE ARGUMENTS, THAT
THOUGH I DARE NOT COMMUNICATE WITH THE OPENLY PROFANE, YET
I CAN WITH THOSE VISIBLE SAINTS THAT DIFFER ABOUT
WATER-BAPTISM. WHEREIN IS ALSO DISCOURSED, WHETHER THAT BE
THE ENTERING ORDINANCE INTO FELLOWSHIP, OR
NO.
'I believed, therefore have I
spoken.'--Psalm 116:10
TO THE READER.
Sir,
I marvel not that both you and others do
think my long imprisonment strange, (or rather strangely of
me for the sake of that) for verily I should also have done
it myself, had not the Holy Ghost long since forbidden me
(1 Peter 4:12; 1 John 3:13). Nay, verily, that
notwithstanding, had the adversary but fastened the
supposition of guilt upon me, my long trials might by this
time have put it beyond dispute; for I have not hitherto
been so sordid, as to stand to a doctrine right or wrong;
much less when so weighty an argument as above eleven
years' imprisonment, is continually dogging of me to
weigh and pause, and pause again, the grounds and
foundation of those principles, for which I thus have
suffered;[3] but having not only at my trial asserted them,
but also since, even all this tedious tract of time, in
cool blood, a thousand times, by the word of God, examined
them, and found them good; I cannot, I dare not now revolt
or deny the same, on pain of eternal damnation.
And that my principles and practice may be
open to the view and judgment of all men, though they stand
and fall to none but the word of God alone, I have in this
small treatise presented to this generation, 'A
Confession of my Faith, and a Reason of my Practice in the
Worship of God'; by which, although it be brief, candid
Christians may, I hope, without a violation to faith or
love, judge [that] I may have the root of the matter found
in me.
Neither have I in this relation abusively
presented my reader, with other doctrines or practices,
than what I held, professed, and preached when apprehended,
and cast in prison. Nor did I then or now retain a doctrine
besides, or which is not thereon grounded. The subject I
should have preached upon, even then when the constable
came, was, 'Dost thou believe on the Son of God?'
From whence I intended to shew, the absolute need of faith
in Jesus Christ; and that it was also a thing of the
highest concern for men to inquire into, and to ask their
own hearts whether they had it or no.
Faith and holiness are my professed
principles, with an endeavour, so far as in me lieth, to be
at peace with all men. What shall I say, let mine enemies
themselves be judges, if anything in these following
doctrines, or if ought that any man hath heard me preach,
doth [savour], or hath according to the true intent of my
words, savoured either of heresy or rebellion. I say again,
let they themselves be judges, if ought they find in my
writing or preaching, doth render me worthy of almost
twelve years' imprisonment, or one that deserveth to be
hanged, or banished for ever, according to their tremendous
sentence. Indeed my principles are such, as lead me to a
denial to communicate in the things of the kingdom of
Christ, with the ungodly and openly profane; neither can I
in or by the superstitious inventions of this world,
consent that my soul should be governed in any of my
approaches to God, because commanded to the contrary, and
commended for so refusing. Wherefore excepting this one
thing, for which I ought not to be rebuked; I shall, I
trust, in despite of slander and falsehood, discover myself
at all times a peaceable and an obedient subject. But if
nothing will do, unless I make of my conscience a continual
butchery, and slaughter-shop, unless putting out my own
eyes, I commit me to the blind to lead me, as I doubt is
desired by some, I have determined, the Almighty God being
my help and shield, yet to suffer, if frail life might
continue so long, even till the moss shall grow on mine
eyebrows, rather than thus to violate my faith and
principles. 'Will a man leave the snow of Lebanon,
which cometh from the rock of the field? or
shall the cold flowing waters that come from another place
be forsaken?' (Jer 18:14). 'Hath a nation changed
their gods, which are yet no gods?' (Jer
2:11). 'For all people will walk every one in the name
of his god, and we will walk in the name of the LORD our
God for ever and ever' (Micah 4:5).
Touching my practice as to communion with
visible saints, although not baptized with water; I say it
is my present judgment so to do, and am willing to render a
farther reason thereof, shall I see the leading hand of God
thereto.
Thine in bonds for the gospel,
JOHN BUNYAN.
A CONFESSION OF MY FAITH, AND A REASON OF
MY PRACTICE, ETC.
'Be ready always to
give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of
the hope that is in you with meekness and fear: having a
good conscience; that whereas they speak evil of you, as of
evil-doers, they may be ashamed that falsely accuse your
good conversation in Christ.'--1 Peter 3:15,
16.
1. I believe, that there is but one only
true God, and there is none other but he. 'To us
there is but one God, the Father, of whom are
all things' (1 Cor 8:6). 'And this is life eternal,
that they might know thee the only true God' &c.
(John 17:3, see also Mark 12:32; Acts 17:24).
2. I believe, that this God is almighty,
eternal, invisible, incomprehensible, &c. 'I
am the Almighty God; walk before me, and be thou
perfect' (Gen 17:1). 'The eternal God is thy
refuge' (Deut 33:27). 'Now unto the King eternal,
immortal, invisible, the only wise God, be honour
and glory for ever and ever' (1 Tim 1:17, see also Job
11:7; Rom 11:33).
3. I believe, that this God is unspeakably
perfect in all his attributes of power, wisdom, justice,
truth, holiness, mercy, love, &c. his power is said to
be eternal (Rom 1:20), his understanding and wisdom
infinite (Psa 147:5); he is called the just
Lord in opposition to all things (Zeph 3:5). He is said
to be truth itself and the God thereof (2 Thess 2:10; Deut
32:4). There is none holy as the Lord. 'God is
love.' 'Canst thou by searching find out God? canst
thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?' (Job
11:7).
4. I believe, that in the Godhead, there are
three persons or subsistances. 'There are three
that bear record in heaven: the Father, the Word, and the
Holy Ghost' (1 John 5:7, see also Gen 1:26, 3:22, 11:7;
Isa 6:8).
5. I believe, that these three are in
nature, essence, and eternity, equally one. 'These
three are one' (1 John 5:7).
6. I believe, [that] there is 'a world
to come' (Heb 2:5, 6:5).
7. I believe, that there shall be 'a
resurrection of the dead, both of the just and unjust'
(Acts 24:15). 'Many of them that sleep in the dust of
the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some
to shame and everlasting contempt' (Dan 12:2).
'Marvel not at this: for the hour is coming, in the
which all that are in the graves shall hear his voice, and
shall come forth; they that have done good, unto the
resurrection of life; and they that have done evil, unto
the resurrection of damnation' (John 5:28).
8. I believe, that they that 'shall be
accounted worthy to obtain that world, and the resurrection
from the dead, neither marry nor are given in marriage:
neither can they die any more: for they are equal unto the
angels; and are the children of God, being the children of
the resurrection' (Luke 20:34-36, see also John
10:27-29; Rev 7:16, 20:6).
9. I believe, that those that die
impenitent, shall be tormented with the devil and his
angels, and shall be cast with them into 'the lake that
burneth with fire and brimstone' (Rev 21:8). 'Where
their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched'
(Mark 9:43,48, see also Matt 25:41,46; John
5:29).
10. I believe, that because God is naturally
holy and just, even, as he is good and merciful; therefore,
all having sinned, none can be saved, without the means of
a redeemer. 'Then he is gracious unto him, and saith,
Deliver him from going down to the pit: I have found a
ransom' (Job 33:24). 'We have redemption through
his blood, even the forgiveness of sins' (Col
1:14). For which 'without shedding of blood, is no
remission' (Heb 9:22).
11. I believe that Jesus Christ our Lord
himself is the redeemer. 'They remembered that God
was their rock, and the high God their redeemer'
(Psa 78:35). 'Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not
redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and
gold, from your vain conversation received by
tradition from your fathers; but with the precious blood of
Christ, as of a lamb without blemish, and without spot'
(1 Peter 1:18,19).
12. I believe, that the great reason why the
Lord, the second person in the Godhead, did clothe himself
with our flesh and blood, was that he might be capable of
obtaining the redemption, that before the world, was
intended for us. 'Forasmuch then as the children are
partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took
part of the same; [mark] that through death he might
destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the
devil; and deliver them who through fear of death, were all
their lifetime subject to bondage' (Heb 2:14,15).
'When the fulness of time was come, God sent forth his
Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them
that were under the law' (Gal 4:4,5). 'Wherefore it
behoved him in all things to be made like unto his
brethren, and that he might be a merciful and faithful high
priest in things pertaining to God, to make
reconciliation for the sins of the people. For in that he
himself hath suffered being tempted, he is able to succour
them that are tempted' (Heb 2:17,18). 'Christ hath
redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse
for us: for it is written, Cursed is every one that
hangeth on a tree: That the blessing of Abraham might come
on the Gentiles through [faith in] Jesus Christ' (Gal
3:13,14).
13. I believe, that the time when he clothed
himself with our flesh, was in the days of the reign of
Caesar Augustus; then, I say, and not till then, was
the Word 'made flesh,' or clothed with our nature
(John 1:14; 1 Tim 3:16). 'And it came to pass in those
days, that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus,
that all the world should be taxed. And Joseph also went up
from Galilee, out of the city of Nazareth, into Judea, unto
the city of David, which is called Bethlehem; (because he
was of the house and lineage of David:) To be taxed with
Mary his espoused wife, being great with child. And so it
was, that, while they were there, the days were
accomplished that she should be delivered' (Luke
2:1,4-6). This child was he of whom godly Simeon was told
by the Holy Ghost, when he said, That he should not see
death until he had seen the Lord's Christ (vv
25-27).
14. I believe, therefore, that this very
child, as afore is testified, is both God and man; the
Christ of the living God. 'And she brought forth her
firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and
laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in
the inn. And there were in the same country shepherds -
keeping watch over their flock by night. And, lo, the angel
of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone
round about them: and they were sore afraid. And the angel
said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good
tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. For
unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour,
which is Christ the Lord. And this shall be a sign
unto you; ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling
clothes lying in a manger' (Luke 2:7-12). Again,
'But while he thought on these things, behold, the
angel of the Lord appeared unto him; - saying, Joseph, thou
son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife: for
that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost. And
she shall bring forth a son, and thou shalt call his name
JESUS: for he shall save his people from their sins. Now
all this was done, that it might be fulfilled which was
spoken of the Lord by the prophet, saying, Behold, a virgin
shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son, and they
shall call his name Emmanuel, which being interpreted is,
God with us' (Matt 1:21,22).
15. I believe, therefore, that the
righteousness, and redemption, by which we that believe,
stand just before God, as saved from the curse of the law,
is the righteousness, and redemption, that consists in the
personal acts and performances of this child Jesus; this
God-man the Lord's Christ: it consisteth, I say, in his
personal fulfilling the law for us, to the utmost
requirement of the justice of God. 'Think not [saith
he] that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I
am not come to destroy, but to fulfil' (Matt 5:17). By
which means he became 'the end of the law for
righteousness to every one that believeth' (Rom 10:4).
'For what the law could not do, in that it was weak
through the flesh, God sending his own Son in the likeness
of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the
flesh' (Rom 8:3). So finishing transgressions, and
making an end of sins, and making reconciliation for
iniquity, He brought in everlasting righteousness (1 John
3:8; 2 Tim 1:9; Heb 10:5-10; Dan 9:24).
16. I believe, that for the completing of
this work, he was always sinless (Heb 4:15); did always the
things that pleased God's justice (John 8:29), that
every one of his acts, both of doing and suffering, and
rising again from the dead, was really and infinitely
perfect, being done by him as God-man (Heb 7:26-28):
wherefore his acts before he died, are called, 'the
righteousness of God' (Rom 3:21,22), his blood,
'the blood of God' (Acts 20:28), and 'hereby
perceive we the love of God, because he laid down
his life for us' (1 John 3:16). The Godhead which gave
virtue to all the acts of the human nature, was then in
perfect union with it, when he hanged upon the cross for
our sins (Acts 10:36; John 20:28; Rom 1:4).
17. I believe then, that the righteousness
that saveth the sinner from the wrath to come, is properly
and personally Christ's, and ours but as we have union
with him; God by grace imputing it to us. 'Yea
doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the
excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for
whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count
them but dung that I may win Christ, and be found in
him, not having mine own righteousness, which is of the
law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the
righteousness which is of God by faith' (Phil 3:8,9).
'But of him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made
unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and
redemption' (1 Cor 1:30). 'For he hath made him
to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be
made the righteousness of God in him' (2 Cor 5:21)
['IN the LORD have I righteousness and strength'
(Isa 45:24).]
18. I believe, that God, as the reward of
Christ's undertakings for us, hath exalted him to his
own right-hand, as our mediator, and given him a name above
every name; and hath made him Lord of all, and judge of
quick and dead: and all this that we who believe might take
courage to believe, and hope in God (Eph 1:17-22). 'And
being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself - unto
death, even the death of the cross, [where he died for our
sins]. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him; and
given him a name - above every name: That at the name of
Jesus every knee should bow, of things heaven, and
things in earth, and things under the earth;
And that every tongue should confess that Jesus
Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father'
(Phil 2:8-11). 'And he commanded us to preach unto the
people, and to testify that it is he which was ordained of
God to be the Judge of quick and dead' (Acts
10:42, 17:31). 'Who verily was foreordained before the
foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last
times for you, who by him do believe in God that raised him
up from the dead, and gave him glory; that your faith and
hope might be in God' (1 Peter 1:19-21).
19. I believe, that being at the right hand
of God in heaven, he doth there effectually exercise the
offices of his excellent priesthood, and mediatorship,
presenting himself continually before God, in the
righteousness which is accomplished for us, when he was in
the world. For by the efficacy of his blood, he not only
went into the holy place, but being there, and having by it
obtained eternal redemption for us; now, as receiving the
worth and merit thereof from the Father; doth bestow upon
us grace, repentance, faith, and the remission of sins: yea
he also received for us, the Holy Ghost to be sent unto us,
to ascertain[4] us of our adoption and glory: 'For if
he were on earth, he should not be a priest' (Heb 8:4).
'Seeing then that we have a great high priest, that is
passed into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold
fast our profession' (Heb 4:14). 'For
there is one God, and one mediator between God and men,
the man Christ Jesus' (1 Tim 2:5). For 'by his own
blood he entered in once into the holy place, having
obtained eternal redemption for us. - For Christ is
not entered into the holy places made with hands, which
are the figures of the true; but into heaven itself,
now to appear in the presence of God for us' (Heb
9:12,24). 'Therefore being by the right hand of God
exalted, and having received of the Father the promise of
the Holy Ghost, he hath shed forth this, which ye now see
and hear' (Acts 2:23, 5:31).[5]
20. I believe, that being there, he shall so
continue till the restitution of all things, and then he
shall come again in glory, and shall sit in judgment upon
all flesh. And I believe, that according to his sentence so
shall their judgment be. 'Repent ye therefore and be
converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the
times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the
Lord; and he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was
preached unto you: whom the heaven must receive until the
times of restitution of all things, - spoken by the mouth
of all his holy prophets since the world began' (Acts
3:19-21). For 'this same Jesus, which is taken up from
you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have
seen him go into heave' (Acts 1:11). 'For the Lord
himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the
voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God';
&c. (1 Thess 4:16). 'When the Son of man shall come
in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall
he sit upon the throne of his glory: And before him shall
be gathered all nations: and he shall separate them one
from another, as a shepherd divideth his sheep from
the goats. And he shall set the sheep on his right hand,
but the goats on the left. Then shall the king say unto
them on his right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father,
inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of
the world. Then shall he say also unto them on the left
hand, Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire,
prepared for the devil and his angels: And these shall go
away into everlasting punishment: but the righteous into
life eternal' (Matt 25:31-33,41,46). For 'the day
of the Lord will come as a thief in the night, in the which
the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the
elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and
the works that are therein shall be burned up.
Seeing then that all these things shall be
dissolved, what manner of persons ought ye to be in
all holy conversation and godliness, looking for and
hasting unto the coming of the day of God, wherein the
heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the elements
shall melt with fervent heat' (2 Peter
3:10-12).
21. I believe that when he comes, his saints
shall have a reward of grace, for all their work and labour
of love which they showed to his name in the world.
'And every man shall receive his own reward, according
to his own labour' (1 Cor 3:8). 'And then shall
every man have praise of God' (4:5). 'And behold, I
come quickly; and my reward is with me, to give
every man according as his work shall be' (Rev 22:12).
'Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye stedfast,
unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord,
forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in vain in the
Lord' (1 Cor 15:58). 'Knowing that of the Lord ye
shall receive the reward of the inheritance: for ye serve
the Lord Christ' (Col 3:24).
How Christ is made ours; or by what means
this or that man, hath that benefit by him, as to stand
just before God now, and in the day of
judgment.
Of Justification.
1. I believe, we being sinful creatures in
ourselves, that no good thing done by us, can procure of
God the imputation of the righteousness of Jesus Christ.
But that the imputation thereof is an act of grace, a free
gift without our deserving. 'Being justified freely by
his grace through the redemption that is in Christ
Jesus' (Rom 3:24, 5:17). 'Who hath saved us, and
called us with an holy calling, not according to our
works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which
was given us in Christ Jesus' (2 Tim 1:9).
2. I believe also, That the power of
imputing righteousness resideth only in God by Christ: 1.
Sin being the transgression of the law. 2. The soul that
hath sinned being his creature, and the righteousness also
his, and his only. 'Even as David also describeth the
blessedness of the man, unto whom God imputeth
righteousness without works, saying, Blessed
are they whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins
are covered. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord
will not impute sin' (Rom 4:6-8). Hence therefore it is
said again, That men 'shall abundantly utter the memory
of thy great goodness, and shall sing of thy
righteousness' (Psa 145:7). 'For he saith to Moses,
I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will
have compassion on whom I will have compassion. So then
it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth,
but of God that showeth mercy' (Rom
9:15,16).
3. I believe, that the offer of this
righteousness, as tendered in the gospel, is to be received
by faith; we still in the very act of receiving it, judging
ourselves sinners in ourselves. 'Oh wretched man that I
am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death? I
thank God through Jesus Christ' (Rom 7:24,25).
'Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved' (Acts 16:31). The gospel is preached in all
nations for the obedience of faith. 'Being justified
freely by his grace through the redemption that is in
Christ Jesus; whom God hath set forth to be a
propitiation, [a sacrifice to appease the displeasure of
God] through faith in his blood. To declare his
righteousness for the remission of sins that are past
through the forbearance of God; to declare I say, at
this time his righteousness: that he might be just, and the
justifier of him which believeth on Jesus' (Rom
3:24-26). 'Be it known unto you therefore, men
and brethren, that through this man is preached unto
you the forgiveness of sins: And by him all that believe
are justified from all things, from which ye could not be
justified by the law of Moses' (Acts
13:38,39).
4. I believe, that this faith, as it
respecteth the imputation of this righteousness, for
justification before God, doth put forth itself in such
acts, as purely respect the offer of a gift. It receiveth,
accepteth of, embraceth, or trusteth to it. 'As many as
received him to them gave he power to become the sons of
God, even to them that believe on his name'
(John 1:12). 'This is a faithful saying, and
worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the
world to save sinners; of whom I am chief' (1 Tim 1:15;
Heb 11:13). 'In whom ye also trusted, after that
ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation:
In whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with
that holy spirit of promise' (Eph 1:13). I believe
therefore, that as to my justification from the curse of
the law, I am, as I stand in myself, ungodly, to receive,
accept of, embrace, and trust to the righteousness, that is
already provided by, and wrapt up in the personal doings
and sufferings of Christ; it being faith in that, and that
only, that can justify a sinner in the sight of
God.[6]
5. I believe, that the faith that so doth,
is not to be found with any but those, in whom the Spirit
of God by mighty power doth work it: all others being
fearful and incredulous, dare not venture their souls and
eternity upon it. And hence it is called the faith that is
wrought by the exceeding great and mighty power of God; the
faith of the operation of God. And hence it is that others
are said to be fearful, and so unbelieving. These with
other ungodly sinners must have their part in the lake of
fire (Eph 1:18,19; Col 2:12; Eph 2:8; Phil 1:19; Rev
21:8).
6. I believe, that this faith is effectually
wrought in none, but those which before the world were
appointed unto glory. 'And as many as were ordained
unto eternal life believed' (Acts 13:48). 'That he
might make known the riches of his glory on the vessels of
mercy, which he had afore prepared unto glory' (Rom
9:23). 'We give thanks to God always for you all,
making mention of you in our prayers; remembering without
ceasing your work of faith, and labour of love, and
patience of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ, in the sight of
God; - knowing, brethren beloved, your election of God'
(1 Thess 1:2-4). But of the rest he saith, 'ye believe
not because ye are not of my sheep, as I said' (John
10:26), which latter words relate to the 16th verse, which
respecteth the election of God.
'Therefore they could not believe,
because that Esaias said again, He hath blinded their eyes,
and hardened their heart; that they should not see with
their eyes, nor understand with their heart, and
I should heal them' (John 12:39,40).
Of Election.
1. I believe that election is free and
permanent, being founded in grace, and the unchangeable
will of God. 'Even so then at this present time also
there is a remnant according to the election of grace. And
if by grace, then it is no more of works: otherwise
grace is no more grace. But if it be of works, then
is it no more of grace: otherwise work is no more work'
(Rom 11:5,6). 'Nevertheless the foundation of God
standeth sure, having this seal, the Lord knoweth them that
are his' (2 Tim 2:19). 'In whom also we have
obtained an inheritance, being predestinated according to
the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel
of his own will' (Eph 1:11).
2. I believe, that this decree, choice or
election, was before the foundation of the world; and so
before the elect themselves, had being in themselves: For
'God who quickeneth the dead, and calleth those things
which be not as though they were' (Rom 4:17), stays not
for the being of things, to determine his eternal purpose
by; but having all things present to him, in his wisdom, he
made his choice before the world was (Eph 1:4; 2 Tim
1:9).
3. I believe, that the decree of election is
so far off from making works in us foreseen, the ground or
cause of the choice: that it containeth in the bowels of
it, not only the persons, but the graces that accompany
their salvation. And hence it is, that it is said; we are
predestinated 'to be conformed to the image of
his Son' (Rom 8:29); not because we are, but 'that
we SHOULD be holy and without blame before him in love'
(Eph 1:4). 'For we are his workmanship, created in
Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before
ordained that we should walk in them' (Eph 2:10). He
blessed us according as he chose us in Christ. And hence it
is again that the salvation and calling of which we are now
made partakers, is no other than what was given us in
Christ Jesus before the world began; according to his
eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord
(Eph 3:8-11; 2 Tim 1:9; Rom 8:29).
4. I believe that Christ Jesus is he in whom
the elect are always considered, and that without him there
is neither election, grace, nor salvation. 'Having
predestinated us unto the adoption of children, by Jesus
Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his
will, to the praise of the glory of his grace: wherein he
hath made us accepted in the beloved. In whom we have
redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins,
according to the riches of his grace. - That in the
dispensation of the fulness of times, he might gather
together in one all things in Christ, both which are in
heaven, and which are in earth, even in him'
(Eph 1:5-7,10). 'Neither is there salvation in any
other: for there is none other name under heaven given
among men, whereby we must be saved' (Acts
4:12).
5. I believe, that there is not any
impediment attending the election of God, that can hinder
their conversion, and eternal salvation. 'Moreover whom
he did predestinate, them he also called: and whom he
called, them he also justified: and whom he justified, them
he also glorified. What shall we then say to these things?
If God be for us, who can be against us? -
Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's elect?
It is God that justifieth. Who is he that
condemneth?' &c. (Rom 8:30-35). 'What then?
Israel hath not obtained that which he seeketh for; but the
election hath obtained it, and the rest were blinded'
(Rom 11:7). 'For Israel hath not been
forsaken, nor Judah of his God, of the LORD of hosts:
though their land was filled with sin, against the holy one
of Israel' (Jer 51:5). When Ananias made intercession
against Saul, saying, 'Lord, I have heard by many of
this man, how much evil he hath done to thy saints at
Jerusalem: and here he hath authority from the chief
priests to bind all that call on thy name.' What said
God unto him? 'Go thy way, for he is a chosen vessel
unto me, to bear my name before the Gentiles,and kings, and
the children of Israel' (Acts 9:12,15).
6. I believe that no man can know his
election, but by his calling. The vessels of mercy, which
God afore prepared unto glory, do thus claim a share
therein: 'Even us, [say they,] whom he hath called, not
of the Jews only, but also of the Gentiles? As he saith
also in Hosea; I will call them my people, which were not
my people, and her beloved, which was not beloved' (Rom
9:24,25).
7. I believe therefore, that election doth
not forestal or prevent the means which are of God
appointed to bring us to Christ, to grace and glory; but
rather putteth a necessity upon the use and effect thereof;
because they are chosen to be brought to heaven that way:
that is, by the faith of Jesus Christ, which is the end of
effectual calling. 'Wherefore the rather, brethren,
give diligence to make your calling and election sure'
(2 Peter 1:10; 2 Thess 2:13; 1 Peter 1:12).
Of Calling.
I believe, that to effectual calling, the
Holy Ghost must accompany the word of the gospel, and that
with mighty power: I mean that calling, which of God is
made to be the fruit of electing love. 'Knowing,'
saith Paul to the Thessalonians, 'brethren beloved,
your election of God. For our gospel came not unto you in
word only, but also in power, and in the Holy Ghost, and in
much assurance,' &c. (1 Thess 1:4,5). Otherwise men
will not, cannot, hear and turn. Samuel was called four
times, before he knew the voice of him that spake from
heaven (1 Sam 3:-610). It is said of them in Hosea, That as
the prophets called them so they went from them; and
instead of turning to them, 'sacrificed to Baalim, and
burned incense to graven images' (Hosea 11:2). The
reason is, because men by nature are not only dead in sins,
but enemies in their minds by reason of wicked works: the
call then is, 'Awake thou that sleepest, and arise from
the dead, and Christ shall give thee light' (Eph 5:14).
Understand, therefore, that effectual calling is like that
word of Christ that raised Lazarus from the dead; a word
attended with an arm that was omnipotent. 'Lazarus,
come forth' (John 11:43). It was a word to the dead;
but not only so: it was a word for the dead; a word that
raised him from the dead; a word that outwent all
opposition; and that brought him forth of the grave, though
bound hand and foot therein (Gal 1:15). And hence it is,
that calling is sometimes expressed by quickening (Eph
2:1,2), awakening, illuminating, or bringing them forth of
darkness to light, that amazeth and astonisheth them (Heb
10:32; Acts 9:6). For as it is a strange thing for a man
that lay long dead, or never saw the light with his eyes,
to be raised out of the grave, or to be made to see that
which he could not so much as once think of before, so it
is with effectual calling. Hence it is that Paul, when
called, stood 'trembling and was astonished': and
that Peter saith, 'he hath called us out of darkness
into his marvellous light' (1 Peter 2:9; Eph 4:24; Acts
9:6). In effectual calling the voice of God is heard, and
the gates of heaven are opened:[7] when God called Abraham,
he appeared to him in glory. That of Ananias to Saul is
experienced but by few. 'The God of our fathers hath
chosen thee, [saith he,] that thou shouldest know his will,
and see that just one, and shouldest hear the voice of his
mouth' (Acts 22:14). True, Saul's call was out of
the ordinary way, but yet as to the matter, and truth of
the work, it was no other than all the chosen have,
viz.
(1.) An effectual awakening about the evil
of sin; and especially of unbelief (John 16:9). And
therefore when the Lord God called Adam, he also made unto
him an effectual discovery of sin; insomuch that he stript
him of all his righteousness (Gen 3). Thus he also served
the gaoler (Acts 16:29,30). Yea it is such an awakening, as
by it, he sees he was without Christ, without hope, and a
stranger to the commonwealth of Israel, 'and without
God in the world' (Eph 2:12). Oh the dread and
amazement that the guilt of sin brings with it,when it is
revealed by the God of heaven; and like to it is the sight
of mercy, when it pleaseth God, who calleth us by his
grace, to reveal his Son in us.
(2.) In effectual calling there is great
awakenings about the world to come, and the glory of unseen
things; the resurrection of the dead, and eternal judgment;
the salvation that God hath prepared for them that love
him; with the blessedness that will attend us, and be upon
us, at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, are great
things in the soul that is under the awakening calls of
God. And hence we are said to be called to glory (1 Thess
2:12). 'To the obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus
Christ' (2 Thess 2:14).
(3.) In effectual calling there is also a
sanctifying virtue; and hence we are said to be called with
an holy calling (1 Thess 4:7), with an 'heavenly
calling' (Heb 3:1). Called to glory and virtue.
'But ye are a chosen generation, a royal
priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people; that ye
should show forth the praises of him who hath called you
out of darkness into his marvellous light' (1 Peter
2:9). Yea, effectual calling hath annexed to it, as its
inseparable companion, the promise of thorough
sanctification. 'Faithful is he that calleth
you, who also will do it' (1 Thess
5:24).
Of Faith.
I believe, that effectual calling doth
therefore produce, 1. FAITH; and therefore it is said, that
'faith cometh by hearing' (Rom 10:17); by
hearing the word that calleth us 'unto the grace of
Christ' (Gal 1:6). For by the word that calleth us, is
Jesus Christ held forth to us; and offered to be our
righteousness; and therefore the apostle saith again, that
God hath called us 'unto the fellowship of his Son
Jesus Christ' (1 Cor 1:9); that is, to be made
partakers of the riches of grace, and the righteousness
that is in him. 2. It produceth hope. It giveth a ground to
hope; and therefore hope is said to be the hope of our
calling (Eph 1:18). And again, 'Even as ye are called
in one hope of your calling' (Eph 4:4). Now the godly
wise know, whoso misseth of effectual calling, misseth of
eternal life; because God justifieth none but them whom he
calleth; and glorifies none but those whom he justifies:
and therefore it is that Peter said before, 'Make your
calling, and [so] your election sure': make it sure,
that is, prove your calling right, by the word of God. For
whoso staggereth at the certainty of his calling, cannot
comfortably hope for a share in eternal life. 'Remember
the word unto thy servant, upon which thou hast caused me
to hope. My soul fainteth for thy salvation, but I
hope in thy word' (Psa 119:49,81). 3. It produceth
repentance; for when a man hath heaven and hell before his
eyes (as he will have if he be under the power of effectual
calling) or when a man hath a revelation of the mercy and
justice of God, with an heart-drawing invitation to lay
hold on the tender forgiveness of sins; and being made also
to behold the goodly beauty of holiness; it must needs be,
that repentance appears, and puts forth itself, unto
self-revenging acts, for all its wickedness which in the
days of ignorance it delighted in. And hence is that
saying, 'I came not to call the righteous, but sinners
to repentance' (Mark 2:17). For the effecting of which,
the preaching of the word of the kingdom, is most proper:
'Repent: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand'
(Matt 4:17).
Of Repentance.
Repentance is a turning the heart to God in
Christ: a turning of it from sin, and the devil, and
darkness; to the goodness, and grace, and holiness that is
in him. Wherefore, they that of old are said to repent, are
said to loath and abhor themselves, for all their
abominations. 'I abhor myself,' [said Job,]
'and repent in dust and ashes' (Job 42:6, see also
Eze 6:9, 20:43, 36:31, 42:6, 16:63).
Godly repentance doth not only affect the
soul with the loathsome nature of sin that is past; but
filleth the heart with godly hatred of sins that yet may
come. When Moses feared that through his being
overburthened with the care of the children of Israel, some
unruly or sinful passions might show themselves in him,
what saith he? 'Kill me, I pray thee, out of hand, if I
have found favour in thy sight, and let me not see my
wretchedness' (Num 11:15). See also how that which Paul
calleth godly repentance, wrought in the upright
Corinthians, 'Behold, ' [saith he,] this self same
thing, that ye sorrowed after a godly sort, what
carefulness it wrought in you, yea, what clearing of
yourselves, yea, what indignation, yea, what
fear, yea, what vehement desire, yea, what
zeal, yea, what revenge! In all things ye
have approved yourselves to be clear in this matter (2 Cor
7:11).
Of Love.
It [effectual calling] produceth also love:
wherefore Paul, when he had put the church in remembrance
that they were called of God, adds, That concerning
brotherly love, they had no need that he should write unto
them (1 Thess 4:9). As who should say, If God be so kind to
us, to forgive us our sins, to save our souls, and to give
us the kingdom of heaven; let these be motives beyond all
other to provoke us to love again. Farther, if we that are
thus beloved of God, are made members of one man's
body, all partakers of his grace, clothed all, with his
glorious righteousness, and are together appointed to be
the children of the next world; why should we not love one
another? 'Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought also to
love one another' (1 John 4:11). And truly so we shall,
if the true grace of God be upon us; because we also see
them to be the called of Jesus. Travellers, that are of the
same country, love and take pleasure one in another, when
they meet in a strange land.[8] Why, we sojourn here in a
strange country, with them that are heirs together with us
of the promised kingdom and glory (Heb 11:9). Now, as I
said, this holy love worketh by love: mark, love in God and
Christ when discovered, constraineth us to love [one
another] (2 Cor 5:14).
The name, therefore, and word, and truth of
God in Christ, together with the sincerity of grace, of
faith, and holiness in us, are the delightful objects of
this love (Psa 119:47,127,132,159, 5:11, 69:36, 101:6). For
it embraceth with delight and complacency, but as it
discerneth the image of God, and of Christ in the soul, his
presence in the ministry, and a suitableness in our worship
to the word and mind of Christ (Psa 26:8, 27:4, 84:1-4; 1
Thess 5:13; Phil 1:3-7; Eph 4:32).
Love also hath a blessed faculty, and
heavenly, in bearing and suffering afflictions, putting up
wrongs, overlooking the infirmities of the brethren, and in
serving in all Christian offices the necessities of the
saints. 'Charity suffereth long and is kind;
charity envieth not; charity vaunteth not itself, is not
puffed up, doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her
own, is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil; rejoiceth
not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth; beareth all
things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth
all things. Charity never faileth' (1 Cor 13:4-8, also
1 Peter 4:8; Gal 5:13). In a word, it designeth a holy
conversation in this world; that God, and Christ, and the
word of Christ, 'may be glorified thereby' (2 Cor
11:10-12; 1 Peter 1:12, 3:16).
Of the Scriptures.
Touching which word of God I thus believe
and confess, 1. That all the holy scriptures are the words
of God. 'All scripture is given by inspiration
of God' (2 Tim 3:16). For the prophecy [of the
scripture] came not in old time by the will of man: but
holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy
Ghost (2 Peter 1:21). 2. I believe that the holy
scriptures, of themselves, without the addition of human
inventions, are able to make the man of God perfect in all
things; and 'thoroughly to furnish him unto all good
works.' They are able 'to make thee wise unto
salvation, through faith which is in Christ Jesus' (2
Tim 3:15). And to instruct thee in all other things, that
either respect the worship of God, or thy walking before
all men (2 Tim 3:17; 2 Peter 1:19-21). 3. I believe the
great end why God committed the scriptures to writing was;
that we might be instructed to Christ, taught how to
believe (1 John 5:13), [and be] encouraged to patience and
hope, for the grace that is to be brought unto us at the
revelation of Jesus Christ (John 20:31; Rom 15:4). Also
that we might understand what is sin, and how to avoid the
commission thereof. 'Concerning the works of men [said
David] by the word of thy lips, I have kept me from
the paths of the destroyer' (Psa 17:4). 'Through
thy precepts I get understanding: therefore I hate every
false way' (Psa 119:104). 'Thy word have I hid in
mine heart, that I might not sin against thee' (Psa
119:11). 4. I believe that they cannot be broken, but will
certainly be fulfilled in all the prophecies, threatenings,
and promises, either to the salvation or damnation of men.
They are like that flying roll, that will go over all the
earth to cut off and curse (Ze 5:2-4). In them is contained
also the blessing, they preach to us also the way of
salvation (Gal 3:8). 'Beware, therefore, lest that come
upon you, which is spoken of in the prophets; Behold, ye
despisers, and wonder, and perish:[9] for I work a work in
your days, a work which ye shall in no wise believe, though
a man declare it unto you' (Acts 13:40,41, see also
John 10:35, 12:37-41, 3:17-19). 5. I believe that Jesus
Christ, by the word of the scriptures, will judge all men
at the day of doom; for that is the book of the law of the
Lord, according to Paul's gospel (John 12:44-50; Rom
2:16). 6. I believe, that this God 'made the world and
all things [that are] therein' (Acts 17:24), for
'in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea,
and all that in them is' (Exo 20:11). Also, that
after the time of the making thereof, he disposed of it to
the children of men, with a reserve thereof for the
children of God, that should in all ages be born thereunto.
'When the Most High divided to the nations their
inheritance, when he separated the sons of Adam, he set the
bounds of the people according to the number of the
children of Israel' (Deut 32:8), for as he 'made of
one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face
of the earth, [so he] hath determined the times before
appointed, and the bounds of their habitation' (Acts
17:26).
Of Magistracy.
I believe, that magistracy is God's
ordinance, which he hath appointed for the government of
the whole world; and that it is a judgment of God, to be
without those ministers of God, which he hath ordained to
put wickedness to shame (Ju 18:7). 'Whosoever therefore
resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinance of God: and
they that resist shall receive to themselves damnation. For
rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil.
Wilt thou not then be afraid of the power? do that which is
good, and thou shalt have praise of the same: for he is the
minister of God to thee for good. But if thou do that which
is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not the sword in vain:
for he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute
wrath upon him that doeth evil. Wherefore ye must
needs be subject, not only for wrath, but also for
conscience sake. For this cause pay ye tribute also: for
they are God's ministers, attending continually upon
this very thing' (Rom 13:2-6). Many are the mercies we
receive, by a well qualified magistrate, and if any shall
at any time be otherwise inclined, let us shew our
Christianity in a patient suffering, for well doing,
what it shall please God to inflict by them.[10]
A REASON OF MY PRACTICE IN
WORSHIP.
Having thus made confession of my faith, I
now come to shew you my practice in worship, with the
reasons thereof. The which I shall have occasion to touch,
under two distinct heads.
I. With whom I dare not hold
communion.
II. With whom I dare.
Only, first, note, that by the word
communion, I mean fellowship in the things of the kingdom
of Christ, or that which is commonly called church
communion, the communion of saints. For in civil affairs,
and in things of this world that are honest, I am not
altogether tied up from the fornicators thereof (1 Cor
5:9,10); wherefore in my following discourse understand me
in the first sense:--Now, then,
FIRST, I dare not have communion with them
that profess not faith and holiness; or that are not
visible saints by calling: but note, that by this
assertion, I meddle not with the elect; but as he is a
visible saint by calling; neither do I exclude the secret
hypocrite, if he be hid from me by visible saintship.
Wherefore I dare not have communion with men from a single
supposition, that they may be elect, neither dare I exclude
the other from a single supposing that he may be a secret
hypocrite. I meddle not here with these things; I only
exclude him that is not a visible saint. Now he that is
visibly or openly profane, cannot be then a visible saint;
for he that is a visible saint must profess faith, and
repentance, and consequently holiness of life: and with
none else dare I communicate.
First, Because God himself hath so
strictly put the difference, both by word and deed; for
from the beginning, he did not only put a difference
between the seed of the woman and the children of the
wicked (Gen 3:15), only the instinct of grace and change of
the mind is his own, but did cast out from his presence the
father of all the ungodly, even cursed Cain, when he shewed
himself openly profane, and banished him to go into the
land of the runnagate, or vagabond, where from God's
face, and so the privileges of the communion of saints, he
was ever after hid (Gen 4:8-16).
Besides, when after this, through the policy
of Satan, the children of Cain, and the seed of Seth, did
commix themselves in worship, and by that means had
corrupted the way of God: what followed, but first, God
judged it wickedness, raised up Noah to preach against it,
and after that, because they would not be reclaimed, he
brought the flood upon the whole world of these ungodly;
and saved only Noah alive, and his because he had kept
himself righteous (Gen 6:1-13)[11]. Here I could enlarge
abundantly, and add many more instances of a like nature,
but I am here only for a touch upon things.
Second, Because it is so often
commanded in the scriptures, That all the congregation
should be holy. 'I am the Lord your God: ye
shall therefore sanctify yourselves, and ye shall be holy;
for I am holy' (Lev 11:44). 'Ye shall be
holy, for I the Lord your God am holy' (19:2).
'Sanctify yourselves therefore, and be ye holy: for I
am the Lord your God' (20:7; 1 Peter 1:15,16).
Besides, 1. The gates of the temple were to be shut against
all other. 'Open ye the gates, that the righteous
nation which keepeth the truth may enter in' (Isa
26:2). 'This gate of the Lord, into which the righteous
shall enter' (Psa 118:20). 'Thus saith the Lord
God: No stranger, uncircumcised in heart, nor uncircumcised
in flesh, shall enter into my sanctuary, of any stranger
that is among the children of Israel' (Eze
44:9). 2. Because the things of worship are holy; 'Be
ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord' (Isa
52:11). 3. Because all the limits and bounds of communion
are holy. 'This is the law of the house; Upon
the top of the mountain, the whole limit thereof - shall
be most holy. Behold, this is the law of the
house' (Eze 43:12)[12].
Third, I dare not have communion with
them; because the example of New Testament churches before
us, have been a community of visible saints. Paul, to the
Romans, writes thus: 'To all that be in Rome, beloved
of God, called to be saints' (1:7). And to the
rest of the churches thus: 'Unto the church of God
which is at Corinth, to them that are sanctified in Christ
Jesus; called to be saints' (1 Cor 1:2). 'To
the saints which are at Ephesus, and to the faithful in
Christ Jesus' (Eph 1:1). 'To all the saints which
are at Philippi, with the bishops and deacons' (Phil
1:1). 'To the saints and faithful brethren in Christ
which are at Colosse' (Col 1:2). 'To the church of
the Thessalonians, which is in God the Father, and
in the Lord Jesus Christ,' &c. (1 Thess
1:1).Thus you see under what denomination those persons
went of old, who were counted worthy to be members of a
visible church of Christ. Besides, the members of such
churches go under such characters as these.
(1.) 'The called of Christ Jesus'
(Rom 1:6). (2.) Men that have drank into the Spirit of
Jesus Christ (1 Cor 12:13). (3.) Persons in whom was God
the Father (Eph 4:6). (4.) They were all made partakers of
the joy of the gospel (Phil 1:7). (5.) Persons that were
circumcised inwardly (Col 2:11). (6.) Persons that turned
from idols to serve the living and true God (1 Thess 1:9).
(7.) Those that were the body of Christ, and members in
particular, that is, those that were visibly such; because
they made profession of faith, of holiness, of repentance,
of love to Christ, and of self-denial, at their receiving
into fellowship.
Fourth, I dare not hold communion
with the open profane.
(1.) Because it is promised to the church,
that she shall dwell by herself; that is, as she is a
church, and spiritual; Lo, the people shall dwell alone,
and shall not be reckoned among the nations (Num 23:9).
(2.) Because this is their privilege. 'But ye
are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy
nation, a peculiar people; that ye should shew forth the
praises of him who hath called you out of darkness into his
marvellous light' (1 Peter 2:9,10). (3.) Because this
is the fruit of the death of Christ, 'who gave himself
for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and
purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good
works' (Titus 2:14). (4.) Because this is the
commandment: 'Save yourselves from this untoward
generation' (Acts 2:40). (5.) Because with such it is
not possible we should have true and spiritual communion.
Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for
what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness?
and what communion hath light with darkness? And what
concord hath Christ with Belial? or what part hath he that
believeth with an infidel? And what agreement hath the
temple of God with idols? for ye are the temple of the
living God, as God hath said, I will dwell in them and walk
in them; and I will be their God, and they shall be
my people. Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye
separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean
thing; and I will receive you, and will be a Father
unto you, - saith the Lord Almighty (2 Cor
6:14-18).
Fifth, I dare not hold communion with
the open profane. Because
(1.) This would be ploughing with an ox, and
an ass together (Deut 22:10): heavenly persons suit best
for communion in heavenly matters. (2.) It subjecteth not
the nature of our discipline, which is not forced, but
free,[13] in a professed subjection to the will and
commandment of Christ: others being excluded by God's
own prohibition (Lev 1:3; Rom 6:17; 2 Cor 8:12, 9:7,13,
8:5). Paul also, when he exhorteth Timothy to follow after
righteousness, faith, charity, peace, &c., (which are
the bowels of church communion,) he saith, do it 'with
them that call on the Lord, out of a pure heart' (2 Tim
2:22).
Sixth, In a word, to hold communion
with the open profane, is most pernicious and destructive.
(1.) 'Twas the wicked multitude that fell a lusting,
and that tempted Christ in the desert (Num 11:4). (2.) It
was the profane heathen, of whom Israel learned to worship
idols. They 'were mingled among the heathen, and
learned their works. And served their idols; which were a
snare unto them' (Psa 106:35,36). (3.) It is the
mingled people that God hath threatened to plague with
those deadly punishments of his, with which he hath
threatened to punish Babylon itself; saying, When a sword
is upon her liars, her mighty, her chariots, and treasures;
a sword also shall be upon the mingled people that are in
the midst of her.
And no marvel: for, (1.) Mixed communion
polluteth the ordinances of God. Say to the rebels, saith
the Lord God, 'Let it suffice you of all your
abominations, in that ye have brought into my
sanctuary strangers, uncircumcised in heart, and
uncircumcised in flesh, to be in my sanctuary, to pollute
it, even my house, when ye offer my bread, the fat
and the blood, and they have broken my covenant, because of
all your abominations' (Eze 44:6,7). (2.) It violateth
he law. 'Her priests have violated my law, and have
profaned mine holy things: [how] They have put no
difference between the holy and profane, neither have they
shewed difference between the unclean and the
clean' (Eze 20:26). (3.) It profaneth the holiness of
God. 'Judah hath dealt treacherously, and an
abomination is committed in Israel and in Jerusalem; for
Judah hath profaned the holiness of the Lord which he
loved, and hath married the daughter of a strange god'
(Mal 2:11). (4.) It defileth the truly gracious. 'Know
ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump?'
(1 Cor 5:6). Look diligently therefore, 'lest any root
of bitterness springing up trouble you, and thereby
many be defiled' (Heb 12:15).
Lastly, To conclude, it provoketh God
to punish with severe judgments: And therefore heed well.
(1.) As I said before, The drowning of the whole world was
occasioned by the sons of God commixing themselves with the
daughters of men; and the corruption of worship that
followed thereupon (Gen 6, 7). (2.) He sent a plague upon
the children of Israel, for joining themselves unto the
people of Moab; and for following their abominations in
worship (Num 25:1-5; Josh 22:17): and let no man think,
that now I have altered the state of the question: for it
is all one with the church to communicate with the profane;
and to sacrifice and offer their gifts to the devil (Deut
32:16-19; Psa 106:36-40)[14]: the reason is, because such
have by their sin forsaken the protection of heaven, and
are given up to their own heart-lusts; and left to be
overcome of the wicked, to whom they have joined themselves
(Deut 12, 7:1-6). join not yourselves, said God, to the
wicked, neither in religion nor marriages; 'For they
will turn away thy son from following me, that they may
serve other gods: so will the anger of the Lord be kindled
against you, and destroy thee suddenly' (Deut 7:5).
'Did not Solomon king of Israel sin by these things?
yet among many nations was there no king like him who was
beloved of his God' (Neh 13:26). Hear how Paul handleth
the point; 'But I say, that the things which the
Gentiles [or openly profane] sacrifice, they sacrifice to
devils, and not to God; and I would not that ye should have
fellowship with devils. Ye cannot drink the cup of the
Lord, and the cup of devils: Ye cannot be partakers of the
table of the Lord, and of the table of devils. Do we
provoke the Lord to jealousy? Are we stronger than he?'
(1 Cor 10:20-22). I conclude, that therefore it is an evil,
and a dangerous thing to hold church communion with the
openly profane and ungodly. It polluteth his ordinances: it
violateth his law: it profaneth his holiness: it defileth
his people; and provoketh the Lord to severe and terrible
judgments.
Object. But we can prove in all ages
[that] there have been the open profane in the church of
God.
Ans. In many ages indeed it hath been
so: but mark, they appeared not such, when first they were
received unto communion (Exo 12:48), neither were they with
God's liking, as such, to be retained among them, but
in order to their admonition, repentance and amendment of
life: of which, if they failed, God presently threatened
the church; and either cut them off from the church, as he
did the idolators, fornicators, murmurers, tempters,
sabbath breakers; with Korah, Dathan, Achan, and others (2
Cor 6; 1 Cor 5; Exo 32:25; Num 25:1-9, 21:5,6, 14:37, 16,
15:32-36; Josh 7; 2 Kings 17; Eze 22, 23) or else cut off
them with the church and all, as he served the ten tribes
at one time, and the two tribes at another. 'My God
will cast them away, because they did not hearken unto him:
and they shall be wanderers among the nations' (Hosea
9:17). I might here greatly enlarge, but I intend brevity;
yet let me tell you, that when Nehemiah understood by the
book of the law of the Lord, that the Ammonite and the
Moabite should not come into the congregation of God:
'They separated from Israel all the mixed
multitude' (Neh 13:1-3). Many have pleaded for the
profane, that they should abide in the church of God; but
such hath not considered, that God's wrath at all times
hath with great indignation been shewed against such
offenders and their conceits. Indeed they like not for to
plead for them under that notion, but rather as Korah, and
his company: 'All the congregation are holy every one
of them' (Num 16:3). But it maketh no matter by what
name they are called; if by their deeds they shew
themselves openly wicked: for names and notions sanctify
not the heart and nature; they make not virtues of vice,
neither can it save such advocates from the heavy curse
both of God and men (Prov 17:15, 24:24). 'The righteous
men, they shall judge them after the manner of
adulteresses, and after the manner of women that shed
blood; because they are adulteresses, and blood
is in their hands' (Eze 23:45).
SECOND, Thus have I shewed you with whom I
dare not have communion: and now to shew you with whom I
dare. But in order thereto, I desire you
First, To take notice; That touching
shadowish, or figurative ordinances; I believe that Christ
hath ordained but two in his church, viz., Water baptism
and the supper of the Lord: both which are of excellent use
to the church in this world; they being to us
representations of the death and resurrection of Christ;
and are, as God shall make them, helps to our faith
therein. But I count them not the fundamentals of our
Christianity, nor grounds or rule to communion with saints:
servants they are, and our mystical ministers, to teach and
instruct us in the most weighty matters of the kingdom of
God: I therefore here declare my reverent esteem of them;
yet dare not remove them, as some do, from the place and
end, where by God they are set and appointed; nor ascribe
unto them more than they were ordered to have in their
first and primitive institution. It is possible to commit
idolatry even with God's own appointments: but I pass
this, and come to the thing propounded.
Second, then, I dare have communion,
church communion, with those that are visible saints by
calling: with those that, by the word of the gospel, have
been brought over to faith and holiness: and it maketh no
matter to me, what their life was heretofore, if they now
be 'washed,' if they be 'sanctified,' if
they be 'justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and
by the Spirit of our God' (1 Cor 6:11). Now in order to
the discovery of this faith and holiness, and so to
fellowship in church communion: I hold it requisite that a
faithful relation be made thereof by the party thus to be
received; yea, if need be, by witnesses also, for the
satisfaction of the church, that she may receive in faith
and judgment, such as best shall suit her holy profession
(Acts 9:26-28; 1 Cor 16:10; 2 Cor 8:23). Observe it; these
texts do respect extraordinary officers; and yet see, that
in order to their reception by the church, there was made
to them a faithful relation of the faith and holiness of
those very persons; for no man may intrude himself upon, or
thrust himself upon, or thrust himself into a church of
Christ; without the church have first the knowledge and
liking of the person to be received: if otherwise, there is
a door opened for all the heretics in the world; yea, for
devils also if they appear in human shapes. But Paul shows
you the manner of receiving, by pleading (after some
disgrace thrown upon him by the false apostles) for his own
admission of his companions: 'Receive us, [saith he,]
we have wronged no man, we have corrupted no man; we have
defrauded no man' (2 Cor 7:2). And so concerning
Timothy: 'If Timotheus come, [saith he,] see that he
may be with you without fear: for he worketh the work of
the Lord, as I also do' (1 Cor 16:10). Also, when Paul
supposed that Titus might be suspected by some; see how he
pleads for him: If 'any do enquire of Titus,
he is my partner and fellow-helper concerning you: or
our brethren be enquired of, they are the messengers
of the churches, and the glory of Christ' (2 Cor
8:23). Phebe also, when she was to be received by the
church at Rome; see how he speaketh in her behalf: 'I
commend unto you Phebe our sister, which is a servant of
the church which is sat Cenchrea: that ye receive her in
the Lord, as becometh saints, and that ye assist her in
whatsoever business she hath need of you; for she hath been
a succourer of many, and of myself also' (Rom 16:1,2).
Yea, when the apostles and brethren sent their epistles
from Jerusalem to Antioch; under what characters do those
go, that were the messengers to them? 'It seemed good
unto [the Holy Ghost and to] us, - to send chosen men unto
you with our beloved Barnabas and Paul, men that have
hazarded their lives for the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ,' &c. (Acts 15:25-27). Now though the
occasions upon which these commendations were written were
not simply, or only, in order to church relation, but also
for other causes; yet because the persons concerned were of
the churches to be received as faithful, and such who would
partake of church privileges with them, they have,
therefore, their faith and faithfulness related to the
churches, as those that were particularly embodied there.
Besides Timothy and Titus being extraordinary officers,
stood as members and officers in every church where they
were received. Likewise Barnabas and Saul, Judas and Silas,
abode as members and officers where they were sent. It was
requisite, therefore, that the letters of recommendation
should be in substance the same with that relation that
ought to be made to the church, by or for the person that
is to be embodied there. But to return, I DARE HAVE
COMMUNION, CHURCH COMMUNION, WITH THOSE THAT ARE VISIBLE
SAINTS BY CALLING.
Quest. But by what rule would you
receive them into fellowship with yourselves?
Ans. Even by a discovery of their
faith and holiness, and their declaration of willingness to
subject themselves to the laws and government of Christ in
his church.
Quest. But do you not count that by
water baptism, and not otherwise, that being the initiating
and entering ordinance; they ought to be received into
fellowship?
Ans. No; But tarry, and take my sense
with my word. For herein lies the mistake, To think that
because in time past baptism was administered upon
conversion, that therefore it is the initiating and
entering ordinance into church communion: when by the word
no such thing is testified of it. Besides, that it is not
so will be manifest, if we consider the nature and power of
such an ordinance.
That ordinance then, that is, the initiating
or entering ordinance [as before] doth give to them that
partake thereof a right to, and a being of, membership with
that particular church by which it is administered. I say,
a right to, and a being of, membership, without the
addition of another church act. This is evident by the law
of circumcision, which was the initiating law of old; for
by the administration of that very ordinance, the partaker
thereof was forthwith a member of that congregation,
without the addition of another church act (Gen 17). This
is declared in its first institution, and therefore it is
called the token of the covenant. The token or sign of
righteousness, of Abraham's faith, and of the visible
membership of those that joined themselves to the church
with him; the very inlet into church communion that gave a
being of membership among them. And thus Moses himself
expounds it; 'every man's servant, that is bought
for money, when thou hast circumcised him, then shall
eat' of the passover (Exo 12:44), without the addition
of another church act, to empower him thereunto; his
circumcision hath already given him a being there, and so a
right to, and privilege in church relation: 'A
foreigner and an hired servant shall not eat thereof,
[because not circumcised]. And when a stranger shall
sojourn with thee, and will keep the passover to the LORD,
let all his males be circumcised, and then let him come
near and keep it; [For then he is one of the church] and he
shall be as one born in the land: for no uncircumcised
person shall eat thereof' (Exo 12:48). Neither could
any other thing, according to the law of circumcision, give
the devoutest person that breathed a being of membership
with them. 'He that is born in thy house, and he that
is bought with thy money, must needs be circumcised: - and
the uncircumcised man child, whose flesh of his foreskin is
not circumcised, that soul shall be cut off from his
people' (Gen 17:13,14). Note then, that that which is
the initiating ordinance admitteth none into church
communion but these that first partake thereof. The angel
sought to kill Moses himself, for attempting to make his
child a member without it (Exo 4:24-26). Note again, that
as it admitteth of none to membership without it; so as I
said, the very act of circumcising them, without the
addition of another church act, gave them a being of
membership with that very church, by whom they were
circumcised. But none of this can be said of baptism.
First, there is none debarred or threatened to be cut off
from the church, if they be not first baptized. Secondly,
Neither doth it give to the person baptized a being of
membership with this or that church, by whose members he
hath been baptized. John gathered no particular church, yet
was he the first and great baptizer with water; he preached
Christ to come, and baptized with the baptism of
repentance, and left his disciples to be gathered by him
(Acts 19:3-5). 'And unto him shall the gathering
of the people be' (Gen 49:10). Besides, after
Christ's ascension, Philip baptized the eunuch, but
made him by that no member of any particular church,. We
only read, that Philip was caught away from him, and that
the eunuch saw him no more, but went on his way rejoicing
to his master and country of Ethiopia (Acts 8:35-40).
Neither was Cornelius made a member of the church at
Jerusalem, by his being baptized at Peter's command at
Cesarea (Acts 10, 11). Neither were they that were
converted at Antioch, by them that were scattered from the
church at Jerusalem, by their baptism, if they were
baptized [in water] at all, joined to the church at
Jerusalem (Acts 11:19). No, they were after gathered and
embodied among themselves by other church acts (Acts 16).
What shall I say? into what particular church was Lydia
baptized by Paul, or those first converts at Philippi? Yea
even in the second of the Acts, baptizing and adding to the
church appear to be acts distinct: but if baptism were the
initiating ordinance, then was he that was baptized made a
member; made a member of a particular church, by the very
act of water baptism. Neither ought any by God's
ordinance to have baptized any, but with respect to the
admitting them by that act to a being of membership in this
particular church. For if it be the initiating ordinance,
it entereth them into the church: What church? Into a
visible church. Now there is no church visible but that
which is particular; the universal being utterly invisible,
and known to none but God. The person then that is baptized
stands by that a member of no church at all, neither of the
visible, nor yet of the invisible. A visible saint he is,
but not made so by baptism; for he must be a visible saint
before, else he ought not to be baptized (Acts 8:37, 9:17,
16:33).
Take it again; Baptism [in water] makes thee
no member of the church, neither particular nor universal:
neither doth it make thee a visible saint: It therefore
gives thee neither right to nor being of membership at
all.
Quest. But why then were they
baptized?
Ans. That their own faith by that
figure might be strengthened in the death and resurrection
of Christ. And that themselves might see, that they have
professed themselves dead, and buried, and risen with him
to newness of life (Col 2:12; Rom 6:4). It did not seal to
the church that they were so (their satisfaction as to that
arose from better arguments) but taught the party himself
that he ought so to be. Farther, it confirmed to his own
conscience the forgiveness of sins, if by unfeigned faith
he laid hold upon Jesus Christ (Gal 3:26; 1 Cor 15:29; Acts
2:38, 22:16; 1 Peter 3:21). Now then, if baptism be not the
initiating ordinance, we must seek for entering some other
way, by some other appointment of Christ, unless we will
say that without rule, without order, and without an
appointment of Christ, we may enter into his visible
kingdom. The church under the law had its initiating and
entering ordinance: it must not therefore be, unless we
should think that Moses was more punctual and exact than
Christ, but that also our Lord hath his entering
appointment. Now that which by Christ is made the door of
entrance into the church, by that we may doubtless enter;
and seeing baptism is not that ordinance, we ought not to
seek to enter thereby, but may with good conscience enter
without it.
Quest. But by what rule then would
you gather persons into church communion?
Ans. Even by that rule by which they
are discovered to the church to be visible saints; and
willing to be gathered into their body and fellowship. By
that word of God therefore, by which their faith,
experience and conversation, being examined, is found good;
by that the church should receive them into fellowship with
them. Mark; not as they practice things that are
circumstantial, but as their faith is commended by a word
of faith, and their conversation by a moral precept.
Wherefore that is observable, that after Paul had declared
himself sound of faith, he falls down to the body of the
law: 'Receive us, [saith he,] we have wronged no man,
we have corrupted no man, we have defrauded no man.' He
saith not, I am baptized, but I have wronged no man,
&c. (2 Cor 7:2, see also 5:18-21). And if churches
after the confession of faith made more use of the ten
commandments, to judge of the fitness of persons by; they
might not exceed by this seeming strictness, Christian
tenderness towards them they receive to
communion.
I will say therefore, that by the word of
faith, and of good works, moral duties gospelized, we ought
to judge of the fitness of members by, by which we ought
also to receive them to fellowship: For he that in these
things proveth sound, he hath the antitype of circumcision,
which was before the entering ordinance. 'For he is not
a Jew, which is one outwardly; neither is that
circumcision, which is outward in the flesh. But he
is a Jew, which is one inwardly; and circumcision is
that of the heart, in the spirit, - whose praise
is not of men, but of God' (Rom 2:28,29: Phil
3:1-4). Now a confession of this by word and life, makes
this inward circumcision visible; when you know him
therefore to be thus circumcised, you ought to admit him to
the Lord's passover: he, if any, hath a share not only
in church communion, but a visible right to the kingdom of
heaven. Again, 'For the kingdom of God, [or our service
to Christ] is not meat and drink, but righteousness, peace
and joy in the Holy Ghost. For he that in these things
serveth Christ, is acceptable to God, and approved of
men' (Rom 14:17,18; Deut 28:47). By which word
Righteousness, he meaneth as James doth, the royal law, the
perfect law, which is the moral precept evangelized, or
delivered to us by the hand of Christ (John 2:8.9). The law
was given twice on Sinai: the last time it was given with a
proclamation of grace and mercy of God, and of the pardon
of sins going before (Exo 19, 34:1-10). The second giving
is here intended; for so it cometh after faith, which first
receiveth the proclamation of forgiveness; hence we are
said to do this righteousness in the joy and peace of the
Holy Ghost. Now he that in these things serveth Christ, is
accepted of God, and approved of men. For who is he that
can justly find fault with him, that fulfilleth the royal
law from a principle of faith and love. 'If ye
fulfil the royal law according to the scripture, Thou shalt
love thy neighbour as thyself, ye do well'; ye are
approved of men. Again, he that hath loved another hath
fulfilled the law, for love is the fulfilling of the law.
He then that serveth Christ according to the royal law,
from faith and love going before, he is a fit person for
church communion; God accepteth him, men approve him. Now
that the royal law is the moral precept, read the place
(John 2:8-12). It is also called the law of liberty,
because the bondage is taken away by forgiveness going
before; and this is it by which we are judged, as is said,
meet or unmeet for church communion, &c.
Therefore I say, the rule by which we
receive church-members, it is the word of the faith of
Christ, and of the moral precept evangelized, as I said
before, I am 'under the law to Christ,' saith Paul
(1 Cor 9:21). So when he forbiddeth us communion with men,
they be such as are destitute of the faith of Christ, and
live in the transgression of a moral precept: 'I have
written unto you, [saith he,] not to keep company, if any
man that is called a brother be a fornicator, or covetous,
or an idolater, or a railer, or a drunkard, or an
extortioner, with such an one no not to eat' (1 Cor
5:11). He saith not, if any man be not baptized [in water],
have not hands laid on him, or join with the unbaptized,
these are fictious, scriptureless notions. 'For this,
Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou
shalt not steal, thou shalt not bear false witness, Thou
shalt not covet; And if there be any other
commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this saying,
namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. Love
worketh no ill to his neighbour: therefore love is
the fulfilling of the law' (Rom 13:9,10). The word of
faith, and the moral precept, is that which Paul enjoins
the Galatians and Philippians, still avoiding outward
circumstances: hence therefore when he had to the Galatians
treated of faith, he falls point blank upon moral duties.
'For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth
anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new creature. And as
many as walk according to this rule, peace be on
them, and mercy, and upon the Israel of God' (Gal
6:15,16). As many as walk according to this rule: What
rule? The rule by which men are proved new creatures: The
word of faith, and the moral precept. Wherefore Paul
exhorteth the Ephesians not to walk, 'as other
Gentiles, in the vanity of their mind'; seeing they had
received Christ, and had 'heard him, and had been
taught by him as the truth is in Jesus.' That they
would put off the old man; what is that? Why, 'the
former conversation,' which is 'corrupt according
to the deceitful lusts'; lying, anger, sin, giving
place to the devil, corrupt communication, all bitterness,
wrath, clamour, evil-speaking, with all malice. And that
they would 'put on the new man.' What is that? That
which is 'created in righteousness and true
holiness'; a being 'renewed in the spirit' of
their mind, and a putting away all these things (Eph 4).
'For in Christ Jesus'; these words are put in, on
purpose to shew us the nature of New Testament
administrations, and how they differ from the old. In Moses
an outward conformity to an outward and carnal ordinance,
was sufficient to give (they subjecting themselves thereto)
a being of membership with the Jews; but in Christ Jesus it
is not so; of Abraham's flesh was the national Jewish
congregation; but it is Abraham's faith that makes New
Testament churches: They that are of faith, are the
children of faithful Abraham. They that are of faith, the
same are the children of Abraham (Gal 3:7-9). So then the
seed being now spiritual, the rule must needs be spiritual
also, viz. The word of faith and holiness. This is the
gospel concision knife, sharper than any two-edged sword;
and that by which New Testament saints are circumcised in
heart, ears, and lips. 'For in Christ
Jesus,' [is] no outward and circumstantial thing,
but the new creature; none are subjects of the visible
kingdom of Christ but visible saints by calling: now
that which manifesteth a person to be a visible saint, must
be conformity to the word of faith and holiness. 'And
they that are Christ's, have crucified the flesh with
the affections and lusts' (Gal 5:24). Hearken how
delightfully Paul handleth the point: The new creatures are
the Israel of God. The new creature hath a rule by himself
to walk by; and as many as walk according to this rule,
peace be on them, and mercy, and upon the Israel of God.
Paul to the Philippians commandeth as much; where treating
of his own practice in the doctrine of faith and holiness,
requireth them to walk by the same rule, to mind the same
thing. I desire to be found in Christ, saith he, I reach
forward toward the things that are before; my conversation
is in heaven, and flatly opposite to them whose God is
their belly, who glory in their shame, and who mind earthly
things. Brethren, saith he, 'be followers together of
me, and mark them which walk so' (Phil 3:17). Mark
them; for what? For persons that are to be received into
fellowship, and the choicest communion of saints. And
indeed this is the safest way to judge of the meetness of
persons by: for take away the confession of faith and
holiness; and what can distinguish a Christian from a Turk?
He that indeed receiveth faith, and that squareth his life
by the royal, perfect, moral precept; and that walketh
therein, in the joy and peace of the Holy Ghost, no man can
reject him; he cannot be a man if he object against him;
not a man in Christ; not a man in understanding. 'The
law is not made for a righteous man'; neither to debar
him the communion of saints if he desire it, nor to cast
him out if he were in. 'But for the lawless and
disobedient, for the ungodly and for sinners, for unholy
and profane, for murderers of fathers and murderers of
mothers, for manslayers, for whoremongers, for them that
defile themselves with mankind, for men-stealers, for
liars, for perjured persons, and if there be any other
thing that is contrary to sound doctrine; according to the
glorious gospel of the blessed God, which was committed to
my trust' (1 Tim 1:9-11). Paul also, when he would
leave an everlasting conviction upon the Ephesians,
concerning his faith and holiness, treating first of the
sufficiency of Christ's blood, and the grace of God to
save us; he adds, 'I have coveted no man's silver,
or gold, or apparel,' he bringeth them to the moral
precept, to prove the sincerity of his good conversation by
(Acts 20:33). And when men have juggled what they can, and
made never such a prattle about religion; yet if their
greatest excellency, as to the visibility of their
saintship, lieth in an outward conformity to an outward
circumstance in religion, their profession is not worth two
mites. 'Let us walk honestly, as in the day; not in
rioting and drunkenness, not in chambering and wantonness,
not in strife and envying. But put ye on the Lord Jesus
Christ, and make not provision for the flesh, to
fulfil the lusts thereof' (Rom 13:13,14). And it is
observable, that after the apostle had in the 9th and 10th
verses of this chapter told us, that the moral precept is
the rule of a good conversation, and exhorted us to make no
provision for the flesh; he adds, these things provided, we
may receive any that believe in Christ Jesus unto communion
with us; how weak soever and dark in circumstantials; and
chiefly designs the proof thereof in the remaining part of
his epistle. For he that is of sound faith, and of
conversation honest in the world; no man, however he may
fail in circumstantials, may lightly reproach or vilify
him. And indeed such persons are the honour of Christian
congregations. Indeed he is prejudiced, for want of light
in these things about which he is dark, as of baptism, or
the like; but seeing that is not the initiating ordinance,
or the visible character of a saint; yea, seeing it maketh
no breach in a good and holy life: nor intrencheth upon any
man's right but his own; and seeing his faith may be
effectual without it, and his life approved by the worst of
his enemies; why should his friends, while he keeps the
law, dishonour God by breaking of the same? 'Speak not
evil one of another, brethren. He that speaketh evil of
his brother, and judgeth his brother, speaketh evil of
the law, and judgeth the law: But if thou judge the law,
thou art not a doer of the law, but a judge' (James
4:11). He that is judged, must needs fail somewhere in the
apprehension of him that judgeth him, else why is he
judged. But he must fail in substance, for then he is
worthy to be judged (1 Cor 5:12). His failure is then in a
circumstance, for which he ought not to be
judged.
Object. But notwithstanding all that
you have said, water baptism ought to go before the
church-membership; shew me one in all the New Testament,
that was received into fellowship without it.
Ans. 1. That water baptism hath
formerly gone first is granted: but that it ought of
necessity so to do, I never saw proof. 2. None ever
received it without light going before, unless they did
play the hypocrite: and besides no marvel though in the
primitive times it was so generally practised first, for
the unconverted themselves know, it belonged to the
disciples of Jesus Christ (John 1:24-27). Yet that all that
were received into fellowship were even then baptized
first, would strain a weak man's wit to prove it, if
arguments were closely made upon these three texts of holy
scripture (1 Cor 1:14-16; Gal 3:27; Rom 6:3). But I pass
them, and say, If you can shew me the Christian, that in
the primitive times remained dark about it, I will shew you
the Christian that was received without it. But should I
grant more than can be proved, viz. That baptism was the
initiating ordinance; and that it once did, as circumcision
of old, give a being of membership to the partakers; yea
set the case that men were forbidden then to enter into
fellowship without it: yet the case may so be, that these
things notwithstanding, men might be received into
fellowship without it. All these things intailed to
circumcision; that was the initiating ordinance; that gave
being of membership; that was it without which it was
positively commanded none should be received into
fellowship (Josh 5). Yet for all this more than six hundred
thousand were received into the church without it, yea
received, and also retained there, and that by Moses and
Joshua, even those to whom the land was promised, when the
uncircumcised were cut off. But why then were they not
circumcised? Doubtless there was a reason; either they
wanted time, or opportunity, or instruments, or something.
But they could not render a bigger reason than this, I have
no light therein: which is the cause at this day that many
a faithful man denieth to take up the ordinance of baptism:
but I say whatever the hindrance was, it mattereth not; our
brethren have a manifest one, an invincible one, one that
all the men on earth, nor angels in heaven can remove: For
it is God that createth light; and for them to do it
without light would but prove them unfaithful to
themselves, and make them sinners against God; 'For
whatsoever is not of faith is sin' (Rom 14:23).
If therefore Moses and Joshua thought fit to communicate
with six hundred thousand uncircumcised persons; when by
the law not one such ought to have been received among
them; why may not I have communion, the closest communion
with visible saints as afore described, although they want
light in, and so cannot submit to that, which of God was
never made the wall of division betwixt us. I shall
therefore hold communion with such.
First, Because the true visible saint
hath already [been] subjected to that which is better; even
to the righteousness of God, which is by faith of Jesus
Christ; by which he stands just before God; he also hath
made the most exact and strict rule under heaven, that
whereby he squares his life before men. He hath like
precious faith with the best of saints, and a conversation
according to light received, becoming the gospel of Christ.
He is therefore to be received, received I say, not by THY
light, not for that in circumstances he jumpeth with thy
opinion; but according to his own faith which he ought to
keep to himself before God. 'Conscience, I say, not
thine own, but of the other; for why is my liberty judged
of another man's conscience' (1 Cor 10:29).
Some indeed do object, that what the apostles wrote, they
wrote to gathered churches, and so to such as were
baptized. And therefore the arguments that are in the
epistles about things circumstantial, respect not the case
in hand. But I will tell such, that as to the first part of
their objection, they are utterly under a mistake. The
first to the Corinthians, the epistle of James, both them
of Peter, and the first epistle of John, were expressly
written to all the godly, as well as particular churches.
Again; if water baptism, as the circumstances with which
the churches were pestered of old, trouble their peace,
wound the consciences of the godly, dismember and break
their fellowship; it is, although an ordinance, for the
present to be prudently shunned; for the edification of the
church, as I shall shew anon, is to be preferred before
it.
Second, and observe it; 'One
Spirit, - one hope, - one Lord, one faith, one baptism [not
of water, for by one Spirit are we all baptized into one
body] one God and Father of all, who is above all,
and through all, and in you all' (Eph 4:1-6). This is a
sufficient rule for us to hold communion by, and also to
endeavour the maintaining that communion, and to keep it in
unity, within the bond of peace against all attempts
whatsoever (1 Cor 12:16).
Third, I am bold therefore to have
communion with such (Heb 6:1,2). Because they also have the
doctrine of baptism: I say the doctrine of them. For here
you must note, I distinguish between the doctrine and
practice of water baptism; The doctrine being that which by
the outward sign is presented to us, or which by the
outward circumstance of the act is preached to the
believer: viz. THE DEATH OF CHRIST; MY DEATH WITH CHRIST;
also his resurrection from the dead, and mine with him to
newness of life. This is the doctrine which baptism
preacheth, or that which by the outward action is signified
to the believing receiver. Now I say, he that believeth in
Jesus Christ hath richer and better than that [of baptism
in water], viz. is dead to sin, and that lives to God by
him, he hath the HEART, POWER and DOCTRINE of baptism: all
then that he wanteth, is but the sign, the shadow, or the
outward circumstances thereof. Nor yet is THAT despised but
forborne for want of light. The best of baptisms he hath;
he is baptized by that one Spirit; he hath the heart of
water baptism, he wanteth only the outward shew, which if
he had would not prove him a truly visible saint; it would
not tell me he had grace in his heart. It is no
characteristical note to another, of my sonship with God.
Indeed it is a sign to the person baptized, and an help to
his own faith. He should know by that circumstance, that he
hath received remission of sins; if his faith be as true,
as his being baptized is felt by him. But if for want of
light, he partake not of that sign, his faith can see it in
other things, exceeding great and precious promises. Yea,
as I also have hinted already, if he appear not a brother
before, he appeareth not a brother by that: And those that
shall content themselves to make that the note of visible
church-membership; I doubt make things not much better, the
note of their sonship with God.
Fourth, I am bold to hold communion
with visible saints as afore [described]; because God hath
communion with them; whose examples in the case, we are
straitly commanded to follow. 'Receive ye one another
as Christ also received us [saith Paul,] to the glory of
God' (Rom 15:1-7). Yea, though they be saints of
opinions contrary to you; though it goeth against the mind
of them that are strong. 'We then that are strong ought
to bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please
ourselves' (Rom 15:1). What infirmities? Those that are
natural are incident to all, they are infirmities then that
are sinful, that cause a man, for want of light, to err in
circumstantials; And the reason upon which he grounds this
admonition is, that 'Christ pleased not himself; but,
as it is written, The reproaches of them that reproached
thee, fell on me.' You say, to have communion with such
weak brethren, reproacheth your opinions, and practice.
Grant it, your dulness and deadness, and imperfections also
reproach the holiness of God; if you say no, for Christ
hath borne our sins; the answer is still the same, Their
sins also are fallen upon Christ; he then that hath taken
away thy sins from before the throne of God; hath taken
away their shortness in conformity to an outward
circumstance in religion. Both your infirmities are fallen
upon Christ; yea, if notwithstanding thy great sins, thou
standest by Christ complete before the throne of God; why
may not thy brother, notwithstanding his little ones, stand
complete before thee in the church.
Vain man! think not by the straitness of
thine order, in outward and bodily conformity, to outward
and shadowish circumstances, that thy peace is maintained
with God, for peace with God is by faith in the blood of
his cross; who hath borne the reproaches of you both.
Wherefore he that hath communion with God for Christ's
sake, is as good and as worthy of the communion of saints
as thyself. He erreth in A CIRCUMSTANCE, thou errest in A
SUBSTANCE; who must bear these errors? Upon whom must these
reproaches fall? (Phil 1:10). Some of the things of God
that are excellent, have not been approved by some of the
saints: What then? must these for this be cast out of the
church? No, these reproaches by which the wisdom of heaven
is reproached have fallen upon me, saith Christ. But to
return; GOD HATH RECEIVED HIM, Christ hath received him,
therefore do you receive him. There is more solidity in
this argument, than if all the churches of God had received
him. This receiving then, because it is set as an example
to the church, is such as must needs be visible to them;
and is best described by that word which discovereth the
visible saint. Whoso, therefore, you can by the word, judge
a visible saint, one that walketh with God; you may judge
by the selfsame word that God hath received him. Now him
that God receiveth and holdeth communion with, him you
should receive and hold communion with. Will any say we
cannot believe that God hath received any but such as are
baptized [in water]? I will not suppose a brother so
stupefied; and therefore to that I will not
answer.
Receive him 'TO THE GLORY OF GOD.'
To the glory of God, is put in on purpose, to show what
dishonour they bring to God, who despise to have communion
with them; who yet they know have communion with God. For
how doth this man, or that church, glorify God, or count
the wisdom and holiness of heaven beyond them, when they
refuse communion with them, concerning whom, they are by
the word convinced, that they have communion with God.
'Now the God of patience and consolation grant you to
be like minded one towards another according to Christ
Jesus' (Rom 15:5). By this word patience, Paul
insinuateth how many imperfections, the choicest Christians
do mingle their best performances with. And by this of
consolation, how readily God overlooks, passeth by them,
and comforteth you notwithstanding. Now that this mind
should be in Christians one to another, is manifest;
because Paul prays that it might be so. But this is an
heavenly gift, and therefore must be fetched from thence.
But let the patience of God, and the willingness of Christ,
to bear the reproaches of the weak; and the consolations
that they have in God, notwithstanding, moderate your
passions, and put you upon prayer, to be minded like Jesus
Christ.
Fifth, Because a failure in such a
circumstance as water, doth not unchristian us. This must
needs be granted, not only from what was said before; but
for that thousands of thousands that could not consent
thereto as we have, more gloriously than we are like to do,
acquitted themselves and their christianity before men, and
are now with the innumerable company of angels and the
spirits of just men made perfect. What is said of eating,
or the contrary, may as to this be said of water baptism.
Neither if I be baptized, am I the better, neither if I be
not, am I the worse: not the better before God: not the
worse before men: still meaning as Paul doth, provided I
walk according to my light with God: otherwise it is false;
for if a man that seeth it to be his duty shall despisingly
neglect it; or if he that hath no faith therein shall
foolishly take it up; both these are for this the worse,
being convicted in themselves for transgressors. He
therefore that doth it according to his light, doth well,
and he that doth it not, or dare not do it for want of
light, doth not ill; for he approveth his heart to be
sincere with God; he dare not do any thing but by light in
the word. If therefore he be not by grace a partaker of
light, in that circumstance which thou professest; yet he
is a partaker of that liberty and mercy by which thou
standest. He hath liberty to call God father, as thou: and
to believe he shall be saved by Jesus: his faith, as thine,
hath purified his heart: he is tender of the glory of God
as thou art: and can claim by grace an interest in heaven;
which thou must not do because of water: ye are both then
Christians before God and men without it: he that can, let
him preach to himself by that: he that cannot, let him
preach to himself by the promises; but yet let us rejoice
in God together: let us exalt his name together. Indeed the
baptized can thank God for that, for which another cannot;
but may not he that is unbaptized thank God for that which
the baptized cannot? Wouldest thou be content that I should
judge thee, because thou canst not for my light give thanks
with me? why then should he judge me, for that I cannot
give thanks with him for his? 'Let us not therefore
judge one another any more: but judge this rather, that no
man put a stumblingblock or an occasion to fall in
his brother's way' (Rom 14:13). And seeing the
things wherein we exceed each other, are such as neither
make nor mar Christianity; let us love one another and walk
together by that glorious rule above specified, leaving
each other in all such circumstances to our own master, to
our own faith. 'Who art thou that judgest another
man's servant? to his own master he standeth or
falleth. Yea, he shall be holden up: for God is able to
make him stand' (Rom 14:4).
Sixth, I am therefore for holding
communion thus, because the edification of souls in the
faith and holiness of the gospel, is of greater concernment
than an agreement in outward things;[16] I say, it is of
greater concernment with us, and of far more profit to our
brother; than our agreeing in, or contesting for the
business of water baptism (John 16:13; 1 Cor 14:26; 2 Cor
10:8, 12:19; Eph 4:12; 2 Tim 3:17; 1 Cor 8:1, 13:1-4). That
the edification of the soul, is of the greatest concern, is
out of measure evident because heaven and eternal happiness
are so immediately concerned therein. Besides, this is that
for which Christ died, for which the Holy Ghost was given,
yea for which the scriptures and the gifts of all the godly
are given to the church; yea, and if gifts are not bent to
this very work, the persons are said to be proud or
uncharitable that have them; and stand but for cyphers or
worse among the churches of God. Farther, edification is
that that cherisheth all grace, and maketh the Christians
quick and lively, and maketh sin lean and dwindling, and
filleth the mouth with thanksgiving to God. But to contest
with gracious men, with men that walk with God; to shut
such out of the churches; because they will not sin against
their souls, rendereth thee uncharitable (Rom 14:15,20).
Thou seekest to destroy the word of God; thou begettest
contentions, janglings, murmurings, and evil surmisings,
thou ministerest occasion for whisperings, backbitings,
slanders and the like, rather than godly edifying; contrary
to the whole current of the scriptures and peace of all
communities. Let us therefore leave off these contentions,
'and follow after the things that make for peace, and
things wherewith one may edify another' (Rom 14:19).
And know that the edification of the church of God
dependeth not upon, neither is tied to this or that
circumstance. Especially when there are in the hearts of
the godly, different persuasions about it; then it becometh
them in the wisdom of God, to take more care for their
peace and unity; than to widen or make large their
uncomfortable differences.
Although Aaron transgressed the law, because
he ate not the sin-offering of the people; yet seeing he
could not do it with satisfaction to his own conscience,
Moses was content that he left it undone (Lev 10:16-20).
Joshua was so zealous against Eldad and Medad, for
prophesying in the camp, without first going to the Lord to
the door of the tabernacle, as they were commanded, that he
desired Moses to forbid them (Num 11:27,28). But Moses
calls his zeal envy, and prays to God for more such
prophets; knowing that although they failed in a
circumstance, they were right in that which was better. The
edification of the people in the camp was that which
pleased Moses.
In Hezekiah's time, though the people
came to the passover in an undue manner, and 'did eat
it otherwise than it was written'; yet the wise king
would not forbid them, but rather admitted it, knowing that
their edification was of greater concern, than to hold them
to a circumstance or two (2 Chron 30:13-27). Yea, God
himself did like the wisdom of the king, and healed, that
is, forgave, the people at the prayer of Hezekiah. And
observe it, notwithstanding this disorder, as to
circumstances, the feast was kept with great gladness; and
the Levites and the priests praised the Lord day by day,
singing with loud instruments unto the Lord; yea, there was
not the like joy in Jerusalem from the time of Solomon unto
that same time. What shall we say, all things must give
place to the profit of the people of God. Yea, sometimes
laws themselves, for their outward preservation, much more
for godly edifying. When Christ's disciples plucked the
ears of corn on the sabbath, no doubt for very hunger, and
were rebuked by the Pharisees for it, as for that which was
unlawful; how did their Lord succour them? By excusing
them, and rebuking their adversaries. 'Have ye not
read,' said he, 'what David did when he was an
hungered, and they that were with him; how he entered into
the house of God, and did eat the shew bread, which was not
lawful for him to eat, neither for them which were with
him, but only for the priests? Or have ye not read in the
law, how that on the sabbath days the priests in the temple
profaned the sabbath, and are blameless?' (Matt
12:1-5). Why blameless? because they did it in order to the
edification of the people. If laws and ordinances of old
have been broken, and the breach of them borne with, when
yet the observance of outward things was more strictly
commanded than now, when the profit and edification of the
people came in competition, how much more may not we have
communion, church communion, where no law is transgressed
thereby.
Seventh, Therefore I am for holding
communion thus, because love, which above all things we are
commanded to put on, is of much more worth than to break
about baptism; Love is also more discovered when it
receiveth for the sake of Christ and grace, than when it
refuseth for want of water: and observe it, as I have also
said before, this exhortation to love is grounded upon the
putting on of the new creature; which new creature hath
swallowed up all distinctions, that have before been common
among the churches. As I am a Jew, you are a Greek; I am
circumcised, you are not: I am free, you are bound. Because
Christ was all in all these, 'Put on therefore,'
saith he, 'as the elect of God, holy and beloved,
bowels of mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness,
long-suffering,' that is, with reference to the
infirmities of the weak, 'forbearing one another, and
forgiving one another, if any man have a quarrel against
any: even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye: and
above all these things put on charity, which is the
bond of perfectness' (Col 3:12-14). Which forbearing
and forgiving respecteth not only private and personal
injuries, but also errors in judgment about inclinations
and distinctions tending to divisions, and separating upon
the grounds laid down in verse 11 which how little soever
they now seem to us, who are beyond them, were strong, and
of weight to them who in that day were entangled with them.
Some saints then were not free to preach to any but the
Jews: denying the word of life to the Gentiles, and
contending with them who preferred it to them: which was a
greater error than this of baptism (Acts 11:1-19). But what
should we do with such kind of saints? Why love them still,
forgive them, bear with them, and maintain church communion
with them. Why? because they are new creatures, because
they are Christ's: for this swallows up all
distinctions. Farther, because they are elect and beloved
of God. Divisions and distinctions are of shorter date than
election; let not them therefore that are but momentary,
and hatched in darkness, break that bond that is from
everlasting. It is love, not baptism, that discovereth us
to the world to be Christ's disciples. It is love, that
is the undoubted character of our interest in, and sonship
with God: I mean when we love as saints, and desire
communion with others, because they have fellowship one
with another, in their fellowship with God the Father, and
his Son Jesus Christ (1 John 1:3). And now though the truth
and sincerity of our love to God, be then discovered when
we keep his commandments, in love to his name; yet we
should remember again, that the two head and chief
commandments, are faith in Jesus, and love to the brethren
(1 John 3:23). So then he that pretendeth to love, and yet
seeks not the profit of his brother in chief; he loveth,
but they are his own opinions and froward notions (James
4:11; Rom 14:21). 'Love is the fulfilling of the
law'; but he fulfils it not who judgeth and setteth at
nought his brother; that stumbleth, offendeth, and maketh
weak his brother; and all for the sake of a circumstance,
that to which he cannot consent, except he sin against his
own soul, or Papist like, live by an implicit faith.[17]
Love therefore is sometimes more seen and showed, in
forbearing to urge and press what we know, than in
publishing and imposing. 'I could not,' (saith
Paul, love would not let me) 'speak unto you as unto
spiritual, but as unto carnal, even as unto babes in
Christ. I have fed you with milk, and not with meat: for
hitherto ye were not able to bear it, neither yet
now are ye able' (1 Cor 3:1,2). The apostle considered
not only the knowledge that he had in the mysteries of
Christ; but the temper, the growth, and strength of the
churches, and accordingly kept back, or communicated to
them, what might be for their profit (Acts 20:18-20). So
Christ, 'I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye
cannot bear them now' (John 16:12). It may be some will
count these old and threadbare texts; but such must know,
that the word of the Lord must stand for ever (Isa 40:8).
And I should dare to say to such, if the best of thy new
shifts, be to slight, and abuse old scriptures; it shews
thou art more fond of thy unwarrantable opinion, than swift
to hear, and ready to yield to the authority that is
infallible.
But to conclude this, when we attempt to
force our brother beyond his light, or to break his heart
with grief; to thrust him beyond his faith, or to bar him
from his privilege: how can we say, I love? What shall I
say? To have fellowship one with another for the sake of an
outward circumstance, or to make that the door to
fellowship which God hath not; yea to make that the
including, excluding charter; the bounds, bar, and rule of
communion; when by the word of the everlasting testament
there is no warrant for it; to speak charitably, if it be
not for want of love, it is for want of knowledge in the
mysteries of the kingdom of Christ. Strange! take two
Christians equal in all points but this, nay, let one go
beyond the other far, for grace and holiness; yet this
circumstance of water shall drown and sweep away all his
excellencies, not counting him worthy of that reception,
that with hand and heart shall be given to a novice in
religion, because he consents to water.
Eighth. But for God's people to
divide into parties, or to shut each other from church
communion; though from greater points, and upon higher
pretences, than this of water baptism; hath heretofore been
counted carnal, and the actors herein babyish Christians.
Paul and Apollos, Cephas and Christ, were doubtless higher
things than those about which we contend: yet when they
made divisions for them; how sharply are they rebuked? Are
ye not CARNAL, CARNAL, CARNAL? For whereas there are among
you, envyings, strife, divisions, or factions: 'are ye
not carnal' (1 Cor 1:11,12, 3:1-4). While one saith, I
am of Paul, and another I am of Apollos, are ye not carnal?
See therefore from whence arise all they endeavours, zeal,
and labour, to accomplish divisions among the godly: let
Paul or Cephas, or Christ himself, be the burthen of thy
song, yet the heart from whence they flow is carnal; and
thy actions, discoveries of childishness. But, doubtless
when these contentions were among the Corinthians, and one
man was vilified, that another might be promoted; a lift
with a carnal brother, was thought great wisdom to widen
the breach. But why should HE be rebuked, that said he was
for Christ? Because he was for him in opposition to his
holy apostles. Hence he saith, 'Is Christ divided,'
or separate from his servants? Note therefore that these
divisions are deserted by the persons the divisions were
made about; neither Paul, nor Apollos, nor Cephas, nor
Christ is here. Let the cry be never so loud, Christ,
order, the rule, the command, or the like; carnality is but
the bottom, and they are but babes that do it; their zeal
is but a puff (1 Cor 4:6). And observe it, the great
division at Corinth, was helped forward by water baptism:
this the apostle intimates by, 'Were ye baptized in the
name of Paul?' Ah, brethren! Carnal Christians with
outward circumstances, will, if they be let alone, make sad
work in the churches of Christ, against the spiritual
growth of the same. But 'I thank God,' saith
Paul, 'that I baptized none of you,' &c.
Not but that it was then an ordinance of God, but they
abused it, in making parties thereby. 'I baptized none
of you, but Crispus and Gaius, - and the household of
Stephanus': men of note among the brethren, men of good
judgment, and reverenced by the rest; they can tell you I
intended not to make a party to myself thereby.
'Besides, I know not whether I baptized any other.'
By this negligent relating, who were baptized by him; he
showeth that he made no such matter of baptism, as some in
these days do; nay, that he made no matter at all thereof,
with respect to church communion; for if he did not heed
who himself had baptized; he much less heeded, who were
baptized by others; but if baptism had been the initiating,
or entering ordinance, and so appointed of God; no doubt he
had made more conscience thereof, than so lightly to pass
it over. 'For Christ sent me not to baptize, but to
preach the gospel.' The gospel then may be effectually
preached, and yet baptism neither administered nor
mentioned. The gospel being good tidings to sinners, upon
the account of free grace through Christ; but baptism with
things of like nature, are duties enjoined such a people
who received the gospel before. I speak not this, because I
would teach men to break the least of the commandments of
God; but to persuade my brethren of the baptized way, not
to hold too much thereupon, not to make it an essential of
the gospel of Christ, nor yet of communion of
saints.
'He sent me not to baptize': these
words are spoken with holy indignation against them that
abuse this ordinance of Christ. So when he speaketh of the
ministers themselves, which also they had abused; in his
speaking, he as it were trampleth upon them, as if they
were nothing at all. 'Who then is Paul, and who
is Apollos?' 'He that planteth is not any
thing, neither is he that watereth, but God that giveth the
increase' (1 Cor 3:5,7). Yet for all this, the
ministers and their ministry are a glorious appointment of
God in the world. Baptism also is a holy ordinance, but
when Satan abuseth it, and wrencheth it out of its place;
making that which was ordained of God for the edification
of believers, the only weapon to break in pieces the love,
the unity, the concord of saints; then What is baptism?
then neither is baptism anything. And this is no new
doctrine; for God by the mouth of his prophets of old,
cried out against his own institutions, when abused by his
people: 'To what purpose is the multitude of
your sacrifices unto me,' saith the LORD: 'I
am full of the burnt-offerings of rams, and the fat of fed
beasts; and I delight not in the blood of bullocks, or of
lambs, or of he goats. When ye come to appear before me,
who hath required this at your hands, to tread my courts?
Bring no more vain oblations, incense is an abomination to
me; the new moons and sabbaths, the calling of assemblies,
I cannot away with it; it is iniquity, even the
solemn meeting. Your new moons and your appointed feasts my
soul hateth: they are a trouble unto me, I am weary to bear
them' (Isa 1:11-14). And yet all these were his
own appointments. But why then did he thus abhor them?
Because they retained the evil of their doings, and used
them as they did other of his appointments, viz., 'For
strife and debate, and to strike with the fist of
wickedness' (58:4): Wherefore when that of God that is
great, is overweighed by that which is small; it is the
wisdom of them that see it, to put load to the other end of
the scale; until the things thus abused, poise in their own
place. But to pass this and proceed.
Ninth, If we shall reject visible
saints by calling saints that have communion with God, that
have received the law at the hand of Christ, that are of an
holy conversation among men; they desiring to have
communion with us, as much as in us lieth, we take from
them their very privileges, and the blessings to which they
were born of God. For Paul saith not only to the gathered
church at Corinth, but to all scattered saints that in
every place call upon the name of the Lord; That Jesus
Christ is theirs, That Paul, and Apollos, and the world,
and life, and death, and all things are theirs, because
they are Christ's, and Christ is God's. But saith
he, let no man glory in men, such as Paul and Cephas,
though these were excellent: because this privilege comes
to you upon another bottom, even by faith of Jesus Christ,
'Drink you all of this,' is entailed to faith, not
baptism: nay, baptized persons may yet be excluded this;
when he that discerneth the Lord's body hath right and
privilege to it (1 Cor 11:28,29). But to exclude Christians
from church communion and to debar them their heaven-born
privileges, for the want of that which yet God never made a
wall of division between us.
(1.) This looks too like a spirit of
persecution (Job 19:28). (2.) It respecteth more a form,
than the spirit and power of godliness (2 Tim 3:5). (3.)
This is to make laws, where God hath made none, and to be
wise above what is written, contrary to God's word, and
our own principles. (4.) It is a directing of the Spirit of
God. (5.) It bindeth all men's faith and light to mine
opinion. (6.) It taketh away the children's bread. (7.)
It withholdeth from them the increase of faith. (8.) It
tendeth to harden the hearts of the wicked. (9.) It tendeth
to make wicked the hearts of weak Christians. (10.) It
setteth open a door to all temptations. (11.) It tempteth
the devil to fall upon those that are alone, and have none
to help them. (12.) It is the nursery of all vain
janglings, back-bitings, and strangeness among the
Christians. (13.) It occasioneth the world to reproach us.
(14.) It holdeth staggering consciences, in doubt of the
right way of the Lord. (15.) It giveth occasion to many to
turn aside to most dangerous heresies. (16.) It abuseth the
holy scriptures; It wresteth God's ordinances out of
their place. (17.) It is a prop to antichrist. (18.) Shall
I add, Is it not that which greatly prevailed to bring down
these judgments, which at present we feel and groan
under;[18] I will dare to say, it was[19] a cause
thereof.
Tenth, and lastly, Bear with one word
farther. What greater contempt can be thrown upon the
saints than for their brethren to cast them off, or to
debar them church communion? Think you not that the world
may groundly say, Some great iniquity lies hid in the
skirts of your brethren; when in truth the transgression is
yet your own? But I say, what can the church do more to the
sinners or open profane? Civil commerce you will have with
the worst, and what more have you with these? Perhaps you
will say we can pray and preach with these; and hold them
Christians, saints, and godly. Well, but let me ask you one
word farther: Do you believe, that of very conscience they
cannot consent, as you, to that of water baptism? And that
if they had light therein, they would as willingly do it as
you? Why then, as I have shewed you, our refusal to hold
communion with them is without a ground from the word of
God. But can you commit your soul to their ministry, and
join with them in prayer; and yet not count them meet for
other gospel privileges? I wold know by what scripture you
do it? Perhaps you will say, I commit not my soul to their
ministry, only hear them occasionally for trial. If this be
all the respect thou hast for them and their ministry, thou
mayest have as much for the worst that pisseth against the
wall. But if thou canst hear them as God's ministers,
and sit under their ministry as God's ordinance; then
shew me where God hath such a gospel ministry, as that the
persons ministering may not, though desiring it, be
admitted with you to the closest communion of saints. But
if thou sittest under their ministry for fleshly politic
ends, thou hearest the word like an atheist, and art
thyself, while thou judgest thy brother, in the practice of
the worst of men. But I say, where do you find this
piece-meal communion with men that profess faith and
holiness as you, and separation from the world. If you
object, that my principles lead me to have communion with
all; I answer with all as afore described; if they will
have communion with me.
Object. Then you may have communion
with the members of antichrist.
Ans. If there be a visible saint yet
remaining in that church; let him come to us, and we will
have communion with him.
Quest. What, though he yet stand a
member of that sinful number, and profess himself one of
them.
Ans. You suppose an impossibility;
for it cannot be that, at the same time, a man should
visibly stand a member of two bodies diametrically opposite
one to another. Wherefore it must be supposed, that he who
professeth himself a member of a church of Christ, must
forthwith, nay before, forsake the antichristian one. The
which if he refuseth to do, it is evident he doth not
sincerely desire to have fellowship with the
saints.
[Quest.] But he saith he cannot see
that that company to which you stand opposite, and conclude
antichristian, is indeed the antichristian
church.
[Ans.] If so, he cannot desire to
join with another, if he know them to be professedly and
directly opposite. I hold therefore to what I said at
first; That if there be any saints in the antichristian
church, my heart, and the door of our congregation is open
to receive them, into closest fellowship with
us.
Object. But how if they yet retain
some antichristian principles.
Ans. If they be such as eat out the
bowels of a church, so soon as they are detected he must
either be kept out, while out, or cast out, if in: for it
must be the prudence of every community to preserve its own
unity with peace and truth: the which the churches of
Christ may do; and yet as I have shewed already, receive
such persons as differ upon the point of water baptism. For
the doing or not doing of that neither maketh nor marreth
the bowels or foundation of church communion.
Object. But this is receiving for
opinion sake; as before you said of us.
Ans. No; we receive him for the sake
of Christ, and grace, and for our mutual edification in the
faith; and that we respect not opinions, I mean in lesser
matters, 'tis evident; for things wherein we differ are
no breach of communion among us; we let every man have his
own faith in such things to himself before God.
I NOW COME TO A SHORT
APPLICATION.
I. Keep a strict separation, I pray you,
from communion with the open profane; and let not man use
his liberty in church relation as an occasion to the flesh;
but in love serve one another. 'Looking diligently -
lest any root of bitterness - [any poisonful herb (Deut
29:18)] spring up trouble you, and thereby many be
defiled' (Heb 12:15). And let those that before were
reasons for my separation, be motives to you to maintain
the like: and remember that when men have said what they
can for a sinful mixture in the worship of God; the arm of
the Lord is made bare against it.
II. In the midst of your zeal for the Lord,
remember that the visible saint is his; and is privileged
in all those spiritual things that you have in the word and
live in the practice of, and that he is to partake thereof,
according to his light therein. Quarrel not with him about
things that are circumstantial; but receive him in the
Lord, as becometh saints: if he will not have communion
with you, the neglect is his, not yours. But saith the open
profane, why cannot we be reckoned saints also? We have
been christened, we go to church, we take the
communion.[20] Poor people! This will not do; for so long
as in life and conversation you appear to be open profane,
we cannot, unless we sin, receive you into our fellowship:
for by your ungodly lives you shew that you know not
Christ; and while you are such by the word, you are reputed
but beasts: now then judge yourselves, if it be not a
strange community that consisteth of men and beasts: let
beasts be with the beasts, you know yourselves do so; you
receive not your horse nor your hog to your table, you put
them in a room by themselves. Besides I have shewed you
before, that for many reasons we cannot have communion with
you.
(1.) The church of God must be holy (Lev
11:44, 19:2, 20:7; 1 Peter 1:15,16; Isa 26:2; Psa 118:20;
Eze 43:12, 44:9; Isa 52:11).
(2.) The example of the churches of Christ
before, hath been a community of visible saints (Rom 1:7; 1
Cor 1:2; Eph 1:1; Col 1:2; 1 Thess 1:1; 2 Thess 1:1-5).
Poor carnal man, there are many other reasons urged in this
little book, that shew why we cannot have communion with
thee: not that we refuse of pride or stoutness, or because
we scorn you as men. No, we pity you, and pray to God for
you; and could, if you were converted, with joy receive you
to fellowship with us: Did you never read in Daniel, That
iron is not mixed with miry clay? (2:43). No more can the
saints with you, in the worship of God, and fellowship of
the gospel, When those you read of in the fourth of Ezra,
attempted to join in temple work with the children of the
captivity; what said the children of Judah? 'Ye have
nothing to do with us to build an house unto our God; but
we ourselves together will build unto the Lord God of
Israel,' &c (Eze 4:3).
I return now to those that are visible
saints by calling, that stand at a distance one from
another, upon the accounts before specified: Brethren;
CLOSE; CLOSE; be one, as the Father in Christ is
one.
1. This is the way to convince the world
that you are Christ's, and the subjects of one Lord;
whereas the contrary makes them doubt it (John 13:34,35,
17:23). 2. This is the way to increase love; that grace so
much desired by some, and so little enjoyed by others (2
Cor 7:15). 3. This is the way to savour and taste the
Spirit of God in each other's experience; for which if
you find it in truth you cannot but bless, if you be
saints, the name of our Lord Jesus Christ (1 Thess 1:2-4).
4. This is the way to increase knowledge, or to see more in
the word of God: for that may be known by two; that is not
seen by one (Isa 52:8). 5. This is the way to remove secret
jealousies and murmurings one against the other: yea this
is the way to prevent much sin, and greatly to frustrate
that design of hell (Prov 6:16-19). 6. This is the way to
bring them out of the world into fellowship that now stand
off from our gospel privileges, for the sake of our vain
janglings. 7. This is the way to make antichrist shake,
totter, and tremble (Isa 11:13,14). 8. This is the way to
leave Babylon as an habitation for devils only; and to make
it a hold for foul spirits, and a cage only for every
unclean and hateful bird. 9. This is the way to hasten the
work of Christ's kingdom in the world; and to forward
his coming to the eternal judgment. 10. And this is the way
to obtain much of that, WELL DONE, GOOD AND FAITHFUL
SERVANT, when you stand before his face. [In the words of
Paul] 'I beseech you, brethren, suffer the word of
exhortation: for I have written a letter unto you in a few
words' (Heb 13:22).
FOOTNOTES:
1. It is much to be regretted that these
books, in common withall Mr. Bunyan's Works, were
grossly corrupted in the text in all the editions published
since 1737,--'poor peace indeed,' was changed to
'pure peace indeed'; 'here is Rome enough,'
meaning popery enough, was altered to 'here is room
enough'; 'Baptist,' was printed
'Papist,' &c., &c.: all the typographical
errors have now been carefully corrected by Bunyan's
editions.
2. Reply to Kinghorn. 1818, p.
xii.
3. King Charles the 2nd, about a year after
this time, pardoned near five hundred Quakers, who had been
languishing in prison for not attending the church service.
Upon this Mr. Bunyan, and his fellow prisoners at Bedford,
petitioned for liberty, and at a court of privy council at
Whitehall, the 17th May, 1672, present, the King and
twenty-four of his councillors, the following minute was
made:--'Whereas, by order of the Board of the 8th
instant, the humble petition of John Penn, John Bunyan,
John Dunn, Thomas Haynes, Simon Haynes, and George Parr,
prisoners in the goale of Bedford, convicted upon several
statutes for not conforming to the rights and ceremonyes of
the church of England, and for being at unlawful meetings,
was referred to the Sheriff of the county of Bedford, who
was required to certify this Board whether the said persons
were committed for the crimes in the said petition
mentioned, AND FOR NO OTHER; which he having accordingly
done, by his certificate dated the 11th instant. It was
thereupon, this day, ordered by his Ma(tie) in council,
That the said petition and certificate be (and are
herewith) sent to his Ma(tie's) Attorney General, who
is authorized, and required, to insert them into the
general pardon to be passed for the Quakers.' This
fully confirms what Bunyan says as to the cause of his long
and dangerous imprisonment. It was for being absent from
the state church and worshipping God according to His will,
as expressed in the Bible. See Introduction to
Pilgrim's Progress, Hansard Knollys edition.
4.'To ascertain us,' in the 17th
century,meant 'to make us confident,' 'to
assure us.' 'It ascertaining me that I am one of
God's children.'--Hammond. Ed.
5. Eternal blessings on our Emmanuel, who
faithfully performed His promise of sending the Comforter
to unlock the mysteries of the kingdom of grace, and guide
us into all truth: without His powerful aid we can neither
know or perform any thing to a good or saving
purpose.--Mason.
6. The gracious soul believes in Christ for
justification, from a sense of utter inability to obtain
justification by works. This is effected by the power of
the Holy Spirit, the glorifier of
Jesus.--Mason.
7. Effectual calling is evidenced by the
soul's love to God, in his dear Son; a superior delight
in Him, as a reconciled Father, cleaving to Him, His ways,
and people; and longing for the full fruition and final
enjoyment of Him in glory.--Mason.
8. How great is the delight of meeting in a
foreign country, after a long absence from home, with one
who speaks your own language and sympathizes with your
national feelings. How much more strong are those
enjoyments arising from the communion of saints, while
travelling through an enemy's country, with difficult
duties to perform,--animated by a kindred spirit, and
seeking the same eternal home.--Ed.
9. The despising and disregarding the Holy
Scriptures, rejecting Jesus and the way of salvation by
Him, especially after having attained to the knowledge and
conviction of the truth of it by the gospel, is the
unpardonable sin, and renders men obdurate and
impenitent.--Mason.
10. How strongly must have been the
principle of humble submission to the will of God implanted
and rooted in Bunyan's mind. He writes this peaceful
advice from his dungeon, after twelve years' cruel
imprisonment for his love and obedience to the Saviour. It
requires a holy flame of Divine love to enable us to take
the spoiling of our goods joyfully; but how much more
strongly must this principle pervade the heart to enable us
to suffer the loss of liberty, deprived of the society of a
much loved wife and family, and in daily fear of an
ignominious death! We cannot sufficiently admire the grace
of God in the sufferer, nor abhor the tyranny under which
he suffered.--Ed.
11. This idea is found in other of
Bunyan's Works. Certainly the mixture of saints and
sinners in a national church established for worldly
purposes, must engender hypocrisy and pride, intolerance
and persecution. Such leaders in Satan's army were
calculated mightily to assist, if they were not the
original cause, of the overspreading of sin which called
forth the flood to wash away.--Ed.
12. Bishop Hall describes a Christian indeed
as 'having white hands and a clean soul, fit to lodge
God in; all the rooms whereof are set apart for his
holiness.'--Ed.
13. Submission to the disciples of a
Christian church must be voluntary, and not by the
constraint of force or hypocrisy. In Christ's church
ALL must be free, and not a mixture of free-men and the
slaves of sin.--Ed.
14. What faithfulness and plain dealing is
here. If any church communicates with the profane it is
offering sacrifice to the devil.--Ed.
15. One of the most touching scenes in the
Pilgrim's Progress beautifully illustrates this fact.
When Christian led Hopeful into Bye-path Meadow, so that
they fell into the hands of Giant Despair, Hopeful says,
'I wold have spoke plainer, but that you are older than
I.' That whole scene manifests the most delicate
sensibility and christian feeling.--Ed.
16. How strange that pious men should
have been prone to punish their fellows for
non-conformity in an outward sign. They themselves were
suffering inconceivable miseries under acts of uniformity
in rites and ceremonies. How applicable to the framers of
such acts of parliament are our Lord's words, 'Woe
unto you, pharisees, who whiten and garnish the outside of
a sepulchre, while within it is full of uncleanness,
hypocrisy, and iniquity' (Matt 23).--Ed.
17. 'An implicit faith'; faith in
things without inquiry, or in things not
expressed.--Ed.
18. 'These judgments we feel and groan
under.' So frightful were the persecutions of the
dissenters by the church in 1670, that the narrative says,
'The town [of Bedford] was so thin of people, and the
shops shut down, that it seemed like a place visited with
the pest, where usually is written upon the door,
"Lord, have mercy upon us."' Had the
dissenters been united, the church would not have dared to
exercise such barbarities--men and women in jails--some
hanged for not going to church--all their goods swept away,
and their children perishing.--Ed.
19. The printer had inserted 'the
cause'; Bunyan's manuscript was 'a cause.'
See marginal note, in his Differences in
Judgment.--Ed.
20. This is a much more extensive evil than
many would credit. I have met with these very expressions
not only among the poor but the rich. It is an awful
delusion.--Ed.