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AN INQUIRY INTO THE ORIGIN of EPISCOPACY, IN A DISCOURSE PREACHED IN JUNE, 1790.

By a DIGNITARY of the CHURCH OF ENGLAND.

PRINTED BY SIMMONS AND CO. CANTERBURY. 1791.

ADVERTISEMENT.

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The Author would feel himſelf much honoured, and obliged by any Remarks (addreſſed to his Printer) from thoſe learned Churchmen, to whoſe conſideration theſe ſheets (at preſent not intended for the public eye) are reſpectfully ſubmitted.

HEBREWS 13th. CHAP. 17th. VERSE. ‘OBEY THEM THAT HAVE THE RULE OVER YOU, AND SUBMIT YOURSELVES; FOR THEY WATCH FOR YOUR SOULS, AS THEY THAT MUST GIVE AN ACCOUNT.’

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IN examining a Religion, which pretends to come from God, one of the firſt things which forceth itſelf upon our attention, is the Influence of its Doctrines and Precepts upon human Felicity. If the natural tendency of theſe, be to regulate the paſſions, and to promote the general Happineſs of Mankind; a ſtrong preſumption ariſeth, that its pretenſions to a divine origin, may be well founded. But if a Religion obviouſly tendeth to leſſen human happineſs, or [2] to diſturb the peace of Society; we may, without further examination, conclude with certainty, that it cometh not from that great, and beneficent Being, who (far from delighting in the miſery of his creatures) would have all to be pious, and virtuous, only, that all may be finally, and completely happy, in thoſe realms where Death hath no dominion.

Viewed in this light, Chriſtianity is eminently diſtinguiſhed above every other religious Inſtitution, which hath hitherto prevailed in the world. It teacheth in perfection, the duties of Man to Man; it affordeth divine aids to human weakneſs; and encourageth the practice of what it ſheweth to be good, by motives the moſt engaging, and the moſt exalted.

Chriſtian Religion exhorteth us to be mindful of ‘whatſoever things are true, honeſt, juſt, pure, lovely, or of good report’—to forgive our enemies, to love our neighbours as ourſelves, to do good, as [3] we have opportunity, to every individual of the human race, and, as much as lieth in us, to live peaceably with all men.

In Society only are theſe duties practicable; and, without Government and Subordination, Society could not ſubſiſt. Therefore the divine Author, and Finiſher of our Faith, in order to give efficacy to his other commands, enforced obedience to the civil Magiſtrate by an injunction of the Goſpel, requiring his followers to ‘render unto Caeſar the things that were Caeſar's, as well as ‘unto God the things that were God's.

The ſame courſe of ſalutary inſtruction, was faithfully purſued by the Apoſtles, and others, the firſt Preachers of Chriſtianity; who earneſtly exhorted their Converts to ‘render to all their dues; tribute to whom tribute was due; cuſtom to whom cuſtom; fear to whom fear; honour to whom honour; to ſubmit themſelves to every ordinance of man for the Lord's [4] ſake; whether to the King as ſupreme, or to Magiſtrates, as unto them, who are ſent by him for the Puniſhment of evil-doers, and for the Praiſe of them that do well.’

To theſe Precepts of Civil Obedience no objection of importance hath ever been made. They are (on the contrary) applauded both by the believer, and by the unbeliever,—by him who reverenceth the Goſpel, as the power of God unto Salvation,—and by him who conſidereth it as a cunningly deviſed fable, calculated merely to erect a Dominion over the conſciences of men.

But the Precept of my Text, hath frequently been viewed in a light leſs favourable. It, certainly ſuppoſeth an Authority different from that of the civil Magiſtrate, whoſe Duty is to watch, not for the Souls, but for the Lives and Properties of his ſubjects; and to that Authority St. Paul, here, enjoineth an Obedience, which the ‘children [5] of this world’ are little willing to pay.

It would be idle to reaſon in ſupport of ſpiritual Authority with ſuch as doubt, or deny the divine origin of the Goſpel; for THESE MEN muſt be convinced that they HAVE SOULS, before they can be perſuaded to enquire WHO are appointed to watch for them; to WHOM, on that account, their obedience is due; or WHAT is the Nature and Extent of the obedience required.

THEY are not, however, ALL infidels, who deny the reality of ſpiritual Powers;—for many ſincere believers in Chriſtianity contend that, under the Goſpel-diſpenſation, there is nothing which bears the ſmalleſt reſemblance to an excluſive Prieſthood; that the Authority which is ſuppoſed in my Text, either ceaſed with the Apoſtles; or that (if it ſtill continueth in the Church) it can be conferred on one claſs of Chriſtians, only, by the Election of others; and that, therefore, we are bound [6] to obey it, no farther, than is neceſſary to preſerve Decency and Order in the conduct of public worſhip.

That, our bleſſed Lord gave to none of his immediate followers Authority or Juriſdiction, of ſuch a nature as, to interfere with the Rights of the Rulers of the Earth, is, indeed, an undoubted Truth,—for all ſuch Authority was diſclaimed by Himſelf; ‘My kingdom,’ ſaid He to Pilate, ‘is not of this world’—And, upon being aſked by a certain perſon to decide a queſtion of Property between him and his brother, his Reply was, ‘Man—who made me a Judge, or a Divider over you?’ But when it is conſidered that, Chriſt came into the world to ‘turn men from Darkneſs unto Light, and from the Power of Satan unto God;’ that, ‘He gave himſelf for us, that He might redeem us from all Iniquity, and purify to himſelf a peculiar people zealous of good works’—and that of theſe works very many are ſuch [7] as unregenerate humanity cannot perform; and that the Doctrines which he revealed, are ſuch as human Reaſon could never have diſcovered; it will be ſeen how neceſſary it was that, when he aſcended into Heaven, he ſhould ſubſtitute ſome Authority, on Earth, to illuſtrate the Revelation which he had given, and to enforce obedience to the Laws which he had enacted.

There is nothing more ſtrictly required of Chriſtians, than that they ſhould live together in Unity; profeſſing the ſame Faith, joining in the ſame Worſhip, and practiſing the ſame Virtues on the ſame Principles. Now, as Men have different Paſſions, Prejudices, and Purſuits, ſuch Unity would be impoſſible, were they not linked together in one Society; under the Government of Perſons authoriſed to watch over the Faith, to preſcribe the Forms of public Worſhip, and to inculcate the neceſſity, and explain the Nature and Extent of the ſeveral Virtues.

[8] In the Scriptures of the New Teſtament, the Society of Chriſtians is (on account of its unity and organization) compared to the human body; ‘for as we have many members in one body, and all members have not the ſame office; ſo we, being many, are one Body in Chriſt, and every one members one of another. (Rom. XII. 4. 5) This Society of Believers, in our common Deliverer, is called the CHURCH, 'the Kingdom of God',—and 'the Kingdom of Heaven'; and ITS affairs (like the affairs of every other Kingdom) are adminiſtered by proper officers in ſubordination to the one Lord; who ‘when he aſcended on high, and led captivity captive, gave ſome Apoſtles, and ſome Prophets, and ſome Evangeliſts, and ſome Paſtors, and Teachers, for the perfecting of the Saints, for the work of the Miniſtry, for the edifying of the body of Chriſt; that, henceforth we ſhould be no more children toſſed to and fro, and carried [9] about with every wind of Doctrine, by the ſleight of men, and cunning craftineſs whereby they lie in wait to deceive; but ſpeaking the truth in love, may grow up into Him in all things, which is the Head, even Chriſt, from whom the whole Body fitly joined together, and compacted by that which every joint ſupplieth, according to the effectual working in the meaſure of every part, maketh increaſe of the body unto the edifying of itſelf in love.’ (Epheſ. IV. 11. 12. 14. 15. 16.)

Now,—of this Society (as of a philoſophical Sect) it is not left to every man's choice, as a thing indifferent, whether or not he will become a Member. ALL who embrace the Faith of the Redeemer of the world, are required to be baptized, under the pain of forfeiting the benefits of Redemption. (St. Mark, XVI. 16.—St. John, III. 5.) But one great purpoſe propoſed by the inſtitution of Baptiſm, was the Initiation [10] of Perſons into the Church of Chriſt; ‘For by one Spirit (ſaith St. Paul, 1 Cor. XII. 13. 27. 28. 29.) ‘are we all baptized into one Body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free.’

Of Baptiſm, (whatever be the Importance) it is evident that to receive it is, not (like moral Juſtice, or the Veneration of the Supreme Being) a Duty reſulting from the Nature of the Relations of Man; and that all its efficacy (which in Scripture is ſaid to be nothing leſs than the Remiſſion of Sins, Acts II. 38. and XXII. 16.) is derived from poſitive Inſtitution, and can accompany the external Rite, only, when that Rite is adminiſtered in the manner preſcribed, and by the perſons authoriſed to adminiſter it.

That all Chriſtians, in common, are not veſted with this authority, is plain from the Commiſſion, which (after his Reſurrection) the bleſſed Jeſus gave to his Apoſtles. We are aſſured that the number of [11] his followers was then five hundred at leaſt; but it was ONLY to the ELEVEN DISCIPLES that ‘He came and ſpake ſaying, All power is given unto me in Heaven, and Earth; Go YE therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghoſt.’ (St. Matthew, XXVIII. 16. 17. 18. 19.) Now there is no reaſon to ſuppoſe that there were not many of the five hundred well qualified to inſtruct either a Jew, or a Gentile, in the doctrines of the the Goſpel; and it is certain, that any one of them could have waſhed his Converts with water in the Name of the Holy Trinity, as well as St. Peter, or St. John: but then, ſuch an unauthorized waſhing would not have been Chriſtian Baptiſm, or of equal Validity with it, any more than the Opinion of a Lawyer at the Bar, is the Judgement of a Court of Juſtice, or of equal obligation: It is the Commiſſion of the Sovereign which gives force to the Judgement of the Court; as it is [12] the COMMISSION OF CHRIST which gives VALIDITY TO BAPTISM.

The ſame Things hold true of the Lord's Supper; which, if it be not adminiſtered by Perſons having Authority for ſuch celebration, cannot be deemed a Sacrament of Chriſt's Inſtitution. Theſe two Rites are the external Badges of our Profeſſion—by the one we are incorporated into that Society, of which God our Saviour is the Head and Sovereign—of the other, with all its Advantages, we have a Right to partake, whilſt we continue Members of that Society; but if, by an open and ſcandalous diſregard to the Precepts of the Goſpel, we ſhould prove ourſelves Deſpiſers of its Privileges: the ſame Perſons who are authorized to admit us into Chriſt's Church, are likewiſe veſted with Authority to caſt us out of it; for to them were given ‘The Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven,’ with an aſſurance that ‘whatſoever they ſhould bind on Earth, ſhould [13] be bound in Heaven; and whatſoever they ſhould looſe on Earth, ſhould be looſed in Heaven.a

Now, as Baptiſm is to be adminiſtered, ſo long as there ſhall be Perſons to be enliſted under the Banner of Chriſt; and, as the Lord's Supper is to be celebrated ſo long as it ſhall be the Duty of Soldiers to adhere to to the Standard of their Leader, and their Head; and as it is to be feared that there never will come a time, when all the ſervants of Chriſt ſhall walk ‘worthy of the [14] vocation wherewith they are called;’—It follows undeniably that this Power of the Keys, b which was originally veſted in the Apoſtles, muſt continue in the Church through all Ages, even unto the End of the World. But we have ſeen that it was not, at firſt, entruſted to all the Diſciples in common, as one of the Privileges inſeparable from their Profeſſion; and, as no Body of men can poſſibly transfer an Authority, of which they themſelves were never poſſeſſed; it is certain, that even now it cannot, by the Election of one Claſs of Chriſtians, be delegated to another, but muſt, by ſome mode of Succeſſion, be derived from the Apoſtles, who were ſent by Chriſt, as He was ſent by his Father.

To argue from the Origin of civil to that [15] of eccleſiaſtical Government, although, perhaps, not very uncommon, is yet extremely fallacious.

Of the various Nations of the world (as particular Forms of Government may be deviſed on Earth, though Government itſelf is from above) many of the Sovereigns may, indeed, derive their Authority from the Suffrages of their Subjects; becauſe, in a State of Nature, every man has an inherent and undoubted Right to defend his Life, Liberty, and Property; and what he poſſeſſes in his own perſon, he may, for the Good of Society, transfer to another: but no man is by nature, or can make himſelf, a Member of the Chriſtian Church; and, therefore, Authority, to govern that Society, can be derived only from Him by whom it was founded, and who ‘died that he might gather together in one all the Children of God.’

Againſt ſuch reaſoning as this, it hath been ſometimes urged that it appeareth inconſiſtent [16] with the Wiſdom and Goodneſs of God, to make Inſtitutions which, (like Baptiſm and the Lord's Supper) are generally neceſſary to the Salvation of all Chriſtians, depend upon the Authority and Commiſſion of a particular Order; Becauſe, by ſuch an Economy, an intolerable Domination would be eſtabliſhed over the Souls of Men; and the purpoſe, for which the Son of God died, might, in ſome degree, be defeated, by the Caprice of an ignorant and arbitrary Prieſthood:—But, this objection, is either of no weight, or it militates with equal force againſt all Religion, natural as well as revealedc; and even againſt the Wiſdom of Providence in the Government of the World.

[17] In every thing relating both to their temporal, and their ſpiritual Intereſts, Mankind [18] are all ſubjected to mutual Dependence. The Rich depend upon the Poor, and the Poor upon the Rich. An Infant, neglected from the Birth, would barely cry and ceaſe to live;’ nor is it very eaſily to be conceived how, in the more rigid Climates, a fullgrown man could, without aſſiſtance, provide even the Neceſſaries of mere animal Life. Of RELIGION, it is certain that in ſuch a ſituation, nothing could be known: For there is not the ſmalleſt Reaſon to imagine that any Individual of the human race—an Ariſtotle,—a Bacon,—or a Newton,—had he been left alone, from his Infancy, without culture, and without education, could ever, by the native Vigour of his own mind, have diſcovered the Exiſtence of a God; or that ſuch ſpeculations, as might be ſuppoſed to lead to that Diſcovery, would have employed any Portion of his Time, or his Thoughts.

[19] Even, in Society, it would be impoſſible for any Man, without the Aſſiſtance of others, to underſtand, in the preſent Age, the very firſt Principles of Chriſtianity; for the Scriptures, in which alone, thoſe Principles can be found, are written in Languages which are now, no where vernacular. In the Fidelity of Tranſlators, therefore, every illiterate Diſciple of Jeſus, muſt confide for the Truth of thoſe Doctrines, which conſtitute the Foundation of all his Hopes; and, as no man ever pretended that the Chriſtian Sacraments are more neceſſary to Salvation than the Chriſtian Faith, where is the impropriety, or inconſiſtency of thoſe Perſons receiving the Sacraments of Baptiſm, and the Lord's Supper, by the miniſtration of others, who, by ſuch miniſtration muſt, of neceſſity, receive the Truths of the Goſpel?

Having thus ſhewn that there is in the Church, a STANDING ORDER OF MEN, to whom, in the Affairs of Religion, the [20] great Body of Chriſtians ought, or are bound to pay obedience; it remains to be enquired WHO they are that, among the various Pretenders, have the beſt Claim to this SPIRITUAL AUTHORITY.

One Party maintains that, originally, the Officers of the Church were ALL, Preſbyters of ONE ORDER, and veſted with equal Powers; Whilſt others (and the Church of England eſpecially) hold that Chriſt and his Apoſtles appointed DIVERS ORDERS of Miniſters in the Church; that of THESE ORDERS the HIGHST ALONE, was veſted with Authority to ORDAIN OTHERS; and that, therefore, Obedience (as to thoſe ‘who watch for our Souls’) can be due ONLY to ſuch as are EPISCOPALLY ORDAINED.

This is the famous Queſtion, concerning the apoſtolic Model of Church-Government, which has (almoſt from the beginning of the Reformation) been agitated between us, and the Diſſenters of the Preſbyterian Sect.

[21] The Plea urged in Behalf of the Preſbyterians is, that the Titles, Biſhop and Preſbyter, being in the New Teſtament indifferently given to the ſame Perſons, cannot be the Titles of diſtinct eccleſiaſtical Officers; which appears, it is ſaid, ſtill more evident from the Ordination of Timothy, who (although the firſt Biſhop of Epheſus) was veſted with his epiſcopal Character by the Impoſition of the Hands of the Preſbytery.

That one and the ſame Man is, in the New Teſtament, ſometimes called a Biſhop, and ſometimes a Preſbyter, cannot perhaps be denied; but although every apoſtolic Biſhop was, therefore, undoubtedly a Preſbyter;—it does not follow that every Preſbyter was likewiſe a Biſhop. In the Old Teſtament Aaron, and his Sons are (without any Diſcrimination of Order) frequently ſtyled Prieſts;—as in the New Teſtament both St. Peter, and St. John call themſelves Preſbyters. (1 Pet. V. 1.—2 John, 1.— [22] 3 John 1.) And St. Paul upon one occaſion, denominates himſelf a Deacon. (Coloſſ. 1. 24. 25. See the original) Yet, I believe, no man ever ſuppoſed that thoſe Apoſtles were ſuch eccleſiaſtical Officers, as modern preſbyterian Miniſters, or Deacons: And it is univerſally known that in the Jewiſh Prieſthood, there were different Orders; and that Aaron was of an Order ſuperior to his Sons.

This being the Caſe; the Preſbyters, by the laying on of whoſe Hands Timothy was made a Biſhop, may have been of the ſame Order with St, Peter, and St. John; and, if ſo, his Conſecration was undoubtedly Epiſcopal. We are (at all Events) certain that it was not (in the modern ſenſe of the word) Preſbyterian; for the Gift, which in the firſt Epiſtle is ſaid to have been given to him by Prophecy, ‘with the laying on of the Hands of the Preſbytery;’ is in the ſecond ſaid to have been in him ‘by the putting on of the [23] Hands of St. Paul. d But by the confeſſion of all Parties, St. Paul was a Biſhop in the higheſt ſenſe in which that word is taken; and the Powers of the Epiſcopate not being parcelled out among various Partners, of whom each poſſeſſes only a ſhare, the Impoſition of his Hands was ſufficient for every purpoſe which could have been effected by the Hands of the whole College of Apoſtles.

It appears, therefore, that (from the [24] promiſcuous uſe of the Titles Biſhop, and Preſbyter) nothing can with certainty be concluded on either Side of this celebrated Queſtion. But if, inſtead of reſting in ſingle words, (which are always more or leſs ambiguous) we attend to ſome important Facts recorded in the New Teſtament; I think, we ſhall diſcover in them ſufficient Evidence, that the Government of the primitive Church was prelatical, and not adminiſtered by a College of Elders, an our Adverſaries are wont to affirm.

During our Saviour's Stay upon Earth, we know that He had under Him two diſtinct Orders of Miniſters; the Twelve and the Seventy: and after his Aſcenſion (immediately before which he had enlarged the Powers of the Eleven) we read of Apoſtles. Preſbyters, and Deacons. That the Preſbyters were ſuperior to the Deacons, and the Apoſtles ſuperior to both is univerſally acknowledged; but it hath been ſaid that in Scripture we find no Intimation that the [25] Apoſtolic Order was deſigned for continuance.—A Quaker ſays the ſame thing of Water-Baptiſm; and, I know not by what Text of Scripture, or by what Mode of Argument, Thoſe who, upon this Plea, reject the Apoſtolic Order of Chriſtian Miniſters, could overthrow the Principles upon which the Diſciples of George Fox reject the Uſe of that Rite, inſtituted for the Initiation of Mankind into the Chriſtian Church.

They were the Eleven, alone, to whom our Saviour ſaid ‘Go ye, therefore, and teach all Nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghoſt—teaching them to obſerve all things whatſoever I have commanded you.’ (Matthew XXVIII. 16. 19. 20.) And, therefore, although we frequently find Preſbyters and Deacons adminiſtering the Sacrament of Baptiſm; we muſt conclude that (as a Judge adminiſters Juſtice by Authority derived from his Sovereign, ſo) thoſe inferior Officers of the [26] Church adminiſtered Baptiſm by Authority derived from the Apoſtles: Indeed, had they pretended to act by any other Authority, it is not eaſy to conceive how their Baptiſm could have been the Baptiſm of Chriſt; for it was not with the external waſhing, by whomſoever performed, but with the Eleven and their Succeſſors that Chriſt promiſed to be ‘always, even unto the End of the World.’

That the Eleven did not conſider this Promiſe, or the Commiſſion with which it was given, as terminating with their Lives, is evident from their admitting others into their own Order; for which they had competent Authority, as having been ſent by Chriſt, as he was ſent by his Father (St. John. XX. 21.)

When St. Paul (to magnify his office, and to procure to it from the Galatians that Reverence which, it appears, they had withdrawn from him, and paid to others, whoſe Doctrine was probably more palatable) [27] ſtyleth himſelf ‘an Apoſtle not of Men, neither by Man, but by Jeſus Chriſt, and God the Father;’ He muſt have known ſome who derived their Apoſtolic Miſſion from Men, otherwiſe he could have claimed no particular Reſpect from what was in his own Apoſtleſhip no particular Diſtinction. At that very early Period, therefore, there muſt have been in the Church, Secondary Apoſtles, (if I may ſo denominate them) upon whom by Impoſition of Handse, or by ſome other ſigniſicant ceremony, the Eleven had conferred that Authority, which was given to them by their divine Maſter: Such were Matthias and Barnabas; ſuch likewiſe, were Timothy, Titus, and many others whoſe names are mentioned in the New Teſtament.

[28] That Matthias and Barnabas were of the Apoſtolic Order has, I believe, never been denied; and that Timothy, and Titus were ſuperior to modern Preſbyters is equally evident: [29] Timothy was by St. Paul, empowered to preſide over the Preſbyters of Epheſus; to receive accuſations againſt them; to exhort, to charge, and even to rebuke them; and Titus was by the ſame Apoſtle, left in Crete, for the expreſs purpoſe of ſetting things in order, and ordaining Preſbyters in every city. Now to exhort, to charge, and (with Authority) to rebuke one's equal, is ſurely incongruous; and altogether inconſiſtent with that Parity of Order and Office, for which our Adverſaries ſo ſtrenuoſly plead.

Even the Commiſſion given to Titus ſeems, by much, too extenſive for a preſbyterian Miniſter; who after having ordained in one city, could not have proceeded to ordain in another, without the Conſent and Aſſiſtance of his Brother and Fellow-Labourer. In a word, no man, I think, who, without prejudice, reads the Epiſtles of St Paul, and the Apocalypſe of St. John, can ſeriouſly believe that Timothy, Titus, [30] Epaphroditus, Soſthenes, Silas, and the ſeven Angelsf of the ſeven Churches in Aſia, were mere Preſbyters; or that the Church was, in thoſe days, governed by a College of Elders.

If from the inſpired Penmen of the New Teſtament, we proceed to examine the ſucceeding writers of the Chriſtian Church, we ſhall find ſuch multiplied, and concurring [31] evidence of the divine Inſtitution of EPISCOPACY, as it is impoſſible to reſiſt, without denying the Truth of all ancient Hiſtory, and even ſhaking the Pillars of Revelation itſelf: For ‘in the noble Army of Martyrs’ the Witneſſes of the Epiſcopal Government of the Church, are earlier, and more numerous by far, than thoſe who teſtify that the Goſpel of St. Matthew was written by that Apoſtle, or that the Book of the Apocalypſe is canonical Scripture.

But it may be ſaid, that although the Government of the Church, as ſettled by the Apoſtles, ſhould be granted to have been prelatical, there is nothing in the New Teſtament, or in the Nature of the Thing to make us imagine a different Conſtitution abſolutely unlawful. The Form of civil Government eſtabliſhed by God himſelf over the Children of Iſrael, was certainly, Monarchical; and the ſame Conſtitution obtained at firſt in every Nation under Heaven, of which Hiſtory giveth any [32] account: Yet no man, in the preſent Age, ſuppoſeth a republican, or an ariſtocratical Government inconſiſtent with the Order of Providence; and why, then, ſhould it be deemed contrary to the Spirit of Chriſtianity to vary the external Polity of the Church, in conformity to the Manners, or Prejudices, or civil Conſtitutions of the different Nations in which it is placed?

This Reaſoning would be concluſive; were not the Polity of the Church, the Authority of her Miniſters, and the Validity of the Chriſtian Sacraments inſeparably united.

To Perſons, who conſider the Religion of our adorable Redeemer, as a mere republication of, what is called, the Religion of Nature; nothing to be ſure can appear more trifling, or more juſtly ridiculous than Diſputes about the external Government of the Church. In the opinion of ſuch Men, it muſt be a matter of perfect Indifference, whether ſhe be governed by Biſhops, by [33] Preſbyters, or by the People at large; for the only thing in which they can be intereſted, is the Truth of the Doctrines taught, which reſts not upon the Authority of the Teacher, but upon Deductions of Reaſon, and the Declarations of Scripture, if indeed to the Scripture theſe Perſons allow any Deference to be due.

Thoſe, however, who conſider Chriſtianity as an inſtituted Religion; who believe that ‘Chriſt Jeſus came into the world to ſave ſinners,’ and to reſtore to them that forfeited Inheritance, which by no human means they could ever have regained; Perſons, who conſider Baptiſm, and the Lord's Supper as of vaſt Importance in the great Scheme of univerſal Redemption; and who are convinced that thoſe ordinances derive their Importance, wholly from poſitive Inſtitution, cannot think it a matter of Indifference, whether the Hand from which they receive them, be the Hand of an Adminiſtrator, who derives his Authority from [34] Chriſt; or of one, who derives it from the People.—VALIDITY or INVALIDITY is then the grand Queſtion; and until the Argument is wound up to this Pitch, little good can be done.

Now, it being certain that, from the Days of the Apoſtles to thoſe of Calvin, no man was authorized to miniſter in holy things, but by Ordination from the Hands of a Biſhop;g and it being equally certain [35] that the Preſbyterians derive their Orders from no ſuch Source; it is ſurely not without Reaſon, that we doubt whether the ordinances diſpenſed in their Aſſemblies, be the ordinances of the Church of Chriſt; or that we conſider the Frequenters of ſuch Aſſemblies (eſpecially here in England) as guilty of Diſobedience to thoſe, to whom by every Law divine as well as human, they are in Conſcience bound to ‘ſubmit themſelves, as to Rulers who have Authority to watch for their Souls.’

Unimportant as this Controverſy has often been repreſented, it appears to me of [36] much greater Moment, than many of thoſe, which make a mighty noiſe among the cold and philoſophical Chriſtians of the preſent Day.

In all Churches, with which I am acquainted, are to be found ſpeculative Opinions; (UNDER WHICH DENOMINATION I do not by any means include the Doctrines of our Lord's eſſential Divinity, and the expiatory nature of his Sacrifice upon the Croſs) concerning which I may affirm that (although they have been often canvaſſed with much bitterneſs of contention, and have ſometimes produced all the Evils of Schiſm) a Layman, who is not obliged to ſubſcribe the public confeſſion of Faith, needs give himſelf very little trouble to examine whether they be true or falſe: But a DEFECT, in the of MISSION the Miniſters of the Goſpel, invalidates the Sacraments, affects the Purity of all Public Worſhip; and is therefore a matter which deſerves to be inveſtigated, by every man who is ſincerely a Chriſtian

[37] That it is particularly worthy of Inveſtigation, at preſent, when the Church of England is aſſaulted on every ſide, ſometimes by clamorous Invective, and ſometimes by inſidious Stratagem, none of the children of that Church can poſſibly doubt. Her Faith, which we have every Reaſon to believe to be the ‘Faith which was once delivered to the Saints,’ is undermined by Sophiſtry, and vilified by Ridicule. Againſt her Conſtitution, a thouſand artful Cavils have been raiſed, as if it were unfriendly to civil and religious Liberty; and we have repeatedly been given to underſtand by men, who agree in nothing but oppoſition to us, that it would be expedient for the Legiſlature to aboliſh her HIERARCHY, and to eſtabliſh, in its ſtead, the eccleſiaſtical Government which prevails among the Preſbyterians, or Independents, or any other novel Sect which Fancy, fertile of innovations, might readily ſuggeſt.

The Faith hath found many and able Defenders [38] who, with ‘the Sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God,’ have completely routed that confederate Hoſt, which (with the ſpirit of ‘Gebal, and Ammon, and Amalek’ of old) hath lately appeared in Arms againſt the Divinity of our Lord and Saviour, and the Redemption of the World. But the Conſtitution of the Church (whether it be thought that the Subject is of little Importance, whilſt her Faith is at Stake; or for ſome other Reaſon—ſuch as the dread of the popular Cry of High Church,h or Prieſtcraft) hath not, for many years, attracted from thoſe faithful Soldiers of Chriſt, the Attention to which, in my opinion, it is juſtly entitled. It ſeemed therefore, that I could not employ myſelf with greater Propriety, than by ſhewing as fully as the [39] Time, uſually allotted to theſe Exerciſes, could permit, That OUR ECCLESIASTICAL CONSTITUTION hath its FOUNDATION in the HOLY SCRIPTURES, and in the UNIVERSAL PRACTICE of the PRIMITIVE CHURCH; and that, although our Biſhops derive many civil immunities, much of their worldly Dignity, and perhaps their whole Revenues from the munificence of the State,—the AUTHORITY to which, in my Text, OBEDIENCE is required, flows to them from ANOTHER SOURCE.

The Supreme Powers in this Kingdom have, in general, approved themſelves the nurſing Fathers of our religious Eſtabliſhment; and we may appeal to the Hiſtory of England, for Proof, that the Members of that Eſtabliſhment have, in return, been remarkable for their Loyalty and Attachment to the Conſtitution of their Country: whilſt the Sectaries, when they prevailed againſt the Church, prevailed likewiſe [40] againſt the State, and trampled, at once, upon the Mitre, and the Crown.

This conſtitutional Loyalty let it be our Care always to maintain, and to inculcate upon thoſe among whom we ‘labour in the word and doctrine.’ From us it is due, not merely by Ties of Allegiance, but as a Debt of Gratitude to that Government, by which we are protected; and to a Sovereign, who ſhines conſpicuous among the Rulers of the Earth, for his Piety, and for every perſonal and royal Virtue, and who is (by Inclination, as well as by Title) a Defender of the Faith. But, whilſt we acknowledge, with all thankfulneſs, that we are indebted for our Eſtabliſhment to the Laws of Man, let us never forget that the AUTHORITY, by which we miniſter in holy Things, cometh to us with the EPISCOPAL ORDER from CHRIST and his APOSTLES; and that it is our bounden Duty to ſupport THAT AUTHORITY, and THAT ORDER againſt the attacks of theſe [41] who, like ‘wild Boars out of the wood, waſted our vineyard’ in the laſt Century; who in their Zeal for a purer, and more thorough Reformation ‘broke down the carved work (of the Church) with Axes and Hammers;’ and who have lately given pretty clear Intimations of their Readineſs (if they be not reſtrained within the Limits of Toleration) to work the ſame work again.

To a Tolerationi of their Worſhip, [42] Chriſtians of every Denomination have an indiſputable Right, not only by the Laws of England, but by the great original Law of the Creator, who hath conſtituted men's minds in ſuch a manner as that, on queſtions complicated and involved, Uniformity of Opinion is ſometimes hardly to be expected; and who has at the ſame time made it the Duty of every Man (after having been at the utmoſt pains to procure the beſt information) to regulate his Conduct by his own Conviction of Truth and Rectitude.

[43] But if an eſtabliſhed Religion be neceſſary to the Tranquility of a State (which hath been repeatedly proved by arguments that have not, yet, been overthrown); and if that Religion, which is eſtabliſhed, hath, likewiſe, the BEST Evidence of being TRUE, which, if I miſtake not, is, happily, the Caſe in England; it is, ſurely, the Duty of thoſe, who are the Clergy of the Eſtabliſhment, to point out its various Excellencies; and it is as plainly the Duty of thoſe, who are its legal Guardians, to prevent its avowed Enemies from intruding into Stations, whence they might be able to aſſail it with weapons very different from ‘the Sword of the Spirit.

In all our Conteſts, however, with ſuch as oppoſe themſelves, let Scripture, Hiſtory, and Reaſon be our only Arms; for by theſe alone, can our Fortreſs be honourably defended; and it ſtands in need of no other Defence.

Let us never, in our eagerneſs to ſupport [44] the Cauſe of Truth, injure the equally important Cauſe of univerſal, tender, heaven directed Charity towards all the Deſcendants of Adam. Let us remember, that the moſt vigorous mind, is, perhaps, not completely fortified againſt the Power of Prejudice; and that, if others differ from us, every Man in the Courſe of his Life, hath differed from himſelf.

Let us, therefore, extend to Sectaries, and Diſſenters of every Denomination, thoſe Indulgences which, (when they were triumphant, and the Church was in the Duſt) we did not enjoy; and whilſt Duty requires us to expoſe their Errors, and to repel their Encroachments; Let our Conduct convince ſuch of them as are open to Conviction, that we can love the Men, whoſe Principles we diſapprove.

FINIS.
Notes
a
St. Matthew, XVI. 19. and XVIII. 18. ‘And I will give you the Keys of the Gate of this Court, or Kingdom, the Church, of which every one of you is to be the Steward, (as the Keys of the Court were given to Eliakim, Iſa. XXII. 22. in token of his being a Steward of the Houſe, to admit, and exclude whom he pleaſed) that is, both Power, and Enſign of Power, Apoc. III. 7. to exerciſe cenſures. and by them to exclude men in caſe of their impenitence, either by laying ſome reſtraint on them in the Church, or to turn them out of the gates of this city, and upon repentance, to receive them into the Church again; and what you do here, as you ought to do, ſhall be valid in Heaven. Hammond's Paraphraſe.
b
See this matter treated in a very maſterly manner by Archbiſhop Potter, in his diſcourſe of Church Government;—a book which I beg leave to recommend earneſtly to every Member of the Church of England; and eſpecially to the younger part of my brethren the Clergy.
c
Although, in conformity with the uſual mode of expreſſion, I have diſtinguiſhed between natural and revealed Religion, I do not imagine that there ever was, or could have been, a conſiſtent ſcheme of Religion excogitated by the mere ſtrength of human Genius: the Authors who detail to us Syſtems of, what is called, the Religion of Nature, borrow ſometimes (without adverting to it) their Principles from the Holy Scriptures, and then, not unfrequently, turn againſt Revelation thoſe arms with which it hath furniſhed them.—In vigour of Intellect Plato and Cicero were, ſurely, not inferior to Mr. Woolaſton; and yet, it is certain, that in their writings are not to be found ſo many Truths, and ſo few miſtakes, relating to the Supreme Being, as He has exhibited in one ſmall Volume—Whence, then, had the Author of the Religion of Nature delineated this ſuperiority over the greateſt Men of Antiquity?—Undoubtedly, from his knowledge of thoſe Truths, which are recorded in the Old and New Teſtaments, and of which the Philoſophers of Athens and Rome, knew nothing, except what had come down to them from the primeval times, through the precarious conveyance of oral tradition.—When a propoſition is once known to be true, it requires no extraordinary ſtrength of mind to underſtand the Grounds of its Truth. He muſt be a very weak man, who could not be made to underſtand the demonſtration of the Pythagorean Theorem; and yet I hope there is not one of my Readers, who does not think himſelf indebted to the Sage, who made the diſcovery.—The Caſe is ſimilar with reſpect to Religion. Its doctrines and precepts are now known, and of theſe doctrines many are of ſuch a nature, that a well-cultivated mind comprehends without difficulty the reaſons upon which they reſt; concerning others we may well be contented with the plain though narrow view of them, which is laid before us in the ſacred writings,—for prying into thoſe Myſteries, like gazing on the Sun, begins in Pain, and ends in Blindneſs.—The fitneſs of the Precepts of Revelation for ſuch a Creature is eaſily diſcerned; but it does not, therefore, follow that the Syſtem could have been excogitated by human Reaſon, any more than that every man of ordinary capacity is equal to Pythagoras.
d
Perſons, who are inclined to reſt in the ſcund of words, and names; and to ſuppoſe that the Members of the Preſbytery, whoſe Hands were lain upon Timothy, were of the ſame Rank and Order with modern Preſbyters, would perhaps do well to conſider the Import of the Prep ſitions [...] and [...]. In the firſt Epiſtle, St. Paul exhorts his Son in the Truth not to neglect the ‘Gift that was given to him by Prophecy [...].’ In the ſecond he ſays, ‘Wherefore I put thee in remembrance, that thou ſtir up the Gift of God which is in thee [...]—but every Lexicon informs us that [...] with the Genitive caſe, anſwers to the latin prepoſition per, and denotes the inſtrumental cauſe; whereas [...] with the ſame caſe anſwers nearly to unà, or unà cum, and denotes only conſent and concurrence. The Inference is obvious—that ST. PAUL WAS THE ONLY ORDAINER.
e
This Ceremony of Impoſition of Hands in Ordination (at which ſome Moderns take great oſſence) is confirmed from the Practice of the Apoſtles, and Apoſtolical Men thus ordaining Deacons, Acts VI. 6.—Paſtors or Teachers of the the words, Acts XIII. 3.—and Elders, whether Biſhops or Preſbyters in every City, Acts XIV. 23. This Practice they certainly derived from the Jews, who created Governors of criminal cauſes, or ruling Elders, and Maſters, Doctors, and Rabins, to be Teachers of the Law, i. e. to labour in the word and doctrine, by Impoſition of Hands; as Moſes did to Joſhua, Numb. XXVII. 23. Deut. XXXIV. 9. and as Maimonides ſaith he did, when he aſſumed the Seventy to aſſiſt him. St. Cyprian in the third Century ſpeaks of Impoſition of Hands, as that which was to be obſerved and held from divine Tradition, and apoſtolical obſervation in the collation to the epiſcopal Office: and the apoſtolical conſtitutions give us this as an ordinance of St. John the Apoſtle, who, doubtleſs, (when upon his return from Patmos to Epheſus, he regulated the Churches, and conſtituted Biſhops) did it according to the Rites of the Jews, and Practice of the other Apoſtles.—Whence we conclude that the laying on of Hands is no [...]dental but a neceſſary Rite of the due Ordination of Biſhops, Preſbyters, and Deacons. (WHITBY on 1 Timothy IV. 14) Thus St. Paul received an outward commiſſion to preach the Goſpel, and was ordained by the impoſition of hands. (Acts XIII. 1. 2 3. 4.) And, although he was before choſen by Chriſt to his office, and thence entitles himſelf at large ‘the Apoſtle of Jeſus Chriſt’; yet being ſeparated by the command of the Holy Ghoſt, but at the ſame time by laying on of hands, he then ſtyles himſelf (in conſideration of the work to which he was eſpecially ſeparated and ordained) ‘the Apoſtle of the Gentiles.’
f
It is known to every one, that in the Old Teſtament the Title of Angel is ſometimes given to the Jewiſh High Prieſt, and particularly by the Prophet Malachi, who calls him ‘Meſſenger ( [...]) of the Lord of Hoſts.’ And that the Angels of the Churches mentioned by St. John, were Chriſtian High Prieſts, or Biſhops preſiding over more than one Congregation, is affirmed by all the ancient writers; and hardly will be denied by any man, who ſhall take the Trouble to compare Scripture with Scripture we are told, Acts XIX. 10. and 20) that ‘in the ſpace of two years, all they, who dwelt in Aſia, heard from St. Paul the word of the Lord Jeſus, both Jews and Greeks; and that the word of God grew mightily and prevailed.’ But with what Truth or Propriety could this have been ſaid, if at the Time of St. John's writing the Apocalypſe, all the Chriſtans of the proconſular Aſia were comprized in ſeven Congregations, which could aſſemble each with its proper Paſtor in one place to perform the duties of public worſhip?
g
Should it be granted, in Defiance of all Antiquity and, as I think, in contradiction to the cleareſt Evidence of Scripture; that in the Church, there were at firſt but two permanent Orders of Miniſters, of which the higheſt were called Biſhops or Preſbyters indifferently, and the other Deacons; I ſee no advantage which, from ſuch a conceſſion, could redound to the Preſbyterian cauſe. According to this Suppoſition, the Apoſtolical Preſbyters muſt have been inveſted, as it is contended they were, with all the powers of modern Biſhops—with the power of preaching, of adminiſtering the Sacraments, and of ſending Labourers into Chriſt's Vineyard: But it is notorious that, at the Reformation, and in every prior period of the Church of which Hiſtory makes mention, there were three Orders of Miniſters, of which the Second was authorized to preach the Goſpel, and to adminiſter the Sacraments, but not to ſend Labourers into Chriſt's Vineyard, which was the Prerogative of the higheſt alone: That ſecond Order, being, therefore, upon this ſuppoſition, unknown in the Apoſtolic Age, muſt have been introduced into the Church, by no competent Authority. But it is from it that the Preſbyterians derive their Miſſion, which, therefore, upon their own Principles, MUST BE TOTALLY VOID. Hence it follows that ſhould the Epiſcopal Church be granted to have deviated from the Apoſtolic Model, which (if any Credit be due to the obvious Senſe of Scripture, and the unanimous Verdict of Antiquity) ſhe has not done; ſtill ſhe is corrupted only in one part, whereas the Preſbyterian Sect reſts wholly upon a human foundation.—See this Argument ſtated more fully, and maintained againſt much ingenious Sophiſtry, in DR. WELLS'S Controverſial Letters with the Diſſenters.
h
On this part of my Subject I beg leave to refer the Reader to the excellent Charge delivered to the Clergy of the Dioceſe of St. David's, in the courſe of the Summer 1790, by their illuſtrious Dioceſan.
i
As ſurely as Perſecution is the Mark of the Beaſt; ſo is Toleration the Seal of the Living God. This then is our preſent boaſt, and it is alſo our great protection. Our national Church, under a Toleration and a Teſt, bids fair to promote the progreſs of true Religion, uſeful Learning, and legal Liberty to the lateſt Times.—But from what is ſaid in this diſcourſe of the Law of Toleration, let me not be underſtood, as if I could ſuppoſe, or would inſinuate, that this Law has altered the Nature of Schiſm, which is a Separation from a Church (not becauſe it is eſtabliſhed, but becauſe it is) ſcriptural in its Doctrine,—and apoſtolical in its government;—an epiſcopal Society (not Sect) of Chriſtians requiring aſſent only to the doctrines of the Goſpel, as taught in the three venerable Creeds uſed in our Liturgy.—The Act of Toleration has not, by taking away all civil puniſhment from the offender, altered the nature of the offence, and rendered it an harmleſs thing, or an empty name. By no means. Schiſm, or a cauſeleſs Separation from the Epiſcopal Church of Chriſt, remains what it was,—a crime deſerving condign cenſure. But of this Separation, whether with or without cauſe, there is no abſolutely adequate Judge, but that Power, who can diſtinguiſh between a well and an ill informed Conſcience. Very juſtly therefore do we remit this Queſtion to a higher Tribunal. But this Lenity rather aggravates than mitigates the guilt of Schiſm, wherever it ſhall be found hereafter to exiſt. Schiſm, let it then be remembered, is no leſs a crime now, than it was when Civil Authority blindly interfered, to vindicate the honour of Religion from this unhappy Scandal.
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Zitationsvorschlag für dieses Objekt
TextGrid Repository (2020). TEI. 3767 An inquiry into the origin of episcopacy in a discourse preached in June 1790 By a dignitary of the Church of England. University of Oxford Text Archive. . https://hdl.handle.net/21.T11991/0000-001A-5E50-1