Corporate Sanctification
A plea to hold fast to the
attainments of the Reformation.
Corporate
Sanctification
by Dr. John Brown of Wamphray
But that which ye have already hold fast till I come. - Revelation 2:25
For
there is a vast difference to be put betwixt a time wherein the church
is advancing in a course of reformation, and a time wherein she is
declining and sliding back from that degree of reformation unto which
she had already attained. In a time wherein the church is but coming out
of darkness, and the day is but beginning to break up, many things may
then be comported with and tolerated which may not be submitted unto
after the church hath got all these abuses reformed. Every believer and
every church is bound to stand fast in that which they have attained
unto, and not to cede in a hoof: so that Christians living in a time
wherein the church is but beginning to wrestle up from under the heap of
error and corruption, may be allowed to do many things which must not be
dome when the noontide of the day is come. In the time of the
reformation begun by Luther and others, many things might have been
comported within the church (reformation being a gradual motion that
hath but small beginnings and risings) which now, since the reformation
hath been carried on, through the blessing of God, to that degree it was
advanced to, cannot be allowed. When God hath wonderfully, by his mighty
power and outstretched arm, brought a church to a great length in
reformation, it will be the duty of that church, and of the members
thereof, to adhere to that degree unto which they have attained with all
perseverance. It will be lawful for the church which is but coming up
the hill to stand at such a step until they gain another, when yet it
will not be lawful for the same church to go backward after they have
advanced. The truth once bought should never be sold. So then the
consequence is null. Their forefathers stumbled not nor did scruple
at
the doing of such or such things; therefore those in this generation who
have advanced, through the blessing of God, unto a farther degree of
reformation, should not scruple either. It is a poor consequence to say.
The posterity may return backwards because their forefathers could not
advance further. Much more may be seen when the sun is up than in the
twilight:
therefore
the scrupling of honest people now doth no way condemn their
forefathers; but, on the contrary, the steadfastness of their
forefathers, in standing to the degree to which they had reached, and
their endeavoring to advance, will condemn this generation for
backsliding. In their days those abuses and corruption were not
remedied,— the church was not then freed of that yoke of
oppression,—-and further, their after consent unto such ministers made
up this defect; but those in this generation are not at liberty to give
or grant their after consent, because they are engaged to stand to the
work of reformation, and to own it in all its parts.
John
Brown of Wamphray, An Apologetical Relation, pp. 145-146. |
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