Memoirs of the Puritans
Nathaniel Bernard
The life and death of Mr. Nathaniel
Bernard.
NATHANIEL
BERNARD, A. M.
THIS courageous and
much persecuted puritan divine was educated at Emanuel college,
Cambridge; after which he was lecturer at St. Sepulcher’s, London, where
he was subjected to peculiar sufferings under the Prelatical tyranny of
bishop Laud. In preaching at St. Atholin's church, May 3d, 1629, having
used the following expression in his prayer before sermon: “Oh! open the
eyes of the queen's majesty, that she may see Jesus Christ whom she hath
pierced with her infidelity, superstition, and idolatry;” for which
expression he was summoned by Laud to appear before the high commission
at Lambeth, where, after long attendance, and having made his humble
submission, he was dismissed; which, however, was considered an act of
great mercy and moderation in that imperious court. Again, in the month
of May 1632, in a sermon, preached at St. Mary's church, Cambridge, he
spoke in favor of maintaining purity in the worship of God, and
deprecated the introduction of Arminianism and popish superstitions into
the church of Christ. Here again the active Laud had him cited before
the commission. On Mr. Bernard's appearance, he was constrained to
produce, before the court, a copy of his sermon, who objected to the
following passages: “God's ordinances, for his public worship, are the
glory of any nation. By God's ordinances here, said Mr. Bernard, I
understand chiefly the word, sacraments, and prayer, which, when blended
with any adulterous innovations, cease to be the ordinances of Christ,
or recognized by him. It is not the nominal possession of the ordinances
of Christ, but their possession in purity and reality, that constitutes
the glory of a nation. The possession of the ordinances of God, in their
purity, are a shield and buckler, and a rock of defense against public
ruin and desolation. For the proof of this, I challenge all records,
ancient or modern, human or divine, to produce one instance wherein God
has punished any part of his church with national ruin till they had
first departed from, or corrupted his ordinances. And if so, how foolish
must it be for some men to think so meanly of the ordinances of their
omnipotent Lord and lawgiver, who has announced himself also as the
universal judge. Such men turn their own, and the glory of their nation
and church into infamy and disgrace; and yet there is amongst us a
generation of profane men, who seem to despise these holy ordinances.
Men who are afraid or ashamed to preach twice on a Lord's day; ashamed
to preach plainly, powerfully, or spiritually, lest, forsooth, they
should be branded with the name of puritans.” But Laud's principal
objection was to the following conclusion of Mr. Bernard's sermon: “It
is impossible, I say impossible, for any, who live in the faith and
practice of the popish church, and die without repentance, to be saved,
as the late Tridentine Council have decreed. My reason is, that whoever
imagines he may enter heaven by any other gate than by faith in the
merit of Christ only, must, and will assuredly be disappointed; and that
the popish devotee, who rests his salvation on the merit of alms,
pilgrimages, and penances, will find he has trusted to a broken reed.
Furthermore, if God's ordinances of public worship, in their divine
purity, be the glory of a nation; then it follows, as a necessary
consequence, that whoever goes about either to rob a nation of these
ordinances, or defile them by mixtures of human invention, do what they
can to render the nation base and inglorious, and, by so doing, to
expose it to the displeasure of God, and consequently either to his
Fatherly chastisement, or to that sweeping destruction, ruin, and
desolation, which he has threatened, and which he has invariably
executed upon these nations who despise, reject, or corrupt his divine
institutions. In what light then are we to consider these corrupters? As
patriots or friends to their native country? No, surely, but as enemies
of God, and traitors to the community in which they live. Hereby we may
learn how to account of those amongst ourselves (if any such there be),
who endeavor to quench the light, and diminish the glory of our Israel,
by intermingling their Pelagian errors with the doctrines of our church
wished by law, and their antichristian superstitions with our Christian
worship. Such as high altars, crucifixes, bowing down to them and
worshipping them, whereby they shamefully symbolize with, the Church of
Rome, to the irreparable ship wreck of many precious souls. How can we
think such men are not the enemies of this church and nation? I say,
enemies they are, and as such let us take up arms against them. But what
arms? The prayers of the church are the arms of the church; let us
therefore pray these men either to conversion, if it be the will of God,
or to destruction; and let us use that prayer against them that David
used against Ahitophel, with which I shall conclude. O Lord, turn the
counsel of all these Ahitophels into folly, who labor to lay the honor
and glory of this church and nation in the dust, by depriving us of the
purity of thine ordinances of public worship, which are the bulwarks of
our security, and the glory of our national strength.”
For these expressions
in his sermon, Mr. Bernard was sentenced, by the high commission, to be
suspended, excommunicated, fined one thousand pounds, condemned in costs
of suit, and committed to new prison; where, for six months, he was most
barbarously used, and nearly starved. It was in vain that he
remonstrated with the bishop in several letters. This honest, but
injured individual, could obtain no redress unless he would defile his
conscience with a public and most debasing recantation, which he was
commanded to make before the same congregation to whom he delivered the
objectionable sermon. This he absolutely refused. He would not sacrifice
the testimony of a good conscience, deny the most glaring matters of
fact, and reject the counsel of God against himself, whatever might be
the consequences. In his letters to Laud, though he expressed his sorrow
for any unbecoming expressions in his sermon, he was told he had no
favor to expect, nothing would appease the wrath of the angry prelate
but a recantation agreeable to the contemptible form prescribed; which
must for ever have degraded the man beneath the basest of the brute
creation. He was therefore detained in prison, where, after languishing
a long time, he died, and, by his death, has consigned the memory of
this Prelatical monster to an immortality of example. |
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