Memoirs of the Puritans
William Bridge
The life and death of Mr. William
Bridge.
WILLIAM
BRIDGE, A. M.
MR.
BRIDGE was a student in Cambridge thirteen years, and some time fellow
of Emanuel college in that university. He Was first appointed minister
in Essex, where he continued about five years, after which he was called
to the city of Norwich and parish of St. George, Tomland. In which
situation he continued till silenced by bishop Wren for his
nonconformity, in 1637; after which he was excommunicated, and retired
to Holland, where he became pastor to the English church at Rotterdam,
of which Jeremiah Burroughs was preacher.
About
this period the puritans, especially in the diocese of Norfolk, were
grievously maltreated and persecuted by bishop Wren, for not complying
with his visitation articles, a string of the most foolish and
oppressive regulations that any part of the Christian world had ever
been pestered with. This book contained one hundred and thirty-nine
articles, comprehending eight hundred and ninety-seven questions, some
of them most insignificant, the greater part highly superstitious, and
numbers of them such as could never be answered. For the gratification
of the curious, We here insert a specimen of this strange hook, Is your
communion table so placed within the chancel as the canon directs? Doth
your minister pray far the king with his whole title? Doth be pray for
the archbishops and bishops? Doth he observe all the orders, rites, and
ceremonies proscribed in the book of common prayer in administering the
sacrament? Doth he receive the sacrament kneeling himself, and
administer it to none but such as kneel? Doth your minister baptize with
the sign of the cross? Doth he wear the surplice while he is reading
prayers and administering the sacraments? Doth he, on rogation days, use
the profaner bulletin round the parish? Hath your minister read the hook
of sports in his church or chapel? Doth he use conceived prayers before
or after sermon? Are the churchyards consecrated? Are the graves dug
east and west? Do your parishioners, at going in and out of the church,
do reverence toward the chancel? Do they kneel at confession, stand up
at the creed, and bow at the glorious name of Jesus? etc. These
questions were intended as so many traps to catch the puritans, and
answered the purpose so well, that in less than two years and four
months fifty worthy ministers of the gospel were suspended, silenced, or
otherwise censured, for not obeying one or other of these articles;
among whom were Mr. Ashe, Mr. William Bridge, Jeremiah Burroughs, Mr.
Greenhill, and Edmund Calamy. A complaint was afterwards brought before
parliament against Wren, stating, that while bishop of Norwich, by his
oppressions, innovations, and the requisition pf certain Psth.8, he had
compelled above fifty families of that city to leave the 'kingdom; and
that, by his rigorous severities, many pf his majesty's subjects, to the
number of three thousand, had removed themselves, their families, and
estates, to Holland, where they had set up their manufactories, to the
great prejudice of the trade of the kingdom.
Bishop
Laud, in giving the annual account of his diocese to the king for 1636,
says, Mr. Bridge, of Norwich, rather than conform, hath left his
lecture and two cures, and retired to Holland. Let him go, tee are
well rid of him, said the king in his note on this article. But
receiving encouragement from the long parliament, as many others, in
like circumstances, did about this time, he returned to England, in
1642, and was frequently called fo preach before the parliament. He was
soon after chosen minister of Great Yarmouth in the county of Norfolk,
where he continued his useful labors till Bartholomews day, when he
was ejected, with the rest of his brethren, in 1662. Mr. Bridge, after
returning from Holland, was appointed a member of the assembly of
divines. He was of the independent persuasion, and, of course, one of
the dissenting brethren in that assembly, who opposed the Presbyterians
on the three following propositions: 1. That many congregations may be
under the government of one presbytery. 2. That there is a subordination
of assemblies or courts: And, 3. That one congregation ought not to
assume the sole power of ordination, if it can at all associate with
other congregations. On these propositions there was an arduous, long,
and well contested debate. Speaking on this subject, Mr. Baillie, who
was present, says, the independents urged that they might be heard in
the negative. Here (says he) they spent us many of twenty long sessions.
Goodwin took most of the speech upon himself; yet they divided their
arguments amongst them, and gave the management of them by turns to
Bridge, Burroughs, Nye, Simpson, and Caryl. Truly, if the cause was
good, the men have abundance of learning, wit, eloquence, and, above
all, boldness and stiffness to make it out; but when they had wearied
themselves, and over wearied us all, we found the most they had to say
against presbytery was but curious idle niceties, and that they could
bring forward nothing conclusive. They entered their dissent to these
propositions, and only these, on the assembly.
Mr.
Bridge continued minister of Yarmouth till cast out by the act of
uniformity; when he and his brethren gave the world an honorable
specimen of their candor and sincerity in the cause of genuine
Christianity, by the sacrifice they made for what they were firmly
persuaded were the truths of Christ. Mr. Bridge says, in a sermon he
preached at Westminster, 1641, Of all the reformed churches in the
world, England has borne the name, and worn the crown, for the life and
power of godliness; yet give me leave, with grief of heart and sadness
of spirit, to make a challenge, What reformed church is there in the
world, that ever knew so many suspended ministers as England? Speak, O
Sun, whether, in all thy travels, from the one end of heaven to the
other, thou didst ever see so many silenced ministers as thou hast done
here? After his ejection, Mr. Bridge had an opportunity of preaching
sometimes at Clapham in Surrey. Wood says, that being silenced on his
majesty's return, he carried on his cause in conventicles till about the
time of his death. He died at Yarmouth, 12th of March, 1670, aged
seventy years. According to Neal, he was a good scholar, and had a well
stocked library; a hard student, who rose every morning, winter and
summer, at four o'clock; he was an excellent preacher, a candid and very
charitable man, who did much good by his ministry.
His
works are, 1. Babylon's Downfall.2. The Saints' Hiding Place in the
time of God's anger.3. The Great Gospel Mystery.4. Satan's Power
to Tempt, and Christ's Love and Care of his People under
Temptation.5. On Thankfulness. 6. Grace for Grace.7. The
Actings of Faith through natural impossibilities.8. Evangelical
Repentance.9. The inbeing of Christ in all Believers.10. The Woman
of Canaan. 11. Christ's coming is at our Midnight.12. A
Vindication of Gospel Ordinances.13. Grace and Love beyond
Gifts14. Scripture Light the surest Light.15. Christ in Travail,
and his assurance of Issue.16. Lifting up for the Downcast. 17.
Sin against the Holy Ghost.18. The false Apostle tried and
discovered.19. Sins of Infirmity.20. The Good and the Means of
Establishment.21. The great things Faith can do.22. The great
things Faith can suffer. He has, beside these, ten Sermons on God's
return to the deserted Soul, ten Sermons respecting Christ and the
Covenant, eight Sermons on good and bad Company. |
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