The Apostolic Church - Which is it?
An article defending the doctrine
of the apostles and Presbyterianism.
The
Apostolic Church Which Is It?
An
Enquiry At The Oracles Of God As To Whether Any Existing Form Of Church
Government Is Of Divine Right
By
Dr. Thomas Witherow
Professor Of Church History, Londonderry
"If
a Divine plan of Church Government be extremely necessary by what
authority does any man reject the Apostolical?"
—
Dr. Carson
CONTENTS
Preface
Statement
Of The Question
Meaning
of the Word Church
Government
of the Church
Apostolic
Principles
The
First Principle
The
Second Principle
The
Third Principle
The
Fourth Principle
The
Fifth Principle
The
Sixth Principle
Prelacy
Independency
Presbytery
The
Result
PREFACE.
PROFESSOR
THOMAS WITHEROW was educated at Belfast College in 1839-43, and later
studied under Dr. Chalmers in Edinburgh. He became Pastor at Maghera,
Ireland, and Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Magee College,
Londonderry, in 1865. He wrote this book in 1856 that readers " May
know the scriptural grounds on which 'the Presbyterian form of church
government rests." Several editions follower, but it is now
almost unobtainable and friends in this country and U.S.A. ask for a
reprint. The Publications Committee of the Free Presbyterian Church of
Scotland, appreciating its worth and conscious of to-day's need of a
clearer understanding of the scripture order of church government,
decided to have it reprinted. This unabridged edition is issued with the
expectation that it will prove, under divine blessing, instructive and
helpful to many.
Halkirk,
Caithness, 1954.
W.
GRANT.
Convener.
PREFACE
TO THE FIFTH EDITION.
SINCE
the third edition of this little Treatise was published in Ireland, an
authorized abridgement, which omitted various passages and the whole of
Chapter IV., was published in London, and was widely circulated in
England. This abridgement was entitled "An Inquiry into the
Scriptural Form of Church Government," and was specially adapted
for English readers.
An
edition somewhat curtailed, entitled " Which is the Apostolic
Church?" and annotated by the Rev. Dr. R. M. Patterson, was issued
some years ago at Philadelphia, by the Presbyterian Board of Publication
in the United States.
The
present edition is unabridged. The local allusions are understood in
Ireland, and the sentiments of Chapter IV. are as applicable to our
circumstances at present as they were in 1856. Before being stereotyped,
the whole work was revised, and received some alterations at the hand of
the Author. He ventures to cherish the hope that, in this its permanent
form, it may still continue to be of some service to the Truth.
Some
ministers have already used it as a text-book in the Bible class and in
the higher forms of the Sabbath School, the Author trusts not without
profit.
Magee
College, Derry, October, 1881.
THE
APOSTOLIC CHURCH
STATEMENT
OF THE QUESTION
IT
is very common for professing Christians to draw a distinction between
essentials and non-essentials in religion, and to infer that, if any
fact or doctrine rightly belongs to the latter class, it must be a
matter of very little importance, and may in practice be safely set at
naught. The great bulk of men take their opinions on trust; they will
not undergo the toil of thinking, searching, and reasoning about
anything, and one of the most usual expedients adopted to save them the
trouble of inquiry, and to turn aside the force of any disagreeable
fact, is to meet it by saying, " The matter is not essential to
salvation; therefore we need give ourselves little concern on the
subject."
If
the distinction here specified is safe, the inference drawn from it is
certainly dangerous. To say that, because a fact of Divine revelation is
not essential to salvation, it must of necessity be unimportant, and may
or may not be received by us, is to assert a principle, the application
of which would make havoc of our Christianity. For, what are the truths
essential to salvation f Are they not these: That there is a God; that
all men are sinners; that the Son of God died upon the cross to make
atonement for the guilty; and that whosoever believes on the Lord Jesus
Christ shall be saved f There is good reason for believing that not a
few souls arc now in happiness, who in life knew little more than
these—the first principles of the oracles of God—the very alphabet
of the Christian system; and if so, no other Divine truths can be
counted absolutely essential to salvation. But if all the other truths
of revelation are unimportant, because they happen to be non-essentials,
it follows that the Word of God itself is in the main unimportant; for
by far the greatest portion of it is occupied with matters, the
knowledge of which, in the case supposed, is not absolutely
indispensable to the everlasting happiness of men. Nor does it alter the
case, if we regard the number of fundamental truths to be much greater.
Let a man once persuade himself that importance attaches only to what he
is pleased to call essentials, whatever their number, and he will, no
doubt, shorten his creed and cut away the foundation of many
controversies; but he will practically set aside all except a very small
part of the Scriptures. If such a principle does not mutilate the Bible,
it stigmatizes much of it as trivial. Revelation is all gold for
preciousness and purity, but the very touch of such a principle would
transmute the most of it into dross.
Though
every statement in the Scripture cannot be regarded as absolutely
essential to salvation, yet everything there is essential to some other
wise and important end, else it would not find a place in the good Word
of God. Human wisdom may be baffled in attempting to specify the design
of every truth that forms a component part of Divine revelation, but
eternity will show us that no portion of it is useless, All Scripture is
profitable. A fact written therein may not be essential to human
salvation, and yet it may be highly conducive to some other great and
gracious purpose in the economy of God—it may be necessary for our
personal comfort, for our guidance in life, or for our growth in
holiness, and most certainly it is essential to the completeness of the
system of Divine truth. The law of the Lord is perfect. Strike out of
the Bible the truth that seems the most insignificant of all, and the
law of the Lord would not be perfect any more. In architecture, the
pinning that fills a crevice in the wall occupies a subordinate
position, in comparison with the quoin; but the builder lets us know
that the one has an important purpose to serve as well as the other, and
does its part to promote the stability and completeness of the house. In
shipbuilding, the screws and bolts that gird the ship together are
insignificant, as compared with the beams of oak and masts of pine, but
they contribute their full share to the safety of the vessel and the
security of the passenger. So in the Christian system, every fact, great
or small, that God has been pleased to insert in the Bible is, by its
very position, invested with importance, answers its end, and, though
perhaps justly considered as non-essential to salvation, does not
deserve to be accounted as worthless.
Every
Divine truth is important, though it may be that all Divine truths are
not of equal importance. The simplest statement of the Bible is a matter
of more concern to an immortal being than the most sublime sentiment of
mere human genius. The one carries with it what the other cannot
show—the stamp of the approval of God. The one comes to us from
heaven, the other savors of the earth. The one has for us a special
interest, as forming a constituent portion of that Word which is a
message from God to each individual man; the other is the production of
a mind merely human, to which we and all our interests were alike
unknown. Any truth merely human should weigh with us light as a feather
in comparison with the most insignificant of the truths of God. The
faith of a Christian should strive to reach and grasp everything that
God has honored with a place in that Word, the design of which is to be
a light to our feet as we thread our-way through this dark world.
Besides, this, unlike every other book, is not doomed to perish. Heaven
and earth may pass away, but the words of Christ shall not pass away.
The seal of eternity is stamped on every verse of the Bible. > This
fact is enough of itself to make every line of it important
With
these observations we deem it right to introduce our exposition of
ecclesiastical polity. Few would go so far as to assert that correct
views on Church Government are essential to salvation, and yet it is a
subject whose importance it were folly to attempt to depreciate. The
Holy Spirit, speaking in the Scriptures, treats of this theme. The
Christian world has been divided in opinion about it ever since the
Reformation. We cannot attach ourselves to any denomination of
Christians without giving our influence either to truth or error on this
very point; and the views we adopt upon this subject go far to color our
opinions on matters of Christian faith and practice. With such facts
before us, though we may not regard the polity of the New Testament
Church as essential to human salvation, we do not feel at liberty to
undervalue its importance.
The
various forms of Church Government that we find existing at present in
the Christian world may be classed under some one or other of these
three heads:—PRELACY, INDEPENDENCY, and PRESBYTERY. We do not employ
these terms in an offensive sense, but as being the best calculated to
denote their respective systems. Prelacy is that form of Church
Government which is administered by archbishops, bishops, deans,
archdeacons, and other ecclesiastical office bearers depending on that
hierarchy; and is such as we see exemplified in the Greek Church, the
Church of Rome, and the Church of England. Independency is that form of
Church Government whose distinctive principle is, that each separate
congregation is under Christ subject to no external jurisdiction
whatever, but has within itself—in its office bearers and
members—all the materials of government; and is such as is at present
in practical operation among Congregationalists and Baptists. Presbytery
is that form of Church Government which is dispensed by presbyters or
elders, m«t in Session, Presbytery, Synod, or General Assembly; and is
such as is presented in the several Presbyterian Churches of Ireland,
Scotland, England, and America.
These
three forms of ecclesiastical polity are at this moment extensively
prevalent in Christendom. Indeed, every other organization, that any
considerable body of Christians has adopted, is only a modification or a
mixture of some of the systems we have named.
A
very brief examination enables us to see that these three systems differ
very widely in their characteristic features. Not only so, but Prelacy,
hi all its main principles, is opposed to Presbytery; and
Independency, in its main principles, is opposed to both. It follows
that three forms, differing so very much, cannot all be right, and
cannot of course have equal claims on the attachment and support of
enlightened and conscientious men. It is self-evident, moreover, that
the Word of God, the only rule of faith and practice, cannot approve of
all; for, as the Word of God never contradicts itself, it cannot
sanction contradictory systems. Some one of the three must be more in
accordance with the will of God, as expressed in the Scriptures, than
either of the others; and to know which of them is so, should be a
subject of deep interest to every child of God. A Christian, of all men,
is bound to be a lover of the truth; and we are warranted in supposing
that, if a Christian could only see to which of these competing
systems the Word of Truth bears witness, he would support it with all
his might, and would lend no encouragement to the others. If a man,
after he sees the difference, can hold what he knows to be merely human
in the same estimation with what he knows to be Divine, let him bid
farewell to his Christianity, and cease to pretend that he cherishes any
attachment to the truth. The religion of the Lord Jesus, except we
mistake its spirit far, binds all who receive it to prefer the true to
the false, the right to the wrong, the good to the evil; and for us to
be tempted by any consideration to hold them in equal reverence and
render them equal support, is to fling one of the first requirements, of
Christianity away from us. The influence of a Christian is often very
little in this world, but whatever it is, it is a talent, for which,
like his time, his money, or his intellectual power, he is accountable
to God, and that influence ought ever to be on the side of the truth,
never against the truth.
Which,
then, of the three forms of Church Government prevalent throughout the
world is it the duty of a Christian to select and to support?
This
is a question of great importance. It is, besides, forced upon our
consideration in every locality where a dissenting chapel lifts its
front, and a church steeple tapers into air. And yet it must be
admitted, that the majority of Christians contrive to pass through life
without ever giving an hour's thought to this most interesting theme.
Most people are content to let their ancestors choose a church for them,
and every Sabbath walk to Divine worship in the footsteps of their
great-grandfathers—they know not why, and care not wherefore. Some
shrink from inquiry, lest it should turn out that the Church to which
they are bound by ties of family, education, and habit, is destitute of
all Scriptural authority, and lest they feel uncomfortable by having
their convictions and their interests set at war. But the great reason
why the spirit of inquiry is almost dead on this subject is, that the
pulpit is silent, or nearly so, on ecclesiastical government. On this
topic the trumpet gives not an uncertain sound, but commonly no sound
whatever. There are, we are persuaded, few ministers in any denomination
who could say to their people that, on this subject, " we have not
shunned to declare to you the whole counsel of God." The people
never having had their attention specially directed to those passages of
Scripture where the principles of Church Government are embodied, give
no time or thought to the consideration of the subject. The result is,
that vast masses of men and women live in utter ignorance, not only of
the Scriptural facts bearing on the case, but even of their own
denominational peculiarities; they are Prelatists, Independents, or
Presbyterians by birth, not by conviction; they view all forms of Church
Government as equally true, which is the same thing as to count them
equally worthless; they have no definite ideas on the subject; and thus,
in absence of public instruction, they are, by the education of
circumstances, prepared to fall in with any system or no system, as may
best suit their private convenience or promote their worldly ambition.
So it is that many who, in the judgment of charity, are Christians,
regard the denomination with which birth or accident has connected them,
either with a blind attachment or a sinful indifference; and, though
rival systems of Church polity have their representatives in every
village, they plod the weary way of life in happy unconcern about all
such matters, and are never troubled with the question that the very
sight of a church spire suggests to other men—Which of these is true?
Most
people who withdraw from the communion of one Church to connect
themselves with another, and thus exercise their right of choice between
the various forms of ecclesiastical government, are induced to give
their preference from motives such as should never influence an
intelligent Christian. They are guided by feeling rather than by
judgment. They do not first ascertain the leading principles of the
denomination from its acknowledged standards, and then examine these
principles in the light of the Word of God. The bulk of mankind are not,
intellectual enough to search for principles and weigh them. At least,
they do not take the trouble, but are influenced in their choice, either
by the authority of some great man, or the moral worth of some
particular persons, or the piety and eloquence of some local
minister—or perhaps by paltry pique, or petty gain, or love of the
rank or fashion of the world, or by some other equally low and vulgar
consideration. But to decide the rival claims of Prelacy, Independency,
and Presbytery by any such tests as these, is absurd in the extreme.
Try
them by the authority of great men! There is not one of the three
systems that could not present a long catalogue of distinguished men,
who were its warm supporters till the last hour of life. Test them by
moral worth! There is not one of them that could not present a goodly
number of the excellent of the earth, waiting on its ministrations and
reposing beneath its shadow. If we ask which of these systems provides
able and pious ministers to instruct the people, we find a large number
of such persons filling the pulpits of each of them; and if we examine
farther, we will find that not infrequently there may be in the same
town a minister who is an eloquent man and mighty in the Scriptures,
who, all the week in the garden of the Lord, is active as the busy bee,
and who, when Sabbath comes, dispenses the sweets of the Divine Word to
admiring multitudes; while, in connection with the same denomination,
there may be on the other side of the street some poor pitiful drone,
who is doomed to hum to vacancy all the year round. Any such modes of
testing ecclesiastical systems, however common, are unsure and unsafe.
To
us it seems there is a much more satisfactory way of deciding upon the
claims of those forms of Church Government which obtain at present in
the world—that is, to test their peculiar principles by the standard
of the Word of God. That book is quite sufficient to point out the path
of duly to the Christian in this as well as in all other matters, for it
was intended by its Divine Author to be our guide in matters of practice
as well as of faith. The Bible furnishes us with peculiar facilities
for forming an opinion on this very point. It tells us of a Church that
was organized in the world eighteen hundred years ago. The founders of
that Church were apostles and prophets, acting by the authority of God.
Every fact known with certainty about the original constitution of the
Church is preserved in the Bible, everything preserved elsewhere is only
hearsay and tradition. We read in Scripture very many facts that enable
us to know with tolerable accuracy the history, doctrine, worship, and
government of that Church which existed in apostolic days. The
principles of government set up in a Church which was founded by
inspired men, must have had, we are sure, the approbation of God. Corruptions
in government, as well as in doctrine, sprang up at a very early period,
but the Church in apostolic days was purer than it ever has been in
subsequent times. The most obvious method, therefore, of arriving at the
truth is to compare our modern systems of ecclesiastical government
with the model presented in the Holy Scriptures. That which bears the
closest resemblance to the Divine original is most likely itself to be
Divine.
The
warmest friends of existing ecclesiastical systems cannot fairly object
to such a test. There is scarcely a Church on earth that is not loud in
its pretensions to apostolicity. The Prelatic Churches claim to be
apostolic. The Independent Churches claim to be apostolic. The Presbyterian
Churches claim to be apostolic. Each of these denominations professes to
maintain the same doctrine, worship, and government that distinguished
the Church which was planted by the apostles of the Lord. On one of
these points—that of ecclesiastical government—we propose to examine
these claims by the very test that themselves have chosen. Divesting
ourselves .of all prejudice, we come to the law and to the testimony,
desirous to know what God says on the topic in question, and determined
to follow where the Scripture points, let that be where it may. Let us
search the Bible, to see what it teaches on this great theme. If, on a
thorough examination, we fail to discover there any clear and definite
principles of Church Government, the conclusion of necessity follows,
that Prelacy, Independency, and Presbytery are upon a level-none of them
is based upon Divine authority—and it becomes a matter of mere
expediency or convenience which form we support. If we find, on the
other hand, that certain great principles of Church Government are
embodied in the Scriptures, then, when we have ascertained accurately
what these principles are, we have reached the mind of God upon the
matter, and we have discovered a touch-stone, wherewith we can try the
value of existing systems, and determine how much is human and how much
Divine in every one of them.
MEANING
OF THE WORD CHURCH.
THE
word Church in our common discourse is used in a variety of senses.
Sometimes it signifies the material building erected for Divine
worship; sometimes it means the people usually assembling in such a
building; sometimes the aggregate body of the clergy as distinguished
from the laity; sometimes the collective body of professing Christians.
As general use is the law of language, it does not become us to take
exception to the variety of significations that are given to the term by
our best writers; nor can we even say that much practical inconvenience
arises from them, inasmuch as the accompanying circumstances usually
determine the specific sense in which the word is to be understood. But
it is never to be forgotten that, when we come to the interpretation of
the Word of God, the variety of senses commonly attached to the term is
altogether inadmissible, and would, if adopted, darken and corrupt the
meaning of Divine revelation. The word Church in Scripture has always
one meaning, and one only—an assembly of the people of God—a society
of Christians. The Greek word ecclesia, in its primary and civil sense,
means any assembly called together for any purpose (Acts xix. 32); but
in its appropriated and religious sense, it means a society of
Christians, and is invariably translated by the word Church. Examine the
Scriptures from the commencement to the close, and you find that the
word Church never has any other meaning but that which we have stated.
Let any man who feels disposed to dispute this statement, produce, if he
can, any passage from the Word of God where the sense would be impaired,
if the phrase society of Christians, or Christian assembly were
substituted for the word Church. This, we are persuaded, would be
impossible.
Though
the meaning of the word Church is in Scripture always the same, let it
be observed that its applications are various. It is applied, at the
pleasure of the writer, to any society of Christians, however great, or
however small. Examples of this fact will not fail to suggest themselves
to all who are familiar with the Word of God. We give a few passages as
specimens: —
Col.
iv. 15: " Salute the brethren which are in Laodicea, and Nymphas,
and the Church which is in his house." There the term is applied to
a society of Christiana so small as to be able to find accommodation in
a private dwelling-house.
Acts
xi. 22: " Then tidings of these things came unto the ears of the
Church which was in Jerusalem." There it means a society of
Christians residing in the same city, and including, as we know on
excellent authority, several thousand persons.
Acts
vii. 38: " This is he (Moses) that was in the Church in the
wilderness with the angel which spake to him in Mount Sinai, and with
our fathers: who received the lively oracles to give unto us." Here
the word signifies a society of Christians—an assembly, of God's
people so large as to include a whole nation, consisting at the time of
at least two millions in number. The term is also applied to the people
of God in the days of David, when residing in Canaan, spread over a
great extent of territory, and amounting to many millions. Heb. ii. 12,
compared with Psalm xxii. 22-25.
I
Cor. xii. 28: " And God hath set some in the Church, first,
apostles; secondarily, prophets; thirdly, teachers; after that miracles;
then gifts of healings, helps, governments, diversities of
tongues." Here the term means the society of Christians residing on
earth; for it was among them, not among the saints in glory, that God
raised up men endowed with apostolic and prophetical gifts.
Eph.
v. 25: " Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the
Church, and gave Himself for it." The word is here used to signify
the society of Christians in the largest sense—all for whom Christ
died—the whole family of God—all saints in heaven and all believers
on earth, viewed as one great company.
Let
it be observed, however, that, amid all this variety of application, the
word Church never alters its sense. Its meaning in every occurrence is
the same. However applied, it never ceases to signify a society of
Christians; but whether the society that the inspired writer has in view
is great or small, general or particular, is to be learned, not from the
term, but from the circumstances in which the term is used. In every
instance it is from the context, never from the word itself, that we are
to gather whether the society of Christians, intended by the writer, is
to be understood of the collective company of God's people in heaven and
earth, or only of those on the earth, in a nation, in a city, or in a
private house. The practice—into which the best expositors of
Scripture are occasionally betrayed—of taking up some idea conveyed by
the context only, and regarding that idea as entering into the meaning
of some particular word, has been shown by a late eminent critic to be
the origin of those numerous significations— perplexing by their very
multitude—appended almost to every word in our classical dictionaries,
and the prolific source of errors in the interpretation of the Word of
God. This is obviously what has led many to suppose that the word Church
has two meanings—signifying something different when referring to
the universal body of believers, from what it does when denoting the
body of believers connected with a particular locality. The truth is,
that the word Church has only one meaning, but it has a variety of
applications. The term of itself never conveys any idea but a society of
Christians; it is the context that invariably determines its general or
particular application: It is manifestly inaccurate, therefore, to
maintain that an idea, invariably conveyed by the context, enters into
the meaning of the term; when, as all must admit, the term, apart from
the context, does not suggest either a limited or universal application.
Had
we occasion to speak of the several Christian congregations of a
province or nation in their separate capacity, it would be quite in
accordance with the Scriptural idiom to designate them the Churches of
that region. None can forget how frequently the Apostle speaks of the
Churches of Syria and Achaia, Galatia and Asia. So, if we required to
speak of the individual congregations of Christians in Ireland—the
separate Christian societies scattered over the country—we might
denominate them the Churches of Ireland, there being nothing in existing
ecclesiastical usages to make such language either unintelligible or
liable to be misunderstood. But it deserves to be noticed that, when we
use such phrases as the " Established Church of Scotland," the
" Episcopal Church of America," or the " Presbyterian
Church of Ireland," there is no departure whatever from the
Scriptural sense of the word. The meaning of the word in Scripture, as
we have seen, invariably is a society of Christians, and this is
precisely its meaning in any of the above phrases; the context, at the
same time limiting the Christians in question to those professing
certain principles, and belonging to a particular country. When we
employ, for instance, such a designation as the Presbyterian Church of
Ireland, the word Church is used precisely in the Scriptural sense to
denote a society of Christians, which we learn from the context
professes Presbyterian principles and resides in Ireland.
The
propriety of applying the term to signify the Christian people of a
country, does not arise from the fact that they are ever assembled in
one congregation, either personally or by representatives, but from
the fact that the mind contemplates them as a collective body. All
saints in heaven and believers on earth are styled the Church, not
because they are assembled either literally or figuratively, but
because, in the view of the mind, they are regarded as a great society,
separated from the world, and united by common principles into one great
brotherhood. And so the Christians of any denomination, though composing
a multitude of congregations, may, in their aggregate capacity, be
properly styled a Church, not because they are either figuratively or
literally assembled, but because, in the view of the mind, they are
regarded as a collective body, distinguished from others, and united
among themselves, by the profession of a common creed.
It
was once doubted whether the Scriptures contain an example of the word
Church being applied to the Christians of a country. The science of
Biblical Criticism has now set that question at rest in all time coming.
The true reading of Acts ix. 31, is, " Then had the Church rest
throughout all Judea, and Galilee, and Samaria; and walking in the fear
of the Lord, and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost, was multiplied."
No man, with the slightest pretensions to scholarship, can now hesitate
about receiving this as the original form of the text, when it is known
that the lately discovered MS—the Codex Sinaiticus—is in its favor,
no less than ABC; these four being at once the most ancient and valuable
manuscripts of the New Testament now extant Not to speak of the evidence
derivable from versions and Fathers, the united voice of these four MSS.
is enough to settle the correct form of any text; their testimony as to
the original reading of Acts ix. 31 none can question; and to that
passage we confidently point as a clear instance of the word Church
being applied to the
GOVERNMENT
OF THE CHURCH.
Christians
of a country, viewed as one collective society, though in reality
divided into many separate congregations. Some Avriters, indeed, give a
different account of the matter. They tell us that the universal
community of Christians in heaven and on earth is called in Scripture
the Church, not because they are viewed as one great brotherhood, united
by common principles, but because they " are at all times truly and
properly assembled in Jesus." It is a mere fancy to suppose that
the mind ever takes such a fact into account, when employing the term in
its universal application; but, if so, it does not alter the case. The
Christians of a particular district, or of a province, or of a nation,
may be properly designated a Church for the same reasons; because they
also " are at all times truly and properly assembled in
Jesus." There is no sense in which all the Christians on earth and
in heaven are " assembled in Jesus," that the Christians of
any particular country are not thus assembled. If the whole is
assembled, so also are the parts. Take the matter either way, the
Christians of a district, or a province, or a kingdom, holding certain
principles in common, if viewed as a collective community, are a
Church, exactly in the sense of the Scriptures. They are a SOCIETY or
CHRISTIANS.
THE
Christian society on earth, or, as it is usually called, the Church, is
represented in the Scriptures as a kingdom. It was of His Church that
the Lord Jesus spake, when He said to Pilate, " My kingdom is not
of this world " (John xviii. 36). The fact of its being a kingdom
necessarily implies at least three things—first, a king or governor;
secondly, subjects; thirdly, laws. In the Church or kingdom of God, the
king is Christ; the subjects are believers; the laws are the Scriptures
of truth.
Every
king has officers under him, who are charged with the execution of his
laws, and who have authority from the crown to do justice and judgment.
Judges and magistrates are the office-bearers of a kingdom, deriving
their power from the monarch under whom they serve, and putting the laws
in force among all ranks and classes of the people. Hence a very
palpable division of a kingdom is into rulers and ruled—those whose
duty is to administer the law, and those who are bound to obey it. The
same distinction holds in the kingdom of Christ. It also consists of
rulers and ruled—the office-bearers entrusted with the dispensation of
the laws, and the people who are commanded to yield them submission.
This is very plain, from Heb. xiii. 17: " Obey them that have the
rule over yon, and submit yourselves: for they watch for your souls, as
they that must give account." It is clear from this passage that
there are some in the Church whose duty is to rule; they are the office
bearers of the Church. It is no less clear that there are others in the
Church, whose duty is to obey; they are the private members—the
subjects of the kingdom—the people. But in every society where it is
the acknowledged duty of some parties to exercise authority, and of
others to practice submission, there must be what is called government;
for in such authority exercised on the one hand, and in such submission
rendered on the other, the essence of all government consists. Even was
there no passage in the Scriptures but that last quoted, bearing upon
the subject, it is undeniable that government was established in the
Apostolic Church. If government existed, some form of government must
have been adopted; for to say that there was established in the kingdom
of Christ government without a form of government is absurd. History
tells us of many ecclesiastical and political wonders, but of all the
strange things that have been witnessed in the world or in the Church,
since the beginning of time, there has never yet appeared government
without a form of government. The thing is impossible. Government in
itself is an abstraction. The moment it puts forth power, it becomes a
reality—it stands before the world as a visible thing—it assumes a
form.
That
there was government in the Apostolic Church, and that this government
existed under a certain form, seems clear to demonstration. To determine
with precision what this form was, is a matter of great consequence; for
it must be evident to all that a plan of Church government, instituted
by the apostles of the Lord, acting under the guidance of the Holy
Spirit, must carry with it a degree of lawfulness, and authority that no
human system, though in itself a masterpiece of wisdom—made venerable
by age, or recommended by expediency—ever can exhibit; and that every
existing form of Church government is deserving of respect only so far
as it conforms in its principles to that Divine original. But there are
obvious reasons that make it a matter of some difficulty to ascertain
with accuracy the system of ecclesiastical polity that was established
in the New Testament Church.
1.
The Apostles, writing to Christians who were themselves members of the
Apostolic Church, and of course well acquainted with its organization,
did not judge it necessary to enter into detailed descriptions of the
Christian society. To do so would have been unnatural. They do
occasionally state facts bearing on Church government, and hint
indirectly at prevailing practices. These hints and facts were
sufficiently suggestive and intelligible to the persons originally
addressed, but by us, who live in a distant age, in a foreign country,
and among associations widely different, they are not so easily
understood.
2.
They do not even arrange such facts as bear upon the question in
systematic order. If man had had the making of the Bible, it would have
been a very different book; but as that circumstance was not left to our
option, we must take it as we find it. On examination, we see that it
teaches nothing in scientific order. Even morality and doctrine are not
there arranged in regular system, but are conveyed in detached portions,
and our industry is stimulated by having to gather the scattered
fragments, to compare them with each other, and to work them up into
order for ourselves. So ecclesiastical polity is not taught in Scripture
methodically; but away over the wide field of revelation, facts and
hints and circumstances lie scattered, which we are to search for, and
examine, and combine, and classify. Now, all do not agree in the
arrangement of these facts, nor in the inferences that legitimately flow
from them, nor in the mode of constructing n system from the detached
material.
These
things make it difficult to ascertain with accuracy, and still more so
with unanimity, the form of Church government that existed in Apostolic
days. But difficult as it seems, it is proved quite possible, by a
thorough and unprejudiced examination of the Scriptures, to discover
the main principles that entered into the constitution of the primitive
Church. We say the main principles—more than these we need not expect
to find. The Word of God, except in some rare instances, never enters
into details—it states principles. This is a very noticeable
peculiarity of the Divine legislation, that deserves a passing remark.
In every civilized country, it may be observed how those entrusted with
the duty of government aim to provide a law for every specific case. The
human legislator descends to details. The result of this in our own
country is, that the common and statute laws of England are so balky
that the books in which they are written would make of themselves a
magnificent library; Parliament meets every year for the express purpose
of constructing new, and amending old laws, to suit the ever varying
circumstances of the country and the times; and notwithstanding all,
cases occur daily in the public courts, wherein the most accomplished
jurists have to acknowledge that the existing laws determine nothing.
But observe how the Divine law proceeds on a method quite different. It
rarely enters into specific details, but lays down general principles,
any one of which is quite sufficient to decide a whole multitude of
cases. Instead, for instance, of attempting to prescribe every form of
good that it is right for a man to perform to his neighbour, it lays
down a principle quite sufficient to meet every case— Thou shalt love
thy neighbour as thyself. Instead of enumerating the different ways by
which children are to discharge the duties that they owe their parents,
Scripture enacts this general law, holding good in every case—Honor
thy father and thy mother. Declining to specify every semblance of sin
that it were well for Christians to avoid, the statutes of the Lord
direct us to Abstain from all appearance of evil. Human legislation
enters into minute details, but Divine legislation enacts general
principles. The result is that, while there is perhaps more room left
for difference of opinion in the interpretation and application of the
enactments of a code of law constructed on the latter system, yet this
disadvantage is more than counterbalanced by the fact, that the laws of
God are in themselves perfect; that they do not change with the ever
varying circumstances of countries and of times; that they meet every
case which can possibly occur; and that they are compressed into a
reasonable size, being all written in a book so small that it can be
lifted in the hand, or carried in the pocket. Now, the Scripture teaches
us Church government, as it teaches morality. It does not furnish minute
details, but it supplies THE GREAT LEADING PRINCIPLES that entered into
the polity of the Apostolic Church. What these main principles were, it
is now our purpose to ascertain. (This paragraph was suggested by
reading Dr. Paley's Sermon on Rom. xiv. 7.)
It
is the common practice of writers, in discussing the important subject
of ecclesiastical government, to select some one of our modern Churches
which happens to be a favorite, delineate its characteristic features,
and then
proceed to show that they
are a reflection of the pattern presented in the Word of God. That this
plan has some recommendations, we can readily believe, but it is no less
obvious that it is liable to grave objections. It seems to assume at the
commencement the conclusion to which the reasoner can only hope to
conduct us after a sound process of logic. It somehow produces the fatal
impression, that the writer has determined in the first place that his
view of the subject is right, and then goes to Scripture to search for
proof of it. The author may be the most impartial and truth-loving of
men, but his very plan betrays a preference for some particular system,
and thus, at the outset, awakes the prejudices of many readers. Besides,
it affords opportunities, for viewing passages of Scripture apart from
their connection, and tempts writers to quote in their favorite texts,
the sound of which only is upon their side. For these reasons we do not
choose to adopt this method on the present occasion.
The
plan of procedure we propose is more unusual, though, we trust, not less
satisfactory. We will examine the Holy Scriptures with a view of
ascertaining from them the various facts that bear on the government of
the Apostolic Church. We will produce the passages, contemplate them
in their immediate connection, unfold their meaning, and try if, by
their aid, we can arrive at TRUE PRINCIPLES. We will then turn to our
modern Churches, view the different forms of ecclesiastical polity
that exist in the world at present, and see which of them it is that
embodies all or most of these principles. When this is done, we shall
have found the denomination that, in point of government, is best
entitled to be regarded as the Apostolic Church.
This
process of reasoning is so very clear and simple that there is no room
for practicing deception either on ourselves or our readers. The very
humblest intellect may follow our logic to the close. There are but two
steps till we arrive at the conclusion. First, we are to ascertain
from
the unerring Word of God
what were the main, principles in the government of the Churches founded
by the Apostles of the Lord; and, secondly, we are to ascertain in which
of our modern Churches these main principles are most fully acknowledged
and carried out. We will then apply to the settlement of the matter an
axiom, radiant in the light of its own self-evidence. That axiom is, The
Modern Church Which Embodies In Its Government Most Apostolic Principles,
Comes Nearest In Its Government To The Apostolic Church.
APOSTOLIC
PRINCIPLES
THE
FIRST PRINCIPLE.
FROM a careful
examination of the Scripture, we find at least four different kinds of
office-bearers in the Apostolic Church: (1) Apostles; (2) Evangelists;
(3) Bishops (also called pastors and teachers); (4) Deacons. Each one of
these had a right to exercise all the offices inferior to his own; but
one filling an inferior, had no right to discharge the duties of a
superior office. Thus, the Apostolic office included all the others; and
a bishop or elder had the right to act as a deacon, so long as his doing
so did not impede the due discharge of duties peculiarly his own. A
deacon, on the other hand, had no right to exercise the office of a
bishop; nor had a bishop any authority to take on him the duties of an
apostle. Each superior office included all below it.
Two
of these offices—those of apostle and evangelist— were temporary,
necessary at the first establishment of Christianity, but not necessary
to be perpetuated. The apostles were witnesses of the resurrection of
the Lord Jesus, endowed with the. power of working miracles and of
conferring the Holy Ghost by the laying on of their hands, the
infallible expounders of the Divine will, and the founders of the
Christian Church; and, having served the purpose for which they were
sent, they disappeared out of the world, and, as apostles, have left no
successors. Evangelists were missionaries—men who traveled from
place to place preaching the Gospel, and who acted as the assistants and
delegates of the apostles in organizing Churches. Of these, Philip and
Timothy and Titus were the most eminent examples. It deserves to be
remarked, with regard to these temporary, or, as they are usually
called, extraordinary office-bearers, that their sphere of duty was not
limited to a congregation, but. extended to the Church at large. They
were members of any Christian Society, within whose bounds they resided
for a time, but their mission was to the world, and their authority
extended to the Church universal.
The
offices of bishop and deacon were, on the other hand, designed to be
perpetual in the Church. The bishops, or, ns they are more usually
called, elders, (This is assumed for the present: it will be proved
afterwards.) and pastors, and teachers, were office-bearers, whose duty
it was to instruct and govern the Church. The deacons had charge of temporal
concerns, and were entrusted with the special duty of ministering to the
necessities of the poor. The Church can never cease to have need of
these two offices, so long as its members have spiritual and temporal
wants to be supplied. But it is to be observed, with regard to the
bishops and deacons, that they were mainly congregational officers. The
sphere of their duty was not so general as that of the apostles,
prophets, and evangelists, but lay for the most part within the bounds
of that particular Church or district for which they were appointed to
act.
Dr.
Campbell thus expounds the special necessity that existed in the
Primitive Church, both for the temporary and perpetual office-bearers:
" To take a similitude from temporal things: it is one thing to
conquer a kingdom and become master of it, and another thing to govern
it when conquered, so as to retain the possession which has been
acquired. The same agents and the same expedients are not properly
adapted to both; For the first of these purposes, there was a set of
extraordinary ministers or officers in the Church, who, like the
military forces intended for conquest, could not be fixed to a
particular spot whilst there remained any provinces to conquer. Their
charge was, in a manner, universal, and their functions ambulatory. For
the second there was a set of ordinary ministers or pastors, corresponding
to civil governors, to whom it was necessary to allot distinct charges
or precincts, to which their services were chiefly to be confined, in
order to instruct the people, to preside in the public worship and
religious ordinances, and to give them the necessary assistance for the
regulation of their conduct. Without this second arrangement, the
acquisitions made could not have been long retained. There must have
ensued an universal relapse into idolatry and infidelity. This
distinction of ministers into extraordinary and ordinary, has been
admitted by controvertists on both sides, and therefore cannot justly be
considered as introduced (which sometimes happens to distinctions) to
serve an hypothesis."* With these preliminary observations, we
proceed in search of—
ALL
offices in the Christian Church take origin from the Lord Jesus. Himself
is the Author and embodiment of them all; He is the Apostle of our
profession; He is an Evangelist, preaching peace to them that are afar
off, and to them that are nigh; He is the great Pastor or Shepherd of
the sheep—the Bishop of souls; and He is the Deacon or servant who
came not to be ministered to, but to minister. All offices in the Church
are embodied in the person of Christ.
The
Apostles were the only office-bearers chosen during the lifetime of the
Lord. They held their appointments immediately from Himself. They were
called to the work of the ministry by His voice, and they received their
commission at His hands. Simon and Andrew were casting • their nets
into the Lake of Galilee, as Jesus walked upon the beach, but at His
call they left their nets, to follow
Him
through the world. The sons of Zebedee heard His voice, and forthwith
they forgot both father and mother in their ambition to become fishers
of men. When Christ said, Follow me, Levi forsook the receipt of custom,
and was a publican no more. The personal call of the Lord Jesus was
then, and is still, the first and best of all authority to hold office
in the Church of God. Let a man only satisfy us that he holds his
appointment directly from the Lord, as the Apostles did, and we require
no more to induce us to submit to him.
But
after the Lord had ascended to heaven, the personal call, except in case
of Paul, who was one born out of due time, was not the passport of any
man either to the ministry or apostleship. Men were no more put into
office by the living voice of the Lord Jesus. The departure of the
Master, and the vacancy left in the list of Apostles by the death of
Judas, gave opportunity for bringing into operation a new principle.
The first chapter of the Acts of the Apostles brings the whole case
before us. Let us specially examine the passage—Acts i. 13-26—that
we may have full possession of the facts. It appears that, in the
interval between the Ascension and the Day of Pentecost, the disciples
met for prayer and supplication in an upper room of the city of
Jerusalem. The mother and brethren of Jesus were present, as were also
the eleven Apostles. Taken together, they numbered one hundred and
twenty in all. Peter rose and addressed the company. He reminded them of
the vacancy in the apostleship. Judas, who betrayed the Master, was
dead, and the office that he forfeited by his transgression must be
conferred upon another. He states the necessary qualifications of him
who was to be the successor of Judas. He must be one who had intercourse
with the 11 from the commencement of Christ's ministry to the close. He
states the duties of the new apostle; he was to be with the others a
witness of Christ's resurrection. Such was the case that
Peter
put before the men and brethren, met together in that upper room of
Jerusalem. We then rend in verse 23 —" THEY APPOINTED TWO, Joseph
called Barsabas, who was surnamed Justus, and Matthias." In
consequence of this double choice, it became necessary to decide which
should be regarded as the true apostle; which, after prayer, was done by
casting lots. But let it be particularly observed that, while Peter
explained the necessary qualifications, and the peculiar duties of the
office, the appointment of the person did not rest with Peter, but with
the men and brethren to whom the address of Peter was directed. Farther,
it is not to be forgotten that the office to which Matthias succeeded
is, in the 20th verse, termed a Bishopric, and how it is said in the
25th verse, he had " to take part of this ministry and
apostleship." The men and brethren, at the instigation of Peter,
exercised the right of appointing a man to a bishopric—that is, to the
office of a bishop, and to take part in the ministry. In the Apostolic
Church, the people appointed Matthias to be a minister —a bishop—an
apostle. The case recorded in Acts xiv. 23, is to the same effect,
though, from a mistranslation, the force of it is lost upon the English
reader. The authorized version represents the two Apostles, Barnabas and
Paul, as ordaining elders in every church; whereas the true meaning of
the word in the original is " to elect by a show of hands
"—a fact now admitted by the best expositors.* We must not allow
a faulty translation to rob us of the testimony of Scripture to an
important fact—namely, that the elders of the New Testament Church
were appointed to office by the popular vote.
The
sixth chapter of Acts comes next under consideration. At the period to
which the narrative there recorded refers, the disciples at Jerusalem
had grown numerous. The Grecians began to complain against the Hebrews,
how that
their widows were
neglected in the daily ministrations. Hitherto the twelve had attended
to the wants of the poor; but their hands were at the same time full of
other work, and, among such a multitude, it is not surprising that some
were neglected, nor is it very wonderful, considering what human nature
is, that some were found to murmur, even when apostles managed the
business. What was now to be done? A division of offices was clearly a
necessity. But were the apostles to take it on themselves to select
persons on whom should devolve the duty of attending to the temporal
wants of the community f Had they done so, few would dispute their
right, or venture to charge inspired men with the exercise of a despotic
or unwarranted authority. But, instead of this, they adopted a course of
procedure unaccountable to us on any other principle, than that they
purposely managed the matter in such a way a? would guide the Church in
the appointment of office-bearers when themselves would be removed, and
thus form a precedent for future ages. The apostles summoned the
multitude together and explained the case. They said their appropriate
business as ministers was with the Word of God. They said it was
unreasonable for them to have to neglect the spiritual province, in
order to attend to temporal concerns; and they called upon the brethren
to look out among themselves for seven men, of good character, gifted
with wisdom and the Spirit of God, who might be appointed to take charge
of this secular business, and who would leave the apostles free to
attend to duties peculiarly their own—namely, prayer and the ministry
of the Word. " And the saying pleased the whole multitude; and THEY
CHOSE Stephen, a man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost, and Philip,
and Prochorus, and Nicanor, and Simon, and Pannenas, and Nicolas, a
proselyte of Antioch; whom they set before the apostles; and when they
had prayed, they kid their hands on them " (Acts vi. 5, 6). The
seven men whom the multitude chose on this occasion were the first
deacons. Though not expressly called so in the Scriptures, yet they are
admitted to have been such, by almost universal consent. The lowest
office-bearers, therefore, in the Apostolic Church, were chosen by the
people.
Here,
then, are three clear facts, fully sufficient to be the basis of a
principle. The first chapter of Acts supplies us with an instance of the
assembled men and brethren appointing to office one who was both an
apostle and a minister. The fourteenth chapter shows that the elders of
the congregation were chosen by popular suffrage. The sixth chapter
furnishes an example of the whole multitude of the disciples choosing
seven men to be deacons. On these three facts, clear and irresistible,
we found the principle of POPULAR ELECTION. The conclusion that
follows from this evidence, we find it absolutely impossible to evade,
namely — that in the Apostolic Church the office bearers were chosen
by the people.
THE
SECOND PRINCIPLE.
THERE
is a class of office-bearers very frequently mentioned as existing in
the early Church, and to which, as yet, we have only made a slight
allusion. We mean the elder, or presbyter, as he is frequently called.
This church officer is often mentioned in the Acts and Epistles; but an
attentive reader will not fail to remark that no passage of Scripture
ever speaks of him as holding an office distinct from the bishop. The
same verse never speaks of bishops and elders. When Paul, for example,
writes to the Philippian Church (i. 1), he mentions the bishops and
deacons, but says nothing of elders. When James directs the sick to
call for the elders of the Church (v. 14), he says nothing of bishops.
If the offices of bishop and elder were quite distinct — if a bishop
were an office-bearer bearing rule over a number of elders, it does seem
strange that no passage of Scripture speaks at the same time of bishops
and elders. There is one supposition, and only one, that would furnish a
satisfactory reason for this fact. If the two terms be only different
names for the same office, then to speak of bishops and elders would be
a violation of the laws of language— it would be tautology—it would
be the same thing as to speak of presbyters and elders, or of bishops
and bishops. To suppose that the two offices were identical accounts
sufficiently for the significant fact that they are never mentioned
together in the same passage of the Word of God; for it is plain that
one of the terms being adequate to indicate the office-bearer intended,
there was no need to introduce the other at the same time.
Still
there must be something stronger than a presumption to warrant as in
saying that the two terms were only different names for the same person.
However improbable it may appear, it is still possible that these two,
bishop and elder, were distinct office-bearers, even though the same
passage never speaks of them together. This obliges us to consult the
Scriptures farther on this question.
The
first passage that comes before us is—Titus L 5-7— "For this
cause left I thee in Crete, that thou shouldest set in order the things
that are wanting, and ordain elders in every city, as I had appointed
thee: if any be blameless, the husband of one wife, having faithful
children, not accused of riot or unruly. For a bishop must be blameless,
as the steward of God; not self-willed, not soon angry, not given to
wine, no striker, not given to filthy lucre." This passage strongly
confirms the truth of the supposition already made, that the two offices
were identical. It appears that Paul left Titus behind him in Crete to
ordain elders in every city. To guide him in the discharge of this duty,
the Apostle proceeds to state the qualifications of an elder. No private
member of the Church was eligible to that office except he was a man of
blameless life, the husband of one wife, and had obedient children;
"for," says he, " a bishop must be blameless, as the
steward of God." Dr. King well observes on this passage, "that
the term elder, used at the commencement, is exchanged for the term
bishop in the conclusion, while the same office-bearer is spoken of. An
elder must have such and such qualifications. Why) Because a bishop must
be blameless, as the steward of God. Does not this 'identify the elder
and the bishop? If not, identification is impossible. Were it said, the
Lord Mayor of London must devote himself to his duties, for the chief
magistrate of such a city has great responsibilities, would not the
language bear, that the Lord Mayor and the chief magistrate were the
same office-bearers? Otherwise, the representation would be absurd; for
why should the mayor devote himself to his duties because some other
person had great responsibilities! Yet the mayor and chief magistrate
are not more identified in this comparison than are the elder and bishop
in Paul's instructions to Titus."* It must be evident to every
unprejudiced man that the Apostle would never state as a reason for
ordaining none but men of good moral character to the office of the
eldership, that a bishop must be blameless, if he did not understand
that elder and bishop were only different designations for the same
office. On any other supposition, the language of the Apostle would be
without coherence and without sense.
Again,
we turn to II John i., and we find how the Apostle John styles himself
an elder—" The elder unto the elect lady and her children, whom I
love in the truth." Next comes up I Peter v. 1, and we find there
that the Apostle Peter calls himself an elder—" The elders which
are among you I exhort, who am also an elder, and a witness of the
sufferings of Christ." (Dr. King's Exposition and Defence, pp.
176-7. Edin. 1853.) That John and Peter were both bishops all admit; but
these passages show that they were elders also. This, however, brings us
but a step to the conclusion. It may be true that every general is an
officer, but it does not follow from this that every officer is a
general. A bishop may, like John and Peter, be an elder, but it does not
necessarily follow that an elder is a bishop.
This
may be true, but we require more proof before we can reach such, a
conclusion. This we have as fully as can be desired in Acts xx. 17-28.
We read there how Paul sent for the elders of the Church at Ephesus to
meet him at Miletus. He spoke of his ministry in their city, the great
theme of his preaching being repentance towards God. and faith towards
the Lord Jesus Christ. He foretold the afflictions awaiting him at
Jerusalem and elsewhere, and he saddened their hearts by saying to them
that they would see his face no more. And he warned them to take heed to
themselves and to " the flock over which the Holy Ghost had made
them overseers"—that is, bishops, as the word is elsewhere
rendered. Every reader acquainted with the original is aware that the
word translated overseers, in Acts xx. 28, is the very same as that
translated bishops in Phil. i. 1, so that we have here the evidence of
inspiration, that the elders of Ephesus were bishops by appointment of
the Holy Ghost. This makes the chain of reasoning strong and conclusive.
Bishops, as we have seen, were elders, and elders, as we now see, were
bishops. This conducts us to a principle—namely, that, IN THE
APOSTOLIC CHURCH, THE OFFICES OF BISHOP AND ELDER WEBB IDENTICAL. An
elder was not inferior to a bishop, nor was a bishop superior to an
elder. It was the same office-bearer who was known by these different
names.
We
are not disposed to attach much value to the opinion of such a man as
Edward Gibbon, on any question of doctrine or morality, but that
distinguished historian was competent to grapple with a matter of fact,
and may be heard as one who, from being unprejudiced in favor of any
religious system whatever, was in a position to judge impartially in a
case of this kind. Speaking of the government and administration of
the Church prior to the Council of Nice, he says, " The public
functions of religion were solely entrusted to the established ministers
of the Church, bishops and the presbyters; two appellations which, in
their
first
origin, appear to have distinguished the same office, and the same order
of persons. The name of presbyter was expressive of their age, or rather
of their gravity and wisdom. The title of bishop denoted their
inspection over the faith and manners of the Christians who were committed
to their pastoral care."*
THE
THIRD PRINCIPLE.
LET
it not be forgotten that we have now ascertained that presbyter and
bishop were, in their first origin, only different names for the same
ecclesiastical office-bearer. Enough has been found in the Scriptures to
satisfy as that bishops were elders, and that elders were bishops, in
the Apostolic Church. We are warranted, therefore, to regard this fact
as fully substantiated, while we proceed to the discovery of a third
principle.
The
fourteenth chapter of Acts describes a missionary journey of Paul and
Barnabas. There was an attempt made to stone them at Iconium, but they
fled to Lystra and Derbe. When Paul made a cripple at Laconia leap and
walk, the priest of Jupiter brought oxen and garlands to the gates, and
it was with some difficulty the people in their pagan ignorance were
restrained from paying divine honors to the two preachers. But so fickle
are the sentiments of the multitude that, shortly afterwards, the
great Apostle was stoned nearly to death at the very place where he had
been almost worshipped as a god. Barely escaping with his life, Paul and
his companion revisited Derbe, and Lystra, and Iconium, and Antioch,
preaching the Gospel, confirming the souls of the disciples, and
exhorting them to continue in the faith. And the sacred historian, in
the narrative of this evangelistic tour, informs us of this important
fact, that they appointed elders in every Church. His words
are—"And when they had chosen for them, by suffrage, elders in
every Church, and had prayed with fasting, they commended them to the
Lord, on whom they believed " (Acts xiv. 23). We have seen already
that a Church in Scripture signifies any assembly of Christians, however
great or small. It was the primitive practice to call the believers
residing in any town, however large, or in any village, however small,
the Church of that place. Many of these societies, collected from among
the heathen by these pioneers of Christianity, organized in the face of
difficulty, and thinned by intimidation, must have been weak in point of
numbers. Still, the two Apostles were not satisfied with appointing one
elder or bishop in each society, however small in numbers; but as we are
taught by the Holy Spirit, they appointed ELDERS IN EVERY CHURCH. If,
then, the Evangelist Luke, speaking as he was moved by the Holy Ghost,
is a true witness, there were more elders than one in each congregation
of the Apostolic Church. How many, whether two, three, or more, we are
not informed, but that in each Church there was a plurality of elders is
clear.
We
proceed once more to the twentieth chapter of Acts. Here Paul is
represented as traveling from Greece on his way to Jerusalem. Having
stopped a week at Troas, he went upon his onward way, sometimes by sea
and sometimes by land, striving to reach the Jewish capital before
Pentecost. Having touched at Miletus,, a seaport of Ionia, thirty-six
miles south of Ephesus, he sent a message to that city for the elders of
the Church. The words of inspiration are—"And from Miletus he
sent to Ephesus, and called the elders of the Church " (Acts xx.
17). From this, it appears the Church of Ephesus had not only one elder,
but more, and we have already seen that, in verse 28, its elders are
called bishops. Unless language mean nothing, and the statements of
Scripture be as unintelligible as the leaves of the Sybil, there was a
plurality of elders or bishops in the Church at Ephesus.
Still
farther. Philippi was a city on the confines of ancient Thrace. To the
classic reader it is known as the place where Augustus and Antony
wrested from Brutus and Cassias, in a pitched battle, the empire of the
world; to the Christian it is remarkable as being the first spot in
Europe where the banner of the Cross was unfurled, and sinners listened
to the Gospel of Jesus. There the heart of the seller of purple was
opened to attend to the things that were spoken of Paul. It was there
that, for casting the spirit of divination out of a soothsayer, Paul and
Silas were beaten by the magistrates, and had their feet made fast in
the stocks. It was there at the dead hour of the night, when the
foundations of the prison shook, and every door in the jail flew open,
and every man's chains fell from his arms, that the keeper of the prison
asked two of his prisoners the most important question that was ever put
by a sinner to a minister of God—" Sirs, what must I do to be
saved f" In this town of Philippi a Church was organized, though in
face of determined opposition; and, some ten or twelve years after
Paul's first visit, he thought it right to address to this Church a
letter. This letter has been preserved. It finds a place in the Word of
God. It is that known to us as the Epistle to the Philippians. One has
some curiosity to read what an apostle thought it good to write to a
Church, at the head of whose roll of members stood the names of Lydia
and the Jailer. As might be expected, it is full to the brim of precious
and consoling truths-; but, what is more to our purpose at present, we
find these words in the first verse of the first chapter: " Paul
and Timotheus, the servants of Jesus Christ, to all the saints in Christ
Jesus which are at Philippi, with THE BISHOPS and deacons."
Philippi was, no doubt, a considerable town; but, in point of
population and importance, it was no more to such a city as Dublin or
Liverpool than a parish is to a diocese. Yet, in modern times, one
bishop is thought sufficient even for London, where professing
Christians
are numbered by millions, whereas a single Christian congregation
gathered out of a heathen population, possessing ecclesiastical
existence only for ten or twelve years, exposed to contumely and
suffering for Christ's sake, and located in a contemptible town on the
outskirts of Macedonia, had a plurality of bishops. Paul, in writing to
that Church, addresses his epistle to the bishops and deacons.
Let
the candid reader glance again at the ground over which we have passed.
He sees that Paul, in, writing his epistle to the Church at Philippi,
addressed it to the bishops. He sees there were elders in the Church at
Ephesus when Paul sent for them to Miletus. He finds it stated that
Barnabas and Paul ordained elders in every Church. How is it possible
for him to resist the conclusion that, in Apostolic days, there was in
each congregation a plurality of elders, or what we have seen amounts to
the same thing, a plurality of bishops f This leads us to the third
principle of Apostolic government—that IN EACH CHURCH THERE WAS A
PLURALITY OF ELDERS.
THE
FOURTH PRINCIPLE.
ORDINATION
is the solemn designation of a person to ecclesiastical office with
the laying on of hands. Every permanent office-bearer in the Church,
whether bishop or deacon, was set apart solemnly to his office by the
act of ordination. In its outward form it consisted of three
things—fasting, prayer and imposition of hands. The imposition of
hands was used when spiritual gifts were conferred (Acts viii. 17; xix.
6); and it was also practiced when the sick were miraculously healed
(Mark xvi. 18; Acts ix. 17; xxviii. 8). But, distinct from all such
cases, the laying on of hands was used at the ordination of Church
office-bearers, and when no extraordinary or miraculous gift was
bestowed (Acts vi. 6; xiii. 1-3; and I Tim. iv. 14; v. 22). The
withdrawment of miraculous powers cannot therefore be any valid reason
why, at ordinations, the practice should be set aside; the imposition of
hands in such cases never was the medium of imparting the Holy Ghost,
but only the form of investing with ecclesiastical office. ^
The
great question regarding ordination is, whether it is the act of one
individual or more, of one elder or many elders, of a bishop or a
presbytery t That the Lord Jesus may give a special call to any laborer,
and send him to work in His vineyard, none disputes. There can be very
little doubt also that, if an inspired apostle were still upon the
earth, he would have the right to ordain alone, if he thought it right
to do so. Nay, if some modern evangelist could show, as Titus could,
that an apostle had left him behind for this special purpose, he, too,
in virtue of the right conferred upon him by a higher power, would have
the privilege of ordaining (Titus i. 5). Any one, therefore, claiming
the right of doing all that an evangelist did, would require to show
that, if not an apostle, he possesses, like Titus, the authority
delegated to him by an apostle. But here every ruler in every Church
must fail. It remains, therefore, that we examine the Scriptures to
discover who it was that, in the absence of apostles, or those delegated
by apostles, had the privilege of solemnly setting apart others to
ecclesiastical office, and especially to ascertain if this power was
lodged in one individual or in more.
First,
we turn to I Tim. iv. 14. We have there the ordination of Timothy. The
Apostle exhorts his son in the faith to employ to good purpose the gift
of the ministry that had been conferred upon him. He intimates that this
gift had been given by prophecy—that is, in consequence of certain
intimations of the prophets, who were numerous in that age of spiritual
gifts, marking him out as one who would be an eminent minister. He adds
that the gift was conferred with the laying on of the hands of the
presbytery —that is, by the presbyters or elders in their collective
capacity. The words of the Apostle are—"Neglect not the gift that
is in thee, which was given thee by prophecy, WITH THE LAYING ON OF THE
HANDS OF THE PRESBYTERY."
These
words are decisive as to the parties with whom the power of ordination
is lodged.
Again,
we turn to Acts xiii. 1-3. It appears that, in the Church of Antioch,
there were certain prophets and teachers whose names are there recorded.
They ministered to the Lord and fasted; and, while thus employed, it was
intimated to them by the Holy Ghost that they should separate Barnabas
and Saul for missionary work among the Gentiles. Both had been preachers
of the Gospel previously; but now they were to enter on a new sphere,
and engage in a new department of the work. It was right, therefore,
that the prophets and teachers should solemnly set apart the two
brethren to the missionary work by the act of ordination. We read,
accordingly, in verse 3, that "when they had fasted and prayed, and
laid their hands on them, they sent them away." The act of
ordination was here evidently not the work of one teacher, but of
several. A plurality took part in it
Another
instance of a plurality of Church rulers taking part in this rite is
recorded in Acts vi. 6. We have there the ordination of the deacons. The
Church at Jerusalem chose seven men to attend to the necessities of the
poor, "whom they set before the apostles*: and when they had
prayed, they laid their hands upon them." This is particularly
valuable, as it proves that, when it was convenient or practicable for a
plurality of rulers to take part in the act of ordination, the apostles
themselves preferred that course.
Glance
again at the ground over which we have now passed. It was the practice
of an apostle, or one directly appointed by an apostle for this specific
purpose, to perform alone the act of ordination. But they did not ordain
singly where it was possible for them to associate. Where a plurality
could be had conveniently, as in the case of the deacons, it was common
for more than one to take part in the ceremony. In the absence of
apostles we have seen, in the case of Saul and Barnabas, ordination was
the act of certain prophets and teachers; and, in the case of Timothy,
it was the act of the presbytery. This conducts us to our fourth
principle, namely, that, IN THE APOSTOLIC CHURCH, ORDINATION WAS THE ACT
OP THE PRESBYTERY— of a plurality of elders.
THE
FIFTH PRINCIPLE.
THE
fifteenth chapter of Acts is much too long to be here transcribed. But,
before the reader proceeds farther, let him open the Bible and read that
chapter carefully from the commencement to the close. If he is really in
search of truth, and disposed to receive it in its simplicity, the
perusal of that chapter will satisfy him that the following facts are
there embodied:—
It
appears that certain men came down from Judea to Antioch, and taught the
Church there that circumcision is necessary to salvation. Paul and
Barnabas set themselves to oppose these teachers, but in vain. It was
then agreed that certain of the Church of Antioch, including in their
number Barnabas and Paul, should go up to Jerusalem and lay the case
before the apostles and elders. When they reached Jerusalem—at that
time the metropolis of Christianity—the apostles and elders came
together to consider the question. At first there was in the assembly
considerable difference of opinion. Peter at last rose to speak. He
reminded them how God bad honored him in making him the instrument of
first preaching the Gospel to the Gentiles, and how it had pleased God,
without respect of persons, to bestow the Holy Ghost upon them as well
as upon Jewish believers. He argues, therefore, that to make
circumcision necessary to salvation—to bind a yoke upon the Gentiles
which even the Jews were not able to bear—would be to tempt God; and
he closes by enunciating the great truth
that Jews and Gentiles,
both alike, obtain salvation through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Barnabas and Paul followed, declaring that by them, too, God had wrought
among the Gentiles miracles and wonders. James next delivered his
opinion. He showed that the truth declared by Peter, namely, that God
had taken out of the Gentiles a people for His name, was the subject of
ancient prophecy. He quotes from the Prophet Amos to show how God had
promised to build the tabernacle of David which had fallen into ruins,
that the residue of men and the Gentiles called by His name should seek
after the Lord. He ends by declaring his judgment to be, that the
Gentiles already turned to the Lord should not be troubled with any
unnecessary burden, but that they should be directed to abstain from
pollutions of idols, and from fornication, and from things strangled,
and from blood. The opinion of James was approved by the assembly. The
apostles and elders, with the whole Church, agreed to send Judas and
Silas down to Antioch, with Barnabas and Paul to announce the result.
The decision of the meeting was embodied in letters, which ran in the
name of the apostles, elders, and brethren, and were addressed to the
Gentile Christians in Antioch, Syria, and Cilicia. The epistle charged
those who taught that circumcision was necessary to salvation with
troubling the brethren, and subverting their souls; denied that they had
authority from the apostles and elders so to teach; mentioned that Judas
and Silas were empowered, along with Barnabas and Paul—men who
hazarded their lives for the name of the Lord Jesus—to declare
verbally the decision of the assembly; and stated that it seemed good to
the Holy Ghost and to them to impose upon the Gentile converts no burden
except abstinence from meats offered to idols, from blood, from things
strangled, and from fornication. Such was the substance of the letter
that Avas carried down to Antioch by the deputies from the assembly at
Jerusalem. The multitude gathered to
hear it; it was delivered and read, and the people rejoiced for the
consolation. Judas and Silas added their exhortations, and the
brethren were confirmed in the faith. Shortly afterwards, Paul, having
had some difference with Barnabas, chose Silas as his fellow-traveler,
and set out on another missionary journey, the object of which was to
visit the converts in every city where he had preached the Word of God,
and see how they did. Commended by the brethren to the grace of God,
Paul and Silas departed from Antioch, and went through Syria and Cilicia
confirming the churches. Derbe and Lystra and other cities of Asia Minor
were visited on this occasion, and, as they went through the cities,
they delivered to them the decrees for to keep which were ordained of
the apostles and elders that were at Jerusalem (Acts xvi. 4).
Every
candid man must admit that this is a fair representation of all facts
bearing on the subject, as put before us in the fifteenth and sixteenth
chapters of the Acts. Let it be remarked that, in the simple narrative,
the following facts stand noticeably out:—(1) That Barnabas and Paul
had a dispute about circumcision with certain false teachers who came
down from Judea; (2) This dispute was not fettled in the Church of
Antioch where it originated; (3) The matter was referred to an external
ecclesiastical assembly consisting of the apostles and elders at
Jerusalem;
(4)
This assembly met publicly to deliberate on the question;
(5)
They pronounced a decision; (6) To this decision the Church of Antioch
and the Churches of Syria and Cilicia yielded submission.
These
facts are on the face of the narrative, and cannot be denied. That they
were permitted to take place, and that a record of them is inserted in
the Holy Scriptures, seems strange if these things did not happen for an
example to us. Were it enough for the Church of Antioch to be made
certain of the mind of God upon the point in dispute, Paul, who was
present, could have declared this with infallible accuracy; for he was
one who not only spake as he was moved by the Holy Ghost, but who often
decided matters equally important by a word from his lips or a stroke of
his pen. A single sentence from the very apostle who was then at Antioch
is admitted by the Church of God to be decisive on any point of
Christian faith or Christian duty; so that, if an infallible decision
was the only thing required, one does not see why the matter was ever
carried farther. When the case did come up to Jerusalem, had the appeal
been to inspiration only, one does not see what business the elders had
to meet with the apostles to consider the matter; surely the apostles
were competent to declare the mind of God without the aid of uninspired
men. If nothing was necessary but for the apostles to pronounce an
infallible deliverance, why was there such a thing as disputing in the
assembly, or even the semblance of deliberation, or why should one
apostle after another state his opinion T We would suppose the
deliverance of a single inspired man quite sufficient. If the disputing
that occurred in the assembly was only among the elders, the elders must
have been very silly to dispute about a matter that inspiration was to
settle, and with which they, as uninspired men, could have nothing to
do, but to listen to the voice of God; and why did the apostles permit
them to dispute, when a word from the infallible expounders of the
Divine will could have decided the question? And when the decree went
forth, why was it in the name of the apostles and elders that were at
Jerusalem T There is one way of accounting for this satisfactorily, and
only one so far as we can see. These events were permitted to take
place, and are recorded for our guidance under all similar circumstances.
Should any difference arise, which cannot be settled within the limits
of the congregation where it occurs, it is to be referred for settlement
to the rulers of the Church in their assembled capacity. If the apostles
were alive upon the earth to meet with the elders, and by aid of their
inspiration, to guide them to an unerring decision, and were we to refer
our differences to such an assembly, this would be literal obedience to
the example put before us in the Divine Word. But when, in their
personal absence, we refer our differences to the assembly of the
elders, and when the elders, guided by the inspired writings of the
apostles as contained in the Scriptures, pronounce a deliverance on the
question, and when to such deliverance we yield submission in the Lord,
this is more than acting up to the spirit, it is acting up to everything
but the letter, of apostolic example.
We
are thus conducted to this twofold fact that, in the Apostolic Church,
there existed the privilege of referring disputed matters to the
decision of an assembly of living men, external to the congregation
where such dispute originated, and composed of the rulers of the Church;
and that this ecclesiastical assembly, in the absence of the apostles,
consisting simply of the rulers of the Church, has a right to meet, to
deliberate, to decide, and to demand obedience to its decisions in the
Lord. This twofold principle we designate the privilege of appeal to
the assembly of elders, and the right of government exercised by them in
their associate capacity.
It
would scarcely be necessary to say a word on the presence of the
brethren in the assembly at Jerusalem, were it not that some parties
have made this fact the foundation for special cavil. As they are
mentioned separately from the apostles and elders, it seems to us clear
that the " brethren " must have been the non-official members
of the Church, or, as in modern times they would be called, the laity.
That they were present at the meeting; that they concurred in the
decision; and that the letter sent down to Antioch was written in their
name, as well as in that of the apostles and elders, are, in our
opinion, undeniable facts —patent on the face of the narrative. But we
have not all the facts of the case before us, except, we observe, first,
that the original reference from Antioch was not to the brethren, but to
the apostles and elders (verse 2); second, that it is not said that the
brethren assembled to deliberate on the question, but that " the
apostles and elders came together for to consider of this matter"
(verse 6); third, that we do not read of any of the brethren speaking on
the subject submitted, but that they " kept silence" while
others spoke (verse 12); fourth, that the decrees are not said to be
ordained of the brethren, but "of the apostles and elders which
were at Jerusalem" (Acts xvi. 4). The unprejudiced inquirer will
observe that the private members of the Church, here designated the
"brethren," did not ordain the decrees, nor speak in the
meeting, nor assemble to deliberate, nor was it to them that the appeal
from Antioch was brought. He will, on the other hand, remark that they
were present in the assembly, that they concurred in the finding, and
that, as it was important to show that all the Christiana of Jerusalem
were unanimous on the subject, the letter embodying the decision was
written in their name as well as in that of the apostles and elders.
From motives of courtesy, and for the purpose of Christian salutation,
Silvanus and Timotheus are represented as uniting with Paul, in his
First Epistle to the Thessalonians, but this does not imply that
Silvanus and Timotheus were inspired men, much less that they were
conjoined in the authorship of the letter. And, in the same way, the
letter addressed to the Gentiles of Antioch, Syria, and Cilicia, was the
letter of the apostles and elders—the name of the brethren being added
to show, not that they took part in the composition, but that they
concurred in the sentiments. Persons, therefore, who desire to convince
us that private Christians in the Apostolic Church were not only present
as auditors at assemblies of Church rulers, but also shared in the
deliberations, and acted as constituent members of ecclesiastical
courts, would require to produce something much more explicit on the
subject than the 15th chapter of Acts. To us it seems clear that the
apostles and elders assembled, deliberated, and decreed; the brethren
were present, listened, and concurred. The apostles and elders were, as
we would say, members of court; the brethren were only auditors, who
gave their assent to the decision of the rulers.
Our
fifth principle, therefore, may be summed up in these terms—THE
PRIVILEGE OF APPEAL TO THE ASSEMBLY OF ELDERS, AND THE RIGHT OF
GOVERNMENT EXERCISED BT THEM IN THEIR CORPORATE CHARACTER.
THE
SIXTH PRINCIPLE.
IT
is a distinctive feature of the apostolic government that Church rulers
did not render spiritual obedience to any temporal potentate, or to any
ecclesiastical chief. Paul seldom commences any of his epistles without
reminding his readers that he held his apostleship by the will of God,
not by the favor of man. Take, as an example, Gal. i. 1: " Paul an
apostle (not of men, neither by man, but by Jesus Christ, and God the
Father who raised Him from, the dead)," etc. In the picture of
apostolic times presented in the New Testament, we can detect no
instance of the Church acknowledging the spiritual dominion of any
earthly monarch, or consenting to surrender a portion of its religious
liberty for any temporal advantage whatever. We find no provision made
in the Gospel for the supremacy of a Christian, much less of a heathen,
king in the things of God. The law of Scripture is express: "
Render to Cesar the things that are Cesar's, and to God the things that
are God's" (Mark xii. 17). In all temporal matters the members of
the Apostolic Church regarded it their duty to yield obedience to the
civil rulers of the country in which they lived; in all spiritual
matters they did homage to a higher power. In temporal matters an
apostle bowed to the laws of the land as administered by the magistrate
of
a
village; in spiritual matters he would not bow to Cesar on his throne.
It
does not alter the case to say that we look in vain for such an example
to the Scriptures, owing to the fact that, in the primitive age, no
temporal prince was made a convert to Christianity, and therefore none
was in circumstances to dispense ecclesiastical patronage and serve as
the depository of spiritual power. But God is not limited by want of
instruments. The same grace that subdued Saul of Tarsus, at a time when
he was breathing out slaughter against the saints of the Lord, could
have converted Pilate, or Agrippa, or Cesar at Rome. Had the example
been useful, the necessary means of supplying the example would not have
been lacking to God. The very fact that, in apostolic days, God did
not take some heathen prince and make a Christian of him, in order that
he might fill the office of temporal head of the Church on earth, is in
itself an instructive fact—fraught with a moral. And let it be
remarked that the Scriptures make no provision for such an occurrence in
after times. They contain no principle authorizing the prince either to
claim or exercise authority in ecclesiastical matters, when in the
course of ages a Christian potentate would appear. If there be such a
principle it is unknown to us; and it is certainly incumbent on those
who approve of such an arrangement, to produce from the Scriptures, if
they can, their warrant for maintaining that a Christian king has a
right to exercise supremacy over the Church in spiritual matters. Till
this is done we must be excused for believing that no temporal prince
has a right to act as a lord over the heritage of God.
Nor
was supreme spiritual power lodged in the hands of any office-bearer of
the Church, however distinguished by his gifts, his sufferings, or his
abundant labors. The private members, indeed, had it in command to obey
the rulers or elders of the Church; but the elders, on their part, were
enjoined not "to act as lords over God's heritage,
but to be examples to the flock (I Peter v. 3). Even the apostles did
not claim to have dominion over the people's faith, bat only to be
helpers of their joy (II Cor. i. 24). And among these apostles it does
not appear that preeminence was vested in any. Peter is the only one
for whom, in later times, official supremacy is ever claimed; but he
never claimed it for himself; he always acted with his fellow-apostles
as a simple preacher of the cross of Christ; he is never presented in
the Scriptures as nominating to ecclesiastical office, or as exercising
any peculiar control over the inferior officers in the Church. On one
noted occasion, when he exhibited some tergiversation, we are told of
another apostle who withstood him to the face, because he was to be
blamed (Gal. ii. 11). The Scripture, therefore, furnishes no ground
whatever for believing that supreme spiritual power is deposited in any
ecclesiastical officer any more than in any temporal prince.
The
Scriptures are to be our guide on this as well as on all other religious
matters. We turn to the following passages, and find where the source of
all spiritual power exists:—
Eph.
i. 20-23: " Which He (God) wrought in Christ, when He raised Him
from the dead, and set Him at His own right hand in the heavenly places,
far above all principality, and power, and might, and dominion, and
every name that is named, not only in this world, but also in that which
is to come, and hath put all things under His feet, and gave Him to be
head over all things to the Church, which is His body, the fullness of
Him that filleth all in all."
Eph.
v. 23: " For the husband is the head of the wife, even as Christ is
the head of the Church; and He is the Saviour of the body."
Col.
i. 18: " And He (Christ) is the head of the body, the Church; who
is the beginning, the first-born from the dead; that in all things He
might have the pre-eminence."
The
passages now quoted are taken from the Holy Scriptures—the only rule
of Christian faith and practice. We have given them our attentive
consideration: and they have led us to the conclusion that the sole
headship of Christ over the Church was the doctrine of apostolic days.
What the head is to the human body Christ is to the Church; and as the
body cannot have two heads, so the Church cannot have two
heads—neither Christ and the Pope, nor Christ and the monarch. To us
there seems no middle way in this matter. We must either reject the
authority of the Bible, or believe what it teaches—namely, that Christ
is head over all things to the Church. We choose the latter. The
HEADSHIP OF CHRIST is the sixth principle of government that we find in
operation in apostolic days. Let us observe the consequence of this
principle; for as Christ is the Head of the Church, the members of the
Church are to be subject to Him; and, as we have no way of ascertaining
the mind of Christ except through the Scriptures, it follows that the
affairs of the Church are to be managed by those officers whom the Lord
Jesus has entrusted with that power, and are, without the interference
of any external authority, to be regulated according to the mind of God
as expressed in His Word.
APPLICATION
OF THE TEST.
LET
the reader seriously consider the evidence submitted in the previous
chapter, and we think he will be satisfied that there is Divine
authority for saying that the principles, of which the following facts
are the realization, were in practical operation in the Apostolic
Church:—
1.
The office-bearers were chosen by the people.
2.
The office of bishop and elder was identical.
3.
There was a plurality of elders in each Church.
4.
Ordination was the act of a presbytery—that is, of a plurality of
elders.
5.
There was the privilege of appeal to the assembly of elders; and the
power of government was exercised by them in their associate capacity.
6.
The only Head of the Church was the Lord Jesus Christ.
The
principles embodied in these six facts cover the whole platform of
Church Government, each rising in importance above that which precedes
it, in an ascending series, from Popular Election up to the Headship of
the Lord. We have been conducted to them> not by any process of
wiredrawn logic, but by receiving the Scriptures, as we think every
child of God should receive them, except there be manifest and good
reasons to the contrary, in the plain, simple, and natural sense. The
most unlettered reader, if he be only unprejudiced and honest, cannot
examine the passages of Scripture we have specified, and fail to see
that these six great principles were all embodied in the government of
the Apostolic Church. But whether they are embodied in those forms of
ecclesiastical government at present existing in the world is another
and a very important question—a question which it is now our
business
to answer. We proceed,
therefore, to bring the existing systems in succession to the test of
the apostolic standard.
PRELACY.
As
already explained, Prelacy is that system of Church Government which is
dispensed by archbishops, bishops, priests, deans, deacons, and other
office-bearers. It is exemplified in the Church of Rome and in the
Church of England, both of which are prelatic in their government; the
difference being, that the prelacy of Rome vests the ecclesiastical
supremacy in the Pope, while the prelacy of England vests it in the
reigning monarch. With this exception, the two Churches, however
widely they may differ in doctrine, are, in every important point of
government, the same. As many may be disposed to consider the prelacy of
a Protestant Church much less objectionable than the prelacy of Rome,
and as we have neither necessity nor desire to take any unfair advantage
in argument, we prefer to bring the prelacy of Protestantism into
comparison with the apostolic standard.
The
fountain of jurisdiction in the Church of England is the monarch for the
time being, who inherits the throne by hereditary descent, and who,
irrespective of all character, is by act of Parliament, the only supreme
head of the Church of England and Ireland (37 Henry VIII., chap. 17). No
person can be received into the ministry of -that Church till he
subscribe this article:—" That the king's majesty, under God, is
the only supreme governor of this realm, and of all other his highness'
dominions and countries, as well in all spiritual, or ecclesiastical
things or causes, as temporal " (Canon 36). The appointment of all
the archbishops and bishops is vested in the Crown, which is guided in
the selection by the political administration of the day—a body
composed of persons of every hue of religious profession, and only kept
in its place by the majority of votes it can command in Parliament. The
highest ecclesiastical office-bearers under the Crown are the
archbishops, of whom there are two in England—the Archbishops of
Canterbury and York, and two in Ireland—the Archbishops of Armagh and
Dublin. Each of these has under him a number of suffragan bishops, and
each bishop has under his care the inferior clergy of his diocese, who
preach and dispense the ordinances of religion to such inhabitants of
their parishes as are pleased to receive them. The parish clergy"
are, in some instances, appointed by the Crown,' in others by the
bishop, in others by a lay patron, and sometimes in a mode still more
objectionable.
Such
is Prelacy in its most favorable form, as presented in the Protestant
Establishment of England. Let us compare it with the system of
government which we have already ascertained to exist in the Apostolic
Church.
In
the Apostolic Church, the office-bearers were chosen by the people; but,
in the Church of England, archbishops and bishops are chosen by the
Crown, and the subordinate clergy are appointed to their charges either
by the diocesan, or by some landed proprietor, or by some civil
corporation. The people of the Apostolic Church exercised the privilege
of electing an apostle; the people in the Church of England have not
power to elect a curate.
In
the Apostolic Church, the office of bishop and elder was identical; the
ciders of Ephesus were the bishops of the flock; but, in the Church
Establishment, it is very different. The apostolic elder, being a
teacher and ruler of a congregation, resembles more closely the parish
clergyman than any other office-bearer in the Church of England. But it
is very evident that, in that Church, a parish clergyman holds a
position widely different from a bishop. The rector wields the
jurisdiction of a parish; but the bishop governs a diocese, that usually
includes a whole multitude of parishes. The one presides over a single
congregation; the other, over many congregations. The one exercises
authority over the laity, but a Church of England bishop is the ruler
of
a band of clergy. If, then, the parish clergyman correspond to the
presbyter or elder of apostolic times, it is very clear that, in, the
Establishment, the bishop and elder are not identical in office. In the
Established Church every elder is subject to his bishop; but, in the
Apostolic Church, every elder was a bishop himself.
In
the Church of England each congregation is under the care of one
presbyter. When a second is called in, he is a mere curate in the
employment of another, and void of all ecclesiastical jurisdiction. It
is not very common, and certainly not essential to the system, to have
more than one presbyter or elder in each Church; whereas, we have seen
that, in each Church of apostolic times, there was a plurality of
elders.
In
the Church of England ordination is an act exclusively performed by a
prelate; he may ask others to unite with him, but it is his presence not
theirs that is essential to the act: whereas, in the Apostolic Church,
it was the practice to ordain men to the office of the ministry with
the laying on of the hands of the presbytery.
In
the Church of England, no matter what ecclesiastical grievance may
exist, there is no power of appeal except to the courts of law, or the
Queen's Privy Council, or some such tribunal. The practice is unknown
in. the denomination of bringing any matter for consideration before
the assembly of elders for them to decide upon, in accordance with the
apostles' word. But this, as we have seen, was the move in which affairs
were managed in the Apostolic Church.
In
our Protestant Establishment the monarch is, by act of Parliament, head
of the Church, and to the king or queen, as the case may be, the 37th
Article informs us that " the chief government of all estates of
the realm, whether they be ecclesiastical or civil, in all causes, doth
appertain "; whereas, in apostolic times, the Church had no head
but Jesus Christ.
We
have thus examined and compared the two Churches as closely and candidly
as it is possible for us to do, and we feel ourselves forced to the
conclusion that, of the six great principles of ecclesiastical
government that met in the Apostolic Church, there is not one embodied
in the Prelacy of the Church of England. We infer, therefore, that,
while that Church may be entitled to great respect as a human system,
maintained by act of Parliament, and numbering in its ranks many
estimable people, there is no ground whatever for regarding it, in point
of government, as an Apostolic Church. At the peril of excommunication
we feel bound to declare our conviction that the government of the
Church of England is repugnant to the Word of God.»
INDEPENDENCY.
IT
is difficult to ascertain the particulars of ecclesiastical order
approved by Independents, inasmuch as we are not aware that they have
embodied their views of what the Scriptures teach on the subject in any
common formula, and ns every congregation, standing apart from every
other, may differ sometimes widely on important points. We are,
therefore, left to discover their views of Church polity from the
general practices known to exist among them, and from the principles
advocated by their most eminent writers. These, however, are
sufficiently known to enable us to compare the Independent system of
Church Government with the apostolic standard.
No.
VII. of the Constitution! and Canon Ecclesiastical, agreed upon with the
king's license in 1603, and republished by the Prayer-Book and Homily
Society (1852) is as follows:— " Whosoever shall hereafter
affirm, That the government of the Church of England under his majesty
by archbishops, bishops, deans, archdeacons, and the rest that bear
office in the same, is anti-Christian or repugnant to the Word of God;
let him be excommunicated ipso facto, and so continue till he repent,
and publicly revoke such his wicked errors."
The
principle of popular election existed, as we have seen, in the Primitive
Church, and had the sanction of the apostles of the Lord. Among the
Independents this principle is preserved in its integrity: with them
every ecclesiastical office-bearer is chosen by the people.
In
the Apostolic Church the office of bishop and elder was identical; the
bishop did not exercise any authority over the elder; on the contrary,
every bishop was an elder, and every elder a bishop. So it is with
Independents. Every one of their pastors fills the office of bishop and
elder, and none of them claims authority over others. With them a bishop
and elder are only different names for the same office-bearers, as it
was in apostolic days.
We
have seen how, in Apostolic times, there was a plurality of elders in
each Church. Here the Independent system fails. On the principles of
that theory of Church Government, it is scarcely possible to have a
plurality of elders, and in practice it rarely, if ever, occurs. Among
them there is only one minister, or bishop, or elder, in each
congregation. Practically, their system admits only of one elder to each
Church. If an apostle were writing an epistle to an Independent Church,
he would never think of addressing it to the bishops, as well as to
the deacons, for the simple reason that, with them, there is usually but
one bishop to one Church: nor could an apostle ever send for the elders
of an Independent Church, as Paul sent for the elders of Ephesus, for
the plain reason that, in an Independent Church, there is usually but
one elder. A single pastor, with deacons under him, governing a Church,
is the prominent feature that the Independent system everywhere
presents—an arrangement than which none can be more opposed to the
plurality of elders that existed in each congregation in primitive
times. Some Independents attempt to palliate their departure from
apostolic precedent, by saying that a plurality of elders is desirable,
but their Churches are not able to support them. Does it never strike
our esteemed brethren that there must be some remarkable disparity
between the apostolic system and theirs, when the richest of their
Churches now cannot afford to possess what was possessed by the very
poorest Churches in the days of the apostles f It is the Word of God
that says of Paul and Barnabas—" they ordained elders in every
Church."
The
office-bearers of the Apostolic Church were set apart to the discharge
of their peculiar duties with the laying on of the hands of the
presbytery. Among Independents, however, ordination of any sort is not
essential; frequently it is counted unnecessary. Instances are known of
persons acting as pastors of Churches for a lifetime, who were never
inducted to office with the imposition of hands and prayer. Ordination
is not required by the system. With them it is a mere matter of taste,
left in each case to the individual choice. If the newly-elected pastor
choose to have himself ordained, it can only be done in a way inconsistent
with Independent principles. The congregation, being destitute of &
plurality of elders, his ordination can only come from the people, who
have no Scriptural right to confer it, or from the neighboring pastor.
But who does not sec that the latter practice is entirely at variance
with the foundation principle of Independency, namely, that each
congregation has within itself complete materials for government? So
much is this felt to be the case, that, while some ask the assistance of
the pastors of the district on such occasions, those who choose to carry
out their Congregationalist principle with a little more consistency
make light of ordination, think it unnecessary, and prefer to go without
it.
In
the Apostolic Church there was the privilege of appeal to the assembly
of elders. Among the Independents nothing of this kind can exist. The
distinctive principle of their system precludes all appeal. The decision
of the pastor, and deacons, and people, assembled in a church-meeting,
is final in every case. No matter how partial or unjust their decision
is felt to be, there is no power of bringing the sentence under review
of a less prejudiced and more enlightened tribunal. The judgment of the
Church may be in strict accordance with justice, or it may be the
offspring of prejudice or malevolence in a few of the leaders of the
meeting, masked, of course, under zeal for purity of communion, and for
the cause of religion; but, no matter how superficial the investigation,
or how deep the wrong, the system deprives the injured man of the
privilege of appeal, and clothes the perpetrators with irresponsible
power. By denying and repudiating all association, it enables the rulers
to be, if they please, the tyrants of the Church, and strips the injured
of the possibility of redress. " Independency," says Dr.
Wardlaw, " is the competency of every distinct Church to manage,
without appeal, its own affairs."(Dr. Wardlaw 's Congregational
Independency, Glasgow, 1848.) This is an ingenious mode of disguising
the most repulsive feature of the system. Very few would deny that a
Church is competent to manage its own affairs in such a way as to
obviate the necessity of appeal; but what we assert is, that, when the
Church lacks the necessary wisdom and discretion to do so, appeal among
Independents is not permitted, the injured is deprived of redress, and
power, for which the possessor is irresponsible to man, degenerates into
tyranny when it is unwisely exercised, and there is nothing to keep it
in check. The case of Antioch shows that, when a difference arose in the
primitive Church, there was a right of referring the matter to the
assembly of elders, who, under the guidance of the apostles, settled the
business. Elders might still meet, and the written word of the apostles
is accessible to all, and a decision pronounced by parties removed from
the scene of controversy, untainted by local prejudices, and standing
far away from the partisanship of the leaders, might go far now, as in
ancient days, to calm dissensions, should they unfortunately arise. But
Independents, in this respect, repudiate the apostolic example. Their
principle is to refuse all recognition of external authority, to make
the decision of the Church-meeting final in every case, and to deny to
them who are aggrieved the privilege of appeal.
The
Headship of Christ was a principle of apostolic times. Independents, we
are happy to say, acknowledge this principle in all its integrity.
The
result of our comparison is, that there are three principles of the
Apostolic Church that we find fully acknowledged and acted upon among
our Independent brethren, namely, popular election, the identity of
presbyter and bishop, and the Headship of Christ over the Church. But
there are three apostolic principles that we fail to find in their
system, namely, the plurality of elders in each Church, ordination with
the laying on of the hands of the presbytery, and the privilege of
appeal. We conclude, therefore, that, while the Independent system of
government advances to the pattern of primitive times much more closely
than that which exists in the Churches of England and Rome, still it is
not the system entitled to plead the precedent of the Apostolic
Church.
PRESBYTERY.
IT
only now remains that we compare the Presbyterian system with the
standard of the law and of the testimony. The term Presbyterian is
derived from the word presbytery, because the leading characteristic of
this form of Church Government is, that it entrusts the duty of ruling
the Church to the presbytery—that is, to the presbyters or elders of
the Church in their assembled capacity. But let us bring it, as well as
the others, to the Scriptural standard.
In
the Apostolic Church, we have mentioned frequently already, that popular
election was an admitted principle.
It
is so with Presbyterians. In all Presbyterian Churches throughout
Britain, and America, with the single exception of the Established
Church of Scotland, the members of each congregation invariably elect
their own office-bearers. The privilege has been sometimes abused, as
what good thing has not been abused by the sin and infatuation of man?
But it is a Scriptural privilege that the Apostolic Church bequeaths us,
and Presbyterians have often shown that they count it more precious than
gold.
In
the primitive age, the office of bishop and elder was identical. An
elder was not inferior, in point of official standing, to a bishop, nor
a bishop to an elder. It is so in the Presbyterian Church. Every elder
is a bishop, or overseer of the flock; and every bishop is an elder, one
whose office is to rule in the house of God. There are two departments
in the office of the elder—that of teaching, and that of ruling; but
the office itself is one.
There
was a plurality of elders or bishops in each congregation of the
Apostolic Church. Such is the practice in every Presbyterian Church at
the present day. There is in each of their congregations a number of
persons ordained to the office of the eldership, one of whom at least
gives himself to the work of the ministry in its various departments,
particularly that of public instruction, while the others give their
principal attention to ruling in the Church of God. Teaching and ruling,
as we have already stated, are different departments of the same office;
and, while there can be no doubt that those appointed to the office
have, in the abstract, a right to fill both departments, yet, in
practice, it is found more convenient and beneficial for the people that
each elder give most of his attention to that department whose duties he
is best qualified to discharge. All elders, being bishops, have an equal
right, according to the Scriptures, to preach, baptize, administer the
Lord's Supper, and ordain (It is to be understood that in the
Presbyterian Church it is only those licensed and ordained by the
Presbytery to the office of the Ministry who may administer the
Sacrament. Exposition and Defence, p. 115), but these duties it is
arranged to devolve on one of the elders, called by distinction the
minister, who is specially trained to his work, and is, by general
consent, admitted to possess most gifts and attainments, and who, in
consequence, is the best qualified to make these ordinances edifying
to the Church; while the majority of the elders only rule, visit the
sick, superintend Sabbath Schools, conduct prayer meetings, and make
themselves useful in other ways. Presbyterians, therefore, maintain a
plurality of elders in every Church; and, as it was in apostolic days,
it is customary among them for elders to rule who do not labor in word
and doctrine. Any unprejudiced person may see from I Tim. v. 17, that
the office of the eldership divided itself into two great departments of
duty in primitive times, even as at present. "Let the elders that
rule well be counted worthy of double honor, especially they who labor
in word and doctrine." Dr. King's comment on this text must, for
sense and truthfulness, commend itself to every intelligent
man—"These words," he says, " could suggest to an
unbiased reader only one meaning, that all elders who rule well are
worthy of abundant honor, but especially those of their number who,
besides ruling well, also labor in word and doctrine. Of course, the
passage so interpreted, bears that, of the elders who rule well, only
some labor in word and doctrine—that is, there are ruling elders, and
among these teaching elders, as we have at the present day." We are
tempted thus to insert the true exposition of this celebrated passage,
of which we have been often charged by our opponents as giving interpretations
the most grotesque and extravagant. But the reader is requested to
observe that the point which we have particularly in view at present is,
that the Presbyterian, like the Apostolic Church, has, in every
congregation, a plurality of elders.
Office-bearers
were set apart to their distinct spheres of duty in the Apostolic Church
with the laying on of the hands of the presbytery. The Presbyterian
Church, in its several branches, is the only one known to us that
carries this Scriptural principle invariably into practice.
In
the Apostolic Church there was recognized the privilege of appeal and
the right of government. This privilege is not only admitted, but it is
one of the most distinguishing principles of Presbyterianism. Should any
difference arise in a congregation, the members are competent to settle
the matter without appeal, if they please; but, should this fail, it is
equally competent for them, to refer the whole matter, either for advice
or decision, to the assembly of elders met in presbytery. The highest
ecclesiastical court known to the system is the Presbytery; the Synod
being the name usually given to the presbytery of a province, and the
General Assembly being the name that convenience has attached to the
presbytery of a nation. The General Assembly has jurisdiction over a
Synod only because it. is a larger presbytery. Hence, that subordination
of Church Courts, which some injudicious friends of Presbyterianism
speak of as being a main feature of the system, is a mere accidental
arrangement, which experience has proved conducive to union and
strength, but which is by no means essential to the existence of the
system. This is proved by the fact that a denomination, without either
Synod or Assembly, and possessing no Church court whatever except a
district presbytery, is, nevertheless, a complete Presbyterian body.
Let there be only one assembly of elders to which a congregation can
submit an appeal, and the apostolic principle is preserved. It is not
even certain that representation is a main feature of the system,
although n virtual representation is the result of existing
arrangements. There is representation so far as that a few
office-bearers chosen by the people on their first admission to office,
transact business for the many. Nor are all office-bearers privileged
to find admission to the higher courts; for, although all elders are, in
the abstract, equal in point of official power, and have, of course,
equal right to sit in presbytery, yet, for convenience sake, it has
been agreed upon that only a part of them shall at the same time
exercise this right. In the Presbyterian Church of Ireland, it has been
the immemorial custom, and long experience has only served to confirm
its advantages, for two elders, the teaching elder or minister, and a
ruling elder, to take their seats in presbytery. The result of these
arrangements is, that a virtual representation occurs, and the system
enjoys all its advantages; but to say it is a main pillar of
Presbyterianism is contrary, in our opinion, to the facts of the case.
Were the platform of the presbytery so widened as to give every elder a
seat in our Church courts, this would, in a great measure, do away with
representation, and would be unwise for many reasons, but. would not
shake a pillar of the system. In the meantime, whatever may be thought
of the principle of representation and the subordination of Church
courts, there can be no doubt that the Presbyterian form of government,
in common with that of the Apostolic Church, secures to the people the
right of appeal to the assembly of elders, and grants to the assembly of
elders the right of government—a privilege which, so far as known to
us, is enjoyed by no denomination that is not, in point of government,
Presbyterian.
In
the Apostolic Church, the Lord Jesus alone was King and Head. This is a
truth acknowledged by all Presbyterians, and practically acted upon by
all, except a very few, who, owing to their connection with the State,
have been charged with a virtual departure from the principle. All
Presbyterian Churches rank among their most cherished, as well as
distinctive principles, that Christ alone is King and Head of His
Church. As a denomination, Presbyterians have ever held that the Church,
independent of the civil rulers, has supreme jurisdiction in all
spiritual matters, and that its office-bearers are bound to exercise
that jurisdiction in conformity to the mind of Christ, as expressed in
His Word. The doctrine of the Supreme Headship of Jesus Christ over His
Church is one to which Presbyterians have always been warm in their
attachment.
We
find, then, on minute and patient examination, that the six main
principles of government that were, by inspired men established in the
Apostolic Church, are all recognized and practically carried out among
Presbyterians. We know no other denomination! in the world, of whose
form of ecclesiastical government the same statement could be made
without departure from the truth.
THE
RESULT.
HERE,
then, is the result of our investigations and comparisons. The Word of
God contains six great, well-defined principles of government, that were
embodied in that Church which was planted and organized by the inspired
apostles of the Lord. All existing modern Churches claim to be
apostolic, and, with the exception of the Greek and Roman Churches,
profess to adopt the Scriptures as the sole rule of faith and practice.
But, on comparing the prelacy of the Church of England with the standard
of the Divine Word, it is found that in that Church not one of the
apostolic principles of government is recognized or embodied. Among the
Independents, three of the apostolic principles are exemplified in
practice; the remaining three are nowhere to be found. Among
Presbyterians, these six principles are all acknowledged, and every one
of them is a main feature of the Presbyterian system. We now remind the
reader of the axiom with which we entered on the investigation: The
modern Church which embodies in its government most apostolic
principles, comes nearest *n its government to the Apostolic Church. We
apply this axiom to the settlement of the case. Our conclusion is, that,
while the prelacy of Rome and England is in direct opposition to the
form of ecclesiastical government that was sanctioned by inspired men;
and while Independency approaches much more nearly, but still falls
short of the primitive model, THE PRESBYTERIAN IS, IN POINT OF
GOVERNMENT, THE ONLY APOSTOLIC CHURCH.
We
are, indeed, very far from maintaining that any Church on earth is in
everything an exact model of the pattern presented in the primitive age.
It requires very little thought to see that the Apostolic Church of the
Scriptures is altogether unique—one that in all its parts is never
to be realized in this world again. There were in it apostles, prophets,
and apostolic delegates—all vested with extraordinary powers, which
have been handed down to no successors. It was quite common for the
early preachers to work miracles in confirmation of their doctrine, and
confer the Holy Ghost by the laying on of their hands. Sometimes in
the same congregation there were several gifted brethren, who could look
into the future with prophetic eye and declare infallibly the mind of
God. In the Church of Jerusalem, organized by the whole college of
apostles, and the mother of all other churches, there was a community of
goods established; and it was quite a common thing for the people of
those days, when their hearts were warm with the first glow of love to
the Lord Jesus, to sell their property, and lay the price of it at the
apostles' feet. There were no public buildings erected for the
celebration of Christian worship during all the apostolic age; and
public teachers, instead of confining the labors of a life to one little
district in the country, went everywhere preaching the Word. These are
matters as to which no sect that we know of has been able yet to copy
the Apostolic Church, or is ever very likely to do so.
Again,
there are some arrangements, some of them very unimportant, interwoven
with the Presbyterian system, for which it would be difficult to find
precedent in the Scriptures. We have already adverted to
representation—the practice of one or two elders representing their
brother elders in our meetings of presbytery—an arrangement founded
more on common sense than Scripture, and adopted to prevent any
individual congregation from exercising a preponderance of influence,
and to secure, as far as possible, calm deliberation and impartial
sentences. Could we command in the assembly of elders the personal
presence of inspired apostles to guide the brethren to a right decision,
we are sure all would go well, and we might not be so solicitous as to
representation; but, so long as humanity falls short of perfection, it
is right to guard against abuses, and to impose upon the exercise of
arbitrary power a salutary check. There in no plan better adapted to
accomplish this, and to secure at the same time the confidence of the
people, than that of representation. We have also spoken of the
subordination of church courts, an arrangement entered into for giving
effect to the principle of appeal, and which not only gives to the
denomination unity and strength, but is obviously attended with many
other advantages. The utility of both these principles is undoubted,
but it Avere vain to say that they are essentials of Presbyterianism.
It
is not uncommon to hear people speak of the advantages that accrue to
the Presbyterian system from the admittance of the lay element into the
Church courts. This must be a misunderstanding altogether. None but
elders— teaching and ruling elders—are competent to sit in any
Presbyterian Church court, from the session of a congregation up to
the General Assembly, and, as we have already seen, all elders are equal
in point of official standing, for though their departments of duty are
in some respects different, yet the office is one and the same. No elder
of any kind is a layman but an ecclesiastical office-bearer, ordained
with the laying on of the hands of the presbytery, and appointed to the
oversight of the flock and to the discharge of spiritual duties. Nor
does an elder sit in oar Church courts to represent the laity. He
represents the laity in no sense different from that hi which the
minister represents them; both are chosen by the people, and both fill
the one office in the Church, the only difference between them being one
of education, of labor, and of reward. The notion is only plausible from
the fact that most elders are engaged in secular pursuits. But it should
be remembered that all ministers were so engaged at the first. Even an
apostle lived by his trade, as he repeatedly informs us (Acts xii. 34;
xviii. 3; I Cor. iv. 12; I Thess. ii. 9; II Thess. iii. 8); and it was
part of Paul's charge to the bishops of Ephesus, "that so laboring
they ought to support the weak " (Acts xx. 35). If the pursuit of
secular employments proves our elders to be laymen— then the bishops
of Ephesus were laymen, and the Apostle of the Gentiles was a layman
too. It is equally in vain to argue that, as the brethren were present
in the apostolic council (Acts iv. 23), the laity are entitled to be
represented, and are represented by the elders in our Church courts;
for, as every one knows, elders and brethren were both present in that
council, and therefore the one could not represent the other—each
class had a place and a function of its own. Elders sit in their own
right as spiritual rulers in the house of God. There are in our Church
courts no lay representatives and no lay elders—a name which ignorance
invented and malevolence has preserved, in order to bring the office
into contempt and disrepute.
It
is, however, only candid to say that such grotesque notions of
ecclesiastical order, as these terms betray, have received countenance
from the disparity that in the course of time has risen between the
elders who teach and the elders who rule. This disparity is not the
result of any ecclesiastical enactment, but was at the beginning, and
still is, the effect mainly of a difference of gifts. The most gifted of
the elders was in the beginning set to preach, and what at first was
only a difference of gifts has grown in the progress of time to wear the
appearance of a difference of rank. One is here reminded of the
truthful remark of Dr. Campbell—" Power has a sort of attractive
force, which gives it a tendency to accumulate, insomuch that what in
the beginning is a distinction barely perceptible, grows in process of
time a most remarkable disparity."
The
disparity existing among teaching and ruling elders among Presbyterians,
instead of being defended, is very much to be lamented, and ought as
much as possible to be removed. This is to be done, however, not by
lowering the teaching elder, but by elevating the ruling elder, and
appointing to office those only who are distinguished from the people by
more than a common measure of graces and gifts, who are aware of the
responsibilities of the elders-hip, and who are determined, for the
Lord's sake, to the best of their ability to discharge its duties.
Besides, the office of the deacon, existing at present only in some
congregations, should be revived in every Church, where elders can
manage temporal matters only by neglecting the spiritual concerns
peculiarly their own. These and other defects can be remedied, when once
they are seen to be defects; for it is one among the many
recommendations of the Presbyterian Church polity, that it possesses
within itself a purifying and reforming power, by which, while always
preserving the Scriptural and essential principles of the system, it can
alter any 'arrangement that experience has proved in its practical
operation not to be productive of good.
We
do not, then, assert that the Presbyterian Church is in everything an
exact copy of the Apostolic Church. There are some things found in the
one that must be for ever wanting in the other; and conversely, there
are some things wanting in the one that are found in the other. But in
doctrine they are exactly
the same: in worship they are exactly the same: in government, all the
main principles of the one are found in the other. There is no other
Church on earth of which the same statements can be made in truth. We
regard it, therefore, as put beyond all reasonable doubt, that of all
the Churches now existing in the world, the Presbyterian Church comes
nearest to the model of apostolic times. That such is the fact, every
man, who gives to the evidence here submitted that careful and
unprejudiced consideration to which it is entitled, must, as we think,
.be convinced.
PRACTICAL
LESSONS.
THE
apostolic principles of Church government arc the peculiarities of the
Presbyterian system. That other Churches neither practice nor
acknowledge these principles, is the main ground why Presbyterians
remain separate from them. I know of no good reason for my being a
Presbyterian rather than an Independent, except that I believe
Presbyterianism has done what the rival system has failed to
do—preserved the principles of apostolic government; and, for this
reason, possesses an amount of Scriptural warrant (not to speak of
unity, coherence, and vigor), that Independency can never have. The
absence of these apostolic principles in the Prelatic Establishment
must always keep enlightened and conscientious Presbyterians out of its
pale, no matter what be the modifications introduced into its articles,
or what change be wrought upon its ritual. If our distinctive principles
are not apostolic and important, Presbyterianism is not only folly, but
very great-folly; and, by standing apart from other denominations upon
such a ground, we only perpetuate needless divisions in the Church of
God. If we discover that the peculiarities of the system are either not
true, or truths of minor consequence, we should take speedy steps to
heal the schism that exists, and exemplify Christian union on a large
scale by uniting with some sister sect, whose principles are more
Scriptural and important than our own. But if, on the other hand, our
distinctive principles are very important as well as true, then duty to
God and the Church demands that we avow, illustrate, and defend them,
and press them on the notice of the world.
In
discharging either of these duties, Presbyterians at present seem rather
remiss. As a denomination we show no desire to renounce our distinctive
principles, and merge into Prelacy or Independency; nor, on the other
hand, do we make such efforts to teach and propagate them as the truth
has a right to expect at our hands. By deriving the name and character
of our ecclesiastical system from these principles, we seem to tell the
world that they are of very great importance; by our habitual reserve on
this topic in our pulpit ministrations, we seem to say that they are of
very little. Our conduct is in this respect ambiguous and vacillating.
We construct with the one hand, and demolish with the other. On the
ground of certain principles we keep apart from other sects; and yet to
teach these principles from the pulpit is usually viewed as an
intrusion inconsistent with the Gospel. Our separate existence as a
Church clothes our peculiarities with consequence; our habitual
forgetfulness of impressing them upon the people, deepens, if it does
not produce, the popular notion that they are of no consequence
whatever.
That
expositions of our principles are very rarely delivered from the pulpit,
is a fact that few acquainted with the circumstances of the case will
venture to deny. I sat myself for years in various Presbyterian Churches
of town and country; I never failed to hear the Gospel of Christ, and
the great precepts of Christian morality preached by our ministers, and
enforced always with great faithfulness, and sometimes with considerable
power; but I do not remember to have ever heard on any occasion, except
at the settlement of a minister, any attempt made to teach the people
why they should be Presbyterians and not Prelatists —and yet I never
worshipped where there was not a parish church within a distance of two
miles. I have met with not a few others, who tell me they have sat all
their lives in Presbyterian Churches, and do not remember to have heard
on any Sabbath a single principle of Presbyterian Church polity stated
and explained. The "Plea of Presbytery"—one of the very
ablest defenses of Apostolic Church government and worship that the
present century has produced, testifies to the singular fact of the
silence of the pulpit on our distinctive principles. In the preface to
their volume, the authors of that work make the following
observations—" Can he (Mr. Boyd) point to a single Presbyterian
minister in Ulster, who had previously addressed a congregation for four
successive Sabbaths on the peculiarities of Presbyterianism, can he
name a Presbyterian minister who had previously employed a single
Sabbath in the discussion of the subject? We are satisfied that he
cannot plead even one such case as an apology for his agitation of the
controversy." To all this there may be some honorable exceptions;
but still it cannot be fairly denied that the exposition of our Church
polity has, in general, become unfashionable and unusual. Even at
ordinations, the explanation of our principles is beginning to be felt
as a periodical encumbrance—inconsistent with the liberality of modern
times—which immemorial custom has entailed upon us; and good easy
people, who wish, at any price, to stand well with their neighbors, and
fear to give offence by telling honest troth, desire to have the
discourse on Presbyterianism, customary on such occasions, either
entirely abolished, or, what amounts to the same thing, so softened down
as to please everybody. And from the press an exposition of Presbyterian
principles rarely issues, except when some champion of another sect,
animated by our apathy, is brave enough to attack our system; and then
some Presbyterian warrior, clad in the panoply of battle, descends into
the field of controversy; but before he strikes a blow, he takes care to
apologies for his intrusion upon the public, by alleging that he appears
in self-defense— which is much the same as saying that he would not
have troubled the world by telling it the truth had he not been provoked
by the occasion. This candid avowal prepares the reader, at the very
commencement, to regard the warmth of the writer's zeal as only an
ebullition of personal resentment, and the keenest thrusts of his logic
as only the envenomed stings of sectarian retaliation.
The
causes of this guilty silence are manifold. I do not believe that we are
ashamed of our Presbyterianism, and yet it seems very much as if it were
so. The fact, however, is, that some ministers never have had their
attention particularly directed to the vast importance of making their
people familiar with the grounds on which Presbyterians stand separate
from other Christians; and a knowledge of which every reflecting mind
must see is so necessary to produce consistency of conduct, and to
perpetuate our denominational existence. Others keep silent, because to
betray strong attachment to Presbyterian principles seems bigoted and
uncharitable, and interferes too rudely with the evangelical heresy so
popular in our day—that all forms of the Protestant religion are
equally true and equally deserving the support and encouragement of
Christians. But the main cause of the silence of the pulpit on the
subject is the impression so prevalent among the ministry, that our
distinctive principles are so clearly written in the Scriptures as to be
evident to all, and that, therefore, the public advocacy of
Presbyterianism is unnecessary. This, I am persuaded, is a clerical
delusion, gross and gigantic. Presbyterian principles are, indeed,
clearly embodied in the Bible, but we are not to forget that what is
very- clear to one man may be very dark to another. The popular mind, so
acute in the business of everyday life, is but a dull learner in the
things of God, and at every step needs help and guidance, in order that
it may reach right views on spiritual matters. Clearly as
Presbyterianism is written in the Scriptures, I consider the Gospel to
be written there still more clearly; and yet it is no uncommon thing to
meet people familiar with the sound of the Bible from childhood, and
clergymen whose business is to preach it, and authors who have attempted
to instruct the world on religion, who are all alike ignorant of the
main principles of the Gospel of Christ. As it would not be wise for the
Preacher of the Cross to leave the multitude to discover in the Bible
the Gospel for themselves, so it is not wise to leave them without
assistance in their search for Presbyterianism. One a very little more
advanced in knowledge than ourselves can, in a few minutes, show us
meaning in a passage of Scripture that we never saw in it before, and
can leave us wondering why we read it so often, and never viewed it till
that moment in a light so beautiful and true. Besides, it seems clear
that, if Church Government is a portion of the revealed will of God,
duty demands that from every faithful minister it should receive, in the
prelections of the pulpit, a place proportioned to its importance. There
is peculiar need, moreover, that, in this department, the people should
receive the assistance of the minister; for, in dealing with the
apostolic system, there is an amount of labor in the collection of
passages, in the comparison of facts, and in the deduction of
inferences, that few minds, left to their own unaided efforts, are
zealous enough to engage, and vigorous enough to accomplish. And whose
duty is it to supply help, if not his, who is called by the Holy Ghost,
and chosen by the voice of the people, to labor in word and doctrine
"The priest's lips should keep knowledge, and they should seek the
law at his mouth."
Whatever
be the cause of the silence of the pulpit on the distinctive principles
of the Presbyterian system, the sad results of it are manifest every
day. The intelligent few who have attained to some acquaintance with our
principles, have derived their knowledge from the Bible and from
books, very seldom from the pulpit; while the many, being uninformed on
such subjects, act sometimes in open violation of them. Multitudes
frequent the meeting-house, because they have been accustomed to do so
from childhood, not because they have ever thought of the peculiar
principles of the Presbyterian system, and from an examination of the
Word of God are satisfied of their truth. They are Presbyterians by
birth and habit only, very seldom by conviction. Not being
systematically taught that the principles of government operating in
their own Church are exclusively apostolic, many of the Presbyterian
people appear to regard all Protestant Churches as standing upon the
same level of truth; they do not trouble themselves with forms of faith;
m their view the Westminster Confession and the Thirty-nine Articles are
only facsimiles of each other; Prelacy, Independency, and Presbytery are
all alike to them—it is only bigotry that pretends to see a
difference. Opinions of this sort are now so common that no odium
attaches to their profession, and are vastly popular, especially with
rich Presbyterians, who ape at fashion, and meditate at some early day
renegadism to the Establishment. Nor is it very wonderful that many
others, untaught to consider Presbyterian principles as a portion of
Divine revelation, and surrounded by many circumstances tending to
deepen tie impression that all forms of the Protestant faith are equally
Scriptural, are kept in the Church only by the force of habit, or
personal attachment to some worthy minister, and are ready to fling the
nominal profession of apostolic principles away from them, so soon as
the time comes that a secession from the Presbyterian Church can advance
their worldly interests, please their superiors, feed their revenge, or
gratify a whim.
There
can be little doubt that ignorance of the Scriptural truth and practical
value of our principles, has made the Presbyterian community much colder
to their own Church than otherwise they would be. I have often remarked
how a Roman Catholic, a Methodist, a Baptist—each thinks his own
Church the purest and best in the world; while a Presbyterian is
usually a man who regards any other Protestant Church as being at the
very least as good as his own. It is this popular persuasion that in
Ulster lends proselytism all its power. Some of the smaller sects
endeavor to diffuse the impression that the differences between
Protestant Churches are of no consequence, and it is their interest to
do so; they have little to lose and much to gain by such an impression
being abroad. Every minister among them who knows his business is, of
course, a vigorous, and doubtless a conscientious supporter of the
Evangelical Alliance. The prelatic clergy also, except in some rare
case, do their best to diffuse the same feeling among Dissenters,
because it gives them freer access to convey their Puseyism into Presbyterian
families; and because, being wise in their generation, they have the
sagacity to see that, when the Presbyterian mind becomes saturated
with the feeling, that there is no difference between the two Churches,
the question will soon follow—Why tax ourselves for nothing; why be at
the expense of supporting a separate Church; why not join the
Establishment f If proselytism gives us any annoyance, we have none but
ourselves to blame. Were we faithful to our own principles, the people
would be faithful to us. The prevalent indifference to Presbyterianism
that our defective instruction has produced, has left us open to the
incursions of every sect that chooses to give us opposition, and which,
in so doing, may always safely reckon on the countenance and
co-operation of some of ourselves. It has turned the Presbyterian Church
of Ireland into a sort of ecclesiastical preserve, where foot of Papist
dare not trespass, but where every marksman, who wears the mask of
Protestantism, is free to sport at pleasure and to bag his game. Let the
blame be all our own, if the thoughtless among our people are, from time
to time, taken in the snare of the fowler.
Instead,
however, of pouring forth unavailing regrets over past deficiencies,
perhaps it were well for all of us to consider the most likely expedient
for communicating a new and better tone to the Presbyterian mind. This
the ministry have it in their power to do the very moment that they will
it. The clergy of no other denomination are able to wield over
intelligent society an influence equal to ours. The General Assembly
comprises the assembled ministers of the kingdom, and a great master
mind, taking advantage of his position in the house to write some great
truths on the hearts of his audience, can give an impulse to a principle
that is felt to the very extremities of the nation. Like the sons of
youth, each auditor there is an arrow in the hands of a mighty man. The
sentiments and principles there enunciated are conveyed by each minister
to his respective sphere of labor; and in his hands sentiment becomes
embodied in action. Scattered at due intervals over all parts of the
kingdom, our ministers are each the center of a circle peculiarly his
own; they come into contact with society at all points, from the highest
to the lowest in the scale of intelligence; they address the people
publicly at least once or twice a week the whole year round, and they go
forth to hold private intercourse with every family at its own fireside;
they take part in public meetings, preside over the education of youth,
contribute to newspapers and magazines, and have access, in many other
different ways, to the intellects and hearts of the people. It is
needless to add that this gives us vast influence for good or for evil.
We have it in our power to mould the opinions of our own community, and
to make deep impression on society beyond. We have only to be unanimous
for a principle, and advocate it with enthusiasm, in order to fasten
that principle very deeply in the intellect of the kingdom. There is as
much mind in the Presbyterian ministry at this moment as, if wisely
directed, could revolutionize the religious sentiment of the nation.
Premising
these things, it is obvious we have only to enter vigorously on a new.
line of action, in order to turn the tide of popular feeling completely
in favor of Presbyterianism. It is never to be forgotten that, as
ministers of the Gospel, there is deposited in our hands a very
important trust. The duties of this trust are best discharged by each
man striving to cultivate, to the utmost extent possible, that portion
of the vineyard committed to his individual care. Zeal in other matters
never can make up for deficient in this. Let our ministers continue, as
at present, to preach the Gospel faithfully, and to maintain that
soundness in the faith, without which there can be no religious
prosperity. Let them continue to exemplify in their own life and
character that pure morality which they inculcate upon others. Let them
redouble, if it be possible to redouble, their attention to the people,
and spare no pains to carry the message of life to every fireside. Let
them visit the sick, comfort them that mourn, instruct the ignorant,
sympathize with the poor and oppressed, encourage missions, and lend a
helping hand to every scheme that has for its object the promotion of
benevolence and virtue. Let them, in everything, study to show
themselves approved unto God—workmen that need not to be ashamed. But
let them be assured that they neither serve the Church nor serve
themselves, if they do not, by pulpit exposition and private
instruction, use their efforts to engrave deeply on the minds of the
people the distinctive principles of the Presbyterian system. I am far
from saying that these things should be substituted for the Gospel of
Christ; but, as we believe they form an integral portion of Divine
revelation, it is our duty, as faithful ministers of Christ, to teach
them to the people. I do not mean that any denomination should be
systematically assailed in a bitter and an unchristian spirit; but it
seems to me that, if a preacher only prophesy smooth things, preach only
what he considers palatable to his audience, spare errors that are
abroad in the community working much evil, and purposely keep back any
portion of the truth for fear of being pronounced sectarian and
uncharitable, he ceases to be the minister of God and becomes the
servant of man. So long as we stand separate from the Establishment,
it is no less our interest than our duty to make the Presbyterian people
thoroughly acquainted with our reasons for maintaining and perpetuating
a distinct ecclesiastical existence. Let our dissent rest upon the
intelligence, not upon the ignorance, of the people; and instantly it
becomes rational and consistent, and of coarse more formidable than
ever. Personal attachment to a minister is a tie too weak to bind a
people to the Church; for death or a removal may snap it asunder any
day. The bonds of custom, kindred, and early association, though in some
instances powerful enough, are not too strong to be broken, as
experience often shows. It remains that we teach our congregations that
our principles, forming, as they do, a portion of the Word of God,
should be to all God's people, precious as gold. We should instruct them
periodically as to what Presbyterianism is. Let each minister do this as
mildly as he pleases, but let it be done faithfully and firmly. Let him
not be turned from his purpose by the murmurs of disaffected parties
within, or the clamors of enemies without, remembering that the patient
cries most loudly when the physician probes the sore. Let him leave no
man in doubt that he himself believes the principles of which he is the
public representative, and that they are very dear to his heart. Let
him take no steps tending to spread the popular error that our distinctive
principles are trifles. While careful not to oppose other Christians who
aim to advance the glory of God in their own way, he should neither aid
nor encourage persons who systematically repudiate what we regard as
great and important truths. And let him not fear to be called a bigot,
for what is a bigot but the bad name which the world gives a man who
ventures to have principles, and is firm enough to show through life a
consistent attachment to them? Li a word, the aim of all of us should be
to make every man who is a Presbyterian by name a Presbyterian by
conviction. The lukewarm and odious indifference to Presbyterian
principles that in this day meets one everywhere, calls loudly for a
remedy of some kind. The best I know is from tie text-book of the Divine
Word to teach the people publicly and privately what Presbyterianism
really is. Had we entered into one vast conspiracy to let our principles
die out of the memory of the world, we could not adopt any course more
likely to accomplish our end than never to breathe them from the pulpit.
But if we wish the people to know and value them, it is very plain we
must show that we know and value them ourselves. If we would drive any
principles into the popular mind, and make them as " nails fastened
by the master of assemblies," we must never cease to hammer at
them. Sentiments perpetually falling from the pulpit, the platform, and
the press, cannot, in the course of nature, for ever fall pointless to
the earth; they may at first be disliked by not a few, but they will
modify the views even of persons whose judgments have already attained
maturity—they will fasten with the greatest tenacity on young minds
opening to thought—they will spread abroad in ever-enlarging
circles—they will grow to be public opinion at the last The pulpit is
the proper sphere for the promulgation of religions truth. Error needs
no effort to spread it through the world, even as the seeds of nature,
carried by the autumn wind, are sown broadcast over the land, and
germinate in the soil without the culture of the husbandman; but truth
rarely goes forth alone—the human heart has no natural affection for
it—ignorance and prejudice obstruct its progress at every step—it
requires an impulsive force to carry it through the world. Weeds grow of
themselves, but the flower requires all the skill and care that the
gardener can give it. Error sprouts rankly in human bosoms without any
help of ours; but truth needs some kind hand to plant and water it, and
keep it in the sunshine. Religions truth, of all others, presents least
charms to the natural mind—and how truth of ibis nature can be
expected to make its way through such a world as ours, without receiving
an impetus from the pulpit, I do not know—I cannot even imagine. It is
certain that a man who, at the proper time and place, states and
illustrates his principles, and satisfies others that he believes and
prizes them himself, is sure, 'sooner or later, to make converts to his
views; but a man who is known to profess opinions, and is always silent
on them, raises doubts as to his own sincerity, and never makes one.
If
we wish to have Presbyterianism the religion of the Church universal, we
must let the world know that we cherish a warm and devoted attachment to
its principles. We should not halt between two opinions, clinging to one
sect and giving our influence to another. We should cease to be a
lukewarm and hybrid generation—Presbyterians only in name. This is not
a time for inconsistency and doubt— but for decision, for energy, for
action. Presbyterianism should be on the move. Every hour we delay to
enter on some vigorous course of policy, our interests, as a denomination,
suffer. In our circumstances, hesitation and inaction are fraught with
danger, if not denominational death. Every pulpit we can command in the
kingdom should strike instantly to a high Presbyterian key. If, as a
denomination, we would be faithful to the truth of God; if we would have
the people to understand and to love our system; if we would marshal
public opinion against renegadism, and hold it up to contumely and
scorn; if we would push our Presbyterianism, and call the attention of
our fellow-Christians to its Scripturality and its vigor; if we would
have our friends to follow, and our enemies to fear us—then we should
learn to regard our distinctive principles as our pride and glory, and
preach and teach them, till the people know them like the alphabet, and
an unwilling world be compelled to listen. The Church that forgets to
assert and teach her peculiar principles lives in such a world as this
only by sufferance; her own children are cold to her; and, when she
sinks to dust, she shall have few to lament her fall. But the Church
that thunders its opinions in the ears of mankind, and which neither
force nor flattery can silence, is a Church that will have many bitter
enemies, but many warm friends— it will have many to hate, but it will
have some to love, and some to die for it—it may be everywhere spoken
against, but, faithful to the truth of God, it will have saints and
martyrs, and, in due time, bring the world to its feet.
A
word, in conclusion, to the Presbyterian people. This little book is
sent to the world principally on your account, that you may know the
Scriptural grounds on which the Presbyterian form of Church Government
rests, and how its claims to apostolicity are so far superior to those
of any rival system. I, at first, engaged in the study of the subject
for my own personal profit and satisfaction, it afterwards occurred to
me that a line of argument, which to me seems so clear and convincing,
might be serviceable to others, who are anxious, as I was, to know the
mind of Christ on this much controverted subject. I entered on the
investigation with considerable misgivings, lest it should turn out that
the system of ecclesiastical government with which I am connected is
not divine in its origin. These misgivings were mainly produced by the
plausible representations and confident assertions of Independent
writers; and I do acknowledge that, bad I given ear to their
bravadoes, without consulting the Scriptures for myself, I must have
ceased to be a Presbyterian. But with me it has ever been a principle to
call no man master, and to take my opinions on religious matters from
the Word of God alone. I sought light from the Fountain of Light. I
asked the guidance of the Divine Spirit. I went directly to the Word of
God, compared one passage with another, and endeavored to arrive at apostolic
principles. I brought the existing systems of Church Government into
juxtaposition with the Bible, and examined them in the light that shines
from the Lamp of God. Lest any important passage of Scripture, or any
weighty argument might escape my notice, I read some of the most
plausible attacks ever made on Presbytery, and I have studied Prelacy
and Independency as presented in the pages of the very ablest of their
advocates. The result is, that I am persuaded Prelacy is a human system
altogether—from top to bottom a fabric constructed by men. I am
satisfied that Independency, in so far as it differs from
Presbyterianism, is not so erroneous as it is defective; and that it
stands in need of someone to " set in order the things that are
wanting." I am, also, fully convinced that the Presbyterian form
of Church Government approaches more closely than any other to that
which existed in the Apostolic Church. To do full justice to all the
arguments that might be advanced in favor of this system of
ecclesiastical polity, would require a large book; but, as large books
are often written but seldom read, I thought it better to go directly to
the root of the matter, present you with the Scriptural view of the
subject, and enable you to judge for yourselves. I have throughout
studied to be brief, that you may have time to read, and plain, that the
very humblest of you may understand. I have purposely shunned all
elaborate discussion and intricate argumentation, and have tried to
present you with facts from the Word of God bearing on the case
—leading the reader by the hand to that pure fountain, and permitting
him to draw water for himself. I now invite you to view in all its parts
the evidence here submitted; examine if I have misquoted a text,
falsified a fact, distorted a testimony, or taken the Scriptures in any
other than their plain and natural sense; put the reasoning here
presented to the very severest test that in fairness and honesty yon can
apply; give the statements of the Divine Word the weight to which they
are justly entitled, and I am confident you will come to think with me
that all the apostolic principles of ecclesiastical government are found
in the Presbyterian Church alone. It is something to yon, surely, to
have good reasons for knowing that that Church, with whose ordinances
the thoughts of your childhood are entwined—within whose temples
beloved friends, now in heaven, learned the way of salvation, and were
taught the lessons of life—and whose psalms and services are fragrant
with the memory of martyrs, is, in its government, no less than its
doctrine and worship, founded on, and agreeable to, the Word of God.
Satisfied of this, it is your duty through life to give it a cordial and
consistent support, to attend upon its sanctuaries, receive its lessons,
and take your part in the various departments of usefulness which it
presents. There is such a thing as being a Presbyterian without being a
Christian, as it is possible to be a Christian without being a
Presbyterian. Depend upon it, it is best to be both. Make the atonement
of Christ the refuge of your souls; hold fast by every truth of God's
Word, small and great; lend no encouragement to opposing errors; take no
pains to conceal your attachment to Presbyterian principles; and
strive to do honor to the system with which yon claim connection, by
your love to Christ, by an upright and consistent life, and by earnest
endeavors on your part to deserve the character which distinguished the
saints of God in other and better days—" a peculiar people,
zealous of good works." |
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