which Christ requires, is, to keep united upon the Profession of true Do∣ctrine and holy Worship, not of any damnable Errors and Corruptions thereof. And under our own Lawful and Canonical Bishops and Pastors, not under any opposite or Anti-Bishops and Pastors, Schismatically set up against them, and violently intruding into their Places.
The determination of this Debate at all such times, & on all such Emer∣gencies, is both of highest account, and of most general Concernment. And the design of these Papers, is to set down those things, whereon, in my Judgment, the clearing of it must depend; and by the help whereof, Sincere Christians, in such Divisions, may be enabled to resolve, both what is the Duty of the Sulfering Bishops and Clergy, in those Cases; and also, what is the Peoples Duty, and with which of the concern'd Par∣ties, Men, who desire nothing so much, as to please God, and to keep a good Conscience, ought to unite and joyn themselves.
As to the deprived Bishops and Clergy, at such times, the question is, Whether, not withstanding their Deprivation, they are Bound still to go on in the Exercise of their Ministry? Or, sitting down under it, and letting fall their Spiritual Ministrations, they Should content themselves to keep United the Anti-Bishops, and to their Adberents, as Lay Communicants.
If it be their Duty still to insist on their Spiritual Powers, and, as they can, and at their Perils to exercise their respective Ministrations; those Churches are unavoidably left in a State of Flagr an•• Schism. For the oppo∣site or Anti-Bishops are set up against them, in their respective Churches, as New Heads, And if the Old Ones are not only still in place, and Bishops of their Flocks, 〈◊〉〈◊〉 and still bound to stick thereto, and to act as Heads of those Churches; each Church will stand divided between Two Heads: which drawing opposite Parties and Members after them, must unavoidably make two Bodies, and ro••d one into two Churches. And besides, one ha∣ving the Protection and Countenance of the State, and the other wanting it, they must not by divided and separate Ministrations. One, in the way of an Incorporate Church, encouraged by Legal Places and Preferments, and fo••••••fied by secular Laws and Priviledges. But the Other, in the way of a Destitute or Persecured Church, stript of the Publick Churches, and of secular Benefices, and of all Temporal Aids and Methods, directing and fortifying the Spiritual Jurisdiction in the Ecolesiastical Courts, and left meerly to its Spiritual Powers. When the State deprives them; they must take up with what is independantly and originall their own, and not expect from it the Benefits and Assistances of any secular mixtures, which were derived to them by Incorporation.
As to this point of Schism, several good Minds may think, that though, by setting up opposite or Anti-Bishops against them, in their respective Sees, others have already made it; yet may it be in the Power of the sein∣jured