in one, must not be allowed to let the other alone. As there can be no receiving of the Sacrament, without worshipping it, in the Church of Rome. It imposing a complyance with its Corruptions, as a condi∣tion to those, who would partake in any sound parts of its Offices.
And these are such hindrances of Communicateing with that Church in the Mass, which are not to be urged in Bar of Communion, under all immoral mixtures of worship and devotions.
And much less is the allowance of some communion under such immo∣ral mixtures, to be extended for a justification of the same communion, in the Assemblies of Jews, yea, or even of Mahometans, on pretence of joyning, in like manner only with the Good, but standing off from the ill parts of their Offices. For that Church-Communion, which, as Christi∣ans, in our Creed we all profess to believe, and seek, is the Communion of Saints, that is, in the language of those times, of Christians, not any Church communion of Professed Unbelievers.
But suppose, that in a Christian Church, retaining all the Essentials of Faith, or Articles of the Creed, all that is necessary in Christian Wor∣ship, is to be had pure, and unspotted; and in a Tongue, which all un∣derstand; but some immoral petitions, or Prayers, are intermixt there∣with, which people may be Tolerated to pass over, and to express dis∣sent from, whilst they shew Concurrence with all the good Prayers, which come along with them. Are they barr'd from such Communion, by such mixtures?
As to this, it may depend much upon the degree thereof, according as the evil passages, are Tolerable or Intolerable, (I mean not to be done, as if any man were to expect a Toleration to do a wicked Action, but to be born,) on the point of this unlawfulness. In care of keeping Union, much would be bore withall for peace, and in hopes of seeing a cure thereof, whilst more modesty is shewn, in these unrighteous and im∣moral petitions. And, in want thereof other ways, for the benefit of Com∣municateing in some Ministerial Offices and publick devotion, men would bear more. If such unlawful and immoral passages, were fewer in num∣ber, and occurr'd more seldom in the service, to shock and gall good mindes; or, if they are any ways uncertain, and less Peremptory in sig∣nification, and some way or other accomodable to an innocent and law∣ful sense: Good people, though they could not Concur in, would yet more patiently endure them. But they are less to be born, when more express and unavoidable in signification, and more grown in number. So that as any Assemblies multiply these petitions, they increase these difficulties and discouragements to those, who, for the sake of peace; yea, or (on the setting up of a Schism, after which they are no lon∣ger bound to maintain Ecclesiastical Peace and Union with them,) for the benefit of having publick Offices and Ministrations, would fain meet at their publick service.