A discourse explaining the nature of edification both of particular persons in private graces, and of the church in unity and peace, and shewing that we must not break unity and publick peace, for supposed means of better edifying in private virtues : in a visitation sermon at Coventry, May 7, 1684 / by John Kettlewell ...

About this Item

Title
A discourse explaining the nature of edification both of particular persons in private graces, and of the church in unity and peace, and shewing that we must not break unity and publick peace, for supposed means of better edifying in private virtues : in a visitation sermon at Coventry, May 7, 1684 / by John Kettlewell ...
Author
Kettlewell, John, 1653-1695.
Publication
London :: Printed for Robert Kettlewell ...,
1684.
Rights/Permissions

To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.

Subject terms
Visitation sermons.
Sermons, English -- 17th century.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/a47294.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A discourse explaining the nature of edification both of particular persons in private graces, and of the church in unity and peace, and shewing that we must not break unity and publick peace, for supposed means of better edifying in private virtues : in a visitation sermon at Coventry, May 7, 1684 / by John Kettlewell ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/a47294.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 2, 2024.

Pages

Page [unnumbered]

Page [unnumbered]

THE PREFACE.

EDification, as applied to the whole Body, is in Scripture-Notion the Uniting of the Church; but now by a very unhappy, tho' a very common Mistake, it is made the great Pretence for Dividing it. For that wherein our Dissenting Brethren hope to shelter themselves in forsaking us, is their Edifying more in Separate Congregations. This is thought a Good Answer to all Laws requiring Communion with the Parish-Churches; for no Law, they think, can hinder them from Edifying, and saving their own Souls: and a sufficient Reason for their rejecting of any Imposed Pastors; which they fancy are not to be appointed by the Will of the Patron, or the Prescription of the Church, but by every Mans own Choice, because no other is so much concerned for his Edifi∣cation, as he himself is. To remove this Cause of Separa∣tion, some Worthy* 1.1 Persons have taken very Pious and Pro∣fitable Pains, in shewing how unjust the Charge of an Un∣edifying Ministry is upon our Church, and how partial they are in ascribing more Edification to their Meetings. And if our Brethren will peruse what they have said with impar∣tial Minds, and see this, as they may if they will lay aside all Prejudice, there will be no need of saying any more to satisfie them in this Business. But if after all they will be Judges themselves where they Edifie most, and in their Iudg∣ment prefer their own Ministers: yet still there is enough to with-hold them from Separation on this account, because they are to edifie and build up the Church of God as well as

Page [unnumbered]

themselves, and must not break the Publick Unity and Peace to carry on their own Profiting in Private Graces. And therefore, referring them to the forementioned Discourses (whose Principal Design I think that is) to convince them that their Assemblies are not more, and ours less Edifying: in that part of this Sermon which concerns this Case, I have applied my self more expresly to those who shall still be un∣convinced, and think they are: and shewn them, that suppo∣sing, what indeed is otherwise, that among them Particular Men have better Means of Edification, yet will not the search of that warrant them to divide the Church, and betake themselves to Separation.

And as it will not justifie the People in Hearing: so, which is the only thing I shall add further, much less will it justifie their Ministers in Preaching in a Separate Meet∣ing. For the Preachers are not less, but more obliged than the People are, to edifie the Church of God in the first place. And whatever Necessity they may think lies upon them to Preach the Gospel, in Places where there are no other Preachers: yet where there are, (and our Brethren will not deny there are store of Sound, and Profitable ones among us,) the Care of Edifying the whole Church ought surely to re∣strain them from breaking Unity by Preaching, and from drawing Men off from hearing us, only in Hopes they may Profit more by joyning with themselves. The Duty, and the Desire, (as of reaping greater Profit themselves, so) of mi∣nistring to the greater Profit of any other Particular Chri∣stians, must stop, as this Discourse shews, in Peaceable ways. And therefore till our Brethren can Conform, and preserve Unity under their Preaching; they ought to be silent, as the Old Peaceable Nonconformists were, and quietly suffer the People to be taught by others; and not exercise their Mini∣stry out of any Hopes of doing more Good with it to their Particular Hearers, when thereby they must cast off the Au∣thority of their Lawful Superiors, and make a Rent and Di∣vision in the Church.

Notes

Do you have questions about this content? Need to report a problem? Please contact us.