A survey of the summe of church-discipline. Wherein the vvay of the churches of New-England is warranted out of the vvord, and all exceptions of weight, which are made against it, answered : whereby also it will appear to the judicious reader, that something more must be said, then yet hath been, before their principles can be shaken, or they should be unsetled in their practice. / By Tho. Hooker, late pastor of the church at Hartford upon Connecticott in N.E.

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Title
A survey of the summe of church-discipline. Wherein the vvay of the churches of New-England is warranted out of the vvord, and all exceptions of weight, which are made against it, answered : whereby also it will appear to the judicious reader, that something more must be said, then yet hath been, before their principles can be shaken, or they should be unsetled in their practice. / By Tho. Hooker, late pastor of the church at Hartford upon Connecticott in N.E.
Author
Hooker, Thomas, 1586-1647.
Publication
London :: Printed by A.M. for John Bellamy at the three Golden Lions in Cornhill, near the Royall Exchange,
M.DC.XLVIII. [1648]
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"A survey of the summe of church-discipline. Wherein the vvay of the churches of New-England is warranted out of the vvord, and all exceptions of weight, which are made against it, answered : whereby also it will appear to the judicious reader, that something more must be said, then yet hath been, before their principles can be shaken, or they should be unsetled in their practice. / By Tho. Hooker, late pastor of the church at Hartford upon Connecticott in N.E." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A86533.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 15, 2024.

Pages

3.

The will of no man, neither Magistrate in the Common-wealth, nor Officer or Officers in the Churches, is the rule either of com∣manding or forbidding things indifferent. For if their wils were the rule, they could not erre in commanding or forbidding: for the rule cannot erre. They were not to give an account for those their commands, nor could be punished for any miscarriage in them. Then also, the will of the Inferiour were absolutely bound to yeeld obedience thereunto, and that without either question∣ing or examining the nature of it. Yea blinde obedience would by this means be not only allowed, but of necessity enjoyned. Nor could the Inferiour sin, in what ever he did in subjecting him∣self to the directions of the Superiour in such indifferent things. All which are contrary to common sense.

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