THE CLAIMS EPISCOPAL BISHOPS," EXAMINED IN A SERIES OF LETTERS, ADDRESSED TO THE REV. S. A. 3ICC0SKHY, D. D., BISHOP OP THE rilOTESTA.NT EPISCOPAL CllUrvCII OF MICHIGAN. u BY GEORGE DUFFIELD, PASTOll OF THE FIRST Pl^ESBYTEF.IAN CHURCH OF DETROIT. SECOND EDITION. NE W.YORK: DAYTON & NEWMAN, 199 BROADWAY. 1842. .D 8 Entered acconi:ii. To Messrs. liEN.T. r. Larked, K. P. Ha.^tinop, Sni . ortk' ^c, members of the 1st Presbyterian Churo<. Dear Brethren— The sermon to which you rclcr, h.itl altract* onliui The propriety, if not the obligation, of noticing it, Ijad occurrc{ion-, i ublisliedin London, 1S35, p. 389, 390 32 the purpose of discipline, is a mere nullity, without the royal assent /'' The second document is of a date so recent as 1761, in the reign of George III, in which his majesty expres- ses it, as his royal will and pleasure, that the four forms of prayer and service, made for the 5th of November, theSOlh of January, the 29th of May and the 25th of October, be incorporated wilh the book of common pray- er, and used yearly, on the said days, in all the cathedral and collegiate churches and chapels, in all chapels of colleges and halls within both the universities, and of the colleges of Eton and Winchester, and in all parish churches and chapels throughout the Kingdom." **The king's mandate in fact, is the Alpha and Omega of every thing in the Chuich of England; nothing can be entered upon without his license first humbly sought, nor con- cluded wiihout his npprobaticn/^=^ Excuse me for dwelling on this point, since the Head- ship of your church and the power you possess are de-/ rived through this channel according to your own f showing. After the restoration of the Church of Eng- land back to popery during the days ot Mary, it is ta Queen Elizabeth that it again owes it existence. ** It was literally her creation — her fiat called it into being/' in opposition to all the Bishops, to **the wMiole convoca- tion, and to both the universities ; that is, in one word, in opposition to the whole body of the clergy of the kingdom,-' ^* as may be seen in Fuller and Heylin.''t As to what sort of power the sovereigns of England exercised in the church, you may learn from the pro- clamation of James I, enjoining, '-that after divine ser- *The book of the .ienoininrilions, published iji London, 1835, p. 391. tVide History oi Dissenters, t-M ed., p. 103, v. I, 33 vice, (on the Sabbath,) the people should not be dis- turbed or discouraged from their lawful recreations of dancing, archery, leaping, vaulting. May games, Whit- suntide ales, morris dances, and setting up of May poles ;" and from an edict of the same, '* that no prea- cher, of w^hat title soever, under the degree of a bishop, or a dean, at least, do from henceforth presume to preach in any popular auditory, the deep points of pre- destination, election, reprobation, or of the universality, efficacy, rcsistibility or irresistibility of God's grace, but leave things to be handled rather by learned mcn.''^ References might be made to other documents of a like character. That a layman, and a wom.an. should control all ecclesiastics of a spiritual Hierarchy, and determine all the matters they are to believe and ob- serve, is one of the strangest abuses of reformation that ; has perhaps ever occurred in the history of human af- ' fairs. It is a strong practical refutation of all your high pretensions of having the power and Headship of Jesus Christ transfered and transmitted down through the line of your ^'apostolic succession.*' Verily, with such glaring facts directly in disproof of your alledged Headship of the English Bishops, whence and through I whom you have derived your asserted authority, we must be excused for not being credulous enough to be imposed upon. To a layman, or a woman, is your Headship to be traced. From this source did the Eng- j lish Bishops, to whom you trace it, get their authority \ as shall be further shown in a future letter. If you repudiate this channel, then you must trace it from the source whence one of your most w-orthy pre- ^Book of denominations, p. 392. 34 lates was ready to do. The late most excellent Bishop White, in '' the case of the Episcopal Churches in the United States considered," 1782, p. 6, speaking of the connection of the Episcopal Churches in this country with the Bishop of London, says : '^ his. authority w^as derived under a commission from the crown: which, though destitute of legal operation, found a general ac- quiescence on the part of the churches, being exercised no further than to the necessary purposes of ordaining and licensing ministers. Therefore, by the revolution which threw off all allegiance to the crow^n of Great Britain, ^-all former jurisdiction over the churches be- ing thus withdrawn, and the chain which held them together broken, it w^ould seem,'' says the Bishop, *^ that \\\c\v future continuance can he provided forj only by VOLUNTARY ASSOCIATIONS FOR UNION AND GOOD GO- VERNMENT.''* The testimony of Bishop White, as an historian as to the facts of his own times, will not be questioned. What then think you of the source of that power by which your Episcopal Churches in these United States have been continued according to his showing ? Where now is your boasted Headship of Christ transferred to you, when — notwithstanding the *' ruinous idea*' that men could associate together, and adopt such rules and government for themselves, as may suit their tastes, and still be entitled to lay claim to be a part of the church of Christ" — Bishop White avowed that the future continuance of your churches, after the revolu- tion, could only be provided for, by voluntary asso- GiATioNs— the principle is the same so far as your ar- ♦See Smyth pn Apostolic succession, p. 220.. 35 gumcnt is concerned, whether it be of churches or priests or people — for union and good government? Is it from your churches that you mean to say this ruinous idea *^ is rapidly passing away ]'' In my next letter, the theology and hermenuetics of your argument shall receive attention. LETTER IV. THEOLOGICAL AND EXEGETICAL PRINCIPLES INVOLVED IN THE AllGLMENT. Rev. and dear sir: The immense importance you attach to the official power, with which you claim to be invested, and the prodigious practical use you are disposed to make of it, render a thorough examination of the grounds on which you urge that claim, and of the argument by which you endeavor to substantiate it, imperiously ne- cessary. Having, therefore, exposed the w^ant of logi- cal condusiveness, in your argument — forming the basis of all that follows, and designed to prove the transfer of Christ^s Headship — it next becomes proper to pay some attention to the theological and exegetical principles involved and assumed in it. The conjunctive particles, as and even so, in your text, as you perceive, denote comparison. In under- taking, therefore, to deliver a discourse, much more to found an argument, in proof of the lofty claims you as- sert from this passage, ^*as my Father hath sent me, even so send I you," it behooved you to have deter- mined, on fair principles of biblical exegesis, w^iat w^ere the things which the Saviour compared; whether His office and the office of His apostles — His power and theirs — or His mission and theirs. Instead of doing this, you assume that He refers to office; and then, so far from instituting a comparison between His office 40 gloriously and victoriously in His appointed kingdom ; till He should have destroyed every enemy, even death itself, and delivered the kingdom into the hands, not of apostles, but of God the Father, and God be all in alK See 1 Cor., xv, 24-27. It was not until after His re- surrection, and after He had assembled His disciples in Gallilee — ^just at the very moment He commissioned His apostles, and gave them commandment to go forth as His messengers, to preach the gospel to every creature and teach all nations — that He made known to them His lofty authority and power as Head over all things to His Church. ** All power," said He, *' is given unto me in Heaven and in earth; go ye thrreforc and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost; teaching them to observe all ////7?n'5 whatever I have commanded you ; and lo ! I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world.'' Mat., xxviii, 19-21. Where is there, in all this, the most remote hint, that Jesus Christ transferred His Headship on earth to the apostles ? or that He gave them any authority to rule and govern? Their com- mission, which constituted them His apostles, His mes- sengers, or missionaries, sent by Him into the world was limited to preachhig the gospel and teaching men to observe all things that He had commanded them — not their own decrees, nor the canons of the church, nor the decrees of councils, nor the commands of a bishop. He retains the power, and gave the com- mands that must be obeyed; and as it w\as the business of the apostles, so it is of all bishops, who claim to be their successors, to teach men Christ's commands, and none other. In all this, there is not a particle of 41 proof, that Christ has transferred His headship and given power to apostles and to bishops, to rule and govern His church on earth. The power of ruling and governing the church on earth, is that which pertains to the teaching of Christ's commands, and to the administration of His ordinan- ces, to them who observe the same. Such is the bound- ary of the apostles' power, accurately defined by Christ Himself in their commission. It exactly accords with the limits set to His own apostolical office to teach what God had commanded Him. Before, therefore, you can avail yourself of this, the apostolic commission, i in proof that your Bishops, or any other, have power to I rule and govern the church on earth, you must either admit, that such power is none other than what per- tains to the teaching of the commands of Jesus Christ, as they are fully and plainly made know^n in the sa- Icred scriptures, and to the administration of His ordi- nances to such as observe the same; or you must prove that Christ imparted some secret commands and in- struction to the apostles, after His resurrection, more fully defining their own powers and the duties of men but which, having not been incorporated with the writ- ten scriptures, are to be transmitted, by traditionary revelation, through the line of the only true apostolical succession. If you admit the former, you take the common ground ' of Presbyterians and all protestants, who claim no other authority for Christ's ministers, than as teachers or preachers of His gospel, and as authorized to dispense His ordinances to those whom they judge, in the ex- ercise of a legitimate judgment, to be observant of 4# 42 Christ's commands. This is respecting Christ as Head and Lawgiver of His church, and claiming none other power than what pertains, either to the admission, to His visible church and ordinances, of those, who by virtue of their credible profession of faith in Christ and obedience to Him, are judged to be His followers — or to the exclusion of those, who, in the exercise of a le- gitimate judgment, are judged to be none of His, be- cause unobservant of His commands. Tl>e power of teaching, and of declaratively judging, in the applica- tion of Christ's doctrines and commands to the con- sciences, conduct and character of men, by means of preaching, of dispensing ordinances, and of church cen- sures, is all the power on earth, which Christ has given His ministers. None other than this do we recognize. All beyond it, we believe, and declare to be, an usur- pation of the power and prerogatives of Jesus TIm-Ic^ as SOLE AND SUPREME HeAD OF HiS CHURCH. Ecclesiastical regulations we regard in no other light than as mere municipal regulations, or expedients, ac- cordant with the law and order of Christ's church, adopted by common consent as consonant with the doctrines and precepts of Christ's word; and for the pur- pose of carrying out and enforcing more ciTcctually the great commandments of our sole Head and Law- giver. Whenever any such expedients are found con- flicting with the commands of Christ, they are ipso facto, null and void. AH claiming to exert power be- yond this, whether by human tests and enactments, or by virtue of any alledged Headship from Christ in the church, are regarded as usurpers. This latter claim of Headship, as asserted by the Pope of Rome, our Con- t^ 4S fession of Faith proclaims to all the world, constitutes him ''that antichrist, that man of sin, and son of perdi- tion, that exalteth himself in the church against Christ and all that is called God/'* You are not willing to take this protestant ground, and to lower so greatly the power you claim, for your- self and for the Bishops of your church. Having re- lincjuishcd the protestant ground of your ancestors, and of the early reformers of your church, you are, there- fore, compelled to take the second horn of the dilemma, and to pass at once over to the popish ground. If you will not admit with us Presbyterians and Protestants, the nature and limitations of the power of the ministry, as above defined, to be those of preaching the gospel, dispensing ordinances, and inflicting church censures, according to legitimate judgment founded on Christ's laws or commands, exclusively made known in His written word, then, so far as the terms of the apostolic commission in JMaf., xxviii, 13-20, are concerned, you must take the ground of the papist, and maintain, that private instruction, and precepts delivered by Christ to His apostles in Gallilee after His resurrection, defined their full powers and the people's duties of subjection, w^hich instruction and precepts, preserved and trans- mitted by traditionary revelation, you and your Bishops have it in charge to require them to observe. Being no believer in such claims to private inspira- tion and infallibility, I call for proof; and in the mean time, utterly reject, with abhorrence, every attempt, whether of Episcopalian or papist, to found upon the apostolic commission a claim to Headship in the churcb * Confeesion of Faith, chap. 26, sec. 6. 44 on earth, by virtue of any alledged transfer of Christ's official power and authority. At the time He gave the apostles their commission, He claimed himself to be the sole and supreme Head, both of His church on earth and in heaven: nor did He ever part Avith that sove- reignty. It seems, indeed, as if you were aware of this ; for although you do not adduce it as a quotation in con- nection with the notice of the apostolic commission in Mat., xxvii, 18-20, part only of which you quote, yet you refer to the fact of Christ having received all au- thority in Heaven and on earth, and connect it very * fallaciously with your text, and what follows about his breathing on them, &c., attempting thus to prove their authority, and investiture with this high office of Head- ship, dnd to refer it to another occasion and incident which shall be presently noticed. Having found no trace, or shadow of proof, in the apostolic commission, that the Saviour means in John, XX, 21, to teach that the power, or office of His Head- ship was transferred to the apostles, let us for a mo- ment advert to JoA/i, xvi, 18, where He expressly compares His ^own and the apostles' mission. '^As thou,*' said the Saviour, in His prayer to His Father, *'hast sent me into the world, even so have I also sent them into the world.'" This is a perfect parallel with your text ; but we look in vain for any proof from it, that the apostles were endowed with authority and power, such as pertained to Christ's Headship. Not a word is said about His headship, nor is the most re- mote allusion made to it; nor, indeed, does the Saviour seem to have His eye at all, on the office either of him- self or of His apostles. He had been in the world doing His Father's will, delivering his messages, in- structing the lost and guilty, and had met with great difficulty and temptations,, with severe trials and per- secution. The world was enraged against Him, and He knew would crucify him. But He had kept near His Father, and discharged His trust. His disciplesHe fore- saw would be in like circumstances. They should en- counter great tribulation. Many temptations, and in- fluences unfavorable to t!icir hoHness, should be exerted against them by the world. Just as He had been His Father's messenger, in the midst of enemies, so would they be His, sent forth in the midst of wolves. He ^ felt exceedingly anxious for them, that their faith might not fail, and that their holiness should not suflcr. He therefore, prayed to His Father, ^^sanctify them through thy truth, thy word is truth,'' and as an argument with God to grant this His prayer, and to secure the sanc- tification so necessary for them. He urged the resem- blance, between their condition, in this world of wick- edness, as His messengers, and His own, as He was sent by his Father. For their sanctification, He actually devoted himself as a sacrificial offering to God, or as He says, sanctified himself that they also might be induced and enabled, through the word, to consecrate themselves to God, living sacrifices holy and acceptable to Him. *^For their sakes I sanctify myself, that they also might be sanctified through the truth," v. 19. Where, I ask, is there in all this any thing like transferring His Head- ship to them ] Their attainment to holiness and per- fection, along with all the redeemed, in the holy joys 46 of that blessed state, in which they all might be made perfect in one, He in them and the Father in Him, and that the world might know the reality of His mis- sion and the Father's love for them. This was the great burden of His prayer, and the subject on which His thoughts rested. And this, too, was the very same object of the desire He disclosed to His apostles, when, having referred them to their mission, w^hich required so much holiness and self denial and divine influences to sustain them. He said, ** As my Father hath sent mc, even so send I you." '^And when He had breathed on them'' — a most significant act to express the deep anxiety of His heart, as though He would impart His own breath and life to them — He said unto them, *^ receive ye the Holy Ghost." The original language is, receive ye a holy spirit. The article is wanting, and Dr. Middleton, an English rector, and learned scholar, will tell you, ** here the manuscripts uniformly omit the article, the meaning being, the injlucuce of the spirit."* The transaction of breathing was undeniably sym- bolical, and was intended to denote, that from himself, their Head and Saviour, their Lord and Life, should proceed, and they receive the influence of that Holy Spirit, which He, before His resurrection, had promised, and which was so essential, to qualify them for their ministry as Christ's messengers or apostles. This oc- curred immediately after He had said, ** as the Father hath sent me, even so send I you," and is exactly what all Presbyterians, Congregationlists, Baptists, Metho- *Middlcton on the Greek article, p. 207, 47 dists, and other Evangelical churches believe and teach that without the Spirit's influence, the mission and min- istry of bishops or presbyters will be utterly inefficient. Their personal holiness, and the Spirit's influence on their minds and hearts, sustaining them and blessing their ministrations, are indispensable. For these they must look to Jesus Christ, whose office and prerogative it is to impart them. Where in all this then, is there the most remote appearance of Christ's having endow- ed them with the Spirit, by any personal imparting or official trust, for their conveying or communicating to others? You evidently understand and preach, that the whole transaction was intended so to teach. It is one of the foundations on which your argument rests. But it re- quires vastly different and more conclusive proof, than you have attempted, or than any of your denomination have ever furnished. What you adduce is gratuitous assertion. *'In this transaction," you say, "they were raised up to the very same office which Jesus Christ himself held. I mean that which belonged to him in His human nature, as head and governor of His church. They were to supply His place in this respect. Full power was given to them, viz: the eleven, (for Judas had fallen from his apostleship,) to set in order the things that w^ere wanting in the church, and in short, to do every thing which Christ avould have done, had He continued on the earth." It is unequivocally denied, that any such things were done in the transaction referred to. A Bishop's declaration has no authority, either as an ar- 48 gument, or canon, with us Presbyterians. We must have something better than his ipse dixit. Having failed egregiously in your proof, that Christ's headship has ever been transferred, you fail as much in your attempt to prove, that it was transferred to the apostles. Your argument is the following: ** they were selected by the Saviour to be with him, as His constant attendants and ministers, to preach the gospel. They had also, power to baptize, for it is said by St. John, that Jesus himself baptized not, but His disciples. This was their first commission. '' It is denied that ever they received a commission to administer the sa- crament of Christian baptism till just before Christ's ascension, J\Iat., xxvii, 18-20, which commission was one of the acts of His sovereignty as S.uprcme Head of His church. There is no more proof that the baptism of the apostles before the ascension of Christ, was chris- tian baptism, than that John the Baptist's was. But take it your own way, and you rank the apostles in this their *' first commission, '^ with the seventy disci- ples; for no one that reads ^Mat.y ix, 37; x, IG, and compares it with Luke, x, 1-16, can discover any dif- ference in llic object, nature, and extent of their com- mission. ^'Afterwards/' you say, '' they received au- thority to commemorate our Lord's sacrifice on the cross, when He directed them, at His last supper, to do as He had done; that is, to bless the elements of bread and wine in remembrance of Him. '^ This was their second commission." From which one of the Evangelists did you learn that the apostles were directed or commissioned by the Lord, *4o bless the elements of bread and wine in re- 41 membrance of him." There is nothing like it in Mat- thew, Mark, Luke or John ! Nor in the commission which the Lord afterwards, by special revelation, gave to Paul! It is surprising, with what looseness you ex- press yourself, and how in your paraphrases of scrip- ture, you assign meaning to :he language of the sacred writers, which cannot be sustained by any correct prin- ciples of biblical exegesis. But you advance to a third, and still a fourth com- mission. Indeed, you ought to have had a fifth, to make the series complete. *' This," you say, '^ was again enlarged prior to the ascension of our Saviour. He then declared to them that all powder was given to ' him in heaven and on earth, and therefore none could ([uestion or deny His right to transfer or delegate His authority. He, tlierefore, said to ihe apostles, as my I Father hath sent me," &c. Now, sir, truth requires ( me to say, He did no such thing. What He said about His authority in heaven and on earth, is found in Mat.^ ' XX, 18-20, and not in Jolin^ xx, 2L You have taken the preface and foundation of the apostle's commission in Matthew, to preach the gospel, baptize and teach the nations His commands, and though not adduced as a quotation, yet made it the preface and foundation of his procedure — noticed in John^ xx, 21 — in intimating I to them their mission, breathing on then), saying re- ceive the Holy Ghost, and declaring that he would \ sanction their exercise of church censure or discipline, under the guidance of His holy spirit — the utmost of what He means, and of what the apostles ever attemp- ted, in the way of their remitting and retaining sins. The two transactions were not the same. There is 5 50 no proof at all that they occurred on the same occasion. You are not at liberty to assume that they were or did, and, therefore, either you should have proved them identical or referred to Matthew, xx. 16-20, as their fourth commission, before the fifth and full and final one on the day of Pentecost, when you say they got full power. Beside, you confound the meaning of words, and use transfer and delegate as synonymous. On this assumed identity of meaning, you claim for Christ a right to do what we deny He did, and what, for your argument, it is indispensable you should show He did. You will not find these words used synonymously in any correct writer. It does not follow, that, because Christ may have a right to delegate authority in this, or the other respect, to His apostles, therefore^ as you assume. He has ac- tually transferred the whole of His earthly Headship to the apostles. You certainly will not indorse, such lo- gic, or such exegesis, or such theology. The comparison you institute between the descent of the Holy Spirit on Christ, at His baptism by John, and the apostles' consecration to their office, betrays the same looseness of logic, theology and scriptural inter- pretation. Having assumed that *^ the apostles were admitted to the exercise of this power, (of Christ's Head- ship,) in the very same manner in which our Lord en- tered upon His office," and having noted the point of resemblance^ not the sameness of manner, to have been in the fact that '' He did not enter upon His duties as a public teacher, until the Holy Ghost fell upon him and anointed him for the office," you add, " hence St. Paul 51 says, no man iaketh this honor unto himself^ hut he that is called of God^ as was Aaron. So also Christ glori- fied not himself to be a high priest, but He that said unto him, thou art my Son, to day have I begotten thee,'' The two subjects arc as widely difierent, as the poles are distant, from each other. Paul did not say, wliat you quote from liim, in view of what you assert. It was nol htnce at all tiiat he made that remark, nor from any such like considerations; nor can you make Paul's meaning in Hebrews to How hence at all. The apostle is comparing the priesthood of Christ, with that of Aaron and of Melchiscdec, and not the ATOSTLESHip, of Christ, and of His beloved disciples. You assume their identity, and found your argument on that assumption. We utterly deny their identity or even resemblance, and in due season, when your argument leads the way, shall show that it is not a de- nial without cogent reasons. What you say about 'Mhe actual visible setting apart of Chiist, and of the apostles for their office," I do not fully understand, though I have tried to ascertain your meaning. You say, '^ they were not to enter upon the duties of the office which Christ had transferred to them, until they had received, in di full and open man- ner, the Holy Ghost. Prior to the ascension of the Saviour, they had received the power to act as apostles, but not the gifts necessary to fit them for discharging the duties connected with the office. The former, viz: \\\e power, was given when Christ breathed on them, and said, receive ye the Holy Ghost — the latter, viz: the gifts, on the day of Pentecost. Hence, they were commanded not to depart from Jerusalem, but to wait 5« for the promise of the Father, \vliich, saith Christ, ye have heard of rne. The Holy Ghost descended on the Saviour at His baptism, and he declared that the apos- tles should also be baptized with the Holy Ghost, not many days hence, which took place, as I have already remarked, on the day of Pentecost.'' What distinction there is between '^powei" to act as apostles,'' nnd gifts necessary \o fit them for discharg- ing tlic duties connected tcith the office,^^ it is for you to show. According to your own showing, the apostles were not qualified for the discharge of their duties, as apostles, till they had received the miraculous gifts of the Spirit. '* Their power was enlarged," you say, *' on three different occasions/' but not until the day of Pentecost, did they receive the full power which Christ possessed ;'' yet, you say, that prior to the day of Pen- tecost, /?/// power was given to them ! What that full power is, you have not told us. At one time, it is the office; at another time, the Holy Ghost; at another, the gifts of miracle?; at another, the minis- terial gifts; and at another, the broad seal of heaven to their commission. We must have something much more definite than all this. You seem to be at a loss in defining it yourself, though claiming to exercise it. And no wonder ! for it is enough to make any frail mortal giddy, and to turn the head of any one who thinks he possesses and presumes to exercise it. And that you must have been bewildered by it. is mr,nifest; for after having told us of the threefold commission of the apostles, and of their public visible introduction to the apostolic office on the day of Pentecost, you add: <^and to place the power the Saviour transferred to 53 j ihem beyond all dispute, and that every one might re- cognize the right to rule and govern the church, He further declared to them, I appoint unto you a king- dom, as my Father, hath appointed unto me. Here, then, we have the foundation of the christian ministry. This solemn transfer of our Saviour's power to the apostles, to govern and rule the church, was the broad seal to their commission to preach the gospel." It was long before the day of Pentecost that the Saviour gave notice of appointing to the apostles; a kingdom and the time when they should be put in possession of it also, is distinctly declared — not at the day of Pentecost — not in this world — but only at the day of judgment. See Mat., xix, 28 ; Luke, xxii, 30, the verse next to that you quote; Rev,, ii, 26 and iii, 21, whence you will learn that the kingdom is something very different from a *^ Bishop's throne." 5* LETTER V. feVlSCOPAL CLAIM TO Tlir. PRTK.STHOOD, AMj THE NATURE OF oiidixation. Rev. and dear .sir : You are careful to assert, that the power of Christ's headship was not transferred to others besides the apos- tles. Having shown that you have failed to prove it was transferred to the apostles, your denial of it to others, would not have demanded any attention from Us, had it not been for the use you attempt, in common with all who claim such lofty power for prelates, to make of the case of the seventy disciples commissioned by Jesus Christ. Although obscurely done, yet your object, following in the track of the great body of prela- ^ 'tical writers, evidently is, to draw a comparison be- tween the priesthood of the Jewish, and the ministry of the christian church. You say, *'the seventy who had been sent out by the Saviour to preach, had no part in it. They were not mentioned, as their commission had expired prior to the crucifixion of Christ. But you will observe, that so long as the Saviour exercised the office of High Priest, and before He transferred it to the Apostles, immediately preceding His ascension, there were three grades in the ministry, as was the case in the Church under the Jewish dispensation. Christ — the High Priest; the Apostles — the priests; and the seventy — the Levites. The Apostles did not reach the highest grade, so long as the Saviour exer- 5B cised any ministerial authority on the earlh, but were raised up to it as He was about returning to heaven. They then stood as His representatives, and arranged the ministry, as will hereafter appear, after the model which He himself had followed, viz: in accordance with the ministry of the Church as it existed prior to His coming." All this is assertion. And what is worse, it is made on the faith of prelatical writers, without the least shadow of evidence from the sacred scriptures ; yea, with glaring evidence to the contrary ! Where is the proof that Christ ever consummated on earth, the duties of the office of High Priest'? And where, that, having done so, and having transferred it to the apostles, He left the oilice behind Him ? The apostle Paul, in the most explicit manner, asserts that He is now discharg- ing, in heaven, the functions of that oHice.* The func- tions of that ollice are such that they cannot be fully discharged on earth. ''If He were on earlh," says the apostle most unequivocally, *' He would not be a priest, seeing that there are priests that oiler gifts according to the law." Ilch.y viii, L He interfered not while on earth, with the functions of the .Jewish high priest, nor with any of the Aaronical priesthood. The law or- dained them, and they were t3^pes of Himself. He re- spected them in the discharge of their official duties. The sphere of Hispriesthood lies not in the earthly tem- ple, but in heaven. For not until he returned thither did he commence some of the more important func- tions of His office as **High Priest of our profession," *See Heb., ij, 17 ; Ui, 1 ; iv. 14-16; vli, ^4^28 I 67 How absurd, therefore, to talk of His transferring His office of High Priest, to the apostles. The iinscriptural character of such a pretence, ap- pears to me even more shocking than its absurdity. For what, I ask, were the duties and functions of the High Priest? Paul shall answer, who has fully dis- cussed this subject in his epistle to the Hebrews. To him, but to no prelate on earth, will we go for instruc- tion in this matter. "Every high priest is ordained to offer gifts and sacrifices. Hcb.^ viii, 3. *' Every high priest taken from among men is ordained for men in things pertaining to God, that lie may offer both gifts and sacrifices for sins. He ought, as for the people, so also for himself, to offer for sins.'^ IlrJ)., v, 1-3. *' A merciful and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God. to viake reconciliation for the sins of the people. Heb., ii, 17. The appropriate, peculiar, emphatic duty of the Jewish priesthood, therefore, it appears from the sacred scriptures, was to offer sacnfces for sins. You will not pretend, that this is the duty of the Episcopal priests, or in any way forms a function of their olHce. Should you for one moment imagine it, the apostle I Paul will quickly rebuke the fancy. Every priest, says he, standeth daily ministering, and otlering, oftentimes, ! the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins; but this man, (Jesus Christ,) after he had offered one i sacrifice for sins, for ever sat down on the ri^hi hand I of God, from henceforth expecting, till His enemies be I made His footstool, for by one offering He hath per- fected forever them that are sanctified." Heb.y^, 11- 14. It is not, therefore, in the appropriate functions S8 of the priest's office, that you can trace the analogy between Jewish and Episcopal priests. It is through Jesus Christ, our high priest, now of- ficiating in Heaven, that we draw nigh to God. If we are to have high priests on earth and priests below thenn, we would be removed to a greater distance from the throne of grace, than were the ancient Jews. Our privileges are diminished. You will not claim to be the medium of access to God, through whom acceptable worship is to be rendered, as was the High Priest. Jesus Christ will contradict you. It must consequent- ly be in the three orders that you trace the analogy. You have not, however, stated this distinctly, hav- ing traced the analogy only while Christ was on the earth, and had the subordinate ministry of the seventy disciples, which n)inistry, nevertheless, you say, in contradiction to some of your Episcopal writers, ex- pired by its own limitation. We are left to infer from what you say, that the apostles were advanced to the highest grade, that is, to the high priesthood of Jesus Christ — that after them, came the Bishops, who, you say, are their successors — and that the Episcopal priests correspond with the Jewish priests, and the Episcopal deacons with the Levites. This is the argu- ment of prelatical writers generally, some of whom pronounce it demonstrative; others, presumption; oth- ers, probability. In reply to this argument, it is affirmed, in the boldest and most unqualified manner, that the New Testament writers, in no instance whatever, run a comparison be- tween the rank, office and duties of the priestly minis- try of the Old Testament and the ministry of the New, Let the passage where they do it, be produced. Nei- ther do they even intimate, that the priests under the law, were a type of the ministry of the gospel. They were types of Jesus Christ, and of the effects of His mediation, but not of His ministers. What Paul says, Heb.^ viii, 5, of the priests under the law, *'Who serve unto the example and shadow of heavenly things,''^ set- tles this point. The heavenly things of which he speaks, as the whole context shows, are not the minis- try of the New Testament, but the substance, the real thing which Jesus Christ has done for ihe redemption of sinners by His sacrifice and intercession, and their blessed effects in the salvation of sinners. Neither are the ministry of the isew Testament ever called dis- tinctively, priests. The term in no solitary instance in the New Testament, is used as a term of office to de- signate the ministry, nor was it, till in the second cen- tury, the idea was conceived to make the christian con- form to the Jewish church. It w^as used for increasing the power of the clergy.* In the cases where it is meta- phorically used, 1 Pet., ii, 9, and Rev., i, 6, it designates ithe whole body of the redeemed — private members as well as public functionaries of the church, and has re- ference to a different state of things entirely, than to the rights, functions, duties, and relations to the visible Church, of an order of her ministry. There is not the slightest shadow of a warrant for designating, the communion table as the altar, and its elements of bread and wine as a sacrifice. Not a note or breathing of priesthood or of priest, of altars or of *See Moslieim's Ecclesiastical History, v. I, pp. 117, 118, 133. Wallonis Messalini, De Episcopis and Presbyteris Dis3., p. 162. 60 sacrifices, nor any sacrificial language and ceremonies pertaining to divine worship and the sacraments, to which the Hierarchy are so attached, are to be found in the New Testament. These, in your ritual are mere empty names, having been retained in your liturgy; adopted at a time when there was as much popery in the Church of England, as there was before Henry the VIII — the first distinctively supreme head of the church- quarrelled with his holiness the pope. The Roman is by far the most consistent. He makes the terms priest, altar, sacrifice, as fully significant, when applied to the New Testament ministry and sa- craments, as they v/ere when used to denote the Jew- ish. The Council of Trent have not accommodated the meaning of the words — retaining the names and discarding ih.e substance — but boldly affirmed, that there is no real difierence between the sacrifice ot Christ, on the cross, and in the mass — the difl^erencc being only circumstantial, the one an offering made by Himself, the oilier by the the Ministry of the Priest.* Such ground you cannot take, although the tendency that way is very strong, among the Oxford Tractators and their advocates, both in Great Britain and in the United States. Where, then, do you find the analogy between the Jewish priesthood and the christian ministry? Simply in the three orders : Type or Shadow. Anti-type oi' Substance. High Priest— Jesus Christ. High Priest— Bishop. Priests. Priests. Levites. Deacons. *Hist. Concil, Lib. 6, p. 465 61 *' Who that intended to institute a set of resemhlan- ces, would ever dream of appointing a numerous body of Levites to represent a numerous body of deacons — a numerous body of priests to represent another nu- merous body of priests ; and then finish by putting at the head of his system, a single high priest, to represent an order of ten thousand bishops \ Nay, if the Epis- copal argument here is sound, it concludes much more forcibly in favor of the papal than of the Hierarchy of *• the Protestant Episcopal Church.'' The former pos- sesses in her single pontiff*, an essential feature of the type, which the latter, by her order of Bishops, has perfectly obliterated. ''"^ It was well and answerably asked by the late Dr. Mason, when comparing the Jew- ish priesthood and the Episcopal orders, ^^ now in what do they resemble each other ? Did the High Priest or- dain the priests'? No. Did he confirm the people \ No. Had he the exclusive right of government \ No. On the other hand: Do the Bishops discharge any duty analogous to the offering up of the yearly sacrifice on the great day of expiation \ No. Have they the pe- culiar privilege of entering into the immediate presence of God? No. Is the order of God attached to their persons ? or have they any special right of declaring the Divine wiin No. He who has sagacity enough to detect, in the appropriate functions of the High Priests, any thing that deserves to be called a type of the functions appropriated to a Christian Bishop, can never be at a loss for types and anti-types, so long as any two objects remain within the Bible or without it. Their prerogatives and offices are so absolutely dis- *Christian Magazine, v. I, p. 314. 6 62 similar, that to make one an image of the other, is to pour overwhelming ridicule upon the whole system of typical ordinances. The success will not be much bet- ter, if we go down to the second and third grades of the priesthood. If the reader has an hour which he cannot employ more profitably, he may throw it aw^ay in hunting for likenesses between the priests of the law and of the gospel, between the Levite and the Episco- pal Deacon. "=^ Yet, with all this absolute dissimilarity in function? and duties, you have asserted, that Jesus Christ trans- ferred his office of High Priest to the Apostles; and made it part and parcel of your argument to prove, that He gave to the Apostles only *'thc power He had re- ceived of the Father." You say '^ this point then is clearly settled, that the Apostles held the only ministry which was of Jesus Christ. Not only the power to rule and govern the Church, but of course, it must also follow, to continue the same power. If not, there never has been any authorized ministry in the church, and all who profess to be commissioned as embassadors of Christ, are gross iMrosTORs. There can be no escape from such a conclusion.'' Not so fast, my dear sir. Escape is the easiest thing imaginable. You seem to have been startled yourself at your boldness, as though you had probably gone too far ; for you add in the very next breath, '^ for I have endeavored to show you, on the authority of the w^ord of God, that Christ gave tlie power v)hich He had received of the Father^ only to the Jlpostles.^' Now, something more than ^^ endeavor \o show," this was necessary ; especially, when you so • Cliristian Magazine, v. I, p. 320. 4l 63 boldly affirm, that escape is impossible from the odious conclusion, to which you design, by your argument, to shut up all non-Episcopally ordained ministers, viz : the admission of their being nothing but *^gross impos- tors." You may say you did not name me; nor say any thing against me ; and profess personal regard as heretofore ; but you meant us all. You have raised the cry of impostors^ against all of us, who have not been ordained, by those who you say are the only true ministry, the lineal successors of the Apostles. I would much rather a man should call me an impostor, a thief, or a knave, at once, in an open manly manner, than to publish such a description of me as would characterize me by my known favored opinions, and as would cause I every one else to understand, that you regarded, and could not but regard, me as an impostor, a thief, and *,« knave, and that they ought also to do so, and then (when called to account for such covert charsres, to sav I in the true spirit of cowardice, why, sir, I did not name ^ you. I am not so blind as not to perceive that the charge jjyou have made, applies to me, just as truly as if my 'name had been mentioned. Nor am I vain enough ; nor able, on the ground of personal professions of friend- I ship ; nor at all because of them, disposed to regard my- \ srelf as separated from my brethren. The libel, I use the ^ word in the ecclesiastical sense, is so drawn up, that i you and your friends, and all who think with you, may ^ fill the blank with whatever name best pleases you. You have made a supposition, which you really be- lieve ; and on the alledged, and as you say demonstra- ted proof of that charge, you denounce Presbyterian, c 64 Methodist, Baptist, Congregational ministers, " gross IMPOSTORS." You have made an unquahfied remark. You have not even thought it proper, to guard against the force of the allegation you have hurled against us, by the admission, that ignorance might save us from the charge of intended deception. Your neglect to do so makes the charge more palpable and direct, for you must be aware, that the design to deceive is an essen- tial item of the proof, necessary to convict us, of being gross impostors. Your knowledge of criminal jurispru- dence, I should have thought, would have made you more cautious. If you do not believe that we are all gross impostors, your whole argument and discourse are fictitious ; for you sny, the conclusion unavoidably flows, from the premises w^hich you affirm and know, we do utterly deny — rejecting, as we do, the ordination you have attempted to prove to be essential to the only true ministry. Surely, you do not think, that wc will sit still under such a charge, and allow the whole weight of your in- fluence, with your people and the pubHc — to strike from beneath us our foundations — to destroy the popular con- fidence in us as ministers of Jesus — and to hold us forth to the scorn of the church and world, as gross im- postors ! Your immediate friends may attempt to con- strue this defence into an attack, and make a false issue before the minds of the public between us ; but it will not do. You are the assailant — assailant by the whole- sale ; and to attempt to secure sympathy, by construing me to be the accuser, is altogether loo weak and disin- genuous for me to think that you will undertake to do. I am persuaded you will not retreat in this way, but 65 that either you are prepared, to substantiate fully, the charge you have made, or, that you will take back the offensive expressions, and acknowledge that they were rashly and inconsiderately used. You cannot think, that after such language, and un- recalled, we can well be deceived by the weak pretence that you respect us non-Episcopally ordained ministers as men and christians, and would not append the name of any one of us to the general accusation. For, should you make this plea ; either it would prove that you do not, after all, believe and act upon your ow^n favorite doctrine of the succession; or, you must withdraw the .charge and amend it by substituting that of venial igno- rance ; or, admit, that you profess and teach, that good christians, whom you respect and love, are nevertheless gross impostors — one of the three. Because we Presbyterians and others, whom, it is said, you actually, in your discourse, named and clas- sed with -Mormons, will not admit — that Jesus Christ has transferred His headship in the church on earth, to the Apostles — or to Episcopal Bishops — or that He has given them the sole power to rule and govern the church, except as they should continue the same pow- ler — or that the three orders of your clergy, correspond with the Jewish priesthood, and were, in fact, typified jby it, when we cannot find one iota of resemblance be- tween them in any respect whatever — or that the Apos- tles have transmitted the power of Christ's headship, Ion the earth, and of His high priesthood, too, through the Bishops, as the sole channel through which power or authority to preach His gospel and to act as His em- bassadors, can flow — therefore, forsooth, we, who sav 6# 66 we are embassador for God, and pray men in Christ's stead to be reconciled unto God, are verily gross im- postors, and there is no possibility of escape for us from such a conclusion ! Verily, the scowl of the community ought to be upon us ! Every upright and godly man ought to shun us! You have hissed upon us, the dogs of war. It is marvelous that any decent person would attend on our ministrations! and yet more marvelous, that there is not an universal rush from our churches, where such imposition is played ofl', into the ** ark of safety," the Episcopal Church ! But these dogs do not bark. We are not placed in such dreadful straits. The cords of your argument are no better than the Lilliputians, and we are not even aware that they bind us. There is not a single posi- tion of your argument which you have proved. The assumptions on which it is based, or which are involved in it, are equally without evidence, and have been pro- ved by us, to be fallacious. We laugh at the idea of there being no authorized ministry in the Church ; and of all being gross impostors, but those who have their commission from the Apostles' successors, to whom Christ's Headship has been transferred. We account the whole thing to be just as ridiculous as it is usurpations, and will tell you how we obtained our commission, and how we believe every true min- ister of Jesus Christ, must get his, too, who would not be found running without being sent. But previously, allow me to say, that w^hile I repel, as I think, with de- served severity, the charge of gross imposition brought against all of us who have not been Episcopally ordain- ed, I take pleasure to acquit your heart from any design 67 to slander us. I prefer to think, that you have been betrayed into rash expessions by your argument, and have said, as the Bisho[), and in your zeal for the Bish- op's powers, what you will unsay as the christian, for whom, though I censure your language, and condemn your argument, and repel your accusation, I still will entertain a kind regard. The supreme power or headship of Jesus Christ on earth, has never been parted with by Him. See Rev,, ii, 1 ; iii, 7, 14, and CoL, i, 12. He is still the head of His bod}^ — the church. It is His prerogative, as in the days of His flesh, to call to that work, the ministers of His gospel. This He does, by the special influence of the Holy. Spirit, vouchsafed to them, whom He will have to serve him in His gospel — inclining their minds and hearts to the work — affecting them with right mo- tives and views — pressing them with a sense of ob!ii:;a- tion — endowing themi with appropriate gifts and quali- fications, imparted by His Spirit, and in His provi- dence — and leading them to the sphere of labor He has allotted to them. It is His, and His exclusive prerogative, to call and commission His own embassadors. What a ridiculous idea, that they can be His embassadors, who are not ap- pointed and sent by himself! Bishops or Presbyters have not the power or authority to constitute any one an embassador of Jesus Christ. He does this, in the first instance, by His divine call and the influence of His Holy Spirit. All offering to enter the ministry, must claim to be called of Jesus Christ. To prevent all imposition in this matter, Jesus Christ has given authority to His church to examine the ere- 68 dentials of those who claim to be His ministers, and prescribed the requisite qualifications as a rule of judg- ment, by which they shall determine, in all cases, whether the call is genuine ; whether the person shall be recognized as an embassador of Jesus Christ ; and whether his credentials shall be indorsed as genuine. The ministry are the most competent judges in this matter, and, after ihe example of the apostles, they examine and see, whether this and the other man, who says he has a call from God to preach His gospel, has indeed been so called. In order so to judge, they must examine whether he possesses — the requisite evidences of piety — right views of the ministry — right motives for entering into it — proper ([ualifications for discharg- ing its duties — i. e., whether he meets in every respect, the rule laid down in the instructions given by insi>ira- tion on this subject, and according to which, a judgment is to be passed in favor of those who say they are called of God to preach His gospel. The right of judging in this matter, according to law, is an inalienable right of the church of God. To the ministry, it ever has been confided, as to the represen- tatives alike, of Jesus Christ, and of His people. In Episcopal, Presbyterian and Congregational churches, it is substantially the same. According to your muni- cipal regulations — the views of church government, you prefer — this work of judging is assigned to the Bishop and his helps : his assistant priests. In the Presbyte- rian churches — to a Presbytery, a permanent body of ministers and their helps : and in Congregational chur- ches, to a council of ministers called for that purpose. When the candidate is judged to be truly called of God 69 and qualified to preach the gospel, ordination follows, which is but indorsing the man's commission, received from Jesus Christ — saying to the churches, that they have examined it and found it genuine, and recognize and set him apart before the eyes of the church, as one called of Jesus Christ, and commissioned to preach His gospel. The laying on of the hands, whether of Bishop, Presbytery, or council, is but the public, for- mal mode of authenticating his commission, and an ex- pression of the entire cordiality with which he is greet- ed and caressed, when God is implored by them for His blessing, and presence and spirit, to be with him. It is not the Bishop, or Presbytery, or council, that transfer the authority. Christ confers that Himself, and they, do but express their judgment ; and as the publicly constituted judges in the matter, introduce the man whom they have judged to be duly called and cho- sen of Jesus Christ to preach his gospel, and to be wor- thy of the confidence of the churches, as His accredited embassador. These are not the positions of non-Episcopalians on- ly. Your own church teaches, and your book of com- mon prayer recognizes, them. You are made to in- terrogate the Deacons and Priests thus: *'Do you trust that you are inwardly moved by the Holy Ghost to take upon you this office, and ministration ] &c. Do you think that you are truly called according to the will of our Lord Jesus Christ ] Do ijou think in your heart that you are truly called, according to the will of our Lord Jesus Christ 1" &c. All your proceedings in the case, are but the distinct, public, formal eliciting and recognition of this fact. You are made to say: '* Take to thou authority," &c. It is not said from you or your Bishops. The thing must be interpreted by what goes before. It refers to Jesus Christ, and the Bishop is made to declare, that by the imposition of his hands, the office is deUvered to him. This, to explain it con- sistently with the scriptures, and with itself, is, but ma- king the Bishops act the public, formal, introduction of the person, as called of JesusChrist, and licensing him to go forward, in the exercise of authority from Jesus Christ, to discharge the duties of the oflice on which he then enters. All this is in accordance with the dic- tates of common sense. It is the supreme authority of a country that com- missions an embassador ; but that embassador must sub- mit his credentials tj those to whom he is sent, and have them duly authenticated ; which, when done, he is accounted, and proclaimed as, minister plenipotentia- ry among them. Our Redeemer has recognized and in- corporated in His church, this principle and procedure of common sense, lie is the supreme power, and He appoints his embassadors by the call of His spirit, and endowment of them with requisite qualifications. It is the right of the church and of the world, to see to it, that this commission is genuine. Ordination is but the established mode of declaring and proclaiming, that this and the other man is duly commissioned by Jesus Christ, and called, chosen and appointed to the work of the ministry. The authority comes direct from Je- susChrist. The recognition, and proclamation, of this commission, pertain to the appropriate judges, who must, in this matter, follow the law of instruction laid down by Christ, and which you have quoted at length. 71 Thus, then, you see, whence we obtain our commis- sions — from a much higher source than Bishops, Pres- byters, prelates, or kings, even from Jesus Christ him- self. We do not fear to have them examined — are un- der no apprehension of being accounted impostors; but appeal to the call and presence and efficacious influ- ence, of the Spirit of Christ, which direct and sustain us, and which, although investigated, and asserted ge- nuine, at our ordination, may be, at any subsequent pe- riod, examined by the church and the world. We prize, infinitely more, the graces of God's spirit in our hearts, and the fruits of that spirit attendino- our ministry, than the approbation of Bishops, Presbyters, or any others who claim to have Christ's power, and in His name, to rule and govern His church. You see also, why it is, that we treat, with so much indiffe- rence, yea, with utter contempt, all that is said about apostolic succession, as though that was the grand test of a man's being a genuine embassador of Jesus Christ, when the very idea carries absurdity on its face — an embassador of Christ, when Christ had no hand in his appointment, at all !! If the Bishop gives the power, Christ has no power of Headship on earth, but accord- ing to your doctrine, has transferred it to the Bishops. Your priests and deacons may be your embassadors, (if they have their power from you, but they are not 'Christ's, and will not be accounted, by the churches in , Michigan, to be such, unless they have been called and < chosen of Jesus Christ, and have been qualified by the , gifts of His Spirit, and by other requisite endowments, 'j for the work of His ministry. They will be disposed to respect your judgment, and 72 to confide in your examinations, as one believed to be competent to investigate all such pretensions, and to judge, along with your presbyters, whether this man or the other, is truly commissioned of Jesus Christ, to preach His gospel — no farther. Beyond this, your or- dinations will not be accounted valid ; and I may add, they will presently be distrusted altogether, if you set up such lofty claims — insist that you are endowed with the power of Christ's Headship — and by authority given you to rule and govern in the church, ordain men to the ministry. In so saying, there is no sanction given to fanaticism and confusion. We can well and truly discriminate between Christ's Headship, in the exercise of which authority. He commissions His ministers, and the com- mon sense usages and regulations, which the churches are competent to adopt, for accredi ti ng the commissions thus given, and for the prevention of imposture. He submitted His own credentials to the Jewish church, and proved their genuineness by His miracles. None, truly commissioned by Him, will be unable or unwilling to have theirs too, examined, and approved by compe- tent judges. More than this you cannot plead as per- taining to ordination, without speaking unscripturally, unintelligibly. We do, therefore, utterly deny the very foundation on which you build your doctrine of lineal succession and sacramental ordination. Your Bishops are not High priests, nor are your Presbyters priests. The analogy was used to increase the power of an ambi- tious Hierarchy.*^ It fails in every particular, and in ♦Murdock's translation of Mosheim, v. I, p. 117. 73 none nnore so than the essential one. The Jewish priesthood was confined to one family — ^.the family of Aaron; whereas yours has no family claims, but follows a very different law of succession. The line of their succession was identical with that of natural descent. The geneological table was to be carefully preserved and consulted, and the proof of a man's birth of the family of Aaron, w^as essential to establish his right and call to the priesthood. Could you prove that Jesus Christ called Peter and Paul and the other apostles to be His priests^ and, as in the case of Aaron, that their families ever after ihem, in all their generations, w^ere to be esteemed such, the analogy would have deserved some respect ; but so far from this being the fact, the doctrine of succession is of a far more subtle character. The procreating process of your succession is to be done by some hocus-pocus mysterious sacramental in- fluence — in other words, must be carried on by a cer- tain vis insita flowing through the Bishops' hands, whose nascent properties, which do not and cannot demon- strate themselves as satisfactorily as in the successive generations of Aaron's sons, must be taken as a matter of blind faith or credulity by all good churchmen. It was to be sure, the only substitute appropriate to a priesthood avowing celibacy, with whom the doctrine ^originated ; but it is too utterly ridiculous to liken or- dination by the hands of a Bishop, in regular descent from Peter or Paul, to the propagation and transmis- ,sion of the Aaronic Priesthood, which must be done to jmake the analogy complete. I The generating virtue of a Bishop's hands must en- |counter so many accidents, and there are so many 7 74 things to neutralize and nullify it altogether — the least departure from essential forms, according to the theo- ry of its most zealous advocates and defenders, destroy- ing it altogether — that amidst accumulating improba- bilities of the genuineness of the sacramental virus to be transmitted, it has become absolutely impossible to demonstrate or establish the succession. I refer you to Dr. Whately's calculation, who, although but an Arch- bishop himself, treats with perfect contempt the idea of apostolic succession. Suppose the probability of an unbroken succession, to be as 100 to one in each separate case, in favor of the legitimacy and regularity of the transmission, and the links to amount to 50, (or any other number,) the pro- bability of the unbroken continuity of the whole chain, must be computed as 99-100 of 99-100 of 99-100, &c., to the end of the whole fifty !^ Such trifles and superstition, I rejoice to think, can never deceive sound Protestants, whether in or out of the Episcopal church. I feel persuaded that, on second thought, you will condemn them yourself. ♦See Whately'8 Kingdom of Christ. LETTER VI. embarrassing results of the apostolic succession. Rev. and dear sir: You attach infinite and eternal importance to your doctrine of ^* succession.'' You ask, *'Had the Apos- tles successors?" and affirm, *Mhis I will attempt to prove. It is a question involving the eternal interests of millions — and if decided in the negative, must de- ;stroy the christian ministry, under whatever name it <:-:. wliieh Hishop Ives did in his quolatioo, atid which Dr. ?f]ilier sup- r.\:r i ;: loiicj.l ut>o.e, iu his reply. I here give you the original. Talem nobis AM «t LXHIBEANT: IN QDa SIC EMINEANT KPISCOPI, UT tlfTlISTO NON SUB- SENT: UT AD ILLO, TANQUAM t'NiCO CAPITE, FKNOEANT, ET AD IPSUM RE^ ,T.:,.^-i K : IN QIA SIC INTER SE rRATER?»AM SOCIETaTEM COLA.VT, UT NON ALIO .NO DO, 4lUAJi>JUH VKRiTATE, SINT CoIXlOATl : TC.H VERO NUI.I.O NON ANaTIIEMATE DiaNOfl PATBOR, SI QUI Ekri«»T, QL'INON EaM REVFRENTER, SCMMaQTJE OBEDIENTIA, OB- eERVFST. If.F. VERO ;Me\dat mERATiriii;f: lakva, QUA superbiunt, quid OMNINO Habkt srr.T^' Joannis Cafrini, M. g-ni thcoloffici,TR\CTATVS theoloffici omnet in unuvi i inui,»(n, certis classibvs con^cali, p. 60, a, b. You next refer 10 the confession of faith, which Calvin "composed In lli« •Tt PiMbyurian of February li, 1842. 14 158 byterian predilections. It proves just nothing as to their sense, and consequently as to Calvin's views, of the nnerits of prelatical Episcopacy. If it proves any thing, it is the very reverse of that for which Bishop Ives cited it. He has assumed, in his argument, what is notoriously incorrect — that Edward and his Bishop's views of Episcopacy were identical with his own high church notions, and you have followed after him. All the rest of his proo!' is attempts at argument, the utter weakness and Jallacy of which Dr. Miller has, with his characteristic urbanity, exposed. As to the Bishop's reference to Strypc, the Doctor says, '*Lct the letter be produced, and then wc will believe ; but not till then. The improbability of there ever having been a letter written, the Doctor has shown, and has adduced name of the. French churches." nnil Bay ihal its *' explicit l.-mifM :i:rr" remlcrs il ** manifest,^' he (U'sircJ t'» rclawi the E;)iH*op.il rczi::ic:i. in hs h\s.oa nlso to the nrliolc.^, aiiM say, lh;ii, if, l>\ lij)i-ct»p:il rcpi- men, you inc.in prelacy, or ihe Episcop.'icy ynu n:ucon a poinl of fact. In ihal paper. Calvin uies the worcia Bishops, PjiR.nrs ««n I Miperintcn- dente, as tjynonynious. IWiEiiEA, say? he, tamri l->cr.Esi.^ auctoritatem, vel PASTORUM F.T SliPEaiNTKNDENTIUM, QLinilS Kccr.FSJ* RTOI NTJE PR(!VlN(;iA MaMDA- TA EST, SUDI.ATaM NOLUMUS. FaTKMUR ERor» KpiSCC-POS SI VE PAS rORKfl, RfcVKREK- TER AUDir.NDOa, QUATP.XUS PRO SL'CE rUNCTlOMS RvTIONi: VlT.nUM DkI VOCKST. *' Itl the mean lime, neverihcle.ss, \vi^ jirc un\v;;iiMK ihii the nuthoriiy of the church, or of Pastors, and of tlio-e supcrinieridinp. whose offuM*. ii is to uovrrn t!v church, •houlJ b'i t.ikeri away. We, therefore, vnufrs-, that Bis ^ps o- /',. reverently henrtl, in so far as as thev tr;;rh Ihe wor'l nl' O ► icidrd ordination to Bishops," isceartiile^,) is as wi leas the poles from proof, ihal ttie Kpiscopucy you advocate, met ('alvin's approhaiion. Vour ne.vl reference, in pro(;f of Calvin'9 attaehrnent to Epj«copacy, coincldinc also will) that of Bishop Ives, is tfie f tct that " he censures the chrpv of Collm (Cologne?) for en.leavorinu to put their head Birdiop out of his plae-e, inasinncii ms he declared in favor of reformation." I know no more sait.diie replv to this th m Iheargumentum a.l hominetu of Dr. Mi'ler. ^?^ppose Bishop McCoskrv shoahl Le- conie a nios*. ze:di»us an I consilient Calvinist, ;:s to his thcolo^jo;.! crM'd, and stip. pose the Episcopal clergy of IMichifran shoidd conspire, on that accoun: alone, lo expel him froni his diocese. IMight I not remoiistra'e against the coi^siiir.-tcy with- out heinjj atiathed lo prel.icy. I certainly sliould fee; it, l:oh on jrrounds of per- ■oral friendship and your known altaclimenl to Evangelic.il trut i, my privilege and duly to citerl what influence I might, to prevent the rejection of a sound oriho- 159 the testimony of Dr. Heylin, a bitter opponent of Cal- vin and Presbyterianism, to prove, that Calvin was consulted by Cranmer, who sought his counsel, and re- quested his aid, in conducting the English refornnation. He even sent the first draft of the English Liturgy, ear- ly in the reign of Edw^ard, to him, requesting his ad- vice and criticisms, which Calvin returned, saying he found in it some tolerabilcs inepiias, tolerable pool- ERiES, which he would wish mighl be corrected, and which was accordingly done.* The fact is — Calvin was devoted to the work of re- formation — anxious to see it advance, but he was not such a zealot or bigot, as to spurn every advance in it, because it did not come up fully to his standard. He gladly hailed every step taken in a departure from Po- *See Presbyterian of Fehrunry 12, 194"2. dox Bishop, for the introduction of an Oxford divine, or olhcr dargcrous errorift, without coinprotiiitiiiis: my Prcsbyicrian principle"?. Your next reference is also LJeniical with lli;it of Bishop Ives. You any that Calvin — " writing to Ithavius, a Polonian Bishoj), wnom he styles Illustrious and reverend Lord Bishop— so far from advisinc; him to lay aside his Episcopacy, cxhortt him to consider wh;u pl:ice he holdeth, and whathnrden is upon liim." Calvin doci not call I:havius *• Right Reverend" rcverendissimus ; nor lord, in the sense which your lanjruaiie implies, ;>s thou'^h it was identical with the title your Canada friendi, ificr the fashion of ilie Eiijflish hierarchy, give yourself The word " dominus,'* every school hoy knows is equivalent lo sir. It is the title of courtesy, which CaJ- vin uses, in addressing the humblest cur.ite. And as to the " dlustrious," it wa« that of merited excellence, and not of office. I perceive, from the use you have made of Calvin's courtesy, that, if I had happened to address you as the Right Reverknd S. a. IMcCoskry, 1). I).. Bishop, &.c.. — which I did not, rather by acci- dent and eniire i!,-n()r:incc of the importance, I uiiderstrnd both you and your friends attach to it— didiking :ind rejecting all honorary lit'es myself— than out of any unconrtcous design, I too, would have been convicted, by the same rule, you apply lo C.ilvin, of Kpiscotnil jire lilcctions. It behooves me, therefore, hereafter to be cJieful, how I atldressa Bishop, I have not, in any of my letters, for a moment hinted it, nor have! even thought " of advising (you) to lay jiside (your) Episcopacy," nor is it my wish you should, however anxious I am, that you should not inculcate the high-toned doctrines on the siibjccl of Apostolic succession, which I know are ns offensive to many excel- lent Episcopalians, bt)'.h clerical ;tnd lay, as?. hey are to other denominationa. It it passing strange, therefore, that Calvin should he convicted of Episcopal predilec- tions, because lie di ncnt lo ncl I. Quid crp<} tihi aj^mdum est 7 Fcrrent npud vo$ ditsidia, part una rts^ titui cupit inlctrrum Dei rultum ; altera impiat tuper.-f'liKUt^ pervieacite' drfendU, Te medium stare, quim Drug qua.u purred a niauu o. ' P •Irticininm cocmt^ turpe ar n'efus est. C'v/ita quern locum ocrvpea. et «, '• * / tmpntittnm. /#>• noBCfS milii pro lua huma- dale, si una in lerhos m > ^ '^"la ui profit, Tt quod sentto dicenduni i$l, ^ ubi ad ncleste tribwal teu-um Juerit. nun po$m «M proditionis crimen, nisi tc mature subJucas ab la catcrra, qua aperte ad opprimuuditm ChrUti numen runspirat : nnd winch, I vrrilv Ichfvc. in lln* vriiilri ry iiiid cflTr^t, not only nithr Oxiurdiliro'oi'y. Imt of yo;ir docirino nf Ap«)«:olic j»u»rr«'sion. Aaw vera si tibi molrftum eM minui. ut crescat in te Ck'istns, in mentcm rental Motes rx- emplum, qui sub umhris ofscuris, Cl'rish tnmen opprvbrinm delirits Qlgyptiorum et> opibus pritfcrrc non dubitatit. Jo. C'alc. Kp e' Hetp. p. |:1I, a. b. Yiiur lu'xl rcrTrn.-r, in (Nxniiioti wiili Uisliop Ivrs, n lo C.ilviii'^ Irltrr (o Ih© king of •'oliui:!. 'VUc n\>cc\ of iliat IritiT. n« any tine ulio rcjul-* il. i to nronio'.c pi-'iy, .mil Iriir «|oc:rirw, in ilic cliiiri-li of Polan.l. Ilr dors li« king lo tics. roy llir llirrarrliy, wliicli waB lirutly rsin'ili-tir I iIi'Ti ip Cbat of Koiiif, ;.9 ;ilio'_'e:l»Pr cxccralilc, nnd ururs Iti:* itisi|< . h in innUcrs wliiih lio .1 *eMic I lirHl niiil iiiosi cssomial. II ■ ly of Uic aiicicfil I'liuri'li. wiili ihal of Uoiiic, Iml disiiiiclly r< ; , ri« macica, as lo ihc invrn'.ion of ilic (-liiin'li, iiol as a Divine iii-iitiMiuwi. 'iJic ancicnl church, of which h<' sp(»k«', was noi Ihc Api»siohc cbu-ch ; nor is llicrr, in Iho whole of iliai leiicr. one solilary wnnl. whirh woiiM iniply— wh it you. and Bishop Ives, liavo said— ;hja Calvin approved of all the degrees of ihr U rrarchy, even of thai ancient church. He says hat ntuliliion and pri lo fahrirate I the Uoaian Hie- rarchy. That of llic aMci<*jU church, prior lo the a[iosta'o Uouian Ihrrarchy, hp admits, was insiituic I, hy ihe .-hurt-h. tor ilie purjjose of ronsohdiiing I'lc union of ber Bii^hop:^. Then ho supposes an or^ranizniion (quemadmodum si kodie) for the church of Poland, wiuoh nu^hi re>cnil»lc it, (a dchca'c way lo him to ihc kinp, lh» uature and exieut of iho rcfomjaiion to Uc souehi hy him in hi& llierarohy,) and in delailinf? the feaniros of this sjipposod orLaiiiz iiion for I'ol.m I, nccor<|ing to the model of the ancicnl cluircli. he makes the fcjpiscopacy that miirhi he introduced into Poland, a«:ref, in .dl essential respeitls, with a l'res'»y«eri;.n organization, whero the Arch-')ishop should he the pcrmancni mo lerator of the synod, )«n I the provin- cial or city Bisiiops, the moderators of their presliylerict — 'arh primus in' er part» and chosen, forthijl purpose, from among tJicjusrlves. lli:i virws, ai^o, of ordina- tion, and of the succcsdion, expressed in the same letter, arc in pcrl.ci keeping. 161 stances beyond control, did not prevent 11 Yet such, I am constrained to believe is the only pretext for clainriing Calvin for the Episcopate, at least until you show where ''on the plea of necessity" it has ever been ^' said (by Calvin,) that he could not receive the Apostolic ministry from circumstances beyond his con- trol/' Having disposed of these allegations. I return, for a moment, to the subject of Presbyterian ordination. There is no proof, whatever, that the laying on of hands in ordination, possessed the sacramental charac- ter which you attribute to it. There is not a solitary instance of any one of the Apostles having been so or- dained, unless you admit, that Paul was ordained at Antioch, Jlcts^ xiii, 1-3, and that was by Presbyters, and not by Episcopal Bishops or Apostles. Even the Oxford Tractators'^ admit, that the Apostles, at first, did not ordain in the manner afterwards adopted, by the laying on of hands. Yet, ordination, by the laying on of the Bishop's hands, we are told, is essential to the validity of the ministry, to the efficacy of ordinan- *vo]. I, p. a3. Th.'it you and Bishop Ives, should have read the original of Calvin'a letter, »o as to make it proof of his approb:ition rf all Ihe dej^rces of the Hierarchy of ihc ancient church, f )unded, ns you teach, in the Apostolic supremacy of the Bishop, and the three orders of the ministry, is so passing slrango, thai I shall not allow myself to attempt any solution of the phenomenon. See the Original letter in Joh. Calvin ep. pp. 85-8. Your Inst reference is olso identical with that of Bishop Ives, the reply to which, by Dr. Miller, as afiven u'love. I iiad embodied in ihis letter, liefore I had seen your •econd e:lilion. I only add, that the witnesses who testify to this fact, related by Strype, viz: the Popish Bishops Bonner and Gardiner, wer?, according to your own showing, guilty of "a forgery," ar d therefore, their word is of no authority, until Calvin's letters themselves, be produced. They are not to be found among all his printed epis'.lcs. Not a hint of it is dropped in his letters to Cranmer, or in Cranmer*s to him. Arfh-hii-liop Al)!)ot, does not say, even in the testimony you i quote, that he saw Calvin's letters,- only, that helearned from Arch-bishop Parker^ I papers, llial Calvin desire! the Episcopacy. So far from being "prevented by ui>- I toward ciri lanstances, from retaining the Episcopal regimen" in the church of Ge- neva, he oven states, expressly, that the Presbyterian system of government, whieb he introduced therr, was his deliberate choice, and that the church had been reform- ed agreeably to God's word, the only ruU. (Set his epUtle ad quendmn Cnratum,) 14* 162 ces, and to the existence and continuance of the church !^' Whether you really believe, that ordination, by the laying on of the Bishop's hands, communicates, sacra- mentally, and really, the Holy Ghost, by a supernatu- ral gift, I will not undertake to say ; but the whole tenor, and spirit of your discourse, are calculated to make that impression. It is important, and essential, to your doctrine of Apostolic succession, that it should be so. Unless it is thus a channel of special grace, it is good for nothing. It behooves you then, to show, when, and how, and by what authority, the practice of ordaining by laying on of hands, which prevailed not at first with the Apostles, originated ;- and in what part of the word of God, you will find proof of ordination by the laying on of a Bishop's hand, thus imparting the Holy Ghost. The first instance of prelatical ordination, recorded in the word of God, has yet to be produced. The Apostles, as we have seen, called themselves Presby- ters. They also used the terms Presbyters and Bishops, as synonymous, that of Presbyters, being, in fact, more honorable than Bishops. Presbyters united in ordaining. They had, and exercised the power to do so. Whether by the formal imposition of hands, or not, is not essential: but the distinct, full, and for- mal recognition of the party ordained, as being called and chosen of God, as being endowed with the requi- site qualifications, as worthy the confidence of the churches, is indispensable. If, then, you cannot prove separate orders and func- "•SeeDr. How's vind. of ilic Prot. Ep. Cb., p. 123. 163 tions from the use of titles, which are indifferently, re- ciprocally, and synonymously used ; — if the imposition of hands is not a sacrament, authoritatively required, and instituted to impart the Holy Ghost ; — if the fact of the Saviour's divine call, and of the possession of the requisite qualifications, as imparted, by His Spirit and Providence, is the essential element, in the ministerial consecration — if the rite of ordination, by the imposition of hands, is but the recognition and certification of the fact of such consecration ; — if this recognition, and certification have been made by the conjoint act of Presbyters, through the imposition of their hands ; — and if no solitary instance, is recorded in the scriptures, of prelatical ordination by a Bishop, of an order superior to Presbyters — with whom, I ask, lies the strength of the argument? And who, were they so disposed, might make a better pretence to the spirit of exclusiveness, and deny the validity of your ordinations, than we Presbyterians, Baptists, Congregationalists and Metho- dists, whom you cast out from the pale of the visible church ] Some of the most learned men of the Episcopal church, have not hesitated to place Episcopal ordina- tion, precisely on the basis which we have done. I Speaking of the ordination of Timothy, Arch-bishop ' Usher said ^'St. Paul was the principal, and the Pres- byters were his assistants, according to the constitu- i tion and custom of our church, in ordination. The I Bishop is not to do it alone, but with the assistance of at least three or four ministers, which was after the pat- \ tern of primitive times."* ( 'Certain Discourses of the late Arch-bisfeop of Armagh, London, 1659, p. 183. 104 Jeremy Taylor says, the Presbytery that ordained Timothy was a company of Bishops, (just what wo Presbyterians affirm,) and yet he adds, that all antiqui- ty declare that it was a company of Presi)yters — pro- cisely as we believe and teach.* Mr. Smyth, t in addition to the above, quotes Bishop Croft, as saying in his ** True state of the Primitivo church," *'and I desire you to observe, that of those two names, Presbyter and Bishop, if there be any dig- nity, and eminency, expressed in one more than the oth- er, sui c it is in the name of Presbyter, not Bishop ; be- cause the Apostles themselves, and the chief of Apos- tles, (as some would have it who stand highest on their pantablcs,) are in scripture styled Presbyters or El- ders, as the word in our English translation signifies, but never Bishops, as I remember.*' He also quotes Powell,! as saying, that **the word Bishop, indeed is never used in the New Testament to signify the office i of oxjersiglU oner minislcrSy but only over ihe flock of i Christ.*' To these might be added many other testimonies. Till you have proved that Bishops and Presbyters in Apostolic times, were diffiirent orders — till you can give us the word of God for it — which Dr. Onderdonk admitted to be the proper range for this argument — we shall not be intimidated or rendered at all uneasy, even though high churchmen, do scowl upon our Pres- byterian ordination, refuse to introduce us into their chancel, and seat us without the pale of the church. ♦See Epis. Asserted, p. 191. In Powell, p. 21. fSec Apo?. Sue, p. 159. tSee Apos. Sue, p. 78. LETTER XI. THE ANGEL OP THE CHURCH— IGNATIUS— POLYCARP. f Rev. and dear sir: The argument, taken from the direction of the Sa- viour's epistles to the seven churches of Asia, is equally inconclusive with all that have preceded it. You ob- serve, '* it will be no difficult matter to prove that these (viz: the Angels of the church,) were the Jiposiles or Bishops of those churches." I must confess, that I was no little surprised by such an assertion, when I remem- bered that the very learned Stillingflcet, of Episcopal authority, calls the argument from these symbolical titles, a ** miserable'' one. *Mf," says he, **many things, in the epistles, be dwect to the Angels, but yet so as to concern Iha whole hocly^ then of necessity, the Angel musl be taken, as a representaLwe of the wholo body; then, why may not the word Angel be taken by way of REPRESENTATION of the body itself; either, of the whole church, or which is far more probable, of tho Consessus, or order of Presbyters in the church? We see what miserable, unaccountable arguments these are, which are brought for any kind of government, from metaphorical or limbiguous expressions or names pro- miscuously used.''=^ ^ That Stillingflcet is correct, I need but refer you to *Mason*s works, v. HI, p. 142. 164 Rev.y xiv, 6, where the same symbol is used, and the Prophet says, he ** saw another Angel fly, in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel, to preach, un- to all them that dwell on the earlh, and to evf.ry na« TioN and KINDRED and tongle and people.'' Surely, one Bishop was never sent or expected to do all this. The one Angel in the synibol, therefore, stands as a representative of a class, of a great company of preach* ers. Should you say, that, in the epistles, the word THOU, the singular pronoun is used, showing that but one person was addressed, I refer you to Rod,, ii, 10, where it is used convertibly with the plural you, and evidently to refer collectively to the church. ** The devil shall cast some of vou into prison, that ve may be tried; anJ ye shall have tribulation for ten days; bo THOU faithful unto death," &c. But even should I admit, that the Angel meant ono individual, you cannot infer, much less ought you to assume, that he was an *' Episcopal Bishop/' That must be proved. This you have attempted, by alledg- ing, that there inust have been many Pastors, in each of the cities named; and, inasmuch as the singular num- ber is used, it mnal mean some one superior to all, and of course, lhc3 governor and inspector of all. I need only, in disproof of such an inference, to quote to you, historical proof of what was actually the state of things in the churches. Paul's sending for the Presbyters at EfJiesus, whom you say, were Presbyter-bishops, or Pastors, does not imply that, in Ephesus, there were many separate and distinct churches. It is no uncommon thing for a church to have more than one Pastor. In large cities, 195 Collegiate charges are not uncommon — several chur- ches forming but one in fact, and having three, four or more Pastors, according to their numbers. This is one way of showing that your inference is a non-sequi- TUR. We Presbyterians have another way. Believing, ns we think, on scriptural grounds, in the associated ** helps," or '-governments,'' we regard as church offi- cers, ** the Elders that rule well,'' who, Paul says, are deserving of esteem, as well as *' those especially which labor in word and doctrine." It is in view of this bench of Presbyters, that we make this distinction. ThePas- I tor is the presiding Presbyter — the Moderator of the j session, and the Bishop of the church. The Elders i composing liis session, are Presbyters, and overseers, or Bishops too, co- operating with him, in the watch, care, and discipline of the church. I intend not, how- i :ever, as I have already intimated, to insist upon the peculiariiics of our Presbyterian form of government, which, on suitable occasions, I am prepared to maintain ( -and defend, as sanctioned by the scriptures; but merely to show you, that there is a very easy way to under- stand, how the symbol of the Angel might have denoted one person — the parochial Bishop or Pastor, and yet there be no inferior grades in the ministry, nor such a thing as an ^'Episcopal Bishop." Were all your assumptions, and those commonly I made by prelatical writers, .^ranted, you might, indeed, construct an argument in favor of the three grades or I orders in the ministry of the gospel, and of the supre- macy of the Bishops; but this has never been done. If it were possible, these things ought to have been long IGG before this, proved, and ihe claims of Episcopacy estab* lished beyond all dispute. When Dr. Ondcrdonk ad- mitted, that ^*the claim of Episcopacy lo be of divine institution, (meaning prelaticnl Episcopacy,) and there* fore obligatory on the church, rests fundamentally on the one question — has it the authority of scripture? if it has not, it is not necessarily binding'' — it was lioped that there might be some speedy adjustment of the con* troversy. But when Mr. Barnes put the argument of Dr. O. into his crucible, and tried it, by scrijUural tests, and found it to be alloy — not genuine gold — it was soon discovered that *' the essential point of the Episcopal controversy," was not so ** entirely simple" as the zeal- ous Bishop had stated it — and he and others since, have renewed tlie nj)peal to the Fathers. *■' ♦It was indceil. a mnsicrly wlrokc of policy— proof ilmt ihf Bishop w»s n rood fcnor;il, of jidiniralilr tad, and knew how lo inkc advant.i^c of ih^ in.-ijrnutiimiiy of his foe, jujil wlulc soiimliiijt a rclrojil, lo w nrd oJF ihc. sUunr .itid dia«T.4rc of a dC' fcol, for liiin l«» liavi' sfi/.-d, ris hir did, Mr. IJ;iriics' ••sprjMli I eiiloijv '" of ifir Ivpi«»- Cop:il cliiirfh, ;is you i-:il! it, in your sciuiiid filjlioii, jind \vi li i!ic toiin I of ' • pel, niid tlu» sliom of viiiory. bark out «»f ilie conlrov(v j\ . l>r. OiuJ' 1 narrowrd Ihc conlrovrr-y down to ihr !>'oriplur.i! r.r^;;;;-'!!-! in f;i\'f)r < i Kpiscop:ic> . :uid voliir.'.rf red ilie rshiltiiion of i! M f . nj, Ihc nrjjumciu, iiiid f^r()\<'d lis f:'Ii»'iCK .iioii hivr tlonc, whicii ' i»rn- ved, licforc ilir ;irL'ii!iirnl lari h.ivc .Miy force. I iiy it? insriuuem.d.ty, and cxprr<»cd hit earnei'i de?irc lo sec the machinery of ICpi»stolic./l su|>remacy— yei wotdd I loo give my hearty as. sent lo ;ill that Mr. I>..riies has said, wiihoul ever imagininc that I should there- fore l.c consiriied inio the apologist, advocate und euloiiisi of ihc episcopal church. Dr. Onderdonk, and your imiiaiinn of him in ihe preface of the second edition of your sermon, are cidcuhitcd lo repress, and to pr^-venl the indulgence of all such generous feelmws. I will not say what they deserve to he c^ille.l, but lira I will say, that ilicy who can l;c c; jolcd hy such argumenis, in favor of Kfiiscopacy. aro Just the nien'that never thinic for ihcmselves, but arc ready, lo foHow or lo hall, to •t < 167 You are fully aware of how little worth and autho- rity are the Fathers, on [joints of faith, and how utterly absurd it is, to make ihcm umpires, in matters of doc- trine or discipline, whose opinions are so discordant and , often contradictory, whatever may be their value as T historians. In this latter respect, the early Fathers I will not be found to establish the claims of prclatical Episcopacy. Hear what Doctor Whately, the very ) learned Arch- bishop of Dublin, has said, upon the subject of the church's organization, at this day, af- , ter all the former controversies. ** A Church and a DiocESK,*' he says, ^^ seem to have been, for a conside- ble time, co-exlensive and idenlicaL And each church I and Diocese, (and frequently each superintendent,) , though connected with the rest by ties of Faith and Hope and Charity, seems to have been, (as has already ( been observed,) perfectly independent, as far as regards any power of control/'* This is, substianally, the same with the account of Lord King, who has shown, that as there was but one Bishop to a church, so there was but one chicrch to a Bishop — ihat that church was not a collection or association of churches, as being in one city, stale or country, such as you call the church of your Diocese — that the Bishop's cure was not called a Diocese, but was, usually, a parish no larger than oiHr parishes, or congregations, or separate churches. t He has taken a survey of the churches of Smyrna, Ephe- * Whntcly on tlie Kinffdom of Christ. t Inquiry in.o ihc prirniiive Con. and Dis., &!!., of the cliurch, chop. II, I applaud or to condemn, at the bidding of their masters. Dr. Onderdonk may bo lauded by liinis:e]f ond others, for declining; :iU controversy wiih a gentleman wb9 entertains such opinion?! of his church; >ei tliose who c.;nseeand appreciate the force of argunient. will say, gentlemen, thi« will not do. Reply to iMr. Bt'rne^' ar- gument. Make no false issue. The Cfmtroversy was not about 3Ir. Barnes' or any other person's opinion of the Epis;:opa] church ; but about the claims of prclatical Episcopacy to be liccounted a divine instiiuiion. Till this is done, however we may uduiire your tact; we raust think but little of your logic, 15 168 sus, Magnesia, Philadelphia and Trallium, as they were, in the days of Ignatius, and has shown that tiic Bishop, in those days, was but a parochial Bishop, sucli as we Presbyterians call a Bishop — the Pastor of a particular church, having associated with hinn his Presbytery or Eldership, and Deacons, all which you will find in a* Presbyterian church. J. C. I. GiESELER — an historian who quotes his re- ferences in proof of his affirmations — speaking of the early churches, says, that they ** every where, formed themselves on the model of the mother church at Jeru* salem. At the head of each were the Elders, (Presby- ters and Bisiiops,) all officially o/" kqual rank, thoughi in several instances, a peculiar authority seems to have been conceded to some one individual from personal considerations." The numerous references he gives to prove both the identity of Presbyters and Bishops, and how long that identity was retained, quoting tho scriptures, and Jerome, and referring to Augustine, Chrysostom, Theodorct, Isidorus Ilispal, Bernaldus, &c., &c.. are certainly enough to demand some mo- desty and forbearance in asscirting the high claims of prelacy.* MosuEiM says, 'Mhc rulers of the church were de- nominated, sometimes. Presbyters or Elders — a desig- nation borrowed from the Jews, and indicative, rather of the wisdom, than the age, of the persons; and so.mc- times, also, Bishops ; for it is manifest that both terms are promiscuously used, in the New Testament, of one and the same class of persons, ^cfs, xx, 17, 2S; PAz7., i, 1; 7\/., i, 5, 7; 1 Tim., iii, 1. Three or four Pres- * Glcscler'3 Ecclesiastical History, v. I, pp. 50, 57. 169 byters, men of gravity and holiness, placed over thoso little societies, (the churches severally.) could easily proceed with harmony, and needed no head or presi- dent. But when the churches became larger, and the number of Presbyters and Deacons, as well as the amount of duties to be performed, was increased, it became necessary, that the council of Presbyters and Deacons should have Vi president, a man of distinguish- ed gravity and prudence, who should distribute among his colleagues, their several tasks, and be, as it w-ere, the central point of the whole society. He w^as, at first, denominated theJlngel, (Apocal. Il^and III,) but af- terward the Bishop — a title of Grecian derivation, and indicative of his principal business. But whoever sup- poses that the Bishops of this first and golden age of the church, corresponried with the Bishops of the fol- lowing centuries, must blend and confound characters that are very diflTerent. For, in this century, (i. c, the first,) and the next, a Bishop had charge of a siU' gle church, which might ordinarily be contained in a private house; nor was he its lordy but was in reality its minister or servant."* Bishop Croft, in his Naked Truth, thus expresses himself. *' Having thus stated and united the iivo pre- tended and distinct orders of Episcopacy and Presby- tery, I now proceed to the third pretended spiritual ' orde7% that of Deaconship. Whether this of Deacon- ship be properly to be called an order or an office, I will ( not dispute; but certainly no spiritual order, for their office was to serve tables, as the scripture phrases it, which in plain English, is nothing else but overseers of * Mosheim's Eccleeiastical History, v. I, pp. 69, 70. 170 the poor, to distribute justly and discreetly the alms of the faithful ; which the Apostles would not Iroublo themselves withal, lest it should hinder them in tho ministralion of the word and prayer. But, as most matters of this world, in process of time, deflect mucb from the original constitution, so it fell out in this busi- ness ; for the Bishops who PRr:TcxDi:D to bc succes* 80RS TO THE ArosTLES, by little and little, took to themselves tlie dispensation of alms, first by way of in* spection over the Deacons, but at length the total man* agcment, and the Deacons, who were mere lay olhcers^. by degrees crept into the church ministration, and bc-^ came a reputed spiritual order and a necessary degreo and step to the priesthood, of which I can find nothing in scripture, and the original institution, not a word rela* ting to any thing but the ordering of alms for ihe poor*^ And the first I find of their ofliciating in spiritual matt ters, is in Justin Martyr, who lived in the second ccn* tury/'* ^* The very pattern of primilive Episcopacy'' — says that learned, excellent, and eloquent advocate and friend of the English church, and its zealous dcfendef against the popery and Gnosticism of the Oxford Trac* tators, Mr. Isaac Taylor — ** might bc pointed to, io some of our rural districts, where a mother Omgrega^ iional church has, under the laborious care of its Pas^ tor, surrounded itself with dependent chapels, (or as we would, in this country, say, (nissionary stations or school houses,) scattered over a district of seven or tei> miles in diameter/^f Other authorities might bc quoted, but these are *8coU'3 col. of Tr., v. 7, pp. 307, 309. t Spiritual despotiaiu,. p. 2U0. 171 enough, to show, how utterly fallacious is the argu- ment you advance, from the alledged Episcopal supe- riority of a class of officers in the church called Angels, and how you have crowded in your explanations, which are but begging the very question in dispute, so as to make the language — on assumptions you have not pro- ved and cannot prove — appear to support your dop- trin6. Thus, you say, after quoting part of the epistle to the church of Ephesus, in John, ** this epistle was written in the year 96, and of course there must have been many Pastors (why ? how of course?) or Elders over the churches, (the epislle is not directed to *' the churches," but l/ie church at Ephesus,) at that time, for there were several (several what ? Pastors or churches? both, no doubt, you mean,) when St. Paul sent for them I to meet him at Miletus, and also when Timothy wa5 ' placed over them in the year G5, (which has never been I proved.) And we cannot but conclude, that many Elders or Deacons the inferior ministers, as I have al- read shown, (certainly not by your argument,) were i added to the number by Timothy himself, as St. Paul had fully set before him, the qualifications such min- j inters have. (How this last consideration helps the ar- gument, or goes to settle the matter as to the number of churches and Pastors, is, to me, a perfect mystery. It is; however, homogeneous with what follows. 1 But ;jhe epistle was directed to the Angel of the churcb, liruOf the churchy not chun hes.) at Ephesus. He was commended for what was good, and reproved for what was evil in the churches, (you have it singular or plural, jaltermitely, as it suits you.) If, however, he was not the ^9hief officer, why shouldhe be thusaddre^ed,? j[^5^l^exl 15* 172 ycm have proved, that to have been the chief officer, viz: the President, Moderator, Pastor, he must have been the Episcopal Bishop of Ephcsus, there will be somo point in the question, and it may deserve an answer, but not before.) Wliy should the Elders and Pcacons, the Paslors of llic churc/ics, be overlooked? (VV^hen you have proved there were churches there, and three orders in the ministry, we shall think it still moro strange than you do now, that they should have been omitted.) Tlie only reason that can he given is, that the Angi:l was the Bishop of the church, and he wag held accountable for their conduct, and was cither com- mended or reproved, as it was proper or improper.** You have changed ihe style of your speech again. To this a Presbyterian would subscribe, understanding iho Bishop to be a parochial Bishop or Pastor, and the church a single parish, not a collection of parishes. I have been surprised at the manner in which you have here expressed yourself — at one rnomenl, in the singu- lar number, speaking as a good Presbyterian, and the next, in the plural, as the Episcopal Bi>hop. There is no coherence or consistency in the argument. Still more, am I surprised, at the manner in which you have reasoned concerning the commendation be- stowed upon the Angel. *' And you will observe,'' you remark, *' that the A::gel is particularly commended, for having tried them which say they arc Jlpostlcs, and are not, and hath found them liars. But how could this be done, if he were not an Apostle himself?" Very easily. There was not a member of the church who might not have been com[)etent to do so. The trial was not a judicial one. ' This you assume without any shovr 173 of reason. The Saviour had laid down the duties and qualifications of an Apostle, very dislincily and defi- nitely. Every man, in the church of Ephcsus, could> therefore, judge, whether those who said they were Apostles, were such in reality ; just as we Presbyte- rians, every one of us, feel perfectly able to try all who make Hke pretences, at the present day, and do Qs promptly reject all their claims as did the Angcl. It seems, that there were very early pretenders to tho Apostolic ofTice. Can you assign the reason why no notice is taken of there being pretenders to any of your alledged inferior grades of the ministry? These pre- ^ tenders aimed high, which is by iio means uncommon ( with such persons. You are at a loss to know, why any one should ever have been suspected of imposition, if the Apostles i were not to have successors. I say, the very fact, that they were not to have successors, excited suspi- cions, whenever any one laid claim to the office ; and i that this was the reason, why, pretenders to this office I and not to the others, were so quickly suspected. **0r why,'' you say, *' should he try and examine the pre- tensions of impostors, if he had been persuaded, that i the Apostolic office was to be limited to those origin- ally appointed, and were not to have successors? It is, ot once a distinct admission, that at that time, in the I year 98, there were true Apostles, who had succeeded to the office originally given by the Saviour, to the ele- ven, when he breathed on them and said, receive yet ho Holy Ghost, as My Father hath sent Me. even so send I you. If not, why try any one who pretended that *he had received such an office." For this very obvi- 174 ous reason, that none but the twelve were, or could bo genuine Aposlles, and, therefore, suspicions, at once, were cxcilcd, in reference to any and every one else. The style of speech, adopted in the episllc, is very strange and unaccountable on any other supposition. If the Angel was Bisliop, in your sense of the term, with exclusive power to ordain, all that was necessary, on supposition of the continuance of the Apostolic office, was not to ordain any impostors to that office. Instead ot trying, ilic proper course would have been simply to ask, whether the man had been Episcopally ordained ^ and if not, there was the end of the matter. But if you admit that he had been — which you must, before you could subject him to the judicial trial, that you evidently understand the Angel Bishop did — ilien. what becomes of that infallible Headship, virtually claimed by you to have been transferred to the Bishop? How came false Aposlles to htivc been ordained at all? The truth is, that the very fact of the Aposlles being called, and commissioned of Jesus Christ, directly offered the temptation to ambitious and aspiring men, to pretend to their lofty powers and oflice. The f;ict of such a pretense, was enough, in any case, to make the church, whether in its members, or officers, demand the dis- tinctive marks, and subject such claims to the proper test, just as the Corinthians did PauTs, whose were isuspccted by some not to be genuine. I might here retort, were I so disposed, your odious charge of being gross impostors made against us, and frame an hypothetical argument, just as you did, to prove it. If the Apostolic office was designed of God to be of temporary conliauance, for extraordinary and 175 specific purposes, and none could lay clainn to it, but men who had been directly called and commissioned by Christ, empowered to work miracles, and miracu- lously, visibly, to impart the gifts of the Spirit by the laying on of their liands, then all, who have not been so called, commissioned, and empowered, to work miracles themselves, and to impart tlje miraculous gifts of the Spirit to others, but who yet claim to be Apos- ties, are gross impostors. So far as argument is con- cerned, I have just as full a right, and firm a ground, to retort your charge against ''Episcopal Bishops," who claim to be Aposilcs, as you had to make it against us, who have not been Episcopally ordained. But I would not think of doing so. For I perceive, that through a fond desire, to assert, and to maintain, your lofty power, you have been beguiled to change tho very design and nature of the Apostolic office ; and thus, claiming powers and authority, distinguishable, in every essential respect, from those of the Apostles, you cannot, and ought not, to be charged with inten- tional deception. You have only erred, as we chari- tably think, in your estimate of the Apostolic office ; and we are happy to regard, and to confide in you a? christian n)en and brothers. It would have been just as easy for you, to have charitably judged us to be in error, according to your views, and to have w^ithheld a charge you can never establish, so calculated to wound feelings, to destroy the reputation and useful- I ness of your brethren, and to build up your own on their ruins. Your attempt, to corroborate your argument taken i from the title of Angel, by your remarks relative to 176 the symbolical title of stars given to the ministry, was, 80 fully, anil perfectly shown, by Dr. Mason, in big Review of Essays on Episcopacy, to be inconclusive, that I wonder the attempt has ever been renewed, *^ Stars,'' says he, *M*n the symbolical language, signify, throughout the whole Bible, '' ministers of religion.'' But we contend that they signify ministers of religion with regard to Xhe'w geiirral office, and not with regard to their relative dignity. Jesus Christ is a *'star/' the twelve Apostles are ** stars," and so are the apostate clergy, figured by the *Mhird part of the stars" which the dragon cast down with his tail to the earth. Who does not see, that the only point, in which the symbol agrees to the subject in all these cases, is the common character of the religious ministry, distinction of rank being utterly disregarded. On this principle, tha " stars" must mean the ministers of the churches, with* out discrimination ; everyone being a ''star." It is, therefore, impossible, to discover under this emblem, any order of ministers to the exclusion of any other. *'In this general reasoning, the Hierarchy might, per- haps, concur without much prejudice to the cause. She might insist, that a symbol, coaimon, in its own nature, to all ministers of religion, is restricted, by the conditions of the text, to a single individual, who, frona the functions ascribed to him, must be a superior offi- cer, and not one of a college, Concessus, or Presbyte* ry, having equal authority. *• There is internal evidence, in the passage itself, that this construction, though ingenious and acute, can- not be true. For, as the "candlesticks" are emblema- tical of the churches, and as there is but one star to 177 give light to each candlestick, it would follow, that there was but a single minister to each of the churches; and thus the Episcopalian would overthrow himself: for without inferior, there can be no superior, clergy. Surely, he will not say, that the Bishop alone did all the preaching, and all the instruction, and set a// the example, i. e. emitted all the light on account of which ministers are called ** stars." The other clergy had some share in ihcse functions. They too, '* preached the word ;'* they too, ** taught from town to town;" they too, *'lct their light shine before others." Now, one "star" being appropriated to one *' church," as one candle is to cne ** candlestick," it follows, from the nature of the comparison, that as one candle, is the full comphincnt of light for one candlestick, so one star, is the full complement of light for one c^hurch. But the light, which shone in these churc:hcs, did not ema- nate from any individual ; (your assumption being that there w^ere churches at Ephesus, gives point to the Doctor's remark,) it emanated from a number of indi- viduals ; from the collective body of the ministers of religion. Therefore, the *' star" which expresses the whole light in one of these churches, is a symbol, not of a single minister, but of her ministry c'Aleclively. It would be a darksome Diocese, indeed, which should enjoy no rays of light but those which proceed from the Bishop."* **The *^ani]:els," and ''stars," in the context before 'us, do NOT signify single persons, but a number of men ; that is ail emblems of a collective ministry, and not of a Diocesan bishop. ♦Dr. Mason's works, vol. Ill, pp. 145, 40-53. 178 **Thus cndclh the second lesson, which is concerning (the) *• absolute dcmonslration," that ihe angels of iho seven cluirchcs of Asia were Episcopal prelates." When Dr. Mason's argumenis, exhibited at large in his Review of Essays on Episcopacy, shall have been nnet and answered, you may talk about evidence sufii- cicnt lo prove ihal the Angels were ** Episcopal Bi- fihops," but certainly not before. In the mean time, I pursue the course of your argument. You adduce the teslimony of Ignatius, to prove, that the Bishops, of the first century, were of unorder supe- rior to Presbyters — ** Episcopal Bishops." I am truly surprised, and somewhat grieved, that you should have 80 incautiously expressed yourself, and affirmed, for un» deniable fact, what, if you had ever been at the pains to read more than the one side of this controversy, yon must have known, has not only been denied, but with strong circumstanlial evidence to support if, that tho epistles ascribed to Ignatius are not genuine. You say of ihcm, *' it is evidence, which cannot be denied, forwo rely uprni it, with other testimony, to prove the canon of scripture. If it be rejected, vc may ol once give up the word of God, and throw ourselves into the hands of infidels." Far, vciy far, are we from admitting tho conclusiveness, or from seeing any thing but the incon- sidcrateness, of such a remark. The authenticity, and genuineness, of the canon of scripture, are not depen- dent on the testimony or writing of Ignatius. The in- ternal evidence, even of the seven epistles — which aro all, bearing his name, that arc claimed to be genuine— is very strong, which refers them to a much later date, than the first ccutury. 181 There certainly are some things in them, which de* ,servedly impair cur confidence in the opinion of Ignatius or leather in the genuineness of the epistles attributed to ^ him, and which have been lately published in a beautiful ^edition, by the Oxford Tractators. They are very dif- . ferent from the other productions, we have of the first „ century. Dr. Cooke is forced, upon the authority of Dr. Lardner, to admit, that the larger epistles are in- terpolations of the smaller; and that the smaller, those f,only now claimed to be genuine, bear evident proofs .of interpolation, adapted to the times of the Arian ^controversy, which rose two centuries after the pe- riod, at which Ignatius is said to have written them ; but he thinks, that while on this subject, they may be ..suspected, they are, nevertheless, entitled to our confi- [^dence, on the subject of church ordcr.^ They cer- Ijtainly hold a style of language, on this subject, to- y tally unlike any thing in the word of God, amounting .^! to something very near impiety, and directly at war, r. both with the spirit and letter of Christ's instructions and I commands to his Apostles. Dr. Cooke has referred to T| some passages in these epistles, which he has italicised, 5! and which, had we nothing else, are so unlike the ex- 5; hortations of Christ, and of the Apostles, but so like J the age when it is confessed the anti-Arian interpola- j lions were made, as to destroy their authority. Thus I the author says, that Onesimus, the Bishop of the Ephe- 5 sians, was to be ** respected as the Lord Himself,''! ^ In the epistle to the Smyrneans, the church at Tralles \ were advised *^ to respect the Bishop as Jesus Christ." I* See works on Episcopacy, v. II, p. 252. tEp, adEph., VI. 16 182 *' Whatsoever the Bishop shall approve ofy that I8 also PLEASING TO GoD.'^* Romc coulcl Qslv, and has claim* cd, no higher infalHbihty. *' It is a good ihing to have a regard, both lo God and lo ihe Bishop. He thai honors thk Bishop .shall be honohed of God. Blt HE THAT does ANY THING WITHOUT HISJ KNOWLEDGEf MINISTERS UNTO THE DEVIL." Thc confcssional, there-- fore, is indispensable lo salvation. '^Hearken unto THE Bl.-^HOP, THAT Goi) MAY ALSO HEARKEN UNTO VOU. My so»l be security for them (hat submit to their Bishop^^^X &c. This is equal to the blind faith of the Papist, who ventures wholly on the Priest. It is ob- vious, that one prominent object, in these epistles, is to exalt the Bishop, lo aggrandize ecclesiastical authority, and if the pointed anti-Arian expressions, arc justly deemed proofs of interpolations made in thc third or fourth century, so also may those about the power of the Bishop, so zealously and pointedly pressed. I shall have a fitter occasion to notice your quota- lions from these epistles, in my next letter. In the meanlime, enough has been said to show, how very questionable is thc genuineness of these epistles, and how very rash it is, to make our belief, in the sacred canon, lo depend on such evidence. Therc is, over and above what I have referred lo, unquestionable proof of forgery in them, for the epistle lo the church at Phila- delphia, represents him as calling God lo witness ^^that ihe spirit spake saying these things: Do nothing without your Bishopy^^ &c. — on which Dr. Wilson, has very justly remarked: " the position is unsound, the inspira- ♦Ep.to Sinyrn., VIII. t Lathra, privately, secretly. ^Ep. lo Poly carp, VI. 18S lion at best a delusion, and the oalh a falsehood, of all which, the pious Ignatius was probably clear/'^ No such testimony from the Spirit is recorded in the sacred scriptures. Both the internal and external evidence of the genuineness of these epistles, fails, and the proofs of interpolation are so glaring, that they cannot be quo- ted, as historical testimony of the first century. All that is said about the piety of Ignatius, of the time when he lived, and so justly, of his conversing with the Apostles, and of his martyrdom so glorious, is to no purpose, as long as his own genuine productions have not come down to us, and it is notorious, that his name was used to dignify a forgery of much later dale. I ^ Beside, even granting the genuineness of the seven epistles in every word, there is not one syllable in them which proves, the existence of Diocesan or any other Episcopacy than parochial — or the Bishop, Presbytery , and Deacons of Ignatius, to be difTerent from the Pas- tor, Elders or Deacons of a single churcli worshipping .together in one place. Ignatius is careful to associate a Presbytery or Eld- I ership with the Bishop, and also Deacons. I have exa- I mined carefully all his seven epistles, in which, the Eld- ' ers or Deacons are spoken of by him as preachers of \ the gospel, or reference is made to their duties as such. I The people are required to obey them, and they are called or compared to the Sanhedrim, the court of judges, and to a concessus of x\postles, associated with the Bishop. But while the people are exhorted to obey, and be subject also to the Bishop, he is distinctly recognized as the one of cAie/* authority and influence, * Wilson on the primitive government of the christian churches, p. 54. 184 to whom they should attend. In his letter to the church at Smyrna, not the churches, but a single assembly, he expresses himself, in terms not to be mistaken, and which cannot, on any legitimate principles of gram- matical interpretation, be applied to a Bishop of a Dio- cese, or to any other than the parochial Bishop or Pas- tor of a parish. '* Shun divisions, as the beginning of evils. Let all follow the Bishop as Jesus Christ the Father; and the Eldership or Presbytery as the Apos- tles. But revere the Deacons as ihe commandment of God. Let no one without ihc Bishop do any of these things which belong to the church. Let that Eucharist be accounted valid, which is (oflcrcd or administered) by the Bishop, or by whom he may appoint. Where the Bishop may appear, there lot the multitude be (the as- sembly — the crowd of worshippers,) just as where Christ Jesus is, there is the Catholic church. It is not lawful, without the Bisliop, cither to baptize or to cele- brate the feast, but w hatevcr he may approve, that also may be pleasing to God, that what is done may be sure and firm.'** This cannot consistently be referred to a Diocese, but refcMs appropriately to a parish. For the Bishop is the only person competent to baptize, or to adminis- ter the Lord's supper. The Eucharistic bread and wine must be oflered by him or some one else, to whom he commits it — and where he is, there the multitude is to assemble. All this is said by Ignatius, in the section or paragraph of his letter, in which he speaks of the evils of division. I quote from the late Oxford edition of the Apostolic Fathers, Clement, Ignatius, &c. The ♦Ep. adSmyr., VHI. 185 translation given in the appendix of Dr. Cooke's work, volume II, of Tracts of Episcopacy, from which I per- ceive you quote, has attached these words: ** avoid all divisions as the beginning of evils," to the preceding [)[iragraph, but which, introducing the paragraph as I have given it, form the key to its meaning, and evi- dently direct us to the assembly of the communicants, where the Bishop of the parish, who alone is compe- tent, administers the ordinances. You will say, that the words of Ignatius are to be differently understood, and explain them according to your system of church order and government, as ap- plying to Diocesan Episcopacy; but however plausible your explanation might be, admitting the existence, of the three orders, and of a Diocese, which we do not, there is proof, from the early Fathers of later date than that assigned to Ignatius' epistles, and even from Igna- tius himself, that ours was the received interpretation at that day. Thus he says, ^* there is but one alta)\ as there is but one Bishop,''* which is not the case where you have several churches — each church having its al- tar, where the Priest officiates. In like manner, he says, '^ therefore, just as the Lord did nothing without the Father, being united to Him, neither by himself nor by His Apostles, so neither do ye any thing without the Bishop and the Elders, (or Presbyters;) neither at- tempt any thing that may appear suitable to reason in your own private judgment, but being come together in- to THE SAME PLACE, let there be one prayer, one sup- plication, one mind, one hope in love and in the joy that is undefiled. Jesus Christ is one than whom nothing *Ep. adPhilad. 16=^ 186 is better. Do ye, therefore^ con^ together as to one temple, as to one altar, as to one Jesus Christ,"* &c. There can be no mistake about the meaning here. All are to come together into ike same place. This is not Diocesan, and cannot be — but parochial Episcopacy, or Presbyterianism — and where there is ooe Bishop, Eldership and Deacon, all assembling together, around the same table, to receive the bread and wine from one administrator, cither from his hands directly, or through those to whom he commits them, to be con- veyed to the communicants. The passage from the epistle to tlve Magnesians, il- lustrates, and confirms our explanation of that from the epistle to the Smyrneans. This is further corrobora- ted, by the testimony of Juslin Martyr. **The Bishop's whole Diocese met together on Sunday, when the Bi- shop gave them the Eucharist; and if any were absent, he sent it to theni by the Deacons.''! Tcrtullian also says^ '' lliat christians received the sacrament of iho Lord's supper, from the hands of the Bishop alone.^J These (juotations may sullice to show, how litlle aid you obtain from Ignatius' epistles interpolated, and ante-dated by two centuries, and spurious as they may be, in support of the high claims of Episcopacy, as- serted by you. Such is ** the proof which you say *Ms full and ought to be conclusive," in favor of the Apostolic superiority of ** Episcopal Bishops!" Par- don me, my dear sir, if I say it ought to be no sucli thing. It wants the essentials of proof ; and if admit- ted at all, works far more against than for your positions. * Ad Ma?.. VII. See also Kp. ad E >h., XIII. ♦ Con. arid Dis. of nrim. ch., p. 19. t Idem. 187 A word or two only, now, is necessary, in reply to what you say about Polycarp. Admilting all you af- firm, that he was the Bishop of Smyrna, at the lime, and the person to whom the epistle by St. John was written — that he too was called the Angel of the church — the very Bishop whom Ignatius exhorted El- ders and Presbyters, Deacons and Laity, to obey — and that he was ordained as Irenasus, Polycarp's disciple, says he was, by the Apostles — it proves, neither more nor less, than that he was parochial Bishop of the church of Smyrna ; and that is all it proves. You have rightly said^ that the opinions of these early fathers are no authority, but that they arc credi- ble witnesses of facts. We reject not their testimo- ny as to facts, though wc do not magnify it as you do, or rely so much upon it, to prove the Bible. But we do reject your construction of their testimony, and your attempt to pass it off for the fads. Should I even reject Ignatius' testimony as to facts, and be- lieve that his letters are not genuine, I should be very far from being the least affected, by your great alarm, about the proof that the Bible was given us of God. You say, ^' if their testimony to facts, as I have al ready observed, is rejected^ it is impossible^ to prove that the book which we call the Bible and which we prize as the great chart, given to us of God to guide us in our voy- age through life is true." I presume you mean to say, that it is, by the writings, not of Ignatius, but of all the Fathers in succession, as they have quoted the sacred scriptures, we identify the book, they call the Bible with what God gave — the original deed; and that, if we reject their testimony as to facts, in one case, we must 188 in all, and therefore cannot prove the chain of title, the authenticity of the original instrument. Yet you have so staled it, as to make every thing turn on giving credit to Ignatius' epistles. We can reject them, and more too, if proved to be spurious, and yet have abun- dant proof of the authenticity of the Bible. In the heat of your argument, and anxiety to silence us by the word of Ignatius, you have been betrayed, to say the least, into a very incorrect statement of the issue between us and the infidel. LETTER XIL the testimony of the fathers. Rev. and dear sir: It is rather an ungracious task, I confess, to point out to a friend, the looseness with wliich he may ex- press himself. It ought not, in ordinary parlance, lo be done; for the petty critic, who is always fiiiding fault with expressions, when the meaning is obvious, renders himself odious to all. But, in the statement and prosecution of an argument, where it is essential. that words be well defined, and that their meaning should not fluctuate, it is very different. In that cnse it becomes an important duty to notice such vagueness, in order to expose the fallacy of the argument, or the speciousness of the sophistry. If w^ords have been used, which admit of different senses, and require a dif- ferent meaning, in the conclusion, from what they do in the premises, truth requires the exposure. Nothing but this sort of necessity, imposed on me by the struc- ture of your argument, induces me to notice how you actually contradict yourself, and nullify your whole ar- gument. ''The name Apostle," you say, '-has been confined to the first rulers in the church, that is the Apostolic 190 age. After this age, as we learn from Theodoret, one of the Fathers, the term Bishop was taken from the se- cond order of ministers, and appropriated to the first. •6f//, therefore, that is said of Bishops in the ^New Testa- ?ne?ity is to be regarded as belonging to the middle grade, who are now designated by the term Elder or Presbyter. The highest order in the scriptures, is called by the word Apostle, but is now^ and has been, since the Apostolic age, designated by the term '• Bishop.'* In so saying, you abandon the proof from Ignatius, whom you quote to establish the point ** that the min- istry consisted of three grades — Bishops, Presbyters or Elders, and Dciicons.'' Ignatius, I admit, uses these three exprossioi.s, the Bishops, Eldership or Presbyte- ry, and Deacons, very often. You have snid that this proof, of the superior and inferior grades in the minis- try, **ougiit to be conclusive." You, certainly, there- fore, will not object to my holding you to your own acknowledged obligations, though I have protested against them, atid shown, that thoy have no binding authority on us who suspect the genuineness of Igna- tius epistles, or at least, account many parts of them to be interpolations made in subsecjuent centuries. Theodoret, to whom you refer, was of the fifth cen- tury, having died A. D. 457, aged 71 years. It is strange that you should have come down to so late a period for the proof, that the word Bishop belonging to the second grade, and i. r.. Presbytery or Eldership, should have hern appropriated to the first, and been made to supersede that of yXpostles. But Ignatius be- longed to the Apostolic age; for you have told us, 191 *^ thai Ignatius was made Bishop of Antioch, by St. Peter, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Evodius/'* and that too thirty-six years before the death of the Apostle John, having *• suffered martyrdonn about the tenth year of Trajan, which was only four years after the death of John the Apostle — at which time Ig- natius lead been forty years the Bishop of ^intioch,'^'^ Who then was the Bishop of the church of Ephesus, of Smyrna, and of others, of whom Ignatius speaks ? Theodoret, you affirm, says, that in the Apostolic age, the Presbyters or Elders, 2. e., the second grade, w^ere called Bishops, but the highest grade, Apostles, and you quote his testimony, as conckisive authority. Of course then, you arc shut up to one or other of these two , conclusions. Either, that the epistles of Ignatius w^ere not of the Apostolic age, but were the production of the third century after it, just as we think their internal levidence proves; or, that the Bishop of the Apostolic age, z. e., the Bishop referred to by Ignatius, was mere- ly a parochial Biphop, primus inter pares — the first of the Eldership or Presbytery, to which grade or class of officers he belonged — tlie Moderator or President as he is called. If Ignatius ever meant to convey the idea of Apostle's successoi's, it was the Elders or Presby- ters he accounted such.'-^ One or other you must ad- mit, for Ignatius does not once use the word Apostle as the title to designate the person he calls Bishop. If you admit the first, viz: the spuriousness of the epistles ^attributed to Ignatius, then, even the shadow of your proof of the three orders of the ministry, in the Apos- tolic age, vanishes; for Ignatius is your main reliance, ' *SeeEp.adMagn., VI. Ad Trail., II. 192 and the only one, you have referred to, among the unin- spired writers of the Apostolic age. If you prefer the latter horn of this dilemma, then you concede Ignatius to us, and his testimony goes for parity and Presbyle- rianism, not for [prelacy. Adhering, therefore, to your avowed obligations to receive the proof which "ought to be conclusive,'' I should anticipate your return to Presbyterianism, did I not know, that there is some- thing very dazzling and captivating, something exceed- ingly fascinating and enchanting, in an '* Episcopal throne.'' Yet have there been some, who were not so dazzled by the splendors of a Bisiioj)hric, but that they could see, and acknowledge, the truth in this matter. Such was Bishop Croft, whose testimony I submit, before I pass to the cxauMnalion of that of Theodore!, your next witness. In his Naked Truth, this Bishop says: ** I hope my readers will see what weak proofs are brought for this distinction and superiority of order — no scripture, no primitive general council, no general consent of primitive doctors and fathers; no, not even primitive fathers of note speaking particularly, and home to our purpose; only a touch of Epiphanius, and St. Austin upon Alius, the Arian heretic, but not de- clared, no, not by them, an heretic in this particular of Episcopacy.''* * The State of tlu' Primiwvr ('!r,:r.-li, pp. I'l, ^'l, *i^, &.c. 193 And now, as to the testimony of Theodoret. Al- though you have not quoted or referred, specifically, to the passage, I shall. His words are, as taken from his commenlary on the first epistle to Timothy: ** but what I have already said — they called the same (persons,) formerly, Presbyters and Bishops — those, at this day called Bishops, they called Apostles. But, in process of time, they relinquished the name of Apostleship (or Apostolic office,) to those who were in reality Apostles; but they gave the appellation of the Episcopate, to those formerly called Apostles. Claudius Salmasius, in his Dissertation against D. Petavius Loyolita, written more than two hundred years ago, examined, very critically, and at great length, this testimony of Theodoret. I give you his language. *^He," viz: Theoderet, '' acknowledges, what we have before said, two kinds of Apostles — for those whom he calls ALETHOS APOSTOLous, inreallty Apostles, he distin- guishes, by this name, from them who were not in re- ality Apostles. Such were they, whose labors the Apostles used to constitute churches, viz: Titus, Timo- thy, Epaphroditus, Linus, Mark, and if there were any others of this sort, whom also the ancient Church called .apostles. These were the sent of the Apostles, that is, Apostles. But the Apostles in reality were the sent of Christ himself. Theodoret, therefore, says, that for- merly, in the times of the Apostles, the same (persons) were called Bishops and Presbyters — tous autous EKALOUN poTE Presbyterous kai Episcopous. For, says he, there could not be a plurality of Bishops in one church. But, it appears, that these very same (persons) were bishops of the highest grade, who also 17 194 ordained and fed the flock of Christ, and were called Pastors, But they were not the less, also, called Pres- byters, because the first and second grades were, at thai tinne, one and the same, and were united in one person. They who were above the same Bishops and Presby- ters, were called Apostles of cither kind, that is, as well, the Apostles in reality immediately appointed by Christ, as those, who, being wont to be sent by the Apostles to constitute churches, were designated by this name, ministers of the Apostles, helps, fellow sol- diers. These held the same place in the church, above Presbyters and Bishops, as long as they constituted one grade, which, afterwards, the Bishops obtained, when the distinction of grades was introduced, and the Bi- shops were placed above Presbyters. Toi's autous FKALOT-N POTT, Pnr.SnTrTFROI'S KAI EpISCOPOUS, ApOS- TOLOus ONOMADSON. They who now are called Bi- shops answer to those then named Apostles; that is, they obtain the same authority above Presbyters which the Apostles — by whom the churches were or- ganized, themselves also sent of the Apostles to or- ganize them — formerly obtained above Presbyters cal" led also Bishops, seeing that it was the custom for those too to be called Apostles. But in process of time, they relinquished the name of Apostleship, to those who were truly called Apostles, (Apostles in reality, the Apostles of Christ:) but they imposed the appella- tion of the Episcopate on those who formerly were called Apostles, [L e.. Apostles of the Apostles.)' After the distinction of grades was made, and the Eldership or Presbytery was divided from the Apostleship, which formerly were blended, the name of Apostleship was 196 properly given, to those who were truly Apostles, viz: the veritable Apostles of the greater nations. Ten DE EPISKOPES PROSEGORIAN TOIS PALAI KALOUMENOIS APOSTOLois EPETETiiESAN — that is, ihey imposed the appellation of Episcopate on those who w^ere formerly called Apostles, viz: on the helps and ministers, or those sent of the Apostles who used their labor and min- istry to constitute Bishops in every city. For when, in churches to be instituted, they would exercise the Apostolic function, and would act, in place of the Apos- tles, they were accounted instead of Apostles, and were so called, and had almost equal authority and power over churches and Bishops of the churches, which the Apostles themselves had, over those whom they had constituted thew Apostles. But w hen the Bishops be- came greater than Presbyters, and were placed in a higher grade, the following age called even the Bishops themselves no longer Apostles, the name of Apostles being left to those who had in reality exercised the Apostolic functions."* This explanation of the meaning of Thcodoret, in the passage to which you refer, Salmasius substantiates by a variety of considerations, expending the most with- ering sarcasm on I^oyolita, who had declared, that the language of Theudorct, in the passage, was involved, and his meaning inexplicable. You seem to be aware, after all, that you can make nothing of the name, and therefore, in common with Bishops Onderdonk, Hopkins, and others, you fall back upon the office of the Bishops, which you think you have proved to be identical with that of the Apostles ; * Walonis' Mcssalini Disserlatio, pp. 50-5*2. 196 ^1 but which we have shown was essentially different. You have allowed yourself to indulge, in a sort of So- cratic reasoning, which, I must confess frankly, has ex-ii cited strong suspicions in my mind, as to the extentfl and accuracy with which you have examined the his- tory of the church. You ask, on the supposition ofj ministerial parity, and no Apostolic succession, *' is iti not strange that it should have been considered so un-^ fitted for the church of Christ, as to be banished from it before the close of the first century ? There is not a trace of it to be found." I suppose you mean ministe- rial parity, and if so, I am perfectly at issue with you on a point of fact. I have examined all your argu- ments thus far advanced, and have not found any thing like proof 'Mliat the Apostolic office was transferred from one to another, and that it was supreme. Thai there were inferior grades in the ministry — Presbyters | and Deacons.'^ You have not produced either from the scriptures, or from Ignatius, any thing like proof. For the meaning you attribute to the expressions you have quoted, you have not even attempted to prove to be the only true and proper one, but have as- sumed, that they meant, just what you say they did, and what suited your argument. I have shown that they did not, and could not, mean, what you say they did. How perfectly out of place, therefore, is your question, which may have its effect upon those who never reason, but on none other — "how could such an office, as was held, by the Apostles, and afterwards by the Bishops their successors, ever arise in the church, without it had been fully sanctioned by the great Head of the church ? It is impossible." When, you an- 197 swer HOW, such an office could arise in the church as has been claimed to have been derived from the Apos- tles, by the Popes, their successors, without its having been sanctioned fully by God, it will be time enough yeq, unnecessary to reply to your question. So far from the thing being impossible, it has actually been done, and you are bound to show, how such offices as Arch-bishops, Metropolitans, Patriarchs, Cardinals and Popes, could have arisen, in the church, without being fully sanctioned by God; and until you do so, your de- claration, '^ it is impossible," will only excite a smile, unless, indeed, you turn papist outright, and go the whole at once — carrying your interrogatory through Bishops, and the whole troop of high dignitaries up to his holiness ^' the Lord God the Pope," Vicar General of Jesus Christ on Earth and Minister Plenipotentiary of Heaven. But even this — however more consistent it would make your interrogatory — would not screen you, from the charge of ignorance of the history of the Church, to which you have exposed yourself by the following remarks : '• They are too jealous of their rights ever to have yielded to such an assump- tion of power without a struggle. And if so, where is the evidence of any opposition on their part] The word of God is silent — all history is silent ! And who could have been the usurper] We might as well expect that history would be silent in reference to our own civil revolution, as to expect silence in so remark- able and complete an ecclesiastical revolution, as must have taken place, when Bishops were made the su- preme rulers of the church. It cannot be." Are you so ignorant of history, as not to know, that the cases 17^ 198 are most numerous, where men have yielded their rights without a struggle when the encroachments have been gradually and imperceptibly made? — how common is it to give new names to things, and having familiarized the ears of men to them, gradually slide off from their original meaning and make names be- come things] — how the most oppressive despotism and tyranny have grown up, and been submitted to, and all for the defence of freedom as it was thought ] — how changes liave been silently wrought, under false preten- ces, and the power obtained, which afterwards could not be resisted? Are you ignorant of the history of both Greece and Rome? — of the regular growth of almost all kinds of oppression that has been in the world, and which have advanced, more by art and de- ception, than by arms and bloodshed ; and of the influ- ence which synods, councils and conventions have had in the church? I am utterly amazed, at the manner in which you have expressed yourself, and feel com- pelled to quote to you, for your information on the subject of the origin and growth of the Hierarchy, the account which Jerome, one of your own authorities, has given of these things. ** A Presbyter, therefore, is the same as a Bishop ; and before there were, bij the instigation of the devil, parties in religion, and it was said by different people, I am of Paul, and I of Apollos, and I of Ceplias, the churches were governed by the joint counsel of the Presbyters. But afterwards, when every one accoun- ted those whom he baptized as belonging to himself and nat to Christ, it was decreed, throughout the whola world, that one, chosen from among the Presbyters, 199 should be put over the rest, and that the whole care of the church, should be commitled to him, and ihe seeds of schism be taken away. ** Should any one think, that this is ir.y private opin- ion, and not the doctrines of the scriptures. let them read the words of the Apostle, in his epistle to the Phi- lippians : *'Paul and Timotheus the servants of Jesus Christ, to all the saints in Christ Jesus, which are at Philippi, wnth the Bishops, and Deacons,*' &c. Philippi is a single city of Macedonia ; and certainly, in one city, there could not be several Bishops^ as they are xow STYLED ; but as they, at that time, called the very same persons Bishops, whom they called Presbyters, the Apostle has spoken without distinction of Bishops as Presbyters. '* Should this matter yet appear doubtful to any one, unless it be proved by an additional testimony ; it is written in the acts of the Apostles, that when Paul had come to Miletum, he sent to Ephesus, and called the Presbyters of that church, and among other things, said to them, * take heed to yourselves, and to all the flock in which the Holy Spirit hath made you Bishops/ Take particular notice, that calling the Presbyters of the single city of Ephesus, he afterw^ards names the same persons. Bishops,*' Other quotations are made from the epistle to the Hebrews, and from Peter, and he then states: '*• our in- tention, in making these remarks, is to show, that^ among the ancients, Preshyiers and Bishops were the very same. But that by little and little, that the plants of dissentions might be plucked up, the w^hole concern was devolved upon an individual. As the 200 Presbyters, therefore, know that they are subjected, BY THE CUSTOM OF THE CHURCH, to him who is set over them, so let the Bishop know, that they are greater than Presbyters more by custom, than by I ANY REAL APPOINTMEX T." * The same things are stated by Jerome, with great j point, in his letter to Evagrius. Here, then, is a full, I distinct, and formal answer given to your questions, f and an account of the origin, and growth of Episcopa- } cy, showing directly, how very limited must have been | your reading, or how exceedingly treacherous must i be your memory, to admit of your having so boldly af- i firmed, that *'all history is silent,'' on the subject of the rise and progress of ihc Episcopacy, for whicli you plead, viz: the three orders and the Bishops' Apos- tolical supremacy. Jerome says, explicitly, that it grew up, ** little hy little," and obtained **more BY CUSTOM, t/uni hy ani/ real appointment,''^ You cannot object to the testimony of Jerome. He lived in the fourth and fifth centuries, having been born about A. D. 331, and died in 420 — was a man of great learning in his day — abundantly competent to investi- gate the history of the times before him — was himself attached to Episcopacy, and, therefore, by no means a prejudiced witness. Doctor Bowden affirms, that ** when he is not obscure, no writer of antiquity has stronger testimony to the Apostolic institution of Epis- copacy.''! The obscurity of which he speaks, is in the above and similar passages of Jerome's writings; but it is only to the eye of an Episcopalian, that there is ♦Opera Hieron. torn., VI, p. 19?. t Rovvden's letters, XXI, p. 324. 201 any obscurity in what we have quoted from Jerome. And here, it may be as convenient, as in any other place, to notice, what occasions that obscurity, and whence so great reliance is placed upon, the opinioni of the Fathers, and quotations from them, with which Episcopal writers, such as Dr. Bowden, and Dr. Cooke and others abound. It is not denied, that prelacy flour- ished soon after the first century, and that Episcopacy changed its character from Parochial to Diocesan very early. Nor is it denied that the Fathers whom Dr, Bowden and others have quoted, speak of and describe the very Diocesan Episcopacy, which he, in opposition to Dr. Miller's views, claims to be of divine origin; but their description and averment of what existed in their day, do not prove, that it existed in the Apostolic age; nor that it was of divine origin. It is of no manner of use to quote the Fathers, speak- ing of what was in their day, and to try to pass it ofl* as proof of what existed in the Apostles' days. We cannot be imposed upon in this w^ay. We require proof, from the scriptures, and from the Apostolic age. That has not yet been produced; and notwithstanding all the parade, that has been made of the Fathers, whose opinions you have admitted are of no great au- thority, the Diocusan character of Episcopacy, was, at one time, in this country, affirmed, by high Episcopal authority, to bo no way involved in the general ques- tion, it being maintained only, that the Bishops were of the superior order, with exclusive power to ordain, and the fact, or extent of their Diocese, being no way connected with the subject. Yea, reproach was cast on some — who discussed the claims of Episcopacy, de- 202 nying any thing like a Diocesan character to the Bishops of the New Testament — for being ignorant on the subject. Give up Diocesan claims, and Episcopacy will become, very soon, identical with the Presbytery of the Apostolic days. It is the fact of Diocesan sway, that gives prelatical Episcopacy its power. That such Episcopacy ever existed, or was authorized, in Apos- tolic days, has never been proved; nor can it be. Your main reliance is on the testimony of Ignatius, from whom you have liberally quoted. I have already said, that the genuineness of the productions ascribed to Ignatius may \vell be doubted ; that there are many in- ternal evidences, indicating, that they are the production of a later period than the first century ; and that even when admitted to be genuine, they aflbrd no more proof of the Episcopacy for which you plead, nor of the lower orders and inferiority of Elders and Deacons to the Bishops, than you can find among Presbyterians who have their Bishops, Elders and Deacons. I only add, to what I have already said on this sub- ject, that, as a witness, Ignatius, or rather the author of the seven epistles bearing his name, is not entitled to implicit credit. The author betrays gross ignorance of the scriptures in several cases, quoting or referring to passages as scripture, which are not in the New Testament, and expressing sentiments as scripture, which cannot bo legitimately inferred from it. In his epistle to the Trallians, he says, aideisthe de kai TON EPISKOPOX, HUMON H0« ChRISTOxN, KATHO HE- MEN noi makartoi dietaxanto Apostoloi, "rever- ence also the Bishop as Christ, as the holy Apostles have commanded us.*' The Apostles never gave such 203 a commandment. From the epistle to the Philadel- phians, you have quoted these words : ** But the Spirit spake saying in this wise, do nothing without the Bishop/' The Spirit never said any such thing, direct- ly, or by implication. Yet this is the witness whose tes- timony you so exalt, and concerning which your lan- guage makes the impression, that the rejection, if not impious, is calculated to slrenirthen infidelity ! ! The next witness, you cite, is Ircna^us. whom you quote in proof of your Apostolic succession, as follows: ** We, he says, can reckon up those whom the Apos- tles ordained to be Bishops in the several churches, and who they were that succeeded them down to our time. And had the Apostles possessed any hidden mys- teries, which they imparled to none but the perfect, (as heretics pretend,) they would have submitted them to those men, to whom they committed the churches themselves ; for they desired to have those in all things perfect and unreproveable, whom they left to be their successors, and to whom they committed their own Apostolic authority ] He then adds, that because it would be endless to enumerate the success! on of Bishops all the churches, he would instance in that of Rome." Now, on this, I remark, that there is no proof that Irena^us meant exactly what you say he did by the succession. He was speaking of the unwillingness of the heretics to be bound, either by the scriptures, or by the traditions of the churches. His object was to disprove their pretending, that they had private mys- teries and were by these means wiser even th:m the Apostles. The passage you quote, I presume, is taken from 204 third chapter of the third book of Irenaeus. The ori- ginal is given in the second volume of Tracts on Epis- copacy, as appended by Dr. Cooke to his work on the invalidity of Presbyterian ordination. His translation will be found in the 130lh section, which, allow nne to say, is much more correct than the one you quote.* The words *' whom they left to be their (Apostles) suc- cessors, and to whom they committed their own Apo8- TOLic authority" arc a very free translation which Dr. Cooke would not venture to give. I have no h(3si- tation in pronouncing it unsustainable. The v/ords are QUOS ET f^UCCESSORES RELINQUEBANT SVVM IPSOilUM LOCUM MAOISTERII TRADENTES. Thc phraSC r UUM IP- SORUM LOCUM MAGisTERii, which vou havc rendered ** their own •Apostolic auUwrihj,^' means no such thing ; but having asumed the identity of the Apostolic and Episcopal ofiicc, by a free translation, you use ihe word Apostolic. Thc passage reads, ** for they very much desired, that they should be perfect, and irrc|)rc- hensible in all things, whom they were leaving their successors, delivering their own place of their magis- tracy" or governmentnl rule. This is a very difierent thing from their Apostolic office. We have already shown, that whatever power the Apostles exercised, in the way of ordaining and governing the church, their MAGisTERiuM, was that of Presbyters, appropriate to that character and office, which they sustained in common with those, whom they ordained, and intro- duced into the churches. And it was, in this sense, that Irena3us understood the matter. For in the pre- ceding chapter, he says, '^when we appeal to the tra- ♦Tracta on Epis. vol. IL pp. 257-250. I 205 dition, which is from the Apostles, and is preserved in the churches, through the successions of the Presbyters, PER succEssioNEs Presbyterorum, ihcv opposc tra- ditions, saying, that they are wiser, not only than the Presbyters, but even than the Apostles."^ *' To represent the iviagisterium, which was given to officers, indifferently called Presbyters and Bishops, as an authority given to Bishops over Presbyters, is to adopt a conclusion without premises. To say that the i succession and mastership, affirmed by Irenaeus of Bi- ■ shops, who were Presbyters, are a proof, that Bishops, in the modern sense, were intended by him, is the ^e- tiiio princijni, or weakness of begging the question. ^^\ i The succession, of which Irenasus speaks, and the ' magistracy, of the Apostles and Presbyters or Bishops, , are very diff'erent things, from what you represent ! them. Linus and Anacletus and Clemens, and **soon to Eleuthcrius,'^ of whom you speak, as forming the Apostolic succession in the church of Rome, were not called Apostles by Irenoeus, but Presbyters. **It is I proper," says he, '^ to obey those Presbyters, eis pres- 1 byteris, who are in the church, *'his," these who have succession from the Apostles, as we have shown; who with the succession of the Episcopate, qui cum EPiscopATUS successione, have received the sure gift \ of the truth, according to the will of the Father.^J '*The succession from the Apostles, which he some- ii times affirms of Bishops, he also applied to Presbyters;§ r repeatedly thus discoursing, that he accounted Presby- *Irenaeus adversus Hcpreseos, lib. 3. c. 2. s. Q. tSee Wilson on the Prim. G;)V. of the Christian Churches, p. 32. t Irenaeus, lib. IV, c. 'XQ, a. 2, §Lib4, c. 33. 18 206 ters to be Bishops, and Bishops, Presbyters. Where Irenaeus, therefore, makes Presbyters the successors of the Apostles, and ascribes the Episcopacy to Presbyters, he may be considered a very positive, as well as com- petent, witness, to establish, that there were no preach- ers, after the Apostles and Evangelists, of an higher order than that of Presbyters, nor any Presbyters of an inferior grade."^ I have as full right to claim Irenoeus as you have.f His testimony is as strong as to Presbyters, as to Bishops, having spoken of them as identical. Where you have found that he asserted, *' that he had at thai lime a correct list of all who had succeeded to that of- fice, in ALL ike churches from the time in which the ^Qpos- ties lived, down to his own day,^^ I know not. The fact is so singular, that I should be thankful for a reference to the place, although it w^ould not prove any thing more than would a chronological list of the Pastors of our difterent Presbyterian churches, who had succee- ded each other in their several parishes. The testimony of Hegesippus, which you quote to confirm that of Irenanis, is of no value. The writings of Hegesippus have perished, with the exception of the few fragments quoted by Eusebius, and one by Photius, and none of them prove a diversity of office among Presbyters, or a difference of order. All that this tes- timony proves, is, that there were certain men, in cer- tain churches, called Bishops, and that there had been a succession of them. It does not prove that they were Diocesan Bishops, or any other than the Parochiai* * Wilson on the primitive government of christian churches, p. 32. t bee W^alonis' Mesialini Dissertatio, pp. iit>8-'i71. 207 Bishops. For Irenaeus. in his epistle to Victor, refer- ring to the Bishops of Rome, \vho had succeeded So- ter, the 11th from the Apostles — ?. e,, up to his own day, calls them Presbyters. =^ As to the testimony of Cletnens of Alexandria, it is no more decisive, in your favor than the rest. In his ^^ what rich man ca7i be saved,'^\ Clemens relates that John the Apostle, observing a young man, and turning to the Bishop who presided over all^ efi pasi to kathes TOTi PROBLEPSAS EPiSKOPo, Committed him to his care, in the presence of the Chinxh, epi tes ekklesias, who received him, tou deckomenolt. It was, therefore, NOT a collection of churches — but one assembly wor- shipping together, and the Bishop, consequently, was j the parochial Bishop or Pastor. John is then said to have returned, after repeating the charge, to Ephesus. ■^nd the Presbyter taking home, no de presbuteros ( ANALABON oiKADE, tlio youug man that had been com- I mitted to his care, nourished, educated and lost him. , Here we have Clemens, no doubt, in the language of his day, as it had been in that of the Apostles, exprcss- ily denominating the same person both a Bishop and a Presbyter. Also, John, returning, is represented to have addressed him as a Bishop: '* o episkope ; return to us your deposit." It thus appears that a successor of the last Apostle, and by John himself styled a Bishop, was notw^ilhstanding a Presbyter.^'^lj. J ' Your next witness is Polycrates ; but his testimony is no more to the point, than that of all the rest ; yea, rather less. You cite him only to prove ^' that Bishops * Lib. 5, 20. tCh.42, p.87. ' J Wilson on the primitive government of chriilian churcheg, p. 40. 208 were settled in all the churches.'^ This is exactly what we have affirmed. Every church had its own Bishop or Pastor. You have not proved, that they were Dio- cesan Bishops, or Bishops of a grade superior to Pres- byters. We have evidence to the contrary, even fronri the mouth of Polycrates, for as you correctly state, Eusebius,* represents him to have said that there were '^ seven Bishops of his own kindred, and great multi- tudes of Bishops who assembled with him, to consult about the time of Easter.'^ It is a very rare thing to find seven cotemporancous Diocesan Bishops of the same kindred, and ** great multitudes" of Diocesans, as- sembling together, but it is not of parochial Bishops or Pastors. In Tcrtullian's testimony, quoted by you, there is no more proof than in Polycrates', of a divinely ap- pointed order of Bishops superior to Presbyters; but there is of the contrary. The highest priest, (not the High-priest,) was the chief presiding Presbyter. The word docs not, as TertuIIian uses it, apply to an order^ but to the individual. The highest, implies in- feriors of the same kind — ^just as the chief priest stood at the head, or was accounted the first of his band. We have found no trace of a superior order, but all along the Bishops and Presbyters are spoken of as be- ing of the same order — the Bishop being the presiding officer of the Presbytery — as we say, the Moderator. Whatever diversity existed, between the Bishop and Presbytery, to which TertuIIian refers, it did not spring from any original divinely instituted difTerence of order. For TertuIIian, in the very passage you *EcclC8iaatlcal History, B. V. C, 24. 209 quote, ** founds the authority of Bishops upon its ne- cessity for the preservation of the honor and peace of the church, and not upon any scriptural or Apostolical ordination or appointnnent/'* The peace of the church required that the adnnini»- tration of baptism should be under the direction of the Presbytery, in every congregation or church, and be perfornned, either by the presiding Presbyter, or by Bome other for him. Cases have occurred, in Presby- terian churches, where strict attention has been neces- sary to this thing. Yea, it is accounted injurious to the peace of the church, and altogether improper, where there arc several Presbyters and ministers of the gos- pel, living in the same place, and worshipping in the same church, for any one of them, to administer bap- tism in the congregation, but the parochial Bishop, or at his request. I have been so situated, that several of my ministerial brethren were regular members of my congregation, and Worshipped with us, yet none of them ever thought of administering baptism even to the members of their own families. They invariably acted on the rule which you quote Tertullian as sajing was observed for the peace of the church. Not one of the authorities you quote, proves the point for which they have been cited. ♦ Wilson on ihe primitive government of the cbrietiau churches, p. 42. 18* LETTER XIII. the apostolical successiox. Rev. and dear sir: My attention shall be turned, in this letter, distinct- ly to the Apostolical succession, which, on the au- thority of Eusebiu?, you say is brought down to the council of Nice, in the year 325, **and is so marked, that no link is broken in the chain which connects the Bishops with the Apostles, and of course with Christ.'' In doing so, it becomes proper to bring into view, what you mean by the phrase ** Apostolical succession,'^ and w^hat has been deemed; by prelatical writers, es- sential to it. It is very evident, to every attentive reader, that you mean by the *•' Apostolical succession'' something more, than that, the Lord Jesus Christ, through succes- sive generations, has preserved and transmitted the grand essential facts of Christianity and the knowledge of its elementary doctrines, by means of a succession of authentic writings, and has influenced, qualified, and called by His Spirit, a succession of men whom He has authorized to proclaim those facts and doctrines. Such a succession, in accordance with Arch-bishop Whately, we believe and teach, but it is nothing more nor less, than the perpetuation, of the truth, and of the church in the world, by men called and chosen of God 212 lo discharge the functions of nninigters and office bear- ers in His house. We have had a regular succession of presidents, gov- ernors, judges, members of senate and congress, &:c., since the foundation of our government, i. e. as one has retired, another has taken his place agreeably to the will of the people, whh whom is lodged the sovereignty and the right of election, &c. The oaths of office do not confer the power ; they are but the mode of con- ducting into their offices those called and chosen to fill them. The president retiring does not confer his power on his successor : nor one judge, governor, or member of congress, on another. Wc would smile at the simplicity of the man who v/ould tell us that the power and authority of this government were given at first to Washington, and to his cotcmporaries, and that he and they transferred it to their successors. It is the sovereign power — the people — directly or indirectly, that confer the power, and no man ever dreams of pro- ducing a perfect list of presidents, judges, &c. &c.. and of establishing this or the other man's power and right to office by proving the line of succession. Such notions, and doctrines, may be adapted to the monarchical gov- ernments of Europe, where ideas, of legitimacy, and of the hereditary succession, are interwoven with the very elements of their existence. But, in this country we understand the subject better; and laugh to scorn, alike the divine right of kings, and the notion, that the civil magistrate is the depositary of power, lodged there by heaven to be transferred to his successors. The offi- cers of the government, are not the fountains of pow- er ; because they are not the sovereign. Our liberties, 213 will never be in greater danger than when we practi- cally concede, to the functionaries of our government, the powers of sovereignty, which belong to the people, and believe, that official authority emanates from one to the other through a line of succession. Death, dis- grace, impeachment, a variety of causes, may inter- rupt and break the succession, and an office may, for a time, be without an incumbent; but the sovereign peo- ple, from whom emanates the power, can direct and call whom they please, to discharge the functions of the civil magistracy. The oalh of office, and the cere- mony of inauguration or induction, are but the acknow- ledged and approved modes of recognizing the fact, that, by the sovereign authority of the people, the per- sons have been appointed to their respective offices. These important and salutary principles w^ere not understood under the tyrannical government of the Caesars. The king or emperor was claimed to be the fountain of power, which flowed down in regular hereditary succession. The doctrine of legitimacy, as taught by European politicians, lies at the very root of the Apostolic succession. You have claimed, distinct- ly, and formally, that the headship or sovereignty of Jesus Christ, has been transferred to the Apostles, and has flowed down from them through their lineal succes- sors whom you style your Apostolic Bishops. Now, this we proclaim to be just as great an usurpation, as were presidents, governors, and judges, &c., to claim to appoint their successors, and to transfer their power to them. We say usurpation, not indeed of the sovereignty of the people, but of Jesus Christ. 214 The members of the church are not the sovereign power in the church ; nor are its officers. The Lord Jesus Christ has the supreme authority deputed to Him by the Father. ^' All power, in heaven and on earth is given unto Him." He has, as I have shown, the ex- clusive right of callin^f, choosing, commissioninc:, and clothing, His ministers with power. The power flows directly from Himself, just as, in our government, it does from the people. Ordination answers to the oath of office and induction into it ; being the public formal recognition of the fact, that Jesus Christ has exercised His sovereignty in the appointment of the man as His embassador. The succcssirn depends not on the flow of authority from Bishop to Bishop, Priest and Deacon, regularly convoyed or transferred as you teach : but on the will and grace, the spirit and providence of Jesus Christ our only sovereign lord and king. The list of successors is of no more consequence to prove the righl to exercise official power from Jesus Christ, than is the list of your predecessors, who have officia- ted as Rectors of St. PauKs church, to prove the legiti- macy of your right to officiate as their Rector. Per- sonal succession does not enter into that right, as any part of its elements. We glorify ihe sovereignty of Jesus Christ, and trace all official power and authority, directly, to Him, discarding, altogether, as one of the engines of oppressive tyranny and oppression, which have enslaved, alike the church and world, flowing down, through a long list of individuals — a privileged order, in regular lineal legitimate succession. I have thus brought into view, your ideas of **Apos- tolic succession/' held in common with those of pre- 215 latical writers, and contrasted them with those heldby the non-Episcopal denonninations. I would not mis- state or misrepresent them. If your language, and that of prelalical writers, has any definite meaning at all on this subject, you unquestionably teach, that the legiti- macy of the functions of the minister of Christ, depends, essentially, on the transfer, of the same power, and of the Spirit of God, from the Apostles down in regular succession through your Bishops, which Christ origi- nally transferred to them, that being v;hat the Father had conferred on Him. That I have not misappre- hended your views, and those of prelatical writers, I quote the language of Bishop Bevcridge: " the Apos- tolical line hal!i, through all ages, been preserved en- lire, there having been a constant succession of such Bishops in it, as were truly and properly successors to the Apostles, by virtue nf that Apostolic imposition of hands, which, being begun by the Apostles, hath been continued from one to another, ever since that time down to ours. By which means, the same Spirit winck was breathed by our Lord into his Jlpostles, is, together with their o^icc, transmiiied to their lawful successors, the pastors and governors of our church at this time; and acts, moves, and assists, at the administration of the several parts of the Apostolic office, in our days, as much as ever.^** These are your own sentiments; and the idea of a mysterious sacramental influence, by the imposition of hands, for the purpose of imparting the Holy Spirit, as an essential element of the Apostolical succession, is too plainly taught to be mistaken. *See his works, v. II, sermon on Christ's presence with his ministry. 216 It IS not; iherefore, at all surprising, that great care, and solicitude, should have been manifested, about the formal part of ordination; nor that the canons of coun- cils, and the common law of ecclesiastical bodies, should have, through much excessive care, rather multiplied the tests, and increased the impossibility of proving the genuineness of each link, in the interminable chain of Apostolic succession. It has thus become impractica- ble to tell, what is, or what is not essential. This, it- self, is sufTicient to condemn the whole doctrine, espe- cially when viewed in connection wiih its total inappli- cability to the great mnss of mankind, so deeply and so vitally interested in the fact of the genuine succession, according to the showing of its asserters. At all events, it demands a stern and severe rebuke, to be given to those prelates, who claim a superstitious reverence for themselves from the people, making their adherence to them essential to salvation, so putting themselves be- fore Christ, and yet, by the very necessities of ihc case, being themselves constituted the judges of their own pretensions. I do not exaggerate. Mr. T. Smyth has extracted from ** the Churchman," published in New York, under the sanction of Bishop Onderdonk, of that city, the fol- lowing, of which many other like examples might be taken from prelatical writers. Dr. Dodwell, says: *'Nonc but the Bishops can unite us to the Father and the Son. Whence it will follow, that whoever is dis- united frojn the visible coinmiinion of the church on earth, and PARTICULARLY from the visible communion of the Bishops, must consequently be disunited from the whole visible Catholic church on earth; and not only 217 so, but from the invisible communion of the holy angels and saints in heaven, and what is yet more, from Christ and God himself. It is one of the most dreadful aggra- vations of the condition of the damned, that they are banished from the presence of the Lord, and the glory of his povi^er. The same is their condition, also, who are disunited from Christ, by being disunited from his visible representative^^' This is putting the Bishop before Christ. No poor soul can be united to Him but through the Bishop ! ! What popery ! Dr. Hook says, '* unless Christ be spiritually present with the ministers of religion, in their services, those services will be vain'^ — a most precious truth, known, believed, and preached, by none more frequently, felt more powerfully, and applied with greater effect, than by many of the non-Episcopally ordained ministers. ^^ But,'' continues Dr. Hook, ** the only ministrations, to which he has promised his presence, are those of Bishops, who arc successors, to the first commissioned Apostles, and to the other clergy acting under their sanction and hy their authority J''] This is just as false as it is arrogant, and is disproved, by the hundreds and thousands of those, who, have been converted from the error of their ways, and abounded in the fruits of holi- ness, through the ministrations of non-Episcopally or- dained ministers. The fruits of the Spirit — proving the presence of Christ — abound among the converts of a/itiinistry, disowning and disdaining to be united to GHrist, by ^^ Episcopal Bishops." Bishop B. Onderdonk of New York, says *^none but the Bishops can unite us to the Father, in the way of ♦Lectures on the Apostolic succession, p. 105. t Idem. 19 218 Christ's appointment, and these Bishops, must be such as receive their mission from the first commissioned Apostles. Wherever such Bishops are found, dispen- sing the faith and sacraments of Christ, there is a true Church ; unsound it may be, like the Church of Rome, but still a true and real Church — as a sick or diseased man, though unsound, is still a real or true man."* This needs no comment. It proves, that I have not misapprehended your idea of the ** true line of succcss- ion,'' which, though not as distinctly avowed, is nev- ertheless truly accordant with it. And now, let me bring your line of succession, to the tests, which you, in common with prclatical wri- ters, have established as the criterion of a true minis- try. It is essential, upon your ow^n principles, that you be able to show, that your ordination — which accord- ing to Bishop Ravenscroftjt is the only evidence you can have of Divine right — has been performed by one. who was himself a legitimate successor of a legitimate successor, through the whole line, up to some one of the Apostles, without a break in one solitary link. For, says Dr. Chandler, ^'if the succession be once broken, and the power of ordination once lost, not all the men on earth, not all the angels in heaven, without an im- mediate commission from Christ, can restore it.'^J I do not see, how even Jesus Christ himself, according to your doctrine, could restore it ; for you say, that He TRANSFERRED IHs earthly power over His Church. Dr. How^e§ — whose orthodoxy, on this point, in your Church, will not be disputed — maintains the very same ♦Address on Unitv. tVind.and def. in Ev. and Lrit. Mag., TX, p. 539. +Appeal in behalf of the Ch. of Eng. in Am. N. V., 1767, quoted in Smyth's Lcc. §Vind. of Prot. Epis. Ch., p. 317. 219 position with Dr. Chandler. Are you prepared to show, that, through the long line of your ecclesiastical pedi- gree, in every solitary instance, nothing, according lo the canons setting forth the essentials of ordination, has invalidated the ordination ? Are you prepared to show, that none of your Episcopal sires were under sentence of deposition, when ordained? that the faith and morals of all, came up to the standard of Christ's prescriptions? that their baptism was not clinic nor heretical, but Episcopally valid ? that they had not been made Bishops, ^er saltum^ instead of passing through the two inferior grades? or that any other of the nu- merous disqualifications, judged, by the Church to ren- der ordination invalid, such as infancy, insanity, adulte- ry, murder, lapse in time of persecution, and mutilation or dismemberment of their bodies, like that Origen ef- fected on himself, have not vitiated the succession, poi- soned the fountain of Episcopal grace, and left you out of the church of God I I am not trifling on this subject, but soberly refer- ring to matters, which have been judged sufficient to invalidate ordination, as may be seen in Palmer and Bingham, referred to in Smyth's lectures.^ Until you can thus demonstrate in full detail, your claim to the lofty Episcopate, upon your own principles, you must excuse me, if I cannot recognize, and own you, as the Right Reverend Bishop of Michigan, in- vested with that ^^ plenitude of sacerdotal power which constitutes Episcopacy ;" however, I recognize and love you as the servant of Jesus Christ, possessed of those Episcopal powers, which you, in common, ♦Smyth's Lectures on Apos. Sue, pp. 115, IIC, &c. 220 share with your Presbyters, and exercise, by their con- sent, as pj'imus inte?^ pares, first among your equals. The list of Eusebius to which you refer, as bringing down an unbroken chain till the year 325, has never been proved. It runs, Peter and Paul, I. Linus, 2. Anacletus, 3. Clement, 4. Euarestes, 5. Alexander, 6. Xystus, or Sixlus, 7. Telesphorus, 8. Hyginus, 9. Pius, 10. Anicelus. 11. Soter, 12. Eleutlierus, &c. Eusebius follows in the track of Irena>us. Neither docs the New Testament, nor do Irenceus and Eusebi- us, furnish proof, that Peter was ever at Rome, at all. If ever he was, it must have been after Paul wrote his epistle. Those who affirm that he was, disagree in point of time, and the time specified, contradicts scriptural history. Both Jerome and Eusebius^ con- tradict the history of Peter, given in the Acts of the Apostles. "^^ The arguments which learned men have urged against the supposition, have not been answer- ed. Still less proof is offered that Peter, if ever at Rome, was fixed and resident Bishop there. Nor is there proof, from the scriptures, that ever Paul was estab- lished there as Bishop. He was there as prisoner, and taught in his own hired house. The church of Rome was not organized, by him. He found it organi- zed, when he arrived there. There is no proof that ever he was ordained to be the Apostolic Bishop of Rome. Too much is expected, if it is thought we will admit, that both Peter and Paul were fixed as Aposto- lic Bishops in Rome, and transferred their authority to their successors. Who was their immediate suc- ♦ dee Stuart on the Rom., pp. 37, 38. 221 cesser, has not been settled. Eusebius says, Linus, but by whom he was ordained, he lias not told us. Certainly it was not by Paul or Peter, for he says, ** after the martyrdom of Paul and Peter, Linus was the first that received the Episcopato at Itome."* They did not transfer their authority, and the Episcopate, before their martyrdom, and it w^ill not be pretended they did after. Here, then, at the very outset, ** the Apostolic succession'' is met with difficulties. By whom was Linus ordained \ He received not the Epis- copate, says Eusebius, and of course, ordination, till af- ter the martyrdom of Paul and Peter. Inferences and suppositions here will not do for you. If you ask us to admit yours, we return the compliment, and tell you, we think ours are better, viz : that Linus was a Pres- byter, and had been such in the life time of Paul and Peter ; but was elected pastor or parochial Bishop, af- ter their martyrdom, as Eusebius says. Diocesan or prelatical Bishop before, he could not have been, or you will have Paul, Peter, Linus, all Apostolic Bishops over the Church in Rome, cotemporaneously, directly in opposition to an essential feature of your system. We have no difficulty in understanding how they could all be presbyter Bishops together, which the Bishops of that day were. Irena^us will not help *^ the Apostolic succession,'' but rather favors our views, although he says, that Linus was the first Bishop of Rome, yet he does not inform us -'how he came there, or where, or by whom, or whether validly ordained, or himself a valid subject for ordination. He does not even say, which of the •Eu»cb. his., II, 2. 19* 222 Apostles delivered the Episcopate to Linus, nor that he was ever ordained by the imposition of hands at air' — and in what he does say, he does not pretend to establish proof, but gives it merely, as that which is held as a tradition from the Apostles,* Irenseus wrote some where from A. D. 177 to 202, more than a century after. The claim to legitimacy fails at the very start. It is truly astonishing, that such a prodigious claim should have so slender a foundation. The very first link in the chain of title is broken, or, what is equiva- lent, its validity cannot be cslablisiicd. Equally unfortunate is it i;i the second link. Irenaj- us and Eusebius say that Anencletus succeeded to Li- nus in the second year of Tilus, A. D. 79. Linus, af- ter having *-held the ofl'icc about twelve years, (i. e. from A. D. G7,) transferred it to Anencletus."! ** Now, Tertullian," says Mr. Smyth, '* and several others as- sure us, that this is an entire mistake, l''or that Clemens was first of all, and the next lineal descendant of Peter, or whoever it might be. Epij)hanius and Optatus again seriously aflirm, that Anencletus and Cletus were be- fore Clemens. Jerome, Augustine, Damasus and oth- ers, dinger from them all, and assert that Anencletus, Cletus, and Linus, were all anterior to Clemens, and the first links in this chain of living energy. Damasus is of opinion, that Peter ordained tuo successors, and not one merely. Vossius declares that before the time of Evaristus, two or three successors sat together on this Episcopal throne. ''j *4n the English church, the same controversy has *Sec Smyth's Lectures, p. 159, and Mui dock's Mos'ieim, C. v. I, p. 120. tEu^eb. Hist. HI). 3, c. 13 :{:Leetures on Apoa., Sue,, pp. 19'-l-»2. Dr. Miller on the Ministry, p. 3Q7, 223 prevailed. Dr. Hammond will have it that Clement, Linus, and Anacletus all succeeded Peter, and held co- ordinate jurisdiction ; the first over the Jews, and the other over the Gentiles. This theory, Coteierius re- jects, being without any support ; while Dr. Pearson insists, that it is, as Cyprian says, contrary to the evan- gelic law, and to the rules of the Catholic institution, for two Bishops to preside together in one city. This also was detennined on in the council of Nice, and be- came a settled proverb, "one God, one Christ, one Bishop," two prelates being regarded, as Theodorel testifies, infamous. So that *' whoever is made Bishop after the first, is, says Cyprian, not a second Bishop, but no Bishop." Arch-bishop Potter again asserts, that *' Clemens not only conversed with the Apostles, but was ordained Bishop of Rome by St. Peter." Bishop Pearson proves, that Linus died before Peter, and how could he succeed him? Thus it is made appa- rent, in what palpable and gross darkness, in what im- ])enetrable obscuiity, the prime question is involved, on which this whole cause rests — the corner stone and foundation, on w^hich the statelv structure of pre- lacy, Romish and Anglican is built. "=^' It is much easi- er for us to establish a succession of Presbyters — a bench of Presbyter-bishops, during the first and early part of the second century, in the church of Rome, than for you to prove the legitimacy of your ordina- tion to the Episcopate, upon your own avowed princi- ples of auiiwrity transferred hy the imposition of hands, in the only true Apostolico-Episcopal suc- cession. *fc*ec Sray til's Leclurcs, note C, p. 15'2. 224 Other discrepancies, in the historical statements, than these 1 have referred to, might be noticed, showing, either the fracture of the links, or the impossibility of proving, what you have assumed, a regular, unbroken line of Bishops in your sense of the term, legitimately consecrated by the imposition of the hands of the Apos- tles' successors. Enough has been said to press the ad- vocates of prelacy with the burden of proof, from which they can never be relieved, if the argument will be fairly and candidly met ; and to let you see that you will not be allowed, either to beg the question, or to presume that we will take your conjectures and infer- ences for fact. You may pronounce us unreasonable, and hypercritical, and say your proof "ought to be conclusive,*' but where such lofty claims are asserted, you must make good your title, through the whole chain. You carry two strings to your bow, to either of which you aflix your arrows, as it best suits you. At one time you pull the Roman string, and at another the Anglican; and to kill us outright, at'another, both to- gether. The very fact of your (juoling Euscbius, and referring to his line of succession, starting from Rome, and also, the further fact, that your printed catalogue of the succession, traces your title through the Roman channel — identify you with the Church of Rome, and force you to acknowledge her to be a true church of Jesus Christ. You have, in this respect, been consistent, and kept an open door of retreat, should you be cut off from Anglican pretensions. ^* Even if we had received our ministry, through that source," you say. **it could do us no harm. For that church, and many of her elo- m quent ■ I 225 quent defenders, I have great respect. For, with all her errors, she has the regular succession of the minis- try, and is a part of the Catholic church." Spirits of the mighty dead! — ye Manes of Ridley, and Latinner, and Cranmer ! what think you of your Episcopal suc- cessors, who thus set at nought the testimony for which ye died ? and shake hands over your mouldering ashes, with *^ Christ's enemy and antichrist," whom ye refused ! I refer to the writings of the Fathers, to the homilies of the English church, and to tlie nni- forni testimony of the reformed churches of England, Scotland, France, Holland, Germany, Denmark and Switzerland, in proof of the fact, that they regarded the church of Rome to be ** idolatrous and antichristian." Here let me quote the language of Towgood, for your special attention. *'Now it is only from this (apostate church) that you derive, by ordination, your spiritual descent. You confess yourself born of her as to ecclesiastical pedigree; and the sons of this (church) you acknowledge as brethren, by admitting their or- ders as regular and valid, whereas those of the pro- testant Churches you reject. If a priest, ordained with all the superstitions and idolatrous rites of this anti- christian and false church, comes over to (your church) you admit him as a brother duly ordained, without obliging him to pass under that ceremony again; but if a minister of the reformed Churches, joins himself to you, you consider him, as but a layman, an unordained person, and oblige him to receive orders according to your form. How, sir, is it possible for you to account for such a procedure 1 Can that church, which is no true church, impart valid and true orders 1 Will you 226 rest the validity and regularity of your administrations, on your receiving the sacerdotal character from the Bishops and Popes of the Romish church ? many, if not most, of whom, were men of corrupt and infamous lives — men, who so far from being regular and valid ministers in the church of Jesus Christ, had neither part nor lot in this matter^ their hearts not being right in the sight of God, Such men, therefore, could not possibly, duly or regularly, officiate therein; con- sequently had no power to communicate, or convey, orders or offices in the christian church. Whatever offices they conveyed, therefore, are, at best, doubtful and suspicious, if not absolutely null, irregular and void. So that really, your own orders, if strictly examined, may minister great doubt and disquietude of mind."* I appreciate your remarks in reference to invective and denunciation, so calculated to irritate, and have, therefore, omitted a few epithets, which Towgood, in the above extract, has borrowed from the homilies of the Church of England. Although I condemn and op- pose the system of popery, yet would I not reproach all indiscriminately w^ho embrace it. Although as an organized society, I account the church of Rome an apostate church, yet I love to think that such men as Claude, Anselm, Bradvvardine, Grossetcsle, Pascall, Fenelon, Massillon, Xavier, and many ardent and de- voted missionaries of the cross, have been the friends of Jesus Christ, and doubtless are numbered among the members of His true and invisible church — His mysti- cal body. The true Church of Christ comprises his elect out of all kindred, people, tongues, and sects. • See Towgood' 8 Dissent, pp. 95, 96. 227 Even to this hour, I doubt not, that it may be, in the idolatrous Church of Rome, as it was in the idolatrous Church of Israel, the Lord hath reserved some for Him- self that have not bowed the knee to Baal. Gladly would I discharge the offices of love, and breathe the spirit of good will, even towards those whom I fear may be deceived by the subtlety of the old serpent. The spirit of persecution and bitterness I loathe. But the very offices of love, require me to bear my testimony, against the fatal soul destroying errors of the Roman Catholic Church; nor will fidelity to Jesus Christ suffer me to wink at or disguise, what I believe to be the true character of the system of popery pourtrayed in the word of God. Should I flatter any, directly or indi- rectly, in the belief, that the protestant testimony against the Church of Rome is not true; and should I re- cognize her as a true Church of Jesus Christ, when He accounts her idolatrous and apostate, my charity would deserve the severest reprehension. It would be mere courteous indifference, alike to His honor and to the eternal welfare of my fellow men. And here I think it proper, to refer you to Dan,, vii, 24-26; 2 Thess., ii, 7-12; Tun,, iv, 1-2, and the 17th and 18th chapters of the book of Revelations, remark- ing, only, that you must have renounced the uniform protestant exposition of the word of God, before you could have been betrayed into such gross inconsistency, as to disown and renounce the whole illustrious com- pany of the protestant Churches of Scotland, France, Switzerland, Germany, Poland, Hungary and Denmark, and in preference, make love to the Church of Rome. Verily, I fear the result, when all this is done so heed- 228 lessly of the warning voice of God, ** Come out of her my people, that ye may not be partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues." I feel deeply grieved for the cause of protestantism, by the avowals you have made; and, therefore, cannot resist the inclination to present you, a very brief sketch of the church and priesthood, whose alliance you evi- dently would prefer to those of the reformed Churches, ** Even Baronius would not deny, but confesses, that, in a succession of fifty Popes, there was not a pious man.''* •' John 22, was a heretic and denied the im- mortahty of the soul; John 23, Gregory 12, and Bene- dict 13, were all popes and infallible heads of the Church at the sanictimc, and the council of (yonstance cashier- ed the whole of them as illogilimate. The council of Basil convicted Pope Eugenius of schism and heresy. Pope Marccllinus actually sacrified to idols. Pope Li- berius was an Arian, and subscribed to that creed. Anastasius was excommunicated as a heretic by his own clergy. (Three names on your list.) Sylvester 2d sacrificed to the devil. Formosus w^as promoted to the chair through perjury. Sergius 3 1, caused his pre- decessors body to be dug out of the grave, its head cut oft', and then flung into the Tiber. Boniface deposed, imprisoned, and then plucked out the eyes of his pre- decessor. In a word, many of the Popes have been atheists, rebels, murderers, conjurors, adulterers, and Sodomites. Papal Rome has far exceeded in crime her Pagan predecessor. It is not, therefore, to be wondered at, that the Popes, though always assuming a new name, *s Smyth's lectures, p. 199. 229 yet, never take the name of Peter. It is a curious fact that they always shun it. Those who have re- ceived that name at the font, have always changed it when they reached the chair. They fear, that the name of Peter, would too plainly show their apostacy from the Apostle Peter's virtues ; and men would be apt to exclaim, ' how unlike is Peter the Pope, to Peter the Apostle.*"* Your preference for such an alliance, and your re- fusal of ministerial intercourse with the ministry of Protestant churches, is a melancholy comment on the tendency of your doctrine of ** Apostolic succession,'' and whither, operating on the love of consistency, it will carry you. I earnestly desire, and pray, that you may be kept uncontaminated by the delusions of *' the false prophet," free from " the mark of the beast," and sep- arate from the communion of *' them that worship his image." For I truly desire your own personal useful- ness, the advancement of your churches in holiness, and the whole weight of your influence, station, office, labors, to be on the side of protestant Christianity — and of the pure and noble principles, to whose successful operation and vindication, we, as a nation, owe our glory and prosperity. * Stevens* spirit of the Churcti of Rome- 20 LETTER XIV, the angl[can succession'. Rev. and dear sir: The corrupt and vitiated channel of ihe Romish church, might well render Episcopalians averse to tra- cing the true line of Apostolic succession through it. It is therefore, not at all surprising, that so much de- light and eagerness, should have been, of late, manifes- ted in attempting to find a new one. You tell us, that ^' it is generally supposed that St. Paul was the first messenger of truth who visited Great Britain. '^ The evidence, you refer to, in proof of this supposition^ is the fact, that ^' this opinion was held at a very early period,'' and the remark of Clemens Romanus, A. D. 70, *' that the Apostle Paul traveled to the utmost bounds of the west." Which expression you say, on the authority of Theodoret and Jerome was ** used to denote the British islands.'' On this slender founda- tion, you at one moment feel, that you can do no more than merely raise the presumption, ^* that Christianity was ear/y introduced into these islands." And yet, in the very next, you say, that ^' the first records of the church, established there, show that it was organized, as all the churches were, by the Apostle, and in three orders, with the Bishop as supreme. That the succes- sion was carried there by St. Paul, and continued, as 232 you will see uninterrupted in the church." It is my design, in this letter, to show that you have no founda- tion for such unqualified statements. Stillingfleot declares *' that by the loss of records of the British churches, we cannot draw down the suc- cession of Bishops from the Apostles limes.''* The Rev. Henry Carey says '' we have no mention of Bi- shops in the British church, nor do we find umj further information on the subject at all, until the year 314.1 The Rev. E. Bloomfield says, "on the authority of the British triades, we are informed, that Caraclacus, a valiant British prince, having been carried prisoner to Rome, found the gospel preached in that city ; and saw, in progress of time, Brennus and some others of his family, converted to the christian reli2:ion. On their return to Britain, they esteemed themselves hap- py, in being permitted to bear such a precious treasure to their countrymen. They were accompanied, on their return, by several christian teachers, among whom was Aristobulus,pro&^//;/// the same as is mentioned by the Apr)slle Paul, in his epistle to the Corinthians.'" j Even the latest historian on this subject, Mr. E. Chur- ton, whoso book has been republished in this coun. 20. 235 that time, there were no village churches, but their Bishops had to preach, on some occasions, in the streets, and in the open fields. Although this mission was suc- cessful in putting down error — the Britons were ex- posed to other troubles. A great portion of their young men had been drawn away, by military conscriptions, to fight for different pretenders to the throne of the then falling empire, most of whom never returned. A party of them settled in that part of France called Brittany or Bretngne, from whom it received its name; where a dialect of the Welch, is^still spoken by the country people, and where a place of refuge was af- forded, aflerv/ards, to the distressed christians of Britain. Notwithstanding, the Rom.ms sent troops into Britain till A. D. 420, and assisted the natives '• to build again the wall of the Emperor Seveius, which extended across from the mouth of the Tync to that of the Esk, beyond Newcastle and Carlisle, as a protection against the Picts and Scots,'' yet these barbarian tribes made bloody inroads, while the Saxons, from Germany, crossed over and carried off spoil from the nearest shores. vSt. Germain successfully resisted these inva- sions, and advised the Britons to found monasteries to preserve religion. Notwithstanding all the laudable efforts made to preserve religion, *' it is hnpossibh^'^ says Mr. Churton, ^^ to find any thing more disastrous than the state of Britain at this time. A famine had followed the ravages of the Picts and Scots; then arose a bloody war among the native chiefs, and the Roman Britons, those who had lived with the Romans in their cities, and learnt their language, were cut oft* almost to a man." 236 ** While they were in this state of weakness, the Picts and Scots returned ; and the sad and suffering people of South Britain, with Vorligern their prince, resolved to invite the Saxons, A. D. 449. From this time, Christianity began to disappear from the most im- portant and fruitful provinces of Britain. As the Sax- ons founded, one alter another, their petty kingdoms, they destroyed the churches, and Ihe priests fled be- fore them"* — some to Brittany and some to Wales. A long interval of heathen darkness now followed, and continued nearly 150 years, till Augustine, A. D. 496, came as the missionary of Pope Gregory the great, and succeeded in the conversion of king Eihelbert, and in the introduction of Christianity. *' The peculiar form of this reh'gion," says Mr. Turner, ** which Gre- gory and Augustine introduced, was of course that sys- tem which Rome then possessed. "t The papacy had been distinctly and characteristically developed, in its odious features. With all your boast, therefore, about the Anglican Church, it is through the channel of Rome, by Augus- tine, that you must trace your Episcopal powers. The first seven of the prelates of Canterbury, ^' were Ital- ians or foreigners." Twenty-nine Arch-bishops of the Church of England, between the 7th and 15th centu- ries were ordained, direct by the Pope, or by the Pope's legate. The Arch-bishop of York, Chicheley, was ordained by Gregory the 12th, one of the three Popes at that time contending for the tiara, who were all of them deposed. Out of thirty-six Arch-bishops of * The early English church, p. 34. t Turner's history of the Anglo-Saxon§, I, p. 231. 237 Canterbury prior to Cranmer, twelve had been conse- crated by the Popes.* The Anglican succession is iden- tical with that of Rome, which Stillingfleet says " is as muddy as the Tiber itself." I ask, then, with all kind- ness, though wounded with such boastings, how long are we to be trifled with, and insulted, by the empty flourishes of prclatical writers, and be challenged to produce a Jlaw in the long line of descent, and boast- fully told that you have the lists of your Bishops from the earliest to the present times? We point you — to the flaw in the very first link in Linus — to the flaw in his successor — to the flaw in the first link of the Angli- can succession — to the wide gap of heathenism which followed the destruction of the Enfrlish Churches — to the deposed Pontiffs and Bishops, whose former eccle- siastical acts were declared invalid; and we say there is nothing but a flaw in it from beginning to end. It is a vein so replete with faults, as to render it unprofi- table and useless to work in it. You say *' the old British Church was not established by, nor placed under any foreign ecclesiastical power,'^ and you quote, according to Fuller, in proof of the fact, the rejection of the proposition, of Augustine, by the Arch-bishop of Cambria, with seven Bishops and other clergy, *Miiade to bring the Catholic Church of Britain under the Roman Bishop." Yet, in the next breath, you acknowledge that ^* the British Church, the true Catholic Church, of which the Episcopal Church is a part, (your language here, needs some explanation,) was foixed, by the civil authority, into submission, and by degrees, lost her independence." In proof of this, * S©« Gary on the Apostolic succession, p. IP, as quoted in Smyth's lectures, pp, 302, 203, 238 you quote Blackstone's remarks about the island of Great Britain, and the relation of its civil authorities, 'Mhe Anglo-Saxon dynasties," and ** William the Con- querer," to the Roman Pontiff. The island of Great Britain, and the civil authorities are not the Church and Bishops. You might have adduced abundance of much more pertinent proof than this, of the subjection of the English Church to the Roman Pontiff. But let us, for a moment, look at the attempt of Au- gustine to bring, what you call, the British Church, into subjection to the Pope. One would suppose, from the way in which you speak, that he found Churches in that part of England where he was established as Arch-bishop of Canterbury — in the dominion of Ethel- bert — in Kent and Essex — and that you have identified the English Church, through which you trace your succession, with the old British church. I will not say, whcllicr you neglected to advert to the history of the country or not; but your language makes the im- |)ression — and your argument is evidently constructed accordingly — that the old British church, which re- jected Augustine, and refused to come under the do- minion of the Pope, but was gradually afterwards sub- dued, was your proper ancestor. Were you not aware, that Augustine's oak was on the bank of the Severn, in Wales, and that the Arch-bishop of Cambria, and the seven Bishops, which Augustine endeavored to bring over to the See of Rome, were Welch Bishops ? The British christians, and the Bishops of the Low- hmd country, fled before the Anglo-Saxons. St. Samp- son, Bishop of York, fled to Brittany, in France, where many British christians found shelter ; while others 239 sought it in the mountain regions. Mr. Churton says, that ** THE LAST British Bishops, Theonas, of London, and Thadioc, of York, retreated with the remnant of their Jlocks into Wales. **^ The pagan Saxons, having overrun all the lowland part of the country, the saints whose memory is honored in Wales, and St, Columba, in the north, were the only remaining Fathers of the church of Britain. St. CoLUMBA was from one of St. Patrick's monas- teries, Durrogh, in Ireland, who, in A. D. 563 or 565, sailing from the west of Ireland, landed on the island of I, afterwards called lona or Icolumkill, one of the western isles. He w^as of the Culdees, and established monasteries, which might, more properly, be termed colleges, and which Dr. Jamieson has shown, were, in fact, the seminaries of the church, both in North Bri- tain and in Ireland. Before you can identify your Anglican succession, or English church, — which commences with the mission of Augustine, A. D. 596 — with the old British church- es, existing anterior to the Anglo-Saxon invasion, and which had been utterly sw^pt from North Britain, you must show how you obtained the succession of which you boast through the churches of South Britain, either from the Welsh Bishops, or from the Culdees. When, and how, it became incorporated with the Ro- man succession, through the line of Augustine, so as to preserve the British succession, you have not shown. You have, however, admitted, that the old British church was subdued, so that from the sixth to the six- teenth century, she was in a state of vassalage, when ♦The early English Church, p. 33, 240 only, ** she had the power of throwing off the foreign yoke imposed on her" — a strange account indeed of a church, whose Bishops you boast have had the power of Christ's earthly Headship transferred to them ! **Is it not a matter of indubitable certainty, that, from the seventh to the fifteenth century, the Arch- bishops of Canterbury, and of York, as wxll as seve- ral of the Bishops, were, in general, consecrated by the Pope or his legates! From A. D. 6G8 to 1414, I find no fewer than 17 Arch-bishops of Canterbury thus consecrated ; and from 1119 to 1312, I find 12 Arch- bishops of York, indebted solely to Rome for all the gifts they conferred on others.''*" An Italian Bishop, Birinus. was placed at Dorches- ter, out of which see, afterwards, were that of Win- chester, and others at Leicester, and Sidnacestcr, sup- posed to be Stow at this day, which were removed to Lincoln. 'J'he first five Arch-bishops of Canterbury, were all Italians. The Scottish Bishops of Lindisfarnc exerted a more efiicicnt influence, to introduce Chris- tianity among the people, and its rapid progress, was es- pecially owing to the disciples of Columba, the Cul- dees. The Roman Bishops, the disciples of Augus^ tine and Paulinus, objected to thoir ordination, and a council was held, A. D. GG4, on the subject. Wilfrid contended for the rule of Italy and France. Being ap- pointed to the bishopric of York, he refused to receive ordination from the Scottish Bishops of Lindisfarne or Litchfield, and there being no Arch-bishop at Canter- bury, and Roxbury being vacant, he obtained it from Agilbert, at Paris. Chad was in the nneantime conse- *Powell on Apos. Sue, sec. xii, p. 123. 241 crated Bishop of York, two Welsh Bishops having as- sisted at his ordination. On the return of Wilfrid from France, finding his see occupied, he stayed in Kent, where there was no Bishop, and ordained Priests, till Theodore, the Pope's primate of England, urged Chad to be reordained, to which he consented, and soon af- ter retired from his bishopric. Wilfrid then entered on the duties of the see, and after having been twice deposed, was restored, and is said to have left some thousands of Monks within the bounds of his Diocese, divided first into the sees of York and Hexham, and afterwards into four. Ripon and Landisfarne being ad- ded, and a fifth w^hich lay in Scotland, at Abercorn, or Whithern in Galloway. "^ Under Theodore and Wilfrid, Rome triumphed. The Welsh christians were not even allowed to receive the sacrament "with the English, unless they confor- med. Of the former Mr. Churton says, ^^ he found the church divided, he left it united ; he found it a mission- ary church (not as you say the old British church) scarcely fixed in more than two principal provinces ; (that mission having commenced with Augustine) he left it, what it will ever be, while the country remains in happiness and freedom, the established church of England.''! This is a very different account of the Apostolical succession, from yours. It is given by the most recent and undisputed Episcopal authority. You cannot, therefore, disconnect yourself from Rome. Through that channel must you trace your line of Apos- tolical succession. *See Churton's Early English Church, pp. 75-86. tChurton'a Early English Church, pp. 75-6. 21 242 Here, then, I might pass at once to consider the claims to '* Apostolic succession,'' advanced for the Bishops of *the Reformed Protestant Episcopal Church of England. But I have a word or two to say yet, about '* the old British Church." Upon the revolution in Northumbria, which raised Oswald to the throne, as ^' Lord of Britain," he obtained a Bishop from the Scotch Churches, and, as Mr. Ciiurton says, establish- ed him on *^ the Island of Lindisfarne, on the coast of Northumberland, near to Bambrough, his own royal seat, A. D., G35. This w^as the first foundation of the bishopric of Durham."^ This Scottish missionary, Aidan, a monk of lona, of the monastery of St. Columba, was followed by many other Scottish monks and priests, who were called Culdees, {quasi cultores Deiy) from their great piety and devotion. They were Presbyters, who had their superintendent, and who was designated Bishop, but belonged to the same order. Tlic council of Ceale- hythe, held A. D., 81G, decreed that no Scotch priest should perform any function in England, and the rea- son assigned was, their icant of ^IctropoUtan Bishops, their contcwpt of other orders^ and the counciFs igno- rance of the nature of their ordination. f Their Bi- shops, or the rectors of their several cells, i. e. Colle- ges, were chosen and ordained, by the members of these societies. Dr. Jamieson thinks, and with every appearance of reason, that, while residing in their monasteries, and teaching those around them, when an opportunity oc- * Early English Church, p. 65. t See Rees' Encyclopocdia, Art. Culdees. 243 "curred, without having a fixed charge, they were cal- led Presbyters, but that when sent to a particular charge, in the Pastoral relation, then they were called Bishops.* The character of their government, and the nature of their ordination, have been subjects of dispute, w^ith the merits of which, I am not immediate- ly concerned. It is enough for me simply to state the fact, in order to show, that if you claim, that the An- glican succession does not flow through the Roman Church, but from the old British Churches, founded by the CuldeeS; it is, in the language of Stillingfleet, ^* as muddy" as the other. We are not sufficiently credu- lous to swallow down all that prelatical writers would have us take for granted on this subject. Proof must be produced. Every link must be shown, historically, to be genuine and firm. There must be no inferences or admissions about it — where such a prodigious claim is asserted. Till this is done, we insist upon being treat- ed with less arrogance ; and recommend a little more modesty, less of the spirit of exclusiveness, and of pro- selytism, less noisy laudations of the Episcopal church, and of her true line of Apostolical succession, and more of that charity and cordial fraternal intercourse, that Will secure a reciprocation of fellowship, and co-opera- tion wdth the ministry of other denominations, and in- terchange of ministerial offices, w'hich we are ever ready to extend, even to those whose claims, never- theless, W'e regard as preposterous, but w^hom we greet as brethren beloved, for the Masters' sake. Take the line of your succession, then, either way, it is but a rope of sand, and will not bear the terrible ♦The Christian Magazine for 183*2, of Ass. Ref. Syn. of N. Y., v. I, p. 107. 244 weight of consequences you attach to it. It runs for a thousand years, niore or less, through the channel of an idolatrous and apostate church. ^'The orders of the English prelatlc Church, being derived from Rome,'' as Mr. Smyth says, with great truth and force, **^re less than nothing and vanity. Her whole unbroken line of prelalic succession, idolized as it is, is what the Apostle defines other idols, quite as rationally worship- ped by their blinded devotees, a mere nothing in the world. Even in the fullness of its boasted suprema- cy, it is in straits ; and when brought to the test of his- torical investigation, it perishes in the fire of probation, and is thus shown to be the hay, wood, and stubble, which cannot endure the breath of this fiery furnace."*'* It is by no means a pleasant task, to float along this turbid channel, for the waters grow thicker and fouler, the further we proceed : but the claims you assert, are so lofty, and have been advanced so boldly, that we are compelled to it. You have your succession from an apostate church. For up to the time of the reform- ation, the Roman and Anglican churches were, as far as England is concerned, identical. The Roman Church was branded by the English reformers as anti-christian, heretical, and idolatrous. As such she could not transfer the true line of Apostolical succession, for she had it not • herself. Admit her to be a true church, and the Church of England is schismatical, and all her orders null and void, for Rome excommunicated her. Take it either way, and the succession fails. f Or, say you, that she did but throw off her allegiance, to the Pope, and thus become independent'? Then, I ^Lectures on Apos. Sue, p. 208. tSee Palmer, v. I. 245 ask, how was this done ? It was by the king's compel- ing all the Bishops within his realm, to take out connmis- sions from him. Henry VIII, and his delegates or lieu- tenants in the Episcopal office, it has been well said, stand, for the everlasting honor and consolation of all true churchmen, between you and the Apostles. The supremacy of the king was substituted for that of the Pope. This was a fundamental principle in the refor- mation in the Church of England. That Church was founded on it at first, and not on scripture authority or Divine institution, and there it remains settled to this day. One of the last statutes of the reign of Henry VIII, (37, Hen. VIII, chap. 17,) declares, that ^* Arch- bishops, Bishops, Arch-deacons, and other ecclesiasti- cal persons, have no manner of jurisdiction ecclesiastical but by, under, and from his royal majesty ; and that his majesty is the only supreme head of the Church of England and Ireland ; to whom, by holy scripture^ all authority and power is wholly given to hear and deter- mine all manner of causes ecclesiastical, and to correct all manner of heresies, errors, vices, and sins whatev- er, and to all such persons as his majesty shall appoint thereunto." Arch-bishop Cranmer on the death of Henry VIII, thought the exercise of his own Episcopal authority ended with the late king's life, and therefore, would not act as Arch-bishop, till he had a new co?nmis- sion from king Edward VI. This shows the source of Episcopal power, as understood by the fathers of the reformed Church of England. Through this *' disor- derly" channel, flows your succession. It comes down as Mr. Newman, one of the Oxford Tractators says, through a series of *' troubles and disorders,'' and in 21* 246 Henry VIII, after having been entirely broken ofT^ starts from the act of parliannent, and the commission of the king 1^ Under Edward VI, the reformation, which had be- gun in the king's headship-power or supremacy, was carried on, by the same authority. The reformers of that day, ^^beUeved but two orders of 67/?^?*c//me7i, in holy scripture, viz: Bishops and Deacons; and conse- quently, that Bishops and Priests, were but different ranks, or degrees of the same order,'^ and ** ihcy gave the right hand of fellowship to foreign churches, and ministers thai had not been ordained by Bishops ; there being no dispute about rcordination, in order to any church preferment, till ihc latter end of queen Eliza- helKs reign. ''t Upon the accession of Mary to the throne, one of her first acts, was to shut up all protestant pulpits, and to forbid all preaching without special license. A thick storm soon gathered round the rcfortners. More than eight hundred retired to foreign parts, and among them were five Bishops, five Deans, four Arch-deacons, and above fifty doctors of divinity, Grindal, Jewel, Sandys, Reynolds, &c., &c., who became famous afterward in Elizabeth's reign. Popery triumphed. Lady Jane Grey, Arch-bishop Cranmer, and Bishops Ridley and Latimer, were executed. Cardinal Pole, who stands in your ** true line of succession," arrived, as the Pope's legate, commissioned to receive the kingdom of Eng- land, into the bosom of the Catholic Church, under the Pope, as their Supreme Pastor. Both houses of par- *See Newman on Romaniam, pp. 4J7, 418, 4*24, 130. tNcaPa Hist, of Puritans, v. I, pp. 12;3-21. 247 liament, presented, to the king and queen, their prayer for thenn to intercede with the Cardinal; which was done, and having enjoined it on them for penance, to repeal certain obnoxious laws, in the Pope's nanne, he granted them a full absolution, which they received on their knees, and then absolved the realm from all cen- sures. Strype says of Pole, ^*he wholly Italianized, and returned into England, endowed with a nature foreign and fierce, and was the very butcher and SCOURGE OF THE EnGLISH.'*=^ Bonner, Bishop of London, pursued the bloody work, urged on by king and queen ; and torrents flowed, till, by Elizabeth's accession to the throne, '' a new succes- sion was introduced,"' not by the authority of Heaven, but by the plenipotentiary authority of a woman, who, although prohibited by Heaven to rule in the Church at all, became ^' arbiter of truth and sovereign lord, as well of the lives and goods, as of the souls and consciences, of the people. So far, this absolute spiritual despotism, w^as in harmony with what the Church had long ad- mitted. The only innovation consisted, in transferring irresponsible church power, from spiritual, to secular, hands. The page of history presents no parallel in- stance of frightful and ingenious tyranny."! Elizabeth assumed supremacy in the Church, and prohibited ad interim^ all preaching. The parliament — Bishops voting against it — having put the power of ap- pointing Bishops into her hands, restored the suprema- cy to her, and annulled wiiat had been done by Mary. All the Bishops, except Dr. Kitchen of LandafF, refus- *Nears lustorj' of puritaiiS, p. 438. t Spiritual degpotism, p. 271, Am. ed. 248 ed the oath of supremacy, and retired from their sees, which remained for some time vacant, to see if any more of the fourteen would conform. Nothing w^ould move them. At length, after twelve months, Dr. Mat- thew Parker, who stands next to Pole, in your ** true line of succession,*' was consecrated Arch-bishop of Canterbury, at Lambeth, by some of the Bishops that had been deprived, in the late reign, for not one of the present Bishops would officiate.'** *' The whole chain of the present Anglican succession, hangs then, upon the validity of Arch-bishop Parker's consecration. Now, he was ordained by not a single prelate of the an- cient British line; but by four English Bishops, who had been consecrated in the reign of Edward the VI — whose times were full of uncanonical proceedings — who were afterwards deposed in the reign of Queen Mary, by that very Church on whose authority the succession depends — and had never been restored — that is to say. Barlow^ Scory, Coverdole, and Ilodg- kins*. Kitchen, the only remnant of the ancient British line, though appointed to do so, yet did not in fact, as- sist at the consecration of Parker."! Parker after- wards consecrated fourteen Bishops, the validity of whose ordination, like that of his own, was denied, and disputed, at the time, till eight years after, parliament found it necessary, to pass an actj confirming the va- lidity of his own consecration, and that of the Bishopsj ordained by him.§ The queen gave out her injunc tions, and appointed her lay visitors, with powder to de^ prive or suspend clergymen deemed unworthy, ani * Ncal's hislory of puritans, v. 1. p. 181. t Smyth's lectures, p. 211. t NeaPs history of puritans, v. I, p. 182. JSEliz., I.e. 249 the result was, that out of 9,400 parochial benefices, 243 clergymen had quitted their livings, and among them were 14 Bishops (all) and 3 Bishops elect, &c. Such is your boasted succession in the ''true line" of the English church. We claim a truce forever, against all such baseless pretensions to an unbroken line of true Apostolic succession. The Roman, and the dis- senter, and every one else acquainted with the history of the times, and of the English Church, as given even by prelatical writers themselves, will smile at such statements as the following, given by you as oracular. ''The church continued, until she had the power of throwing off the foreign yoke imposed upon her.*' The Church had nothing to do with it. It w^as king, queen and parliament did the whole of it, and '• to the present day (1835) the English establishment, says Mr. Tay- lor, a zealous Episcopalian too, has not relieved itself of the humiliations that resulted from the surrender, it had first made, of its independence to the civil magis- trate.'^^ Yet, directl}^, in the face of history, you say, '•this powder was exercised in the 16th century, and her Bishops, Cranmer, Latimer and Ridley, who had the regular Aposto!ic succession, (broken, muddy, and through an apostate and idolatrous Church, as we have shown,) abandoned the errors introduced into her bo- som, and brought out from the rubbish of ages, the old British Church of St. Paul, the true Catholic Church, which ever since, like the polar star, has guided many a temptest-tost soul, to the haven of eternal rest. They did not leave the Church, or establish a new Church, they continued in it, and diffused throughout every part ♦Spiritual despotism, p. '270. 250 of it, the life and light of the gospel of the Son of God." You mean, no doubt, the above named Bishops, and yet they took their commissions from the king, and swore allegiance to a sectlar, instead of a spiritual head! and were eventually deposed and executed, by the very authorities whom they renounced ! ** But,'* you continue, *^ those who clung to the Bishop of Rome, set up another Church — it is true, havmg an Apostolic ministry, but in a state of schism. From the former Church, we received our ministry.'' This is such perfectly new information — such wonderful light thrown upon the history of the En!::lish Church, that I presume all your inquisitive read<;rs, will be just as anxious as I am, to be referred to your authorities. In my next letter, I shall notice the origin and his- tory of the Anglo-American succession. In the mean time, I subjoin the following extract from a recent pub- lication in Scotland,* to show, that others entertain like fears with myself, and h«>w utterly absurd is the pretension to Apostolic succession, derived through the Scottish channel : **If Popery be destined lo assume for a season, its old ascendency, it will be found that the Episcopalian controversy will swell mightily into importance, during at least the earlier stages of iis rise. It is more than probable that on this old battle field, will the war of outposts in the great struggle, have to be carried on." *'It is a curious and important fact, that, for a period of nearly forty years — from the appointment of the Ihlchan Bishops, in 1572, until after the meeting of the .Angelical General Assembly, in 1010 — the rite of or- * The Witness, of April 27, 1S4-2, Edinbiirgh. 251 dinalion, as practiced both in ihe English Church, and among our Scottish Episcopalians of later times, had no existence in Scotland. Our Bishops, tried by the only standard recognized as legitimate now, were all iinordained Bishops. In other words, they wx^re not Bishops — not ecclesiastics even. The old Popish line had been suffered to die out in Scotland — the last of the number, James Beaton, Arch-bishop of Glasgow, had closed a long and useless life, the very year in which James had ascended the throne of England ; and no Scotch Bishop of the Reformed faith, seems to have so much as suspected that the race passing into extinction, were in the possession of any virtue which they could have communicated to their successors. As in the case of cattle infected by cow pox, ere the dis- covery of vaccination, no heed had been taken to the valuable mailer which they had carried about w^ith them — it was suffered to dry up accordingly ; and so in 1610, seven years after the accession of James, when, thiough the medium of the court, the high church notion had insinuated itself into the kingdom, it was found necessary to export the ichor from England.'' ^4t was once held that the toad, " All loiithsome though it be, and venomous, Did bear a precious jewel in its liead." And certainly, had the jewel been there, the belief would have insured its discovery. But what gem-hun- ter now thinks of mining into toads' heads in quest of jewels? Wherever else one may dig for them, no one ever thinks of digging for them there. It so happen- ed, as we have shown, that in the days of our earlier Episcopalians, there prevailed a belief regarding Pope- 252 ry, analogous to our modern belief regarding toads. Protestantism in Scotland never once dreamed that aught so precious as the ^Apostolic succession/ could be borrowed from the beast. It knew much of the ve- nom inherent in it; but it was quite unaware of the gem — nay, it went farther, it decided, like our modern naturalists, in the case of the toad, that there was no gem. It acted as if there was none — it asserted in the Confession of its Faith, that there was none ; and Episcopacy, by way of being particularly orthodox, re- peated the assertion — nay, aflirmcd in the very words of Knox, that * hncal descent,' however certain it may be, is no mark of the * trew kirk.' * We affirm,' says the Confession of Faith, by which, for nearly half a century, our Bishops professed to hold, * we affirm that the notes, signs, and assumed tokens, whereby the immaculate spouse of Christ Jesus is known from the horrible harlot, tlic kirk malignant, are neither antiqui- lie, title usurped, lineal descent, ])lace appointed, nor multitude of men approving an error.' " LETTER XV. anglo-american succession, Rev. and dear sir: I shall delay to examine but one more broken link, in your true line of Apostolic succession, and that is, the ^nglo- American Episcopal Church, *^ At the period of our civil revolution," you say, ^' the Episcopal Church in the colonies, was under the care of the Bishop of London. An ecclesiastical revolution also took place, and the Church renounced all foreign juris- diction,'' Your Episcopal Churches, both in England and America, it would seem, always follow in the wake of civil and political revolutions. Strange sort of Head- ship power must that be, which is so easily and inva- riably disturbed by a political revolution. In your Churches, by your own confession, Christ's transferred power has been made subordinate to kings and queens and revolutions! We are happily exempt from such •Catastrophes, knowing no supreme powder in our Chur- ches, but that of Jesus Christ now in Heaven, our sole supreme Head and Lawgiver. He must be blind in- deed, who reads Bishop White's memoirs of the Epis- copal Church of the United States, and does not see how formidable were the embarrassments with which the American Episcopal Church had to contend — ^all growing out of the Episcopal headship power. 22 254 You speak of it as a matter of course, '* that the Church in America" — I understand you as speaking only of the Episcopal Church, for il is not the fact in reference to Presbyterian and other Churches, and I enter my protest against your use of such language, as though the Episcopal was all *' the Church in Ameri- ca," which — " was left without a Bishop." You ad- mit, that the Episcopal Church was left *' without the Apostolic succession." just as Queen Bess's Church had been, by the revolution in her day. " But," you say, '^ God's promise was still recorded — the Church of Christ could not be destroyed," and the proof of it, you cite in the Episcopal ordination of certain worthy di- vines of these United States. Why, sir, God's promise would not have failed, nor his Church have been de- stroyed, if neither these gentlemen, nor any other, had ever been ordained *' Episcopal Bishops." I notice this, merely to show, how incidentally you betray the opinions you clierish, that none but churches having Episcopally ordained ministers, are a part of the true church of Christ. You inform us, that ^* the Rev. Samuel Seabury, an eloquent defender of the faith, early received the Apostolic office from the church in Scotland — and that eminent servant of Christ, William White, then a Presbyter in Pennsylvania, and Samuel Provoost, a Presbyter of Nev/ York, repaired to the mother church in England, and received from the hands of her Bishops, the Apostolic succession, (such as it was, I add,) — and with James Madison, of Virginia, who also received the Apostolic office from the English Church, have continued it down through the different Bishops, since 255 consecrated to that office — and xow, throughout the length and breadth of the land, the Gospel of Christ is proclaimed through the Church, and by an Apostolic MIxVISTRY." I say nothing of the spirit which such hinguage breathes. I am no judge of the heart, and have tjiere- forc carefully and conscientiously guarded against any impeachment of your motives, or the use of a single epithet that would convict me of unkind and olfensive personalities, much less, of '^railing," or a persecuting spirit. I have, indeed, addressed you personally, and used great plainness of speech in analyzing your argu- ment, and in trying the strength of your logic. This, i have been induced to do, not as a criticism of your sermon, but because it has afforded a suitable occasion for the examination of the claims of Episcopa- I cy. I perceived that you had endeavored to work in- I to your discourse, in a popular form, the general range |. of argument, in the discussions which have been had ^ on this subject, and therefore, in addressing you per- sonally, I have meant not to single you out as an indi- vidual, but to regard you as the representative of Epis- copacy. I mean not to reproach therefore, but I must say, I that the language, which you, in common with prelali- cal writers, hold about your Apostolical succession, < and the manner in which you have presented the sub- j ject, whatever proof to the contrary may have been I given to you, is to me, and to many of my brethren, both clerical and lay, as " unkind and offensive'' as if I you had openly slandered us and called us outright, ' aBOSS iMPOJSTORS. The dagger dipped in oil, is not 256 less the dagger still. I have tried to understand it as applying only to your own Episcopal ministry, but cannot perceive that such an exclusive reference or particular explanation will at all comport with your argument or language. If your suspicions or fears of '^ gross impostors," implied in your hypothesis referred to, are meant to be confined to your own sect, be it so. Certainly there is ground for them, w^hen there are those among you, calling themselves Apostles. We have no such pretenders, and are therefore, happy to be exempt from them, and to know, that we are not the object of them. If this bo not the true meaning, but you intended to Include your ministers with those of other denomina- tions, it does not help you. For, Episcopal ordination and Apostolic succession — the things you sa}^ you have — are the very things from the want of which by others, you argue and atlirm that they are gross impostors. Possibly you may have had Icars and suspicions, that in asserting the high claims you did, you, and those with you, vv'ho insist upon being Apostles of Jesus Christ, in regular linear succession, endowed with Christ's head- ship power, subjected yourselves to the charge of be- ing reputed ^^ gross impostors,*' if you failed Xo prove by sound conclusive argument, the positions you advan- ced. If this be the fact, I greatly respect your fears, and only regret that you should have ventured to give your argument till you had so conclusively settled the Apostolic character of your office, that your own mind should have been entirely relieved, from them and from the suspicions they are so apt to engender. You certainly are not able to make out your case, so plainly, and to prove your Apostolic succession so con- 267 clusively as to be entitled to appropriate, to your Episco- pal societies, the appellation of the church, as though thei) were exclusively such in these United States. Bishop Seabury's ordination, coming through the Scotch line, has been pronounced invalid. It is essen- tial to a valid ordination, according to the sacramental views you advocate, ihat it should have been validly received and delivered. Where there has been doubt on the subject, it has been judged that ^* they ought certainly to be conferred again. ''"^ This principle you yourself recognized, and acted on, when you disowned your Presbyterian baptism, and was Episcopally re- baptized, ^' The divine grace or commission is believed to be only given perfectly, to those lawfully ordain- ed."! I will not state the different departures from the canons, in matters of form, which invalidate ordin- ation ; but merely remark — that that ordination has been judged invalid, where the person ordained Bishop, had not been previously ordained a Deacon and a Priest; that is, ordination per saltum does not convey the grace — and that the want of Episcopal baptism also is an essential defect. "f Other things have been judged also to invalidate Episcopal consecration, which I need not notice. Dr. Campbell§ says, that the ordination of our pre- sent Scotch Episcopal clergy is solely /rom Presbyters, Men, who, according to your Episcopal doctrine of Apostolic succession, had a part only of the ministerial powers, and no right of transmitting orders to others.^ *Palraer, I, 435. tBingham, b. H, c. 16, s. 12 tSee Dr. Field as quoted in Smyth's Lectures, p, 116. §See Bingliam, vol. XI, p. 493. ULcct, on Eccle3. Hist., XI, p. 202. 22* 258 King James nominated thirteen Bishops, to the thirteen Scotch bishoprics, which he had himself previously abolished. Mr. Spotswood, Arch-bishop of Glasgow, Mr. Lamb, Bishop of Brechen, and Mr. Hamilton, Bishop of Galloway, he sent to England, and issued a commission, under the great seal of the Bishops of London, Ely, Bath, Wells, and Rochester, requiring them to proceed to the consecration of the above men- tioned persons as Bishops, according to the English or- dinal. The Bis!iop of Ely, viz : JlndrewSy objected, alledg- ing their previous consecration as Priests to be neces- sary. A majority, however, judged Presbyterian or- dination valid, and they were consecrated, A. D. 1610, and thus Episcopacy usurped supremacy over the Kirk of Scotland,^ and the race of JScolch Bishops started, whose canonical qualifications have always been doubt- ed, by high churchmen. ** The troubles of Charles I, came on. Episcopacy sank, and ere its resuscitation in IGOO, ail the old Bishops had died out, with the exception of Sydserf, Bishop of Galloway. Now, one Bishop lacks power, it would seem, to communicate the Apostolic virtue. To do the thing unexceptionably, three are required,; and* fewer than two cannot transmit it all. It is a law of the electric Huid, that if a single Ley den jar be well charged, it yields a smart shock. Double the number of jars, and connect them, and the shock is doubled. Every additional jar gives additional strength to the shock, until at length, by the sheer force of numbers, we construct a battery powerful enough to explode *A'eaI*3 Hist, of Puritans, vol. H, p. lOS 259 gunpowder, or to light tapers tipped with sulphur. But the Apostolic fluid is regulated by other laws. A sin- gle jar, let it be charged as it may, gives no shock what- ever; set beside it a second jar, and ihere ensues what may be regarded a shock incases of dire necessity, but not otherwise. Add yet a third, and the battery is complete. The fluid glances nimbly along, and ignites tapers at the noon day altar. Of course, the single surviving Scolcli Bishop, even had his predecessors been baptized, and had they been admitted regularly into Episcopalian orders, could demonstrably on these principles do nothing — the degree of virtue which he himself possessed he could not communicate ; and so, four Scotchmen, like the three on a former occasion, were sent up to England, to be ordained. In the case of the electric telegraph, the fluid can be transmitted by a wire — in the case of the cow pox infection, the ichor can be conveyed between two bits of glass — the gas engendered in one locality may be carried through a pipe many miles in length, and consumed at another; but the vital gas — ichor — fluid of Episcopacy, has, it would seem, no such transmissive quality — it can be carried only by the living person — an unlucky pecu- liarity which leads occasionally, it would seem, to ir- regularities of a very fatal kind. But to these, sur- rounded as we are by deadly weapons of a more pal- pable class, we shall, at present, lack space to refer. The four Scotch ecclesiastics sent up for ordination, were the infamous Sharpe, Leighton, an eminently ex- cellent, but mistaken and facile man, and two others of less note, Fairfoul and Hamilton. Leighton and Sharpj like the former Bishops, possessed only Presby- 260 terian orders; light had been gradually strengthening, however, among the guardians of Episcopacy in Eng- land, the objection, overruled before, was sustained now, and they had both to submit to be prelatically in- troduced into orders, ere their introduction as Bishops could take place. But the light, though strengthening, was not yet sufficiently strong, and the old fatal flaw which had marred the former ordination, was suffered to impart the infection of nullity to this ordination also. Sharpe and Leighton had received only Presbyterial baptism, z. e., they had never been baptized; regarding one of the others, Fairfoul, no man could say whether he had been baptized or no; and though the fourth had been baptized prelatically, it was only through the old Scotch prelates that he had been so — men who had never been baptized themselves. None of the four jars sent up to be charged on this occasion had been pre- viously prepared — they lacked the tin coaling, if we may so speak, and of course, could not retain the fluid. ^•But had all the four been hnpthcd, and that by the Pope himself, and even had English Episcopacy been charged with the Apostolic virtue, which it professed to bestow upon them — and that it did not possess this virtue, can be very satisfactorily shown — there awaited on Scottish prelacy, a disaster which would itself have thrown no inconsiderable shade of doubt upon its claims, had there been no other. Scottish history, as has been often remarked, has had a sad trick of losing its records. It lost them by wagon-loads in the days of Edward I; it lost a whole ship cargo of them in the times of Charles II; and recently, it lost some of its more important ecclesiastical documents by the fire which 261 destroyed both houses of parliament. Miserable as the genealogy would have been which would have connec- ted them with Sharpe and Fairfoul — that genealogy is lost. They possess no means of serving themselves heir to even the unhaptized dignitaries of the Restora- tion. In 'short, so miserable is their plight^ that had the Apostolic succession been a ten pound freehold, and had it been in the undisputed possession of the worship- ful James Sharpe, they would be unable to make good their pretensions to it in a court of law. They lack their certificates of legitimacy, and no jury could in conscience find their claim proven without ihem.""^ This doubt. Bishop White tells us was so far enter- tained as to have created distrust concerning the valid- ity of Bishop Seabury's ordination, and to have direct- ed himself and others to England, for the Episcopal consecration, though his own private views were dis- tinctly expressed, that there were but two orders of the ministry resolved by many christians into one; and that Presbyterian ordination would have been valid, had they failed to get Episcopal ordination from Eng- land, for he urged that the superintendent of the dis- trict or permanent moderator, should have power to ADMIT TO THE MixNisTiiY. The Organization Bishop White proposed for the churches, which, by the Amer- ican Revolution had been severed from the Epis- copal Church of England, was, in all essential respects, Presbyterian. He admitted of the propriety of at- tempting to obtain the succession from England, but insisted that they could go on without it, and after- wards, when the Episcopate should be obtained, cor- *The Witness, April 27, 1S42, EdinburgM. 262 rect any imperfections in the system, and in the inter- mediate ordinations without acknowledging their NULLITY.^ A letter from the Rev. A. C. Jarvis, in the name of the clergy of Connecticut, addressed to "Mr. White, dated Woodbury, March 25, 1783," objects to his views and enters into an argument and remonstrance against them.''t The Episcopal consecration was obtained, as you say from England, by Bishops White, Madison, and Provoost — but I ask }ioii\ under what limitations, and from what source? These things you have not advert- ed to, but would fain have us believe, ** that the Apos- tolic succession" has flowed down, uninterruptedly, from Paul, through the old British Churches, the pre- sent established Churcli of England, and the triumvir- ate above named. Were you not aware, of the utter destitution of the union of the Episcopal churches in this country, consequent on the American revolution? Of the part which Bishop White took, in his efforts, *• to procure a union of all the Episcopal churches in the United States, into one body or church only?"]: and of the fact, that it was by means of human wisdom, they were consolidated, having, as Dr. Hawks fully sets forth, come together as independent churches, duly or- ganized, and so considered each other ?§ The organization of the present protestant Episcopal church of these United States, and flie introduction of ♦The Case of the Episcopal Churches in the U. S., considered and published by Bishop White, 1782. tSec While's Memoirs of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the U. S. A., pp. Xl^r, \A ilson's Mem, p, 07, §Conslit. of Prot. Epi*. Ch. in Ch. Record. 263 the Episcopate, were questions that led to much con- troversy, both in Great Britain and America. Episco- pal ordination was not easily obtained — ''the Aposto- lic succession" of the Engh'sh Church itself, having, for its fountain, the king's supremacy. Political prejudices, and other considerations, operated, and no Bishop of England, dared to lay his hands on the American di- vines, till king George and his parliament gave them power and authority to do so. I give you in a note below, the law enacted specially empowering {he Eng- lish Arch-bishops to extend the Episcopate, in order to show, from what source, and by what authority, Bish- ops VVhite, Madison, and Provoost obtained their pow- er, which you claim yourself to exercise as their regu- lar lineal successor.^' There are several things in this law deserving atten- *An Jet to empower the Arch-hislup of Canterhury, or the Arch- bishop rf York, for the time being, to co?isecrale to the ojjice of a Bishop, persons being- subjects or citi- zens of countries out of his Majesty's dominions. Whereas, by the laws of this realm, no person can be consecrated to the office of B Bishop, vvitliout the king's license for his election to that office, and the royal mandate under the great seal for liis confirmation and consecration : And whereas, every person wJio s^hjilj he consecrulcd to the said office, is refjuircd to take the oaths of allegiance and supieaiacy, and also ihc oalii of due ohcdicnce to the Arch-bishop •, and whereas, tiicrc are divers persons, snbjec's, or citizens of countries out cf his Majesty's dominions, inhabiting and residing; within thesaid countries, who profess the public worship of Alniiglity God, according to the princii»Ies of ilie Ciiurch of England, and who, in order to provide a regular succession of ministers for the service of their Ciiurch, are desirous of having certain of the su!>jecls or citizens of those countries coi sjcrated iJishops, according to the form of consecration in the Church of England : Be it enacted by the King's most excellent Mnjesty, and by and with the advice and consent of llie Lords spiritual and temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and hy the authority of the same: that from and after the passing of this act, it shall and inay be lawlul to and lor the Arch-bishop of Can- terbury, or the Arcii-bisl'.op of York, for the time being, together with such other Bishops as tliey shall call to their assistance, to consecrate persons being subjects or citizens of countries out of liis Majesty's dominions, Bishops for the purposes aforesaid, without ihe King's license for tlieir election, or the royal mandate under the great seal, for their conlirmation and consecration, and without requiring them to take the oaths of allegiance and supremacy, aud the oath of due obedience to the Arch-Bishop for the time being: Provided, always. That no person shall be conse- crated Bishop, in the manner herein provided, until the Arch-bisliop of Canterbury or the Arch-bishop of York, for the time beins, shall have first applied for and ob- tained HIS 3Iajest\'s License, by warrjtnt under his royal signet and sign manual, authorizing and empowering him to perform, such consecration, and expressing the name or natiies of the persons so to be consecrated; nor until the said Arch-bishop has been fully ascertained of the sufficiency in good learning, of the soundness of their faith and of the purity of their manners : Provided also, and it is hereby de- 264 tion. It provides for and determines, the Anglo-Ameri- can Episcopal succession. It forms the fountain of your sacerdotal powers. Before they could be obtain- ed, the king and parliament of Great Britain had to le- gislate on the subject. What a beautiful specimen, and illustration, is this, of the plenitude of Christ's Headship power, which you claim to have been trans- ferred to the Apostles, and to your *^ Apostolic Bi- shops,"' their successors, for the government of the Church ! To the king and parliament of Great Britain are you as much indebted for all your Episcopal pow- ers, as arc the English Bishops themselves. The law, under which you hold your Apostolic commission, carefully and particularly limits the exercise of your Episcopal powers. When Christ commissioned His Apostles, it was, ** go into all tiik world, and preach the gospel to every creature,'' JMat.y viii, 15. But when the act of king George the 3d and his parliament, authorized the Arch-bishops of Canterbury and York to commission your first American ''Episcopal Bishops,'' it explicity excluded them from the exercise of their functions, in a very large part of the world — through- out the immensely extended dominions of Great Britain. ** JVo person or persons consecrated to the office of a Bishop in the manner aforesaid, nor any pejson or per- sons^DERivLXG TiiEiR CONSECRATION from or uudcr any clarcd, ihRt 7io person or persons consecrated to the office of a Bishop In tlie manner n.foresaid, nor any person or persons derivino their coNSErR ation from or un- der any Bishop so covskcrated, nor any prrson or persons admitted to ihc order of deacon or priest by any J5is!iop or Bisliops so consecrated, or by the successor or SUCCESSORS of any Bisliop or Bishops so consecrated, shall he thereby enabled to exercise his or their respective oflice or offices within his Majesty's dominions: Provided ahcays, and he it further enacte 1, that a certificate of such consecration shall be ^iven under the hand of the Arcli-bishop wlio consecrates, containing the name of the person so consecrated, with the addition as well of the country wliere- of he is a subject or citizen, as of the church in which he is appointed Bisliop, and tlie further description of his not having taken the said oaths, being CJKcmpied £rom the obligation of so doing by virtue of this act. 205 Bishops so consecrated, nor any person or persons ad- mitted to the order of a deacon or priest by any Bishop or Bishops so consecrated, or by the succes- sor OR SUCCESSORS OF ANY BiSHOP OR BiSHOPS SO consecrated, shall be thereby enabled to exercise their office or offices within his Majesty's domin- ions." Under this law, the American ^^ Episcopal Bishops'" accepted ordination. They are bound, in good faith, to abide by the terms of the covenant, with the British government, implied in their acceptance of ordination, through the hands of the king's authorized agent, his grace, the Arch-bishop of Canterbury ; so that, whene- ver you cross our beautiful river, to officiate as a min- ister of the Gospel, you should, in good conscience, leave your Episcopal robes and office, behind you, and appear there, as you really are, agreeably to the laws of Great Britain, any where within her dominion, a mere layman. Unless you can show, that the law, un- der which you, as Bishop White's successor, hold your commission, has been modified, or that some new law has since been passed, you should, consistently with the implied covenant, refuse to exercise your Episco- pal or priestly functions, in Canada. And further, should it ever happen, so disastrously as it once did, which, I pray the good Providence of God may prevent, in the event of a war with Great Britain, that our city should come again, though but for a time, under her dominion, the obligations of the im- plied covenant, through which you derive the '* Apos- tolic succession," would silence you at once, and de- 23 266 grade you to the level of ihe laity, unless the authori- ties, for the time beihg. should grant you a dispensation. American ''Episcopal Bishops," assuredly, are the very last persons, that should boast of antiquity, and Apostolic succession, and Divine right, if they would have any regard for modesty. Before 1784, there was no such thing as an *• Episcopal Bishop," in the coun- try. That year, Bishop Seabury was consecrated by the nonjuring Bishops of Scotland. It was not till 1787, that the constitutional compact of the Episcopal Churches was ratified, the first general convention, preparatory to an independent organization, having been held in Philadelphia, two years before, nor till August 8, 1789, when it was finally adopted. Bish- ops White and Provoost were consecrated in 1787, but they could not consecrate others to the Episcopjil oflice, until there were three regular Bishops, constitu- ted such, by receiving their ordination from the hands of English Bishops.* The Methodist Church had the start of yours, by six years, and the Presbyterians, nearly a century. Pro- perly speaking, the Protestant Episcopal ChuVch of the United States, did not exist, w^ith full power to propa- gate itself, before 1790, when Bishop Madison, of Vir- ginia, was consecrated to the Episcopal oflice, by the Arch-bishop of Canterbury. Knowing these facts, therefore, we certainly are not disposed to entertain any very great reverence for the American Episco- pate, beyond what the personal worth of the Bishops, as brethren, may entitle them to. Nor can we give you credit, for what, in the prq^ * See W^hite's JMemoirs, &c., pp. 27, 28. Note, pp. 115-124. 267 face of your second edition, you applaud yourself, when you say, *-I also feci gratified on account of the proof, which has been given, that the manner in which the subject is presented, was not considered unkind or oflfensive. For while I shall always feel bound to contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the Saints, I trust no expression shall escape from me, at w^ar with those feelings, which the Gospel of our bles- sed Lord directs us to cherish, even to those who have erred and departed from his own institution — the Church." Neither you may have intended or suspec- ted it, nor those who have lauded you for it ; but you could not well have used more oflensive language. You have assumed your American Episcopal Church to be the only true church of Jesus Christ in these Uni- ted States, THE Church! and you have denied to other churches, all right and title to be thought a part of Christ's Church, — have in fact declared, that they have departed from Christ's institution — the Church — virtu- ally proclaimed us to be in error and apostate, and yet very obligingly tell us, that you have used no unkind and offensive language — nor any words calculated to irritate or wound. Verily this is the unkindest cut of all. You must have very strange ideas of our sensi- tiveness, and the import of your own language, thus to speak, after all that you have said about the Episcopal Church being ^* the ark of safety,'' about your having the true line of Apostolic succession — about your being \ THE Church, and other things equally exclusive in their spirit and bearing, and that too, when you have so Ht- tle to show, on the score of your Apostolic succession, 268 or the antiquity and purely spiritual origin of your church. You have had among yourselves, doubts and dis- putes about the validity of the consecration of some of your Bishops, and therefore, if not out of deference to the sentiments of others, on the vexed and unconfirm- ed question of your '^ Apostolic succession/' it behooves you to be a little more modest in asserting your claims. You certainly must be aware, that the validity of the ordination, both of Bishop Hobart and of Bishop Gris- wold, was soon after seriously and publicly questioned, for reasons then declared, and that the subject was made a matter of controversy both in newspapers and pamphlets, not by Presbyterians, but by Episcopali- ans.* ** On this doctrine, therefore," to use the language of Mr. Smyth, whose learned and elaborate work on the Apostolical succession, I would recommend to your careful perusal, ** the claim of the American Episcopal Church to an unbroken and uninvalidated succession, must be allowed to be very weak indeed. The chain, if ever it extended across the Atlantic, before 1787, was assuredly broken, when even the semblance of a previ- ous union was shivered by the storm of the revolution, and, when the Episcopal Churches found themselves without union, without a head, and without any acces- sible source of Episcopal grace. And when to this fearful break in their boasted line, we add the other in- validating defects in the composition of the links them- selves, there is surely enough to exclude all boasting, * See Bishop While's Mem. Prot. Ep. Church, p. 215. AUo, a pamphlet cniiiled, Serious Thoughts on a late adminisiration of Episcopal orders, in N. Y., March, 1812, p. 80. 269 on the part of the American prelacy, on the ground of any certain and unbroken succession of duly consecra- ted prelates."*' We certainly are not at all prepared to hear such language as the following, or to attribute it — as we will not, to a design to insult us — to any thing else, than to the overweening influence of a blind attachment to your own church. '' Happy people then are we, to have this ministry. For amidst all the agitations of the christian world, the Church has stood firm and decided, and not one of her Bishops has been carried away from the simplicity of the faith, as it is in Christ." I was utterly amazed at such a declaration, as it appeared in the first edition of your sermon, having learned the fol- lowing facts in relation to the spiritual dignitaries of the Church of England, so very like a wide departure from *'the simplicity of the faith, as it is in Christ." **In the Church of England, we have two Arch-bi- shops. The name is as anti-christian as the thing. What are the duties of the office, it is difficult to ascer- tain. Those sustaining it, have no functions distinct from the Bishops, nor does it appear that they have any jurisdiction over them. They do not appoint them — the king does, and they cannot remove them. They cannot, without the king's concurrence, call them together in convocation.! Their sole use, therefore, seems to be, to rear their mitred fronts in courts and Parliaments ; to vote in the train of ministers ; to rule their wide and opulent dominions, count their enor- * Smyth's Lectures, p. 220. t This ecclpsiastical Parliament, formerly the organ through which "the Supreme Head of the Chuich made known His will on all points of doctrine, discipline, wor- ship, &c., has still a legal capacity of existence, but has not been allowed to meet tor any purpose, except to preserve ancient forms, since May. 1717. 23* 270 mous revenues, and dispose of good livings to sons, brothers, nephews, cousins, relations, and dependants, without end, as their own interest, or the interest of ministers, reserved by special agreement, may dic- tate."* *^The Arch-bishops have their princely reti- nue, domestic chaplains, officers for temporalities, their spiritual officers, vicar general, guardian of the spiritu- alities, dean of the arches, with all their under officers and attendants. Then they have their court of Facul- ties, court of audience, prerogative court, delegates. The Bishops have their full share of pomp ; they, too, have their trains, domestic chaplains, officers and courts. To the Arch-bishops belong, 26 chancellors and their attendants, 24 registers, with their clerks, 124 gentlemen apparitors, 20 inferior apparitors. Under the Bishops there are 60 Arch-deacons; and these have 60 courts, to which belong Commissaries, 60 registrars, Officials, 120 proctors, Surrogates, 200 apparitors, so that, the number belonging to Arch-Bishops, Bishops, Arch-deacons, and their courts and offices, are judged to be no less than ten thousand persons— all of them, whether sacred or secular, supported by the country for the sole purpose of increasing the splendor and aug- menting the revenues of what are called '' the dignified clergy, ^^ It is difficult to ascertain the amount of the revenues of my lords the Bishops, arising from rent of glebes, * Book of Dcnonio p. 395. 271 tithes or church rates, surplice fees, marriage licenses, consecration of churches and burial grounds, and ex- penses arising from processes in ecclesiastical courts. Upon a fair assumption, which applies accurately to every thing else, continues the author,* from which I quote the above facts, *' the lists of prelatical incomes will stand thus: Arch-bishop of Canterbury, £56,650 a year. York, 32,200 Bishop of Durham, 36,420 *• London, 70,000 '' Winchester 57,779 Ely, 42,698 Salisbury, 27,700 The rest on an average, 10,000; that is from more than 290,000 dollars, to 44,444, annually. All this, it may be said, is the result of alliance with the state. True; but certainly the state has ** carried away'^ the Bishops very far **from the simplicity of the faith as it is in Christ'' — not to mention the lives of some which were wholly at war with the precepts and spirit of the gospel. It is notorious that a Bishop's office has been as truly the object of ambitious pursuit, and as systematically educated for, and sought from the crown, irrespective of spiritual qualifications, as any civil office within its gift. The reproach of Cow- per is founded on truth, and is the very antipodes of your panegyric: "The parson knows enough, who knowsa dukel Egregious purpose ! worthily begun In barbarous prostitution of your son , Press 'd on hie part by raeons that would di^racc *BoQk of Denom., p. 410. 272 A scrivener's desk, or footrann out of place, And ending, if at last its end be gained, In sacrilege, in God's own house profan'd. It may succeed ; and if hid sins should call For more than common punishment, it shall ; The wretch shall rise, and he the thing on earth Least qualified in honor, learning, worth, To occupy a sacred, awful post. In which the best and worihlest tremble most ; The royal letters arc a thing of course, A king, that would, might recommend his horse; And deans no doubt, and chapters, with one voice, As bound in duty, would confirm his choice. Behold your Bishop : well he plays his part. Christian in name, and infidel in heart, Ghostly in office, earthly in his plan, A slave at court, elsewhere a lady'a man. Dumb as a senator, and as a priest, A piece of mere church furniture at best: To live eslrangc, 307 the heart, and in the salvation of the soul. And in pressing this op/inion on your attention, I am happy to avail myself, of the sentiments of a dignitary of the Episcopal Church, Arch-deacon Jeffreys, who answers triumphantly, your insinuated, and Bishop Hopkins' avowed, objections against temperance and other vol- untary societies, viz: that they are of human device: After describin^T the drunken condition of Enf]rland and New South Wales, he says, '' In this deplorable condition of our country, the mercit\il grace of God has suggested the only remedy, that has ever prevailed to stop the desolating scourge; and j)rofessors of the gos- pel, instead of rushing to the battle of the Lord, — their bosoms warmed wMth the love of Christ — have mana- ged, to set up the gospel as an enemy to the great deli- verance, that the Lord is now workin^f amonD:st us ! O monstrous delusion ! delirium ! ! insanity ! ! ! In the next age it will not bo believed ; and the historian w^ho shall attempt to relate it, will himself be suspected of having ^Mipped his wrings in wine ! " Madidis quce CANTAT SosTRATus ALis."' For surcly, such a view of the gospel as this, is a miserable delusion of the under- standing, to say the least ; and the man who professes- to admire the gospel, and the labours of self denying love, which mark its character, while he can coldly I look upon these very labors brought into action by temperance societies, must either be afflicted w^ith a strange darkness, and bewilderment of his understand- ing, upon the subject, or else be extremely itncked. Temperance societies are, in fact, the effect and work- ing of the gospel. They are the very agency which^ the genuine gospel is calculated to set at work — the 308 very 'talent' which is put into our hands, by the mer- cy of God, as adapted for this particular end.'' **Who is to go into the dram-shops of our cities, and the innumerable beer shops of our towns and vil- lages, and persuade the wretched inmates, to abandon these hot-beds of crime and misery, and to frequent the house of God? The Church cannot do it, so long as she herself uses the drunkard's drink. While she holds the intoxicating cup in her own hand, the reehng drunk- ard will mock her to her face, and in answer to all her remonstrances, will snccrin^ly oflcr to * drink her health,' and pledge her cup in his own. Stubborn facts have proved, that, so far from reclaiming the drunk- ards with such a gospel as llih, she cannot even keep the members she has got ; and, that, so long as the Church dallies with the bait, parlies with the tempter, and fosters the deceiver within her own bosom, she is far more likely, to lose her own members, by deser- tion to the ranks of the intemperate, than to bring over the intemperate to her fold." ^' We have been, hitherto, pleading the cause of the many millions, that never go near the house of God, and never hear the sound of the preachers voice ! But here are instances, in which the destroyer has entered into the very bosom of the Church, and carried away, both the sheep and the shepherd, from the fold ! And will the objector still say, * why not leave it to the gos- pel to cure intemperance]' (the very spirit of your ad- vice to your clergy.) The Church cannot even keep her own^ much less can she reclaim the drunkard, by, such a gospel scheme as this." **Has any plan of operation yet been proposed, I 309 which, in its visible effects, is, at all, to be compared with the astonishing effects, even now produced by the agency of temperance societies, thougli they are clog- ged, and hindered, in the good they might do, by the keeping back of those who ought to be their best and warmest friends! But notwithstanding this strange, this unnatural hindrance, the tetotal society, where- ver it is found, has done immense good. It has per- suaded vast multitudes away from the haunts of intem- perance, and drawn them lo the house of God. Thus it is a powerful handmaid of the gospel. Christ does not usually extend His kingdom, in the present day, by miracles, but by sending His blessing upon human in- struments and second causes. The man, therefore, j who neglects to employ these for the cure of a nation- j al evil, and even encourages other causes, (such as drinking fiery wines, port, sherry, madeira, cham- paign, and in parties, and at table, in company with I those who are known to be occasionally inebriate, or under any circumstances, which may sanction the use of intoxicating liquors as a beverage,) which have ma- nifestly a contrary tendency, upon the plea that he will leave it to the grace of the gospel to cure if, in so doing, teaches antinomianism in its very worst and rankest form."' *^ He gives his countenance to those customs, which encourage others to continue in sin that grace may abound. He turns the grace of God into licentious- ness, and makes Christ the minister of sin. He inflicts a deeper and deadlier w^ound on Christianity, under the guise of a friend, than her bitterest enemy can possi- blv do: for men iudfre of relisfion, bv the conduct 310 of her friends, and not by the conduct of her enennies. He stabs the gospel to the heart, and then substitutes a wretched invention of his own, which is no more like the gospel, than the cold hearted selfishness of the world, is like the self denying love of Christ — no more like the gospel than a stone statue is like a living, breathing man."* I mirdit notice other dani^erous tendencies of the high church notions, you advocate, but confine my- self, entirely, to those, which develop themselves in your sermon. Every one of them, on which I have animadverted, in this letter, seem to me, to be fraught with evil to the cause of Jesus Christ, and to the best interests of society. They are the legitimate fruit of principles, which I earnestly hope may never take root, and spread in ihc United States — the very spirit and essence of popery. I did not dream that you was tinctured with them, till I read your sermon. I had always supposed you were adverse to such principles, and that you cared more for the glory of the Lord .lesus Christ in the immediate work of saving sinners, than for exalting the Episcopal Church, and inculcating the spirit T>f Judaism, ** Stand ofl', for I am holier than thou.'^ 1 deplore the miscliief which such sentiments are cal- culated to produce, and the ruin they are adapted to bring upon the souls of men. Only let men believe, that the church is the ark of safely, and be thoroughly brought under the influence of a sacramental religion, by which, in some mystic, mysterious manner, by * The religi ous objection to letolalism by Arch-deacon Jeffreys, pp. 23, 37, 2«, II 311 forms and public duties, rites, and cerennonies, they are to possess the Spirit of God, and I know no nnore fatal and deadly opiate, that can be administered to them. This is the reh'gion the Oxford Tractators are attempt- ing to introduce, and to establish, in the Church of Eng- land. It is an importation from Rome, and sorry, in- deed, am I, that it should have found friends and patrons in our own country. Your zealous attachment to Episcopacy, and your exclusive notions of the church, have carried you far into it, and will, if not corrected, inevitably rank you among its advocates. I speak not rashly or unadvisedly. I have endeavored, to compare the features of your system, as ihey are set forth in your discourse, with those of tlie high church men — the reh^ion vou so much laud, w^ith the Oxfordism of the English divines, and I am surprised at the resemblance. I do not say in all respects; but that it is discernible in so many. Lest I may be suspected of erroneously judging in the premises, I extract, from the notes which Mr. Smyth has appended to his lectures on the Apos- tolic succession, the view which Bishop Meade, of Ya., has given of this system, in his sermon at the consecra- tion of Bishop Elliot, (Washington, 1S41, app., ch. ix., p. 93.) Their belief, on this subject, (the sacerdotal office,) which, he says, they magnify beyond all bounds, seems to be contained in the following pi'opositions : "1st. That before Jesus Christ left the world He breathed His Holy Spirit into the Apostles, giving them the power of transmitting this precious git^t, to others, by prayer, and the imposition of hands ; that the Apos- ties did so transmit it to others, and they again tooth- 312 ers ; and ihat in this way, it has been preserved in the world to the present day. *^2d. That the gift thus transmitted, empowers its possessors: 1st, to admit into, and to exclude from, the mysterious commutiion, called, in scripture the king- dom of heaven, any one whom they may judge deserv- ing of it, and this, with the assurance, that all whom they admit or excIuJe on earth, and externally, are admitted or excluded in heaven, spiritually, in the sight of God and IkjIv angels ; that it empowers men to bless, and to intercede for those who are within His kingdom, in a sense, in which no other man can bless or intercede ; 2d, to make the cucharistic bread and wine the body and blood of Christ, in the sense in which our Lord made it so : 3d, to enable delegates to perform this great miracle, by ordaining them with im- position of hands.*'* The most superficial reader cannot fuil, to see how closely anil strikiniily the views of the ministry you teach in your sermon, coincide with the above ; nor to discover, that the very same results, which Bishop Meade deduces from the Oxford system, flow legiti- mately from yours. ''According to this view of the subject,'' in the language of this Episcopal divine, **to dispense vvith Episcopal ordination is to be regarded, not as a breach of order merely, or a deviation from Apostolic precedent, but as a surrender of the christian priesthood, a rejection of all the powers, which Christ instituted Episcopacy to perpetuate ; and the attempt to institute any other form of ordination for it, or to SEEK COMMUNION WITH Christ, thvougk any non-Epis- *Smyth's Lectures on Apos. Sue, p. 407. 313 copal associaiiony is to be regarded not as schism mere- ly, but AS AN IMPOSSIBILITY.^ It is not difficult to see, what must, of necessity, be the tendency, and result, of such views of the ministry of the gospel. They raise a wall of partition, high as Heaven, around the Episcopal Church, and do most effectually prevent, all ministerial and religious inter- course, with christians of other denominations. I see their operation, in the course which you pursue ; and want no clearer, or more decisive, evidence cf their error, than the spirit of exclusiveness, which they en- gender, and which is so rife in your Churches. You doubtless think, that you are glorifying God, and will meet his approbation, by giving way to its dictates, and by refusing to recognize, the ministerial character, and office, of the preachers of righteousness in other de- nominations. But you, certainly, are not prepared to say, that your convictions on this subject, are 'prima facie evidence, of the correctness of this spirit of exclu- siveness, and will exonerate you from all guilt, in the sight of God, incurred, by casting out your brethren of other denominations from His Church. Peter verily thought himself to be actuated by a spirit, of which God would approve, when he shrunk from all contact, with what he accounted common and unclean; but the Lord reproved his exclusiveness. You admit that the Lord may have true followers in other denominations. How then, I ask, can you escape from the obligations of brotherhood, which bind you to them, and from the duties you owe your Master, in rela- tion to them that are the members of His own mystical *Idem. 1 27 314 body 1 He has said, that whoso offendeth one of thesu little ones, it were better a mill-stone were lied round his neck, and he cast into the sea. Have you never thought, that you, and the ministry of your church — who refuse ministerial intercourse with, and all recog- nition of, non-Episcopal denominations — are in great danger of meeting this rebuke f Where did He ever give you any right thus to contract yourself into your own church, and lo treat all the world beside you, as heatlicn men and publicans ? How docs He rebuke the pride, the arrogance, ihe preposterousness of such a course of conduct, l)y the abundant proof He gives of His presence and blessing among christians of other denominations ? And who are your ** Episcopal Bish- ops,'' and Priests, and Deacons, that you cannot enter — and cordially commune and co-operate with those — among whom dwells the Spirit of God ? Are you made of purer mould, of choicer metal ? too highly honored as the favorites of Heaven ? too lofty in your dignified Church relationship ? to recognize a Presbyterian, Bap- tist, Methodist minister, as your brother? or even the poor, wretched and ignoble common people of other! denominations, except as the Jews did the Gentiles, U make proselytes? We are free to confess, that sucll treatment is painful to our sensibilities. But we havi abundant consolation under it. The Lord has admor ished us, not to be dismayed, nor to revenge such treat-i ment. ** Your brethren," says He, '' that hated you^^ that cast you out for my names saJce, said. Let thI Lord be glorified, but He shall appear to your joyjj and they shall be ashamed," We will not reciprocate such treatment. Instead of 315 magnifying our points of difTerence, and of consulting our prejudices against your fornus and government, we will rather look upon things in which we agree, and la- bor to advance the cause of our blessed Master, our common Christianity, and the salvation of immortal souls. We would much rather decline to speak, and if possible, even to think, of things in which we differ, and occupy our hearts with those in which w^e agree. Instead of lauding our Church, and its forms — how- ever excellent we may think them, and strongly we are attached to them — and in our social intercourse, instead of interlarding our discourse with panegyrics on our religion, we would carefully avoid every thing that might excite envy, and jealousy, and tend to se- parate. Just as it would be mo?^t unseemly, and insuf- ferable, for a man to say that he loved all his neigh- bors' families, and would not breathe a w^ord against them, but ever and anon, in his intercourse with them, would be boasting of his own, pr(;cl.iiming that no chil- dren were like his, no domestic economy, no interests, no social and family ties, like his, so do we esteem it, to be extolling our Prcshytei inn organization, and there- fore carefully abstain from all boastful laudations of our own church, and atten^pis to proselyte to our pecuHari- ties. We claim similar trcatiiii:. rain. It is because we do not find it reriprora i are most ungraciously (ic i God's house, that I havr i spoken, alike to your 'i Believing that the cliu i < love^Jesus Christ, rej ^ ui. on the contrary, lie, and a place, in jisiian liberty, and .) your conscience, prises all that truly 1 si as, and obey His 316 commands, irrespectively of their ecclesiastical relation or visible Church organization, I have been impelled to discharge, what 1 feel to be my duty to you, and bear my testimony against the dangerous tendency of the doctrine and spirit you inculcate. If you will magnify your Episcopal office, I shall prefer to exalt Jesus Christ, and search for His image where ** there is neither Greek, nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free, but Christ is all in all.'' GEO. DUFFIELD. ERRATA. Page 74. For "but a Ilisliop," in Uic 8(h and Otli lines from tbc lop, read "jix " 01. ►Sliikc out "nr»^ Aarr," from Ihr l"2ili linr. ** 103. For •' a historian," in llir I'lili n\u\ HUli line*, rrnd ** aX nisTOKiAll.*' '* 11*2. For •' Oriclmcli," Iniho :iii and 4lli line, reiid " CiRiL^Bicii." •* 120. For '* nor." in the ^^ilt line, rrnd '* ant)." '' 142. For '• Whill«*y," in l*2ili linr. rr.id *' Wliilhy." " 144. For '* Auntim," in '2:y\ \\nt\ rrad " Aihtin." '* 15*2. For " Thoplnjlnrt,'" in '-tli line, read " TnrorYiiLAET. " 101. For ** Hipliop,'' in '20th lino, rend •• Bisiiop.'' " 203. In 2;}d line, inlrodnre " in*" hetore " oU." ** 23G. For 490, in the l*2ih line, read 31X). EPISCOPAL piSHOPS, THE SUCCESSORS OF THE APOSTLES. THE SERMON PREACHED IN ST. PAUL'S CIICRCH, DETROIT, ON SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1842, AT THE ORDINATION OF THE REVEREND MONTGOMERY SCHUYLER, TO THE PRIESTHOOD, AND SABIN HOUGH AND EDWARD HODGKIN, TO THE DEACONSHIP. RIGHT REVEREND SAMUEL ALLEN McCOSKRY, D. D. PUBLISHED BY REQUEST. DETROIT: MORGAN BATES, PRINTER. 1842. The following sermoii was prepared under ihc pres- sure of the nnany cares and anxieties connected with the Apostolic office, in addition to those incident to the Rectorship of a large parish. The author had not the most remote idea of publishing it, when it was delivered. But at the earnest solicitation of the clergy then pre- sent, and many of the Laity of his own parish, and of reputable strangers who witnessed the transfer of a part of the Ministry, which the Great Head of the Church intrusted to His Apostles and their successors, he has consented to give it to the public at large. He has been, so far as possible, most scrupulously careful to avoid using any words calculated to irritate or wound christians wiio hold different vicw^s — but he hopes with- out any compromise of the truth. The subject is of vital importance, and concerns the eternal welfare of the human race. The author lias thus considered it, and most fully believes, if the positions advanced can- not be sustained — ^Christ has left no Chirch on THE EARTH AND NO MINISTRY OF RECONCILIATION* I BELIEVE ONE CaTUOLIC AND ArOSTOLIC CnUnCH, JSTicene Creed. From all false doctrlne, heresy and schism ; from hardness of heart, and contempt of thy word and commandment, Good Lord, deliver i>. The Litanij. SERMON. MS MY FATHER HATH SENT ME, EVEN SO SEND I YOU/^ St. JTohn, XX, 21* Every one who has been a close observer of pass- ing events, must be convinced that seldom, if ever, has there been exhibited a more anxious spirit of inquiry in reference to the true church of Christ, than at the pre- sent day. The time has gone by, when men would be satisfied with harsh and coarse invective, against those who rejoiced in the possession of an uninterrupted suc- cession of the priesthood of which Christ was the Head, and which he established to continue to the end of the world. They have grown weary of the continued di- visions and countless number of sects which have sprung up, all w'arring against each other; and are now seeking for some resting place, where they can escape such agitations, and feel secure under the broad prom- ise our Saviour made to His Church, the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. Men have endeavored to repress this spirit ; and have made the most exciting appeals to popular prejudice ; and under the specious name of religious freedom, have, in some degree, kept back the claims of the Church of Christ. But however 1* 6 successful these means may have been in former days, they are beginning to lose their power, and the chris- tian world highly excited by the wide-spread ruin which schism, (separation from the true Church of Christ,) has effected, is anxiously and boldly inquiring where and what is the Church of Christ. The ruinous idea, that men could associate together, and adopt such rules and government for themselves, as may suit their tastes, and still be entitled to lay claim to be a part of the Church of Christ, is rapidly passing away. Men have been convinced, from sad experience of its fallacy, that however well adapted such organi- zation may be to secure their civil comforts, yet they have not, and will not answer to promote, either their religious comfort or freedom. The Saviour has not left his household, the Church, to be new-modelled by the ever changing opinions of men, or the eternal interests of millions of the human race, to be determined by a casting vote. His church is not of man's forming — but has been established by him- self, and is regulated by well defined and well estab- lished laws. He is the Head and permanent Ruler thereof, and although now removed from sight and seated on his Mediatorial throne, yet he governs and regulates this Church, or Kingdom, (as it is frequently called,) by his constituted agents, to whom he has committed the very same authority which he received from his father, and with whom he* has promised. to to be to the end of the world. That this is the case, can easily be ascertained from the word of God. In it we find that the Church is con- * See Mat., xxvii cliap., 19 and 20 v. stantly spoken of as a permanent body, as one — and its continued unity prayed for by the Saviour, its Head. St. Paul says, He purchased a Church with his own blood. This Church so purchased, is called his Body — his Spouse — the Bride — the LamVs wife, and Christ is the Head of the body, the Church. And again, there is one body, and one spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your callings one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is above all, and through all and in you all. Such declarations at once settle the point, that the Church is not of human organiza- tion, but was established by Christ himself — that it can- not be altered in any way by man, either on the plea of necessity, or of supposed advantage to be gained. Nothing is left, as you perceive, to men, in reference to the organization of this Kingdom. This has been set- tled and permanently fixed by the Saviour himself. They have nothing to do but bacome subjects of this Kingdom, obey its laws, and promote its interests. It becomes then a question of vast importance to as- certain — to w^hom Christ has committed the govern- ment of this Kingdom ] had they successors 1 and what are their powers and duties X 1st. To whom Christ has committed the government of his Kingdom — the Church. That he transfer- j red the power he received from God his Father, the words of the text most fully declare. ^^5 niy Father hath sent me, even so send I you. Every thing that could be possessed by a mere human being, was given by the Saviour. He was, as the Apostle declares, the Head of the body — consequently this headship was i transferred, and all the power necessary to preserve 8 and regulate the body. For if the power to preserve and regulate the body be not transferred with the head- ship of the body, the body itself nnust cease to exist ; and of course the Church of Christ comes to an end. This cannot be. It must follow then, that as Christ is the permanent Ruler and Head of this body now in heaven, so are those to whom he transferred this pow- er, permanent rulers and heads on the earth, for he transferred the earthly power over his Church. A& my Father hath sent me^ even so send I you. The individuals who hold and exercise the office thus given, may and do change, but the office created has not, nor can it change, so long as the body, the church, exists, or until the power granted be taken back. But the Church has, and will exist, until it becomes such a Church as Christ designs it to be, and until the gospel is proclaimed through it to all the world. For as St, Paul declares, Christ a/so loved the Church, and gave himself fur it, that he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of icater by the word, that he might present it to Iwnself a glorious Church, not having spot or wrin- kle, or any such thing ; but that it should be holy and without blemish. So that you perceive, the Church is to continue until it becomes a glorious Church, not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing. And the same Apostle, speaking of the introduction of the Gen- tiles into the Church, says : to the intent that now unto the principalities and powei'S, in heavenly places^ might be known by the Church, the manifold wisdom of God. It is to continue until the gospel, through the Church, is preached to every creature. Nor has the power, (given by the Saviour) been taken back. On the con- trary, it is to continue to the end of the world, for our Saviour declared to those to whom he gave this pow- er, go 2/e, therefore^ and teach all nations, hajptizing them in the name of the Father^ and of the Son, and of ilte Holy Ghost, teaching them to observe all things whatsa- ever I have commanded you, and lo ! I am with you al- ways, even unto the end of the world. But all nations have not yet been taught and baptized — and all those to whom Christ gave this power, have died. It follows then, that the power is to exist until this is accomplish- ed, and if so, it must be found in a certain class of men, for the promise is made, that the Saviour will be with them to the end of the world. The question is now fairly presented, to whom was this power transferred 1 To none other than the Apostles. They were selected by the Saviour to be with him, as his constant attendants and ministers to preach the gospel. They had also power to baptize, for it is said by St. John, that Jesus himself baptized not, but his disciples. This was their first commission. Afterwards they received authority to commemorate our Lord's sacrifice on the cross, when he directed them at his last supper, to do as he had done; that is, to bless the elements of bread and wine in remem- ^brance of him. This was their second commission. This was again enlarged prior to the ascension of our Saviour. He then declared to them, that all power was given to him in heaven and on earth, and there- fore none could question or deny his right to transfer or delegate his authority. He therefore said to the Apostles, as my Father hath sent me, even so send I yoiu And when he had said ihis^ he breathed on them, and 10 ^aitli unto them^ receive ye the Holy Ghost, whose soever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them, and whose so- ever sins ye retain^ they are retained. In this transaction they were raised up to the very same office which Christ himself held. I mean that which belonged to him in liis human nature as head and governor of the Church. They were to supply his place in this respect. Full power was given to them, viz : the eleven, (for Judas had fallen from his Apos- tleship,) to set in order the things that were wanting in the Church, and in short, to do every thing w^hich Christ would have done, had he continued on the earth. And you will observe that the Apostles were admitted to the exercise of this power in the very same manner in which our Lord entered upon the duties of his office. He did not enter upon his duties as a public teacher, until the Holy Ghost fell upon him and annointed him for the office. Hence St. Paul says, 770 man taketh this honor unto himself, but he that is called of God, as was Aaron, So also Christ glorified not himself to he made a high priest, hut he that said unto him, thou art my son, to-day have I begotten thee. There was an actual and visible setting apart of Christ for this ollice. It was equally so in the case of the Apostles. They were not to enter upon the duties of the office which Christ had transferred to them, un- til they had received in a full and open manner, the Holy Ghost. Prior to the ascension of the Saviour, tJiey had received the power to act as Apostles, but not {;he gfls necessary to fit them for discharging the duties connected with the office. The former, viz : thepoiver, ^ynsgwen, when Christ breulhed on thena and said, re- 11 ceiveyeihe Hobj Ghost — the latter viz : the gifts, on the (Jay of Pentecost. Hence they vverecomaianded not to depart from Jerusalem, but to wait for the promise of the Father, which, sailh Christ, ye have heard of me. The Holy Ghost had descended upon the Saviour at his bap- tism, and he declared that the Apostles should also be baptized with the Holy Ghost 7iot many days hence,, which took place as I have already remarked, on the day of Pentecost. Here then we have it most solemnly determined, that no man could take such an office upon himself. Christ did not do so. He was set apart in an open and visi- ble manner by his Father. The Apostles did not do so. Their power was enlarged on three different oc- casions, and each time by the Saviour himseh^. And when they received the full power wdiich Christ pos- sessed, it was done in the most solemn manner, espe- cially when the ministerial gifts were bjestowed, so that every one could at once see, that they had indeed re- ceived the promise of the Father — the Holy Ghost. They then commence to preach the gospel, and began to speak with other tongues, as the spirit gave them ut- terance. And to place the power which the Saviour transferred to them, beyond all dispute, and that everj'* one might recognize the right to rule and govern the Church, he further declared to them» 1 appoint unto you a kingdom, as my Father hath appointed unto me. Here then v»'e have the foundation of the Christian ' Ministry. This solemn transfer of our Saviour's pow- er to the Apostles, to govern and rule the Church, was the broad seal to their commission to preach the gos- j ' pel, and under wiiich they were to go into all the world, 12 sustained and cheered by his promise, lo! I am with you always^ even unto the end of the world. And this pow- er was not transferred to any others. The seventy who had been sent out by the Saviour to preach, had no part in it. They were not mentioned, as their com- mission had expired prior to the crucifixion of Christ But you will observe, that so long as the Saviour exer- cised the office of High Priest, and before he transfer- red it to the Apostles, immediately preceding his as- cension, there were three grades in the ministry, as was the case in the Church under the Jewish dispensa- tion. Christ — the High Priest ; the Apostles — the Priests ; and the seventy — the Lcviles. The Apos- tles did not reach the highest grade, so long as the Sa- viour exercised any ministerial authority on the earth, but were raised up to it as he was about returning to heaven. They then stood as his representatives, and arranged the ministry, as will hereafter appear, after the model which ac himself had followed, viz : in ac- cordance with the Ministry of the Church as it existed prior to his coming. This point then is clearly settled : that the Apostles, held the only ministry which was of Christ. Not only the power to rule and govern the Church, but of course it must also follow, to continue the same power. If not, there never has been any authorized ministry in the Church, and all who profess to be commissioned as embassadors of Christ, are gross impostors. There can be no escape from such a conclusion. For I have endeavored to show you on the authority of the word of God, that Christ gave the power which he had re- ceived of the Father, only to the Apostles. 18 Which brings me to the consideration of the second question. Had the Apostles successors 1 This I w ill attempt to prove. It is a question involving the eternal inter- ests of millions — and if decided in the negative, must destroy the christian ministry under whatever name it may be called. For J have endeavored to show you from the word of God, that the Apostles were the only individuals to Avhom Christ imparted the powder he had received from his Father. If it died with them, and the promise of his presence to be with them to the 'end of the world, is to be limited to them ; then all who call themselves ministers of Christ are not only deprived of all power or right to preach, but also the only comfort which could sustain and cheer them in their arduous, and oftentimes thankless office — the pre- sence of the Saviour through the influence of his Spirit. But God be thanked, we arc not left to doubt on this all important question. We have the transfer of all V ministerial power most clearly set forth, as given by the Saviour to the Apostles; and to prove that such an office was needed to bring sinners to the know^lcdge of the truth as it is in Jesus, we have also the record of the feestowment of ministerial ability to fit them for its du- ties, given on the day of Pentecost, w^hen they spake as the spirit gave them utterance. If such an office was necessary then, it is equally so now, Thousand9 are still ignorant of the great salvation which our bles-? sed Redeemer came to purchase, and thousands who liave heard the^lad tidings, are to be persuaded to be- lieve through the foolishness of preaching. The mere fact that the Apostles also received power to work 2 14 miracles, and actually did so, in no way aflecls the ar- gument. This was necessary to estabh'sh the truth of Christianity, and put to silence the ignorance of fool- ish men. But when this power was withdrawn, the power to act as the representatives of Christ, was not at ail affected, for Chi ist's promise was not limited, but ex- tended to the end of the world. This promise must have at once satisfied the mioda of the Apostles, that the office they had received from the Saviour, was not to cease — that it was to continue until the glad tidings of salvation had been conveyed to the ends of the earth. They could not live to this period, and therefore all doubt as to their right of trans- fer must have been removed from their minds. Bui mistake on this subject, was imj)ossiblc. For they not only received the Holy Ghost at the time when the Saviour breathed on them, and said, receive ye the Holy Ghost; and also on the day of Pentecost, to fit them for the performance of the duties of the office, but the Saviour promised to give ihem the continual influences of this same spirit to keep them from doing any act which would be wrong, and also to lead them into all truth. To direct them not only in preaching the gos- pel, but to enable them to make such arrangements, as would secure the preaching of the gospel to every crea- ture on the earth. What then did they do to this end, and what evi- dence have wc that they transferred their powers ? One of the very first acts they did after they received the Apostolic office, was to transfer the very same power they had received from Christ. One of their number had fallen from the high position on which Christ had 16 placed him. He had betrayed his Master, and had gone to his own place. He had never received the full Apostolic commission, but as St. Peter observed, he was numhered with them and obtained part of this min- istry. The fall of Judas was in accordance with a pro- phecy uttered by David several hundred years prece- ding the event, let his habitation be desolate, and let no man dwell therein, and his bishophric let another take. So that you perceive his fall was foreseen, and at the same time a clear direction was given, that his place should be supplied. The declaration contained in the Psalms must have been long known to the Apostles, and although they may not have had the most remote I idea of the manner of its application, yet when the event j took place, no difficulty could have been felt in apply- ing it to Judas. That this was the case is evident from the address which St. Peter made to the disciples. He at once referred them to the prophecy uttered by Da- vid, and applied it to Judas. He stood up in the midst of them and said, men and brethren, this scripture must needs have been fulfilled, which the Holy Ghost by the mouth of David spake before, concerning Judas, which was guide to them that took Jesus. They therefore, under the guidance of the Spirit which was to lead them into all truth, appointed two, Joseph, called Barsabas, who was sur named Justus, and Matthias. And they prayed, and said, thou Lord, which knowest the hearts of all 7nen, shew whether of these two thou hast chosen, that he may take part of this ministry and Apostles/lip, from which Judas, by transgression, fell, that he might go to his own place. And they gave forth their lots ; and the lot fell upon Matthias ; and he 16 was numbered with the eleven Apostles. It is singular that the Apostles should have thus acted, unless they beHeved that Christ had given to them the power ta continue the very same office, they had received from Him. And more especially, that they should so soon appoint an Apostle in the place of Judas, when there was no need to increase their number, if there were to be no succession. It seems highly probable that this subject must have been brought before them by the Saviour himself, on those occasions when he had retired with them from the multitudes which surrounded him^ to converse w^ith them, and give them instructions in reference to the Kingdom — the Church, over which they were to be placed. This supposition is strength- ened by the manner in which it was done. St. Peter mentioned it; and referred to the fulfillment of the pro- phecy contained in the Psalms, as at once demanding of them some action, in reference to the vacancy occa- sioned by the treachery of Judas. All the Apostles at once consented to it. There w^ere no arguments pre- sented by any of their number, either for or against thu proceeding. Nei ther is there any evidence to show that they thought the proposition admitted of any doubt or hesitancy on their part. Now% how could this be so, unless they fully believed that Christ had given them the power to give to others the power they had re- ceived ? And unless they had received s|>ecial instruc- tions on this subject from himself? He must have spoken of the treachery of Judas, and also of the posi- tion which he occupied, and if so, it is reasonable to in- fer that he gave them instructions to supply his place. For it cannot be supposed for one moment, that the 19 Saviour would transfer so great an office as he himself had received from his Father, to feeble and short- sighted men, without giving them instructions, as to the manner in which its duties were to be performed, and more especially, whether it could be transferred to others. But they could not err in a matter which would for- ,ever after give character to the government of the Church of Christ. The Spirit of Christ had been pro- mised to guide them into all trut/i, and to keep them from every error in discharging their official duties. If .this be not admitted, and this act of the Apostles consid- ered as unauthorized, we must come necessarily to these two conckisions — that there cannot be implicit reliance placed upon any one of their acts — and next, that St. Luke, the writer of the ** Acts of the Apostles," could not have written under the inspiration of the Spirit, or he never would have recorded an unwarrantable act, and palmed it off on the christian world, as authorized. It was his duty to have mentioned that the Apostles acted unadvisedly, and that they had no right to trans- fer the authority which they had received from the Sa- viour. For his silence and of course his implied recog^ nition of this act as authorized, has led to the contin- uation of this very office, with all its ordinary powers, j from that time down to the present hour, as you will hereafter see. But this cannot be. Few persons are willing to re- ject the *'Acts of the Apostles,'' and therefore, they must recognize the transfer of the Apostolic authority to Matthias. If so, the position is established, that the Apostles had successors. For if the power received 3* 18 from Christ, be rightly transferred to o\r:, it U right- ly transferred to others. For the Saviour fixed no limit, but expressly promised to be with their succes- sors to the end of the world, which promise, as I have already observed, is a clear intimation that the office was to continue. In addition to this, we find that when the liolv Ghost was given to the Apostles, on the day of Pentecost, to qualify them for discharg!r>g the duties? of llie oflice they had received from Christ, prior to his ascension,- Matthias was equally honored. This was the distinc! recognition of the right to transfer their office. Fof ministerial gifts were given to Matthias, precisely as they were given to the other Apostles, and this would not have been the case unless ministerial power had been equally conferred. After this, he was numbered wiih the other Aposr- tics, and spoken of precisely as l/icy were when they spake with other tongues, ^5 tlie spirit gave (hem utter- ance. But Piter standing up with the ftlevex, If ted up his voice and said unto them, S^c. Again, Matthias h numbered with the twelve, sometime preceding (he conversion of St. Paul, as we find in the sixth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles. Then the twim.ve called the multitude of the disciples unto them, ( nd said, it is not reason that we should leave the word of God and serve tables. Nor can it be supposed that ?>Iatthias was only or- dained 10 be a witness w^ith the Apostles, of the reSuiv redion. If this had been the case, that he was only to be a witness, and nothing more, there w^as no need to ordain hjm. 'For, according to the statement of St. IS retcr, he had acconipanied with them all the time that the Lord Jesus vjent in and out aviong them. Besides, St. Paul himself, in his first epistle to the Corinthians, numbers Matthias amongst the TvrcLVE, and also states that several hundred were loitnesses of Christ's resur- rection, who never were Apostles. Proving most con- clusivel}% that the mere fact of having seen Christ af* ter he rose from the dead, could not have been the on- ly treason why Matthias was raised to the Aposlleship. Speaking of Christ, he says, he was buried^ and rose again the third day, according to the scripturcSf and wa? seen of Cephas , then of the twelve, after that he i^as seen (f above five hundred brethren at once ; cf whom the greater part remain unto this present, but some are fall- en asleep. After that, he was seen of James; then of all the Apostles, And last of all, he was seen of mf, also, as of one born out of due time, St. Paul, therefore, re- cognizes Matthias as a true Apostle, as having been properly set apart for that office, and if so, the Apos- tles had, and were to liave, successors. This, however, is not the only instance recorded in the scriptures. St. Paul, who was callcd-to the Apos- lleship by the Saviour, and exercised the same power which had been given to the other Apostles, also trans- ferred the office he had received. He placed Timothy as Apostle over the Church at Ephesus, and Titus over the Church in Crete. They had supreme authority to rule and govern the Church, and also, to set apart El- ders and Deacons — inferior and subordinate ?>linisters. So that v;e arrive at another point, viz : that the Apos- tohc office w\as not only to continue in the Church ; but was to be suprem.e. There w^as no other ministry of 20 Christ, as I have already shown ; all power was cen- tered in them ; yet ihey, by the guidance of the Spirit, transferred their office to others, and also created infe- rior grades in the ^Ministry, with limited powers, de- riving those powers directly from themselves. That St. Paul transferred the office he received from the Saviour, to Timothy, and gave him superior pow- er and control over the Elders and Deacons, all must admit who are familiar with the word of God. But I proceed to the [)roof. St. Paul says, the charge that I commit unto thee, son Timothy, that thou mayest know how thou oughtest to behave thyself in the house of God, which is the Church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the Truth. The Apostle places him over the Church atEphcsus. and gives him the power to ordain Elders and Deacons in the Churches, as is evident from his in- structions to him. The things thai thou hast heard of iMK among many xcitncsscs, the same commit thou to faithful men, icho shall be able to teach others also. And to guide him in the performance of this duty, describes, at length, the qualifications that all should have, to be fitted for these offices. He says,-^ a bishop (the name then given to the second grade in the ministry; the highest grade being designated by the term Apostle,) must be blameless, the husband of one wife, vigilant, so- ber, of good behaviour, given to hospitality, apt to teach, not given to wine, no striker, not greedy of filthy lucre, but patient, not a brawler, not covetous, one that ruleth well his own house, having his children in subjection with all gravity, [For if a man know not how to rule his own house, how shall he take care of the Church of God.) *lTira., iilcliap., from v. 2. 21 J^Tot a novice, lest, heivg lifted up with 'pride, he fall into condemnation of the devil. Moreover, he must have a good report of them who are without ; lest he fall into repj'oach and the snare of the devil Likewise must the deacons be grave, not double tongued, not given to much wine, not greedy of filthy lucre : holding the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience. And h.t these, also, first be proved ; then let them use the office of a deacon, being found blameless. Even so must their wives be grave, not slanderers, sober, faithful in all things. Let the deacons be the husbands of one wfe, ruling their children and their own houses well. For they that have used the office of a deacon well, purchase to themselves a good de- gree, and great boldness in the faith which is in Chiist Jesus, The ordination of both Bishops (or Elders) and Deacons was committed entirely to Timothy, for the Apostle further writes to him, lay hands suddenly on no man. That these offices were parts of the Ministry * which Christ gave to the Apostles and their successors, none can doubt, when they remember the charge which St. Paul gives to the Elders of the Cliiurch at Ephesus, prior to the placing of Timothy over them as their Apostle. In this charge they are addressed as Pastors (not Laymen) as you will hereafter see. And that the Deacons were also clothed with ministerial powers of a limited degree is evident, from the fact, that St. Ste- phen, and St. Philip, both Deacons, preached, and the latter baptized as we learn from the Acts of the Apos- tles. Then Philip went down to the city of Samaria, and preached Christ unto them. When they believed Philip preaching the things concerning the Kingdom of Godf and the name of Jesus Christ, they ivere baptized, 22 both men and women. And that this office was greatly inferior to the Apostolic office which Timothy held, is evident from the fact, that two of ihe Apostles were sent, viz : St. Peter and St. John, to Samaria, who when they wore come down jirnycd for them, that they might receive the Holy Ghost {for as yet he was not fallen upon any of them ; only they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus) then laid they their hands on theniy and they received the Holy Ghost. But the power of ordination was not the only power which Timothy received from St. Paul, which proves ihat Timothy succeeded to the Apostleship, and wasof course superior in point of office to the Elders and Deacons, but he had also the power to hear charges against the Ministers over whom he was placed, and of course give his opinion as to their guilt or innocence, and not only so, but to rebuke them before the church, if found guilty. St. Paul says, against an Elder re- ceive not an accusation, but before two or three witnesses. Them that sin, rebuke before all, that others may fear. And in reference to certain doctrines that were taught at E|)hesus, he informs Timothy of them, and tells him to charge some that thcij teach no other doctrine^ than that which St. Paul himself had made known to them. But the proof is still stronger that Timothy succeed- ed to the Apostleship, and that this office was superior to all others. If we now refer to St. PauTs charge to the Elders that were settled at Ephesus, prior to the time when Timothy was placed over them as their Apostle, or as their Bishop, (as the individuals who succeeded to the office were so coiled, as I shall here- after prove,) we will find that no power of ordination 23 was given to ihcm, nor any power over one another. St. Paul's charge to the Elders of Ephesus, is contained in the 20th chnptcr of the Acts of the Apostles. He says, lake heed therefore unto yourselves, and to a!l the Jlock over which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the Church of God, which he hath purchased v:ith his own blood. For I know this, that after my df'parting, shall grievous wolves enter in among you not sparing the flock. Also of your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things to dravj away disciples after the?n. How different this charge is from thai which the same Apos- tle gave to Timothy when he conferred upon him the Apostleship, and placed him over the Churches at Ephesus. The Elders arc addressed as a body, and those duties only enjoined upon them that relate to the exercise of the Pastoral office : such as feeding the (Jhurch, that is, nourishing the members with the bread of life. And in addition, to be watchful over them- selves, lest some might be led away from the faith, speaking perverse things. . But in his address to Timo- thy, he speaks to him individually — grants to him the power of ordination — gives to him the power to admin- ister discipline — to rebuke those who might speak per- verse things, and places him over all the Elders who were at Ephesus. We have then another instance in which the Apos- tles imparted to others the very same right and powers which Christ had given to them, and which proves that ( the Apostolic office was to continue to the end of the world, in accordance with the declaration of the Sa- viour : lo I I am with you always, even unto the end of the world. 24 The next instance I would notice, to prove that the Apostles innparlcd their office to others, is lliat of Ti- tus, who was placed over the Church in Crete by St. Paul, as their Apostle or Bishop. He says, to Titus mine own son, after the common faith, grace, mercy and peace, from God the Father, and the I^rd Jesus Christ our Saviour. 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 1 had appointed thee. You no doubt, are familiar with the fact, that there were one hundred cities in the Island of Crete, and yet St. Paul gives the charge of every Church to Titus. And he gave him not only the power of ordination, but also of removal from the Church, of all who had departed from the faith. Jl man that is a heretic, after the first and second admonition, reject, knowing that he that is such, is subverted, and sinneth, being condemned oj him- self. These are powers which were never given to any but Apostles. The Elders never exercised any super- vision one over anotln^r. But Titus had both these powers conferred u|)on him by the Apostle Paul. Of course he must have been superior to the Elders, and, if so, it proves conclusively that he received the very same [)Owcrs and lights that the Apostles received from the Saviour himself. I might also mention the fact that Barnabas was raised to the Apostleship, as we find in the 14th chapter of the Acts of the Apostles. Here it may not be out of place to mention that some have supposed that the power of ordination was also exercised by the Elders, and if so, it would in a great degree do away with the necessity for the continuance of the Apostolic office. That it was only an office 25 created for specific and limited purposes. The passage of scripture relied on to sustain this position, is found in the first epistle to Timothy, and is in these words, J^eglect not the gift that is in thee, which was given thee by prophecy, with the laying on of the hands of the pres- bytery. Even if it be admitted that this passage sus- tained the position advanced, and that Timothy was ordained by the laying on of the hands of the presby- j tery, it by no means follows, that therefore there was no difference between the Apostles and Elders. For you will remember in his second epistle to Timothy, St. Paul says, wherefore I put tfiee in rememhrance that , thou stir up the gift of God ichich is in thee, by the I PUTTING ON OF MY HANDS. So that you pcrccive that • St. Paul, an Apostle, was present, and was the ordain- er, and that the presbytery only signified their assent i to the act by the laying on of their hands, as they do 'in our own Church at the present day. But it is con- I ceded by the most learned men among those who deny ^ the continuance of the Apostolic office in the Church, that the word *^ presbytery," as used by the Apostle, I means the office to which Timothy was ordained, and I not the persons who ordained him. So that the pas- jsage would read, with the laying on of hands, to con- ifer the presbytery, or presbytership, or clerical office. I Such is the opinion of Jerome and Ambrose, early 'fathers in ihe Church, who hold to the Apostolic suc- cession, and of Calvin and Grotius, who differ — the for- (mer, however, viz: Calvin, on the plea of necessity, as he could not receive the Apostolic ministry, from cir- cumstances said by him to be beyond his control. But the scripture argument going to prove that the 3 26 Apostolic office was to continue and did continue in the Church, is not yet exhausted. They contain evidence of the fad, recorded when all the Apostles, with one exception, had laid down their lives, as witnesses to the truth and power of the Gospel of the Son of God. This evidence is to be found in the book of the Revelations of St. John. The seven Churches of Asia were ad- dressed by the Saviour, through him. The epistles are directed to the Angcls of those Churches. And it will be no difficult matter to prove that these were the Apostles or Bishops of those Churches. In the epistle, to ihc Angf^l of the Cliurch at Ephesus, we have these words. Unto the Angel of the Church at Ephesus writc^ I know thy irorhs, and thy lahor^ and thy patience^ and how thou canst not bear them which are evil; and thou hast tried thcm^ which say they arc Apos- tles, and arc not, and hast found them liars, Sfc. This epistle was written in the year 96, and of course there niust have been many Pastors or Elders over the Chur- ches at that lime, for there were several when St. Paul sent for them to meet him at Miletus, and also when Timothy was placed over them in the year G5. And we cannot but conclude that many Elders and Dea- cons, (the inferior ministers as I have already shown) were added to the number by Timothy himself, as St. Paul had fully set before him, the qualifications such ministers should have. But the epistle was directed to the Angel of the Church at Ephesus. He was com- mended for what was good, and reproved for that which was evil in the Churches. If, however, he was not the chief officer, why should he be thus addressed? Why should the Elders and Deacons, the Pastors of 27 the Churches, be overlooked? The only reason that can be given is, that the Angfl was the Bishop of the Church, and he was held accountable for their conduct, and was either commended or reproved, as it was proper or improper. And you will observe that the Axgel is particularly commended, for having tried iliem which say they are Apostles^ and are not, and hath found them liars. But how could this be done, if he were not an Apostle himself? Or why should he try and examine the pretensions of impostors, if he had been persuaded that the Apostolic office was to be limited to those originally appointed, and were not to have successors? It is at once a distinct admission that at that time, in the year 90, there were true Apostles, who had suc- ceeded to the office originah'y given by the Saviour, to the eleven, when he breathed on them and said, receive ye the IloJy Ghost, as my Father hath sent me, even so send I you. If not, why try any one who pretended that he had received such an office ? But there are other considerations c^oins: to show the continuance of the Apostolic office, and that it was su- preme and to continue so. *• The cluirches are only called in the epistles, candlesticks — the Angels are resembled to stars, whicii give light to the candlesticks. 'Which, as has been observed, is a very fit emblem of those who succeeded in the place of the Apostles, whom our Lord calls the lio-ht of the world, and resembles to candles, which being put into candlesticks, give light to all in the house. They are also called, as I have re- marked, stars, and the same title is given to our Lord himself, who is the great light of the world. In addi- tion to this, the term Angel is never given to any but 28 such as are placed in some high office and dignity un- der God. The Angels of God are the blessed spirits, who always Hve in his presence, and execute his com- mands. The Jews called their High Priest by this name, because they looked on him as the messenger of God to them.'' It is not then an uncommon mode of addressing those in authority ; and tlie evidence before us is sufficient to prove that this name was applied to none other than the Apostles who had been placed over the Churches addressed by St. John. This, as I have remarked, brings us down to the year 90. But we have strong human testimony in reference to this point, which at once settles the question as to the office (which the persons addressed as Angels,) then held. And it is evidence which cannot be denied; for we rely upon it with other testimony to prove the ca- non of Scripture, if it be rejected, we may at once give up the word of God and throw ourselves into the hands of infidels. Ignatius, who suifered martyrdom about the tenth year of Trajan, which was only four years after the death of St. John the Apostle — at which lime Ignatius had been forty yea»s the Bishop of Anti- och, tells us who was the Bishop addressed by St. John. And it is important here to learn, that Ignatius was made Bishop of Antioch by St. Peter to fill the vacan- cy occasioned by the death of Evodius. In his epistle to the Ephesians, bespeaks *'of Onesimus, their Bish* op, and exhorts all of them, presbyters and deacons, and private citizens, to obey him.'' Here, then, we have the testimony of one who had conversed with some of the Apostles, and must have been fully acquainted with their view^s in reference to the ministry and gov« 29 ernment of the Church. He himself, as I remarked, had received the Apostolic office from the hands of St. Peter. He tells us that Onesimus was at that time, viz : the period when St. John wrote his epistle to the Church at Ephesus, their Bishop, the chief officer in the Church. And not only so, but he confirms the po- sition already advanced, that there were inferior grades in the ministry — presbyters and deacons, and exhorts them to obey their Bishop. So that the proof is full., and ought to be conclusive, that the Apostolic office was to continue in the Church and always to be su- preme. The proof, however, does not stop here. The testi- mony is equally clear that Polycarp, who was cotem- porary with Ignatius, and the fellow disciple of St. John, was, at this time, the Bishop of Smyrna, one of the Churches addressed. The epistle is directed to him as the Angel. And if so, why may we not infer that the epistles were directed to the other Churches in the same manner. To the Angel of each, viz : their Bishop, Ignatius speaks of Polycarp as the Bishop of Smyrna, **and exhorts all the Church, presbyters and deacons, as well as laymen, to be obedient to him." And Irenseus, who was Polycarp's disciple, assures us that Polycarp was ordained Bishop of Smyrna by the Apostles. This testimony we cannot reject, for these early Fathers w^ere competent and credible witnesses of facts, although their opinions are only to be taken as the opinions of fallible men. If their testimony to facts, as I have already observed, is rejected, it is impossible to prove that the book which we call the Bible, and 3* so which we prize as the great chart given to us of God to guide us in our voyage through life, is true. I have thus brought before you the evidence going to show nnost clearly, that the Apostles had successors ; and that the office which they held, was to be given by those who had received it from them, down through the different periods of the (church. And also, that this office was to be supreme and the individuals to whom it was committed, to have the power to rule and govern the Church. In all this period, there is no in- stance to be found of any one who officiated in holy things without having their commission from them ; and we find, that the ministry consisted of three grades, as it did in the Church under the old dispensation, bish- ops, presbyters or elders, and deacons. And here it is proper to remark, that although the Apostolic office was to continue, and has continued, as I shall show, without one single link being broken in the chain which connects it to the Great Head of the Church, Jesus Christ, yet the name Apostle has been confined to the first rulers in the Church, that is the Apostolic age. After this age, as we learn fron'j Thco- dorct, one of the Fathers, the term Bishop was taken from the second order of ministers and appropriated to the first. All. therefore, that is said of Bishops in the New Testament, is to be regarded as belonging to the middle grade, who were then, and are now, desig- nated by the term elder or presbyter. The highest order in the Scriptures, is called by the word Apostle, but it is now and has been since the Apostolic age, de- signated by the term Bishop. The name, however, is nothing — it is the office we arc examining, and thus far, 31 we think, we have shown that it was to continue in the Church, and also as superior to the other orders of the ministry. If, however, it is urged that an equaHty of ministry was established by the Great Head of the Church — that all were to be considered equal in point of min- isterial rights, such as is held by Presbyterians, Con- gregationalists and Baptists,^ and that there was to be no Apostolic succession — is it not strange that it should have been considered so unfitted for the Church of Christ as to be banished from it before the close of the first century ] There is not a trace of it to be found. During all this period, I have proved from the Scrip- tures and from unquestionable human testimony, that the Apostolic office was transferred from one to anoth- er, and that it was supreme. That there were inferi- or grades in the ministry — presbyters and deacons. And how could such an oflice as was held by the Apos. ties, and afterwards by the Bishops, their successors, ever arise in the Church, without it had been fully sanctioned by the Great Head of the Church. It is im- *The Methodists do not hold to an equnlity of minisleriul riiihts. But yet their government is Pfe^l)yierian, as tlie ministerial office is conveyed h\ presbyte-s. The highest ffrade is called My ihe term Bishop, but they have not the Apos:olic succes- sion. The Rev. John AVe-iley, tlieir founder, was only a pre>l>yter of the Church of England. But m endeavoring to excite a grRater degree of religious feeling in the Church of wliich he was a meii-bcr, he led his followers furttier than he ever intended or detired. He died, as he himself declared, a member of the Church OF England. But he lived long enough to see the danger of ever departing from the established laws of Christ's house, Irs Church. His followers not only Jeft the Church, but some assumed the title of Bishoi'. To whom he thus writes — the letter is written to Mr. Ash'iry. "In one point, my dear brother, T am little afraid both ihe Doctor (CoUe) and you difler from me. I study to be little, you study to be great; I creep, you strut along. I foiind a school, you a college! Nay, and call it afier your own names ! O beware! Do not seek to be someihingl I^et me be nothing, and Christ be all in all. One instance of this your greatness, has giv- en me great concern. How can you, how dare you sulTer yourself to be called a Bishop. I shudder, I start ai the very thought. Men may call me a knave, or a fool, a rascil, a scoundrel, and J am content, Imt they shall never, by my consent, call me a Bishop ! For my snke, for God's sake, for Christ's sake, put a full end to this. Let the Presbyterians do what they please, but let the Metbodists know their calling belter." He recognized, as you ])erce'tvc, the necessity for *'the Bisho^s^^ to transfer such fin office, as they alone were the successors of the Aposiles. 32 possible. Men are too jealous of iheir rights ever to have yielded to such an assumption of power without a struggle. And if so, where is the evidence of any opposition on their part ] The word of God is silent — all history is silent. And who could have been the usurper 1 We might as well expect that history would be silent in reference to our own civil revolution, as to expect silence in so remarkable and complete an eccle- siastical revolution as must have taken place when Bishops were made the supreme rulers of the Church. It cannot be. But, I ask your attention a little longer, to the evi- dence which is furnished from the early records of the Church, to prove that the Apostles had successors, viz: the Bishops, and that this succession was preserved in all the Churches of which we have any account. I quote again from Ignatius, of whom we have spoken, and who had been the Bishop of Antioch thirty-six years, when St. John died. In his epistles, which arc now to be found entire, and which were written a short time bclorc his martyrdom, there is scarcely any duty so earnestly ))rcssed, and so often inculcated, as that private christians should be obedient to their pastors, and the presbyters and deacons to their Bishops. In his epistle to the Magnesians, he writes, ** seeing then I have been judged worthy^ to see you, by Da- mas, your most excellent Bishop ; and by your very worthy Presbyters, Bassus and Apollonius, and by my fellow servant Sotio, the Deacon, in whom I re- joice, forasmuch as he is subject unto his Bishop as to the grace of God, and to the presbytery as to the law of Jesus Christ ; I determined to write unto you. 33 Wherefore it will become you also not to use your Bishop too familiarly upon the account of his youth, but to yield all reverence to him according to the pow- er of God the Father ; as also I perceive that your holy presbyters do ; not considering his age, which indeed to appearance, is young, but as becomes those who are prudent in God, submitting to him, or rather not to him, but to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Bishop of us all." Again, he says : ** I exhort you that ye study to do all things in a divine concord ; your Bishop presiding in the place of God, your pies- byters in the place of the council of the Apostles ; and your deacons most dear to me, being intrusted with the ministry of Jesus Christ." And in his epis- tle to the Philadelphians, he says : *^ But the Spirit spake, saying in this wise ; do nothing without the Bishop ; keep your bodies as the temples of God ; love unity ; flee disunion ; be the followers of Christ, as he was of his Father. I, therefore, did as became me, as a man composed to unity. For where there is divi- sion and wrath, God dwelleth not. But the Lord for- gives all that repent, if they return to the unity of God, and to the council of the Bishop." Again, in his epis- tle to the Trallians, he says : *' Let nothing by any means be done without the Bishop, even as ye now practice— subject yourselves to the college of presby- ters, as to the Apostles of Jesus Christ, and let the deacons, who are the mystery of Jesus Christ, study to please all men, for they are not deacons of meats and drinks, but ministers of God's Church." And in his epistle to the Ephesians, he says : ** Let no man be deceived ; whoever is without the altar, is depri- 34 ved of the bread of God. Let us beware of opposing the Bishop, that we may be subject lo God/' And again, he speaks of Bishops settled to the ends of the world. And in his epistle lo the Church of Smyrna, he says : " Let no man do any thing which concerns the Church, without the Bishop. Let that cucharisl be accounted valid, which is ordered by the Bishop, or one whom he appoints. Where the Bishop appears, there let the people be. even as where Christ is, there is the Catholic Church. Without the Bishop, it is nei- ther lawful to baptize, nor to celebrate the feast of charity, but that which he approves, is well pleasing to God.'' And again : -'It is well to know God, and the Bishop. lie that knows the Bishop, is honored of God.^' I have thus presented a small j)art of the evidence which this Father and martyr, furnishes. This testi- mony must bo considered valuable, inasmuch as he had many opportunities of seeing and conversing with some of the Apostles of our blessed Lord, especially with St. Peter and St. John. You will perceive that he insists upon the fact, that the Bishop is Su[)reme as it regards power and rights in the (church. Nor does he do this, as if any one disputed it, or supposed that any other arrangement could be proper in the Church. He mentions it as a thing acknowledged by all. And you also find that he constantly speaks of the other or- ders in the ministr}^ presbyters and deacons, as inferi- or to the Bishop. Now% how such testimony could be given, and such an arrangement always insisted up- on, without it was in accordance with the views of the Apostles, who were guided by the Spirit of God, 35 and with whose views Ignatius nnust have been fully acquainted, I am at a loss to know. But, I pass to the next witness, Irenaeus, who was the disciple of Polycarp, Bishop of Smyrna. Irenaeus was first a presbyter, and afterwards the Bishop of Lyons. He makes the succession of Bishops an argu- ment against the heretics, who crept into the Church in that age, and propounds it as the surest way to or- thodoxy in the christian faith, to follow those who de- scended in a direct line of succession from the Apos- tles. *' We, he says, can reckon up those whom the Apostles ordained to be Bishops in the several Church- es, and who they were that succeeded them down to our time. And had the Apostles known any hidden mysteries which they imparted to none but the per- fect, (as the heretics pretend,) they would have com- mitted them to those men, to whom they committed the Churches themselves ; for they desired to have those in all things perfect and unreprovable, whom they left to be their successors, and to whom they commit- ted their ow-n Aposiolic authority.*' lie then adds, ^' that because it would be endless to enumerate the succession of Bishops in all the Churches, he would in- stance in that of Rome." In which he tells us, that Linus was ordained the first Bishop by St. Peter and St. Paul. The next was Anacletus, after him Clem- ens, and so on to Eleutherius, who was the twelfth from the Apostles, and filled the Episcopal chair when Irenaeus wrote. Here is testimony full and complete, from one who was the disciple of Polycarp, and must have often heard the latter speak of the Apostles, and the mode prescri- 96 bed by them, for the government of the Church. It is in itself conclusive. For Ircna3us not only asserts the fact that the Bishops were the successors of tlie Apos- tles, but also that he had at that time a correct list of all who had succeeded to that office in all the Churches from the time in which the Apostles lived, down to his own day. I also quote from the writings of Ilegesippus, who lived at the same time with Irena?us, who traveled through a great part of the world on purpose to learn the doctrine and tradition, left by the Apostles in the Churches which they founded, lie says, ** he had con- versed with many Bishops, and received the same doc- trine from them all. One of these, whom he mentions by name, was Primus, Bishop of Corinth. Another was Anicetus, whom he found Bishop of Rome on his arri- val there, at wliich time Eleutherius was his deacon. After Anicetus, Soter was Bishop of Rome, and Soter was succeeded by Eleutherius. He also states, that Simeon, the son of Cleophas, being of our Lord's fami- ly, succeeded James in the Bishopric of Jerusalem. And in every succession, he says, and in every city, the same doctrine is received, which was taught by the law, the prophets, and our Lord.'' Here then we have Irenaius and Hegesippus, living at the same time, in dilTcrcnt parts of the world, testi- fying that the Apostles had successors, and that there were Bishops in the diflercnt Churches. And not only so, but actually tracing their succession from one to another. This succession you will find brought down to the council of Nice, in the year 325, by Eusebius in hisec- 87 clesiaslical history. No link is broken in the chain which connects the Bishops with the Apostles, and of course with Christ. Another witness, who lived in this age, is Polycrates, Bishop of Ephesus. In a letter ad- dressed to the Bishop of Rome about the time of keeping Easter, part of which you will find in Eusebius, he ap- peals to the tradition of former Bishops and martyrs, and the practice of those who lived in his own time. Among others, he mentions Polycarp, Bishop of Smyr- na and martyr — Sagaris, Bishop of Eaodicea and mar- ter — seven Bishops of his own kindred, and great mul- titudes of Bishops w^ho assembled with him to consult about the time of Easter. And he says, that when he wrote this epistle, he had been G5 years a christian. So that here is a witness beyond exception, who lived the greatest part of the next age after the death of the Apostles, testifying that Bishops were settled in all the Churches. Clemens, Bishop of Alexandria, also lived at this time. He was considered one of the most learned men of that age, and he speaks of the ministry existing in three or- ders, of which the Bishop was supreme. Speaking of Matthias, he says, *Mhat though he was not elected by our Lord with the rest of the Apostles, yet having de- served to be advanced to that office, he was substitu- ted in Judas' place. And even now, he says, they who live up to the perfect rule of the gospel, may be taken into the number of the Apostles. He is indeed a dea- con and minister of the divine w^ill, and he is a presby- ter of the Church, who does both practice and leach what our Lord has prescribed.'' And again, he says, "that St. John, the Apostle, returning from Patmos, 4 38 the place of his banishment, to Ephesus, went about the neighboring nations, and in some places ordained Bishops — in others established Churches, and in others, set apart such for the Clergy, as were pointed out to him by the Spirit." I might go on and bring proof after proof from these early witnesses, but I will conclude this part of the sub- ject by a quotation from the writings of the celebrated Tertullian, a presbyter, who lived at the end of the second and commencement of the third century. He says, '* the chief or high priest, who is the Bishop, has the right of giving (baptism) and after him, the pres- byters and deacons, but not without the Bishop's au- thority, on account of the honor of the Church, which being preserved, peace is secured/' No language could be stronger going to show the superior office and power of a Bishop, and also that such an office was held in his day. And you will observe in all the writings of the early fathers, there is not the slightest allusion made to any superiority among the Bishops themselves. They were all equal. It was at a much later period, when the Bishop of Rome endeavored to gain the su- premacy. I have now endeavored to bring this subject before you, in as clear and condensed a manner as possible. And in doing so, I have shown that the Apostles re- ceived full power to rule and govern the Church, from Christ — that they, very early transferred that power to others, and that the office was continued in the Church. That it was supreme. And that they estab- lished two inferior grades in the ministry, to which was given limited powers, derived entirely from the Apos- lies, and the Bishops, their successors. How any one can resist the testinnony, I know not. And what is still more singular, the opponents of the Apostolic suc- cession will refer to the very Fathers, whose testimony I have quoted, and depend upon them to establish the truth of the word of God, and many other doctrines, but reject their testimony when presented to establish one of the most important of all truths — the regular succession of the Aposlolic ministry. Having then established the position under conside- ration, the question is naturally presented, whether we have this ministry. If not, we have no right w^hatever to perform the duty before us — of giving part of that ministry to others. But God be thanked, that question can readily be answ^ered. We can trace up our min* istry much further than the reformation. We go back to the days of the Apostles, and find that they early obeyed the command of Christ, go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to ex^ery creature. This gospel was early carried to that Island now known as Great Britain. It is generally supposed that St. Paul w^as the first messenger of truth who visited it. And this opinion was held at a very early period. The testi- ! mony to this fact was first given by Clement Romanus, I He says, that the Apostle Paul *' traveled to the utmost I bounds of the west,'' an expression, according to Theo- doret used, to denote the British Islands. Clement I gave this testimony as early as the year 70. To the ' like effect is the testimony of Jerome and Theodoret. At all events, the proof is most ample to show that I Christianity w^as early introduced into these Islands. I And the first records of the Church that was estab- 4& lished there, show that it was organized as all the other Churches were, by the Apostles, and in three orders, with the Bishop as supreme. That the succession was carried there by St. Paul and continued, as you will see, uninterruptedly in the Church. As early as the year 314, we have an account of the council of Aries, and among those assembled, there were several Bishops from Britain. Also, in the coun- cil at Sardica, in the year 347, and at the council of Ariminium, in the year 359. This is important testi- mony, going to show the early organization of the Church in Britain, and also that they had the true suc- cession of iho ministry, and that the Bishops, (as the Apostles,) were the supreme rulers in the Church. And also, that there was no superiority among the Bishops themselves. That at this period, no supremacy was claimed by, or granted to, the Bishop of Home. And it will enable us to answer satisfactorily the question often asked, did your Bishops, viz: the Bishops of the Episcopal Church, receive their succession from the Roman Catholic Church ! We answer unhesita- tingly, no. The old British Church from which we descend, existed several hundred years in all her pu- rity of doctrine, worship and ministry, before she was brought under foreign ecclesiastical power. But even if we had received our ministry through that source, it could do us no harm. For that Church, and many of her eloquent defenders, I have great respect. For, with all her errors, she has the regular succession of the ministry, and is a part of the Catholic Church. And it is not the way to remove those errors, to de- nounce and abuse her priesthood, and hold her up to 41 scorn and derision. Oh no. I would rather speak of her in kindness — ihank her for the good she nnay have accomph'shed in preserving the word of God — and tell her of her faults — of her departure from the old Catho- lic Church — and endeavor to persuade her to give up the commandments of men, and come back to the un- corrupted Church of Christ. I pray ardently for this happy period to arrive, when she will give up her er- rors, and come with all her untiring energy — her pa- tience under trial — and her self-sacrificing and self-de- nying priesthood, and unite in the great work of bring- ing the scattered sheep of Christ, into one fold, under one Shepherd, Jesus Christ, the Lord. The old British Church then, was not established by, nor placed under any foreign ecclesiastical power. She was independent of all other Churches. The on- ly preference ever given to any Church in the early periods, was to the Church at Jerusalem. And this was only the preference of respect, from its being the place where the Great Head of the Church offered up himself a sacrifice for the sins of the world. She was the Mother Church. And we find this respect early shown to her, for in the first council of the Apos- tles, her Bishop, James, presided and delivered the opinion of that body,* In all the early councils you can easily see that there was no spiritual supremacy claimed or admitted. Even Gregory the Great, of Rome, when the Bishop of Constantinople attempted to maintain such a claim, used the following language: ** Whoever claims THE UNIVERSAL EPISCOPATE IS THE FORERUNNER OF * See 15th chap. Acts of the Apostles. 4# 43 Antichriht/^ Gregory Magn* tlpist,, Let. G. Epist, 30. It was not until the year 590, that the attempt was made to bring the Catholic Church of Britain under the Roman Bishop. Auguslin, the monk, was sent to Bri- tain for this purpose — and shortly after his arriva), through the aid of Elhelbert, a meeting of the Clergy of the British Church was held at a place known af- terwards as Augustin's Oak. ''^ At the different n>eet- ings held, there were present, the Arch-bishop of Cam- bria, seven Bishops, and a number of the other British clergy. Augustin wished them to submit to the Bishop of Rome, and con^e under his jurisdiction — to conform to the Romish custom of keeping Easter — to use the Romish forms and ceremonies in the ministration of baptism, and to join the Romish missionaries in preach- ing to the Sr.xons." The rccjucst was startling to the Bishops of the British Church, and was rejected in the strong and decided language presented by the good Dimoth, of Bangor.* But resistance was vain — the British Church, the true Catholic Church, of which the Episcopal Church is a part, was forced, by the civif authority, into submission, and by degrees lost her in- dependence. And these facts are in accordance witb the views of that eminent jurist, Sir William Black- stone. He says in his commentaries, [B, 4, Ch. 8,) under the Anglo-Saxon dynasty, the island was com- *nc it known and wiihoiif douht tmlo you. tliat wc :!ll arc, ani every onr of OS, Qijcdicai iiiiJ su!)jects lo il)c Chiircli ofGu.-l, and lo ihc Pope of Rome, arul to every gotlly Chrinli'in, to love every one In his dcj^ree of perf»*ci trliariiy, and to help every one of tlietn l.y word ami i\G^d, to i:e Uc children of Goi! and oihcr obedience than thi-', I do not know to I.e due to him whom yo;i name lo he Popc^ nor lo \\\e father of fathers, lo be elainio i and dcm-mde I. And (his <>f>e li'*nce wo are readv m give, and to pay lo him, i nd lo every cfirisijan. continually. Beaidetf, we Jire under the {lovernment of ihe Uishop of K:'.erIeon-u|.oii-Uske, wlio is to over-see undf^r Ciod f>ver us, lo caur>e us to kee[) the way spiritual, —/V^r** Church HiHory of Britain, pp. SO, 00— wLcre soc origin; 1. 49 paratively independent, and was more in conimunioii with, than subjection to, the Italian Pontiff; but the Nornnan line of monarchs, after William the Conquer- er, submitted to the dictation of the Popes, and concc-* ded one point after another, until the nation found it- self completely under the foot of a foreign Bishop.'' Thus the Church continued, until she had the power of throwing off the foreign yoke imposed upon her. This power was exercised in the sixteenth century ; and her Bishops, Cranmer, Latimer and Ridley, who had the regular Apostolic succession, abandoned the errors introduced into her bosom, and brought out from the rubbish of nges, the old British (Church of St. Paul, the TRUE Catholic Ckurch, which ever since, like the polar star, has guided many a tempest-tost soul, to the haven of eternal rest. They did not leave the Church, or establish a new Church, they continued in it, and diffused throughout every part of it, the life and light of the gospel of ihe Son of God. But those who clung to the Bishop of Rome, set up another Church — it is true having an Apostolic ministry, but in a state of schism. From the former Church we received our ministry. At the period of our civil revolution, the Episcopal Church in the colonies, was under the care of the Bish- op of London. An ecclesiastical revolution also took place, and the Church renounced all foreign jurisdiction. Of course the Church in America w^as left without a Bishop, and without the Apostolic succession. But God's promise 'was still recorded — the Church of Christ could not be destroyed. Accordingly, the Rev. Samuel Seabury, an eloquent defender of the faith, early re- 44 ceived the Apostolic office, iVom ihe Church in Scot- land — and that eminent servant ot* Christ, William White, then a presbyter, in Pennsylvania — and Samuel Provoost, a presbyter of New York, repaired to the mother Church in England, and received from the hands of her Bishops, the Apostolic succession — and with James Madison, of Virginia, who also received the Apostolic office from the English Church, have con- tinued it down through the diffierent Bishops since con- secrated to that olRco — and now througliout the length and breadth of the land, the gospel of Christ is proclaim- ed through the Church, and by an Apostolic ministry. Happy people then arc we, to have this ministry. For amidst all the agitations of the christian world, the Church has stood firm and decided — and not one of her Bishops has been carried away from the simplicity of the faith as it is in Christ. God grant that she may so continue — that in all the storms and tempests which are beating around her, she may, like the Ark of olden days, a beautiful type of the church, ride safely over eve- ry tossing wave, until she quietly rests on Mount Zion, carrying back the Jew, long an exile from his home, with his harp tuned and singing the song of praise and gladness — and the Gentile — rejoicing, that Christ hath broken down the middle wall of partition, and united in the bonds of christian brotherhood, the whole na- tions of the earth. Hasten on, happy, happy day of the Lord. But, I have left, only a short space to notice the powers and duties of the successors of the Apostles. These, however, I have fully noticed on former occa- sions. I will, therefore, be brief. They are to ordain 45 presbyters and deacons, and send them forth to preach the unsearchable riches of Christ. For as St. Paul says: *^ How shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard ? Jlnd how shall they hear without a preacher ? And how shall they j)reach, except they be sent ? They are to rule and govern the Church, and be ready, with all faithful diligence, to banish and drive away from the Church, all erroneous and strange doctrine contrary to God's word, and so minister discipline that they forget not mercy. They are to confirm all who have repented and been made disciples through the w^ashing of regeneration, (baptism,) by laying their hands upon them, and invo- king the aid of the Holy Spirit, that they may continue Christ's faithful soldiers and servants, to their lives' end, as St. Peter and St. Paul did upon the disciples in Sa- maria. They are to preach the word, as well as to send others to preach, and to do it without fearing the face of man. The whole truth of God is to be made known — the riches of His mercy in Christ, as well as his deter- mination to punish for unrepented sin — heaven is to be presented with all its joys, as the reward of the faith- ful — and hell with all its woes, as the lot of the disobe- dient. They are to visit the sick, and comfort the dying believer, and hold up to the sinner, even struggling in I the agonies of death, the invitations of mercy. These ! duties (with the exception of ordination, confirmation, and ruling the Church, &c.,) are common with all the I orders in the ministry. It is also the duty of thepres- ' byter and deacon, to perform them with an eye sin- 46 gle to the glory of God. And especially they are to tell men, that ii is only through this ministry that par- don and acceptance with God. can be made known. Not that there is any power in the ministry to forgive sin, but tfiey who hold this office, are the constituted agents, *^ to pronounce and declare to His people, being penitent, the absolution and remission of their sins.'' Without such a declaration on the part of the ministry, there is no tangible evidence of pardon. The repenting sinner who has come to Christ by faith, may be accept- ed long before this act ; but this act is the tangible evi- dence communicated through the embassadors of Christ. If not, what is the use of the ministry ? They are the agents of Christ, and as such, are to make known the terms of reconciliation and pardon lo sinners; and on the supposition that these terms have been fulfilled, they are also to declare that they have been pardoned and accepted of God. Such a view of this subject places the ministry where Christ placed it. and holds out to repenting sinners, the strong encouragement to come to the minister of Jesus, not as a mere hireling em- ])loyed to perform certain specific duties, but as his agent, authorized to tell him, his sins are forgiven. How holy the office ! and what weight of responsibility is thrown upon a minister of Christ. My beloved brother,"^' you have already received a part of this office, and are about to be advanced to a higher grade, ** having purchased to yourself a good degree." You already know some of the anxieties and cares connected with the ministerial office. But I bless God that with these you have had strong evidence that *Thc Kev. Montgomery Schuyler. 47 you have not labored in vain. That he has vouch- safed his blessing upon your efforts, and given you some seals of your ministry. But my beloved brother, your work is only begun — the fields are white to the har- vest — souls are perishing around you, and it becomes you to put on the whole armor of God, that you may be able successfully to contend against the evil one. Look first to yourself — cultivate a close intercourse with God — have the blessed Saviour before you in all his loveliness, and in all his efforts to save men — and lean continually upon the Spirit of God to hold you up, as well as to prepare you for the duties of your office. Stand boldly, yet meekly before men — and proclaim your message. Be mild — courteous — firm — decided — above all, preach Jesus, My beloved friends,"^ you are now about to receive the lowest part in this ministry, yet it is an honorable part. It will enable you, (by the permission of your Bishop,) to preach the gospel, and admit disciples into the school of Christ. The same advice w^hich I have given to the beloved brother beside you, I would also give to you. But as you have not had any experience in the ministry, I would add a few cautions with it.. The times in which we live are exciting, and you have need of much prudence and care, lest you may be drawn away from the appropriate duties of the minis- try. Many suppose, and many too of those who are admitted into the ministr3% that the way to be useful is to join heart and hand in all those societies which are formed by men for benevolent purposes. Indeed, a failure to do so, most generally brings upon all who re- *Mr. Sabin Hougli and Mr. Edwin Hodgkin. 48 fuse to join such societies, reproach and oftentimes scorn. Few have the moral courage to keep aloof, and follow the plans which Christ has given for the refor- mation of men. They let go the gospel, and depend upon human efforts, to dry up the desolating streams of vice. Now, my brclhen, I ask you not to oppose the efforts of men to put down any vice, God forbid I I would rather tell you to bid ihcm God speed. But I want you to remember that you arc always to be min- isters of Christ. That he has instituted a great socie- ty, into which he invites all of human kind — the church. That the means which lie has revealed to promote their reformation, not only of the outer, but the inner man, and fit ihem for becoming worthy members of this Church, is His Gospel. This is to be your means — and I would advise you, as you desire success in winning souls lo Christ, and value your future peace and influence among men. lo keep aloof from every voluntary society. In doing this, you are not to oppose any benevolent effort of men, but only to show, tiiat wherever you go, and wherever found, you go and are found ready, to preach Jesus. This cannot be done in these societies. A min- ister, thcrcfoie, loses his influence — becomes seculari- zed, and oftentimes excited, in a manner unworthy of his character and callinnr, and soon fails in the perfor- mance of the appropriate duties of his oflice. The re- ligious world is full of such instances, and I would therefore, most aflectionately warn you, and beseech you to be the more diligent in preaching the truth as it is in Christ. May God give you strength of mind and body to fit 49 you for the arduous duties of the ministry, and at Jast give you the happy reward promised to all those who turn many to righteousness — to shine as the stars for- ever, and ever. '* I \voiild to God it lav in me to restore the ;:'ovcrn inenl of JJishops. For I sec what manner of Church we shall have, the ecclesiastical polity being dissolved. I do sec that hereafter will grow up a greater TvKAit- Nv in the CiuTRrii, than tliero ever was before." Mklanctiion. APPENDIX. It is sometimes urged by persons, who deny the ApostoHc succession, and who are unable to meet the Scripture argument, clearly proving that it was estab- lished by the Saviour himself, that such a government is monarchical, and unsuited to the genius of our free institutions. To persons who are in the habit of exa- mining such subjects and forming their own opinions, it would be unnecessary to add a word to refute an as- sertion so utterly unfounded and at variance w^ith the I truth. But lest such appeals, (worthy only of religious demagogues,) to popular prejudices, should blind the minds of some honest inquirers after truth, 1 would very briefly show the beautiful analogy which exists between the ecclesiastical institutions of the Protestant I Episcopal Church of the United States, and the civil ' institutions of the United States. At the time of our civil revolution, the Church, as ] is well known, separated herself entirely from the ju- risdiction of a foreign Bishop, and declared her inde- I pendence; but she never could forget that^ **she is in- j debted, under God, to the English Church, for her first I foundation, and a long continuance of nursing care and j -protection.^' j ♦ Preface to the Book of Common Prayer, 62 Having received llie Apostolic succession from ihis Church, by which she could increase her ministry, and extend her influence, her first efiorts were made to conform her whole human organization and legislation to that adopted and followed by the people of this coun- try in refeience to their civil government. The con- sequence was, that the government of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States, became truly republican in its character, as we will hereafter see, and in which I have no hesitation in saying, that the rights of the people are better secured, than in any other ecclesiastical organization; for there are no per- manent off^icers, so far as the Laity are concerned, but fresh representatives are yearly selected by the people, and have a voice in all her legislation. But I will present the analogy to our civil govern- ment: In both, the power of government resides primarily in the whole people. In both, the forms of government are representative; in the Church, however, there are no limitations in the application of the principle of universal suffrage. The parish meetings, and the town or district elec- tions, are analogous. The parish vestries, and the select men or common councils of the towns or cities, are analogous. The union of parishes into dioceses, and the union of towns or counties into states, are analogous. The independence of the several dioceses, and iho independence of the several states, are analogous. The union of the several dioceses into one general 53 convention, and the union of the several states into one general government, are analogous. The Diocesan conventions, with their secretaries, and the slate legislatures with their secretaries, are analogous. The representation in the Diocesan conventions, and the representation in the state legislatures, from the people DIRECTLY, are analogous. The general convention of the United Dioceses, and the general congress of the United States, are analo- gous. The house of Bishops, in the former, corres- ponding to the senate in the latter, and the house of clerical and lay deputies, in the former, corresponding to the house of representatives in the latter. But sufficient proof is here given to show how scru- pulously careful the Church has been to guard the rights, as well as secure them, of every member of her fold. The poorest member has an equal voice in her councils with the most wealthy and influential, and no law is imposed upon any, without their own consent. M7 7 Deacidified using the Bookkeeper process. Neutralizing agent: Magnesium Oxide Treatment Date: August 2005 PreservationTechnologies A WORLD LEADER IN PAPER PRESERVATION ml homson Parx Dnve Cranberry Townsh^j PA I606r (724)779-2111 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 014 673 543 5 [LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 'lilfiiPiFiiiiiii'i 1111111' ■I'll I III III I III III II Hi in 029 787 265 5