r-AtfStfi '""in,- ^ PRINCETON, N. J % Presented by Mr. Samuel Agnew of Philadelphia, Pa. Agnciv Coll. on Baptism, No. NEW DANGERS TO THE Chriftian Priefthood : OR, A Serious Enquiry INTO THE Proper Adminiftrator O F Christian Baptism, I N A LETTER to the Author of Lay-Baptifm In- valid • occafioned by one of his New Do- ctrines, in feparating the Divine Authority of the Chriftian Minifter from the Sacred Order of the Clergy, and Authorising Lay-Baptifm by CommiJJiony without Ordiyation^ JL '■ - By the Author of the Defence of the Principles, and Traclice of the Church of England 3 &c. £ Q xf DO N: Printed for Jvhn Morphea, near Stationers -Hall. 171 2. ■ M l ' ■ * l I ■ "■*— «W— ^— 1 III ■ I > , L I . , !■■ Illl U * ERRATA. PA G. 4. Line 20. for the, read your ; p. 7. 1. 2. for Commijftons, r. Commiflion ; p. 9. 1. 4. after itooi, r. / Jaw ; p. '10. 1.24' iox'aiminifler valid Baptifm, r. lawfully aiminifler Baptifm ', ib. 1. 35. r. to the Allegations ', p. 16. 1. 34. dele^oa ; p. 23. 1. 14. Divne y r. Divine. DANGER TO THE Chriftian Priefthood, &c* SIR, SINCE the pretended Invalidity of Lay- baftifm has been the common* Subject of Converfation about the Town, I fet my felf to the reading of your Books, with a de- fire to underftand the juft Merits of the Caufe, and to find out the Truth. Upon my Perufal of your firft Book, I found that you propofed to proceed Mathematically, and aimed at Demon- stration in what you untertook to fet forth. And in order to Try and Examin, fairly, the force of what you alledg'd, I thought it pro- per firft to ftate fairly the main Point in De- bate. A fair and right Hating of the Contro- verfy being one of the moft likely means of coming to a juft and right Determination of it. Whereas a Miftake in this firft ftep, muft needs occafion great Confufion. The true State of the Queftion in debate, I took to be this ; Whether the Divine Authority of the Minifter be ejjential to the Sacrament of Bap- tifm, and fo indifpenjibly NeceJJhry by the Inftitu- A z tion 4 New Vahgersio the tlon of it, that it lofes its proper Efficacy and Validity -when this is wanting? This I look'd on as your Doctrine^ which you had undertaken to make good. And I found, that to fupport what you had Aflert- ed, you made ufe of this as your main and chief Principle. Whatfoever in a Divine Pofitive Jnflituticn we are obliged conjtantly to ohferve, as long as the utmoft duration of the Force , and Obliga- LayBapt.j^ jr t y Jnfiitution it felf: That is an ejjential ^nv. pag. -p^ t f the Divine Jnfiitution, and cannot be difpen- Pag. i4, fed with. The Divine Authority of the Adminiftra- *5« 37- tor in Baftifm, is to be confiantly obferved by us as long as the "utmofi duration of the Force and Obliga- tion of the Divine Infiitution of Chrifiian Baptijm : Therefore the Divine Authority of the Administra- tor is an ejjential Part of that Sacrament, as well as she Matter and Form of Adminiftring it \ and the Want of that deftroys its proper Efficacy and Va- lidity. This I thought was the nrft Funda- mental Principle fairly ilated and reprefented in its full Force and Strength. That which moft eafily led me into this Opinion of your main Defign, was, the Title of your firft Book, the only one that I had yet read ; Lay-Bapifm Invalid, or the Invalidity of Lay-Bapifm. I could not but take the Defign of fuch a Book to be, to teach the World, that none but Minijters or Clergymen , none but Bifhops, Priefts and Deacons* could adminifter Valid Baprifm. All others, of whatever Denomination, being, as I thought, in your Senfe excluded by the Divine Inftitution from a poffibility of Valid- ly adminiftring that Holy Ordinance. And I fuppofed that the Honour and Authority of the Chri- stian TrieBhood, and the Sacred Sacerdotal Pow- ers, were intended to be Aliened and Main- tained by you, I was Chriftian Priefthood. £ I Was confirmed in this my Opinion, by the general Method of your Reafoning upon this Subjed ; in which you fpeak often of Minifters as diftinguifhed from Laymen ; and of the Com- miffion given by Chrift to his Apostles and their Succejforsy which I took to be the Chriftian Clergy ; and the Epifcopal Clergy in a more efpecial manner. I obferved again, That in the Proofs of your Aftertion, you argued from the appointed Adminiftrators of Divine Offi- ces, both under the Law of Mofes 3 and in the Church of Chrift. In both which, God efta- bliihed Sacred Orders of Minifters. I found you alfo telling us exprefsly, That by the Words p ag . f2 . of the Institution it plainly appears, That as long as EL II. the World jhall last, the Apostles and their Sucejfors are the Terfons Commijjioned to Difciple Nations, Baptizing them. And again, You ipeak of fome p agi 2% . Things_, which if true, you lay, Confidently the £0ini(tZl$ Of Chrift, and Baptizing and Teach- ing would be but Temporary. I was rivetted ftill the fafter in this Perfwafion, when I found you to lay this down as one of your undeniable Maxims, That no Ecckfiaftical, or Civil Autho- p afTi , fity can difpenfe with any Divine Yofiti've In ft i tut ion. I could not but from all this conclude, That the Divine Authority of the Adminiftrators of this Sacrament, muft mean the Divine Au- thority of the Chriftian Minifters, exclusive of all . Laymen whatfoever. I thought my felf very fure that your Opinion was, That by the In- stitution of Chriftian Baprifm, and the Divine Commiflion given by Chrift to his Apoftles and their Succejfors, which no Power on Earth can difpenfe with ; the Divine Commiflion of the Minifter is made fo Efienrial a part of the Sa- crament, as that no Layman, none buc a Bi- Ihop, Piieft or Deacon, in Holy Orders, can ad minifter New Dangers to the adminifter Valid Baptifm. And thus I began to examin the Truth of your Do&rine. But when I come to look farther into your Performances on this Subjed, I found, to my great Surprife, That you had chang'd your Stile. And what was before, Lay Baptifm In- valid, was now delivered thus, The Nullity of €3nailt60?t^CH Lay-Baptifm. Unauthorized Lay- Baptifm, laid I to my felf, imports, That Lay- Baptifm may be Authorized. And I began then to fufpecl a Snake in the Grafs ; and grew ap- prehenfive that you would advance fome fuch new Principles, as inftead of proving Lay-Bap- tifm Invalid, would eftablifti it by Authority. The Confequences of which, I could not but fear, would/all heavy upon theftated Miniftry ; and inftead of Defending, would rather very much Prejudice the Sacerdotal Powers which you had taken upon you to Aflert. And I foon faw that my Sufpicions were not ill grounded. For in the profecution of your Argument, I found it was not a real Minifter in Holy Or- ders, whom you indifpenfibly required to the Valid Adminiftration of Baptifm, by the Di- vine Inftitution of it, but that a Layman was allowed to do it Effe&ually enough, provided that he had but the Bifhop's Commands, or the Churches Direllivn and Authority therein. Thus you tell us, That the Canon of the Coun- cil of Eliberis, which exprefsly direffs a Layman, in fuch and fuch Cafes, to Baptize ; does not countenance Lay Baptifm, becaufe it does not declare any Right that Laymen have of themfelves, as pri- vate Cbriftians, to Baptize ; hut only gives them a Fewer to Baptize, which they had not before. They ailed by Authority, they were CptfCOpaifp 3tltf)0- XYytift lilPUlCtt* EpifcopaUy Authorized Laymen .' Sir, what new Adminiftrators are thefe, whom you Cbrijtian rriejwood. j you fet up with the Divine Authority o£ *> \ Chrift's Commiffions ? This Language is, I anv> V> perfwaded, entirely new, and wholly ^un- known to the Chriftian Church for thefe 1600 ^ ^ Years and more. *+ You ufe the very fame Evafion to get off from the Obje&ions brought againft you, from the Church of England and the Church of 'Romes allowing Lay-Baptifm to be Valid. The Diffcnt. Bifaops of the Church of England commanded Lay-^apuffulL wen, in Cafes ofNecejfity, to Baptize fo that?' 6 ' 7* whatfoever Validity fuch Baptifms were believed to have had, it was owing to the Baptizers aBing^ — \>y Vertue »f the Churches Tower and Authority com- mitted. And the Church of Rome declares , that fhe gives that Power to Laymen. Now to pretend p. 48. the Divine Authority of the Administrator to be Ejjential to the Sacrament and its Validity, and yet to allow Validity to Lay-Baptifm, becaufe fo Authorized, feems to me, I confefs, very odd. "lis, methinks, giving up a great deal of what your firft Book pretended to, and to be fure makes the Title of it very improper. Nay, it fcarce favours of Integrity, to amufe the World with Expectations of proving that a Lawful Minifter is an Ejfential part of Baptifm^ and that that Sacrament is Invalid when admi- niftred by Laymen,*becauCe repugnant to Chrift's Inftitution ; and yet at the fame time to allow the Validity of fuch Baptifms, in feveral Ages and Places of the Chriftian Church, even from the Council of Eliberis, A. D. 30?. to the Year 1602. when the Church of England firft pcremtorily required a Lawful Minifter ; only becaufe thefe Laymen were Authorized, and had the Churches Authority for what they did : And all this from a Patriot, who, at the fame time lays it down as one of his undeniable Max- ims* New Dangers to the ims, That no Ecclejtaftkal, or Civil Authority can Aiftenfe "with any Divine Pofitive Infiitution in whole or in any Ejfential Parts, is very extraordinary. The Miniftration of Baptifm by Laymen is Invalid by the Institution of Chrift, and indifpenfyly Invalid; and yet becomes Valid when done by the Bifiops Command, or the Churches Authority. This is Ma- thematical Demonstration indeed ; but it is, Sir, of your awkward and inconfrftent way of Reafoning. Inftead of demonftrating Lay- Baptifm to be Invalid, you have gone farther than any other Author that I know of, to Efta- bliih its Validity. And what could you mean or defign by all this? Why, it is vifible that this was at firft in- tended only as an Artifice, whereby you might evade the Force of what was to be brought a- gainft your firft Main Defign, r iz,. That the Mi- nifter is of the Effenee of the Sacrament, from the known Opinions and Determinations, and Practice ©f feveral Chriftian Churches thro' all Ages of Chriftianity. Whofe Authorities, when produced, for allowing the Validity of Lay-Baptifms, you had found out this as a prefent Reply to 'em •, that when this is done by the Churches Authority, What Validity fuch Baptifms have-, they owe to the Authority of the Church, by which fuch Baptizers aBed. Is there not a ftrange Infatuation attending an over-bearing Zeal to defend Errors, and to impofe Miftakes under the fpecious Title of Apoftolical DoBrines ; that it mould drive Merj into iuch apparent Absurdities and Contradi- ctions? And thit it mould, as it were, force- ably betray them into double Dealing and Gollufion, even when they make the moft hearty Profellions of Probity and Integrity, for I would,, Sir, impute all this rather to the badnefs Cbrifiian Priefthood. .9 badnefs of your Caufe, than to any intended Infincerity. And yet you muft give me leave to take Notice, That upon looking back into your firft Book, you had provided your felf of of this Evafion againft you wanted it, from the beginning. And that by a fubtle Addition of the word Subftitute. Cbrifiian Baptifm, fay Pag. if yon, is appointed to be adminiftred by the Apo{lUsi1* and their ©UCCCftb^j either themfehes in Perfon, or by their ^UbftttUt?& And this word is pretty often repeated Now, as Bifhops are the A- poftles SuccefTors, fo one who fufpe&ed no Guile, might be apt to thing that Subftitutes, might refer to Prieits and Deacons, who are the Bifhops Curates or Sub(£itutes 3 if you have a defire to call them fo. But when I found the Churches Authorizing Laymen to Baptize, pleaded as the Foundation of the Va- lidity of fuch Baptifms, I faw that Subftitutes was intended for another Meaning, and ano- ther Purpofe, And that it reached to alK, whe- ther Laymen or Women, whom the Bifhops of the Church mould Impower, or Authorise to adminifter that Sacrament. And thefe I take to be fuch as you, in another Place, call Piff. Bapt, God's Lawful Attorneys. IV J ,//.p,i4, When I had gone thus Tar in reading and meditating upon your Principles and Reafbn- ings, I could not but Paule a little, and thus ReflecT:. Blefs me ! Is this the mighty Cham- pion of the Church of England and its Clergy? Inftead of convincing the World, that by the Ordinances of Chrift, Lay-Baptifm is Inva- lid, and the Ordained Mini ft er Eifential to the due Efficacy of that Holy sacrament: He has found out a new way pf Baptizing by the Di- vine Authority of Chrift's CommhTion, with- out the Clergy. And fuch an one,- as if once adhered to, k will never hereafter be Necejfa- B ry }o ./ New Dangers to the ry or Ejfential to that Sacrament, that it mould , ^ be Adminiftred by any Other than Laymen. For if Laymen can be empowered to aft by Chuffs Gommijjion as well as Priefis • that I doubt will be the Conclufion to be drawn from it. And can my Brethren, of the Sacred Order, fit un- concern'd at fuch Principles, and fee no Dan- ger from them ? Can they fo little underftand the true Foundation of all Sacerdotal Power and Authority, as not to apprehend the Confequen- ces of Bifhops and Councils appointing for God, Subflitutes and Lawful Attorneys for the Performance of Divine Offices, who are not of the Clergy ! Did ever the Diffenters ad- vance any thing more Mifchievous to the Prieftly Office, than this pretended Defender of it? I muft therefore now, Sir, beg leave to Ar- gue and Expoftulate a little with you upon this Subjed; with a defire to know of youex- prefsly and dire&ly, Whether you will adhere to, and undertake to make good this Afferti- on ; That an Authorized Layman can by ChrijFs Commijjion and Institution administer Valid Baptifm ? Will you, I fay, adhere to this as your Prin- ciple, or will you give it up; That the Di- vine Authority of tfie Administrator of Chriftian Baptifm, pleaded by you to be an Ejfential Part of the Sacrament, may include an Authorized Lay- man ? If you will give this Do&rine up, which in truth I think the faireft way, and a piece of Juftice to the Appropriating Laws of the Sa- cerdotal Powers $ you muft then give up with it all that Part of your Anfwer to Allegations of your Adversaries ; in which they plead for the Validity of Lay -baptifm from the Canons of any Councils, or the allowed Pra&ice of any Chri- ftian Churches ; and you muft be conftrained to Chrifiian Priefthood. \ 1 1 to own., that all fuch Authorities are you. ' -" Or if rather than do this, you will f&tfia- v ^ " bide by, and infift upon this Doctrine; you p \ muft then confider whether thefe Confequen- ces will not inevitably follow from it. Viz.. i. That the Ordained Lawful Minifter is not an Ejfential Part of this Sacrament,- for if he were j none, but an Ordained Minifter could Va- lidly ^dminifter it, and the Authorized Layman could not poflibly have any Divine Authority therein. The one of thefe is direct Contradi- ction to the other ; and therefore, that I may have a right Underftanding of your Doctrines and Principles, as to this Matter I beg of you to let me know which of thefe you will flick to, in that they cannot poffibly be both true. If you will grant me that it is not the Divine Authority of the Lawful Ordained M'mifter, but only of the Authorized Adminiftrator i who may be a Layman, that is an Ejjential Part of the Sacrament : I have indeed then found but the Principle, the Truth of which I am to examin. But then. Sir, here is 2. Another Difficulty arifesupon you, which to me feems a very great one. Viz,. That then it cannot be Repugnant to the EjJ'ence of this Sa- crament, that ic mould be adminiftred by a Layr man. Forific were, no Bifhop, no Council, no Church could give Authority therein, or effectual Validity thereto. This is juft Reason- ing upon your own Principles and wnjLemabU Maxim, That what is an Ejjential Part in a Di^ vine Pofitive In ft it ut ion, no Authority, -whether Ec- cleftaftical or Civil, can difpenfe wish j i- e. None can Authorize that, to be done, or make Valid by that Authority. For that would be to give the Validity of a Sacrament to that which is no Sacrament, And that., indeed^ is not a, V> 2. Sacra.- 1 2 New Dangers to the Sacrament which wants an Effential Part of it. Here then again, Methinks you fhould in % Reafon and Juftice, give up all Pretences to making Lay baptifm Validly its being done by the Churches Authority. Pray, Sir, give me a plain, direcT: Anfwer to this fhort Queftion. Is it repugnant to the EjJ'en- tials of Christian Bapijm that it jhould be admini • ftred by a Layman or no ? Let your Anfwer be but Plain and Honeft, and take which fide of the Queftion you will. If you fay no ; Why then have you pretended ro demonstrate to the World the certain Invalidity of Lay-baptifm ? If it be repugnant to the Ejjentials of that Divine Ordinance that it mould be fo adminiftred, why then do you, or your Friends lay any ftrefs on the Lay-baptifm being Authorized, or Unautho- rized? Can any Powers on Earth Authorize Men to do that, which by a Divine Pofitive In- ft it ut ion is made repugnant to an EJfential Part of the Ordinance ? Be afhamed -to. infinuate it. Remember your own undeniable Maxim, and defire your great Apollo to extricate you out of thefe Difficulties. If you anfwer, That it is not repugnant to the Eflbnce of this Sacrament, that it be ad- miniftred by a Layman, but only, that it be not done without a Divine Authority in the Per- fon, whoever he be, committed to him from the Apoftles SucceJJors: It is plain, That by this Diftin£tion and Solution you allow, that the Divine Authority of the Priefthood may be fepa- ratedfrom the Function. And this is that Do- ctrine which I cannot but Complain" of, as abfolutely destructive of all the Divine Infti- tution of a Perpetual ft at ed Miniftry. And ac- cordingly, if your Authorized Lay Baptizers be allow'd to a# by the Divine Authority of Chrift's Commiffionj a 3. Third Chriftian Prieftbood. 1 3 3. Third Difficulty will be, How you will Reconcile this with the Appropriating Laws of Chrift ? How it will or can then appear, that it was the Purpofe of Chrifi, that an Efta- blifhed Order of Men fhould by a Solemn Im- pofition of Hands and Ordination be fet a- part for thefe Purpofes ? When therefore you fhew your felf zealous to maintain, that by the Divine Inftitution of Chrift, the Divine Commijjion of the Baptizer is made an EJJential Part of this Sacrament, as well as the Form and Matter of it : I beg you to Confider Seri- oufly, and to tell us Impartially, Whether you* do in yflur Confcience believe, that it was the Intention of Jefus Chrift, that the Power of the Ministration mould be committed to Lay- men ? Speak out plainly, Whether the Apo- ftles, by their Commiffion, were empowered to Constitute Bifhops and Paftors to adminifter the Sacraments, and perform Divine Offices in the Chriftian Church by a Solemn Ordina- tion ? Or whether they had Power at large to Authorise Lay Elders, if they fo thought fit, to the Sacred Miniftration of thofe Offices ? Con- fider this well, and think of the Confequen- ces of your AiTertions, before you give your Anfwer for the Divine Authority of Lay-Ad- miniftrators. I cannot but think that the very Being of the Chriftian Priefthood,and of all its Divine Rights, Privileges and Authorities, de- pend very much upon the Determination of this Queftion. And be veryfure that you do not run into Rank Fanaticifm, while you pretend fflch a mighty Zeal againft it. And in your Solution of this Difficulty, take this into your Account,, 4. Whether you will allow the fame, as to the other Sacrament of the Lord's Supper ? I could not but ^sk this Queftion, becaufe you infi- New Dangers to the infinuate the fame Argument againft us, who do j with the Church of England, allow fueh Baptifms to be Valid, altho' Irregular. Our An- fwer to the Objection is this, That while we aflfert the Irregularity , rather than the Invalidity of the Sacrament, when adminiftred by Lay- men, we think it better to difpenfe with fuch Irregularity, than to run into the Error of Re- baptization ; which according to the Senfe of all the Primitive Church, is an Ordinance not to be repeated. But in both the Sacraments we Condemn the Practice of Intruders as altogether unlawful. But you, while you allow the Mi- niftration of Authorised Laymen, to beAvith the Authority of Chrifts Commijjion, can give no Reafon , in my Opinion, why fuch Lay- men may not ad as Validly in both the Sacraments, as in one. I defire to be Satis- fied in this Particular : Whether the Autho- rized Laymen may, or may not as Effe&ually as ChrifVs Substitutes, and Lawful Attorneys ad- minifter the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, as that of Baptifm ? If you fay No, \ would willingly be informal in the Reafon of the Difference. For if Laymen can be really and truly Authorised with the Divine Authority of Chrift, I cannot fee why it may not extend to both the Sacraments alike. If you fay it 1 is be- caufe Laymen never were Authorized to both: The Confequenceof that Anfwer, methinks, will be this ; That if they were fo Authori- zed, they would then be veiled with the Au- thority of ChrifVs Commiflion to them both. There is nothing then, according to this Rea- foning, repugnant to the EiTentials of one Sa- crament more than of the other ; only the Churches Direftkn and Authority are wanting to Empower Laymen to the one as well as to the other. And if you will allow this, which Chriftian Prieftbood. 15 I cannot but think the neceflary Confequence of your Do&rine : We poor Parifh Priefts are reduced to a very precarious and defperate Condition. This brings me to the Fifth and laft Obje&ion againft your Do- ctrine, and that for which it is to be fo much Dreaded and Abhor'd by all Clergymen ; viz. That it deftroys the NeceJJity of Ordination, and and the Divine Inftitution of the Chri(£ian Frieft- hood, or ftated Chriftian Miniftry. If Laymen may be vefted wich the Divine Authority of Chrift's Commiflion to, or in performing the Divine Offices of the Chriftian Church, there will be but little left to be faid in the Defence of a Sacred Order of Mznfet apart, and fanclifi- ed by Solemn Ordination. The ufual Arguments, and the ftrongeft Reafons for it, I think, are thefe. That as Chrift fent his Apoftles with a Divine Com- miflion to the Performance of thefe Offices, and Promifed to be with them to the end of the World ; fo that the Power given can not reafo- nably be confined to their Perfons^ which were Mortal, but muft be intended for their Succef- fors for ever : And that, as the Perpetuity of Di- vine Miniftrations in the Chriftian Church, re- quires a Perpetuity of Minifters ; fo the Method which the Apoftles ufed in fetting an Order •of Men apart for thefe Divine Offices by Pray- er and Impcfition of Hands, is abundantly Inftru- <5tive, that the true Intention of Chrift's In- ftitution was, That fuch a diftind: Order of Men mould, throughout all Ages, be Devoted and Confecrated to thofe Purpofes. This is fuch Reafoningin Defence of a Standing, Ordained Chriftian Miniftry, as, I think, can never be overthrown, if we will keep clofe to thefe Prin- ciples. But if you rife up with new Notions, and having firft affirm d the Divine Authority of 1 6 New Dangers to the of the Commiflion to be Efiential to the Sa- crament, inftead of inferring from thence the Necejjity of an Ordained Miniltry, which one would take to be the Natural Confequence of your own Argument, you go on, and allow Chrift's CommifTion to be extended to Epifcopally Authorised Laymen ; how can you then prove the Divine Inftitution of an Or- dained Miniltry ? How little will there be be then to be faid for it ? The Confequences of fuch a Dottrine mull - , in my Opinion, be of the laft Importance to all Ghriftian Minifters. I hope ive fhall not be found to Argue at this wild and inconfiftent rate. You cannot, Sir, but excufe me in preffing this Argument very clofe. You remember how you and your Friends accule thofe who plead the Validity of Lay-Baptifm as Banter- Biff. SaptJ^S ana< Blemijhing their Priefily Office, and total* Null. Pref. ly defiroying their own Order, and the whole Mini- p. 2. Lay.jlry of the Chrifiian Priesthood, And will not In- ■Rapt. tov. trua 1 ers _/[ r g ue thus, fay you, What need we attend upon others for thefe Miniftrations, when we Lay- men, have as much valid Power therein as them- felves? If our Baptifms are Valid, fo are our Admi- nifiraticns of the Lord's Supper, &c And if Vali- dity may be allowed to all, by whomfoever admin'u ftred, then farewell" all Rule and Order in the Church, and Chrift's fetting fome therein ', fir ft Apojtles, fe- condarily Prophets. If ever Men be perjwaded that an Unauthorised Perfcn can by means of the Opus opera cum of Sacraments, convey thofe unfpeakable Advantages which belong to them ; We then, you fay, in effebt you aJJ'urc them, that every Chri- fiian can exercife that Power, and receive as much Spiritual Benefit by Vncommiffiond Teachers Mini- fir -at ions of fuppofcd Sacraments, as otl ers do by ours, Becaufe God concurs as much with their Sacraments as with ours. You thus fpeak to us again. Tour charging Chriftian Priefthood. 17 charging thefe Intruders with Schifm in adhering to Minifiers -who have no Divine Miffion, is ridiculous end nonfenfical, becaufe, fay you ro us, they have all as valid a Commiffion as jour own, which you your [elves mufi needs grant, by allowing the validi- ty of their fuppofed Sacraments. And again, Tou DifiBapt. befeech us earnefkly to confider thefe things, and how ^& P re £ our Office, and therein Chrifis Infiitution can be at X1V > xv * all efteemed and obferved, if validity as you call it can without any Divine Law for it, be afcribed to the Unauthorised Alls of Laymen ; What figni- fy the appropriating Laws of Chrifl and his Church ; if we unauthorized Laymen, fay you, can do as much in the Mini f ration of Sacraments as you can, who are the only Authorized Officers for that Turpofe? If we cannot do as much as you we can do nothing at all, for there is no degree of validity in fuch Mini ft '-rations. If we as Lay Chriftians can do as much, then you can have no Superiority over as in thefe Matters ; and fo your whole Order .md the Neceffity of it mufi ceafe, and become void, except We LayMenjljall think fit to continue it, by fubmit- ting to your Miniftrations • not through any NeceJJity of Obedience to a Divine Law, but by an Ab~l of our own unneceffary Generofity and Arbitrary Free-Will. This is what you allege againft Us, who with the Church of England, allow the Validity, and yet aflert the Irregularity of Lay-Baptifm. It tends, you fay, to the Deftruition of our whole Order, and makes the Neceffity of it to ceafe and become void. The Charge is very Unjuft, becaufe this doe? not follow from our Princi- ples, but only thefe are fome of them, fuch Confequences as would be true, if we allowed. no Irregularity , no Intrufions in fuch Baptifm. But more of this by and by. In the mean while, do but obferve, Sir, now your own Language and Arguments turn upon you, and I think with a much fupcriour Force, Let me then, G mutatis 1 8 Hew Dangers to the mutatis mutandis, apply to you your own Words. To allow Lay-Baptifm valid, only becaufe Au- thorized, is to feparate the Authority of Cbriftian Minifters from the MinifttriA Order ; and this is in Effect to deftroy the whole Christian Priefthood. And will not the Enemies of it then thus crgue ? What need is there of a Divine Miffion by Solemn Ordination, if Lay- Men without all that So- lemnity may be Authorised to thofe Mini ft rations , and have as 'Much valid Power therein as the Clergy ? If fuch Authorised Lay-Baptifms are of Divine Authority, fo may their Admin i (I 'rations of the Lord's Suffer too, and if Divine Authority may be allowed to all, becauje -performed by Authorized Lay -Men, then farewel all Rule and Order in the Church, and Chrifrs fetting fome therein, firfi Apoftles, feconda- rily Prophets. If ever Men be perfwaded, that an Authorised Lay- Man, can be inverted with the Authority of Chrifi's Commiffion for the Ad- mini ftration of the Sacraments., then in effect you affure them, That every Chrifkian may be thus Authorised, and the Sacraments becontinu'd, by the Miniftration of fuch Lay-Subftitutes, as well as of the Clergy • feeing God concurs by his Autho- rity, with thofe Sacraments as well as with the ethers. To chmge fuch Lay-Men as Intruders, or with Irregularity, is Ridiculous and Nonjenfi- cal : Becauje if they abl by Chrijfs Authority, they have as Authentick a Commiffion as the Clergy, as you y our f elves muff needs grant, by allowing then- Authority to be derived from Chr iff, without which the Sacrament, you fay, could not be valid. / befeech you then earneftly to confider thefc things, and to fl)ewhow the Minifterial Office, and therein Chrijt's Institution canbe at all efteemed and objerved, it a Divine Power in adminifcring Chriitian Sacra- ments, can without any Divine Law for it, befepa- ratedfrom the Order of the Priefthood, and Chrift's Authority be afcribed to the Acls of Lay-Men. Chtiftian Prieflhood. 1 9 What fignify the appropriating Laws of Chrift and his Churchy if your Authoriz'd Lay-Men can do as much in the Mlmftration of Sacraments, as the Clergy can who are the Appointed Officers for that purpofe ? If fuch Lay-Men cannot all with as much Authority as the Clergy, they can acl with none at all y for there is no degree of Authority in fuch Ad~ miniftrations according to the Tenor of God's Law. If as Authoriz'd Lay-Men, they can do as much as the Clergy, then the Clergy or Ordain- ed Mini Iters can h.ive no Superiority over them in thefe Matters, and Jo the whole Order and Necef- fity of it muft ceafe, and become 'void, except the Bifliops and Councils pall think ft to continue it, by Ordaining Minifters, not through any NeceJJity of Obedience to the Divine Law, but by a mere AB of their own unnecejjlny Generofty and Arbitrary Free Will. Thus you fee your own Reafoning, and your own Language turn'd upon you : Let us now confider which Side cm make the beft Defence againft the Charge As to our^ Side, you muft confefs, that we acknowledge and plead for rhe Divine Inftitudon of the Chriftian Mini- ftry, and infill upon it, that as fuch are by Chrift appointed, and to be continued to the End of the World ; to that none but fuch Ordain'd Minifters, ought, or can Regularly Adminifter Chriftian Baptiim. That it is a great Irregula- rity whenever any Lay Perfons do take this Miniftration upon them. If they do it with- out the Allowance or Permiflion of the Church, they are Intruders and Invaders of an Office, that does not belong to them. And when fuch a Practice is Tolerated by the Church, it is on- ly in Cafes of great Neceflity; and then they are not allow 'd by m, as they are by you, to ad; by Chrift's Authority therein, but rather a Divine Inftkution of Decency and Order, C 2 giyes ao New Dangers to the gives Way to a Cafe of prefling Neceflity : And in Truth, we come as to this, nothing fhort of you, faving only that you plead the Divine Authority m the Adminiftration of Bap- tifm, to be Ejjtntial to the Sacrament, which we do not; and confequently weownthatfuch Lay-Baptifm may be Valid, altho' it is, as to the Minifter of it, Irregular and Unlawful. Now how does this deftroy the Prieftly Office ? Muft every Thing in Pofirive Inftitutions be ne« ceffarily made Ejjential? Were Aaron 's Bells Effentials in the Sacrifices, becaufe always to be put on when he Mini/I red before the Lord ? Cculd not Chrift Eftablilh a Perpetual Prieft- hood for Order or Regularity Take, without ma- king that an Ejjential of the Sacrament ? This is what we plead that he has done : And thus the allowing Lay Baptifm to be Valid, does not Prejudice the Divine Inftitution of the Chrifti- an Minifrry at all. This is a Confequence that follows, only fromyourPrinciples^ but not from ours. We affcrt the Divine Rignts and Priviledges of the Clergy to thefe Miniftrati- ons, by a Divine Law of Order and Regulari- ty, tho'not of Effentials 5 and we condemn all fuch Lay Performances, as Invafions of the Prieftly Office, and unlefs Neceffity will vindi- cate them Unlawful: And if at any Time Ex- cufable, becaufe Neceffary, yet we do not pretend that they act. therein by Chrift's Au- thority : This is our Defence. But as for you, who allow that the Authori- ty of Chrift's Commiffion may be vefted in a Lay- Man, which you muft do, to make Lay Bap- tifm Valid, according to your own Principles : I know not what you can fay, in defence of the Divine Inftitution of a ftanding Ordain'd Miniftry : You cannot thus pretend the Ordain d Minifter to be Effential to the $acrament any more Chriftian Prieftbood. a I more than we : For if he were,, anUnordain'd Lay-Man could have no Authority. You can- not plead that the Inftitution of Chrift appro- priates the Power to the Order, without giving up this whole Plea of Authorized Validity : For, if the Divine Inftitution of Chrift has Appropri- ated the Votver and Authority to the Order of the Yrieflhood, no Power on Earth can Separate them., and fo a Lay-Man can have no Autho- rity. Do not pretend that Author*? a Lay Baptijm is better than that which is Unauthorized, and done in a Schifmatical Oppofition to the Prieft- hood : Fortho'a SchifmaticalOppoJition'xs a great Aggravation of the Guilt of an Evil Practice j yet you know., chat there is no degree of Autho- rity, any more than of Validity, in what is Re- pugnant to the Ejfentiah of Sacraments. Above allThings, do not pretend that ic is the^ , Divine Authority of ChrifVsCommiffion, altho' L( ^" tter to Unduly and Irregularly convey'd, or pro h ac vice ; t he Author for this difficulty will I think., inevitably arife upon it. Whether the effectual Authority of Chrifts Commiilion can be irregularly convey'd, and contrary to the Original Intention of his Inftitution ? If it cannot, then what is Irregular, muft alfo be Invalid and Ineffectual: On the o- ther hand, he, who is affirmed to acl: effectual- ly by Chrift's Divine Authority and Qommiffion, muft, in that refpecl:, be allow'd to acT: Regu- larly. And if you will carry the Matter thus far, as indeed you muft, to make a Lay-Bap- tizer a inifhation of ihe^fhrifiian Sacraments, may, a- greeably to Chrifl's Inflitution be Co Separated from the Order as that Lay-Mefri may bevefled with, and aft by Divine Au- thority in thoi'e Sacred Minijlrations ? A fair and direct Anlwer to this plain Queition, will be kindly taken. And the lefs of Shifts and Evafons there mall be found in it the more Candid and Acceptable it will be. Anr 1 becrufe it is, you fee, a Quell ion of very great Importance in the Confequences of it ; you, who have made it neceflary to be put, may, if you pleafe, orfer it to the Lower Houfe of Convocation, to whom you have, on occafon, made your Court and your Appeal, and get, if you can, their Deter- mination of it. If you are even yet willing to give it up, and at the fame time will give up with it, all the Ufe that you have made of it in Defence of the Caufe, which 1 think you have very unreafonably efpoufed ; I am content, and mall give you no farther trouble on that Account. But if you will ltill adhere to it, That a Laybapu^er has the Divine Au- thority ofChrifi's Commiffion for that Miniflration when Au- thorised by the Church, and thereby allow. That the Power of the Prielthood may be feparated from the Or- der , I cannot but think, that in the "natural Confequence of this your Dodrine, and according to your own Reafo- ning, you leave it entirely at the Difcretion, or as you exprefs it, the urmeceffary Generofity of the Bimops, whether there mall be any other Ordained Handing Minifters or no. If you tell us that they are bound by the Laws of the Land to Ordain Priefts and Deacons •, I own the Truth ofit, and I think it is all your new Principle has left us to plead in our own Defence. But I mull beg leave to take notice. That this is placing the Sacerdotal Powers, of which you have taken upon vou to be the avowed and prolefs'd Champion : Jult where the pretended Rights of the Chrifiian Church have left them. Depending wholly on the Laws of the Land, and the Conflitutions nf our Country : But not at all neceffary bv the Sacred Laws of Cod, or the Divine Inftitutions c f z jefusChriM. And when you have brought us to this, by the Divine Authority of your Epifccpally Authored Lay- Men, 'tifr'high time for us not to be Lull'd into plealing Dreams by emptv Names, and unprofitable Frctcnces,butto awake out of Sleep and take the Alarm. I beg your Pa'rdon for the Liberty I haveus'd, and am,tho' not at all fatisfy'd with your Doclrine, yet Sir, May 21. 1 7 1 2. With Sincere Affection, Tours*