A Disquisition Upon our Saviour's SANCTION OF TITHES, Matth. 23. 23. and Luke 11, 42.

WHEREIN That whole CASE is most Impartially Stated and Resolved According to Express SCRIPTURE: FOR THE Satisfaction of All SCRUPLES.

Entred according to Order.

LONDON, Printed by Th. Dawks, 1685.

A DISQUISITION UPON TITHES.

From Mat. 23. 23. and Luke 11. 42.‘Wo unto you Scribes and Pharisees, Hy­pocrites; for you pay Tithe of Mint, Anise, Cummin,Luke. and Rue, and all manner of Herbs; and have omitted the weightier matters of the Law, Judgment, Mercy and Faith, andLuke. pass over the Love of God; These ought ye to have done, and not to have left the other undone.’

THat we may arrive to the Argument arising from these Words, their full Sense and Ex­planation lies thus:

Our Saviour in the Course of his severe Denounciations upon the Scribes and Pharisees, and while he was with a just Indignation exposing them, [Page 2] charges their foul Hypocrisy, that they Tith'd Mint, Anise, &c. and passed over Judgment, Mercy, &c. the weightier matters of the Law, and then subjoyns this Cen­sure; These Things ought ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone.

Now I allow, the [...], to be understood of the paying, not the Sacerdotal Receiving, or Magi­stratical Adjudication of Tithes; Although the Scribes and Pharisees being mostly Priests, and of the Sanhedrim, some Interpreters incline to that Sense of Receiving, or Adjudication of Tithes, which seems to raise the Sense somewhat higher, and indeed [...], Heb. 7. 5. signifies to receive Tithes; but then it is applyed to to the people [...]: to receive Tithes of the people, and not to the Things Tith'd, as here; I rather therefore understand them in that Pharisees Sense, Luke 18. 12. [...], I pay Tithes of all I pos­sess, proper to a Pharisee at large. Again the [...], or, these Things, ought ye to have done; I refer to the nea­rest Judment, Mercy, &c. and the [...], or those Things ought you not to leave undone, to the furthest of Mint, Anise, Cummin, &c. Although Interpreters think each re­ferrible to each, which would still aggrandize our Sa­viours Sense in Favour of Tithes: But I rather Inter­pret them thus; These weightier Things ye ought in the first place, and with a higher Intention upon the Things themselves to have done, and the other, Tithing Mint, Cummin; in regard of the Authority of the Law-giver, and the Equity of his Laws, even to every iota of them, ought ye not to leave undone.

Taking then the Words with the least Favour to Tithes; They must needs amount to this, our Lord at that very Time, when he had the greatest Provocation from the Hypocrisy of the Pharisees, (which he was so sharply chastising) preferring the minutest parts of Tithing, above the [...] ▪ and when he was com­paring [Page 3] Things of so puisne a Consideration, as Tithing Mint, Anise, &c. with those Massive Duties of Righteous­ness, Judgment; yet, he saw something in these so pe­tite Observations of Tithing, some Foundation that they rested upon, of so huge Importance and Conse­quence, that the same [...], or ought he applys to the do­ing the weightier things of the Law, or to the [...], he applys also to the [...], or the not leaving undone those smallest Punctillo's of paying Tithes: at the least by the Frame of his Speech, It is necessarily so extended: And thus by his own proper Sanction the payment of Tithes, even to the smallest particles of Justice therein, he Establishes.

But because notwithstanding all that hath been yet said, it may seem a Permission rather than a Sanction or Injunction, I shall enforce what I have already said by this Argument.

That which our Lord in the most minute Instances of observance gives the very same Sanction to, that he does to the more weighty Duties of the Law, that he does not only permit but enjoyn: But to the minu­test Instances of paying Tithes, he gives the same Sanction, as to the more weighty parts of the Law; therefore he does not only permit, but enjoyn the payment of Tithes.

That our Lord confirm'd all the weighty parts of the Law with his own Sanction, is undeniable; if therefore he fixes the same ought upon the payment of Tithes in the smallest Instances, as he does upon the weighty Things of the Law, he then by his own Sanction Esta­blishes the one with the other; And if he allowed that deference to the smallest Instances of Duty in the Pay­ment of Tithes, to Mint and Cummin, what by way of proportion would he have allowed to the more Bulky, and weighty Instances of payment of Tithes; For the Tithing of Mint and Cummin, and the neglecting [Page 4] of the more considerable Seeds of the Land would have been great Hypocrisy, if the Pharisees had been guilty of it; even as the neglecting or passing over Judgment and Mercy was; and the Robbing of God in them had been much more worthy of being rancked with the passing over JUDGMENT and MERCY, those more weightie Things of the LAW, then Mint, and Cummin could amount to. But now as the minu­tiae of Tithing were only in this Case under our Sa­viours Eye, so his Sanction is upon them equally, not as to the Things themselves, for so do they infinitely outweigh one another, but as to the general obligation of Duty. Seeing we must not willfully break the Law in one point, or in one of its least Commandements, in re­gard of the Authority of the Law-giver, and the general Equity of his Laws, as was said before, though the mat­ters of Obedience do so much preponderate one to another.

Now that our Saviours [...], or ought, upon both is undeniable from the Text, for to make up the Sense it necessarily communicates it self to the one as to the other; and as the one is to be done with a more So­lemn Address of the Soul, so the other is not to be left undone in its just place and Season.

But having proceeded thus far, I must now contest a more weighty Objection; that is, This Injunction of our Lord was Commensurate to the Time, Moses his Law was to continue in full Force and Strength; but assoon as that Expired, which was at the Death of Christ, then did that Precept of Tithing expire and naturally go off with the whole Body of Moses his Ce­remonial Law, with the Sacrifices and Priest-hood of that Law.

In Answer to this Objection, I shall first argue Ne­gatively, and then Affirmatively; and so proceed to a further debate upon each Argument.

Argum. 1 First then, I thus argue Negatively. That which our Lord upon so just an occasion, and even so great a Provocation, as the Hypocrisy the Pharisees committed on these Punctillo's of Tithing to compensate for their passing over Judgment, &c. yet derogated nothing in the least Iota from, as He did from other parts of Moses his Law, in that he saw no just Reason on any Account for the Abrogation of it at his Death. But he Derogated not in the least Iota from the payment of Tithes, as from other parts of Moses his Law, on so just an oc­casion, and so great a Provocation, therefore he saw nothing in it for which it ought to be Abrogated at his Death with such other parts of Moses his Law.

Argum. 2 In the second place I argue thus Affirmatively. That which our Lord did not so Remonstrate to as to other parts of Moses his Law, on so just an occasion and provocation, in that he saw something more valuable, than that it should be Abrogated with other parts of Moses his Law, and Jewish Observances at his Death.

But in this Case our Lord Remonstrated nothing against payment of Tithes in the smallest Instances; therefore he saw something more valuable than that it should be Abrogated with other parts of Moses his Law, and Jewish Observances at his Death.

In both these Arguments I have placed the stress not upon the Sanction, I have just before made Evi­dent our Lord gave to the Law of Tithes, because I pre­sum'd it might be supposed only Temporary as other parts of Moses his Law; But the stress is placed upon the Treaty, our Lord gave to this part of Moses his Law, very different from other parts of it to be Abro­gated at his Death; and that together with the San­ction, he gave to this particular Law, he made no Ex­planatory Remonstrance of its near approaching Abro­gation for some Fault he found with it: This plainly ar­gues, [Page 6] our Lord saw something so Equitable in this Law, for the sake of which he intimated no signification, that it was to be abrogated at his Death, but to conti­nue in its own place; For the very want of such an E­quity had else been a fault in the Eye of Christ, Now the minor Propositions in both these Arguments that Christ Derogated nothing, Remonstrated nothing, are Evident from the Text of both the Evangelists, who give us no Account of any such either Derogation or Remonstrance, but only of his Sanction: And it cannot be supposed, but they would as freely have Recorded and deliver'd over to us the one as the other; and that they would have been directed so to do by the Divine Spirit, if it had been a point of Christs Doctrine.

For the proof therefore of the major Propositions, that Christ not Derogating from, nor Remonstrating to this Law of Tithes, saw nothing in it for which it should be abrogated; but that he saw something in it, why it should not be abrogated, but continue after his Death; I shall now reason these two ways.

1. By observing our Saviour did Remonstrate to any other parts of Moses his Law, or Jewish Observances as they came in his way, and by some fit way shew ei­ther his present dislike, or give some forebodes of his Pleasure, they should be abrogated at his Death, and his Servants discharg'd from them; but having not done so in this particular Law; it argues he saw no­thing in it at which he was at that present offended, nor for which it should be abrogated at his Death.

And therefore I shall set my self to observe such par­ticulars of Moses his Law, and Jewish Observances, as by the Evangelical Records fall under our Lords par­ticular Remark, and of his particular Demeanour to­wards the severals of them compared with this.

2. In that our Lords Respect to this Law, as we shall under the former Head make good will be found very [Page 7] different from other parts of the Jewish Law, and ob­servance; and that such a Respect cannot be imagin'd to be grounded on an indifferency, that it was neither Good nor Evil; it will therefore follow, he saw some­thing of a positive Equity and Goodness, why he did so regard it as no way to predict its Abrogation at his Death; and therefore I shall endevour by a com­pare with other Scriptures centring in this, to find out that positive Equity and Goodness.

Let us then first Examine our Saviours Treaty of the several parts of Moses his Law.

1. And first as to the Moral precepts of Moses his Law, our Lord was so far from Abrogating them, that he sublimated them to their own purity, far above the false Glosses of the Pharisaick Doctors, or the low sense the Carnal Jew had of them, as appears all along that divine Sermon on the Mount, and for the perpe­tuityMat. 5. 18. &c. he dates the Duration of every Iota or Tittle of them beyond that of Heaven and Earth.

2. In those things wherein either Jewish Custom and Practise, or explicite permission by Moses his Law had prevaricated from the Divine and Original Constituti­on; Our Saviour plainly and immediately reduced those Customs and Practises to that Divine original by settling that Standard of Reduction; From the Begin­ning it was not so, as in the Case of Marriage and Di­vorce. Mat. 19. 8.

3. He peremptorily decided to the Civil Power the due of Tribute, and therein of all subjection con­sistent with the supream Law of God, all pretenses from the Jewish Law or any other of latter date to the contrary notwithstanding, in that everlasting Oracle, Render therefore to Cesar the Things that are Cesars, andMat. 22. 2 [...]. to God the things that are God's.

4. He diverted the severity of the Judaick Judicial [Page 8] Law as to the Execution, from the woman taken in Adul­tery, John 8. 9, 10. although [...], in the very Fact; by striking the Consciences of her Accusers with their own Guilt.

5. In that great precept of the S [...]bbath Day, Our Lord crossed the Superstitious Austerity of the Phari­sees, and refuted it by Arguments drawn from the Mo­saick Law it self, which allowed nullum in Sanctuario Sab­bati Otium no Sabbatism of rest in the Sanctuary; but the Priests prophane, as our Lord says, the Sabbath Day in Mar. 12. 1. &c. Mar. 2 23 &c. the Temple, and are blameless, from their own practise in Leading their Beasts to Water, from the true Intention of the Sabbath, which was made for Man, and not Man forJohn 5 17. it, from the ever Active Goodness of the Divine Being and the Mediator that never Sabbatizes; my Father wor­keth hitherto, and I work: And he foreboded the change of it from the seventh Day to the First, by declaring himself Lord, even of the Sabbath; and assigning that for the Reason, why he declar'd himself Lord over it, viz. to change it, because the Sabbath was made for Man, and not Man for it, That is, the First day Sabbath might be as much adapted to Man's Good, as the seventh was; and that neither the one nor the other was any of those Eternal and Immutable Laws for which Man was made. Therein intimating he changed no such Laws, but as the Son of Man or the the great Mediator he chan­ged such Laws as were made for Man's Interest, to what he saw most for their interest by variety of Circumstances and Times; and were not those eternal immutable Laws for which Man was made, and where­in his Happiness without any Alteration consisted: Thus he judged the First Day honoured with his Re­surrection, and as a seventh part of Time includ­ing the Memory of the CREATION was now fittest for a Sabbath. For who as the Son of Man can judge of those advantages of Humane Nature, who took that Nature upon him, that he might be touched [Page 9] with our Infirmities, and might be a Compassionate High-Priest. Upon this Head I have insisted the longer, be­cause it gives great light into the main discourse, and because I shall have after occasion to compare toge­ther the precept of Tithes, and of a seventh part of Time.

6. He foreboded the Change of the whole Mosaick Frame, by declaring the Scribe not far from the Kingdom Mark 12. 34. of God, who understood the Love of God and our Neigh­bour, to be more than all whole Burnt Offerings and Sa­crifices, which our Lord soon after (as we shall pre­sently see) in an umbrage abrogated: Circumcision was already antiquated by the Baptism of John, and the Disciples of Jesus; and was undervalued in compare with the making a man every whit whole, the great Design ofJohn 7. 22. the Gospel; although by the first Institution, the Uncircumcised was to be cut off from his People; the Pass-Over was voided by the Lords Supper, the Feast upon the True Paschal Lamb substituted to it.

7. In all Cases wherein Pharisaick Hypocrisy, Ex­tortion, Vain-Glory, Traditional Superstition had in­troduced any Additions upon Ceremonial, or even Moral Duties; our Saviour was most Rigorous in the Detection and Censure, as in their Phylacteries, Corban, Eating with washt Hands, their long Prayers, Fastings, Alms, the odd Sentiments of the Resurrection fastned to Moses his Law by the Sadduces, with many other In­stances of both kinds.

Now to draw up a Comparison betwixt the afore­nam'd Instances (for there remain two more of a pecu­liar consideration) of our Saviours Treaty of Moses his Law, and his Treaty of it in this perticular of Tithes, and it thus arises.

We find the Interpretation of Moses his Law, con­cerning Tithes was most particular, and to the utmost Stretch and Extent, when it was drawn down to Mint, [Page 10] and Cummin, far more express than any Words we find in the Levitical Law it self; yet our Lord blames no­thing, he finds no fault, nay he Approves, and sets his Seal to it; These Things ought ye not to leave undone: He does not make it void, nay he Establishes it; it could not indeed be, but that especially the Tantilloes, those uttermost Farthings of Tithing, must be in themselves much lighter in our Lords Account than Judgment, Mercy; but else he moves them not out of their place, though but as the Dust of the Ballance in Tithing it self.

And therefore undoubtedly, our Saviour saw some Rule of unchangeable Right, that sustained so nice an Exposition of Moses his Law, and that supported even that Law it self above the Ceremonial, or Judicial San­ctions of Moses.

He does not fulfil it, that is explain it at a greater Breadth or Height, as he did Matthew the 5th, those greater Laws: Indeed the Pharisees had done that to his Hand, and shrivell'd up the other by false Glosses, but he Evacuates it not, he retrenches nothing, he gives nothing of an equitable Interpretation to it: He redargues nothing as in all the rest of the fore­mentioned Instances. It assures us therefore, this Ex­actness of Tithing was none of their Extortion, Vain-Glory, Traditional Superstition, Rigid or Erroneous Interpretation, not knowing the Scrip [...]ures in their Mer­cy to Humane Nature, or the Power of God; but only their Hypocrisy shew'd it self in their passing over the weightier Matters of the Law, while they were so puncti­lious in Tithing Mint, and Cummin.

But besides all these Instances given of our Lords Abearance towards the Law of Moses, there are two more that require a more intimate research into them, because they import a greater Favour of our Lords towards the Mosaical Law, and yet in one of them [Page 11] there was a certain Expiration of Moses his Institution at the Death of Christ, and in the other within less than half an Age after his Death: so that except there shall be a certain Distinction found betwixt those two Instances, and this of Tithing, we are upon; it may have been out of Date with the Rest of the Mosaick Law, which had some kind of Languishing Life till the Destruction of Jerusalem by Titus.

The first is that of the Leper, Mat 8. 2. &c. who being cleansed by our Lords miraculous Power, was in­joyn'd by him to sh [...]w himself to the Priest, and to offer for his cleansing as Moses commanded, from whence it may be thus argued:

Christ enjoyn'd, or approv'd the Offering Moses Com­manded for cleansing the Leper.

But that Offering is abrogated by Christ's Death, therefore some part of Moses his Law abrogated by Christ's Death is yet enjoyn'd, or approved by him.

And as it would be Iewish and Anti-Evangelical to continue such an Offering upon the Cure of a Leper, because of that Injunction of Christ, so is it the same to continue the Observation of the Law of Tithes, be­cause Christ said at that Time to the Pharisees. These ought ye not to have left undone.

But in Answer to this Argumentation, I rejoyn these Considerations:

1. Our Lord was indeed himself in all Instances of Duty obedient to the Law of Moses, under which he was made, and proportionably he withdrew no man atGalat. 4 4. that time of his Being upon Earth from a present Actu­al Obedience to it, rightly understood, so to this Le­per, he enjoyn'd the observation of the Law of his cleansing so far as to offer according to it.

2. Yet in the course of our Lords miraculous Healing, there were many Lepers cleansed; For as a daily thing, [Page 12] he renunciates to Iohn by his Disciples, among other Miracles, the Lepers are cleansed; and yet we have on­ly this Exemplification of Christ's Solemn CommandMat 11. 15. to observe Moses his Command; Nor did he Caution his Apostles concerning it in their Commission to cleanse the Lepers, Mat. 10. 8.

3. In that most remarkable Healing of the Ten Lepers, Luke 17. 14. There was only a Command to shew them­selves to the Priest, without any mention of the Offering, which shews, though our Lord did pay an observance to the Mosaick Law; yet in all his miraculous Clean­sings, he knew a Greater than Moses was there, and so did not oblige the Cleansed rigorously to those Obser­vances.

4. He Limits the Injunction to the proper end of it, viz. For a Testimony to them: that is,

1. That our Lord was no Contemner of Moses his Administration, though they calumniated him as such on all occasions, but a Just moderator over it. As a Son over his own House.

2. For a Testimony to them, that the Kingdom of God was come upon them in the Miraculous Power of Christ:Luke 11. 20. And therefore the Leper was charged to tell no Man, but to surprize the Preist with the Offering for his Purifica­tion, that so there might be a legal Attestation to the Truth of the Miracle, which was so porfect doubtless (like Naamans his Flesh coming again, as the Fl [...]sh of a 2 Kings 5. 14. Child,) as to surmount any occasion for the seven Days probationership, Levit. 13 6. The Appearing thus to the Priest, and the Offering for Cleansing were Indisputa­ble Ratifications of the Miracle, and therefore were so carefully Commanded.

Now all these things laid together, There will ap­pear to any unprejudic'd Considerer, a vastest Diffe­rence betwixt our Saviour's Sanction of the Duty of Tithing, and the Command to the Leper, as pro hac vice, [Page 13] for that time to shew himself to the Preist, and Offer, &c. and that for so great an End, as a Testimony to them, without which there had been no such necessity.

The second of these two last Instances, and much the Greater is comprehended in those twoJohn 2. 14, &c. Mar. 11. 15. 16. Zelo­ticisms (if I may be bold so to call them) of our Lord and Saviour, the one at the first Pass-Over he publickly ap­peared at, after his Baptism; and the second at his last, just before his Death, viz. the Whipping and Eject­ing the Buyers and Sellers out of the Temple, and which is most Remarkable, prohibiting the passing of Vessels through the Temple or Sanctuary rather; setting these [...], Two Mottoes, as it were, by his Divine Action on the Gates, or first Avenues to the Temple.

The first in his First Action, make not my Fathers House a House of Merchandise.

The second in his Second Action, my House shall be call'd a House of Prayer for all Nations.

This I account an Instance of greatest moment to the present Case;

1. Because our Saviour gave this as a Sanction of his own above, and beyond the Sentiment of the Jews, who were in amaze at it, and ask'd a Sign to be the Warranty of so great Doings, and it did so enrage the Pharisees, that they sought to destroy him upon it, and yet the Temple of the Lord was their great Cry, and their last Accusation of our Lord at his Death was for the very Temple, as if Blasphem'd by him. And fur­ther, It is the more remarkable, because Christ for the fulfilling of a double Prophecy thus Soveraignly mani­fested himself, the first Time, that of David his Type; The Zeal of thy House hath [...]aten me up. The last Time, that of the Prophet Esay, My House shall be called the House of Prayer for all Nations.

[Page 14] 2. It is the more Influential on our present Discourse because Tithes and the Sanctuary had such a Correlati­on one to another, that they may seem to have Lived, and Died together.

3. Because this Divine Zeal of our Lord termi­nated in a Temple, whose Holyness and Use was much prostrated at his Death; Then the Vail of the Tem­ple, that separated it from common Approach, even of Eyes, was by Miracle rent from the Top to t [...]e B [...]t­tom, Mat 27. 51. and within less than fourty years it was burnt by Titus, the Instrument of Divine Vengeance, and utter­ly rased.

Here then appears, as Solemn a Sanction upon the Holyness of the Temple, as upon Tithes; and yet how soon, It was of necessity to be abrogated, and that e­ven as by a Hand from Heaven, we have seen, as ourMat. 24. 1, 2. Saviour also foretold, A Stone not left on a Stone.

Now to All This these two things are said,

1. That our Lords Intention was to put that San­ction upon the Holyness of the Temple, as an Entail of the same Holyness upon the successive Temples of the Christians; against which I shall say no more, then that the very want of the Cabor and Shecinah, proper only to that material Sanctuary does disprove that opination.

2. The more valuable Account of the most Pious and Learned Mead, takes the Place of this, who puts the Emphasis of our Saviour's Action of Favour to the the Temple, on that part of it, which was allowed to the Gentiles, which the Jews valued at that vile Rate, as to make it as Common and Unclean: But our Lord for the Vindication of it in preparation to the Gentiles coming into his Church, did thus Exterminate All that prophane Incumbrance of it: and Correspondent to this does that Prophecy especially shine out; My House shall be called for All Nations the House of Prayer.

[Page 15] 3. Although this Account of our Saviour's Action can be by no means spar'd, much less excluded for the very sake of that Prophecy, and also the near approach of the Gentiles Conversion; yet I shall be bold to give one larger, and more Receptive, as also more close and nearer to the purpose of this unparalell'd Comming of the Lord into his Temple.

And that is, This was indeed our Lords Causing Sa­crifice and Oblation to cease, foretold by Daniel in the midst of the week his last Pass-Over, or just approach­ing Death Consummatively; as it was inchoated at the very beginning of the Week, or the first Pass O­ver.

And when Saerifice was thus caused to Cease; Prayer, Dan 9. 27. that was at least Coeval with Sacrifice, and to endure to the very end, as the surviving Worship succeeded naturally to it alone; as Comprehensive of all Spiri­tual and Intellectual Worship, and God's Acceptance of it.

This Action then of our Lords so superlative takes away the First, that he may Establish the Second. And that here resided the Mind of that Heavenly Grandeur our Lord assum'd, I thus argue.

1. The Temple was at that time the Great Symbol of both the Divine Presence and Worship, and indeed the only then in the World.

2. It was from its very first Foundation, a House of Prayer, Solomon dedicated it, as such at the first, by that1 Kings 8. 2 Chr [...]n. 6. his Reyal Prayer, Prayer was intermix'd with all Sacri­fices, as the most Learned Dr. Outram often observes, in that Excellent Discourse of Sacrifices. It was always Comprehensive of all Divine Worship, Oh thou that hear­est Prayer, to thee shall all Flesh come; but yet under Moses his Law Sacrifice over-shaded it; and the Temples name was [...] is not [...] primarily, not a House of Prayer, but a House of Sarifice.

[Page 16] 3. The Evangelical Prophet Esay foretels: It should in the Gospel state of the Church receive another name; It should be called the House of Prayer, that is, of Pray­er separated from Sacrifice, for else it was before the House of Prayer, and although he joins Sacrifices, yet it is only according to the Language of that time a predi­ction of Spiritual Sacrifices.

4. That Merchandize our Saviour ejected, and the passing of Vessels through the Bounds of the Sanctuary he prohibited, was in a Sense absolutely necessary; at least of High Conveniency to the Sacrifices of the Tem­ple, and had some Countenance from God's Allowance to the Farr Dwellers of his People, to bring their Money instead of their Sacrifices, that they might buy nearer the Temple, and on many Accounts the Vessels could very ill be interdicted to that Service; so that the Ces­sation of one was hardly possible without the other; the Cessation of the Merchandize and the Vessels, with­out the Cessation of the Sacrifices.

5. The Remark of these two Actions of our Lords is put upon this first: Make not my Father's House a House of Merchandize; and in the second, It shall be called the House of Prayer.

6. It is once by the Evangelist Mark added, For all Nations; which argues to us, It was not principally, but yet inclusively and consequentially intended, that is when it should be a House of Prayer, and not of Sacri­fices. All Nations should flow into the Chruch, and it could not indeed be a House of Prayer for All Nations, in a con­fluence to the Church of God, while it was a House of Sacrifice; For that state was fitted only to the Jewish Nation.

There are these Three Things therefore in our Lord's Intention in the Action, and his Concomitant discourse.

[Page 17] 1. That there should be a Cessation of that Carnal Jew [...]sh Worship, of God by Sacrifice.

2. That in the place of it should succeed a Spiritual Intellectual Worship comprehended under Prayer, and that represented by the Temple, or House of God, as the Symbol of it.

3. Our Saviour with so high a Zeal thrusts out that Market, that Sacrifices necessarily brought so near the Temp [...], not only with the Reproach of its Sordidness, but of all that Fraud, Injustice, and other Rapines at­tending places of Traffick, by which it was made a Den of Theives. And this to prepare for that Purer, Freer, less Cumbersom Worship, signified by Prayer; and that should not be clogg'd with those Temptations of Fraudulency.

4. The Christian Church Catholick, as consisting of all Nations, rises as it were out of this Temple, when the Apostles met together, when the Effu­sion [...] of the Holy Spirit coming down, as a Shecinah upon them, viz. in Fiery Cloven Tongues, consecrated that Church Acts 2. 1. &c. to be the House of the Living God, a House of Prayer for all Nations, a representative of which then met, Devout men of every Nation under Heaven.

5 The Jews and especially the Pharisees Surmizing, whither All this Action of our Lord tended, were fil­led with so much Rage and Amazement, being equal­ly Enemies to the Cessation of Sacrifice, and to the Church of God spread through all Nations.

And thus I have given Account of the most plausi­ble Appearance of our Lord's Sanction upon a Branch of the Mosaick Jewish Law, which yet was indeed, and in true understanding the most efficacious Abrogation of it, and Introduction of the Evangelical state; and I have insisted the more industriously upon it because it is of difficult explication according to its true Sense, [Page 18] and according to that Sense very different from this Case of Tithes.

I am now arrived to the second Point of the Argu­ment, that is, that our Lord not onely blam'd nothing in this most Rigid Interpretation of the Pharisees upon the Law of Tithes given by Moses; nor in the Law it self: But on the contrary, that he saw some unchangeable Equity in it, for the sake of which, he intimated not the least Iota of Abrogation in relation to it.

And that we may attain that, I shall proceed by these several Propositions that are either evident by their own Light, or proved in the former, or following course of the Argument.

Posit. 1 God hath a Sovereign Right over all things we pos­sess, being himself always the most High possessor of Hea­ven and Earth.

Posit. 2 He may reserve to himself, or command from us, as a Tribute or Homagery-Acknowledgment whatever proportions of any thing we call ours, and to what ends he pleases.

Posit. 3 Since the Sin and Fall of Man, because all the Grace and Favours of God to us are in and through his Son as our High-Priest, and Mediator, in whom All things now consist; there hath therefore arisen together with theColos. 1. 17. aforesaid Acknowledgment of the Divine Nature, an Acknowledgment of our High Priest and Mediator, an Acknowlegment of the Son of God in our Nature, through whom we receive All, and offer All; who abideth a High Priest continually, without either Beginning of Days. or End of Life. Heb. 7.

Posit. 4 Because neither to God, nor the Son of God in Heaven can our Goodness of this sort extend in specie, therefore he hath declar'd his Pleasure, It should be Deputed.

1. To the outward means and conveniencies of So­lemnizing his Worship.

[Page 19] 2. Because for the more Due, and certain Perfor­mance of his Worship, God hath separated and select­ed persons for the Care of, and Service in it; He hath therefore given to those his Immediate Servants, and Ministers of his Worship in the World, their just pro­portions of those Acknowledgments, due to him, out of what we possess, both for an Inablement to, and Recompence of their Service, not as Alms, but as Ho­nour. 1 Tim. 5. 17

3. After this by way of Alms to the Poor, which yet is also call'd our Righteousness on this Account.2 Cor. 9. 9, 10,

Posit. 5 By Divine Impulse the Tenth of All hath been pitch'd upon, as the Quota pars, or proportion of a Tribute to him, to whom All is indeed Due.

Posit. 6 In God's own peculiar Nation, and Government, the Tenth of All the Increase of the seed of the Land, and of whatsoever passed under the Rod of the Flock, or of the Herd, was Holy to the Lord by his special Appointment.

Here then we find, that, which was in our Saviour's Eye, that differences this Law of Tithing so much from other parts of Moses his Law.

Even the Everlasting Equity of Acknowledging God by the Mediator, and Eternal High Priest, out of what we possess, deputatively deferr'd to the immedi­ate Ministers and Servants of his Solemn Worship, which Acknowledgment is most duly, and justly ari­sing from the very least Things; even the Mint and Cum­min, that serve the uses of Life, and is therefore to con­tinue in the Substantials, as long as God hath a Holy Service in the World, Priests and Ministers of it, even throughout All Ages; and no less under the Evange­lical Law, then the Mosaick; after Moses, as it was before him; As long as the Goodness of God grants us All Things to enjoy, even so long does our Tribute to God through Jesus Christ, oblige us out of All Things, we do enjoy, It is of Eternal Equity to Honour the Lord [Page 20] with our Substance, and with the First Fruits of all our In­crease, Prov. 2. 9.

Abraham, therefore the Father of Decimation gaveGenes. 14. 18, 19. the Tenth of All to Melchized [...]k, long before Moses, and under that Character, Priest of the most High God, Posses­sor of Heaven and Earth, who Blessed him in the name of the most High God.

Aod who this Melchizedek was and of whom he was so Near, so Express, and Immediate a Type in his PRIEST-HOOD, and therein so Great a Man, Abra­ham, who saw Christ's Day, and was Glad, very well knew, and therefore He Receiv'd Blessing from Him, who Himself had the Promises; which Blessing Melchisedek could not have conferr'd upon him, who had the promises, had he not immediately represented the Seed, who wasHeb. 7. 4. the True High-Priest and Blesser, in whom both Mel­chizedek, Abraham, and All the Nations of the Earth were Blessed. Upon all which Accounts Abraham gave him the Tenth of All. Which Tenth as to its Substantial Sense and Intention was first of the Eternal Law of Equity, and Evangelical, before it was Mosaickly Le­gal.

In pursuance of this Acknowledgment of God, Ja­cob Genes. 28. 22. the Third from Abraham, vowing JEHOVAH should be his God, that he would Build him a House, Vowed also to that God, the Tenth of All, He should give him, accor­ding to the Example of his Great Father, and by the same Divine Impulse, God's Acceptance of which he testified to Jacob when he said, after the giving him Laban's Cattle: I am the God of Bethel, where thou anoin­tedst Gen. 31. 13. the Pillar, and Vowedst a Vow unto Me, and at other times after that.

And after all this, when the God of Abraham, and Jacob founded a National Church in their Seed, from which the High-Priest after the Order of Melchizedeck also sprang; in approbation of his own Impulse, He [Page 21] separated a Tenth part of ALL to himself for the Priest­hood, Num. 18, &c. he ordain'd.

Now all this being under the Eye of our Lord and Saviour, the High Priest of Our Profession; He dimi­nish'd nothing from the Right of God, and of himself in the very least Particles, however abused by his Hy­pocritical Adversaries to the neglect of Greater Things; He knew ir too Awful to be violated, and did it not; No; he establish'd it by his own Sanction, even the mi­nimum quod sic, the very smallest Digits of it.

Thus our Saviour look'd back upon what had been before; That he look'd forward upon the Future state of Things also is undoubted: For at this time the King­dom of God, or the Evangelical State was already Com­menced, although the Mosaick Frame was allowed a Co-existence with it for a Time: But that it was al­ready entred is most certain, and that some Time before.

1. John the Baptists Preaching, and Baptism is styl'dMar. 1. 1. Luke 3 1. by the Evangelist Mark; the Beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. And the Year of it directly noted by the Evangelist Luke; Our Lord calls it the Counsel of God, Luke 7 30. which the Pharisees rejected against themselves, being not Baptiz'd of J [...]hn: The Publicans and Harlots conversion by it he Praises, as their entring into the Kingdom of Hea­ven before the Pha [...]sees, who were Baptiz'd with John's Baptism: He dates the Law and the Prophets till John, and that then the Kingdom of God was taken by violence, and Ceremoniousness no longer attended it. The Week Dan. 9. 27. our Lord's confirming the Covenant was begun; John's Baptism, as an Intermedious Ministration had decreased, that our Lord's might increase and out-shine it, and the John 3, 25; &c. least in the Kingdom of Heaven became greater than He, so that He himself had instructed Nicodemus concerning Baptism, the Symbol of Regeneration into his Kingdom, some considerable time before this: For now our Lord'sJohn 3. 3. 5▪ Week wax'd near its middle point, that he might Cause [Page 22] Sacrifice to Cease, as I noted even now.

And now it was that he gave this his Determination concerning the Exactness of Tithing; These Things ought ye [...]t to leave undone.

And whether this was the very Time, to which the Apostle refers, and which he further explains, when he says, the Lord ordain'd, That they, who preach the Go­spel, should Live of the Gospel; even as they that Minister about Holy Things, &c. May be now farther exami­ned.

Thus much of certainty we have attain'd, that the Gospel being begun, and the whole Mosaick Law of Sa­crifices, ready to expire; He thus ordain'd, (as we have already all along declared,) These Things ought, &c.

I come therefore now to make the Appeal of this Discourse to the Apostolical Writings, and to observe from them, how the Scales will turn, whether to the Dissenters from Decimation, or towards the As­sertors of it: And that the proceeding may be most equal, I will first make the Objection of the Dissenters from those Apostolick Writings, as strong as I am able, and then apply to it its Answers: first from what is most Certain and Demonstrative, out of the Apostolick Writings, then from what is very probable and agrea­ble to Reason, although possibly not so Demonstra­tive.

The Objection I frame thus.

Tithing was a proportion for the Acknowledgment of God, and his Ministers, adjusted to the Time of Sa­crifice, and the Priest-hood Attendant on Sacrifices. It was indeed before Moses, and was transplanted into the Mos [...]ick Law as Circumcision, and commanded under the name of a Heave Offering; All these three, Sacrifice, Circumcision, and Tithes being first of the Fathers, and then of Moses. But the very original of Tithes, was in Ho­nour of a Priest, and doubtless of a Priest, that Offered [Page 23] Sacrifice, though that part of his Office for as great Reasons conceal'd, as his Genealogy, and onely his Bles­sing in the Name of God recorded.

To argue then, Tithes were not abrogated by Christ, because before Moses, is no stronger then to argue Sa­crifices, or Circumcision were not abrogated, because be­fore Moses.

And if we continue Tithes, we may as well continue Sacrifice, or Circumcision because of the Fathers.

And seeing we justly reject the continuance of Sacri­fices, so should we also Tithes, as of a Sacrifical Nature.

The continuance therefore of them is justly Blame­able, as Jewish and Anti-Christian, and is of the same sort with calling the Ministers of the Gospel, Priests, on which account Tithes are so earnestly contented for by them, a Priestly Maintenance for a Priestly minister.

Therefore the Apostles, as in all their Writings, they carefully avoid affixing any Priestlyness to the Ministers of the Gospel; so do they any Subindications of a priest­ly maintenance; and therefore though our Lord abated nothing from the Law of Tithes, yet he left it to his Apostles by the Total Silence of any such Law to de­clare it abrogated with the Sacrifical Law.

The two main Hinges, on which this Objection turns are these.

1. Tithes were of a Sacrifical and Priestly Original, and as such, consign'd into Moses his Law; and there­fore certainly Abrogated with all things of that sort and alliance.

2. They are not once mentioned by the Apostles, and therefore are to be concluded abrogated, though our Lord out of Honour to that Law of Moses defalked no­thing from it himself, yet He left it to be thus done by his Apostles.

To the first of these Objections, I make these fol­lowing Answers.

1. The whole sum of all True Religion was by Di­vine Artifice, interwoven with the Jewish Administrati­on, whatever of Natural or Revealed Truth had been derived from God. was either in plain precepts, or cu­rious Types and Shades to be found in that Theocratical Frame of Laws; and not onely what had been implan­ted, or deliver'd by God to his Servants; but even the whole Evangelical Frame was in apt Figures, and Emblems delincated in it. It is no wonder then, that a Tenth, devoted as a Tribute to God, should be taken into the Mosaick Frame under the Symbol of a Heav-Offering, which by its Exaltation (as Terumah signifies) to Heaven, and then let down to Earth Sursum, Deorsum should carry its pedigree, and original in that symbol; even the Acknowledgment of the most High God, Posses­ser of Heaven and Earth. And in the second Heaving by the Levites of the Best of the Tithes for the use of Aaroh, the High Priest and his Successors; the most livelyNum. 18. 2 [...]. Type, the Jewish Priest-hood had of our Lord's Priest­hood; there were the Lineaments of the first Decima­tion to Melchisedeck, the more lively Type of Jesus, our High-Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedek.

2. As all True Religion was by God's own Infinite Wisdom deposited in the Jewish Types, so in them were the most unchangeable and eternal Moral Duties per­form'd by all True Worshippers: In the Sacrifices were close Applications to the Infinite Mercy of God in Christ under the Type; Confessions, Supplications, Thanksgivings, Acknowledgments of JEHOVAH, the Onely True God; filling Heaven and Earth with his presence; of which the Tenupha, or Wave-Offering was a Symbol; turning the Worshipper to all parts of the World [...]rorsum, Retrorsum, Dextrorsum, sinistrorsum, to Adore God, to whom the Sacrifice was Wav'd.

[Page 25] 3. When therefore under the Gospel the Shaddows flew away, and the Types were stripp'd off, whatever was substance still remain'd; Nor did the Holy Spirit of God so desert its formerly Instituted Organs of Di­vine Worship, but that it still delighted to make use of them, as lively Expressions of those Duties, the Things themselves had formerly been the Shades of; Prayers are call'd [...]d [...]urs; and Praise is still a Sacrifice; and True Christians call'd Priests; The Offering up the Body in Holiness is a Living and Acceptable Sacrifice.

The Apostles Conversion of the Gentiles was a Priestly Rom. 15. 16. or Hierurgical service: And more close to our purpose, [...]. The Things the Philippians sent to the Apostles supply, were an Odour of a sweet smelling savour, and would abound Phil 4. 17, 18. to their Account, of what they possessed under the most High possessor of Heaven and Earth; To do good, and to Communicate, a Phrase proper to the support of Gospel Ministry, (as is to be observed) are Sacrifices, with which God is well pleased; Thus we see these Moral Du­ties remain, and continne a Memory of the Divine Law by Moses, by being expressed to us in the Gospel, un­der such Tralations, as were proper to that Law,

If therefore we shall find Great Moralities under Tithing as a Tribute to God in his Ministers; If we shall find in a Tenth Part, more then Typical and Ce­remonial, and in such Expressions as resemble such a Dedication to God, as Decimation was; why should we reject it as meerly Sacrifical.

For it is Evident, Sacrifice hath a plain and undoub­ted Ceremonialness in its Nature, for the sake of which onely can it by any Law of Nature, or Equity be once supposed an Acceptable Acknowledgment of God, or Worship of him; and when-ever a Ceremo­nial Worship vanishes, that must needs Evanish also.

But setting out a Tenth part to God, and in honour of the Priest-hood of Christ, for so Great and Real an [Page 26] Use, as the upholding the Worship of God in the World in his Ministers, Set apart to that Work; is of so True a Morality in the Substance, as not to be denied, and the Omission of it is a Robbing of God.

And for the Tenthliness of it, It is the Determin­ing so far a settled proportion, to such a purpose, as which beyond all Reversal, God did once accept and approve, and therefore could not be Inequitable in it self, and which also after so many Ages, Christ on an occasion of Severity Review'd, and Blamed nothing in both which Characters of honor can never be raz'd out.

But now what was Shaddowy, Mosaick and Typical; viz. the Tenth being accounted above other parts, Holy to the Lord; the Bringing the Tithes to Jerusalem; Any Ceremony of Heaving them, first to the Levite [...], then to Aaron; the Affixing them to Sacrificing Priests; These are all vanished.

For in no such Sense do the Ministers of the Gospel claim them, nor call themselves a PRIEST-HOOD, butRom. 15. 16. as they offer up by their Ministry Souls Converted to GOD, who are thereby as the Apostle in allusion speaks; [...] and He Himself, as before, a Priestly Administrator.

And as they are [...], Seniors, or Elders in the Family of God, offering up the Sacrifices of Prayer and Praise, as the Apostle James instructs us. Jam 5. 14.Heb. 13. 10.

And lastly as they attend on that Altar, of which they have no right to eat that serve the Tabernacle; viz. The continual publication of the Sacrifice of Our Lord Jesus, who suffered for his people without the Gate, as a Malefactor, by Preaching, and Administration of the Lords Supper, which is a setting forth of Jesus Christ evidently, before Heb. 6. 6. Men's Eyes, crucified among them, and a shewing forth his Death till he come; as Apostacy, and Denying of Christ is in a contrary sense Crucifying the Son of God afresh, put­ting Heb. 10. 29. [Page 27] him to an open shame, counting the Blood of the Cove­nant, a Common, or Unclean Thing.

In any other Sense we are all of the same Mind with that Eminent Servant of God, and Minister of theDr. Outram de Sacrificiis p. 222. Gospel [...]ow with Christ.

It is of great Remark; That none of the Ministers of Christ. in whatsoever order they are constituted, are any where in the Holy Scripture, call'd Priests, or Chief-Priests;

And a little after; Not the Gospel Ministry, but the Priest-Hood of Christ was in Succession to the Jewish Priest-hood; so that there is no one by Divine Autho­rity, either Priest, or High-Priest surviving, except Christ alone, viz. An Advocate with God for Men.

Thus the whole Objection from the Connexion be­tween Tithes and Sacrifices is clearly removed; and therein whatever concerns the first part of the Obje­ction.

I come now to the second part of the Objection, There is no mention of Tithing in the Apostles Writings with Reference to the Ministers of the Gospel; but such a Deep Silence, as argues it a very Unevangelical Pra­ctice to Require or Receive such a Maintenance.

In Answer to this, I shall first observe, what is De­monstratively certain from the Apostolical Writings: And that is.

1. That, It is the Ordination of Christ the Lord, that they, 1 Cor. 9. 13, 14. who preach the Gospel should live of the Gospel. This is so ex­pressly the Ap. Paul's Doctrine; that it cannot be que­stioned even when he most professed a Recession from his own Right or Power, as it were to fit himself for it, there he most boldly asserted this, either as immediate Revelation, or some most known Decree of the Lord in this Case, or the Result of this Determination upon the Law of Tithes or that undoubted Maxim; The Labourer is worthy of his Hire: But this is most positive; [Page 28] The Lord hath ordained, that they who preach the Gospel, should Live of the Gospel, whether we take it for the Reward of the Messengers of Good Tidings, according to the Cu­stom of all Ages and Nations, who use to proportion the Rewards to the Goodness of the Tidings, or for the Sacrifices of Gratitude to God for so Joyful an Embassy of Peace: It is evident the Compensation for2 Cor. 5. 20. Spiritual Things out of our Carnal Things is to be Great and Honourable; like the Presents made to Embas­sadors, answerable to the Dignity of the Prince from whom, and to whom they are sent, and according to the particular Riches of every Country, where they are to Treat.

All the provision the Law made for the Ministers of the Altar and Temple, and even for the very Oxen ten­ded hither; for if the Ministers of the Law, that was2 Cor. 3. 6. &c. but a Ministration of Death, and Condemnation were so honour'd; the Ministers of the Gospel, the Ministration of Life are worthy of Double Honour; and least any should think a Low Proportion enough the Apostle in this ve­ry Case of Communication admonishes; God is not moc­ked, that is, He will not suffer himself to be so.

2. It is most certain, the Tenth part under so many Scales of Divine Acceptance must remain a Standard, to the very ends of the World, of that proportion God expects, as a Sacrifice of Praise to him, of Glory to him in the Highest for the Message of Peace on Earth, and Good will to Men proclaim'd in his Gospel; so that if it be supposed not to be absolutely required to the For­mality, yet it cannot but be expected in the Sub­stance. Seeing the Right of God and our High-Priest is unchangeable; and the obligation through the clearness of the Revelation is much higher: The Tri­bute therefore cannot possibly abate in its value or ob­ligation, but must needs Rise.

2. There is therefore great probability, that the [Page 29] Provision made by God for the Ministers of the Temple, 1 Cor. 9. and the Altar, leads to the very Specification of a Tenth Part; that the Double Honour is suited to the1 Tim. 5 17. Promogeniture of the Evangelical Presbytery above that of the Law; that the Priest-hood of Christ, shaddowedHeb. 7. by Melchisedeck, that was honour'd with Abraham's Decimation to it, so abundantly insisted upon by the Apostle, was an Admonition to Christians of that Acknowledgment Due to our High-Priest, as conferred upon the Preachers of his Sacrifice and Intercession, by those to whom the Feet of them that bring those glad Ti­dings are Beautiful. That Communicating in all Good Rom 10. 15. Galat. 6. 6. Things, is a silent insinuation of the Ancient Law of Tithing, carrying so clear an Image of it: But because These Things are not so Cogent, as to convince the Gain-sayer, I therefore acquiesce in what is impossible by those that acknowledge the Scriptures of the New Testament to be contested.

Let us then for a Conclusion of this whole Matter, ob­serve several Reasons, why we may suppose no such Cogent Indications of a Tenth part, in the Apostolick Writings, as agree with former Times of Scripture. To omit the great modesty of the Gospel, as to any secular Design I give these.

1. Because in the first ministration of the Apostles in Jerusalem, so much above a Tenth part was freely given, that Christians sold Intire Possessions, and laid the Prices of them at the Apostles Feet; neither said Acts 4. 32. Any Man that ought he possessed was his own: And it is probable in all the First Christian Churches, Greater proportions, then the Tenth were offered for the service of the Gospel.

2. That in the Affluence of Nations, States, and persons; They might not think themselves Circum­scrib'd, nor indeed discharg'd by a Tenth part as a Tri­bute to God: The Priests and Levites had much more [Page 30] given them by God under the Law. Nor Any, whose Increase falls not under ordinary Decimation should absolve themselves from the main Duty.

3. Because some Things clearly, and abundantly settled in their Formality in the Old Testament are more silently in the New applyed onely to the Gospel pu [...]pose, and Service.

Thus the Lord's Day so evidently noted by the First Day of the Week, the Day of our Lord's Resurrectio [...]; of his several Appearances to his Disciples, of the Effusion of the Spirit, at Pentecost fully come for Preaching theActs 2 1. Gospel, as it had been of Giving the Law on Mount Si­nai, the Day of Christian Sollemnities, and [...]ollections is the onely Day of the Week, noted in all the Scripture, after the Six Days of Creation, except the Seventh, or Sabbath; and after it had been often remark'd under the name of the First Day was at length consecrated by the name of the Lord's Day, as Breaki [...]g of Bre [...]d was by the name of the Lord's Supper▪ Which Two Engraven with our Lord's Name, as in Capital Letters, [...], are the Commemorations of Two of the Lords Great Actions (in which all the rest Center) appointed us in his Word; viz. his Dying for Our Sins, and Rising again for Our justification, one in a Sollemn Institution, the other in a Solemn Time; and it were Happy, if they could at no Time be sundred, one from the other.

Yet That This Day though the onely Instituted Time in the New Testament is to be a Sabbath; its Obser­vation to be Weekly in memory of the Creat [...]on; Its Celebration to be by keeping it Holy: All these so prin­cipal Concernments are referr'd to the State of that Matter in the Old Testament, where every Thing is full and clear: And although the Reversal of the Jewish Sabbath by the Apostle; the First Day so sollemnly Re­corded as the Day of the [...]ord's Resurrection and Chri­stian [Page 31] Meetings; the Apostles Being in the Spirit on this Day; (though the principal Intendment be Propheti­cal) It's being styl'd the Lord's Day are very Great Cha­racters of a Christian Sabbath; Yet the Importance and Ratification of such a Sabbath are to be derived wholly from the Old Testament; No wonder then, if Devoting a Tenth Part to God, which cannot be supposed equal to God's Sanctification of a seventh part of Time be onely conserv'd in the Old Testament, and confirm'd by our Lord in the Days of his Ministery, as a Standard of pro­portion, and yet not mention'd in that so undoubted point of Duty in the Apostolical Writings, viz. Let Him that is taught, Communicate to him that teacheth in All Good Things, fortified with so Tremendous a Monition; God is not mock'd.

4. That there might be no ensnaring Consciences in regard of the various Revolutions of States and Laws determining this point of Decimation: Or not allowing the possibilities of it; either setting it a-part to the support of a False Religion, as under the Papacy, or to Secular uses: In such Cases the Consciences of Sub­jectsGal 6. 6. are Free, in rendring them according to Law, to Caesar, as the Things that are Caesars; For publick Acts having devested private persons of them, they can have no propriety in them; although yet this Stan­dard of Dedication to God out of what they possess be­yond that Alienated Tenth obliges them still to Ren­der to God the Things that are Gods.

But especially where Both Concur, the Laws of Men with the Laws of God; we at the same Time Render to Caesar the Things that are Caesar's, in obeying Laws; and to God the Things that are God's, in that they are de­voted to his Service, and are therefore to do it with all Heartiness and Chearfulness as to the Lord, and not to Men onely: For God loveth a Chearful Giver. No Man now can have any Just Reason of being Scanda­laiz'd [Page 32] at the separation of such a Tenth for an Evange­lical Ministry, that duly weighs what hath been of­ferr'd.

And especially seeing their whole Lives, the Educa­tion of their Youth, and the service of their Age, are necessary to this Service, since the Cessation of ex­traordinary Gifts; and the Labour not only of the Mind but of the Body are sequestred to it. Giving themselves wholly to their Ministry, and Attending in private to Reading, as well as publickly to Exhortation, and Preaching in Season, and without Season, are express­ly requir'd by the Apostle; so that it is but a Re­compense of Justice requir'd by God in this Case:

But if on any Account whatever, Any Man be un­satisfied in the Decimation, Laws impose upon him: He must consider, nothing separated by publick Acts, that have stood from Age to Age is any more any Man's claim by his Birth Right; then a wholsom Air, or Fruitful soil are, when his Country is not so happily scituated.

FINIS.

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