Letter continued...
Letter from the
people of Bedfordshire to Lord General Cromwell, and the Council of the
army.
May 13th, 1653.
To the Church over
which God made me an overseer when I was in the world.
I beseech you,
brethren beloved, let these following words (wrote in my love to you, and care
over you, when our heavenly Father was removing me to the kingdom of his dear
Son), be read in your church gatherings together. I shall not now, dearly
beloved, write unto you about that which is the first, and without which all
other things are as nothing in the sight of God, viz., the keeping the mystery
of the faith in a pure conscience; I shall not, I say, write of these things,
though the greatest, having spent my labours among you, to root you and build
you up in Christ through the grace you have received; and to press you to all
manner of holiness in your conversations, that you may be found of the Lord,
without spot, and blameless, at His coming.
But the things I
shall speak to you of, are about your CHURCH AFFAIRS, which I fear have been
little considered by most of you; which things, if not mended aright, and
submitted unto, according to the will of God, will by degrees bring you under
divisions, distractions, and at last, to the confusion of that gospel order and
fellowship which now, through grace, you enjoy. Therefore, my brethren, in the
first place, I would not have any of you ignorant of this, that every one of
you is as much bound now to walk with the church in all love; and in the
ordinances of Jesus Christ our Lord, as when I was present among you: neither
have any of you liberty to join yourselves to any other society, because your
pastor is removed from you; for you were not joined to the ministry, but to
Christ, and the church; and this is and was the will of God in Christ to all
the churches of the saints, read Acts 2:42; and compare it with Acts 1:14, 15.
And I charge you before the Lord, as you will answer it at the coming of our
Lord Jesus, that none of you be found guilty herein.
Secondly. Be constant
in your church assemblies. Let all the work which concerns the church be done
faithfully among you; as admission of members, exercising of gifts, election of
officers, as need requires, and all other things as if named, which the
Scriptures being searched, will lead you into, through the Spirit; which
things, if you do, the Lord will be with you, and you will convince others that
Christ is your head, and your dependency is not upon man; but if you do the
work of the Lord negligently if you mind your own things and not the things of
Christ, if you grow of indifferent spirits, whether you mind the work of the
Lord in his church or no, I fear the Lord by degrees will suffer the comfort of
your communion to be dried up, and the candlestick which is yet standing to be
broken in pieces; which God forbid.
Now, concerning your
admission of members, I shall leave you to the Lord for counsel, who hath
hitherto been with you; only thus much I think expedient to stir up your
remembrance in; that after you are satisfied in the work of grace in the party
you are to join with, the said party do solemnly declare (before some of the
church at least), That Union with Christ is the foundation of all saints'
communion; and not any ordinances of Christ, or any judgment or opinion about
externals; and the said party ought to declare, whether a brother or sister,
that through grace they will walk in love with the church, though there should
happen any difference in judgment about other things.
Concerning separation
from the church about baptism, laying on of hands, anointing with oil, psalms,
or any externals, I charge every one of you respectively, as you will give an
account for it to our Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge both quick and dead at
his coming, that none of you be found guilty of this great evil; which, while
some have committed, and that through zeal for God, yet not according to
knowledge, they have erred from the law of the love of Christ, and have made a
rent from the true church, which is but one. I exhort you, brethren, in your
comings together, Let all things be done decently, and in order, according to
the Scriptures. Let all things be done among you without strife and envy,
without self-seeking and vain glory. Be clothed with humility, and submit to
one another in love.
Let the gifts of the
church be exercised according to order. Let no gift be concealed which is for
edification; yet let those gifts be chiefly exercised which are mostly for the
perfecting of the saints. Let your discourses be to build up one another in
your most holy faith, and to provoke one another to love and good works: if
this be not well-minded, much time may be spent and the church reap little or
no advantage.
Let there be strong meat for the strong, and
milk for babes. In your assemblies avoid all disputes which gender to strife,
as questions about externals, and all doubtful disputations. If any come among
you who will be contentious in these things, let it be declared that you have
no such order, nor any of the churches of God. If any come among you with any
doctrine contrary to the doctrine of Christ, you must not treat with such a
one as with a brother, or enter into dispute of the things of faith with
reasonings (for this is contrary to the Scriptures); but let such of the
brethren who are the fullest of the Spirit, and the word of Christ, oppose such
a one steadfastly face to face, and lay open his folly to the church, from the
Scriptures.