Skip to product information
1 of 6

Specs Fine Books

1646 JOHN WHITE. Heretics and False Teachers to be Banished so the Church can be Restored.

1646 JOHN WHITE. Heretics and False Teachers to be Banished so the Church can be Restored.

Regular price $350.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $350.00 USD
Sale Sold out

An interesting sermon from preached by Westminster Assembly Divine, John White [1575-1648] during the English Civil War. White was generally a moderate and even conformed to certain practices in order to continue serving his people [as William Gurnall, etc.]. 

Here, however, he recognizes that unity must be gathered around something definite. As with many of the non-conformists of the time, wrestling through what was "essential," what was "beneficial," and what was "inconsequential," proved a challenge. He argued for generosity at many points, but here draws the line and recognizes the need for a central proclaimed and confessed faith for the Church to be revived and reformed. An unusually stringent sermon for one so long associated with liberty of conscience. 

White today is remembered as having been one of the catalysts to the formation of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. He helped obtain the original charter and sent people form his community in Dorset to settle Massachusetts specifically for the purpose of establishing and enjoying religious liberty. Francis Higginson and Samuel Skelton, first Ministers of the Massachusetts Bay Company, were selected by White. And it was White who held the service for John Winthrop aboard the Arbella prior to its Departure for America in 1629. White was, as much as any man in England, perhaps uniquely responsible for the Great Migration. 

White, John. The Troubles of Jerusalems Restauration; or, The Churches Reformation: Represented in a Sermon Preached before the Right Honourable House of Lords, in the Abbey Church, Westminster, November 26, 1645. London. Printed by M. Simmons for J. Rothwel, and L. Fawne, 1646. 62pp. 

A fascinating sermon, which White was too ill to deliver in its entirety before the Assembly. A call for unity, as others, but unity through uniformity of doctrine and strict ethical and doctrinal disciple.

EXTRACTS:

There are Instances of Troubles raised by Satan and his instruments against the Church by those which are without, no less are those that are stirred up within the bowels of the Church, by false Brethren, who by speaking perferse things, to draw Disciples after them, strike at the very foundation, on which the Church i sbuilt, the very doctrine of Truth. What divisions were raised thereby in the Churches, even in the Apostles owne days, divers of their Epistles do sufficiently declare, and that Satan continued by the same policy to divide the Church in sunder, and thereby to ruin it, the records of the Primitive time, setting before us the Factions that infected the Church in those ages, and the Excommunications, Banishments, and other Persecutions, which ensued thereupon, make it evident enough to all that will take the pains to look into the histories of those times.

Neither do these troubles, however raised by the practice of Satan, fall upon the Church without the foreknowledge and both permission and direction of God himself. Our Saviour tells his Disciples in express terms that he came not to send Peace on earth, but a sword. Not that this is an effect, but a consequent of the Gospel. The Gospel is in itself a message of glad tidings of Peace. But is of Peace between God and Man. 

. . . 

The establishing of Christ's Kingdom in the Church is the overthrowing of the Devil's Kingdom in the World, as many subjects as Christ gains, so many the Devil loseth. Our Saviour tells us that when the Gospel is preached it brought down Satan from Heaven like lightning. No marvel then if Satan to save his own Kingdom labor to hinder the planting of the church, and as little marvel if his servants join with him therein, as for other reasons so especially because the Gospel which the church embraceth discredits and condemns all their ways, restrains their lusts, and cuts off all their hopes, sentencing them to hell to be made the subjects of God's wrath to all eternity. 

Very nicely preserved complete English Civil War sermon from the Cromwellian era. Complete as issued, removed from a larger sammelband at some point with relevant flotsam on spine. Textually crisp. First two leaves tenderly held. Rare on the market. 

View full details