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rors, or corruptions in which we are not called to participate, we are guilty of dividing that body. The reason of my adverting to a transient act is, that I am supposing the cause of separation to rest with us, and that a member of a different community proposes merely to unite in an occasional commemoration of the ineffable love of the Redeemer, without either a formal renunciation of the peculiarities of his sect, or an attempt to introduce them. In such circumstances, occasional fellowship is all that can be looked for; the adoption of different modes of worship, a predilection for different rites and ceremonies, will naturally dispose him to prefer a permanent union with professors of his own persuasion. But while in the mutual intercourse of such societies, a disposition to recognize each other as Christians is cultivated, the unity of the body is preserved, notwithstanding their disagreement in particular points of doctrine, or of discipline. Owing to a diversity of judgement, respecting the proper organization of churches, obstacles, at present invincible, may prevent their incorporation; and it is left to the conscience of each individual to determine, to which he will permanently unite himself. An enlightened Christian will not hesitate for a moment, in declining to join with that society, whatever be the piety of its individual members, in which the terms of communion involve his concurrence in religious observances, of whose lawfulness he entertains any doubt. Hence arises, in the present state of religion, an impassable barrier to the perfect intercommunity of Christian societies. But it is not upon this ground that my opponent objects to the practice for which we are contending. He rests his refusal to commune with members of other denominations, on the principle of their not being entitled to be recognized as Christians. He protests against a union with them, not on account of any erroneous or superstitious observances, with which the act of fellowship is necessarily combined, but considers them as personally disqualified. His hypothesis is indeed so wild and incoherent, that it is difficult to state it with accuracy, or to preserve a steady conception of it in the mind. According to his theory, the Pædobaptists occupy a station the most anomalous and extraordinary, that ever entered the human imagination. Many of them are genuine believers, of whose exalted piety he avows the fullest conviction, yet they are not to be recognized as Christians; they are members of the mystical body of Christ, or they could derive from him no saving influence or benefit, yet are excluded from all the advantages resulting from the union and cooperation of the several parts of which it consists; and though as a portion of the mystical body, it is impossible to deny them a place in the one catholic or universal church, yet it is the duty of every particular church, to dis

own, and exclude them. In short, the great majority of the sincere followers of the Saviour, whose names are written in the book of life, are totally disqualified for performing the duties, and enjoying the privileges, which distinguish the church from the world; betwixt which they occupy some intermediate place, some terra incognita, whose existence it is as difficult to ascertain, as the limbus patrum, or a mansion in the moon. In the present state of the Christian church, that extensive portion of the New Testament, which was designed to cement the affections, and to regulate the conduct of the faithful towards each other, is superseded; its precepts are in a state of suspension and abeyance, and in the midst of Egyptian darkness, which envelopes the Christian world, the Baptists alone dwell in the light of another Goshen. However strange these positions may appear, they form but a part of the absurdities which necessarily flow from our author's theory; nor is there any possible way of evading them, but by denying that Pædobaptists belong to the mystical body of Christ, or demonstrating the consistency of their exclusion with the union and cooperation, which St. Paul enjoins; or by asserting the existence of more mystical bodies than one, destined to subsist apart.

CHAPTER IX.

The injustice of the exclusion of other denominations, considered as a punishment.

In the treatise "On Terms of Communion," it was urged, that as exclusion from the communion of the church is the highest ecclesiastical censure, which it is possible to inflict, it can only be justified, on the supposition of a proportional degree of demerit in the objects of it. If the moral turpitude inherent in the practice of infant baptism, is of an order which entitles it to be compared to the habitual indulgence of vice, or the obstinate maintenance of heresy, it is but fit it should be placed on the same level, and subjected to the same treatment; but if the understanding, and the heart equally revolt at such a comparison, that method of proceeding must be allowed to be unjust. To this our author replies, by denying the propriety of applying the term exclusion to a bare refusal of admission. "Words," he informs us, "must strangely have altered their meaning, before such an application of the phrase in question can be justified." To be com

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pelled to dispute about the meaning of terms is always humiliating, but that his assertion is unfounded, is sufficiently evident, from the authority of the most eminent critics. Our great Lexicographer, under the word exclude,' defines it thus, "to shut out, to hinder from entrance, or admission;"exclusion' he defines, "the act of shutting out, or denying admission." Thus much for his accuracy as a grammarian. Let us next examine his reasoning.

He denies that the act of debarring every other denomination from admission is a punishment—“it is not considered as such by sensible Pædobaptists." (Baptism a Term of Communion, p. 60.) But why is it not? Solely because the Baptist societies are too few and too insignificant to enable them to realize the effects of their system, in its full extent. Their principle involves an absolute interdict of church privileges to the members of every other community; but being an inconsiderable minority, there are not wanting numerous and respectable societies, who stand ready to give a welcome reception to the outcasts, and to succour the exiles. That their rejection is not followed by its natural consequence, a total privation of the communion of saints, is not to be ascribed in the smallest degree to the liberality or forbearance of our opponents, but solely to their imbecility. The celebration of the Eucharist they consider as null and void, when attended to by a Pædobaptist; his approach to the table is absolutely prohibited within the sphere of their jurisdiction; and should their principles ever obtain a general prevalence, the commemoration of the love of a crucified Saviour would become impracticable, except to persons of their own persuasion. Instances have often occurred, where the illiberal practice, against which we are contending, has been felt to be a punishment of no ordinary severity; where eminently holy men have been so situated, that the only opportunity they possessed of celebrating the passion of the Redeemer has been withheld, and they have been compelled, most reluctantly, to forego one of the most exalted privileges of the church; nor has it ever been known, that compassion for the peculiar hardship of the case, was suffered to suspend the unrelenting severity of the sentence. Let me ask the advocates for the exclusive system, whether they would be moved for a moment to extend their indulgence to a solitary individual, who differed from them on the subject of baptism, although he was so circumstanced as to render a union with other classes of Christians impossible?

This writer affirms, it is not intended as a punishment by the Baptists, and strongly remonstrates against the confounding it with the sentence of excommunication, on account of immoral delinquency. He concurs with the author of Terms of Communion in admitting that in these instances, its "accordance with the mor

al nature of man, may and does give it authority and weight; in such an instance as the incestuous person at Corinth, it becomes an instrument of punishment. He was in the church, and could be expelled from it. But which way the censure or punishment of excommunication and expulsion can take place in one who never was in a society, the strict Baptists," he tells us, "have yet to learn." (Baptism a Term of Communion, p. 60.)

In reply to this, I shall not descend to a tedious logomachy, farther than just to remark, that this writer has on this occasion fallen into a similar error, respecting the meaning of words with his former. Excommunication is synonymous with exclusion; and is defined by the highest authority, "an ecclesiastical interdict; exclusion from the fellowship of the church." (See Johnson.) The punishment it involves is exactly proportioned to the value of the privilege it withholds; and therefore to affirm that it is not a punishment, is equivalent to the assertion that the fellowship of the church is not a benefit. To withhold privileges and immunities from him who is legally entitled to their possession, must be supposed to be felt with a severity proportioned to the justice of his title, and the magnitude and extent of his privations.

By refusing to admit a Pædobaptist to the privilege of communion with us, we in fact do affirm his incompetence to commune any where; we deprive him, as far as our influence extends, of all the advantages which result from the fellowship of the saints; and that he is not reduced to the situation of an outcast and an exile from the church, is in no degree to be imputed to the lenity of our decision, but to the limitation of our power. It is surely not necessary to multiply words to prove, that the equity of every judicial sentence must be ascertained by considering it, as it is in itself; by exploring its tendency; not by adverting to a fortuitous concurrence of circumstances, which may possibly mitigate or extinguish the evils with which it is fraught. In the present instance, we must, in order to form an accurate judgement, make the supposition, that the sentence of excommunication actually operates in its full extent, so as to deprive the subject of it of all the consolation and benefit resulting from the union of Christians; we must suppose that no asylum is left to which he can retreat, no community remaining, where he can hide his humiliation and his shaine. For that there is any, is solely to be ascribed to the prevalence of a system which our opponents are accustomed to stigmatize as erroneous, and for the existence of which, it is not to be imagined, therefore, they will assume to themselves the smallest credit. Let us imagine, what Mr. Kinghorn will probably be among the first to anticipate, that the sentiments of the Baptists triumphed to such an extent, as to be embraced by dissenting churches in gen

eral, and that the opposite views were retained only by a few individuals; let us suppose one of the latter description to possess the zeal, the humility, the devotion of a Brainerd; and that on account of his being unable to perceive the nullity of infant baptism, he were shut out from every religious society within his reach, though acknowledged to possess an elevation of character, which threw the virtues of others into the shade; would there be no hardship, no injustice in this case? Would it be sufficient to silence the murmurs of indignation to remark, that it was not intended as a punishment, that he had nothing to complain of; for "as he was never in the church, he could not be expelled from it ?" Would such cold and trivial subtleties, were they as correct as they are erroneous, quell the instinctive cry of justice, demanding a satisfactory reason for placing the friend, and the enemy of God, the devoted servant of Christ, and the avowed despiser of the great salvation, on the same level, and comprehending them in one and the same sweeping censure? If these characters are totally opposed, not merely by the contrast exhibited between the vices of the world, and the virtues it is most prone to admire; but in consequence of the possession, by one of the parties, of supernatural and sanctifying grace; where is the equity of confounding them together by the interdict of religious privileges; and if the door is opened at the same time for the admission into the church, of persons of a character decidedly inferior, how can impartial justice be asserted to hold the scale, and determine the merits of the respective candidates; justice, whose office it is to appreciate the rival claims of competitors, and to impart to every one his due? The iniquity of such a mode of procedure is so obvious and striking, that it is no wonder we find our opponents exert their ingenuity to the utmost, in attempting to palliate and disguise it; though the issue of their attempts is only to plunge them deeper in perplexity and contradiction.

The author of "Terms of Communion," had remarked, “that there was no difference with respect to the present inquiry, betwixt the refusal of a candidate, and the expulsion of a member, since nothing could justify the former of these measures, which might not be equally alleged in vindication of the latter. Both amount to a declaration of the parties being unworthy to communicate." To this Mr. Kinghorn replies, by observing that " in one case the party is declared unworthy from moral delinquency; in the other, he is not declared unworthy but unqualified." Here it is plainly conceded that Pædobaptists are not refused on a moral ground; whence it necessarily follows, that even supposing they were acquitted from all blame in practising infant baptism, their exclusion would still be justifiable. They are not repelled from

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