known, that in all those Cities, the manner of choosing
Magistrates, and Officers, was by plurality of suffrages;
and (because the ordinary way of distinguishing the
Affirmative Votes from the Negatives, was by Holding
up of Hands) to ordain an Officer in any of the Cities,
was no more but to bring the people together, to elect
them by plurality of Votes, whether it were by plurality
of elevated hands, or by plurality of voices, or plurality
of balls, or beans, or small stones, of which every
man cast in one, into a vessell marked for the Affirmative,
or Negative; for divers Cities had divers customes
in that point. It was therefore the Assembly
that elected their own Elders: the Apostles were
onely Presidents of the Assembly to call them together
for such Election, and to pronounce them Elected,
and to give them the benediction, which now is called
Consecration. And for this cause they that were
Presidents of the Assemblies, as (in the absence of
the Apostles) the Elders were, were called proestotes,
and in Latin Antistities; which words signifie the
Principall Person of the Assembly, whose office was
to number the Votes, and to declare thereby who was
chosen; and where the Votes were equall, to decide
the matter in question, by adding his own; which is
the Office of a President in Councell. And (because
all the Churches had their Presbyters ordained in
the same manner,) where the word is Constitute, (as
Titus 1.5.) “ina katasteses kata polin presbuterous,”
“For this cause left I thee in Crete, that thou
shouldest constitute Elders in every City,”
we are to understand the same thing; namely, that
hee should call the faithfull together, and ordain
them Presbyters by plurality of suffrages. It
had been a strange thing, if in a Town, where men
perhaps had never seen any Magistrate otherwise chosen
then by an Assembly, those of the Town becomming Christians,
should so much as have thought on any other way of
Election of their Teachers, and Guides, that is to
say, of their Presbyters, (otherwise called Bishops,)
then this of plurality of suffrages, intimated by
S. Paul (Acts 14.23.) in the word Cheirotonesantes:
Nor was there ever any choosing of Bishops, (before
the Emperors found it necessary to regulate them in
order to the keeping of the peace amongst them,) but
by the Assemblies of the Christians in every severall
Town.
The same is also confirmed by the continuall practise even to this day, in the Election of the Bishops of Rome. For if the Bishop of any place, had the right of choosing another, to the succession of the Pastorall Office, in any City, at such time as he went from thence, to plant the same in another place; much more had he had the Right, to appoint his successour in that place, in which he last resided and dyed: And we find not, that ever any Bishop of Rome appointed his successor. For they were a long time chosen by the People, as we may see by the sedition raised about the Election, between Damascus, and Ursinicus;