THE Divine Authority AND USEFULNESS OF THE Holy Scripture ASSERTED IN A SERMON On the 2 Timothy 3. 15. By R. ALLESTREE D. D. and Chaplain in Ordinary to his Majesty. OXFORD At the THEATER. 1673. 2. Tim. 3. 15. And that from a child thou hast known the holy Scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation, throughx faith which is in Christ jesus. THE words are part of St. Paul's reasoning, by which he presseth Timothy to hold fast the truth he had received, and not let evil men, seducers, work him out of what he had been taught: urging to this end both the authority of the Teacher, himself, who had secured the truth of his doctrine by infallible evidence; and beyond that, as if that were a more effectual enforcement, pressing him with his own education in the Scriptures; how he had been nursed up in that faith, sucked the Religion with his milk, that it was grown the very habit of his mind, that which would strengthen him into a perfect man in Christ, and make him wise unto salvation if he did continue in the faith and practise of it; which he proves in the remaining verses of the Chapter. In the words read there are three things observable. 1. Here is a state supposed, Salvation; and put too as of such concernment, that attaining it is looked upon as wisdom; wise unto salvation. Now since true wisdom must express itself both in the end that it proposeth, and the means it chooseth for that end to be pursued with and attained by, and take care both these have all conditions that can justify the undertaking, and secure the prudence of it, and this wisdom to salvation therefore must suppose both these; in order to them both we have here 2. That which with all divine advantage does propose this end, and alsox does prescribe most perfect means for the attaining it; and that is Holy Scripture through faith which is in Christ jesus. Thou hast known the holy Scriptures which are able to make thee wise unto salvation, through faith which is in Christ jesus. Holy Scripture probably of the Old Testament; for there was hardly any other Timothy could know from a child, scarce any other being written then. The faith of that then through the faith which is in Christ jesus, that is, together with the faith of all things necessary to be known concerning Christ, is meant. Now since St. john, after the view of all that the other three Evangelists had wrote concerning Christ, adding his story also says, that Christ * John 20. 30, 31. did and spoke more than what is written, yet affirms most positively that those things were written that we might believe that jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and believing might have life through his name; and so enough is written for that faith which is in Jesus that is necessary to eternal life: therefore the Holy Scripture of the Old Testament, together with the faith of what is written in the New, is that which St. Paul affirms is able to make us wise unto salvation. 3. Here is the advantage Timothy had above others as to Faith in these, and consequently the far greater obligation to continue in it. He had known them from a child. And that from a child thou hast known the holy Scripture, etc. The first thing that does offer itself to our consideration is the state supposed, Salvation. But because my Text supposes it, I shall do so too, nor shall think it needful to prove here, that there is such a state, nor consequently that all those are stupid, who propose not to themselves this everlasting safety for their main end, and by strict care in the duties of Religion and God's service aim at it: for if that state be granted, nay if it be but possible, it must be granted that there can be no security but in doing so, nor consequently any wisdom without being wise thus unto salvation. But then if this were granted, that the wisest thing man could propose to himself, were by strict care in all the duties of Religion to design God's honour and his own salvation; still, as to the other part of prudence which consists in the choice of means, we are to seek for that Religion we are to pursue this end by and attain it; since there are so many and so opposite Religions in the word, that 'tis not easier to reconcile them, then to make peace betwixt enemies and contradictions. And it always was so; for excepting that mankind agreed still in the notion of the necessity of Religion, that all had apprehensions of invisible powers above us, and differed not much in the rules of Justice and Morality, in other things there was no nearness. Almost from the beginning there was more variety of Gods than Nations, I had almost said then Worshippers. Beasts were their Sacrifices and their Deities, and therefore the votaries were certainly no better. Vices also were their worships; things which their Cities and their Camps would not endure, found Sanctuary in their Temples; and the actions which were whipped in the Judgment-hall, were their piety in the holy places. And though some wise men among them found good reason to decry this, yet they knew not what to take up in the stead. I need not add the present differences of the world, even that called Christian too, great part of which as heretofore they sealed their faith with their own blood, now seal it in the blood of all that differ from them; and by their persecutions hope to merit Heaven more, than those did hope to gain it by their Martyrdoms. But these I need not add to make up this into a demonstration, that it is impossible for lapsed men, so far as they are left to themselves, and have no other guide to follow but their reason, to find out what they are to believe of God, and how to serve him, and save themselves. The a Hil. l. 1. de Trinit. p. 53, 54. Clemens Al. Strom. 6. p. 675. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fathers and b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Vid. justin. Mart. ad Diognetu● p. 499. Athanas. ad Serapionem ●om. 1. p. 191. 194. edit. Par. 1672. Philosophers too▪ conclude that we can learn from none but God, what we must understandx of God; who must be known only as he himself is pleased to revele himself. His worship also, how he will be served, and what observances he does require, or will admit, since it depends on his own good pleasure, therefore without his directions 'tis in vain to hope to please him with our Religious service whatever it be, and by consequence impossible without his guidance and assistance to acquire the end of all our Service and Religion, the salvation of our souls. So that how wise soever he be who does propose this blessed end to himself, if yet withal he be not some way from the Lord instructed by what means he must pursue that end, and do not make choice of, and use those means, it is impossible he can be wise unto salvation. Now for this St. Paul assures us most expressly, here we may be furnished: For he says, The Holy Scriptures are able to make us wise unto salvation, through faith which is in Christ jesus. And he does assert this on the very ground we mentioned, for they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inspired by God; they come from him. All which must be made out in the next place. That those Holy Scriptures which St. Paul first mentions, those of the Old Testament were so, and did contain sufficient revelation both of God, and of the way of worship of the Jews, that Nation did so perfectly believe, that neither Sufferings nor Miracles could persuade the contrary; neither the Roman persecuters that destroyed their worship, nor the Son of God that changed it, could yet take them off from Moses and his Scriptures. Now that this Moses led that Nation out of Egypt with an high hand, and made himself their Prince and Lawgiver, multitudes of a justin. ex Trogo. l. 36. Diod. Sicul. l. 1. Strabo l. 16. Plinius 30. Tacitus Hist. 5. joseph. contra Apionem mentions many others. foreign Histories of the first times, and the best account assure us: whose relations we cannot question as derived from themselves, because they hated Jews beyond all possibility of such compliance. But the b Exod. 7, 8, 9, 10. Chapters. Scriptures also tell us, how in Egypt by strange wonders, (such as their Magicians could not imitate nor bear, who though they had permission to do some, it was that so they might appear to be outdon the more miraculously, themselves confessing God's hand in those prodigies) Moses wrought on the Egyptians to give leave the people should depart: and how when yet notwithstanding that leave given they were pursued, he made way for them through the c Exod. 14. 21. Sea by Miracles, which was a rampart and defence to them, a ruin to their enemies: How they were d Exod. 16. 15. Deut. 8. 24. fed for forty years with Manna raining down from Heaven in the wilderness: and that they might depend on Providence for their daily provision, when he forbade them to take care or gather for the morrow, whatsoever their greediness or want of faith provided, straight bred a Exod. 16. 20. worms and stank, except that on the Sabbath eve, to keep off such cares from the day of their Religion, they gathered double which b Exod. 16. 24. corrupted not: How when they mutined for flesh, would have variety, Paradise in the desert, such great plenty of c Num. 11. 19, 20. 31, 32. Quails flew to them as fed the whole Nation till their very lust was surfeited; and they had no more will then hunger to them: How Moses Rod did strike a living stream, a River that sufficed that people and their cattle out of a d Num. 20. 8. 11. Rock: How in the midst of lightning and thunder God himself promulgated his Law e Exod. 20. to the whole Nation audibly at once: How his glorious presence showed itself in all necessities upon the Ark, in which the Tables of the Law were laid up: How the waters of the river f Josh. 3. 16. jordan fled from that Ark both ways, flowed upwards to give passage to the people into Canaan: How the walls of g Josh. 6. 20. jerichó without any other battery, any other force but that the Ark was there, fell down before it. But to name no more, If these be true; that power by which these were wrought, was great enough to give that Law, require obedience to it, and reward it, and to punish all transgression according to the tenor of these Scriptures: that is▪ it was God; and he that wrote those Scriptures must have had communication with, and been inspired from, God to write them. But, 2. Whether they were true or no according as they are recorded in those Scriptures, that whole people from the greatest almost to the least must know; because they are recorded as all don, not only in the presence of them all, but as the objects and the entertainments of their senses, every one; so that if they were forged, not one of the whole Nation could be ignorant of it. And then, 3. If they knew them forged all; that a Num. 2. 32. Num. 11. 21. 600000 men, besides their wives and families, should endure this Moses, having brought them forth only into a wilderness, there to lay such a heavy Law, and so severe a yoke upon them, with such penalties annexed to every least transgression, and adjure them to observe it on the account of all those prodigies that had been wrought among them, and upbraid them with stiffneckedness, rebellion, and appeal to their own senses for the truth of all this, and record all to posterity in this Scripture, cause all to be read before them; and that they should bear all this from him they knew so impudent a deceiver, and convey that Scripture and the faith of it to their posterity, ground their so strict, so chargeable Religion on that book, which they were certain had no word of truth in it: this sure transcends belief and possibility. 'Tis certain therefore, since the Jews of that age did perform the services required, and in performing them according as that book directs, did teach their children the great works that God had done in their sight, therefore they believed those Miracles and Scriptures. And since it was impossible that they should be deceived; if they believed them, they were true: and their posterity received from them the faith of this, and so derived it on, that neither Gods dread judgements, nor man's cruelty can yet shake it. Now had they not been done, and on that account conveyed; when ever they were broached, and that book first appeared, the men of that age must needs know their Fathers never had performed such services, had such a book read to them constantly, nor told them of such Miracles that had been wrought: and therefore 'twas impossible that they could have believed it had been so from Moses, if it had been true that it had first begun to be taught in their own time, or in theirs with whom they lived. And this discourse must be of force concerning every age, if we ascend until we come to that of Moses wherein all was effected. Yet besides this, they had also that perpetual Miracle in the High Priest's Pectoral, the Oracle of Vrim and Thummim, that did keep alive their faith and strengthen it: and they had Prophets constantly foretelling, as from God, things that were sometimes suddenly to come to pass, and sometimes not till many ages after, the event of which depended often on the will of those that would not of some hundred years be born; others on Gods own immediate will and hand: and therefore none but God could look into, foretell, and bring to pass all those events. Now such were jeremy's predictions of the taking of jerusalem, and the captivity of the people, and the express number of a Jer. 25. 11. 12 years it would continue; Esays naming b Isa 44. 26. 21. 28. & 45. 1. Cyrus, who was to release it, near two hundred years ere he was born; All daniel's prophecies, particularly that most eminent one of the c Dan. 9 24. etc. Messiah this Christ jesus, of whose Scriptures we are next to speak. That that jesus, whom Cornelius Tacitus the heathen historian in the fifteenth book of his Annals, calls Christiani dogmatis autorem, the a Tac. An. l. 15. Author of the Christian Doctrine, did work Miracles, and prophecy, both b Vid. Raim. Martin. pug. fid. p. 2. c. 8. Jews and learned c Celsus apud Orig. l. 2. julian. Cyril. contra ipsum 6. Origen. contra Cel. l. 2. c. 69. Heathens do confess. But these Books tell us, when he first began to preach, he publicly cast out a Devil in the Synagogue on the Sabbath day; and at even, when the whole City was assembled, he healed all their sick, and cast out many Devils, which confessed before all, that he was the Son of d Mat. 8. Mar. 1. Luc. 4. God. Then he cast out a Legion of such mischievous malign Spirits, as having got licence, drove two thousand Swine headlong into the Sea & choked them, which was known to the whole Country of the e Mat. 8. Mar. 5. Luc. 8. Gadarens▪ Before the Pharisees and Doctors, that came out of all the Cities both of Galilee, and jewry, and jerusalem, and so great a crowd as forced them to unroof the house to come to him, he freed one from his f Mat. 9 Mar. 2. Luc. 5. palsy and his sins. A multitude was witness of the death of g Mar. 5. Luc. 8. Iairus' daughter, and bewailing her laughed him to scorn that undertook to raise her, yet he called her into life. And on a feast day in the Temple, before all the people, he recovered one that had lain lame b John 5. eight and thirty years: and when a widow's son was carried to his funeral, and all the City followed him, he only touched the bier, and bid him c Luc. 7. live. With two fishes and five loaves he fed d Mat. 14. Mar. 6. Luc. 9 Joh. 6. 5000 men besides women and children, and with what they left they filled twelve baskets, when one basket carried all before they ate; so that they were convinced, he was that Prophet that was to come into the world: and with seven loaves he filled e Mat. 15. Mar. 8. 4000 afterwards and seven baskets. He commanded a dumb spirit out of him that had been f Mat. 17. Mar. 9 Luc. 9 Lunatic, vexed with a Devil from his infancy, before the people and the Scribes, whom his Disciples could not cast out. And when g John 11. Lazarus had been dead four days, and buried till he stank, yet at his call, although bound hand and foot with grave clothes, he came forth, all the multitude beholding. From so many more I chose out these, because they are reported done before the people, and the Scribes, and Pharisees, and Doctors. I might name his a Mat. 24. Mar. 13. Luc. 21. Prophecies of the destruction of Jerusalem, and of the propagation and continuance of his Religion; even of the woman's box of b Mat. 26. Mar. 14. John 12. Spikenard, which event hath made notorious to the world. But his death was so even at the present: when if the rending of the c Mat. 27. Mar. 15. Luc. 23. John. 19 veil of the temple was apparent Miracle to all Jerusalem, the suns prodigious Eclipse, when it was impossible by nature he should be eclipsed (it being then full moon,) was so to the whole Hemisphere. It serves the use I am to make of this, that 'tis here recorded, but withal Heathen ᵈ Phlegon apud Orig: contra Cels. l 2. p. 80. Euseb. ad Olym. 202 ann. 4 Philop. & Georg. Syncel. Thallus apud African. vid. Seal. animad. ad Euseb. Chron. p. 186. ad ann. 2044. Etiam vide Just. Mart. p. 76. & p. 84. & Tertull. Apol. c. 21. & de isto terrae mot● agere Tacitum & Plin. l. 2. c. 84. scribit Oros. Historians and Chronologers bear witness to it: for when they relate that in the 4th year of the 202 Olympiad, the year that is assigned to Christ's death, there was such a great Eclipse as never had been, day at noon turned into night, the stars appearing, and earthquakes as far as Bythynia, since 'tis apparent by the motions of the Heavens and the calculations of Astronomy, there could be none such then according to the course of nature, it must be this the Gospel speaks of. But beyond all this, 'tis registered here, that according as he had foretold, he raised himself from death the a Mat. 281 Mar. 16. Luc. 29. John. 24. 3d day; yea and many bodies of the Saints that had been buried, long it may be some of them, he raised with him. That notwithstanding all the art and treachery of the Chief Priests to conceal it, yet that very day he appeared b Mar. 16. 9 First to Mary Magddalen, a Luc. 24. 5. 2dly the Women, 3dly b V. 33. Peter, 4thly to them that went to c V. 13. Emans, last of all on that day to the Eleven d V. 36. 37. 41. except Thomas, being seen and handled by and eating with them; 6thly eight days after to the same eleven with e John 20. 24. Thomas; 7thly at the sea of f John 21. Galilee appearing in a miracle of fishes; 8thly to all his Disciples and g Mat. 28. 16. Mar. 15. 6. 500 Brethren more in Galilee, then to James, h 1 Cor. 15. 7. then to all his Apostles, promising them the i Luc. 24. 49. Act. 1. 4. 5. Holy Ghost; and lastly all of them beholding he k Act. 1 9 Luc. 24. 51. ascended into Heaven, and ten days after as he promised sent the l Act. 2. 6. 7. 8. Holy Ghost upon them in the shape of fiery tongues, so as that they spoke all Languages immediately, to the amazement of the Jews of every Nation under Heaven to which they were scattered, that the Miracle might spread as far. Now if all this be true, he that did these must have communication with a power above all that we account the powers of Nature; such an one most certainly as can perform whatsoever he in this book promises, inflict what e'er he threatens; such as is divine. And since he wrought all these, on purpose to evince he came commissioned from that divine power, brought these Miracles as seals of that commission, that we might believe him, therefore whatsoever he delivers must be embraced by us, as we hope for those blessed rewards that he proposeth, and on pain of those eternal torments if we do not; of both which it is not possible to doubt if these accounts be true. 2dly Since the most and greatest of these must be done but once; he could not be incarnated, and born, and live, and preach, and die, and rise again, and go to Heaven every day, of every age, in every place, to convince every man by his own senses; to all those that did not see the matter of fact, therefore faith of all these must be made by witnesses. And 3dly If we can be sure the witnesses that do assert a fact understand it exactly, if the things be palpable, and they must certainly know whether they were really done or no; and if we can be sure too, that they are sincere, will not affirm that which they do not know, and do not lie, their testimony of it must be most infallible: because it is impossible such witnesses can be deceived, or will deceive. 4thly The witnesses in this case, the Apostles and the 70 Disciples (for I'll name no more) must needs know most perfectly: For they not only saw the Miracles, but were a Luc. 1. 14. instruments and parties in some of them; sent to cure diseases, cast out Devils, and knew whether all this were in earnest. And most certainly they saw (as all the Jews did too) Christ crucified, his heart pierced with a spear, and his body buried; and whether they did see him risen, handle him, and eat with him they knew. And if they might mistake in his Ascension, yet the fiery tongues, if such did light on them, they must needs see; and whether they themselves, who spoke no Languages, could then speak Tongues, it cannot be but they must know. In these there is no possibility they could err, unless they did it wilfully: but then 'tis as impossible that they could do it wilfully, if they were sincere and honest, such as would not lie. Now that they were such, I might urge their simplicity and openness, without disguise, not covering their own errors; men who seemed to live as well as preach against all artifice, and to have no design on any thing but the amendment and salvation of mankind. For he that can suppose it possible that they were otherwise, men of art and finess, that they contrived the story, must needs know; First, that such would not seal their falsehood with their blood; design no recompense to all their travels but contemt, and hatred, persecutions, prisons, whip, wounds and death, to be the scum and the offscouring the world; lay out their lives against their conscience to preach that jesus, who did only call them out to be a a 1 Cor. 4. 9 spectacle to all the world, just such as Malefactors when exposed to fight with, and to be devoured of wild beasts. Their sufferings are too known to stay upon: St Paul's own catalogue of his for five whole verses 2 Cor. 11. is such, that to sustain them only for this end, to put a cheat on mankind; count a so laborious, vexed, torn, miserable life and an infamous death gain, so the fable might be believed: to think they could do this, is sure as great a madness as to do it. But yet I will suppose that possible; that those who wove the fable pleased themselves so infinitely with the expectations of imposing on mankind, as that those hopes could make misery and death itself look lovely to them. But Then 2dly that all and every of them should be of that mind, that amongst so many that bare witness of Christ's Miracles and resurrection not a man should discover the cheat; that when their persecutors did with arts of torment as it were examine them upon the rack, they should work not one single confession out of them; that no one's courage should be broke, nor have a qualm so far as to acknowledge how it was, disclose the plot, lay open the confederacy, the whole mystery and the contrivance of it: When of twelve Disciples one was so false to betray his Master's person at a vile rate, yet that all of them, and many more, in a feigned story of his Miracles should be so true to one another, that no engine of man's cruelty ever could screw out the secret, not one should betray the forgery and be a judas where he ought to be: no not that judas, whose concern it was, whose treason to his Master had been justified had he been an impostor: yet that he should stir no least suspicion of it, but should burst, choked with his grief because he had betrayed innocent blood: This, if he knew it had all been imposture, must be most stupendous. But yet we will give them this too, that vainglorious hopes of drawing in the world to follow them, might make all of them obstinate in secrecy against all attemts of cruelty; or if some weak brethren did perchance discover, we may not have heard of it. But For them 3dly to begin their preaching at jerusalem is yet more strange. To hope to draw men into a persuasion, and to bottom that persuasion upon Miracles, and a resurrection done amongst them there, where if discovery were made it must be made, and where it could not but be made if there were fraud. For to relate and write those works with every circumstance of persons, place, and time, where they not only could examine every circumstance, but where they rather than their lives would find them false, if nothing else would, this must needs discover it. They preach them to the face of the whole multitude and of the Pharisees, and tell them they were done before their eyes, sometimes 500 and sometimes 5000 being by and the chief Priests and Pharisees and Doctors: so that 'twas most impossible they should not know if they were true or false, as sure as there was never a Jew in all the Land, but knew whether there were a darkness over all the land when Christ was crucified. Now if these were forged to hope to draw jews out of their Religion with apparent forgeries, which they knew such, speaks these Apostles men so far from art to manage a design of changing the Religion of the world, that they were mad beyond recovery and precedent. But let us give them that too. Yet 'tis certain 4thly that the Jews, if any such were wrought on by them, must be much more stupid to believe them upon the account of such things done in all the country, in their Cities, and the Temple, before all the Nation, when they could not choose but know they were not done, if they were not done, but were feigned all. For what ever might be motive to Christ's followers and his Apostles, with the certain danger of their lives to forge the cheat, what possible temptation could there be so great to incline jews, the most stiffnecked people, the most stubborn in Religion in the world, to embrace a faith which nothing but the Cross and shame and misery attended, and which they must know false too? Had they so great lust to die, as for that to bid farewell to their Moses, their Religion and their Law? It is impossible had they not known the truth of those things, that in waters of affliction, in Jerusalem, ipsis persecutionum fontibus, in that fountain, that springhead of persecutions, as the Fathers call it, they would ever have been baptised into Christ. Yet suddenly in one day at one sermon of St Peter we read near 3000 were baptised. Act. 2. at another straight 5000 Act. 4. and such beginnings, such sums are required to make good what the Governor of Palestine a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. S●idas in vo●e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Tiberianus tells the Emperor, that he was not sufficient to put to death all those that confessed themselves Christians. All which must needs have either been convinced those things were true, or else as well against their conscience as against the powers, thus embraced that faith and death together. Neither was this a first surprise of Christianity, as it had seized men's minds at unawares; for it went on conquering till the world came into it, receiving the Religion with the loss of all that was dear to them in this world. For in one age from Christ's death, what with the Apostles sermons, miracles, and ᵃ Whence Euseb. says. l. 2. Ecc. hist. c. 14. they at Rome not thinking it enough to have heard the gospel once 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not being contented with the preaching of the heavenly doctrine while it was but an unwritten doctrine, earnestly entreat St Mark, that he would leave in writing with them a monument of that doctrine which had been delivered to them by preaching. Nor did they give over till they had prevailed; which when St Peter knew by revelation of the H. G. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being extremely pleased with that desire and their earnestness in it, He approved, it and appointed it to be read in their assembly. writings also to confirm and keep men in the truth, and to convey it better to posterity, and their disciples after them, who went forth b Euseb. l. 3. c. 37. delivering those writings, preaching on, and doing wonders also, very many Nations are recorded by Historians as converted almost wholly. And the truth of it is evident, since nothing but almost whole Nations, nor yet they but as buoyed up by the wonders and the graces of God's spirit, ever could be able to endure, or be sufficient to employ the Swords, the Flames, the Lions, and the other numberless tortures which the jews and Nero and Domitian, and above all Trajan in that first age raged with, till they made their Cities, villages and provinces so desolate, that the Proconsul Pliny, being frighted with the multitude of murdered Christians, did advise with him about relaxing his edicts, as he himself a l. 10. epist. 97. assures us. It was the same the next age, when the power of Miracles b Iust. Mart. dial▪ come Tryph. judaeo p. 247. 302 311. Iren. l. 2. c. 56. 57 yet lived, and those which Christ himself wrought were scarce all dead, (some c Excerpt. ex Quadrat. Apolog. ad Hadrian. apud Eus. l. 4. c. 3. lived till near that time, who rose up with him at his resurrection;) when these d Iust. Mart. Apol. 2. p. 98. books, (writ by the will of God to be the pillar and foundation of men's faith in after ages, as saith e Iren. l. 3. c, 1. ● Irenaeus in that age,) were also read in the assemblies weekly; when not only those that did assemble were by f Iust. Mar. Apol. 2. Eccl. Smyrnens. apud Euseb. l. 4. c. 15. Ecclesiarum Viennen. & Lug. dun. comment. de passione Martyr. suorum apud Euseb. l. 5. c. 1. & Niceph. l. 3. & 4. Hadrian martyred, but they put men to their oaths, to find out whether they were Christians, that they might massacre them. And in the 3 d, it was the like, when Miracles they say were not g Orig cont. Cel. l. 2. p. 62. & p. 80. Tertul. Apol c. 23. yet ceased, yet sure the greatest was the constancy of Christians in adhering to this book & patience in suffering for it. For they report the h Niceph. l. 5. c. 29. sands on the sea shore almost as easy to be numbered as the Martyrs of that age; what by a V. Euseb. l. 6. & 7. ●erè integros. de Seu. Spartian. & Tertul. de Decio S. Cypr. Valerian, Decius, Maximinus and Severus, but especially by b Euseb. l. 8. c. 2. c. 6. Niceph. l. 7. c. 6. Euseb. l. 8. c. 11. etc. 9 Sulp. Seu. l. 2. Oros. l. 7. c. 25. Ignatii Patr. Antioch. literas. apud Scalig. de emend. temp. l. 5. p. 496. Spond. ad annum 302 n. 4. Dioclesian, who put so many men to death for not delivering up their Bibles to be burnt, and refusing to Sacrifice to his Gods, as if he meant to have depopulated the whole earth. And this is as notorious as that men do now profess that they are Christians, and that these are holy Scriptures. Therefore I shall need to go no further. Now among so many myriads who on the account of all these Miracles (whate'er they were) suffered themselves to be converted to the faith of Christ, and then as if they cared for nothing but Religion and their Bibles, for them bore the loss of goods, and life itself, and engaged their posterity to do so also; that not one of these should know whether indeed any such miracles were wrought, if any were restored to life or no: (for if they knew, than they were true:) and that among so numberless a crowed of teachers, who by assuming to speak languages, raise the dead, work signs, drew in those Myriads to Religion and the stake, and went before them, gave them an example both in faith and death; that not one of all those should believe either the Miracles or himself that did them: for if any one that did them did believe them, since he knew who did them, they must needs be certain: but not one of them to know it, sure is such a thing as neither could be done nor be imagined. He therefore that requires strict evidence in things of faith which cannot bear it, he that calls for Mathematical demonstration, nor will believe on easier terms, yet is so credulous and so unwary, that he can believe so many things which by the nature and the disposition of mankind I have demonstrated not possible, which yet must be true, unless these scriptures be from God: 'tis plain he does not seek for certainty, but for a pretence of not believing; would fain have his Infidelity and Atheism look more excusable, and is not fit to be disputed with but to be exploded. But if these scriptures be from God, than whatsoever they affirm (with modesty I may conclude) is true. And therefore when St Luke Acts. 1. 1. declares his former treatise contained all that jesus began both to do and teach until the day in which he was taken up: since Christ before he did ascend taught every thing that was required to be believed and done in order to salvation, and more too; therefore if his Gospel did contain all that he taught, and did, since it did not contain all absolutely, it must needs mean it contained all that was necessary, or it must mean nothing. And since the same St Luke in the beginning of that Gospel does affirm he wrote it, Luc. 1. 4. that Theophilus might know the certainty of those things wherein he had been instructed; 'tis plain he avers that the certain knowledge of all those things wherein the having been instructed made Theophilus a Christian, might be had out of that Gospel: and when St Paul says here, that the Holy Scriptures are able to make us wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ jesus, and St John in his 20 chap. v. 31. that tho he had not wrote all the things that jesus did, yet those that he had wrote were written, that we might believe that jesus was the Christ the son of God, and that believing we might have life through his name; 'tis evident the Scriptures say that what was written was sufficient to work that belief which was sufficient to life and salvation, as far as the credend● do concur to it. And when St Paul in that verse that succeeds my text, in most express particular words sets down the usefulness of Scripture in each several duty of a man of God, or preacher of the Gospel, both for Doctrine of faith, for reproof or correction of manners, and instruction unto righteousness, and tells you Gods express end in inspiring it, and consequently its ability when so inspired was, that the man of God might be made perfect, throughly furnished unto every good work that belongs to his whole office; 'tis most certain that what is sufficient for that office to instruct, reprove, correct and teach in, must needs be sufficient to believe and practise in for all men: i e. what my text affirms, they are able to make us wise unto salvation. I might call in Tradition universal to bear witness to this truth for holy Scriptures, if having once demonstrated that they are God's word, when that does affirm it, and bears witness to it, there were need of any other. And this I dare boldly say, that if the Scripture did say as expressly, that the Pope had a supremacy or soveragnity over the whole Church, or that he or the Roman Church were infallible; their definition, or the living voice of their present Church, a most sure rule of Faith, as it does say Scripture is able to make us wise unto salvation, those Articles would suffer no dispute, it would be blasphemy or sacrilege to limit or explain them by distinctions, when those sayings of the perfectness of Scriptures are forced to bear many. Then we should have no complaints of the obscurity of those books; if those articles were either in the Greek or Hebrew, they would never say the Bible were not fit to be a Rule of Faith, because the Language were unknown to the unlearned, and they could not be infallibly secure of the Translation; were they there they would account them sure enough, who think them plain enough already there, and that we must believe them because, Thou art Peter, Feed my sheep, and Tell the Church, are there. And for him that shall affirm, all necessaries that must make us wise unto falvation are not in the Scripture, 'tis impossible to give a rational account how it should come to pass that some are there, the rest are not. It must be either on design, or else by chance. Now 1. That God should design, when very many things that were not necessary were to be written, that the main and fundamental ones should be omitted: and when of the necessaries most he did design for Scripture, than He should not suffer the Apostles to write the remainder of them: and yet what he would not suffer them to write, designed that the Trent Fathers (who I hope have perfected the Catalogue) should write all: of these since 'tis not possible to give a reason, 'tis not therefore rational to affirm it was upon design. But 2. If he shall say it only happened so by chance, he does affront both Scriptures, and Gods Holy Spirit, who, as they affirm, inspired them for this very end, to bring men to the faith and to salvation. But there is no place for chance in those things that are done in order to an end, by the design, impulse and motion of the infinite wisdom of God's holy Spirit. He certainly does most unworthily reproach his Maker, who can think it possible, that what he did design expressly and on that account alone to attain such an end by (namely that men should believe and be saved) and inspire it for that purpose, should yet fail, not be sufficient for that purpose. And sure if it be sufficient it contains all necessaries, otherwise it were deficient in the main; yea so clearly also, as that they, for whose salvation they are intended, may with use of such methods, as are obvious and agreed upon by all men, understand them: for otherwise they could not be sufficient: if men could not be instructed by them in things necessary both to faith and life, they could not make them wise unto salvation. I must confess the Scripture labours under a great prejudice against this doctrine, from the different senses and interpretations that are made of it, even in the most fundamental points, by them that grant it is the word of God; when yet all use the same means to find out the meaning, and no doubt they seek sincerely after it. But yet I think it evident this happens not from the obscurity of Scripture, since it is not only in the most express texts; but also if you should suppose the doctrines were as plain set down there as words can express them, yet there are such principles assumed into the faith of different sects, as must oblige them to interpret diversely the same plain words. I am not so vain as to imagine that no places are obscure in Scripture, and I know that learned men have arts by obscure places to confound the plainest, just as the Philosopher did motion. Neither am I so perverse and singular not to think that universal practice and profession of the Church does much assure and confirm explications of Scriptures, whether obscure or plain. But this I say, that the diversities of explication come, as I now said, from the diversity of principles or rather prejudices, and that this only is the cause of it I thus demonstrate. First in the Socinian, who interprets all those Scriptures, which the Catholic world hath still applied to the Divinity and satisfaction of Christ, that I name no more points, otherwise then the Church did always; and I affirm he does it, not because he thinks the words do favour his interpretation, but because his principle requires it; namely this, To admit nothing into his faith but what agrees with that which he counts reason, which in a Socinians faith is judge of all points in the last resort. And I mean reason upon natural principles, and thus I prove it. Socinus speaking of Christ's satisfaction, says the word is not in Scripture, Ego quidem etiamsi non semel sed saepe id in sacris monimentis scriptum extaret, non ideirco tamen ita rem prorsus se hub●re crederem. Socin. de jesus Chr. Servatore parte 3 c. 6 operum tom. 2. p. 204. yet if it were there very often I would not believe it, because it does not consist with right reason, that is with the arguments that he had brought against it drawn from human principles. And therefore he there adds; those things which 'tis apparent cannot be, (i. e. that appear such to him who judges by the principles of natural reason, which yet cannot judge of supernatural and infinite beings,) though the Holy Scripture does expressly say they are, yet must not be admitted; & idcirco sacra verba in alium sensum quam ipsa sonant per inusitatos etiam tropos quandoque explicantur: and for this reason we make use of even unusual tropes, strained figures to explain the words of Holy writ to other senses than the words themselves import. And so he therefore serves that great variety of words by which the Scripture does express Christ's suffering for our sins, in our stead, as our sacrifice; against the universal notions of those words, not only which the Church of Christ, but which the Jew's and which the heathen world had of them. And when his reason told him that Christ could not be God one with his Father, that he was so far from having any being from eternity, as that he was not at all, till he had a being from the Blessed Virgin; Therefore when the Scripture says directly a John 10. 30. I and the Father are one, he must strain it to this meaning, are of one mind, we agree in one: although St john avert that, by b Joh. 5. 7. The Father the Word, and the Holy Ghost, and these three are one. 8. the Spirit, and the Water and the Blood, and these three agree in one. distinguishing those two expressly. Yea worse, when to prove that Christ had a being ere the world was made, we urge from the first Chap. to the c Heb. 1. 10. 11. 12. Hebr. what St Paul produces from the d Psal. 102. 25. 26. 27. Psalms, and does apply to him most particularly. Thou Lord in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth, and the Heavens are the works of thine hands; they shall perish, but thou remainest, and they all shall wax old as does a garment; and as a vesture shalt thou fold them up, and they shall be changed: but thou art the same, and thy years shall not fail. They explain it thus: that God by Christ will at last destroy these Heavens, and this Earth, and change them, according to that saying in the Psalms; which although the Apostle produce at length, as it stood there, both concerning the Creation and destruction of the world, yet he intended only to apply this last to Christ. And though he say as well of the same Lord, Thou Lord in the beginning didst lay the foundation of the earth, and the heavens are the works of thine hands, as, thou shalt change them; yet he meant no more but that this change God would effect by Christ. It is not possible that the text can give any the least countenance to this interpretation. The different explication of this Scripture does not come from the obscurity of any words in it; for in the Psalm they and we understand the same words in the same sense exactly: therefore that we differ here, is not from any thing in the words quoted, but is wholly from the Principle. And we may not wonder, for the plain sense will not suit with their Hypothesis. There are no other that are instanced in as differing from us in points of faith but the Romanists. I know not whether they account those differences to be in things necessary to salvation. a The reasonableness of this supposition might be demonstrated if there were any need of it. If that be true that they allow (for what cause they know best,) some that are reconciled to their Church to communicate with ours, that is, join in our worship, and by doing so own the profession of our faith in distinction to that of others, or at least espouse the scandal of the owning it; Then one would think they must account that there is nothing in our worship done that is unlawful, nor omitted that is necessary, nor any thing Heretical professed, at least that there's no scandal in the owning that profession. For if there were, they did allow them only to profess and act gross sin, which certainly they would not do. So that poor Protestants when they are pleased to give leave may be no Heretics, and therefore there is nothing of itself in that profession faulty. But yet on the other side since we see they call us Heretics, and when they have no power over us, damn us to Hell fires, and when they have had power, damned us to the fire and faggot also; sure they think the differences to be in things necessary. But yet the account is easy, how not the obscurity of Scripture, but a Principle or prejudice does cause this. For We are bound in conscience to grant they believe their own Principles. Now 'tis a Principle with them, that their Church cannot err, and therefore that their present faith and consequent depending practice was their faith and practise always. That it may appear so, they must seek for countenance from Scripture: and if any thing there seem to thwart their faith or practice, they must smooth and disguise it, that it may look friendly. And 'tis most certain if the Scripture should be never so express against them, whilst they think it is not possible that they can err, they cannot think it possible Scripture can mean what it pretends to speak. 'twere easy to make instances. As first for invocation of the Saints departed, which with them is a point of faith, a L. 1. de Sanct. Beatit. c. 17. Bellar. and Cochleus produce that of the Psalms, I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills from whence cometh my help. Psalm. 121. 1. and although the text directs that looking up expressly to the Lord that made heaven and earth. v. 2. and though it be a Principle with them, that on those everlasting hills there were no Saints in David's time that could be invocated, they were all in limbo than they say; yet as I said, they would have countenance from Scripture, and for want of better they are therefore forced to interpret those words, I will lift up mine eyes unto the Hills, thus, I will invocate the Saints. Now will any say 'tis the obscurity of this Scripture that does hinder Protestants from seeing the bright evidence of this argument, and not rather that it is the weak foundation of this practice that does make the Romanists seek to build it on those mountains? So among those several texts which in the 2d Nicen general Council are produced for adoration of the images of Christ and of the Saints, and are expounded to evince it, none is plainer than that which I produced now from Bellarmin. I shall give one or two examples from the Psalms: a Psal. 27. 8. Thy face Lord will I seek: b Psal. 4. 6. and, Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us: and again, c Psal. 45. 12. the rich among the people shall entreat thy face: therefore David thought the picture of Christ was to be adored. It is their own d Council tom. 18. p. 295. conclusion from these texts, And they have no better for it. Yet they saw the doctrine in these so apparently, as that with great opposition to great Councils, and more blood shed I think then yet ever any doctrine hath been settled with, it was imposed. Yea more, the first experiment of the Pope's power over Sovereign Princes was on the account of this same doctrine: when for opposing Image-worship Gregory the 2d excommunicated the Greek Emperor. Pope * Sigen. de regno Ital. ad annum 712. l. 3. p. 94. Constantine for the same cause indeed had 14 years before done so to Philippicus, but he did not go much further, whereas Gregory absolved the Emperor's subjects in the Roman Duchy from their Allegiance; commanded them not to pay him any tribute, nor in any wise obey him; whereupon they a Sigen. de regno. Ital. ad annum. 726. l. 3. p. 103. killed their Governors, and b Leonis impeperium respuerunt, ac solenni sacramento se Pontificis vitam statumque in perpetuum defensuros, atque ejus in omnibus rebus autoritati obtemperaturos jurarunt. Ita Roma Romanusque ducatus à Graecis ad Romanum Pontificem pervenit. Sigon. de Regno Ital. ad annum 727. l 3. p. 105. swore obedience to the Pope. And this was the beginning of St Peter patrimony, and it was thus gotten by this doctrine, which they saw so clearly in these Scriptures; when they cannot see the contrary in those plain words, Thou shalt not make to thyself any whether Graven image or idol it matters not, since it follows, nor the likeness of any thing which is in heaven above, etc. nor in those where God takes care expressly that himself be not worshipped by an image Deut. 4. 15. and then judge if 'tis obscurity or plainness that makes them see or not see doctrines in the Scripture: rather if it be not merely the necessity of prejudice. So again we differ in the meaning of the 14th chap. of the 1. Cor. where we think St Paul asserts and argues, yea and chides against all service in an unknown tongue in the public assemblies, saying all must be done there so as it may be c 1 Cor. 1. 5. 12. 19 20. understood, and to edification. But that which is performed there in an unknown tongue does not d V. 6. 14. 16. 17. edify says he there: yet to justify this practice they must make it have a different meaning, which no Father's countenance, but which * Basil. Mag. in reg. brevior. interrog. 278. Tom. 2. p. 641. Theodor. & Cecumen. in locum etc. and the commentary under St Ambrose's name makes these who in the Church of Corinth would use an unknown tongue in their sacred offices, (against whom St Paul directs his speech, and takes occasion for that which he says in this chap.) converted Hebrew's; who would it should seem perform the service or at least some parts of it in the Christian Assemblies, as they had been done of old in the Synagogues, in the Hebrew tongue, which the Corinthians understood not, against which St. Paul disputes. several expound as we do, yea and divers of their own do so too, and particularly their Pope john 8th in his 247th Epistle writing expressly on that Subject. Conc. tom. 24. p. 287. Once more, so their half communion, that it may be reconciled with that express command b Mat. 26. 27. Drink ye all of it: and this do, obliges them to find another meaning: drink ye all must be directed to them only as Apostles; and do this must signify consecrate the Elements, although St Paul apply it most directly to the drinking, 1 Cor. 11. 25. and the drinking to his lay Corinthians. Nor dare they say in truth it means the other, for St Paul when he does say do this, did not intend to make his Lay Corinthians male and female all c Yet the Counc. of Trent Sess. 22. c. 9 can. 2. pronounces Anathema to all those that shall say these words do this, quoting them also in the margin out of this place 1 Cor, 11 did not constitute priests, and ordain that they should offer the body and blood of Christ. Edit Col. Agrip. anno 1261. priests, and give them power to consecrate. The words are plain, there's nothing in the text obscure that makes us differ; but the practice had by little & little grown upon them, till it became Universal, and so grew into their faith: and then since they believe they cannot err, they must expound Christ's words so as they may not contradict their practice; because that would overthrow their Principle. But the Church that builds upon no Principle but God's word, can have no temptation to pervert or strain it, since what ever does appear to be the meaning of it, that their Principle must needs engage them to believe. And therefore if it say This is my body, we believe it; if it says too after consecration it is a 1 Cor. 11. 27. bread, we believe that also: and because it therefore says 'tis both, we so believe it one that it may be the other: which since both say it is impossible that it can be substantially, neither hath God in express words told us which it is substantially; therefore seeing when he calls it body, he is instituting his Sacrament, there's all reason in the world he should mean Sacramentally; since 'tis the most proper meaning: and by consequence 'tis bread substantially, as all ways of judging in the world assure us. Here's no stress on Scripture, as there is no Principle to serve; when as the other makes us differ, not in Scripture only, even where 'tis plainest; but tradition too. For the most express and evident sayings of the primitive Fathers are on every head of difference, as much the matter of contention as the texts of Scripture are; as it were easy to demonstrate if that were my business. So that it is mere deceit to lay our quarrels to defects in God's word, and particularly to its obscurity, which a man would think were evident enough from this that Children knew it. The last thing I am to speak to. And that from a child thou hast known the holy Scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ jesus. I cannot pass this, that it is St Chrysostom's observation, that Timothy was nursed up in the Scriptures from his childhood. Yea and since his Father was an Heathen, he must have been taught them by his Grandmother Loïs', and his Mother Eunice, whose faith St Paul speaks of 2 Tim. 1. 5. Children therefore then, and Women, and they sure are Laics, read the Bible. Yea and since they knew it, they must read it in a language which they understood: and we know where that is unlawful now. If we consider the first prohibition that appeared in that Church with Synodical authority against such men's having any Bibles in their own tongue, we shall find it was immediately upon the preaching of the Waldenses, one of whose doctrines it was, a Vsser. de Chris. Eccle. success. c. 6. §. 17. that the Scripture was the rule to judge of faith by: so that whatsoever was not consonant to that must be refused. This they preached in France and over Europe in the latter end of the b c. 8. §. 1. 12 Century: and that Council which forbade their having of the Bible, we find lately put forth by the friar c Spicileg. tom. 2. p. 624. D. Achery as held at Tholouse in the beginning of the 13th Century. It seems they apprehended then their doctrines hardly would abide that touchstone: And they therefore had no surer, more compendious way for its security then to prevent such trial, taking care men should not know what was or what was not in Scripture. And it is not possible for me to give account why in their catechising they leave out all that part of the commandments, Thou shalt not make to thyself any graven image, etc. but this only, that they dare not let the laity compare their doctrine and their practice with that Scripture. But though it is possible they might conceive some danger if the whole Scripture should be exposed, yet in those portions which the Church itself chose out for her own offices, the little lessons, and Epistles, and Gospels, those sure one would think were safe: no, not their Psalter, Breviary, nor their Hours of the Blessed Virgin must they have translated in their own tongue; as that a cap. 4. Council did determine. And truly when the Roman Missal was turned lately into French, and had been allowed to be so by the general Assembly of the Clergy in the year a Ordonnance de Messieurs les Vicaire, Genereux de Monseigneur l'Emiminentissime Cardinal de Retz Archevesque de Paris, which is in the 137th page of the Extrait du Frecez verbal de l'Assemblee general du Clerge de France, tenuë à Paris en l'année 1660. 1650. and when it was done it had the usual approbation of the Doctors and some Bishops, and then was printed at Paris with the licence of the Vicar's general of their Archbishop. Yet another general assembly of the Clergy the year 1660, whereat there were b p. 128 of that extrait. 36 Bishops, upon pain of c Ibid. p. 128. & p. 139. excommunication forbid any one to read it, and condemn not only that present traduction, but the thing in general as d p. 130. poisonous, in an Encyclical Epistle to all the Prelates of the Kingdom: and in e p. 141. le: enfans de nostre mere ont pris les armes contre neus, ils la vent attaquer jusques dans le Sanctuaire, des Mysteres de son Espoux pour les prostituer. another they say of him that did translate it, and the vicar's general that did defend him in it, that by doing so they did take arms against the Church, attaquing their own Mother (namely by that version) at the Altar, in that sanctuary, that closet of her spouses' mysteries to prostitute them: and in f p. 132. another Epistle they beseech his Holiness Pope Alexander 7th to damn it not in France alone but the whole Church; which he then did by his g p. 147 and the same bull is printed in the Index of prohibited books set out by the command of Alex. 7. at Rome 1664. p. 382. Bull, for ever inter dicting that or any other version of that book, h Missa le praefatum Gallico idiomate conscriptum vel in posterum alias quomodolibet conscribendum & evillgendum perpetuo damnamus, reprobamus, & interdicimus, ejusque impressionem, lectionem & retentionem universis & singulis utriusque sexus Christi fidelibus, eujuscunque gradus, ordinis, conditionis existant, sub poena excommunicationis latae sententiae ipso jure incurrendae perpetuo prohibemus: mandantes quod statim quicunque illud habuerint, vel in futurum quodcunque habebunt realiter & cum effectu exhibeant & tradant locorum Ordinariis vel inquisitoribus, qui nulla interposita more, exemplaria igne comburant, & comburi faciant. forbidding all to read or keep it on severest pains; commanding any one that had it to deliver it immediately to the Inquisitor or Ordinary that it might be burnt forthwith. Now thus (whatever it be otherwise) the mass is certainly a sacrifice when 'tis made a burnt offering to appease his holiness' indignation: when that very Memorial of Christ's passion again suffers, and their sacred offices are martyred. To see the difference of times; 'twas heretofore a Pagan Dioclesian, a strange prodigy of cruelty, who by his edict did command all Christians to deliver up their Bible's or their bodies to be burnt: 'Twas here his Holiness, Christ's Vicar, who by his Bull order all to give up theirs, that is all of it that they will allow them, and their prayers also, that they may be forthwith burnt, or themselves to be excommunicated, that is their souls to be devoted to eternal flames. And whereas than those only that did give theirs up were excommunicate, all Christians shunned them as they would the plague; and multitudes, whole regions rather gave themselves up to the fire to preserve their Bibles: now those only that have none, or that deliver up theirs, are the true obedient sons of that Church, and the thorough Catholics. I know men plead great danger in that book: it is represented as the source of monstrous doctrines and rebellions. I will not say these men are bold that take upon them to be wiser than Almighty God, and to see dangers he foresaw not, and to prevent them by such methods as thwart his appointments; but I will say that those who talk thus certainly despise their hearers; as if we knew not Heresies were hatched by those that understood the Bible untranslated: and as if we never heard there were rebellions among them that were forbid to read the Bible. For if there were a Covenant among them that had it in their own tongue, so there was an Holy League amongst those men that were denied it. While those that had the guidance of the subjects conscience were themselves subject to a foreign power, as all Priests of that communion are, How many Kings and Emperors have there been that did keep the Scriptures from their people, but yet could not keep their people from sedition, nor themselves from ruin by it? In fine when God himself for his own people caused his Scripture to be written in their own tongue, to be weekly read in public to, and day and night in private by the people; and when the Apostles by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost indicted Scripture for the world, they did it in the language that was then most vulgar to the world: what God and the Holy Spirit thus appointed as the fittest means for the Salvation of the world, to define not expedient, as the Holy Fathers of Trent did, looks like blasphemy against God and the Holy Spirit. But blasphemies of this kind are not to be wondered at from that kind of men, that call the Scripture a dumb a Pigh. 3. de hier. Ecc. judge, b Eccius. a black Gospel, incken Divinity, c Pigh. de hier. l. 1. c. 2. fol. 8. written not that they should be the rule of our faith and Religion, but that they should be regulated by, submitted to our faith; d Idem Pigh. that the authority of the Church hath given canonical authority to Scriptures, and those the chief, which otherwise they had not neither from themselves nor from their authors; And that if the Scriptures were not sustained by the authority of the Church they would be of no more value than Aesop's e Vid. Chemn. examen de S. Can. p. 47. fables. f Peres. de tradit. par. 1. assert. 3. And lastly, that the people are permitted to read the bible was the invention of the Devil. But to leave the controversy and speak to the advantages which may be had from early institution in the Scripture; 'tis so evident that I need not observe how 'tis for want of principles impressed and wrought into the mind in Childhood, that our youth is so licentious. And 'tis not possible it can be otherwise, when they have nothing to oppose to constitution, when 'tis growing, and to all the temtations both of objects and example; no strict sense of duty planted in them, no such notions as would make resistance to the risings of their inclination, and seducements of ill company: and they therefore follow and indulge to all of them. And in God's name why do parents give their Children up to God in their first infancy, deliver him so early a possession of them? as if they would have Religion to take seizure on them straight, as if by their baptising them so soon, they meant to consecrate their whole lives to God's service, make them his as soon as they were theirs, as if they had been given them merely for God's uses? And they therefore enter them into a vow of Religion almost as soon as they have them: why all this? if accordingly they do not season and prepare them as they shall grow capable. Why when they are but newly born their children, do they take care they shall be regenerate and born again God's children? if they do not furnish them with necessaries, educate them into all the qualities and hopes that appertain to the condition of God's children, as well as they do to that of their own. That parent which not only, like some delicate ones refuses her own breasts to her own infant, but provides no other to sustain it; that does only wash her babe from its first blood and uncleanness to expose it the more handsome prey to wolves and tigers in the desert, is more savage than those tigers: a Lam. 4. 3. even the sea monsters draw out the breasts, they give suck to their young ones, saith lamenting jeremy, but he adds the daughter of my people is cruel like the Ostrich in the wilderness, b job. 39 14. which leaveth her eggs in the earth, and forgetteth that the foot may crush them, or that the wild beast may break them, she is hardened against her young ones: such are they who when their children are so born again to God, yet as they shall wax capable provide not that which St Peter calls the sincere milk of the word that they may grow thereby: 1 Pet. 2. 2. but from their being washed so in the laver of regeneration, take no more care, but expose them forthwith to such lusts and conversations, as are much more wild and savage than those beasts in the comparison; to which they cannot choose but be a prey. They strive indeed, they say, to educate them into men betimes, that is, make them conversible and bold: and since for that they must engage them into frequent company, where they see and hear men's follies, that I say no worse; by that means they come to have their understandings stored with nothing but the Modes, and sins of conversation; filled with froth and puddle; men betimes only thus, as they have forwarded their inclinations to, and got an early understanding and experience of, those vices, which one would think men only could be equal for. But by this means the mind, that only part that makes us be men, is not only not improved, but dwarft. They do not only still continue children in their understanding, as to any thing that's real and solid; but the hopes of reason are destroyed in them, and its growth killed, by turniug all its nourishment to feed the beast part; and the Christian is quite starved. There needs no other cause be given for the most part, why so many men have no Religion, own being Libertines, and profess vice; for want of education they have nothing in them that does check this, for they had no principles of a Religion instilled into them. And if at any time it comes to pass that they think it is their interest to take upon them the profession of some Religion, they therefore, since they have no Principles nor rules to judge by, are most apt to choose to profess that Religion, which is like to be most gentle to the courses they have steered, and are engaged in. Now that men hope to find such an one, (whether by its constitution I shall not inquire but,) by its practice is but too appaernt. Accordingly when they go over to it, they carry with them, and preserve in it the vices of their no Religion; and by consequence they went not over seriously for Religion: and are therefore so much worse now than when they owned no Religion, that they do their wickednesses with certainty of easy absolution, and so hopes of salvation; and by this are likely to be made twofold more children of Hell then before: and let them triumph in such conquests. there's nothing in the world that contributes so much to this as men's being not acquainted early with, instructed in, those divine rules and obligations to piety and virtue, which this book the Bible does afford. If men had been seasoned first with the knowledge and the sense of duty, with the comforts that are in it, with the apprehensions of great blessings that attend it; and the mischiefs that are consequent, indeed essential to impiety and vice here; and their minds were furnished with examples of both, which this book abounds with; and their hearts too raised with expectations of far greater blessedness in a life hereafter, and with the belief that both that blessedness and life shall have no end: and were made sensible also of strange dreadful torments that await the breach of duty, which shall also last for ever: If these impressions I say, did prevent all other, and take up the mind, and had in them the stamp and character of God, and so there were a reverence and awe of him wrought in them, and they looked upon him as concerned in all this; how it was his word that said; and these sentiments were grown into the very habit of their mind; as it would not be easy to corrupt or soften such, so 'twould be much more difficult to shake them, since their faith is founded on the rock of ages. Besides the Holy Scriptures carry in them such an obligation of adhering to them, and to them alone, since they are sufficient to make us wise unto salvation, and are God's word, that men would not be apt to exchange them for Legends, pious forgeries, for things that can make good no certain title from the Lord: for let them show an equal derivation of it, bring it down through all the ages ae we have done the Scriptures title to him. Otherwise it justly may provoke God's exclamation in the Prophet a Jer. 2. 13. Jeremy: Be astonished O ye Heavens, and be horribly afraid, be ye very desolate; saith the Lord, for my people have committed two evils, they have forsaken me the fountain of living waters, and hewed them out cisterns, broken cisterns that can hold no water: cisterns therefore that may leave them in a state to want a drop of water, when their tongue shall be horribly tormented: whereas he that drinks that living water which Christ gives, his b Joh. 4. 14. compared with c. 6. 34. word, shall never thirst, but it shall be a well of water in him springing up to everlasting life. FINIS.