Imprimatur Liber cui titulus, A Letter in Answer to a Book Entitled, Christianity not Mysterious etc. May 6. 1697. Narcissus Dublin. A LETTER IN Answer to a Book ENTITLED Christianity not Mysterious. As also To all Those who Set up for REASON and EVIDENCE In Opposition to REVELATION & MYSTERIES. By PETER BROWNE, B D. Sen: Fellow of Trin. Coll. Dub: DUBLIN: Printed by Joseph Ray in Essex street, for John North in Skinner row. 1697. A LETTER In answer to a BOOK ENTITLED Christianity not Mysterious. SIR, WHEN I sent to borrow of you the Book Entitled, Christianity not Mysterious, I little thought of drawing on myself any trouble beyond the bare reading of it; but since you have desired my thoughts of the matters contained in it, I was unwilling to resuse. Tho' I must freely tell you, what you seem to own in your Letter, that I think myself better employed. And your saying, that it is no neglect in a Shepherd to leave his feeding of the Lambs, and go aside for a while, to beat off any thing that comes to devour or infect them, would not have prevailed with me, if this had caused any intermission in that business, which I hope will turn to better account when I come to receive my Wages. But having a little time to spare, I shall perform what you desire. And I have done this the rather, for that you tell me the Book hath made some noise; and that the Author is countenanced, and encouraged by some Men of Sense. I don't much wonder at it; for every Man of Sense is not a Man of true Religion; besides it is not every Man of Reason and Integrity, hath leisure to consider it; and if they have, yet these sort of abstracted Discourses, are out of the road of Men of Business. What you observe is very true, that the generality of Men who write such Books as these, and talk of them most, are those of a mixed sort of learning; Persons of a miscelaneous education, who have some insight into most of the Sciences, but are throughly versed in none. And the talking of Ideas, and running endless divisions upon them, is a cheap and easy way, some Men now adays have taken up, of appearing wise and learned to the world. Whereas the bottom of it all is no more than this, That Men of nice heads have agreed to speak of plain things in a peculiar dialect of their own; which if they were stripped of those terms of Art, and put into plain Language, have nothing in them more than what is obvious to the common sense and reason of all Men. And the consequence of using them so frequently in matters of Religion is generally, what is so visible in this Author, that they darken the Subject; so that the Question is lost in a multitude of Words, and then Men wander far in pursuit of Truth, when they left it behind them at their first setting out. But before I come to the particulars, I can't but take notice of that unreasonableness of People, who never think a Writer sufficiently confuted unless we follow him in all his wander; whereas in a subject of this nature it is enough to show where he left the Road, and that he is not yet returned into it. If a Man were to demolish a Fabric, there is no necessity of doing it stone by stone; it is abundantly enough if he undermine and destroy those Pillars which are the main supporters of it; for than it falls to the ground, and is no other than a heap of Rubbish, though many of the materials were very good in themselves. To any reasonable considering Person it were a sufficient Answer to this whole Book; to show in short, how he mistakes the Question, and proceeds in it, all upon two false Suppositions: One in Logic, in the former part of his Book, viz. That Evidence is the only ground of Persuasion. The other in Divinity, in the latter part of it. That now under the Gospel the Veil is perfectly removed. This would satisfy them that he runs all the while upon a false scent; and they would not take it ill, that we left him to wander by himself. But because these are but few, in comparison of those who take things in the gross, and can't so well discern the connexion and dependence of one thing upon another: And indeed because Answers are designed for such as are not able to see into the fallacies, and not for those who are; therefore I shall trace him step by step, and leave nothing in him unanswered, that hath any appearance of reasoning. I shall be so far from endeavouring to contradict him in every thing, that I shall grant him all that possibly I can. The worst of Heretics speak many things that are true; and the more we can with justice allow them, the plainer we shall make their Errors appear; and the more difficult it will be for them to proceed, for this obligeth them either to speak to the pinch of the Question, or be silent. It can't be expected in the compass of a Letter, that I should enter into any nice disquisitions about the nature of Faith in general; or of the mysteries of the Gospel in particular; or of the use of Reason in Religion: For I am not now going to write a Book upon this subject; if I were it should not be in answer to him. I shall at present only show the weakness and ●olly of this Man's arguing; and lay open the Cheats and Fallacies, by which he is either deceived himself, or would impose upon others: That I may relieve the subject he treats of, from that darkness and obscurity in which he has involved it, either through ignorance or design. And first, there is great deceit in the very Title of the Book; CHRISTIANITY NOT MYSTERIOUS. For by these two words, as it appears by what follows, he would raise a Notion in the heads of People that Christianity, as it is now generally taught and received among us, is a Religion made up of dark enigmatical Allusions, and absurd irrational and unintelligible Notions; or else of the plainest things wrapped up in mysterious Rites and Ceremonies; and in short, that our most holy Faith, is no other than one great Riddle. Whereas Christianity is so far from being Mysterious, that it is the plainest Institution in the World. All the necessary Points of Faith and Practice are so clear and obvious to every capacity, that it is a Religion calculated for all sorts of People: And therefore it is said of the times of the Gospel▪ That God would put his Law into their inward parts, and write it in their Hearts, and they should all know him even from the least of them to the greatest. That which this Sophister would have inferred from hence is, That every thing God should reveal in the times of the Gospel, Men should have as full and comprehensive a knowledge of, as they have of any thing in nature. But 'tis evident this expression was designed to signify the plainess of the Gospel, as to all matters of obligation upon men's Consciences, in opposition to the obscurity of the Law; which was so perplexed with a multitude of Rites and Circumstances of Duty, that it was troublesome and tedious to learn and observe them all. And therefore it is said in the same Text, That they should not then teach every Man his Neighbour; saying, Know the Lord; because all the necessary knowledge of him and his Laws, was then to be rendered plain and easy. And accordingly this is now the glory of our Religion; and its plainess is one great argument of its Excellence and Divinity: not but that there are some things revealed in the Gospel, of which we are not now capable of any clear & distinct knowledge. So that there is a great deal of difference between these two expressions, Christianity not Mysterious, and, There are no Mysteries in Christianity▪ The first is very true, and the last is absolutely false. Or a Treatise showing, that there is nothing in the Gospel contrary to Reason. Who among us ever said there was? but if this had not been added, his Book would have been the shorter by Fourteen Pages; and were it not for this, and many other things in it, as little to the purpose, it had been only a stitched Pamphlet, and cried about with Almanacs. Nor above reason. This likewise is a dubious saying; for if it signifies that there are no expressions in the Gospel, that it is impossible for us to know the meaning of, than it is very true: For though some passages are difficult, yet every thing in the Gospel is intelligible; and were there any expression in it impossible to be understood, so much of it must have been writ to no purpose. But if by not being above reason, be meant that there is nothing spoke of in it, but what we have as complete and perfect a knowledge of, as we have of any object of our Senses, it is absolutely false; as I hope will sufficiently appear. And thus the whole Title Page is nothing else, but equivocation and sophism. However there is this to be said for it, that it suits the-Book very well; the main drift of which is, to s●t up Natural Religion in opposition to all Revelation; and these same Equivocations begun in the Title Page, run through every thing he says. His Introduction, wherein he pretends to state the Question, requires no Answer; for we grant that the notion of a Mystery is to be taken from the Holy Scriptures, and not from the opinion of any private Doctor, or Council, or any infallible Head, So there are Six Pages of Impertinence cut off already. I shall only take notice, how he sets out with a fling at the Divines, the Men he's all along so angry with, who gravely tell us That we must adore what we can't comprehend. Yes, they tell us we must adore God, and yet we cannot comprehend him. Let him prove we can if he's able, and without giving himself or us any farther trouble, we will put the whole Controversy to a short issue and let it lie upon this one point. And if he does not make out, that we have as full and comprehensive a knowledge of the Nature and Attributes of God, as we have of any Proposition in Euclid, then what will this Man deserve for that arrogant expression of his, That the Divine Being himself cannot P: 87: Last Edition. with more reason be accounted Mysterious, than the most contemptible of his Creatures. His business here was to have stated the Question, and let us have known what was the true Notion of a Mystery in Scripture. But instead of this he goes a great way about to tell us, that the true notion of a Mystery is to be taken no where but from thence, which no one denies. And therefore since he hath not done it, I must: That both He and I may speak to the purpose, and neither of us hereafter trouble the World with impertinence. Now the clearest way I can think of, for doing of this, is to instance in some particular Mystery of the Gospel, and in that one for all, to let us see what a Christian Mystery is in the sense of Scripture. I shall take the first I think of, that of the Resurrection of our Bodies. Saint Paul speaking of this says, 1 Cor: 15: 51, 52. Behold I show you a Mystery, we shall all be changed in the twinkling of an eye. Again, St. John speaking of the same 1 Joh: 3: 2. matter says, It doth not yet appear what we shall be, but we know that when he shall appear, we shall be like him. From whence we see a Christian Mystery is something which relates to another life, which it was impossible for us to know, without Divine Revelation; and now that it is revealed we know it but it in part, and cannot fully comprehend it. Or shorter. It is a Divine Truth revealed to us in part. As particularly this of our being changed at the last day into the likeness of Christ. It is a truth relating to another life, which could never have entered into our heads to think of, unless it had been revealed to us from Heaven; And now that it is revealed to us that we shall be like him, yet we know nothing of the manner of it wherein this likeness will consist. So that in a Christian Mystery, there is something we do understand, and something that we are wholly ignorant of; and it is called a Mystery in respect of both these. 1. It is called a Mystery in respect of what we do know of it; because it was a thing so hidden from us, that it was impossible to discover it by those powers of knowledge which we are now endued with. As we could never have known from reason, that good Christians should be changed into the likeness of Christ. Now it is this part of the Mystery which makes it an Article of Faith, and obligatory upon our Consciences to believe it. Because we understand well what it is for a Body to be raised, and altered for the better, and we know perfectly what it is for one thing to be changed into the likeness of another. 2. It is called a Mystery in respect of that part of it which as yet we have no notion of; because 'tis utterly impossible for us in this life to attain to any knowledge of it by reason assisted with the greatest degree of revelation that is afforded us. And thus it is impossible for us in this life to have any notion of the manner of that change▪ into the likeness of Christ, for 'tis expressly said, That it doth not yet appear what we shall be. From whence I shall infer only thus much at present, that what we do know, and what is yet concealed from us, are in gross called the same Mystery. And that as we are obliged to believe what is revealed of it, so likewise we are at the same time obliged from express words of Scripture to believe, that there is more in it than we are now able to comprehend. Nay that there is something in it which we have no notion or Idea at all of. This is the notion of a Mystery in the sense of Scripture; and therefore now we see the Question is not, Whether a man can believe what he knows nothing of, which no man in his wits ever yet affirmed; for there is a flat contradiction in the terms; and yet this is the main thing he labours to disprove, and by which he endeavours to confound his Readers. But the Question is, Whether there be not some things in the Gospel, concerning which we are bound to believe, that there is much more in them than we are now able to comprehend. If there be such things, as it appears in this instance of the Resurrection, than there is something in the Gospel that may properly be called a Mystery; and in so strict a sense, that nothing else can be called a Mystery with so great propriety of Speech, as will appear more fully hereafter. The case would have been the same, had I taken any other Mystery for an instance, either the eternal Generation of the Son; or the Procession of the Holy Ghost; or the Union of the Divine and Human Nature; or the Operations of the Holy Spirit in the act of Grace; or the Felicity and Joys of Heaven, etc. and if it be required I am ready to quit this, and take any other for an instance which he shall pitch upon. Now this is the thing that lay upon him to disprove; but he durst not go about proving or disproving any thing, till he has perplexed the matter in hand, and amused his Reader with fantastical terms and distinctions. If he had meant honestly, and thought himself able to go through with what he undertook, he would have spoke plain undisguised Reason and proceeded immediately to the proof of the Question. But instead of this he finds it necessary to spend above one third of his Book, in losing of it: wherefore I must take my leave of it for some time as he doth, to rescue the subject from obscurity, and force this Man to speak plainly and intelligibly. And first he tells us, That reason is P. 8, 9, 10 not the man that hath it; nor the things to be reasoned about; nor is it our appetites and desires; nor is it authority. What trifling this is? he should have added, that it was not the Head that forms the Thoughts; nor the Fingers that write them; nor is it the Brain itself; No! nor is my Reason, the reason of another Man. Our Readers are like to be much the wiser for this. After this he proceedeth to show P. 11. what it is, in his second Chapter; the whole substance of which in other words is only this; that it is not Simplex Apprehensio, nor Judicium, but that it is Discursus that is properly called Reason. Which last he will not express by Syllogism, the word for it that is commonly received: but he must call it, The application of intermediate Ideas to other Ideas that are distant from one P. 13. another, and lie too far asunder in the mind. And this he explains by the measuring of two Houses with a line; because you can't take one House in one hand, and the other in another, and so clap them together, to find out which is highest. What is this but making a Syllogism, by applying the Medius Terminus to the parts of the Question? and to what purpose is all this, unless he thinks that his Readers have not learned Logic? Yes, he hath a drift in it, which is very observable in all our modern Writers against revealed Religion; for unless he first lays down false rules of reasoning, the consequences he would make, will not appear to be true. Tho' he's in the right of it thus far, and it is no more than what is in every common Logic; Yet what follows is his own, and is both trifling and false. For first, his four ways of coming to the knowledge of any thing, are very ill put together, and the distinction frivolous. The Experience of the Senses, P. 18. the Experience of the Mind (i. e.) in usual speaking, Sense and Reason; Human and Divine Revelation. Now at first sight who does not see? that any revelation by God or Man, must enter into the mind by one of these two ways, either by our Senses or our Reason; so that there are but these two ways still. And then as to his making Authority P. 16. a means only of Information, and * To make what is to be said upon this head more intelligible, the Reader may take notice that by Evidence he means nothing more than the knowledge of a thing in the Mind. So that these two Expressions are the same. Evidence is the only ground of Persuasion, and, You can give your assent to nothing but what you know. All the difference is, that one is plain, and the other affectedly obscure. But I must use his own Cant, otherwise though I speak ever so much to the purpose, he will not think himself answered. Evidence the only ground of Persuasion; which is the fundamental Error of his Book, and indeed of all these modern Writers who make such a stir about Reason and Evidence; we shall see the falsity of it if we consider Authority in respect of the Person who is informed, and of him who gives the Information. 1. In respect of the Person who is informed, I grant it is a means of Information; for how comes any one to the knowledge of a thing he was wholly ignorant of before, and which he could not attain of himself? why? by an others revealing it to him. 2. When considered in the Informer, it is a ground of Persuasion; for why do I give my assent to any Proposition related to me from another? because of the veracity and ability of the Person that makes the Information. But this cunning man will ask, how can that which is inseparable from another be the ground of any assent in my mind? I Answer, It is the opinion that is in me of his ability and veracity is the cause of my assent. The ground of this opinion indeed is Evidence: But then this Evidence is a ground of persuasion in respect of the worth of the Person only; and that Worth or Authority of his, is the only ground of persuasion in respect of the substance of what he relates to me. From whence it is plain, that though we grant that Evidence in the Mind is a ground of persuasion, yet it is not the only ground. And therefore to make this very clear and undeniable, let us take an instance of two Propositions, wherein these two grounds may be considered separately. The three angles of a Triangle are equal to two right ones. In a Person who is able to demonstrate this Proposition, the only ground of his persuasion or assent, is the evidence of it in the Mind: For the reason why he gives his assent to it is; because he finds out the agreement of the extremes by intermediate Ideas, and thus as he speaks, the demonstration at last becomes self evident. But as to the substance of this Proposition When Christ appears we shall be like him. The authority of the Person relating it, is the only ground of persuasion. For as I should never have known this if it had not been revealed, and therefore in this respect Authority is a means of information; so I should never have believed it, if I had not known that this Revelation had come from God. And therefore Authority considered in the Revealer, is the only grounds of my assent to the substance of this Proposition. But to make this plainer, we must consider that all natural Truths which do not necessarily require Revelation, need no other ground of persuasion but Evidence; but those which do, have both these grounds of persuasion, Evidence and Authority; as will appear if we distinguish the three things in every relation. 1. The meaning of the words. 2. The relation itself, or the very act of revelation. 3. The * To prevent all ambiguity, I do not take the word Substance here strictly, as it is opposed to the modes and accidents of the thing, but as it includes them. substance of the thing intended by the Revelation. As to the meaning of the words, and truth of the revelation in any proposition, Evidence is the ground of persuasion: for why do I believe this Proposition? When Christ appears we shall be like him. Because I know the meaning of the words; and because there is an evidence in my Mind of its coming from God, from those proofs to my Senses and Reason; which argue the Divine Mission of the Person who relates it; and consequently the Divinity of the relation itself. But as to the Substance of that Proposition, Authority is the only ground of Persuasion, as indeed it is in all relations whatsoever. And therefore 'tis now plain how P. 43. & 128. Divine and Human Authority differ as well in degrees of Perspicuity as of Certitude. And why? because when a mere man relates any thing to me, though I allow the veracity of the man, yet it is impossible for him to give such proof to my Senses and my Reason of the reality and substance of what he relates, as God can; And therefore can't raise so great a degree of Evidence in my Mind. Though I suppose this man's relation to be true (so that this relation of his, and one of God's shall be upon equal Terms as to certitude, being both alike true) yet this assent of mine to what the man relates, is more precarious and worse founded than my faith of any divine proposition; because this is more clear and distinct, as having a degree of Evidence in the mind which the other wants. * That which may make this Paragraph obscure, is the mistaking Evidence in the Mind, or Knowledge, for those proofs which are only the cause of it. I shall make this plain by an instance. A man tells me that Rome is swallowed up by an Earthquake; I have such an opinion of the veracity of the Man, that I give my assent to it and believe it firmly. Let us suppose afterwards that God reveals this same to me. As yet there is the same degree of perspicuity allowing the ability and veracity of the man; for then both God and he tell truth in this. But if God confirm the relation by a Miracle, this shall raise an Evidence or degree of knowledge in my Mind, beyond any thing the man is able to effect; and consequently the revelation of the same thing from God makes it clearer, and gives it a greater degree of perspicuity than it had before. But it will be yet more clear, That Authority is a ground of Persuasion, if we consider, that all Evidence in the Mind proceeds from Evidence in the Thing. Now all Truths in themselves are equally evident; but in respect of us they are not so: for some we are capable of knowing distinctly, and some we are not, because they are not suited to our present capacities. In respect of those divine truths, or of that part of them which is suited to our present capacities, Evidence is the ground of persuasion; but in respect of that part of it, which is not suited to our Capacities, as we have seen, Authority is. And thus we see, how we may give our assent, to many propositions, for the substance of which we have no Evidence in the mind. Why then says he a man shall believe what he doth not know, and that is giving his assent to nothing. But this is a quibble and to remove it effectually, let us take up the same propositions again. The three angles of a Triangle are equal to two right ones. 'Tis plain a man who knows what a Triangle is, and what it is for one Angle to be equal to another, may give his assent to this proposition; though perhaps it may be utterly impossible ever to beat the demonstration into his head. And though he doth not comprehend it, yet he can't be said to be ignorant of it. And the only ground of his assent is, the Authority of some person who is able to demonstrate it. And thus it is with a divine proposition. When Christ appears we shall be like him. Any one who knows what it is for a body to be raised, and for one thing to be like another, may give his assent to this proposition; though it be impossible for him to know wherein this likeness will consist, or to demonstrate that it will certainly be so. And therefore the Authority of God is the only grounds of persuasion in this proposition; and no Evidence is necessary any farther than to understand the meaning of the words, and the truth of the revelation itself. So groundless is that main principle of his, that a man can give his assent to nothing but what he comprehends: whereas the contrary is as clear as the light, from what hath been said. But farther, from this supposition of his, that Authority is only a means of Information, and Evidence the only ground of Persuasion, these two absurdities will directly follow. 1. That a man can never be deceived in any thing; for if Evidence in the Mind be the only ground of Perwasion, a man can never give his assent but where there is this Evidence: for if there be but one only cause, the effect can never proceed but from that cause; and what is evident (ay: e:) what is truly known, can never deceive. He hath no way of evading this, but by saying that the cause of error is the giving assent where there is none, or not sufficient Evidence in the Mind; which destroys every thing he says upon this head, for this supposes that there may be some other cause of assent besides Evidence. But if we suppose Evidence to be the only cause of assent, than it must vary in degrees together with its cause; so that a clear Evidence shall have a firm assent, and the least degree of Evidence shall have but the least degree of assent; so that still a man can never be deceived in any thing, or in any degree. And for him to say that we may think we have this Evidence when we have it not, is still supposing that there is some other ground of assent. Nay worse, 'tis supposing that a thing may be Evident to us, and not Evident at the same time. 2. It will follow that no Person either God or Man, can be believed on their word. For what they relate is evident to the Mind, or it is not; If it be, than they give their assent to that Evidence, and not to the Person who relates it. If it be not evident (ay: e:) according to him, if he doth not know it perfectly, he must utterly reject it. And thus in a few words he destroys all Faith, both Human and Divine. For thus he proceeds; a man can believe nothing but what he knows; and he knows nothing but what he comprehends; and then he is said to comprehend a thing when he hath a clear and distinct Idea of it, (ay: e:) when it is as clear as a Mathematical Demonstration; or as evident as what he sees with his Eyes, for you know seeing's believing all the World over. Having thus made it plain that Evidence is not the only ground of Persuasion, I come now to consider his clear and distinct Ideas which he lays down as the ground of this Evidence. This opinion carries a face of fairness and probability, and insinuates itself by the common inclinations of men, who are naturally averse to all restraint in thinking as well as acting, and are as uneasy at any fetters upon their Mind as upon their Body. They would not willingly be obliged to give their assent to any thing but what they have clear & distinct Ideas of; and if it be not thus in the Christian Religion, even well meaning people are apt to wish it were so. Now because I design this Letter in answer not only to this Book, but to all the opposers of Revelation and Mysteries, upon the like principles of setting up for Reason and Evidence, and clear and distinct notions of every thing they give their assent to, I shall be very particular in the consideration of this point. And I hope to make out plainly to them, the deep deceit that lies at the bottom of all this; and to convince them that God, by requiring their assent to his Revelations, doth as little violence to their mind as to their body; and that he leaves their Reason as full a scope, and as great a liberty in matters of Religion as in any thing else. So that they will find us as great Sticklers for clear Ideas, strict Reason, and Evidence as they can be for their hearts. These men speak much truth, but make false inferences, never considering the difference between these two propositions, but confounding them in all their discourses. Clear and distinct Ideas are the foundation of all our knowledge and assent, which considered in a right sense is undoubtedly true. But for that other which they make a consequence of it, it is absolutely false, viz. That we can believe nothing but what we have a clear and distinct Idea of. For the clear conceptions we have of some things, give us a confused and imperfect knowledge of others; and it is upon the account of those things whereof we have clear and distinct Ideas, that we give a firm assent to the existence of things whereof we have no Idea at all. So that these two sayings widely differ; as much as truth from falsehood. I can give no assent without clear and distinct Ideas. And I must have a clear and distinct Idea of every thing I give my assent to. Now because this is the fundamental error of all our acquaint Reasoners against Revelation, and the fallacy w●●●●by they impose upon others, I shall express myself as distinctly and p●●●nly in this matter as I can. But by the way we must observe th●● since it appears undeniably from w●●● hath been said, that Evidence is ●o●●●e only ground of Persuasion, it is a direct and immediate consequence from thence; that there is no necessity of having a clear and distinct Idea of what I give my assent to. Not but that I allow there is a necessity of clear and distinct Ideas of some things, to make us give our assent to others; And therefore though Authority be a ground of Persuasion, yet what this man would insinuate doth not follow, viz: That therefore all its Relations, or any of them are to be received without Examen. For all the Revelations of God admit of the strictest enquiry, and severest search of our reason: and it is this that enables us to distinguish them from the wild extravagancies of Enthusiasts, and the delusions of the Devil. It is by the help of this that I now show the difference between his fallacies and the truth of God. And in order to set them both in a clear light, I shall six the signification of this most ambiguous word, which he hath compelled me to make so much use of, for otherwise we shall but grope for truth in the dark. What is meant by an Adequate Idea is sure and fixed (ay: e:) a full and comprehensive knowledge of any thing, so as to know all that is knowable in it. But how far short, what men call a clear and distinct Idea comes of that adequate conception of a thing, is impossible to determine, because our knowledge of things is varied almost in infinite degrees; insomuch that perhaps we have not Ideas of any two things in nature, that are equally clear and distinct. And therefore to cut of all Metaphysical niceties, and infist upon nothing but genuine Reason; by a clear and distinct Idea, as it relates to this controversy is signified, as clear and distinct a conception as we ordinarily have of the things of this World. For these are the two main things he contends for in his whole Book. 1. That we have as clear and distinct Ideas of all things revealed to us in the Gospel, as we have of the ordinary Phaenomena of Nature. And 2. That we are obliged to give our assent to them no farther than we have clear and distinct Ideas of them. In direct opposition to which, I shall lay down these two propositions. 1. That we are so far from having clear and distinct Ideas of those things of another World which are revealed to us, that we have no proper or immediate Idea at all of them. And 2. That though we have no proper or immediate Idea of those things, yet we are bound to believe them; and that our assent to them, according to his own principle, is founded upon clear and distinct Ideas. 1. As to the first by a proper and immediate Idea I mean, a conception or notion of the thing as it is in itself, By a mediate or improper Idea I mean, a notion we form of any thing in our Minds by Analogy or * Not that worldly Objects can have any real likeness or resemblance of the things revealed, but they are such as God hath made choice of for that purpose; and therefore we may make this inference from his Wisdom, that they bear the greatest analogy with them, of any things that fall within the compass of our knowledge now. Similitude. Whether this distinction hath been made use of or no I know not; but sure I am 'tis a very necessary one, and of excellent use to set the bounds and measures of our knowledge, and to lay open the true nature of our Christian Faith: that we may clearly apprehend where Knowledge ends, and Faith proceeds alone. And I am persuaded a due observation of this distinction, would effectually put an end to all this controversy about mysteries. Now what I say is this, that we have no proper Ideas of the things of another World, but frame to ourselves conceptions of them, from those things in this World whereof we have clear and distinct Ideas. And to make this appear, let us consider that there are but two ways of Gods revealing any thing to us; either by giving us new faculties, or by adapting his Revelations to those we have, which are our Senses and our Reason. He grants that it is not by giving us any new faculties; and therefore since this is done by adapting himself to those faculties we already have, then 'tis plain that he must make use of such words and notions as fall within their proper sphere. Now that we can have no proper or immediate Idea from Sense or Reason, of the real nature of any thing relating to another life as it is in itself; or indeed any other notion of them than that of Being in general, will best appear by instancing in the particulars. I shall begin with God himself and his Attributes, that incomprehensible Being which this bold man affirms, to have nothing more mysterious in it than a stock or a stone. 1. And first our imagination can frame no likeness or resemblance of God, as it can do of material and sensible Objects; and therefore the Israelites were forbid to represent him by any figure or resemblance, because they saw no similitude. And to the same purpose are many expressions in the Scriptures as Is●i. 40. 18. To whom then will ye liken God? or what likeness will ye compare unto him? So that I hope I have gained thus much, that God is more mysterious than a stock or a stone, because we can frame some imagination of these, but none at all of him. 2. But 2dly, as we can form no similitude from the Senses, so neither hath the Reason any the least glimpse of his real Nature as he is in himself, for the only way we have of forming an Idea of him is either negatively, by removing from him all the Imperfections of the Creatures, or by enlarging those excellencies we find in these, and attributing them to God. So that he is now incomprehensible to us, not only as we have no clear and distinct knowledge of him, but as we have no proper Idea at all of his real nature. And therefore when he made a particular Revelation of himself it was only by the name I AM, which denoted nothing more of him than barely his Existence; and plainly intimated that it was impossible for them to conceive any thing farther of him. For this reason 'tis said that hereafter we shall see him as he is, because we have no knowledge of him now, but by mediation of those Ideas we have of the things of this World. And to make this farther appear let us consider him in those Attributes of his, whereof we are thought to have the most clear and distinct Ideas. And 1. 'Tis revealed to us that God is a Spirit, by which we really understand nothing more, than that he is a Being that is not matter; which is so far from a proper immediate Idea, that it is not a positive one; for all the notion we have of a Spirit is that it thinks, and that it moves. As to the first of these, the only reason why we attribute it to a Spirit, is because we can demonstrate that mere matter cannot think; And therefore we conclude it must be something else that can, though we have no notion at all of what it is. Besides we can't conceive what thinking is in a pure Spirit; we know nothing of the true manner of that operation in them, which is answerable to knowledge in us▪ We can conceive thinking now, only as it is performed by help of material Organs, and more immediately by the Fibres of the Brain. But when we set ourselves to consider it abstractedly from these, we have no Idea at all of it. So that we now form as gross a notion of thinking in a pure Spirit, as we do of its motion, when we walk by dragging one Leg after another. And then as to its motion, when we say a Spirit moves, we don't make this inference from any knowledge we have of the true nature of it, but because we can prove that matter can't move itself, and thus by denying it to matter, we really do nothing more than give it to something else; but what that something is we know not. For we know not how it moves, or how it communicates this motion to matter. Nor indeed can we distinguish Thought and Motion in a Spirit; and as far as we may make a conjecture of what we have no Idea of, in all likelihood they are the same. And therefore I can't but wonder that any one Lock of H. U. B. 2. C. 23. should affirm, that we have as clear and distinct an Idea of Spirit as of Body. That we have as good proof for its existence, as we have for that of matter I grant; but to say our Ideas of their Modes and Properties are equally clear and distinct, appears to be a very groundless assertion. 2. As for Infinity another Attribute of God, the only way we are said to form a notion of this, is by continued accumulation, and then a confused Idea of what remains when we are weary of this. But 'tis plain there is not one addition we make but ipso facto we destroy its being; the very thought of addition, does of all things in the World carry the Mind farthest from the real nature of it. And how little this will help us to any immediate positive Idea of it is plain, because that when we have imagined all the Atoms that go to the composition of the Universe, told as many times over as we can heap up numbers for it, we are as far from any true Idea of Infinity, as when we began to reckon Two. Had I said One, we should in all likelihood have been nearer it; as an instant of time hath been found a better representation of Eternity, than the successions of numberless. Ages. And therefore it were more conducive Lock of H. U. to true knowledge, to own our ignorance, and say it is a perfection which we know nothing of, but we form a gross, a scanty notion of it by perpetual addition to the widest space, or greatest number, or longest duration we can think of. 3. As to his Omnipresence we have no Idea at all of it, for it is utterly impossible for us to conceive, how the same thing should be here, and there, and every where in the same instant: and therefore we frame to ourselves a gross notion of it by that of continued extension; though at the same time we are sure this must be utterly inconsistent with the real Nature of God. 4. And as for the Prescience of God, we are so far from having any notion of it, that it can't enter into our heads to think how God should actually see a thing that hath no being: for God sees things to come, as we see what is now. So that we can no more conceive it, than we can conceive how a thing may be, and not be at the same time; and therefore we frame to ourselves the best Idea we can of it (i. e.) from those previous Ideas of things in our Mind; which doth not at all represent this Attribute of Prescience as it is in God, who sees them actually and ex parte rei. Nor can we conceive how this Prescience of his is reconcileable with the contingency of things, though we are sure it is so, from those Prophecies of very minute circumstances, many hundreds of years before they came to pass. I might thus run through all the Attributes of God, and show in every one of them, how we make to ourselves some representations of them, by compounding and enlarging those Ideas we have either of sensible Objects, or of the operations of our own Minds. And thus we represent the Wisdom, and Power, and Justice, and Holiness, and Mercy, etc. of God, from the scanty notions we have of these things in ourselves, though they exhibit to us no more of the real nature of these things as they are in God, than continued extension doth of his Omnipresence; or a great number doth of his Infinity; or many ages of his Eternity. So that in all our thoughts of that divine Being we don't proceed thus. The nature of God is such, therefore these things follow. But these things are the greatest perfections we are able to conceive, and therefore by help of these we form the best and most honourable Idea of God, that is possible for us in this condition of infirmity and blindness that we are now in. Not but that after we have framed the biggest Idea of God our Minds are capable of, by the greatest enlargement of these perfections, after all, 'tis as gross a representation of him as Darkness is of Light: and expresseth nothing of the real nature of that incomprehensible Being to us, nor do they give us the least glimpse of him as he is in himself. 2. But 2dly, As we can have no such proper and immediate Idea of God himself, so neither have we such Ideas of any thing relating to another World. And therefore it is that the Glory of Heaven, is revealed to us under the notion of Light; the greatness and splendour of that place, by that of a Kingdom; and the joys of Heaven by sensual pleasures, such as Eating and Drinking; the operation of Grace, by the nourishment of our Bodies, etc. and when God himself is spoke of, 'tis always by analogy with the Members of a Human Body, and the operations of our Minds. Thus he is mentioned as having Hands and Feet, as Seeing, and Hearing, and as being affected with all the passions of a Human Soul; because he hath no other way to speak of himself to us now, since we have neither Words nor Ideas, to think or speak of him after any other manner; or indeed of any other Objects of another World. And therefore it is that the Spirit of God in all his Revelations, hath made use, not only of the Words and Phrases commonly received and understood; but likewise of those common notions in the minds of Men, of things in this World, to represent Truths, which are in respect of us now unconceivable; and for which there are as yet no capacities in our nature. So that in truth all the Ideas we at present have of the things of another World, are no other than a sort of Types and Figures of things, the real nature of which is totally obscured from us. And this is the literal meaning of 1. Cor. 13. 12. those words of St. Paul, That now we see through a Glass darkly, (i. e.) by analogy only with the things of this World. But then Face to Face (i. e.) we shall have as immediate a view of those heavenly Objects, as we have now of these things which only represent them to us. So that when we are said to have these divine Truths revealed to us in part, the meaning is not, that any real part of the thing as it is in itself is exhibited to our view, and the rest obscured; or that we have any indistinct view of the thing itself, as we see an Object at a great distance. But the meaning is, that the whole is revealed to us under the resemblance of some things in this World, whereof we have clear and distinct▪ Ideas. And thus it is plain that though we may be said to have Ideas of God and Divine things, yet they are not immediate or proper ones, but a sort of composition we make up from our Ideas of Worldly Objects; which at the utmost amounts to no more than a Type or Figure, by which something in another World is signified, of which we have no more notion than a Blindman hath of Light. And now that I am fallen into this Metaphor, which seems well to explain the nature of the thing, let us pursue it a little; and suppose, that to a Man who had never seen or heard any thing of it, it were to be revealed that there was such a thing as Light. This man as yet hath neither a name nor a notion for it, nor any capacity of conceiving what it is in itself. 'Tis plain therefore God would not reveal this to him by the name of Light, a word wholly unknown to him; nor by stamping on his Mind any immediate Idea of the thing itself: for than it were utterly impossible for him to communicate this Revelation to others as blind as himself; for nothing but the same Almighty impression could do that. So that this Revelation must be made by Words and Notions which are already in him. And accordingly when he is told, that it is a thing which can diffuse itself in an instant many thousands of miles round; and enable him to know in a moment what order all things lay at a great distance from him, and what proportion they bore one to another; nay that it could make him know where the Heavens lay; and by the help of this he should there discern at once, a vast and almost infinite number of very pleasant Bodies; and in short that without the help of his Stick or his Hand he should know every thing that lay before him. After all, 'tis plain this Man would form to himself an Idea of Light from his Touch, he would think it very like feeling, and perhaps call it by that name; because this was the best way he had of distinguishing one thing from another: and therefore would conclude that those Bodies he heard of, must needs be wondrous soft and smooth. Just thus do we conceive the things of another World, so that we may rack our invention, and turn and wind all those Ideas we have into ten Thousand different shapes, and yet never make up any likeness or similitude, of the real Nature of those Objects of another World. And now I hope, he will grant it a thing possible for God to make such a Revelation as this to a Blind man. And yet by this concession he destroys his whole Book. For upon his Principles it were a thing utterly impossible for any man that was born Blind, to believe there is such a thing as Light, upon the testimony either of God or Man, for without the use of one of his Eyes at least, he's so far from having any clear and distinct Idea of it, that he could have no Idea at all of it as it is in itself; and therefore must never believe that there is such a thing. Now it were a very pretty way of revealing the nature of Light to this Man, by opening of his Eyes. Then I must confess Light would be no longer a Mystery to him. And when this Man makes us understand (as he hath undertaken) the nature of God, and the things of another World, as perfectly as that man doth the nature of Light when his Eyes are opened, I will yield. But till then, I must freely own ours to be the case of that Blind man, in respect of all the Mysteries of our Religion: and before this wonderful Book of his comes out, I am very positive that nothing less than the Almighty Power of God is able to perform what he promises, since it requires the alteration of our whole Nature, and the enlargement of all our Faculties. But perhaps he will object here, If it be a thing thus impossible for us to have any proper Ideas of these things of another World, what necessity was there for any revelation at all of them? would not the immediate Objects of Sense and Reason have done as well, without farther reference to any thing beyond them? I answer, no. For the discovery of the things of another World even thus far, is absolutely necessary to make men good and virtuous. Tho' we had ever so great a conviction of the innate excellency of Virtue itself, yet this would bind us but like a Spider's Webb. We might perhaps have admired it for its delicate and excellent contexture, but it would have been of no strength, to restrain the unruly inclinations of our Nature. The excellencies of Virtue, without these Revelations, had been a sort of Bonds and Fetters which would have sat as lose upon us as the Air; they would have served at best only to have raised our admiration, but never to have influenced our practice. And therefore since they were thus necessary, and that we are not capable of any knowledge of them by direct and immediate intuition, there was no other way of revealing them to us, but by analogy with the things of this World. And this Imperfect way of Revelation is sufficient to answer all the ends of God, since it is abundantly enough to all the purposes of Virtue and Holiness: as the motions of the heavenly Bodies represented in a Sphere, is sufficient to answer all the ends of human life, though the Hypothesis be all very different from it, and represents nothing less to us, than the reality of the thing. It being, as I hope by this time very plain, that we have no such proper or immediate Ideas, either of God or the things of another World, as of the things in this; we may from hence see the specious trifling of those abstracted Metaphysical Brains, who bend their endeavours to bring down these hidden things to the level of our present capacities of knowledge: whereas the finding out a way of commerce with the Moon, or how to make a visit to the sixth Stars, is a grave and serious thought to it. The other Proposition I laid down in direct opposition to him was, 2. That though we have no proper or immediate Ideas of these things, yet that we are bound to believe them. And, That our belief of them is founded upon clear and distinct Ideas. Not of themselves, but of those things by which they are represented to us, and because of those proofs we have from thence of their existence to our Senses and our Reason. And here we are to observe what I made out before, viz. That in every Mystery there are two things to be considered. 1. Something that we do comprehend fully, and 2dly Something that we have no notion at all of. As to this latter part of it, it is wholly exempted from the disquisition of Reason, and Faith alone can reach it, for our Reason fails us where we have no Ideas. So that in respect of this part of the Mystery, these and such like expressions of his are very true, viz. That the intermediate Idea can be no P. 14. proof, where the agreement with both Ideas of the question is not evident. And again. That when we have no Notions or Ideas of a thing we cannot Reason about it at all. For, as I have shown, we have no proper immediate Ideas of the things revealed to us in the Gospel; and therefore we can't speak one word of sense about the real nature of them, as they are in themselves. All beyond this World, as yet, is but a dark and empty Void to us; and we may send out our Reason to range it backward and forward incestantly, till Soul and Body part, and never discover the least glimpse of light, into the true nature of any thing beyond this scanty Sphere of ours. We have no intermediate Ideas to make Inferences concerning them, and if we had, there could be no application of them to things whereof we have no notion. So that thus far every thing of another World is a mystery to us, and a new born Infant knows as much of them, bating their existence only, as the learnedst man in the world. But as to that other part of them which is knowable by us (i. e.) as far as we are able to conceive these divine things, by analogy with the things of this World, either under the similitude of sensible Objects, or the Operations of our own Mind, they fall entirely under the consideration of our Reason. Thus far we have as clear and distinct Ideas of them, as we have of other ordinary worldly Objects. And in respect of this part of our Christian Mysteries, all these sayings of his are very true, viz. That nothing revealed is more exempted from the disquisitions of Reason, than the ordinary Pha●nomena of Nature. And That nothing in the Gospel is contrary to Reason, or above it. For all the Revelations of God are in a way suitable to those powers of knowledge we have, and he requires us to believe nothing, but what is just and reasonable. For as he says, To act tyrannically does only become the Devil. In respect of this part of the Mystery, all that he contends for holds true. We must have clear and distinct Ideas of the things; we must have intermediate Ideas to find out the agreement between the Extremes. What need I instance in any more particulars? I allow him thus far, all the Clearness, Perspicuity, Evidence and Reason any man can wish for. And all the request I would make to these Men of Reason is, That they would cease to ask for a rational account, of what neither they nor we can have any notion of; and that as to every thing else in Religion, they would be as exact, and critical, and severe in their Reasonings as possible they can. And unless they find more reason to believe the truth of those things revealed in the Gospel, than it is possible for them to have for what any Man says, than I will allow them to be the only Men of Sense, and that we are only soft and credulous fools. 'Tis every man's native Right and Privilege to judge and examine every thing, before he gives his assent to it; and 'tis this alone which distinguisheth our Christian Faith from blind Credulity, because it admits of such enquiry. For though we have no notion of the things themselves, yet we are sufficiently assured of the truth of them, from those things we fully understand: And the constant method of arguing in divine things is this; from the things whereof we have clear and distinct Ideas, we infer the existence of those things whereof we have no Idea at all. As for instance in this Proposition. This Corruptible shall put on Incorruption. I have a clear and distinct Idea of what it is for a Body to corrupt and rot; and likewise I know what an athletic habit of body is, and for a person to have a firm constitution, and to remain always in the utmost beauty and vigour of a blooming Youth, which is the best Idea of Incorruption that I can frame to myself now. And the reason I give my assent to this Proposition, is not because I have any, the least notion of that immutable state of perfection which a Body shall be raised to, and which is here represented under the notion of Incorruption. But because I have sufficient proof for the truth of it, in this Type or Figure by which it is represented to me, that it is possible for me to have, (i. e.) the concurring testimonies of Prophecies, Miracles, and the Excellency of that Doctrine which they preached, who were made the instruments of revealing this to me. And thus likewise, though we have no Idea of God as he is in himself, yet we infer his Existence from those clear and distinct Ideas we have of the things of Nature; which is the very meaning of the Apostle when he says, All that was to be known of God was manifested in them, for the invisible Rom. 1. 19 things of him from the creation of the World are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made. It was for want of some Idea of him as he is, that made the Heathen World run into Idolatry, and represent him under the similitude of some of the meanest of his Creatures. And now by Revelation, what we come to know more of him is, that we can have no Idea at all of him as he is in himself: and as it follows it is this will one day render all Infidels without excuse, because though they had no clear and distinct Ideas of the things of another World, yet God did not leave them without sufficient proof of their existence; nay greater than it was possible for them to have for any thing else. From whence we see, that there is an essential difference between Human and Divine Faith, because the proof on which one is grounded is fallible, and that of the other infallible; and consequently a greater degree of knowledge in the one than in the other. This is one reason of using these two words Faith and Knowledge so promiscuously in some places of the New Testament, because our belief of a mere man, is but a precarious assent, but the Christian Faith may be called Knowledge in a more peculiar sense, because we are obliged to believe nothing, but what we have infallible prooffor. Which again shows the falsity of that saying of his, which he lays such a stress upon. That Divine and Human Revelations do not differ in degrees o● perspicuity. For where there is a greater degree of Knowledge, there is a greater degree of Perspecuity, but in the Christian Faith there is a greater degree of Knowledge, Ergò. And now we see plainly the error of those men, who out of a mistaken zeal for the Mysteries of Christianity, have set themselves to defend them, by bringing them down to the level of a man: and endeavour by thin spun notions, to solve the greatest difficulties in them upon the Principles of Reason. These are very rash and inconsiderate attempts; and when all is done, their failing in what they aim at, is the best defence of our Christian Mysteries. If we had not a determinate sense for the words wherein they are revealed, they could be no Articles of Faith, And if they could be fully solved and explained, they would cease to be Mysteries. This hath given the Enemies of our Religion a great advantage, for when they find they are not to be throughly accounted for (as indeed they are not) upon the strength of Reason, together with the assistance of that degree of Revelation we now have, they utterly reject them, as inconsistent with those powers of knowledge which God hath given us. Never distinguishing between that part of a Mystery, which we understand clearly and distinctly, and will admit of the strictest enquiry of the mor●sest Reasoner; and the substance of the thing signified by it, whereof we have no Idea at all, and therefore nothing can be more absurd than to raise any Disputes about it. It would certainly be very pleasant, to hear two such quicksighted blind men as I spoke of, dispute warmly concerning the nature of Light, and how many seeming contradictions they would start concerning it, as, How any thing could be in every point of such a vast space in the same instant? How it was possible for them to touch so many millions of Objects at once? Since this was their chief way of distinguishing one thing from another, etc. and fall out about these imaginary difficulties irreconcilably. Whereas upon supposition, that it was revealed to them that there was such a thing; which should make them very happy some time or other, when God should open their eyes: Their business was not to consider, whether they were able clearly and distinctly to comprehend the nature of this thing; but whether it were really revealed to them, under the notion of such things whereof they had clear and Distinct Ideas. If it were divinely revealed, and they had sufficient testimonies for the reality and existence of it, than they would have sufficient reason to believe it, without any clear and distinct Idea of the thing itself. So that we take a wrong method, against all the Opposers of Revelation and Mysteries, when we go about to explain to them what is really inexplicable by us now; many such profane and impious Books as these have been the consequence of it. We are neither able to apprehend any thing of these Mysteries, nor if we knew them, could we explain them so as to make other people understand us. 'Tis the greatest Folly, because it is impossible; and the greatest Boldness, because it is searching into what is hidden from us; and all these elaborate Intricacies are but mischievous trifling. And when Men talk so much, o● what they have no Idea of, it must always end in darkness and confusion. That part of a Christian Mystery which is intelligible and plain, was ever so; and that part which is mysterious, notwithstanding all their vain endeavours, will ever be so till we co●● to another World. Therefore our way to deal with these men is, to fix the right sense and meaning of those Propositions, wherein the Mysteries of the Gospel are revealed to us; and then to insist upon the Proofs we have for the truth of the Revelation, and show that they are such as ought to convince any reasonable unprejudiced man; insomuch that if they do not give their assent to them, they shall be without excuse when they come to be tried for their Infidelity. Thus we should turn the course of our Thoughts into a right Channel, and confound all these Enemies of our excellent Religion. For by freely owning (as becomes us) that we have no notion at all of these mysterious things as they are in themselves, we cut off a multitude of frivolous and impertinent Objections. And show these men, that our Christian Faith however is no lazy credulity, or blind implicit assent, since it is built upon a better foundation, than is possible for any man to lay, without the concurrence of the Almighty Power of God: insomuch that we are ready to join issue with them, upon the Principles of Reason, in every point of our Christian Faith, as far as the things revealed fall within the compass of it. And therefore were I to give a reason of my belief of the TRINITY, laying aside all affectation of hard words, and abstruse Metaphysical Notions, I would do it thus. I am fully persuaded of the necessity of Revelation in general, in order to all the purposes of Virtue and Piety in this life; and I am convinced that those Revelations of the things of another World, which are made in the Gospel, have better proofs of their Divinity than any other whatsoever. They have such testimonies of their coming from God, from Prophecies, and Miracles, and the agreeableness of the Doctrines therein contained, to our common Notions, that if I use my Reason with the same impartiality in these that I do in other things, I must give my assent to them. In those writings I find this Proposition, There are Three that bear Record in 1 Joh. 57 Heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost, and these Three are one. * Tho' we grant this Text was not quoted by the Nicene Council against the Arrians, and is not found in many ancient Copies. Nay though we should grant that it was not originally in the Epistle of St. John, it is however a good Argument for the Doctrine of the Trinity. For If it was a Marginal Note, and so crept into the Text, this however shows it to have been the Opinion of the most Ancient and Primitive Christians, who put this Comment to the Text. If they say this was put in by the Orthodox, it was done in opposition to Heretics, and this was a sufficient evidence of their firm belief of the Doctrine of the Trinity then. But if this Text was expunged by the Arrians, who, as St. Ambrose observes of them, were remarkable for this sort of fraudulent dealing with the Scriptures, than there was a great deal of reason for restoring of it. Tho' it be not in some Copies, yet it is in others, and those very ancient And that which may give us a strong presumption that it is genuine, is that it was quoted by St. Cyprian a considerable time before the Nicene Council: and before the Arrian Heresy ran so high, or that it was so much for the interest of any party either to insert, or expunge it. But however this be, we are sure the Scriptures with it are all of a piece, and very consistent with themselves. For the substance of this Text is plainly expressed in other places, which they don't deny to be genuine. And we make no question but if it were in the power of our modern Heretics of the same rank, these too would be left out of all those Copies, which should be transmitted to posterity. From whence, and from many other passages in the Scriptures, I find that there is a Distinction made in the Godhead, under these three names of Father, Son, and Holy-Ghost, which the Church hath expressed, altogether by the word Trinity, and singly by the word Person. And I think these terms proper enough, to express all that we know of this Mystery. Now I find no account of the Manner and Nature of this Distinction in the holy Scriptures, any otherwise than that the Son was begotten, and that the Holy Ghost comes from the Father and the Son. I conclude there is something more than a mere Nominal Distinction, because we are said to be Baptised, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy-Ghost. Which must needs import something more than if that Commission had run thus. Go Baptise all Nations in the name of Jehovah, and of Elohim, and of Adonai. And if there were not something more intended, than barely that they should do it in the name of God, this were a needless tautology. Again, I conclude that they are not three distinct different Spirits, for then there must be three Gods, contrary to Reason and Scripture. From all which I infer, there is in the Godhead something more than a mere nominal Distinction, and something less than that of three different Spirits. And because I find each Person separately as well as jointly mentioned as God, and Divine Worship allowed and paid to them. Therefore as that excellent Creed expresseth it, I worship the Trinity in Unity, Athe. and Unity in Trinity; neither confounding the Persons, nor dividing the Substance, Now at the same time I make this profession of my Faith, I allow I have not the least knowledge how strict this Union is, nor how great the Distinction. It is as much beyond my Reason, as the Glory of God is beyond my Sight; and any man who strives to conceive it himself, or takes pains to explain it to others, is guilty of such a folly, that I can't think of any action in nature extravagant enough to match it. If we saw a Man stretching up his hand with a great deal of Vehemence to pull down a Star, we should certainly conclude him distracted; because 'tis utterly impossible for him to reach it, or grasp it if he could. 'Tis the very case of those men, who go about to account for the manner of that Unity, and Distinction for which they have neither Words nor Ideas. And therefore I say it again, in opposition to this Insolent Man, that I thus adore what I cannot comprehend. This is one of those Mysteries revealed in the Gospel, and it is never the less a Mystery for any thing he hath yet said, or ever will say; for the Union is inexplicable, and will be so to the end of the World. However my assent to this is not precarious and implicit▪ or any easy blind Credulity; but is ●ounded upon clear and distinct Ideas. For there are three things to be done by every reasonable thinking man, concerning any Proposition wherein a Mystery is revealed. 1. To be sure that he understand well the meaning of the Words. 2. That he discern no Contradiction in them. 3. That he hath sufficient evidence of the Revelations coming from God. 1. As to the first of these, in respect of the Mystery I am now upon, I understand very well the meaning of the Words wherein it is revealed; and they themselves who oppose this Doctrine understand them as well as I; for if they did not know what was meant by the Words, they would never set themselves to argue against it; for there is no other way of confuting Nonsense, but saying it is such. So that thus far, if it prove to be true, these Propositions wherein the Trinity is revealed, will hold good against them at the day of Judgement, and render them without Excuse. 2. As to the second thing, I see no Contradiction in it; and if there were, I would utterly reject it. For to say that Three are One, is so far from being a contradiction, that there is nothing more common in ordinary discourse, than for any one to say, that Three or any other greater number of things, are but one; and if every man who spoke such seeming contradictions, were catched up immediately, and forced to explain himself upon all such occasions, it would make conversation very troublesome. As if one should say, that there are three distinct things in a Man, a Body, the Animal Spirits, and an Immaterial Substance, and yet these three are but one; and he should be forced to explain himself and say, that his meaning is not, that three men are one man, or that one man is three men. They who cry there is a Contradiction in this Mystery, seem to me neither to know what a Contradiction is, nor what is the Christian Faith concerning the Trinity. For we don't believe that the Divinity is One & Three in the same sense; then indeed it would be a contradiction. But we affirm the quite contrary, viz. that the Godhead is One & Three in different respects. So that all this noise of Contradiction vanishes, and the whole force of the Objection amounts to no more than this, viz. That we are not able to conceive, in what respect he is one, and in what respect he is three; and therefore because we have no clear and distinct Idea of this, we must utterly reject it. I grant we are not able to account for this, and it is this that makes it a Mystery, and if I could clearly solve the manner of this Union and Distinction it would ●●a●e to be such. Thus much of it is purely the Object of my Faith, and the Authority of God is the only ground of my assent to this part of it. But then 3. I have sufficient proof of this Revelation's coming from God. I have for This, all the proof that I have for the Truth of the Scriptures, and the Divine Mission of the Persons who wrote them; so that I must either reject all revealed Religion, or allow This to be an Article of my Faith. But perhaps this man will Object, that though he should grant it to be an Article of Faith, yet it is so no farther than we can comprehend it. But I have already made it out at the beginning, that both what we do, and what we cannot know are both in gross called the same Mystery; and that my assent to what I do not apprehend, is founded upon the Authority of God, but my assent to what I do apprehend is founded upon Evidence: The first assent is properly Faith, the last is Knowledge. And so likewise if I were to give an account of my belief of the DIVINITY OF THE SON, it should be thus. I am convinced by the Completion of Prophecies, the Miracles he wrought, and the agreablness of his Doctrine to the natural sentiments of our Minds, that whatever Jesus Christ was, He came from God. I find him in many places, assuming to himself the Name, and Titles, and Worship of God. In discoursing with the Jews he useth this form of Speech, Before Abraham was I AM, on purpose to signify to them, that he was that very Divine Being which was revealed to Moses under that Name. And sometime after he tells them, that as he was the Son of God, so He and the Father were one. That the Jews understood him in this sense I am sure, because they took up Stones at each of these sayings, to stone him as a Blasphemer, because he made himself equal with God. If these expressions were not to be understood in the sense they took them, he would certainly have undeceived them, and have made it known, that he was not God in the sense they understood him; but that he was only a God by Deputation, according to the wild notion of the Socinians. But he spoken the Truth, and the Jews understood him right, That he was eternal God equal with the Father, the very same God who was signified by that sacred name I AM. And he hath never undeceived either them or us to this day; but instead thereof hath used many expressions to countenance and encourage this notion of him; and therefore if I act like a reasonable man, I am under a necessity either of giving my assent to this▪ or of utterly rejecting him as an Impostor. Now had he been and Impostor, God who showed himself always very jealous of his Honour, would never have confirmed this Doctrine of his with such repeated Testimonies. If we suppose him to be only a Messenger come from God, and a mere Man who spoke only by his Spirit and Commission, he would never have used such expressions as must naturally be misunderstood, and lead thousands into the gross sin of Idolatry, which of all others is the most detestable to God. Moses was never suffered to enter into the Land of Canaan, for a much less suspicious expression, and in the heat of passion too Must we bring water out of the Rock? which was a vainglorious insinuation, that they wrought that Miracle by their own immediate power, and proper efficacy. This comes much short of these expressions of our Saviour's, destroy this Temple, and in three days I will raise it again. I have power to lay down my li●e, and I have power to take it up. And before Abraham was I am. And indeed that passage concerning Moses, seems to have been upon Record by the special providence of God for this very purpose, that it might be a good argument of conviction to the Jews of the Divinity of the Son, since this inference was very natural and obvious from it, viz. If God was so incensed with Moses for making use of one expression, which seemed to encroach upon his Prerogative; then how far would he have been from giving testimony, of much more frequent and greater Miracles, to a Person who by many plainer expressions, assumed to himself the full power and perfection of the Godhead; if he were not really what he gave himself out to be. For this reason I say because I can't reject him as an Impostor, therefore I believe this Proposition, and confess, the blessed Jesus the Son of God to be Eternal God equal with the Father. Now thus far I proceed in this Mystery upon the strictest rules of Reason and Evidence, and my Faith of this Proposition is founded upon clear and distinct Ideas; for I know clearly who I mean by Jesus Christ, (i. e.) that Person who was born of the Virgin Mary, and Crucified under Pontius Pilate; I have a clear and distinct Idea of what it is for one thing to be equal to another; and I apprehend very well what is signified by the name of God here, (i. e.) that Divine Being whose necessary Existence, I infer from that clear knowledge I have of his Creatures: And of whose Nature, though I have not the least notion as it is in itself, yet I form the best Idea of him I can by enlarging all the Perfections that are discernible in the Creatures. And I have a clear and distinct Idea, of what it is for one Person to be the Son of another. Thus I understand the meaning of the words; nor is there any thing in them contradictory to my reason. And lastly I have clear and distinct Ideas of those miraculous proofs to the senses of men; and of those completions of Prophecies; and the excellency of that Doctrine they confirm, the agreableness of it to the common notions of Men, and it's natural tendency to make men easy and pleasant and useful to one another. All which raise such an Evidence or Knowledge in my mind of the Divinity of his Mission who revealed this Proposition to me, that I must do violence to my Reason if I do not give my assent to it. And thus far it is not so properly and strictly a Mystery. But when I think of this Proposition again, Jesus the Son of God, is God equal with the Father. I must own at the same time I give my assent to it, I have no knowledge at all of that Eternal Generation, which I form an improper Idea of from the Procreation of one Man from another. Nor have I any notion of this wonderful Union of the Human nature with the Divinity. Nor can I in the least imagine wherein this Equality consists. These and all other things relating to the manner of it, are wholly out of the reach of all my Capacities, and totally obscured from me. These are the things which make it a Mystery, and in respect of this part of it, the Authority or Veracity of God, is the only ground of my Persuasion; and my Christian Faith of this Article consists, in thus giving my assent to the existence of things which I have no notion of, when he hath taken care to give me undoubted Testimonies, of the revelation's coming from him. And I trust he will accept of it, because 'tis no rash inconsiderate assent, but that I use those powers of knowledge I have, as strictly and impartially in this, as I would do in any affair which immediately concerned my life. And thus I hope it plainly appears, how little reason these people have to talk to us of a blind implicit assent or easy credulity, since in our Christian Faith we proceed upon the strictest rules of Reason, and build our assent upon no foundation but what we know to be firm. And now before I proceed to the other part of his Book, I shall repeat in short the Principles he lays down ●or himself to go upon in this, and the following Books which he threatens the World with. The whole sum of his Logic in short then is this. 1. Evidence is the only ground of Persuasion (i. e.) you can never give your assent even to the reality or existence of any thing, but when you know as much of it as you do of any thing in the World; and comprehend it as fully and perfectly as that 2 and 3 make 5. which is plainly to say, you can never believe any thing, but when it is so clearly known to you, that you can't help believing it; for no man can hinder his assent to a thing he knows perfectly well: as no man can help believing that 2 and 2 make 4. A thing may be very true indeed, and you not believe it; but if this truth be evident to you, your assent must necessarily follow. So that you can believe nothing, but when you can't help it; and when you can't avoid it, than you must believe it; P. 22. for God hath taken it out of our power to descent from an evident Proposition. and our kind Disposer hath put us under P. 23. a Law, of bowing before the Light and Majesty of Evidence, and therefore this Man must make such an Idol of it as totally to exclude all deefrence, or assent to the Word of the true God. For another Principle of his is 2. That Authority is only a means of Information, (i. e.) you can believe neither God, nor Man upon their Word, for they can only relate a thing to you, but neither of them can influence your Mind to an assent. So that to speak plainly, 'tis all one in respect of your assent whether God, or Man, or the Devil tells you a thing, for though you are convinced that God always tells truth, and the Devil is a Liar; yet still you believe the thing never the more because it comes from God. Alas! the veracity of God is not to be regarded in the case; no, you must bow before the Light and Majesty of Evidence only. But suppose God and the Devil speak two contrary Propositions, as in the case of Eve. In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely Diego And, Thou shalt not surely Diego The words of these two Propositions were equally clear to her; she understood the substance of them alike; and her Ideas of the things spoke of were equally clear and distinct. What then was the ground of her assent to the latter▪ it could not be Evidence, for according to him, both these Propositions, had equal pretence to her * It may be thought that I have taken a wrong Instance, because at first sight, it looks as if it was the consent only of her Will without any delusion of her Understanding. But on second thoughts you will find, this is no other than to disbelieve the truth of the History, which records this false persuasion of her Understanding as the temptation which prevailed upon her; for the consent of her Will did not follow, till the Devil had removed her Objection from that saying of Gods, in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die. assent upon this score; and therefore nothing remains to be the ground of her assent, but the Authority either of God or of the Devil. And we find by sad experience it was the Authority of the latter that swayed her. But 'tis plain, she had a greater degree of Evidence or Knowledge of the truth of the former Proposition, because she kn●w it came from God who could not lie; and yet we find she rebelled against this Evidence. Whereas had she been under such a necessity of bowing before the Light and Majesty of Evidence, she would not in all likelihood have transgressed as she did; and then he had not now been falling down thus prostrate to Igno rance and Error. That which shows the ridiculousness of these two Principles is, that upon them we can never believe any thing that is to come, though it were the next hour. For though we understand the meaning of the Words, and that the Prophecy be concerning any of the most familiar Objects of Sense and Reason, so that you have the clearest Knowledge of the thing foretold: yet unless you will allow Authority to be a ground of Persuasion, you can never believe the truth of the Relation; for no man can have any knowledge or Evidence of this till the thing comes to pass. So that as to the truth of the Relation there is nothing left to be the ground of assent, but the Veracity or Authority of some Person or another. And thus he utterly destroys the Faith of all Prophecies; for though they may be true, yet we can never believe them so, till the relation is evident to us; and this can never be evident to us, till the things actually come to pass. So that this is a short way of destroying the credit of every thing in the Gospel, which for the most part speaks of things to come. I said before that in Divine Propositions, Evidence was a ground of Persuasion in respect of the Relation itself, or act of Revelation; and here I say that in respect of the very same, Authority is a ground of Persuasion. They are both true; and therefore to make this whole Discourse more clear, and prevent all mistakes as far as I am able, I shall once for all, show the diffe rinse between Divine and Human Revelations in respect of those three things, which I said were to be considered in every Revelation. 1. As to the meaning of the Words, Divine and Human Revelations are upon equal terms. They must be both intelligible alike, and thus far Evidence or Knowledge is the only ground of Persuasion in each of them. 2. As to the substance of the thing revealed, in many cases they both agree in this too, viz. That they are equally intelligible; for some of the Revelations of God, are concerning things as knowable by us, as the ordinary Phaenomena of Nature. But in respect of a revealed Mystery, Divine and Human Revelations are directly opposite, for the substance of the thing intended by the revelation, in one must be always intelligible, but in the other it is totally obscured. But 3. As to the truth of the Relation itself, or the very act of Revelation there is this difference; that in all Human Revelations Authority is the only ground of Persuasion; because no mere Man can give any proof, which shall amount to more than a probability or strong presumption. But in Divine Propositions, the truth of the Relation is founded both upon Evidence and Authority. 1. Upon Evidence, as the truth of it is confirmed by Testimonies which are certain and infallible, as Prophecy, or Miracles, etc. which can come from none but God, and therefore create a degree of Knowledge beyond what is possible to be had of any relation merely Human. 2dly. Upon Authority, as this Knowledge is not directly of the thing itself, and therefore that we do not know the truth of it by any direct or immediate intuition. So that these Testimonies are only to convince us that the Revelation comes from God, and then we give our assent to the truth of them, purely upon the account of his Veracity. A third Principle of his is. That 3. Divine and Human Revelations differ not as to Perspicuity. (i. e.) You must understand the meaning of the Words in Divine Propositions as well P. 42. as Human; for as for unintelligible Relations, we can no more believe them from the Revelation of God, than from that of Man. A very subtle piece of Logic indeed, if he had designed no more than he spoke. But he hath a farther drift in it; he knew it was not every Reader would distinguish between the Sense and Meaning of the Proposition, which we grant must be equally clear and perspicuous in both, in order to an assent; and, The reality and existence of the thing, and truth of the Revelation, in respect of which, the Revelations of God always carry a greater degree of Perspicuity; because of that Evidence in the Mind, occasioned by such proofs which it is impossible for man to give. What I spoke of this before, I levelled at his design rather than his words, as I am forced to do in several other instances. But he will say perhaps, these proofs may make the Revelation more certain, but not more clear. I grant they don't explain the words of it. But 'tis plain the Proofs make the Revelation never the more true or certain in itself: But it is in respect of us they make it more certain. And to make a Revelation more certain in respect of us, is to make it more clear; and that is to add a greater degree of Perspicuiry to it. 4. We can give our assent to nothing, but what we have clear and distinct Ideas of. (i. e) We can believe nothing but what we have the immediate perception of Sense, or Demonstration for, or know by direct and immediate Intuition. Such stuff as this he lays down for Logic, and if you will argue with him, it must be in his own Method, and upon his own Principles; and then to be sure he will be too hard for you. But if you put him out of his Bias, and keep him to plain undisguised Reason, and the received rules of Arguing, you spoil him quite. Now by this time who so blind as not to see? That the design of this Book is To strike at the Root and Foundation of all revealed Religion. And now I have thus brought this Man out of the Clouds, I need not spend much time in striping him of his disguise; for the inferences he would have people make from these Principles, are so glaring and open, that every body may see them. If Authority be no ground of Persuasion, than we must not believe the truth of any Revelation or Prophecy. And if we must give our assent to nothing, but what we have clear and distinct Ideas of, then farewell all Religion both natural and revealed. For we know all Religion natural and revealed is ●ounded upon the belief of a Deity, of the Immortality of the Soul, and of Rewards and Punishments in another World; but it is impossible for us now to have as clear and distinct Ideas of these, as we have of a Stock or a Stone; but we infer these truths only from those things whereof we have clear and distinct Ideas; and therefore upon his Principles we must utterly reject them all. And then since by clear and distinct Ideas he means, As exact and clear a notion as we have even of sensible Objects, in one sentence he excludes all assent even to the reality and existence of every thing in the Gospel that respects another World; and rejects all those Methods of our Salvation, which are spoke of in the Bible, as so many Dreams and Fictions. Thus we must disbelieve the Resurrection and Change of our Bodies; the Happiness of the blessed in Heaven; the Incarnation and Divinity of the Son; the Trinity of Persons in the Godhead; the Operations of the Holy Ghost, etc. nay the whole Christian Religion: Because, as I have sufficiently shown, we have not such clear and distinct Ideas of these things, as we have of the ordinary Phaenomena of nature. He could not but see this, and therefore we may well conclude this was his drift. But he did not consider atthe same time, that this would cut off all assent to the very Being of God. And though I am fully convinced, that he is the most inveterate Enemy to revealed Religion, that hath lately appeared in Print; however I can scarce think he is arrived to that height of Atheism yet, as to deny the existence of God, though he has not as clear and distinct an Idea of him, as he has of a Stock or a Stone. As for his second Section, 'tis all Sect. 2. foreign to the matter; and all that he says about seeming contradictions, is plainly levelled at the Doctrine of the Trinity, though Transubstantiation be the instance he makes use of. And he proceeds upon the same fundamental Error he hath hitherto done, That we can believe nothing but what we have a clear and distinct Idea of. We say as well as he, That there is P. 25. nothing contrary to Reason in the Gospel. P. 26. That there is no contradiction in any point of Doctrine in it. That Christianity P. 46. is a Rational and Intelligible Religion, which are the things he insists upon in this Section, and goes a great way about to prove very aukwardly. And therefore what can he mean by it, unless it be to make unthinking People fancy we deny all this. If he hath any thing to object against our Doctrine of the Church of England or Ireland, let him speak plainly: but nothing is more vile and disingenuous, than for a man to speak thus indistinctly and confusedly, and talk all in the general with design to make People think us guilty of those errors we detest and abhor. If he has any controversy with us, let him deal honestly, and instance in any one point of Doetrine we believe or teach, that is contrary to Reason or Scripture; and make it out as plainly, as I have done his Principles to be such. If not, let him own he had no other design but to expose the Christian Religion, and its Teachers; and gratify the Rancour of a sort of People, who because of their lewd and debauched lives, must naturally hate that Institution, which they shall one day be condemned by; and which promises them nothing but Damnation in another World. This Book which goes under his name, is exactly calculated for them; there is a little superficial show of Learning to make it plausible, but not one instance in all the Book of close Reason or Argument. Let him show me where one link of my Reasoning fails, and I will make it up again so firm, that he shall never be able to undo it. Whereas all his whole Discourse is a mere Rope of Sand; many bold and false Assertions, sly Insinuations, and several things, nothing at all to the question, huddled up together on purpose to patch up a Book; and amuse such persons who have just Logic enough to be imposed upon by a Fallacy, but not to see through it. Now after this long digression of Sect. 3. two Sections, in his third and last Section he comes at length to the matter in dispute, but with what success we shall see. Here he begins to state the question P. 6●. again, and says a Doctrine above Reason, or a Mystery denotes one of these two things. Either 1▪ A thing intelligible in itself, but P. 66. covered with such a Veil, that Reason cannot penetrate to see what is under it, till it be removed. Which definition agrees perfectly to the Mysteries of the Gospel; for they are all things intelligible in themselves, but in this life so obscured from us by this vail of flesh and blood, that with our strongest Imagination and closest Reasonings, we cant penetrate into the true nature of them, till this Veil be removed; and then we shall see them clearly. Now this is not the definition that he quarrels with, and if he will admit of this little enlargement of it, we are both agreed. But the definition he finds fault with, is this. 2. A Mystery is a thing of its own P. 66. nature unconceivable, and not to be judged of by our ordinary Faculties and Ideas, though it be never so clearly revealed. I never met with any one Sentence, so fraught with absurdity as this is. For 1. It signifies a thing in its own nature unconceivable, this is a downright falsity. For every Mystery is in its own nature conceivable; the more truth any thing hath in it the more conceivable it is in itself; the Mysteries of Christianity are the Eternal Truths of God, and therefore are in themselves conceivable. But it is in respect of us that they are not so, because of the frail and limited condition of our understandings in this life. 2. Not to be judged of by our ordinary Faculties and Ideas, though it be clearly revealed. Now for a thing to be clearly revealed to a Man, and yet that same man know nothing of it (which is his sense of the words, and which he would fasten upon us) is a perfect contradiction. For it is no other than saying, that the same man way, and may not know the same thing, at the same time. He can never come off by saying that a thing may be clearly revealed, and yet the Person may have no ability to apprehend any thing of it; for all Revelation supposes a capacity in the Person to whom it is made, to apprehend something of it; and therefore 'tis nonsense to say, that any thing can be clearly revealed to a Horse, or a Stock, or a Stone. 3. Besides it is absolutely false, that the Mysteries of our Religion are not to be judged of, by our ordinary Faculties and Ideas. It hath already appeared, that as to the thing signified and intended in the Revelation, we have no Idea, nor faculty to judge of it as it is in itself. But as to all those means, whereby God hath discovered the reality and existence of those things to us, we may judge of them all by our ordinary Faculties and Ideas. And to make this plain, let us instance in the same Mystery of the Resurrection. Our Bodies sown in Corruption, shall be raised in Incorruption. This is one of the revealed Mysteries of the Gospel, and yet we are to judge of it by our ordinary Faculties and Ideas. For we have Ideas in our heads of what a body is; what it is to be sown or laid in the ground; what it is to be raised; and what it is for a body to be improved when it is so. Besides our Faculties of Understanding are employed, in considering those many arguments which prove the truth of this Mystery; and therefore 'tis plain that by our Faculties and Ideas, we can judge of that part of it which is knowable by us. But he will say, we can't judge of that part of it which is totally obscured from us, and therefore so far it is no part of our Faith, and we are wholly unconcerned in it. But on the contrary, we are bound by express words of Scripture, to believe that this Improvement will be very great, as in 1 John, 3. 2. We know not yet what we shall be, but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him. Here we are bound to believe that we shall be like Christ, though we know not what this likeness is, or wherein it will consist. 4. On this supposition, that a thing is in its own nature unconceivable, how is it possible for it to be revealed? This is another flat Contradiction ex Parte Rei, as the first was ex Parte Hominis. A thing is in its own nature unconceivable, and yet it may be revealed (i. e.) the same thing may, and may not be revealed. 5. He makes a thing's being in its own nature unconceivable, and not to be perceived by our ordinary Faculties and Ideas, to signify the same thing; whereas they are just as different as Light and Darkness. Tho' our capacities are now dark and shallow, yet they will hereafter be improved and enlarged; and then we shall have extraordinary Ideas to represent to us what we have no notion of now: And then the thing will be no way unconceivable either in itself, or in respect of us. These are not all the absurdities in this sentence; and yet it is the very Monster this Knight Errand sets up for himself to engage with. It is the spurious off spring of his own brain, and yet he father's it upon us, by introducing it with this expression, It is made to signify, etc. But it was never made to signify this by any besides himself. I should read the Gospel a million of times over before this definition of a Mystery would have come into my head. Here he hath made his own words good; That Contradiction and Mystery are two emphatical ways of saying nothing; He lays down this absurd definition of a Mystery, and then sets himself with a great deal of Solemnity to encounter it, which is in truth no other than for a man to put himself into a ridiculous antic posture, and then quarrel with his shadow for it. It is hard to tell how to proceed with this man, he has been running away from the Question ever since he began; and now that he put us in hopes of coming to it again, you see how grossly we are disappointed. I would with all my heart stick by the first definition of a Mystery, which with a little addition I allow to be very good. A Christian Mystery is a Divine Truth intelligible of itself, but so covered and obscured from us now in this life, that Reason can't penetrate the Veil to see what is under it, till this Veil be removed in another life by the glorification of our Bodies. Let him confute this definition if he can, for I will never fall out with him about the other; he shall have it all to himself, 'tis his own Creature, let him be as severe upon it as he pleases. But because he has so blindly mistook the matter, I must tell him once more what it is he is to prove, if he has any controversy with us in this point. He is to prove these two things. 1. That there is nothing revealed to us in the Gospel but what we have clear and distinct Ideas of, (i. e.) either a full comprehensive knowledge of; or as clear and distinct notions, as we have of any ordinary Object in nature. And 2. That we are not obliged by Scripture, to believe that there is any thing intended in some points revealed, beyond what we are now able thus to comprehend. These are the things which lay upon him to prove, if he would have spoke to the purpose. It is impossible that any man should argue closely, who mistakes the Question as he does▪ however I shall consider what there is in the rest of his Book that looks like reasoning. He does not proceed to proof yet, but runs upon another Digression, to tell us the signification of the word Mystery, and particularly what it signified among the Gentiles. But what is this to us? it signifies quite another thing among the Christians. But he says not, for in the New Testament Mystery is always P. 68 used in the first sense of the word, or that of the Gentiles, viz. For things naturally very intelligible, but so covered by figurative Words P. 73. or Rites, that Reason could not discover them without special Revelation. This is the description which he gives both of the Gentile, and Christian Mysteries in common. But taking a Christian Mystery even in his own sense, (i. e.) As it was involved in Jewish Types and Ceremonies; yet they differ very much from those mysteries of the Gentiles. For 1. The Christian Mysteries were not discoverable but by the special revelation of God, whereas those of the Gentiles were discoverable by the revelation of a man. 2. Besides 'tis absolutely false that the things involved in the Jewish Types were in their own Nature very intelligible. For they were all of such a Nature, that men could never have arrived to the least degree of knowledge concerning them by strength of Reason; whereas there was nothing in the Heathen Mysteries but what was in itself very obvious to Reason. 3. The matters contained in the Jewish Mysteries and the things intened by them, were such as concerned the Eternal salvation of men's Souls, whereas the things contained in those of the Heathen were to a quite contrary purpose, in order to Idolatry, and many other gross sins. And it is not without very good reason I take notice of this difference here, for though it doth not hit this description of his immediately, because he may perhaps say those were thought to be the concernment of Souls too: yet it is levelled at the main design of his Book, which by this time no man can be ignorant of. 4. The things contained in the Jewish Mysteries, the Priests themselves were ignorant of; whereas the Heathen Priests for the most part knew the bottom of theirs, and concealed them industriously from the People. And this is what he would insinuate of all Christian Priests, viz. That we fully comprehend the meaning of all these things ourselves, and palm them upon the People for Mysteries. Which is the occasion of those virulent expressions of his in this Chapter, That P. 72. through ignorance or passion we maintain, what was introduced by the craft or superstition of our fore fathers. And calls it a Gainful Opinion; as if the only design P. 73. of Christian Mysteries, were to bring in Money to the Priests. he calls Christianity as it is now received an Implicit Constitution; and says the P. 73. Venerable Teachers, play at this small game to amuse the People. But he, P. 74. like a sharp inquisitive man it seems, has found out our Mysteries, and is resolved in his next Book to discover them all, and lay us open to the World, like Heathen Priests as he makes us. And now I come to his second Chapter of the third Section, where there P. 74. is the first appearance of any thing like a reason; there is but one argument in all that Chapter, and indeed in all the Book; and because he delivers it confusedly, I will reduce it to form, and then we shall see clearly what force there is in it. And if he thinks I don't do him justice, let him manage it better for himself if he can. The whole strength of his arguing is this If we have as clear and distinct Ideas of every thing revealed in the Gospel, as we have of any thing in Nature, than there are no Mysteries in it. But we have as clear and distinct Ideas of every thing revealed in the Gospel as we have of any thing in Nature Therefore There are no Mysteries in the Gospel. The Minor he proves thus If we have as clear and distinct Ideas of God and Eternity, as we have of any thing in nature, than we have as clear and distinct Ideas of every thing revealed in the Gospel, as we have of any thing in Nature. But we have as clear and distinct Ideas P. 86. of God and Eternity, as we have of any thing in Nature. Ergò Now do but deny this Minor, and he puts you off to another Book for the proof of it, and this is the whole substance of his reasoning here. But to pass by the Impiety and Profaneness of that saying of his, That the Divine Being itself is not more Mysterious than the most contemptible of his Creatures, I will give him a reason why it is impossible for him ever to prove what he pretends. And that is, because even the most glorious of his Creatures are finite and limited, whereas the nature of God is Infinite; and therefore even when we come to Heaven, he will be mysterious to us in a more proper sense than any thing else, because we shall not even then have as full and comprehensive a knowledge of him, as we shall have of the greatest of his Creatures. That which he builds upon is this, P. 75. That nothing can be said to be a Mystery, because we have not an adequate Idea of it, and a distinct view of all its properties at once. But who ever said that the Mysteries of the Gospel were such only for this reason. I grant him if this were all, then as he says every thing in nature would be a mystery, for we have not a full and perfect knowledge of any thing. The true reason why our Christian Mysteries are such in a more peculiar and proper sense is, because the Ideas we have of them are more imperfect and less adequate, than those we have of the ordinary phaenomena of Nature. This is the point in difference between us, Whether we have as perfect and comprehensive a knowledge of every thing revealed in the Gospel, as we have of any thing in Nature. This is what he affirms, and we deny; and for proof as I said before, he refers us to another Book in reversion. Here he only affirms it boldly, and instead of proving that our notions of these divine things are as exact and full, as the notions we have even of sensible Objects; he spends this whole Chapter in proving by several instances, as of the Table he writes upon; of Rain, and a drop of Water, etc. that we have not an adequate Idea of any thing. But why does he thus beat the Air? who ever denied it? and yet this poor hungry thought, is the only appearance of an Argument through his Book; it was for this only the whole was wrote, and the only skill he has shown in it, is in beating up so little Sense, into all this Froth. Now because there is no Proof here, there can be no farther Answer: However since he hath ordered the matter so as to make it look like Reasoning, to amuse the Minds of unthinking People, I shall show the difference between the things revealed to us in the Gospel, and the usual Phaenomena of nature with respect to the measures of our knowledge. And therefore 1. Tho' we should grant what is absolutely false, and what he was to have given some proof for if he had been able, that the things revealed in the Gospel, and the ordinary objects of our senses, were upon the same level as to our knowledge, that we are equally ignorant of both, and comprehend them alike; yet his Inference would not follow from hence, viz That the things revealed in the Gospel are not mysteries, in a more proper sense than a Spire of Grass, a Stock or Stone. For though we are equally ignorant of two things, yet there may be much more behind to be known in one than in the other; and therefore upon this score, may much more properly be called a Mystery. For certainly though we knew as much of God now as we do of a Stock or a Stone, yet sure he will allow there is infinitely more yet to be known in that Fountain of all Perfection, that rich Treasure of Wisdom, which is so far from being comprehended now, that he shall never be exhausted to all eternity. We may say the same of all the other Mysteries of Christianity, though we should grant our Ideas of them were as perfect, and that we knew as much of them now as we do of any thing in nature, yet because they are infinitely more excellent in themselves; and that there is much more behind to be known in them, yet they would deserve the name of Mysteries in a much more proper sense than any thing in nature. Especially if we add that they are not only more excellent in themselves, but they are of much greater concernment to us, as they relate to the salvation of our Souls, and our well-being for ever in another World: Which makes them deserve more regard, and consequently a better name if we have it to give them. Wherefore we may well wonder what end any man could have in starting such a notion as this is, unless it were to vilify and debase the Doctrines of the Gospel; and cunningly to lessen all revealed Religion and its Teachers in the opinion of men, as if they already had too great thoughts of God and his Revelations. 2. But there is a yet greater difference than this, for the things revealed in the Gospel, as to that part of them which makes them Mysterious, are such as exceed our present Capacities of Knowledge; whereas all the things of Nature fall within their Sphere, and are in themselves immediate and proper objects of our Sense and Reason. Tho' many of them are such, that we neither do, nor ever can actually know any thing of them. And to lay this difference open to all, we must consider that this of being above Reason is an aequivocal expression, and signifies two very different things. 1. It signifies a thing which does not exceed our powers of understanding; but is concealed from us, and lies out of our reach, by some accidental impediment or obstruction, which it is impossible for us to remove. And in this Sense it is above our Reason to know certainly, what is at the centre of the Earth; or whether there be any Inhabitants in Saturn, or of what species they are; what are the true motions of the Heavenly Bodies, and what order they observe among themselves; and the different configuration of the little parts of matter, etc. That which makes these things above our Reason, is not any thing essential to them, but something accidental. And therefore we find our knowledge very much improved, and promoted by the help of Glasses, which discover things that by reason of their smallness, and distance were not preceptible by the naked eye, nor certainly discoverable by Reason. So that we may say, many things were above our Reason before these helps were found out, which are not so now; and if these helps could be carried on, and improved to that degree, as to lay open to our view the smallest parts of matter, and at the greatest distance; or that a rational account were given us, of all the Phaenomena in Nature, by any intelligent Being superior to ours, we should apprehend it distinctly and perfectly, and then nothing in nature would be above our Reason. 2. To be above our Reason signifies, A thing which in its own nature exceeds our present Capacities, and is no proper object of those faculties of knowledge which we are now endued withal. And in this Sense the nature of God is more properly above our Reason than a Stock or a Stone, Eternity than Time; a Spirit, than a Body; the Joys of Heaven, than Sensual Pleasures; the eternal Generation of the Son, than the ordinary Procreation of Man; the operations of the Holy Spirit, than the nourishment of our Bodies, etc. There is as yet no proportion between these Objects and our Faculties of Knowledge; our intellectual powers are not yet formed and so adapted for them, as they are for those things in Nature, which are the proper objects of our Sense and Reason now. So that it is a more improper way of speaking, to say that these things should be clearly revealed to us now, as they are in themselves; than to say that a nice point in Divinity or Philosophy, should be clearly explained to an Infant. They are indeed plainly revealed to us as to their reality and existence, but not clearly as to the true nature of the things. Nothing in the World is more evident than that such things are revealed to us; but what or how they are in themselves, is impossible for us to comprehend. And this is what the Apostle means by that saying, That Eye has not seen nor Ear heard, neither have entered 1. Cor. 2. 9 into the heart of Man the things which God hath laid up for them that love him. Which Words, though by the context they are more immediately spoke of things past, and then revealed in part; yet they have a farther reference to the full completion of all these things in another World. I shall make this whole matter plain by an Instance. A Person who was born blind knows as little of the Sun as he does of the real nature of God; he feels the heat and warmth of it; he is cherished by it, and lives and thrives by the secret influences of it; but he neither knows where, nor what it is: and if he had been ever told that all this was the immediate act of God, he would have thought so, for he knows nothing of the Sun besides the name. Now upon this Author's Principles, the nature of the Sun, and the nature of God are both equally a Mystery to this Blind Man. That he is equally ignorant of the true nature of both I grant, however they are not equally a Mystery to him. And that this may appear let us suppose this Man's Eyes were opened; then he would see clearly that the Sun is a large, round, lucid Body in the Firmament: but he would be hereby enabled to know nothing more of the true nature of God than he did before. And why? because this is beyond the reach of all his natural powers of Knowledge; and if all his Senses were improved to be a thousand times nice● than they are, though he would see much deeper into the nature of all things here, yet the nature of God, and the things relating to another Life would lie as much out of his reach as ever; he would even then know as little of the Glory of God, as that Man did of the Sun before his Eyes were opened. for Light itself is but a Metaphor, adapted to our gross Capacities to signify the Glory of God, which we are told in the Revelations is to be instead of light in Heaven. But because this is an Instance only of a sensible Object, let us take another of Reason. Let us suppose an illiterate person, who never heard of Christianity, or the Mathematics is equally ignorant of these two Propositions. The three Angles of a Triangle are equal to two Right ones. And this We shall be raised in the likeness of Christ. These two Propositions this Derinder of all revealed truths will say, are alike mysterious to this Man. Whereas the contrary will evidently appear if we but take this Man and teach him Mathematics, than he shall perfectly apprehend all that is to be known of that demonstration, and how it is impossible it should be otherwise. But teach him the Gospel, and make him as learned as he is capable in the Christian Religion, he shall know nothing more of that Proposition (though he shall be better convinced of the Truth of it) than he did at first hearing. And why? because the one was a truth in nature, within the sphere of his intellectual powers; the other is supernatural and he can never have any notion of the manner of it, till he has new Faculties or those he already hath are greatly enlarged. But this matter will clear up farther, if we compare some of the Mysteries of our Religion with those things in Nature which bear the greatest Analogy with them, and by which they are represented to us in the Scriptures. If we say a Son is like his Father, we immediately conceive in our Minds the same Stature, Countenance, Lineaments, and Complexion; or the same Humour, Disposition, natural parts and Inclinations, etc. so that we very well apprehend wherein the likeness consists. But when we say we shall rise in the likeness of Christ, here we stop and our Thoughts can reach no farther. Again when we say one Man is the Son of another, we apprehend very well the manner of natural procreation, and how it is he came to be his Father. But when we say Christ is the Son of God by an Eternal Generation, we know nothing of the manner of one Spirits producing another; nor can we tell how he came to be born of a Virgin without the concurrence of a Man. When we say the Spirit of God hath a real influence upon ours in the operation of Grace, we know much less of the manner of it, than we do of one Bodies moving another by contact: and we know the Food we eat nourisheth us by undergoing several alterations, and then being converted into the substance of our Bodies; but we can't know thus much of the manner how Grace administers strength and comfort to our Souls. Again we know of time that it is finite and successive, and we can measure it in certain proportions by the motions of the heavenly Bodies. But as for Eternity, for want of a clear Idea we frame a notion of it from time, and thus by a limited thought we do little less then destroy its Being. For as for saying it is a perpetual Now, though it be the prettiest thought we have of it, yet if we attend to this we shall find, we say nothing more than that the same Instant shall remain for ever; and thus attribute that succession to one Instant of time abstractedly considered, which we used to attribute to things which exist in it. And therefore it is as gross a description of Eternity, as a flying Boy is of an Angel. And yet it is very pleasant to hear how this man talks of it. It is no more above our Reason because we can't apprehend it, than a Circle is because we may. But why? because Reason goes as far as it can in both. The Circle is to be imagined, but Eternity is not essentially imaginable; if it were, Reason would have it as well as the Circle, yes that it would: but you would not have Reason to imagine any▪ thing that is not to be imagined? And yet but a few lines after he will make us imagine it in his next Book as perfectly as that 3 and 2 make 5. But this is a strange Circle in arguing, to prove that Eternity is not above our Reason, because it is. And you see the cause of this blunder is, because he confounds Idea with Imagination, one of the best distinctions we are beholding to the modern Logicians for. 'Tis plain there are many things we have Ideas of, which we are not able to imagine, and Eternity is one of them. And because we can't frame any imagination of it; it doth not follow that we can't apprehend it at all, for Reason can frame an Idea of it as it doth of the other things of another life (i. e.) by Analogy, and for this reason it is more a Mystery than a Circle which we perfectly imagine. Once more, though the Essence of matter lies hid from us, as well as that of a Spirit, yet we know much more of its properties, as that it hath Gravity, Extension, Solidity, Impenetrability, Divisibility; and this Table on which I write though I can't actually divide it into infinite parts, yet I can carry it on in my Mind, and conceive it divisible. Now these are properties of matter which agree to it in general, and are not mere modifications of it. But we know no more of a Spirit but that it thinks (i. e.) just enough to prove its Existence, and no more; for as to all the different modifications of Thought, it is but thinking still; and therefore is answerable but to that one property of Extension in matter. Besides we don't attribute this of Thinking immediately and positively to a Spirit; for we don't say a Spirit thinks because we know so much of the real nature of it as to discover this: but we say it thinks because we can prove that matter can't. Now when I say the Idea we have of a Spirit is not positive, I mean that it is not so in respect of our understanding; because we have no way of attributing it to a Spirit, but by a negation of it to matter. I must confess if we take a Spirit in the sense that some men do (i. e.) only for a Thinking Being, then indeed we come to the notion of it by Reflection; we find something in us that Thinks, and from thence we immediately attribute it to that Being. But for any thing that is yet concluded, this Thinking Being may be mere matter; and when we proceed to infer the existence of an immaterial substance (which is the true notion of a Spirit, as it is distinguished from matter, and in which sense God is said to be a Spirit) than the Idea we have of it, is as far from being positive, as the words by which we express it. Then we have no other way of conceiving it, but by removing from it Extension, Divisibility, Solidity, etc. which are the properties of Body: and we conclude that the substance in us that thinks must be immaterial, because this operation exceeds the power of mere matter, i. e. while it is such; for if God should alter all the properties of it, so as to make it something else, and not matter, than no one can deny but it may think; but how far this implies a contradiction I shall not now dispute. So that again I can't but wonder any one should affirm positively, that we have as clear and distinct Ideas of the Nature and Properties of Spirit, as we have of Body. Mr Lock's Notion of the Soul is only Letter to the Bp. of Worces: P. 69, 70, 71. that of a thinking substance without any regard either to the materiality, or immateriality of it; tho' one would think he inclines to the former, when he shows this to be the sense of the word Spirit both in Profane and Divine Authors. However he says afterwards that the utmost Proof we can have for the immateriality of it will amount only to a Probability; and thus much concerning it he thinks deducible from his Principles, and particularly from his supposition of a System of matter; and adds that he would gladly see a better proof of it either from the Bishop of Worcester or any one else. To speak to this now would be no other than a digression from the business I am upon, but I do not despair of giving him this Demonstration which he would so gladly see; and showing him withal 〈…〉 〈◊〉 how very much he is out in his application of those Texts of Scripture he makes use of. I know 'tis easy for a person to deny any thing to be demonstration which is not mathematically such; but if it appears that we have as good proof for the immateriality of the Soul, as we can reasonably expect for any natural or moral truth, this is sufficient for the conviction of any, except those who by their Principles are obliged to oppose it. But to return, it is Evident from what hath been said, that we are so far from forming any Idea of Spirit as clear and distinct as that we have of matter, that we can't form a simple Idea of any property in it, which is positive in respect of our understanding; and therefore since simple Ideas are the foundation of all our knowledge as they are laid down by that Delicate and Curious Head, which this man of Forehead only has so grossly mistaken; that defect in the first principles shall run through all our after Reasonings about the real nature of it, and render them much more confused & imperfect than those concerning matter. I might say the same of a Spiritual or Glorified Body, that we can frame no Idea of it, but by negation of those imperfections that are incident to us in this frail condition of mortality, and those few passages related of our Saviour's Body after his resurrecton, are wholly unaccountable by us; at least much more than the ordinary appearances of Nature; as particularly his vanishing out of their sight all of a sudden; and appearing in the midst of them, at a time when the doors were shut, etc. and that these things were not any miraculous operations, but the real properties of a glorified Body, is more likely to think; than that he should have rarified the Door, or the Walls of the House to get entrance; or have secretly conveyed himself along with them, as some learned men have endeavoured to solve these passages. Nor can we conceive how a body should be divested of its gravity, so as to mount the Skies as our Saviour's did at his ascension, and as the Bodies of the Saints shall do at the general resurrection. None of these things are to be solved upon the common principles of knowledge that are in us now, because we have not capacities suitable to the nature of them. So that now we may wonder what ridiculous meaning this man can have, when he says that all the things which are spoke of in the Gospel, are as consistent with our common notions as Wood and Stone; and that we are as properly said to comprehend them; and that our Ideas of natural and divine things are equally clear and distinct. A strange fallacious inference this, because we fully comprehend neither, therefore we are equally ignorant of both. And to amuse people that can't see this, that he might seem to speak something to the purpose, he borrows a distinction. viz. That between the Nominal and Real Essence of a thing. How impertinently he hath made use of it in this matter, is very plain from what has been said; which though we grant it to be a good one, yet it is nothing to the purpose. But it is so far from being a good Distinction, that it seems to me not to be good Sense. For nothing can be more absurd than to suppose two different Essences in the same thing. Nor can any thing be more directly levelled at those glorious Attributes of God, his Goodness and Truth than what it supposes, viz. That we are thus deceived in every thing, and know nothing at all of the true nature of things by those properties that are discernible by us. And therefore to use his own words, This rather becomes Impostors to think, than the taught of God who hath no interest to delude his Creatures, nor wants ability to inform them rightly. If it had been said in plain language, that there is something in natural things we do apprehend, and something we do not; which means all in that distinction: This would have been Philosophy for the Vulgar; and therefore to make a Mystery of it, it must be called the Nominal and Real Essence of a thing: though it carry a flat contradiction in Physics, and a monstrous consequence in Morality, and lays a foundation for Eternal Scepticism. But supposing there is a meaning in it both true and innocent, yet it must be owned this was the most unhappy way of expressing themselves, that possibly they could have light upon. Thus far as to his arguments from Sect▪ 3. C. 3. Reason. Now I come to consider those he brings from Scripture: and we are like to have very close reasoning from them, when in the very entrance he again confounds these two Propositions. Whether or no Christianity is Mysterious, and whether there are no Mysteries in P. 90. Christianity. Whereas even the latter of them is dubious; for the word Mystery is used to signify several things. And therefore to remove all ambiguity, and show the fallacy of his arguing we will lay aside the Word, and speak to the thing itself, (i. e.) Whether we have not as clear and distinct Ideas, as full and perfect a knowledge of all things revealed to us in Scripture, since the appearing of Christ in the World, as we have of ordinary sensible Objects. That we had not before he allows, and therefore he grants they were Mysteries then, but now since the coming of Christ they are not. And the whole substance of his arguing in this long Chapter is this. If all those things which were signified by the Jewish Rites and Ceremonies are clearly revealed to us, than they are no longer hidden from us. But all those things signified by the Jewish Rites and Ceremonies are clearly revealed to us. Therefore They are no longer hidden from us. Thus he proves the Minor. If the Veil is taken away in Christ then they are clearly revealed to us. But the Veil is taken away in Christ. Therefore. They are clearly revealed to us. And to make this Minor good, he brings all these Texts of Scripture, and Quotations out of the Fathers; to prove that the Veil is taken away, and that they are clearly revealed. Now if any amongst us had absolutely denied that the Veil was taken away▪ and had affirmed that they were not plainly revealed to us, than he might have had an adversary: But there is not a sentence in this Chapter, that looks like a controversy with any but the Jews. If this man would have argued instead of Bantring; he would have distinguished, and shown in what sense we deny it, and then have proved that the Veil was taken away in that sense that we deny. And therefore since he hath dealt treacherously, I must make him honest, and distinguish for him. And in order to make this matter very plain, we know that there are four things to be revealed concerning any thing that is hid from us. It's Existence, it's Essence, its Properties, and the Relation it hath to us; and every one apprehends at first reading how a thing may be clearly revealed as to its Existence, together with the relalation it hath to us, and yet remain totally obscured as to its Essence & Properties. Now therefore what we say is this. 1. That as to the internal Essence, and real Properties of these divine things revealed to us from Heaven, we are wholly ignorant of them; and know as little of them in this respect now they are revealed in the Gospel, as was known before when they were involved in Types and Figures. 2. That all these things which we call Mysteries, and now revealed to us in the Gospel, while they were veiled in Types and Figures under the Mosaik oeconomy, were very much obscured as to their Existence, and as to the concernment of mankind in them; and therefore the Law is said to have had only a shadow of good things to come, i e. Men had but a very dark & imperfect knowledge even of the reality, and being, and signification of those things. As of the Eternal generation of the Son, his Incarnation, Crucifixion, Ascention, the Trinity of Persons, Resurrection and Glorification of the Body, the Operations of the Holy Spirit, etc. They had then no clear and certain knowledge of the reality and existence of any of these things afterwards revealed in the Gospel, excepting only that of the Being of the true God, which was revealed to them by Moses under the name I AM, which denoted nothing more than his existence. 3. We say that these divine things, which were hidden and obscured before the appearing of Christ, were all of them plainly and clearly revealed as to their Existence and as to the Relation they have to us, (i e.) as to the reality and being of these truths, and our concernment in them. And yet they do not cease to be Mysteries still, because they are still infinitely more obscured as to their Manner and Properties, than the common objects of nature. So that now it is clearly revealed to us that Christ is the Son of God, yet it doth not follow that therefore we know as much of the manner of that Eternal Generation of the Son, as we do how one Man is said to be the Son of another. Because it is revealed to us that there are endless Joys in Heaven, it doth not follow that we know as much of them as we do of sensual pleasures. Because it is clearly revealed to us that we shall be raised at the last day, in the glorious likeness of Christ; it doth not follow that we know as well what this Glory will be, as we know what it is to be of a Fair and Beautiful Complexion; and so in all the rest. And this is the reason of those seemingly opposite expressions of St. Paul, the one in 2 Cor. 3. 18. where speaking of the Clearness of the Gospel, in opposition to the Obscurity of the Law he says, We all with open face beholding as in a Glass the glory of the Lord. And yet in 1. Cor. 13, 12. speaking of this same present state of the Gospel, in opposition to our future state in Heaven he says, That now we see through a Glass darkly, but then Face to Face. By the first he denotes the clearness of the Revelation as to the Existence, and Design of those things now under the Gospel: by the latter, he denotes the present obscurity of them, as to their Manner and Properties. But it may be objected here that thus they are but Types still, and therefore the things contained in the Jewish Rites and Ceremonies, are as little revealed now, as they were before. But whosoever makes this Objection can't but know these two things to be true which I contend for, however we are able to reconcile them, viz. 1. That those things signified by Jewish Rites and Ceremonies since the coming of Christ are more clearly revealed to us than they were before. And 2. That now they are more clearly revealed to us, yet we have no Ideas of the real Nature or Properties of them, which I have sufficiently proved. Whosoever allows these two things, must be of my opinion, whether I were able to answer this objection or no. But it is easy for any one to apprehend, that when I say the Ideas we have of the things of another World, are no other than a sort of Types or Figures; I don't take them in the strictest sense of the Words, as they are applied to Jewish Rites and Ceremonies; which were all of them actions conversant about external Objects, and designed to represent some divine transaction which was to have its completion in this life; and even then was to have a farther reference to something intended by it in another World. But my meaning is, that the best notion we can frame of a Divine Object, represents nothing of the real nature of the thing to us as it is in itself; if any one finds fault with the word, let them call them by what other name they please, since it is plain they must allow the thing. And now he sees, if he was really blind before, in what Sense this Veil is removed, and in what sense we affirm it to remain. and if he thinks himself able to do it, instead of proving operosely what no man denies, that the Veil is taken away in Christ; let him prove the truth of it in that sense which we deny, viz. That it is taken away, not only as to the Reality, and Existence, and Intent, of the things revealed which we allow; but as to the Manner and Properties of them, so that now we have as perfect a notion and compre hensive a knowledge of them, as we have of the Manner and Properties of any thing in nature; or in his own can't, that we have as clear and distinct Ideas of them as of any sensible Objects. As for instance Jonas' being in the Whale's belly, was a Type of our Saviour's Burial and Resurrection, and therefore now this is revealed he must make it out, that there is nothing more mysterious in our Saviour's Death and Resurrection, than in a man's being carried into a Vault, and walking out again upon his legs. The feast of the Passover was a Type of Christ, and represented the Lords Supper; and this now is but a Type of the joys of Heaven, as our Saviour himself makes it by those words, Hence Math. 26. 27. forth I shall not drink of this fruit of the Vine, till I drink it new with you in my Father's Kingdom. But this man must show us the real nature of those pleasures which are here signified by the Fruit of the Vine. And now that it appears what he was to have proved; to save me the labour of transcribing, do but look over every Text he hath quoted by way of Proof, and try to make his inference from it, and then you will be satisfied that Quaker, or any other Enthusiast never applied Scripture so impertinently. Do but apply this distinction of a thing's being revealed as to its Existence and Design, and the Relation it hath to us only; or as to the manner and property of the thing itself, and then the little fallacy will appear which runs through his application of them all. I shall only instance in the two or three first. 1. Cor: 2, 7, 8. We speak the Wisdom P. 90. of God hid in a Mystery, which God ordained before the World for our glory, which none of the Princes of this World knew, from whence he makes this inference, viz. That this divine Wisdom was then a Mystery for want of revealing Information. Who denies it? and to confirm this he adds the following words. Eye hath not seen, nor Ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of Man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him; but God hath revealed them to us by his Spirit, which proves no more than what every body owns, That it was impossible by strength of Reason to have attained to the knowledge of those means, which God had appointed for our Salvation, and now they are revealed it is only as to the truth and reality of their existence, as to their Intent, and the Relation they have to us; and not as to the Manner and Properties of them. The things here spoke of which could not have entered into the heart of Man, were the Incarnation of the Son, and the Descent of the Holy Ghost; which were the contrivances of infinite Wisdom for the restoration of fallen Man; and this was what the wisest heads among us could never have thought of. These things were obscured in Jewish Types and Ceremonies, and at length God revealed it clearly to us, that those were the means he had appointed for our Salvation. Now the inference this man must make, if he would speak to the purpose is, That therefore we now know as perfectly the manner of that conception wrought by the power of the Holy Ghost in a pure Virgin, as of the ordinary way of Generation; and because it is revealed to us that the Holy Ghost works in us, therefore we must know the manner of it as perfectly, as we do that of the nourishment of our Bodies by meat and drink. The next is, St. Paul used great ● Cor. 3. 12. 13. plainess of Speech, Ergò they had as full and perfect a knowledge of every thing he spoke as they had of a Stock or a Stone. Nay when he spoke to them of the depths of the Wisdom of God, and discoursed to them how he was caught up into Paradise, and heard unspeakable words, without doubt they that heard him had as lively an impression of this whole vision on their imaginations, as he that saw it; nay as they had of the Man that spoke to them; and we may expect no less from this profound Revealer of Mysteries, than that he will quote us all these unspeakable words in his next Book. And so by the following quotations he thinks he hath knocked us down, when any mention is made of the Mystery being made manifest or known to all Nations. Ergò the very Manner and Properties of those things are laid open to us. And therefore this Man (I warrant you) knows as much of the secret Councils of God now, whose Judgements are unsearchable, and his ways past finding out; as he doth of the dark contrivances of that Cabal against all revealed Religion, where the design of this Book was first laid, and the rest are now a forging. For 'tis well known this Mystery of Iniquity doth already work; but he who hath hitherto hindered, we trust will hinder, till they be taken out of the way, and their wickedness be revealed. And here if I were disposed to be merry, I could make better sport with the History of this Man's life, than he has done with the Doctor and his Parishioner; P. 109. for I have traced him in this too, from the time he first gave out he would be Head of a Sect before he was thirty years of Age, till he became an Author; and from thence to his coming into this Kingdom to spread his Heresies, and put his Designs in Execution. But I am now upon a Subject in Divinity, and not making a Farce; and perhaps I may have another opportunity of giving the World a clear and distinct Idea of this man, who thinks himself so formidable; and swells with the fancy of having run down three Kingdoms only with one cross Question, which is the foundation of all his Book, viz. How can a Man believe what he doth not know? I come now to consider how he answers those Objections which are made against this new Hypothesis of his in Religion. The first sort of Objections he brings Sect. 3. C. 4. P. 120. are three or four Texts of Scripture, which make nothing against either what he, or we say in this matter; but such as Enthusiasts bring against the use of Reason in Religion. So that they are wholly impertinent, unless he disputes against the Quakers; and therefore I have no more to do here but to take notice of the base disingenuity of the man, who by this would make unthinking or prejudiced people believe, that we are those ignorant perverse Men he speaks of; and put us upon the same level with the rankest Enthusiasts. Whereas he can't but know that we are as vigorous defenders of the use of Reason in Religion as he can be. 'Tis by this that the truths of all revealed Religion are established, and remain unshaken and the same for ever, in spite of all the opposition of their subtlest enemies. 'Tis by this we confute his Errors, 'tis before the Evidence and Light of Reason that all his Operose and laborious Sophisms disappear like empty shadows, and vanish into nothing. When we thus contend for the use of Reason in Religion, then on one side we are charged as if we denied all Revelation, and when we defend the truth of Revelation, then on the other side we are charged with laying aside our Reason; as if we must needs cease to be Men, before we can be Christians. And therefore I shall state a right notion of this matter as clear as I can in short; and that by these degrees. 1. We allow that Sense and Reason are the only faculties we have of knowing or judging of any thing either in Nature or Religion; and we allow that God in all his Revelations applies himself to us by these faculties; and doth not either create any new ones, or make any essential alteration in these we have; for then a Stock or a Stone would be as capable of a Divine Revelation, as a Rational Creature. And therefore 2. We allow that what is not agreeable to these Powers of knowledge we are already endued with, is not to be received or entertained by us; for otherwise God who placed these in us, would not be consistent with himself, nor would he have us so. 3. These Powers of knowledge are better suited to the present objects of this life than they are to those of another; for otherwise we argue God of want of Wisdom, and Contrivance, and if they were now as well fitted for the Objects of another life, there would be no occasion for a change at the last day. 4. We affirm that all the things of another World, even after they are revealed are totally obscured both from our Senses and our Reason as to the real Nature and Properties of them as they are in themselves. And this I hope I have sufficiently made out; so that if People will believe any thing at all of another life, they must do so without clear and distinct Ideas of them. 5. That since we have not capacities for them, there is no other way of revealing any thing to us relating to another life, but by Analogy with the things of this World. Thus the Glory and Intellectual Light of Heaven, is revealed under the notion of that we have from the Sun; the Generation of the Son of God, under the notion of one Man's proceeding from the Lions of another, etc. Now therefore let me again distinguish these two things in every Revelation or Mystery. 1. That Analogous object of this life, under the notion of which God doth reveal any thing of another life to us. And 2. The Thing itself that is signified by it. As to the first of these it falls in all respects under the severest censure and trial of our Reason, as to the latter it is wholly exempted from it. As for instance in this Proposition, The Saints shall reign for ever. In this Mystery the thing revealed is the happy and glorious state of the Saints in Heaven. The Analogous' object made use of by God for this, is that of the Splendour and Grandeur of a Kingdom. In respect of this latter our Reason hath full scope and 'tis not only lawful but commendable, nay our duty to be very punctual and exact in our Scrutiny. And therefore we must know the meaning of the words, and understand the matter of the Proposition; we must be satisfied that it hath no impossibility or contradiction in it. Nay more, our Reason must be convinced, and we must have a clear evidence in our mind, of its coming from God by such Proofs to men's Senses and Reason of its divinity, as shall convince us that it could come from none but God; such as Miracles and Prophecies, or the agreableness of the thing to our common Notions▪ and I am not to give my assent to it unless I have this Evidence, which I allow thus far to be the ground of Persuasion. Thus far we are ready to join issue with any Adversary of Revelation and Mysteries purely upon the principles of Reason. And to require it any farther is no other than to demand a rational account from us, of what we grant we have no notion of. God never requires our Assent to any Proposition, but upon such testimonies and proof as shall cause this Evidence. But as to the thing itself which is signified by this analogy, as the real state and condition of the blessed in Heaven is in this Mystery, it is wholly exempted from the enquiry of Reason. And herein is my Faith that I give my assent to a proposition which is sufficiently proved to come from God, though I have no notion at all of that divine truth which is represented to me under the similitude of some worldly Object. And thus you see how Faith is nicely and most exactly defined. The Evidence, or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 demonstration of things not seen, because Faith is no such precarious implicit assent, as these Champions for Reason think, but it is the giving our assent to things which though we have no notion at all of now, yet the reality and existence of them are demonstrated to us by such proofs as raise up in our minds the greatest degree of Evidence for the truth of the Relation. And it is this that will strike all these Opposers of Faith and Revelation dumb, when they appear at the Tribunal of God; because they will not then have it to say, that God required their assent to any proposition, but what they understood as well as they could understand any thing in this World. And for the Divine Revelation of which, they had sufficient proofs (if they did but consider them) to raise up in their minds an Evidence as clear and distinct as they can have of any thing in this World. And thus he sees how groundless all those Objections are, and malicious Insinuations against us and our most holy Faith; as if we in any point of it declined the strictest examination of Reason. We are so far from distrusting our cause, or obliging men to walk blindfold, that we give their Reason all the helps we can; and men are never better disposed for the belief of our Christian Mysteries than when they follow the guidance and conduct of it. For our whole Christian Faith is grounded upon the strictest Retiocination. And therefore having stated the true extent of Reason in the Mysteries of Religion, I shall now proceed to consider P. 126. his Friend's objection against his Book, viz. That it destroys the nature of FAITH. A shrewd objection it is, and that which he never will evade, though he had the wisdom of the old Serpent to help him. And that person whosoever he was would have been more his Friend, if he had in time opened to him all the other false and impious consequences of his Book; before it came abroad to spread infection, and blast the credit of the Christian Faith. But now alas! it is too late, for nothing is so vain as a man of some parts, where there is not a true sense of Piety to qualify them: And therefore he is now to stand by it with his Soul, and venture Damnation rather than lessen himself by a public Recantation, in the opinion of a half learned and debauched sort of people, whose interest it is to run down that Institution, which if it be true must rise up in judgement against them at the last day. P. 126. The force of the objection lies in this. If we can give our assent to nothing but what we have a clear and distinct Idea of in the Mind, so as to believe nothing upon the Worth and Veracity of another person, than there can be no Assent distinct from Knowledge; and thus there can be no Faith either Divine or Human. For if a man of whose sincerity you are throughly convinced, should tell you That there are a sort of people in the Indie's, who scourge their Idols severely, when any thing goes cross to their expectations, it is impossible for you to believe this unless you see it. For though you know the meaning of the words, and apprehend clearly what an Idol is, and what it is to scourge it; yet if the relations of ten thousand People, and ever so many circumstances concurred to the truth of it, yet you can never give your assent to it upon any other terms than he did who saw it, for nothing else can give you this evidence or knowledge of the truth and reality of it, which he makes the only ground of our persuasion And then if we can't give our assent even to the Reality and Existence of any thing, but when we have clear and distinct Ideas of the real modes and properties of it as it is in itself, than we can believe nothing either of God or of any thing relating to another World; For I have made it sufficiently appear that it is utterly impossible for us now to have such Ideas of them. Therefore now let us see how he endeavours to get over this. My Reader thinks, I warrant, that he is going about to reconcile the Christian Faith with his Principles. But instead of this, he spends sixteen pages in showing you there is no such thing as Faith; as you will see plainly. I shall take him in order, and answer every Paragraph because this is the most plausible part of his Sophistry. First he tell's us that to be confident P. 127 of any thing without conceiving it, is no Real Faith or Persuasion; but a rash Presumption, and an obstinate Prejudice. If he means by not conceiving it, not understanding the meaning of the Proposition revealed, he is in the right of it; but if he means by conceiving it the having as full and complete a knowledge of the thing revealed, as we have of any Phenomena of nature, 'tis absolutely false; for as I have shown at large, we may give our assent to the Existence of things when we can't conceive any thing at all of their real nature: And that our Christian Faith is however no rash Presumption or obstinate Prejudice, because it is founded upon sufficient testimonies of the truth and reality of the propositions believed, in things whereof we have clear and distinct Ideas. This is the thing he drives at, viz. that we have a full and complete knowledge of the things believed; and to make it plausible he says that God hath no interest to delude his Creatures, nor wants ability to inform them. ●rgo he reveals nothing but what he makes them perfectly comprehend. Therefore he hath not revealed any thing of the eternal Generation, of the Son, the change of our Bodies, the Joys of Heaven, of the operations of the Spirit, etc. because if God had revealed them, he would have made you conceive the manner of all these perfectly; and if he did not, it was certainly want of sincerity or ability in him. But let this Blasphemer know, that it is neither want of Veracity, nor Ability in God that is the reason why we don't conceive these things, but the Weakness and Imperfection of our present state, who have no capacities for them as yet. And therefore as we now give our assent to the Reality and Existence of what we can't conceive, upon that veracity of God which he hath thus endeavoured to rob of all its Authority, and Influence upon our assent; so God will one day manifest his Power, in bringing all those things to pass, which we can't now conceive; and will so enlarge our Souls that we shall clearly apprehend them, and all the Objects of another World. He proceeds and says that God would lose his end if what he said P. 12●. did not agree with our common notions (i. e.) I● God should speak Nonsense to you in his Revelations you would be never the wiser▪ for if he should reveal to you that a thing called BLICTRI had a being in nature, and not inform you what this Blictri was, you could not believe it. Now this very Instance which he intends by way of Ridicule of all the Objects of our holy Faith, doth happily show the true difference between a rational Assent and a blind Credulity; and is a sufficient confutation of his whole Book. Let us therefore compare these two words BLICTRI, and GLORY. Of the first I know nothing more than that it is made up of seven Letters, and therefore he that speaks it is a Barbarian to me. And as I know nothing of it, so I can believe nothing concerning it, but the uncertain found it makes to my ●●t; and that seven Letters makes two Syllables in writing As to the other word Glory, I grant I know as little of the real nature of the Glory of God, and of the Saints in Heaven, as I do what that Blictri means; and yet God doth not speak Nonsense, when he reveals to m● that there is such a thing in Heaven as Glory. For 1st. Tho' I have no notion of the thing as it is in itself, yet it is represented to me by the brightness of the Sun, and Glory of a Kingdom, the greatest Images I now am able to frame of it. 2. I am made acquainted with the Relation this Glory hath to me, viz. That it expects me in the Heavens, that I shall enjoy it, and be made partaker of it; and that it will render me happy beyond all imagination. But I am no more able to conceive that Happiness, than that Glory of God which shall be the cause of it. And 3. It is revealed by God with this design that it should be a prevailing motive of my Obedience, and an incitement to the practice of Virtue and Holiness. 4. I have not capacities at present to apprehend the real nature of it as perfectly as I can apprehend any thing in nature if it were discovered to me. And thus we see how God in all his Revelations doth not speak Nonsense to us, though we have not clear and distinct Ideas of the things which are revealed. Nay though we have no more Idea of them as they are in themselves, than we have of what Blictri is. Besides the Text he brings to back P. 129. this Sophism of his, explains the matter farther and lays open the Fallacy, Heb. 11, 6. He that comes to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him. By which we see all that is knowable of God by us now is his Existence, and the Relation he hath to us, viz That he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him. For I hope he will own that we are bound to believe all we know of God, though he flatly denies that we are bound to believe any thing more in him than what we know, as well at least as we do any thing else. He goes on and asks, without conceiving P. 130. Faith after this manner, (i. e.) without making it nothing else but knowledge, How could Christ be termed the light of the World? and how could we be said to have the Spirit of Wisdom? (i. e) unless he gives you as clear and distinct Ideas of every thing he reveals, as you have of a Stock or a Stone. I answer by giving us a clear and distinct Revelation of their Existence, of which we should have been wholly ignorant but for him, for thus he hath made us wise unto Salvation, since he hath given us a clear knowledge of our Duty, and backed his Precepts with the promise of future rewards, which we have no notion of; and the best thought we can frame of them is. That they exceed all that we can think or speak. But says he, That remarkable instance P. 131. of Abraham's Faith will be objected. Yes 'tis objected, and the way he answers it, is by saying as we do, and leaving his own Opinion to shift for itself. God promised Abraham to give him a numerous Progeny in Isaac; after this, before Isaac hath a Child, God commands him to sacrifice his only Son; He obeys upon this consideration, that God was able to raise him up again, by the same power that he at first raised him out of the deadness of Sarah's Womb. Now the question between him and me, is not Whether this Faith was a firm Persuasion built upon P. 132. substantial Reasons, which we allow and contend for, and therefore he says nothing to the purpose. But the question is, Whether Abraham gave his Assent to what he was not able to comprehend, which he must own; unless he proves that Abraham knew as perfectly the whole manner of God's raising a Body from the dead, or from a Womb past Child bearing, as he did the procreation of it in the ordinary way of Nature. Had Abraham been able to demonstrate that God would raise his Son, & to conceive exactly the manner how this was to be brought to pass, then indeed it were no Faith but Knowledge; but instead of this he had only the promise of God for it; and knew no more how God would raise him, than he knew how he made the World. After this he lays down several Observations P. 133. to prove there can be no such thing as Faith, (i. e.) an assent distinct from Knowledge. 1. If Faith were not a Persuasion resulting from a comprehension of the thing believed, there could be no degrees in it. I answer this is false like all the rest, for though I know nothing more of a thing than its Existence, and the Relation it hath to me, and therefore am fat from comprehending it; Yet my assent to the truth of it, shall vary in degrees either according to the Proofs I have for it, or according as I weigh and consider them. 2. The Subject of Faith must be intelligible P. 134. to all, since the belief thereof is commanded under no less a penalty than Damnation. Who doubts it? let him if he can produce one proposition we believe which is not intelligible. But because we don't fully comprehend the thing spoke of, are we therefore wholly ignorant of any thing relating to it, & must we reject it all as Fallacy & Imposture? If it be said He that believeth not shall be damned, Mark 16, 16. then what will become of him that takes all this pains to show there is no such thing as Faith? especially since the Belief there meant is something plainly distinct from Knowledge. For sure he doth not think the meaning of that text is this, He that hath not as full and comprehensive a knowledge of God and the things revealed, as he hath of any thing in Nature, shall be Damned, which is all his notion of Faith. Again. 3. If any part of Scripture were unintelligible P. 135. it could never be rightly translated. A very wise observation, who ever questioned it? But as I have shown there is a great deal of difference between understanding the meaning of the words, and, having a comprehensive knowledge of the thing intended by them▪ As I understand very well the meaning of these words. When Christ appears we shall be like him, though I am wholly ignorant wherein this likeness will consist; ●o that I can however translate the sense of that Proposition exactly and perfectly. And therefore 'tis such Wretches as He who affirm the contrary, that plentifully furnish the Atheistical and Profane, with all the matter of their objections against Scripture. But I hope in time God will put it into the hearts of our Governors to remedy these disorders. 4. Except Faith signifies an intelligible P. 136. Persuasion, we cannot give others a reason of our Hope. 'Tis very true, it is an Intelligible Persuasion, and grounded upon the strictest Reason. But he with a hardy confidence openly pretends, that we deny people are to examine and understand their Faith; and so runs into a comparison between Christ and the Idol of the Siameses upon our Principles. Now he is past all Reason and Modesty, and therefore I have no more to do here but deliver him up into the hands of our Governors. We may confute his Errors, but 'tis They only can suppress his Insolence; We only can endeavour to heal those who are already Infected, 'tis They alone can hinder the Infection from spreading farther. 5. That either the Apostles could not P. 137. write more intelligibly of the reputed Mysteries, or they would not. I answer that all that we are able to understand of these Real Mysteries they have made so plain, that they could not, neither need they have made them more plain and intelligible. As for the other part of them, they knew as little of it as we do; and therefore we don't Rail at them as he doth at all the Clergy, as if they had industriously concealed any thing from us which they knew themselves. He goes on, ' 'tis affirmed that God hath a right to require the assent of his Creatures to what they can't comprehend. Yes he has, and accordingly doth require it. And again I say 'tis Blasphemy to affirm that in this he is guilty of such a Tyranny as only becomes the Devil. He requires our assent to the Eternal generation of the Son; the Trinity of Persons, and Divinity of Christ; the Resurrection of our Bodies and change of them into the likeness of Christ etc. though we can't comprehend them. And yet he is so far from acting like a Tyrant in this, that he acts like a merciful God, and a tender Father. For he herein condescends to our capacities, and Reveals the methods of our Salvation, and the future state of Heaven to us, after such a manner as we are able to understand them; and promiseth that if they have that influence upon us which he designs, (i. e) to excite our Gratitude, and make us Virtuous and Holy; he will at the resurrection of our bodies, give us capacities to see them clearly as they are in themselves. So that these Mysteries are to be understood at last, but not till we come to another World. And therefore God doth not reveal them only to puzzle our heads, but for wise and P. 138. excellent ends, viz. to bring mankind to salvation by such Methods, as are consistent with the Freedom of his nature. From all these Observations he con P. 139. cludes, That to give our Assent to any thing above Reason in his sense is contradictory. 1. To the ends of Religion, whereas I have shown at large that upon this supposition, there can be no Religion at all either natural or revealed. 2. To the nature of man, (i. e.) because no man can believe what he knows nothing of, but this Quibble I have sufficiently removed. And 3. To the goodness and wisdom of God, who as he intimated before, is as much a Tyrant as the Devil for requiring us to believe any thing we can't comprehend. If God had required us to give our assent to what we knew nothing at all of, he would have required Impossibilities; if he had required us to give our assent to what we had no Proof or Evidence for, he would have required what was Unreasonable; but when he adapts the Revelation of things which we cannot comprehend to our capacities, under the notions of things which we do apprehend clearly and fully, it is the greatest argument of his wisdom. And when he requires no assent from us without sufficient Arguments of Conviction to any considering unprejudiced person. It is a great instance of his Goodness. And these revelations of things above our Reason to comprehend, as they are most powerful incitements to Gratitude here; so they will be the subject of our Praise and Thanksgiving hereafter, when the Veil is perfectly removed, and that we are enabled to apprehend them clearly. Now after all this pains to show that P. 139. there is no such thing as Faith distinct from Knowledge He says this will be objected against him. He is in the right of it, this will be ever objected against him, till he recants his Error publicly. But how doth he endeavour to evade it? Why. That knowledge which is the present & immediate view o● a thing is not Faith. He says well. But what is. Faith is only the understanding what is believed He will stand by it with Soul and Body that Faith is nothing else. That the understanding what is believed is necessary in order to Faith no one denies; but any man of common Sense may see, that this and the other definition are the same; for pray what is understanding what is believed, but having a present immediate knowledge of it, unless he will say a man can't believe a thing till he hath forgot he knew it. That which constitutes the formal act of Faith as it is distinct from Knowledge, is an Assent upon the Authority of another Person. But according to him Authority is no ground of Persuasion, and Faith is only the understanding what is believed, Therefore there can be no such thing as any Assent distinct from Knowledge. And now have I done this man any Wrong, by charging him with endeavouring to destroy the Faith of the Gospel, and to overthrow the whole Christian Religion. In the face of a Christian Government, and in Defiance of all Laws and Power Ecclesiastical and Civil; He tells them plainly that Faith is nothing more than understanding what is believed (i. e.) there is no such thing as Faith distinct from knowledge; and consequently the Faith of Christians is nothing but Implicit Assent and blind Credulity. And therefore here again I would deliver him into the hands of the Magistrate, not moved by any heat of passion but by such a Zeal as becomes every Christian to have for his Religion. But here he pleads a Toleration, but P. 110. for what? I hope there is no Toleration for Blasphemy and Profaneness; and though men are allowed to believe what they please themselves, yet sure they may be restrained from industriously spreading such Impious Notions as are destructive of all Religion, and from openly reviling the Christian Faith as Imposture and Implicit blind Credulity. Again 'tis objected against him That P. 140. his notions of Faith makes Revelation useless. Yes it doth, for though we understand the Words of the Proposition revealed ever so well, and comprehend the thing spoke of as fully as we do a Stock or a Stone; yet we can never give our assent to the truth of the Relation; because that after all is done we must take this upon the Word of another. But much more doth it make all the Revelations of the Gospel useless, because we have no clear and distinct Ideas of them, and therefore must utterly reject them all upon this score likewise. But in opposition to all that can be said, this Positive Man asserts here, what he hath been Asserting from the beginning of his Book, but gives no reason for; That Revelation is only of use to inform us, whilst the Evidence of its subject persuades us. Then reply we, if so you must believe all Relations true or false indifferently, when you understand the meaning of the Words, and know the nature of the thing spoken of. Nay if two contrary Propositions equally intelligible be related he must believe them both. And therefore now I hope he won't take it ill of the World, if they believe me when I inform them, that this Book which goes under his name, was the joint Endeavours of a secret Club, who set themselves with a great deal of Industry to destroy all Revealed Religion. And that they have made use of this Man as a Tool only, and have pushed him before them, to try with what safety such Principles as these may be openly avowed in opposition to all that is established among us; that they might follow and openly maintain what they have been forging in secret Cabals. Now this is a matter of Fact, and whosoever reads this must believe it, because they understand the meaning of the Words and know the nature of every thing that is spoke of in them; for Faith is nothing else but understanding what is believed, and if they understand P. 139. what is spoke of they must bow before the Light and Majesty of this knowledge. And therefore I hope he will never contradict me in this or any thing else I relate of him; for if he says the contrary then either the World must believe us both when we relate two contrary Propositions or they must be swayed one way or the other by his Authority or Mine; and whether they believe him or me it will sufficiently confute him, for it will show that Authority may be a ground of Persuasion as well as a means of Information. If they believe neither of us, than it will appear they are not under such a necessity of bowing before the Light and Majesty of that Evidence he contends ●or in all relations. The last objection he raises against this Principle of his, is that passage, 1. Pet. 2, 12. Where there is this expression, Which things the Angels desire to look into. The things spoken o● here are the methods of our Salvation by the Incarnation of the Son of God, and Descent of the Holy Ghost. and 'tis said in the time present that the Angels Desire to look into them. And I think it a natural inference from hence, that these things yet are Mysteries even to them in a great degree; which we need not much wonder at when they don't so much as know when the day of Judgement will be, and therefore we may the less wonder they are Mysteries to us. But we will suppose that this expression is meant of the time past. And then let me ask him these two Ques●ions concerning it. 1. Whether the Angels did believe those things they are said to inquire into, or no? if they did believe them, than we find 'tis very possible to believe things that we can't comprehend; for if the Angels understood them fully when they believed, why should they desire to search into them? 2. Whether, now these things are come to pass, he will assert that we have as full and comprehensive a knowledge of them all as the Angels have. If we have not, than we may believe things we do not comprehend. If we have, than there is no difference between ours and the state of the B●est in Heaven, at least in respect of knowledge. The last Objection he brings against C. 5. P. 144. his own Principles is That which is drawn from the consideration of Miracles. And this likewise is so strong an objection against him, that the very supposition of one true Miracle wrought in confirmation of any point of Doctrine, quite overthrows his whole Book. For 1. The thing itself is in a great degree Mysterious, and therefore if he will allow these things related of our Saviour to be true Miracles, he must allow there are Mysteries in Chris●●●nity. But he endeavours to evade this by the same Quibble he did the Doctrines of the Gospel being Mysterious, ●●z▪ P. 145. by saying the miraculous action mu●● be something in itself Intelligible and Possible. Who denies it? but it is however Mysterious still..: And to lay open this Fallacy we must distinguish the two things that are to be considered in every Miracle. And 1. The substance of the thing performed we grant must be very Intelligible and Possible, for as he says Contradiction is only another word for Impossible or nothing. 2. The manner of performing it, which is totally obscured from us, and lies out of the reach of all our Capacities. As to instance in that Miracle of our Saviour's F●●ding five thousand People with five Loaves▪ We understand very well what it is, for a great number of men to eat and be satisfied; and what it is for a small quantity of Bread to be increased to a mighty bulk: but as to the manner how this was performed, we are wholly ignorant of it, though we know well how Corn is increased in the ordinary way of nature. But he will object here as he did concerning the Doctrines, viz. That at this rate All the Phenomena of Nature are miraculous, for we know not the true manner of any one of them. And this is the main drift of this Chapter, to give us a wrong notion of a Miracle, viz. That it is nothing more P. 150. than the dextrous management of second causes, and not any immediate effect of Almighty God; and therefore in the close he tells us That Miracles are wrought according to the laws of Nature, though above its ordinary operations, which are therefore supernaturally assisted.▪ And this is the reason of that bold and arrogant expression of his, That could he tell how a Miracle was wrought, he believes he might do as much himself. For there is nothing more in it than in a Chemical Operation, and if he were Philosopher enough, he would work any Miracle of them all. But the true notion of a Miracle is, that it is An operation wrought by the immediate power of God, not by Assisting only, but overruling the laws of Nature; not only by hastening and accelerating its Operations, but sometimes by an instantaneous production, of what was never to be effected by the united force of all natural causes. As to instance in the Raising a Body from the Dead, all the united force of nature with the most dextrous management, would not be able to effect this; all the Extracting, Mollifying, Mixing, Infusing, Consolidating, etc. And the ministry not only of Thousands but of Millions at once would not be able to unite a Soul and Body again, when once they are separated: nothing less than the Almighty immediate act of God is able to effect this, and that without the concurrence of any natural cause. Again, there are some Miraculous Operations which are so far from being according to the laws of nature, that they are contrary to them. As that of the Sun's going back or standing still, all the laws of nature are disposed for its motion, or at least for the motion of our Earth which makes it seem to us to move. Again, The making Iron to swim 2. Kings 6. 6. Were this effect produced by Mollifying, Consolidating etc. or any Operation which should convert the substance of Iron into that of Wood, than we could not say that Iron swum, but something else; or if the water were condensed to support it, than it would be Ice and not water; and if any thing of this nature were done of a sudden'st would however be miraculous, but not contrary to nature. But for a solid piece of Iron while it remains such, to swim in Water no way condensed, this is not only above but contrary to the laws of nature. And so likewise for Fire not to burn, is contrary to nature. Indeed if there were nothing more in it than what this man supposes▪ that it is done by repelling the heat, and keeping off the flames, than it might be according to P. 145. the laws of nature, and there are many things which by an instantaneous application might extinguish the Fire. But to hinder fire from burning while it remains such, and combustible matter actually in it, this is contrary to the laws of nature. But all those Miracles which are not so directly contrary to nature, can't however be said to be according to the laws of nature. And I take these two expressions to be directly opposite. Which he makes the same, Miracles are according to the laws of nature. And, they are above the operations of it. For to instance in the first Miracle our Saviour wrought, that of Turning Water into Wine. The production of Wine according to the laws of nature. must have been by accelerating the growth of the Vine, and ripening the Grape suddenly, by application of all those things in nature which could forward it: but to turn Water immediately into Wine, without any of these methods, was to produce it afer a manner wholly different from all the laws of nature. Upon his Principles we have no way, from the nature of the thing, of distinguishing between the Delusions of the P. 147▪ Devil, those celebrated Feats of Goblins, and Witches, and Conjurers which he speaks of; and those which are wrought by the Finger of God. For without doubt the Devil is a great Philosopher, and can manag● second Causes, so as to produce Effects according to the laws of nature, which shall appear very strange to us. But we are sure nothing less than that power which is the Author of Nature, can work any real effect contrary to it, or above it. The Devil indeed may delude men's senses, so as to make them think that Real which is only an Appearance; as it is likely he did to mimic that miracle of turning Aaron's Rod into a Serpent; for that of the Magicines was not a real Conversion, but effected by their Enchantments, or as 'tis in the original by their Wiles and Juggling. For we find when they endeavoured to imitate Moses, in the instantaneous production of any real thing with Life, there the Devil failed them, and they were forced to own it was the Finger of God. And thus we see plainly, how this Man strikes at the foundation of all Revealed Religion, by undermining one of the main Pillars on which the Faith and Credit of it is founded. You see his drift all along in every thing he says, is to take away all Operations above the Laws of Nature, and all Doctrines above the reach of Reason; and then all the Religion of Men is consequently resolved into Infidelity, an Heathenism. So that any one who wishes Christianity to be true, must hope at least that this Man's Principles are false, since they are so utterly inconsistent. 2. But 2dly, As miracles being in a great degree Mysterious is an unanswerable objection against him; so they are altogether useless and impertinent upon his Principles. He owns P. 146. that God does not work them at random, but for some end; and this end he owns is for the confirmation of some Divine P. 150. Doctrine. But why for the confirmation of a Doctrine? for he hath told us over and over, that it is only the Evidence or immediate knowledge of the Doctrine itself can persuade us. That Faith is nothing more than the knowing what is believed etc. And therefore all Miracles for the confirmation of any Doctrine are needless and superfluous. If they are so evident to our Senses or our Reason that we know them to be true, what necessity is there of farther conviction? if a thing be so evident to m● Senses or Reason that I know it to be true, nothing can make me surer of it. So that we see the reason of Miracles is, that they may be a proof of something that we cannot comprehend. But it may be objected here that at this rate, if both the Doctrines and Miracles are mysterious, Then you prove one Mystery by another. I answer that they are not equally mysterious, for a mysterious Doctrine is totally obscured from us, both as to the manner and substance of the thing signified, as it is in itself. But in a Miracle the substance of the thing is obvious and intelligible, and the Manner only of the operation is concealed. And therefore in so doing, that which is more mysterious is proved by that which is less so. But this Blunderer will tell you, P▪ 150. that the Doctrines themselves are very knowable in all respects, but Miracles are wholly obscured as to the m●nner of them; And yet in the s●me breath Own, that these obscure Miracles, are for confirmation of these plain Doctrines This is another pi●c● o● his Logic, to prove Notum per Ignotius. He can't say that though the Doctrines are plain, yet that they came from God is not so; and therefore Miracles were to assure us of this. For if the knowing they come from God makes us give our assent to them, than Authority is a ground of Persuasion. And besides if they have that Evidence of their truth in themselves, which he contends for, let them come from whence they will we must give our assent to them. And now I am come to his last Sect. 3. C. 4. P. 151. Chapter, wherein he pretends to give an account When, Why, and by Whom Mysteries were brought into Christianity. There is not here so much as a pretence of reasoning, but several vile Insinuations against all the Primitive Christians, against the Clergy of all Ages, and against Christianity itself, making it as it is now professed only a sort of Heathenism, and the Ministers of it in all respects no better than Pagan Priests. By the title of this Chapter he was to have shown how these Mysteries came into Christianity, but instead of this (of which he says not a word) he talks in general how some Ceremonies were introduced, and some Doctrines abused to superstition. The dispute all along was about Mysteries, and now it is turned to Ceremonies; of which he speaks too after a confused manner, making no difference between the Orthodox and Heretical Professors, but charging all the mistakes and errors of every Sect indifferently, upon the whole body of Christians in the general. That miscarriages and errors crept in, and that the Christian Religion was corrupted and abused by many in the Primitive times to superstition is without all doubt; it is so now, and is like to be so to the end of the World, for it must needs be that Offences come. But what is all this to those who are not guilty of these things? suppose every thing in this Chapter true, what is all this to us? who in the celebration of Baptism and the Supper, have rejected all these numerous Rites and superstitious Ceremonies which he speaks of. As for those Ceremonies retained by us, it is time enough to defend them when he says any thing against them; and proves, either that the Worship of God and Celebration of the Sacraments can be performed without any Ceremonies. Or, That those which we have retained are unlawful. All he would insinuate here of them, is that they were in use among the Heathens; and the force of what he says, if it hath any, is this. Heathens used a White Garment in their Idolatrous Worship, they had certain Times and Places, and Persons, and Actions, appropriated to the Worship of their Idols; therefore 'tis unlawful to have any thing of this nature in the Worship of the true God. The Heathens used washings, Ergò P. 157. Baptism is unlawful. The Heathens used Eating and Drinking in honour of their G●ds, Ergò the Eating and Drinking in remembrance of Christ is superstitious. And thus by a direct and immediate consequence he destroys the Doctrine of the Sacraments Let him i● he can, show wh●t else can possibly be inferred from all this ridiculous incoherent s●uff. What he would insinuate here concerning the Sacraments is, that by a multitude of Ceremonies we obscure the nature of them, we make them Mysterious, and do not celebrate them wi●h that simplicity they were at first instituted. But let him in his next Bo●k show, what it is that we know ourselves concerning the Sacraments, which we conceal from the People. In short let him make out that he hath any other drift in this whole Chapter, than to show that there is no difference between Christianity and Heathenism. All this is by way of Amusement to People who do not know when a man speaks to the purpose; Ceremonies are not Mysteries, nor do they make a thing Mysterious. Those things which we call Mysteries, are the Nature and Attributes of God; the Eternal Generation and Incarnation of the Son, and Procession of the Holy Ghost; The Union of the Divine and Human Natures in Christ; the Resurrection of our Bodies; the Operations and Influences of the Holy Spirit of God upon ours; the Trinity of Persons in the Godhead; the Glory and Felicity of the Saints in Heaven; The Solemnity of the last Judgement etc. These are the Mysterious Doctrines of our Religion. Let him show us When, Why, and by Whom these reputed Mysteries, as he calls them, were brought into Christianity. For we affirm that they were brought into Christianity by Christ himself; who alone was able to reveal them. That they came in at the first publication of the Gospel; and with design to make us wise unto Salvation; and therefore we own ourselves so fond of them, that we P. 120. will hazard any thing, Life and all rather than part with them. And thus I have gone through his Book, and answered every thing that looked like Reasoning in it. If he will show me where I have overlooked any thing that hath the appearance of an Argument; or where my Answer fails, I will promise him not to let it pass. And if any are offended with my manner of treating him, I doubt not but they will be satisfied▪ if they but consider what St. Paul said to Elyma● the Sorcerer upon a like occasion▪ O full of all Acts. 13. 01. Subtlety and all Mischief, thou Child of the Devil, thou Enemy of all Righteousness, wilt thou not cease to pervert the right ways of the Lord? In the next Book he speaks of, he has two things to perform. 1. To show that we are not obliged by Scripture, to believe that there is any thing, in any point of the Christian Faith, which we do not comprehend as fully and perfectly, as we do the common objects of this World. 2. To discover to all the World those secrets in Religion, which the Clergy have industriously concealed from the Laity, under the notion of Mysteries, and make them so plain that they shall cease to be such; so that every one of them shall be as wise as e'er a Priest of us all. And indeed he is much to blame that defers it all this while; He that pretends so much Zeal and Concern for the Vulgar, should not let them remain so long in Ignorance, to be thus miserably imposed upon, by the craft and cunning of their Priests. What strange unheard of Design this Man has in that second Book, which is now a forging, is hard to tell. For by it he is to inform the World of things they never heard or thought of; He is to reveal to us more than ever Jesus Christ hath done; and what never yet could enter into the heart of Man to think, or into his imagination to frame any true and proper notion of. I● The World had any opinion of his abilities to perform what he pretends with this hardy confidence, we should all of us expect this wonderful Book with much impatience. Certainly by all these promises of so much New Light to the World, which hath lived in darkness so many hundred Years, we can't guests he designs to be no more than Head of an ordinary Sect, but to be as famous an Impostor as Mahomet, He hath laid a fair foundation for it, for he a●er's positively in one place, that if he knew the way how a Miracle was wrought he would work it himself. And again he openly says, That nothing related in the Gospel is Mysterious, either as to the manner or Substance of the thing, and therefore 'tis not unlikely that we shall have this man shortly confirming his Doctrines with Miracles. For my part, I can't imagine how he will go about what he hath undertaken; however thus much I dare venture to promise him, that whenever any thing is built upon that Rotten Foundation which is here laid, by the Grace of God I will pull it down. When this Book of his comes out (which after all will tell us no more concerning these Mysteries, than what we have heard an hundred times over; but by what he promises must take place of the Bible itself, which gives us no such clear and distinct Ideas of the things of another World) Then we shall give a better guess at the design of the Man. In the mean time, P. 150. I shall only say a little more concerning the Pretended, and the Real Drift of this Book. And 1. The Pretended Drift of it is▪ To free the Christian Religion from that Darkness and Obscurity, in which it is involved by the Contrivance of its Preachers, only to gain a Reputation ●● their Person● and Profession; and ●● make it such a Religion as God designed it, (i. e.) a Religion for all Men. But how doth he go about this? by scraps of Metaphysical Abstractions, which were tolerable where he found them, but spoiled in the Application. By talking of Adequate, Inadequate, and Intermediate Ideas; by the Nominal and Real Essence of things; by Irivolous distinctions between the Means of Information, and grounds of Persuasion; and by littl● Niceties concerning the degrees of Perspicuity i● Divine and Human Revelations etc. This is the method this grand Reformer takes, to restore Christianity to its Native Simplicity, and make it a Religion for all People▪ Whereas it is not One of ten Thousand that knows the meaning of any of these Words and Phrases, by which he darkens what is in itself▪ Plain and Obvious, and renders every thing in Religion a Mystery to them. And yet this is the very man that talks so much against the new converted Philosophers, P. 154 for confounding their Philasophy ●nd Divinity together, and by that means rendering every thing abstruse by Terms. And who rails at our Clergy for darkening every thing in Religion, and industriously concealing it from the People. 2. As to the Real design of thi● man, 'tis plain it is no other than what he formerly declared, and wha● he openly affects, viz. to be the Head of a Sect. and set up for a Reformer. For besides many General Expressions, he hath several very particular ones to this purpose, as where he says, That P. 165. the very Nature and use of the Sacraments are absolutely perverted and destroyed, and are not yet fully restored by the purest Reformations in Christian▪ do●. And that expression in the close of his Book. Because several turned Libertines and Atheists, when Priestcraft was laid ●o open at the Reformation; were Luther, C●lvin, or Zwinglius to be blamed for it? which is spoke by way of Defence of that great Reformation he intends, whatever the ill consequences of it are. Now the Method he hath taken to effect this grand design of his, is first to Amuse the generality of people with a little show of Learning, by hard Words, and several impertinent Quotations to get a reputation among them. His next Business was, to insinuate into the minds of people a disesteem of the Religion they now Profess, and make them believe that Christianity, as it is now received, is no better than Heathenism; which he doth by comparing Sect. 3. C. 6. them in several instances, and tells us plainly He hath said enough to show how the Divine Institutions of Christianity, through the Craft and P. 163. Ambition of Priests and Philosophers, did degenerate into mere Paganism. He calls our Principles narrow bigoted Tenets. And in short says they are a Mystery of Iniquity. He calls the present Theology, the Gibberish of our Divinity Schools, and the Language of the Beast. He would have no Ceremonies, P. 141. no Times, Places or Particular Actions for the Worship of God, etc. P. 167. And notwithstanding all these virulent Expressions, and many more through his whole Book, against the Religion professed and established among us; He says, That such is the deplorable Preface. P. 2. condition of our Age, that a man dares not openly and directly own what he thinks of Divine Matters, if it but v●ry slightly differ from what is received by any Party; or that is established by Law. And therefore He that hath openly said so much already, what is it he would not say, were it not for the Laws? Undoubtedly he hath a great deal more to say, whenever this new SECT of his becomes so numerous, that they shall outbrave the Laws, and labour for a Public Reformation of all the Mysterious Doctrines of the Gospel. Had this Man made any of the Mysteries of our Religion more clear and intelligible than they were before, He had done worthily; and might have hoped for a Reward from God, and Esteem from Men; And the Ministers of the Gospel would have been so far from resenting it, that they would have thanked him for it, and not failed to have acquainted their People with it. But by this Scurrilous Libel upon all these Doctrines which are the ground and foundation of Christianity; and by Railing at all the Teachers and Professors of it for sixteen hundred Years, as if they had all been Fools, and Knaves, and Bigots at the best, till He appeared in the World; He is justly become odious and detestable by all Men, who have any concern lest for the Christian Religion. 'Tis true he hath set his Forehead like a Flint, and is prepared with Obstinacy and Resolution against all that can be said or done against him. For God knows he no more values this ridiculous P. 172. Nickname of an Heretic, than Paul did before him. But sure there is a Acts. 24. 14. great deal of difference between St. Paul's being called a Heretic for Preaching the Resurrection of the Dead, 1 Cor. 15. 5. and saying the manner of it is Mysterious. And this Man's Contradicting him, and saying the Manner of it is not Mysterious; and by his Principels undermining the foundation of all Revealed and Natural Religion. Another way of effecting what he designs, is by loading the Clergy in general with Reproaches, and charging them with most detestible Frauds to serve the vilest ends. He declares himself in his Preface An open inplacable Enemy to all Clergymen, who make a mere Trade of Religion, and build an unjust Authority upon the Consciences of the Laity (i. e.) to all Clergymen who are not of his opinion, he is a professed Adversary; and He hopes every good and Wise Man will be the same. Nay the whole Race and Order, he calls an Usurpation on Mankind, and P. 166. a Diabolical and Antichristian Tyranny; Preface. P. 22. and says that by the assistance of Mysteries we first erected ourselves into a distinct Order, and one separate Body; us if there were no such Order instituted and appointed by our Blessed Saviour. And to make us sure that this is his Opinion, He says plainly, He Preface to the Lady's Religion. sees no reason why all men indifferently, should not as lawfully teach, as they are bound to practise their Religion. And again, why Women might not enjoy the Privilege of instructing others, in the Religious Duties they are bound to practice themselves, He wants still to be informed. That they may teach their Children and Servants in private, all the World allows; So that his meaning is, that they may Preach in public as well as men, though this be contrary to the express words of Scripture. He insinuates every where that our Profession is but a Craft; and calls it a Trade; and our Religious Mysteries a Preface. P. 19 Contrivance only to bring us Gain and Credit: as if we had no sense at all of Religion, and that a little Vain glory and profit were all our aim. He levels the whole Book mainly at the Clergy, and doth all he can to render us odious in the sight of the People. And to do it more effectually, he all along makes the Clergy and Laity two opposite Parties, and endeavours to raise in them jealousies and suspicions of our gulling and abusing them, in order to prejudice and incense them against us. And that his Sophistry might pass upon them the better, he paints us out under the notion of Heathen Priests; he draws their Picture, and then leaves the Laity to mistake it for ours; endeavouring everywhere, to make all People of his Faith, who thinks that Priests of all Religions are the same. What this Man advances here, is but a Branch of that bitter Root of Socinianism, which hath opened a Door for introducing and reviving many of those Heresies, which have formerly infested the Church, and troubled the Faith of Christians. These Men differ among themselves, and there is as great variety of them as there were of the Arrians formerly; yet they all agree in Destroying Revealed Religion and the established Doctrine of that Church, of which they yet profess themselves Members. Thus these Vermin engendered in the Body of it, at the same time they strike at one another, do all equally contribute to devour the whole, from whence they first derived their life and being. I hope I need not here enter into a Defence of our Order, or make any long Apology for the Ministers of the Gospel. This one Book of his, is a sufficient Proof of the Necessity and Usefulness of the Clergy; for had it not been for us, such ridiculous Sophisms as these might have passed with the People for sound Reasoning. If it were not for them, whose business it is to confute the Arguments of these pretenders to Reason, to lay open their Fallacies, and detect their Villainous Designs; there would not, in a little time, be so much as a Face of Religion omong us. And if the Experiment were not too dangerous, and the consequences of it never to be retrieved, there could not be a greater demonstration of the Necessity and Usefulness of the Clergy, than the universal desisting of their endeavours only for a very short space, For then all Religion would degenerate into Barbarity and Heathenism. If we are guilty of all these Villainies with which this Man brands us, there is no punishment either in this World, or the next too bad for us. But if we are not, and that this Man doth not make out what he so positively asserts, then what will he deserve? We appeal to any Power that is able to take account of the matter; And if the strength of all Laws Ecclefiastical and Civil should once be so relaxed, that every one may openly vent what they please against the Christian Religion, and its Teachers, without restraint (which God forbid) than we must leave it to him to defend his own Cause. The World is at this time so disposed for the reception of all Discourses that seem to set up Reason and Evidence in opposition to the Revealed and Mysteririous Doctrines of Christianity, that nothing less than the Interposition of Authority, can stop this current of Infidelity and Profaneness which threatens to overwhelm these Nations. How far Men in Power, according to their several stations, are obliged to intermeddle in point of Conscience, I shall not now inquire. But sure I am in point of Policy, it is become no less than necessary. For the writers of this Strain have given broad Hints, that they are as little Friends to our Government, as our Religion. This Man can say, That Magistrates are made for the People, and every one knows, what Doctrines of Rebellion men are wont to insinuate by this saying. And again he says. That God alone, and such as are inspired by him can prescribe Injunctions Pref. relating to the World to come, whilst Human Powers regulate the Affairs of this. By which 'tis plain his meaning is, that they have nothing to do, to meddle any way in the Affairs of Religion Now what would this man have said, if he durst have spoke as plainly of Government as he hath done of Religion? Whosoever observes these men's way of writing as to this one point, will be convinced they deserve to be looked too; Their Numbers grow Formidable, They begin to speak out their Infidelity and Profaneness, as plain as some of them do Treason; they are secretly forming themselves into Clubs & Cabals, and have their Emissaries into all parts, which are supported by Contributions: And I make little doubt, but that their design is at length to show us, That all Dominion as well as Religion is founded in Reason. POSTSCRIPT. I Have designedly left the consideration of those Passages he citys out of the Fathers, to the last, to be considered by themselves; because many Persons who will read the rational part, don't care for troubling themselves with the examination of these. And indeed, because I designed to dwell much longer upon them, than I find the length of this Letter already will permit. The very Quoting of the Fathers, is a confutation of himself; for if there be no other ground of Persuasion but Evidence, what can the Authority of the Fathers signify to incline men's Assent either one way or the other? and indeed of Scripture itself? All Quotations Divine or Human are useless & impertinent upon his Principles. For what he would persuade by them is evident in itself or it is not. If it be evident, we shall certainly believe it, let who will say it; but if the truth of it be not evident from the nature of the thing itself, all the Pompous Citations in the World signify nothing. He was sensible of this, and that is the true reason why he gives the Fathers as foul language, as he doth the modern Clergy; not considering that the same objection holds against the Bible itself. For if the Authority of God be not a ground of Persuasion, than a Text out of the Bible will be of as little ●orce, as a Quotation out of any fabulous Heathen Author, to influenceo ur Assent to any Proposition. He introduces them after the most scornful manner he could contrive, and says, that the mentioning of Schutcheons puts him in mind of the Judgement of the Primitive Church. And in another place he hath this expression, by way of ridicule, The Fathers, The admired Fathers▪ their Opinions he calls Whymsies. And their Works insuperable Labyrinths. And calls the just Esteem we have for them, A Blind Veneration for those who lived before us. He never mentions them without the greatest contemt, and says, He is not to be put out of countenance by Venerable names, and Pompous Citations, that have no value, but such as an ugly Rust and Colour give ancient Coins. But this similitude that he designs by way of derision, doth very well express the worth and usefulness of the Fathers. For as ancient Coins are now of no greater intrinsic value than the bare weight of the Metal they are made of; yet they are of excellent use to give us light into the times and customs of Antiquity, and upon that score are of vasily greater value than any modern Coins. So it is with the Fathers; they were Men, and wrote like such; and though we should grant that some of their works, are not in themselves more excellent than what hath been written in after ages; yet these Writings of theirs are much more to be valued, because they lived nearer the times of Christ and his Apostles, and therefore had greater advantages of coming to right apprehensions of all things relating to Christianity, than it is possible for any after them to have. Not but that some of them seem to have wrote by a more peculiar influence of the Spirit. And therefore this Man's arrogant treatment of the Fathers, puts me in mind of that passage of the ignorant children's reviling the Prophet, and calling him Baldpate; who saw nothing of him beyond those common infirmities that are incident to Human Nature, and did not discern any thing of the Divine Spirit that was in him. We do not blindly and implicitly acquiesce in any thing they say, but we have a just Veneration for them, and deserence to their Authority; And if he could have produced any thing from them which had made against us, we would have owned he had gained a great point. But all the Citations he produces, are only to prove that the things revealed under the Gospel, were called Mysteries under the Law; and That the Veil is taken away, both which we allow. Let him bring one Text out of the Bible, or one Quotation out of the Fathers, to prove that the Veil is taken away in the sense that we deny, (i. e.) in respect of the true Nature, and real Properties of those things which we call Mysteries For that it is taken away as to the Existence of those things, and as to the Relation they have to us, as to the intent and design of them we allow. And this is a sufficient answer to all his Quotations, if he brought a thousand more to the same purpose he hath done these. However I shall consider them in particular. And 1. He says * STROM. Lib. 5. Clemens Alexandrinus hath the same notion of Mysteries with him. For he says the Christian Discipline was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Illumination, because it brought hidden things to light. Very true. But not because it brought them so to light, as to discover the real Nature and Properties of every thing revealed; and give us as clear and distinct notions of all divine things as they are in themselves, as we have even of sensible Objects, Which this Man ridiculously contends for. And this he would have seen if he had read but Ten Lines farther, where he has this Expression, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. By which he affirms the nature of God, to be above all we can conceive or speak of him. So that 'tis plain the Father in direct opposition to this Scribbler, is of opinion that God is still Mysterious, notwithstanding all the Revelations we have of him. The whole drift of the former part of that 5th. Book, is to show that the true nature of FAITH, consists in giving our assent to the truth of things which we cannot know, upon the Authority of God; and to this he applies that Text of the Apostle, 1. Cor. 2. 5 where he adviseth us that our Faith should not be founded on the Wisdom of Men, who as he explains it pretend to make us know every thing we believe. But on the Veracity of God, who saves us by pure Faith, without that Evidence of the thing itself, which some Men require. The Father's own words are these. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. and therefore he elegantly calls Faith the Ears of the Soul, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉▪ because by this we are disposed, to listen to Discourses of those things which we cannot comprehend. Not that he supposes we are ignorant of the meaning of any Proposition we believe, and therefore he says 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is no Knowledge without Faith, no● Faith without Knowledge. And he here makes a manifest difference, between that Assent which is the immediate effect of Knowledge, and that which is properly Faith. And then asketh this Question 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Who is so estranged from God, so much an Infidel, as not to believe him upon his word; but require the same Evidence, and clear Knowledge of the things revealed from God, as he requires from men? I answer, This Man of unparallelled Impudence, who hath quoted this same 5th Book of his, against himself and us, to prove the quite contrary to what he thus positively asserts. The next Father he Quotes against us, is Justin Martyr. Who says, Moses with his hands stretched out at the Battle with the Amalakstes, was a Type of Christ Crucified. And He useth these words Type, Simbol, Mystery etc. to signify things once hid, but now revealed. So do we all to this day use these words, to express those things which were once hid, and now revealed; and yet there are Mysteries in the Christian Religion for all that. And if he will look into his Tract of a True Confession of Faith, He will never again cite this Father against us, at least in this Controversy; but call him all to nought as he hath done us. When he had been speaking of the Union of the Divine and Human Nature in the Person of Christ, and proposed many intricate and insuperable difficulties concerning this Article of our Faith, Perhaps says he these unconceivable difficulties may perplex your mind, and stagger your Faith. As for me when I am in, any perplexity about these CHRISTIAN MYSTERIES, I cry out. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. That those things of our Religion are above our faculties of Knowledge, above REASON, above the capacities of created Nature. And it follows, That there is no other Solution to be given of these things, but that of a READY FAITH He argues moreover, the impossibility of coming to the true knowledge of these Divine Objects, from the disproportion there is between them, and our present capacities. And asks this Question. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. With what Confidence can ye go about to give an exact Solution of Divine things? I leave this man who is concerned, to give him an answer. The next Quotation is out of Tertullian, who hath this expression in his Apology. Cum vel ex Formâ omnibus Mysteriis silentij fiides habeatur etc. He is in that place defending the Christians, from those crimes of Incest, Adultery, and murdering of Children, which the Heathen charged them, as being guilty of in there meetings. That they were groundless Rumours and nothing more, He argues thus; These things must be first discovered either by ourselves, or others; not by others, because they have no way to know them, but by such as are privy to them; not by ourselves, for none who are guilty of such horrid Crimes, would discover things which must expose them to the immediate punishment of the Laws, though the vengeance of God were deserved. And the force of the comparison with the Heathen Mysteries lies in this. If the Samothracian and Elusinian Mysteries are kept so secret, which are not of such dangerous consequence to discover; How much more must you think such Herrid and dangerous Mysteries as you suppose ours to be, will be kept secret. And his In●erence is very natural viz That these things must needs be mere Rumour, since if they were true they would not be discovered; or, if they were discovered, must expect no mercy from the Heathen, who would be sure not to spare them. And therefore he says. Dicimur sceleratissimi, dicimur tamen semper; nec vos quod tam diù Dicimur eruere cu●atis. Ergò aut cruite si creditis, aut nolite credere qui non eruis●is. This is the whole scope of the place, and how this man will wrest his Inference out of it. Ergò, There are no Mysteries in Christianity, I can't imagine. The last He citys is Origen. Who says, That the Doctrines of our Religion do all agree with our COMMON NOTIONS. (i. e.) as far as we are able to know of them. But this doth not prove, That there is nothing more intended by them, than what we Know as well, as we do the ordinary Objects of our Senses. Again He says The Land of Promise was a Type of Heaven. This Man's Inference is, Ergò, Now this is known, the state and condition of the blessed in Heaven can be no Mystery to us. That whole sixth Book of his against Celsus is to show, the direct contrary to what this man infists upon in his last Chap. viz. To prove against that Heretic, That the Mysteries of the Christian Religion, were not originally derived from the Idolatrous and Superstitious Customs of the Heathen. Let him answer that Book before he sets about answering Mine. These are all his Pompous Citations from the Fathers, to prove what no one denies. That the Veil is removed, and that therefore nothing in Christianity, no not the Nature of God is Mysterious. Now after all I find this is no new Heresy, but an old one of Eunomius revived, who affirmed, The Real true Nature of God to be intelligible by us, Basil: Con: Euno● which was long ago conjured in all the branches of it by St. Basil. It is to no purpose to heap up Quotations here, to prove that the opinion of the Fathers was, That we know nothing of the true Nature of God, there is not any thing which occurs more frequently in them, and that they are more express in. Greg: Nazianzen calls God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and in the same Him Hymnus ad Deum. to God he hath this verse. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How can the mind frame any Notion of thee, who art incomprehensible? Having thus shown to how little purpose his Citations out of the Fathers are, and how the Nature of God is truly Mysterious; Because what I have spoke, concerning our manner of forming Ideas of God and the things of another World, may look a little odd at first sight; as if I turned all Religion into Allegory, and by that means destroy the Reality and Substance of it. I shall show that this is no new Doctrine of mine, but the opinion of the Fathers. Contr. Marcionem. lib. 2. Cap. 27. way of intercourse with Men, but by taking on him our Senses and Affections, by which he accommodates, the insupportable Majesty of his Nature, to our ●rail and imperfect state. Deus non potuit humanos congressus inire, nisi humanos & sensus & affectus suscepisset, per quos vim Majestatis suae intolerabilem, utique humanae mediocritati humilitate temperaret. Gregory Nyssen discoursing at large, Lib. 12. contra Eunomium Haeret. how the sacred Style was accommodated to our Capacity, by expressing the nature of God and divine things, under the notion of such things as are familiar to us; adds these words, For how says he could that Immensity be contained in a little? were it not that those things are brought down to our shallow Capacities. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Dionysius speaking of this Symbolical and Figurative way of conceiving, and expressing the things of another World, calls those things by which they are represented to us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Epist. 9: ad Ti. signa, figmenta, which is better rendered by the english word Substitutes. And he adds that the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are the Substitutes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Those things which have Form and Figure, are the Representatives of those Divine Things which have none. Again Dionysius says it is impossible for us Cap. 1. de Cal: Hi. to contemplate the nature of immaterial Objects, any other way than by help of those notions, we frame of those things which are material. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. St. Cyrill says that our manner of conceiving Divine things, is by Examples or Similitudes; after the same gross manner we represent the heavenly Orbs upon a piece of Paper. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Gregory Nazianzen discourses fully, Orat. 34. how nothing is more evident than that there is a God, though at the same time we are not able to conceive or express what he is; and hath these remarkable words, concerning our manner of conceiving the things of another world. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. By which he plainly supposes it as impossible for us, whilst we are immersed in these gross Bodies, to frame any conceptions of Spiritual things, without the help of worldly Objects; as it is for us to overtake our shadow, or to see in the dark. It is ordinary with the Fathers, speaking of God to say, That when we conceive him as being a Substance, as being Wise and Holy, nay as having Life, etc. they are all but Figurative Representations of something in God which transcends all that we can imagine. Dionysius, or whoever was Author Cap. 13. de Diu. No: of those Books which go under his Name, says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And accordingly in his Mystical Theology, speaking of the nature of our present knowledge of God and spiritual things, says very aptly that this is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉▪ And therefore God in the writings of the Fathers is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. without Existence, without Substance, without a Mind, without Life. Not by way of Privation, as Marius Victorinus in his 4th. Book against Arius observes, but by way of Excellence. Because the notions affixed to these words, express nothing of the true nature of the things when referred to God. Very agreeable to what the Apostle says, Acts 17▪ 27. Where he expresseth the Knowledge we have of God, by Feeling after him. The Original word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is very expressive, for it signifies the greping for a thing in the dark. Clemens Alexandrinus speaking of Storm. Lib. 5. the method we have of coming to know the nature of God, says, That the utmost we can arrive to, is to know what he is not, and not what he is. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And thus we see how little reason this man had to quote those Fathers who, he tells us, have the good luck to be both the New, and the Old of the World. But His Heresy is as old as Eunomius, and now revived by this UPSTART as he very aptly calls himself. And I think we may well call this New Old Sect of his, the Genesticks of our Age, since they are a profound sort of people, who set up for Knowing every thing, and Believing nothing. He hopes in time to plead Prescription, and that His Book too shall in after ages be valued, as the Fathers are in this. But alas! though he wants no qualification of Error, and Impiety for this Ambition of his; yet he hath not Wit and Learning enough, to be a Heretic upon Record. Such Books as these seldom live any longer, than till their Fallacies are laid open; and then they perish, and Rot with the Memory of their Authors. Whereas the Fathers (who are now in Heaven for defending that Truth, which he hath laboured to corrupt) will have their just Authority, among all Pious and Learned Men to the end of the World. And now that I have done, I must confess the Man was not worth my trouble; but the Cause is richly so, and it is our misfortune that we think no thing can gain upon the World but sound Reasoning and Argument. Whereas there have been many instances, of the most odd and ridiculous Enthusiasts having in a short time Proselytes enough, to bring Church and Sta●e into confusion. He hath as little of true Reasoning or Argument as any of them, but his Pretence is plausible; and those are the Books which do mischief in the World. And therefore I was not to consider the strength only of the Poison, but the constitution of the Age, which seems strangely disposed for Infidelity, and a Contemt of all Divine Revelation. Besides, I have contrived this Letter, so as to be an answer not only to him, but to all the Opposers of Revelation and Mysteries. And I hope I may say, I have done something towards the right stateing this whose Controversy, which hath been hitherto so much mistaken on both Sides. For whilst Men on one hand, expect a rational account, and clear and distinct Ideas of what is wholly Unaccountable by ●●▪ and of which we can have no Conceptions at all. And on the other hand▪ men go about with endless labour, to explain what is Inexplicable; there can be no end of these Controversies which multiply upon us every day. But if we all agree to leave off speaking of what we know nothing of, and freely own what we must confess whether we will or no; That we can have no Ideas at all, of the things of another World as they are in themselves; and that our manner of conceiving them at present, is by Intervention of the common Objects of this Life, than the whole controversy will be reduced to a very short ●●●●●. And all the Revelations and Mysteries of Christianity, established upon those foundations which Christ hath laid; Not in the Wisdom of Men, but in the Power of God. Trin Coll. Dub. May 1. 1697. ERRATA PAge 10. line 13. for Senses r. Senses. And so wherever the word is distinguished from Reason, p. 24. l. 1. r. ground, p. 25. l. 3. r. evidence, p. 30. l. 3. r. persuasion, p. 63. l. 3. r. of, p. 85. ult. r. deference, p▪ 134. l. 20 r. taught, Ibid 27. r. which is all that's meant, p. 143. l. 7. r▪ cant, p. 156. l. 8. r. Ratiocination, p. 185. l. 11. r. after, p. 186. l. 7. r. Magicians, p. 187. l. 1. r. and▪ p. 199. l. 2. r. abstruse, p. 206. l. 1. r. Arians, p: 219. l. 18. r. fides, p. 222. l. 23. r. Hymn.