A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE Rise, Growth, and Progress OF QUAKERISM; Setting Forth, That the Principles and Practices of the Quakers are Antichristian, Antiscriptural, Antimagistratical, Blasphemous, and Idolatrous from plain matter of Fact, out of their most approved Authors, etc. Containing Also, A modest Correction of the General History of the Quakers; wrote in Holland by Gerard Croese. By Francis Bugg, Senior. Because I have called and ye refused; I have stretched out mine hand and no man regarded; I also will laugh at your calamity, I will mock when your fear cometh. Prov. 1. 24, 26. Raze it, raze it, even to the foundation thereof. Psalm 137. 7. London, Printed Anno 1697. THE INTRODUCTION. Courteous Reader, IN my former Books I thought myself obliged to Apologise for my writing against the Errors of the Quakers, because some People then, even the Author of the Snake in the Grass, etc. thought I might wrong them, as the Quakers suggested, who since are better satisfied therein, their Mask being taken off: But yet some objections still remain, to obviate which, I shall proceed to do. Obj. 1. But say some, Fra. Bugg in his Book Entitled, The Qua. Detected, etc. gave a tolerable account of the Quakers respecting their beginning; and now to write contrary seems contradictory. Ans. I do acknowledge, that in the year 1686. when I wrote that Book, I had better thoughts of them, respecting their beginning, than now I have; neither did I then in 1686. know them guilty of holding such pernicious Principles and Fundamental Errors, as now I know they do; having than not seen many of their Books, which since I have both seen and perused. But grant I did not so clearly see them then as now, nor understand their Fundamental Errors so clearly then as now; yet I saw enough to justify my separation from them, from the charge of Apostasy, as I made fully appear, not only in that Book, but also in my Book, i. e. New Rome unmasked, etc. neither did my acknowledging them and their deportment, and the simplicity and plainness of their Carriage, which attended them and their Doctrine [which I since understand was only a decoy to catch simple Souls] to be a reason for their being Orthodox, and myself an Apostate from the Christian Faith, since not only I, but Men more Learned, and of better Judgements than I have been mistaken; Witness that famous Man and worthy Martyr of Jesus Christ, Archbishop Cranmer. See Fox's Acts and Mon. p. 1488. The Church of Rome Taught in the beginning a pure Doctrine; but after she fell into the new Doctrine of Transubstantiation, I marvel that any one could allow it if they knew it: But, whatever they bear the people in hand, that which they writ in their Books hath neither Truth nor Comfort. Again p. 1325. ibid. I am [said Huge Latimer that worthy Martyr] Ignorant of things which I trust hereafter to know, as I do now know things in which I have been Ignorant heretofore; ever learn, and ever to be learned to profit with learning. I thought in time past that the Pope was Christ's Vicar, had been Lord of all the World as Christ is: So that, if he should have deprived the King of his Crown it had been enough, for he could do no wrong: Now I think otherwise. I thought in time past that if I had been a Friar in a Coul I could not have been Damned, nor afraid of Death; and by reason thereof, I have been minded many times to have been a Friar, namely when I was sore sick and diseased: But now I behold my Superstitious Foolishness. It were two long to tell you what blindness I have been in, and how long it were e'er I could forsake such Folly, etc. Reader, These two Instances (if there were no more) show forth, that the best of Men are fallible and may err as I did, and be mistaken; as also the Humility of these two learned Prelates and worthy Martyrs are exemplary in their Christian acknowledgement thereof, and forsaking such a corrupted Church, infected with Idolatry and Superstition, which cleared them from the charge of Apostasy; and the same cause leads to the same thing: And if I once had a good opinion of the Quakers, you see these famous Men had as good, if not a better opinion of the Papists, who yet left them and forsook them as I did the Quakers; and for which I bless God, who put it into my heart to forsake such a manifest Heresy. Amen. Obj. 2. But say the Quakers in their Book Judas and the Jews, etc. p. 78. But herein you show your malice; for, had G. F. been a cursing Man, like Muggleton, etc. Implying it somewhat pardonable then to write against the Quakers. Ans. See their Book Truth's Defence, etc. G. Fox's words to Mr. Camelford a Minister, thus, O thou filthy Beast, no Prayers can we send to thee, but for thy Destruction, thou Man of Sin and Enemy of Christ.— O thou impudent and brazen faced;— thou Hypocrite and Pharisee thou art damned openly.— Thou art in the Sorcery, in the Witchcraft, and in the Adultery, and in the corrupt Seed, whose Blessings are Cursed.— O thou slanderous Beast;— thou natural Brute-beast:— and here I charge thee to be a Witch, and to bewitch the People.— Thou deaf Adder and Serpent,— thou child of the Devil, Blasphemer and Enemy of all Righteousness.— O thou falsehearted dissembling Hypocrite; the Plagues of God are due to thee, and that is thy portion,— thou blind Sot,— thou dark Sot;— thy Torment is but beginning, and so far thee well: Thus far Fox. Again, hear another of the same Praternity, viz. Ed. Burrow in his Works p. 29, 30, 31. In Answer to certain Queries sent to the Quakers by one Mr. Bennet, Burrow's Answer runs in this Channel, viz. Thou art manifest what thou art, where thou art, and what Spirit thou art off: a Reprobate, a child of Darkness; the Light condemns thee and all thy Generation [of Priests] Eternally we witness thee and all thy Generation to be in the Witchcraft and Sorcery,— for thou art Darkness itself:— Here thou, full of all subtlety, hast made manifest thy Poison and Enmity:— Here thou Jesuit,— and thou Reprobate, see whether thou beest not a blind ignorant Sot;— there thou accursed art made manifest:— Here thou beast, to whom the Plagues of God are due, and upon whom his wrath must be accomplished: Here thou dark blind Hypocrite,— thou dead Beast;— here thou polluted Beast;— here stop thy mouth thou Sorcerer; O thou dark Beast and Conjurer, who art Querying with thy Conjuring words, etc. Reader, behold and be amazed! that this people should blame any body for writing against them, when never did any write like themselves; nor was Muggleton a greater Curser and Damner than Fox. The next I shall mention is their Learned Fisher, who writing against John Owen, Richard Baxter, Thomas Danson, and John Tombs, In his Book Styled, The Rustics Alarm, etc. calls and compares them to Lizards, Moles, Tinkers, Red-coats, Cowdung, Green-headed Trumpeters, Rare and Base, Wheelbarrows, Gimcracks, Whirlpools, and Whirlygigs, a Mooncalf, their Bell has no Mettle but the sound of a Kettle, caper's about, quivers up and down like a blind Night-bat, Ragged, Torn, Threadbare, tatterdemalions, malicious Serpents, Vipers, grinning Dogs, Jack-puddings, dunceable Darkness, gropable Blindness;— Then so many leaps of a Louse, bo to a Goose, Hedgehogs, Fiery fighters; Baxter and Tombs as Twins that tumbled out of one Belly, the Womb of that Babylonish Bawd, etc. All which idle Drollery and ridiculous Nonsense is vindicated by W. Penn, in his Epistle prefixed to this Sam. Fisher's Works, saying, It was so ordered by God's Providence, that his [Fisher's] partly fell to be most Controversial, in which to carry a clear Mind, and an even Hand, is very difficult: However allowing him, in some passages, the freedom of the Prophet Elijah against the Prophets of Baal [1 King's 18, 27.] sometimes exposing absurd things by vulgar Terms and Proverbs to Derision, in the view of his ingenious Reader, he hath discharged himself as a conscientious, fair, and learned Apologist, etc. Now, if the Quakers will have allowance from the Prophets to vent this sort of wild Gibberish, I hope I may take a little liberty to expose their absurd Principles to the just abhorrence and derision of the People. Obj. 3. But some may say, was there no way to accommodate this Controversy without this public method; surely a more Amicable and Friendly way had been more suitable to a religious Difference. Ans. It would be too tedious to recite the many and frequent offers that I have given them from time to time to meet me, and that according to the very words of their own propositions, but they would not; I have sent them Summons after Summons, until at last I Summoned 12 of their Hearers to give me a meeting, but they would not; a Copy thereof is as followeth. A third Summons. For Jo. Hubbard, Thomas Brewster, J. Haws, Ed. Deeks, Jo. Peacock, Jo. Cranwell, Jo. Carver, Jacob Baker, William Mead, John Knight, Sy. Birgis, Amb. Friend, Hearers amongst the Quakers, to bring forth Sheba the Son of Bichri, 2 Sam. 20. Alias G. Whitehead to stand to his own Proposition, in his printed Sheet delivered to the Parliament December 1693. Entitled, The Qua. Vind. etc. p. 4. otherwise to give me a meeting yourselves within 20 Miles of my Dwelling, and timely notice thereof; and then and there openly and publicly either justify your Teacher's Books by Scripture proof, and if it be not possible for you so to do, then to condemn the Errors contained in them under your Hands, for the prevention of further controversies thereabout; but if not, then know, that my hand will be heavy upon you, if God permit. July 20. 1696. Fr. Bugg, Sen. But this being sent to divers of them near 6 Months since, and they will neither hear nor answer any proposition how equal soever it be; tho' I have often wrote to them and spoke to them. Therefore I now proceed to lay their pernicious, as well as presumptuous, Errors further open; and in so doing I shall not spare them, nay, nor pity them, being wholly clear of them. Obj. 4. But if this had been sooner, before they got to this height, and to this order and settlement, as to have their Classes, their Provincial Synods, their Anniversary Synods and Counsels, and the favour of the Government, it might happily have stopped their further growth, which now seems impossible. Ans. I grant their Heresy is of long continuance, yet the Arrians much longer; which continued, as I have read, more than 300 Years; who through their subtlety got so much into the favour of the Government, as to get the Pulpit, and the exclusion of the Orthodox; yet they are dispersed and withered away, and these have not yet been half a century, and their Errors more notorious: And 'tis my belief they will not remain the other half before they are exploded. Why then should any be discouraged in such a work? The Pope and his Superstitions have not gone on without many Testimonies against them. 'Tis said that our famous Wickliff, an Oxford Scholar, has wrote more than 200 Volumes against his Errors and Innovations: And I hope we are not without some such now in our famous Universities; who, as they become sensible of this Quicksilver Tribe, I mean New Rome; and know where to fix upon them, and their invisible Tenets, which at present they mask under disguise, owning in words, being examined, what in their Books they deny: For indeed, their Books are of two sorts, carrying two contrary Faces. The one to the World, to decoy people, the other to their Friends to be read in their Meetings, insomuch as 'tis hard to know a Quaker, who, as Irenaeus said in his third Book against Heretics, viz. Whilst Heretics speak like the Faithful, they not only mean otherwise than what they say, but clean contrary; and by their Tenets full of Blasphemy, they destroy the Souls of those, who with their fair words suck in the poison of their foul Opinions, etc. And no marvel (saith St. Paul) for Satan himself is transformed into an Angel of light: therefore it is no great thing if his ministers be also transformed as the ministers of righteousness, whose end shall be according to their works, 2 Cor. 13. 14. And for our pattern we have the famous Wickliff, who paved the way for great Luther in Germany, who was wonderfully carried on, even as upon Angels Wings; which made the Papists rave and roar, fret and fume; calling him Apostate, Self-condemned Apostate; insomuch that all men's minds stood (as it were) upon their tiptoes to see the issue of Pope Leo's rage; and brave Luther's courage, who went on undauntedly writing many Books, until he finished both his Days and Testimony, of whom Beza said, Rome tamed the World, the Pope tamed Rome so great; Rome Ruled by power, the Pope by deep deceit. But how more large than theirs was Luther's Fame, Who with one Pen both Pope and Rome doth tame. Go fictious Greece, go tell Alcides then, His Club is nothing to great Luther's Peneus Jan. 18. 1697. Fra. Bugg, Sen. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE Rice, Growth, and Progress OF Quakerism; With a modest Correction of the General History of the Quakers, writ in Holland by the Learned Croese, Anno 1696. The PROLOGUE. WHen I first heard of the said History, I thought it might have spared me this Labour; hoping it would have given an impartial Account; not only of the coming in of that Sect, of the names of the Persons, of the places of their abodes, of their Handicraft professions, of their tumultuous behaviours, of their belching out their Defamations, and scurrilous Languages to Magistrates and Ministers, and of their frequent disturbing the Churches, and contemning the Ordinances of Christ and all Instituted Religion: But also the ways and methods by which Quakerism have grown and increased, and prevailed to this height it is now arrived at: But when I came to view it, and seriously to consider the Contents of it, as I find it in many things very well done, with respect to the former particulars, and thereby will spare me some pains and cost; so with respect to the latter, viz. to set forth their pernicious Doctrines, their horrible Blasphemies, their dissembling Cheats and religious Frauds; [by which they have not only deceived Thousands, but almost persuaded many well meaning and worthy Gentlemen to have a better esteem of them, and their Tenets, than they deserve] I found it very deficient, viz. In showing the methods by which they have risen, and their Hypocrisy and wretched ways by which they have spread their blasphemous Errors, and pernicious Principles, and how they have unchurched all but themselves; and thereupon it seemed to me, that the said History rather tends to strengthen them in their Errors, then to help them out of them; for it bends too much to the left hand, and reflects on our English Magistrates as Persecutors, and on our Church as not well disciplired; which I charitably presume, was occasioned by that Learned Authors giving too much credit to the Books and Manuscripts, and his conversation with some of them, for saith he, p. 5. Since therefore I have had the fortune of a long time to be familiarly acquainted, and much conversant with these men called Quakers, and that in many places, and besides, many of their Writings and Manuscripts, of which some are in print, some not, having fallen into my hands I thought it would be an acceptable Enterprise to write upon this Subject, leaving it for every Man to judge as he thinks fit, of their Actions, Tenets, etc. And since I find the said History as above observed, to be deficient in the main Part, at least, in many main Points, I shall write something by way of Correction, which I hope neither he, nor any other indifferent Person will take amiss, since I pretend to have as much experience and knowledge of the Quakers as he can pretend too, having the misfortune to be many Years conversant with them and their Teachers, as also the good fortune to know their Methods, to have of their Writings and Manuscripts by me, some in print, some not, whereby I have been able to direct them, and to confute their Errors; and so I shall leave it to every Man (as he saith) to judge as he pleaseth of their Actions, Tenets, Customs, way of Church-Government, and principles of Religion, and Doctrine, which I shall produce from Book and Page of their most Authentic Authors. First then, that it may appear I have reason to know the Quakers as well as this Learned Author, and thereupon as warrantable a Motive to write on this Subject: In the Year 1657. I went first amongst the Quakers; and in 1659. became one of their Society, and continued amongst them about 25 years; and since that time I have been a narrow observer of them, and much acquainted with many of them: I have near 300 of their Books by me, besides Manuscripts and old Records; and besides all this, I was Clark to their Monthly and Quarterly Meetings for the Isle of Ely and County of Cambridge; at Haddenham, Sutton and Chatterise, for about 16 years and more, in all which Service I served gratis, without Salary, as others had. My House was a place of Entertainment for their Teachers for many years together: I suffered Imprisonment at Ely and Nislech for their cause, in which I was then Embarked 3 Years and about 4 Months: I suffered the loss of more than a hundred Pounds for Meeting contrary to an Act of Parliament, made the 22 King Charles II. besides many other affairs in which I was concerned whilst with them: Sometimes chosen to go to London-Meetings, sometimes chosen to end some differences which happened amongst us, sometimes to assist in Marriages, about settlements of Estates in that case, as in the Instance of William Read Widower; and the Widow Brewster of Brund, and divers others, as Stephen Clackson and the Widow Young; I say put all together, and I think I may venture upon my own experience, to say as much as the Author of the said Hist. and yet notwithstanding, I shall not impose upon my Reader; but in the main of what I shall write, I shall prove from matter of Fact, and then, as he says, shall leave every one to judge as he thinks fit, being at all times ready to appear and maintain what I writ according to G. W.'s own proposition in his printed Sheet, styled The Quakers Vindication, etc. And when I meet Mr. Croese I shall go along with him, in this History, as far as he goes my way, and when he turns aside to the right Hand or to the left, I shall part friendly with him, and deal kindly by him as we used to do to strangers. But since his Book came over the Water and reflects upon the Government, Implicitly charging the Magistrates with the crime of Persecution, a thing they are much averse to; I shall therefore endeavour to Rectify it, and show him 'tis not persecution, but prosecution; and to show that I am not alone in this matter, I received a Letter wrote by a dignifyed Clergyman of the Church of England to a Neighbouring Minister. An Abstract thereof is as followeth, viz Worthy Sir, Since I had the happiness of your good Company here, I read over the general History of the Quakers which came from Holland, I find it wrote so much to the advantage of that pestilent Sect, and so much to the disadvantage both of the Government and Church of England, that I think it necessary to be again done by some other hand, whom we may confide in for a better performance of it, and I know none, better sitted for it [respecting matter of fact] than your Neighbour, Mr. Bugg, and I doubt not but with your Assistance, he may be able to give the World satisfaction in this matter. I earnestly desire you would persuade him to it; and in Truth the daily growth of that Sect makes it necessary to have it thoroughly laid open, that Men may thereby be warned the more to beware of it: This will be a Service to God and the Church. Your humble Servant. And so I enter upon my Work. SECTION I. The Reason of their Name. GEorge Fox was born Anno 1624. in a Village called Draton in Leicestershire; his Father's Name was Christopher Fox, his Mother's Name Mary, who gained their Living by Weaving. This George afterwards learned the Trade of a Shoemaker, and wrought Journey work with George Gee of Manchester, who having gained so much Learning as that he could read print pretty well, but writing he could read but little of, neither could write except very rudely. And this was the only piece of Learning he attained too all his Life long: For neither then nor any time after did he apply himself to any Liberal Study: So that he not only knew no other Language, save his Mother-Tongue; but even in that he was so little expert, and so ill qualified, either for Speaking or Writing, all the whole course of his Life; that what he understood perfectly well, he could not explain or enlarge upon, in any tolerable good English, and far less could he deliver it in Writing: And this I thought worth the remarking, because a great many Books are extant in Geo. Fox's Name, writ not only in Letters of English but also in Latin, and interlarded with Sentences of many other Languages which are but little known to the learned World, which whether it was an effect of simplicity in him, or of his Ambition and Ostentation I will not determine, only 'tis plain he had not the gift of Tongues, p. 10. The Quakers Doctrine is for a great part of it New, or taken from some Ancient Opinions condemned and rejected by the Church, which have lain so long dormant, are revived anew by them; and as to the rest 'tis a medley or hotchpotch diametrically opposite to that of ours, and their manner of Life so singular from all Christians as possibly can be: And these are the Tenets they have so busily spread both at their first rise, and in the further progress of the Sect; and all that are capable of Speaking or Writing, do diligently apply themselves in all places, to the Explaining, Defending and Propagating their Doctrines, inveighng and railing against the contrary opinions in others, with as bitter and reviling expressions as they can invent. And such their accusatory Libels they disperse abroad into all Countries, p. 11. The Original Mother and Nurse of the Quakers is England, a Country once famous, for Banishing and Extirpating Heresies, now the Seat and Centre of all manner of Errors, p. 25. Nay when their Number increased they became bolder, going into People's Houses when not invited, intruding themselves into company, Litigiously starting Controversies. Thus would they belch out ignominious Reproaches and Slanders against Religious Men; and especially the Ministers of Churches, p. 26. And now would they publicly appear on the Highways, in the Market-places, yea enter into Churches and that boldly too; finding fault with the Discourses and Prayers of the Ministers, disparaging and defaming them and their actions with all manner of Insolence and Impudence, p. 32. Charging them to Preach only for love of Lucre and Reward. But in all these controversies he [George Fox] never considered how near of Kin his own case was unto theirs; for tho' he pretended to take all this pains and trouble in running about to Preach Gratis, yet those he Preached to, supplied his necessities before he asked it of them, at leastwise he never was denied the Liberty of coming uncalled for (as the Flies) and like (Mice) feeding upon others Provision, etc. Thus far Mr. Croese hath given a very fair account (tho' not from their Manuscripts I presume) and true it is, with respect both to their rise and progress in every particular; as 1st. their Censorious way to accuse, condemn, and set at naught all Christians. 2dly. That their Doctrine is either new, or some old Heresy revived and new vampt. 3dly. That their Religion is a mere hotchpotch, diametrically opposite to the Christian Faith. 4thly. That their very business has been to rail on others; to belch out ignominious Reproaches and Slanders, defaming them both Insolently and Impudently. 5thly. That they banter other Ministers for taking Rewards, whilst they themselves, like Flies, and Mice, come uncalled for, feeding upon others Provision. 6thly. That it cannot be denied but that this grand Heresy had its first rise in England, etc. whoever reads The Snake in the Grass, etc. Mr. Falo's Quakerism, no Christianity, etc. may see every Point Confirmed. SECTION II. The Time and Place of their Rise, and the occasion of their growth. The Historians mistake. The Quakers proved Blasphemers out of their own Mouths. IN the Year 1650. G. Fox and John Fretwell went into the Church of Derby, and uttered divers Blasphemies, and pernicious Principles, for which he was examined by Mr. Jer. Bennet, from one of the Clock till nine at night, at Mr. Bennet was the first that gave them the Name Quakers 1650. last sent him to the House of correction as a Quaker, and was so rightly called as not deserving the Name of a Christian. A Copy of the said Mittimus is as followeth, viz. To the Master of the House of Correction, in Derby, greeting. We have sent you here withal the Bodies of George Fox late of Mansfield in the County of Nottingham, and John Fretwell, late of Stansly in the County of Derby. Husbandman, brought before us this present Day, and charged with the avowing, uttering, and broaching of divers Blasphemous Opinions contrary to a late Act of Parliament, which, upon their examinations, they have confessed. These are therefore to require you forthwith, upon sight hereof, to receive them the said G. F. and J. F. into your custody, and them therein safely to keep during the space of six Months, without Bail or Mainprize, or until they shall find sufficient Sureties to be of the good Behaviour, or be thence delivered by Order from ourselves; hereof you are not to fail, given under our Hands and Seals this 30th. of October 1650. Jer. Bennet Nath. Barton Upon the like Crimes, there was a Petition not long after by the Gentlemen, etc. of the County, as Quoted by George Fox, in his Book styled Saul's Errand to Damascus, etc. And by reason the Author of the Gen. Hist. is pleased first to mention it, and then excuse the Quakers, to whom he had not long before given their due correction. First reciting the principal part of the said Petition. Gen. Hist. p. 103. saith. But yet, as they left nothing that was objected against them without some Answer, so did they also, confute this (Petition) in their Writings, in such a manner, and with such Reasons, that it was very apparent that they were wicked Men who invented these things, and that those who believed them were Fools, excepting the Prophecies of Milner, the vanity of whose Words they willingly acknowledged and reproved— and overthrew these Charges, etc. Now if the said Historian had the said Book Saul's Errand, etc. not by him, he is to be born with; if he had it, he deserves correction; and that the state of the matter may be clearly seen as it is, I will transcribe the Petition, their Charges in the Petition, and their Answers to the said Charges, and all of the Quakers Writing and Printing. And when I have thus done, I doubt not but it will appear, that they have rather owned the Charges than denied them; and that instead of confuting, they are still most obnoxious to them: And that there is no apparent Reasons given why they were wicked Men that charged the Blasphemies upon them, nor Fools that believed it, viz. To the Right Honourable the Council of State; the humble Petition of several Gentlemen, Justices of the Peace, Ministers of the Gospel, and People within the County. Shows, That George Fox and James Nayler are Persons disaffected to Religion, and the wholesome Laws of this Nation; and that since their coming into this County, have broached Opinions tending to the destruction of the Relation of Subjects to Magistrates, Wives to their Husbands, Children to their Parents, Servants to their Masters, Congregations to their Ministers, and of People to their God † Indeed Mr. Croese in the foregoing recital tacitly says the same. and have drawn much People after them, many whereof, Men, Women and Children, at their Meetings, are strangely wrought upon in their Bodies, and brought to fall, foam at the Mouth, roar and swell in their Bellies; and that some of them affirm themselves to be equal with God, contrary to the late Act, as hath been attested at a late Quarter Sessions holden at Lancaster in October last, and since that time acknowledged before many Witnesses, besides many other dangerous Opinions, and damnable Heresies, as appear by a Schedule hereunto Annexed, etc. May it therefore please Your Honours, upon consideration of the Premises, to provide a Remedy, as to your Wisdoms shall seem meet, that some speedy course may be taken for the speedy suppressing these Evils. And your Petitioners shall ever pray, as in duty bound. 1. Charge, That George Fox professed and avowed that he was equal with God. Defence, It was not so spoken as Geo. Fox was equal with God, but the Father and the Son is one, I and my Father are one; and where the same is revealed this is witnessed. Let the same mind be in you that was also in Christ Jesus, who being in the Form of God, thought it no Robery to be equal with God; and this I witness to be fulfilled for the same Spirit where it is, is equal with God, and he that hath the same Spirit that raised Jesus Christ, is equal with God. Observa. Mark Reader, here is the Charge that's Blasphemy; you do not hear him deny it, only he brings in an Equivocation like G. W.'s It is not spoken of George Fox who then is that? He, I say, who is this? He, if not George that Hath, for He and Hath are but the Relative and the Verb. It cannot be meant here, that the Spirit of God is equal; no, it is, and He, the Man that hath the Spirit which raised Jesus Christ is equal with God: 'Tis proved Blasphemy beyond all the Quakers Glozing. 2. Charge, That George Fox professed himself to be the Eternal Judge of the World. Defence, He that was a Minister of God said, that the Saints should Judge the World, yea Angels: Herein they do show themselves to be no Ministers of God. Observe, The Charge is confessed, and the Ministers, who handed the Petition, condemned as no Ministers of Christ, for that they will not allow George Fox to be the Eternal Judge of the World. 3. Charge, He said he was Christ, the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Defence, The old Man cannot endure to hear the new Man speak, which is Christ; and Christ is the Way, and if Christ be in you, must he not say, I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Observe. 1. The Charge is Blasphemy. 2. 'Tis not denied, but fairly owned; and the Petitioners justified to be wise and good Men, and not wicked Men nor Fools. 4. Charge, That George Fox said, whosoever took a place of Scripture and made a Sermon of it, and from it, was a Conjurer, and his preaching was from Conjuration. Defence, And all that do study to raise a living thing out of a dead, to raise the Spirit out of the Letter are Conjurers, and draw Points and Reasons, and so do speak a Divination of their own Brain, they are Conjurers and Deceivers, and their Teaching is from Conjuration, which is not spoken from the Mouth of the Lord, etc. Observe. What contempt is here thrown upon the Scripture, and upon all the Servants of God, who from the beginning of the planting of Christianity, have frequently read the Scripture in the Churches, and sometimes have expounded a Chapter, and Catechised, etc. And frequently have taken a portion of Scripture and opened it, and held it forth to the People? What signifies the Quakers vindicating the Martyrs; printing a Book in Folio, Entitled The Spirit of the Martyrs revived, etc. 'Tis not revived in the Quakers surely, when they thus condemn them and their practice, and condemn all Ministers of the Christian Faith as Conjurers, Diviners, etc. This I would ask G. W. whether these following Martyrs and Ministers were Conjurers and Deceivers? Viz. Cranmer Archbishop of Canterbury: Ridly Bishop of London: Latimer Bishop of Worcester: Hooper Bishop of Glecester: Bradford Prebendary of St. Paul's: Dr. Tailor Parson of Hadly: I say, were these and their Brethren which took places of Scripture and Preached from them with the Assistance of God's Spirit accompanying the Ordinance, all Conjurers and Diviners? 5. Charge, That Fox said the Scriptures were Carnal. Defence, The Letter of the Scripture is Carnal. Obser. This contempt is confessed, etc. 6. Charge, R. Hubberthorn said that Christ's coming in the Flesh was but a Figure. Defence, As he is held forth in the Scripture Letter without them, as in the Flesh without them; he is their Example or Figure which is both one. Obser. Then Christ in the days of his Flesh was but a Figure; his Death and Sufferings a Figure; his Resurrection and Ascension a Figure of the Quakers Light within them; his Death within them; his Crucifixion and Resurrection within them: This is perfect Blasphemy, and infallible Quakerism. 7. Charge, Ja. Milner professeth himself to be God and Christ, and gives out Prophecies that the day of Judgement shall be the 5th. of Novem. next; that there shall never sit Judge more at Lancaster; that he must e'er long shake the Foundation of the great Synagogue i. e. the Parliament, etc. Defence, George Fox said; as for Ja. Milner, tho' his Mind did run out from his Condition, and from minding that Light of God which was in him, whereby the World takes occasion to speak against the Truth, and many Friends stumble at it, yet there is a pure Seed in him. Obser. I am the longer on this Head because it contains all the Pillars upon which Quakerism stands, Gen. Hist. p. 103. say these Words were denied; there is not a word of reproof, like that of the Apostle, who has bewitched you? Not a word of condemning his Blasphemy, but all is hushed, he had a pure Seed in him. I writ the more for Mr. Croese his sake, that he may see, and in seeing may correct the Quakers for their false Information. 8. Charge, Leo Fell said that Christ had no other Body but his Church. Defence, There is one Body and one Spirit, even as ye are called, etc. Obser. John Whitehead, Joshua Coal, and as many of them as have spoke honestly what they believe, have said and wrote the same. Read the Gen. History of the Quakers, p. 102. 103. where the Historian is pleased to say, the Quakers left nothing unanswered: They confuted these Charges of Blasphemy, with such Reasons, that it is apparent (saith he,) they are wicked Men that said so, and Fools that believed it, altho' the very Man Geo. Fox himself, gives the whole Relation: And I affirm, there is not one Charge answered or taken off as it ought to be, but rather all confessed: I must confess G. W. I believe is ashamed of his Brother Fox, and of his Brother Milner's Blasphemy; but yet cannot, nay, will not condemn the Book; they have said it and will stand to it, which puts me in mind of a story I once heard of a Woman whose Son was going out Apprentice, even at the Door; hold said his Mother I have something to say, pray have a care of Lying, yea said the Son; ay said She my Son, I charge you not to tell a lie, and the Lad going out, stay Son said the Woman, I say again, be sure you do not tell Lies, but if it happen at any time that you do tell a Lie, besure you stand in it, and so farewell. The Quakers say in print, that he that hath the Spirit that raised Jesus Christ is equal with God; He yea He, the Man; and all the Quakers that hear of this Book, I am persuaded [because the World's People have got it] would wish it were burnt; yet for a thousand Worlds they would not have the World know they burn it, so beloved a Point is Infallibility. The Quakers say in print, that 'tis Conjuration to speak out of the Scriptures, and not a Quaker is to be found that will condemn it. George Fox said he was before all Languages were, and not a Foxonian Quaker in England will condemn it. George Fox said that neither He nor his Name was known in the World, not a Quaker found to deny it. George Fox said he heard the Thundering Voice from Heaven saying, I have glorified thee, and will glorify thee again; but not a Quaker found to condemn this Blasphemy. George Fox said he was Christ, the Way, the Truth, and the Life; not a Quaker found to condemn it. Edward Burrow said that the Sufferings of the Quakers are greater, and more unjust, than the Sufferings of Christ, his Apostles and Martyrs; not a Quaker found to condemn this Book. I except the late separate Quakers both in England and America. I could enumerate a hundred Blasphemies like these, but the Quakers cannot condemn one. Thus did Quakerism rise, thus did it grow, and by these principles hath it taken a deep root, and made a large progress: These principles are Antichristian, they are Antiscriptural. Oh! that these poor deluded People would once come to consider of them, and condemn them: If not, my Hand shall not spare, nor my Eye pity, neither will I keep back any thing that may discover their dangerous Errors: Who knows but their Children may see, and seeing may abhor these most horrible Blasphemies. Fox's Journal is full, take a Taste of them as followeth. p. 37. Wife (said the Gaoler) I have seen the Day of Judgement, and I saw George Fox there, and then going to George said, I have been as a Lion to you, but now I shall be like a Lamb. Obser. And great reason for it; for Geo. Fox whether the poor Gaoler knew it, before he saw the Judgement day and Fox there; I say whether he knew it, he said he was the Eternal judge of the World, and therefore it was time for the Gaoler to come to him Trembling, as the Gaoler came to Paul and Silas Trembling, p. 45. A Trooper at Church heard a Voice from Heaven, go to my Servant [George Fox] for direction, so I [said Fox] spoke to his condition, and his understanding was opened. Again, Fox said p. 47. that he see the Heavens opened, and p. 55. etc. Thus have his Editors laid a Foundation for the Youth at R. Scories' School to believe the Fox was an Angel; and p. 60. it was a dreadful thing to hear the Man was come with his Leather Breeches, meaning himself. Reader, I must mention these things if I perform what I promised, to give a Relation of the Rise, Growth, and Progress of Quakerism: And surely the Papists Legends are not more stuffed with counterfeit Miracles, and Self exaltations, and horrid Blasphemies, read p. 57 63, 202, 30, 18. of Fox's Journal. And now I return to the Gen. Hist. to hear what news from Holland, touching the Rise, and Progress of Quakerism. SECTION III. The Ringleaders of their Sect: Their early applying themselves to the Powers, the Parties and Divisions amongst them. GEN. Hist. p. 136. 137. They address themselves to the Supreme Assemblies (i.e. Parliaments) of the Nation, and set forth in their Petitions 140 Prisoners, etc. That 21 had died in Prison, in demonstrating of which, they could not yet leave off their old way of Accusation, as well by concealing their greater crimes and more notorious Offences, that had brought many of them under that confinement, as by aggravating too much the many Evils which they Suffered, and oftentimes taking and amplifying a little scratch, a pinch, a blue Spot for a grievous Torment, and bloody Wound; which two things seems to me may well be observed in most of the Monuments of the Quakers, which they have left of their Sufferings; for, indeed, I cannot allow that these Quakers have been so often used, as that they were left half dead; for no example can be produced of any of their deaths the same Moment, or in a short time after. Again, p. 117. They made it their business to defame and heap up scandalous Reproaches upon the Credit, Fame and Reputation of the Magistrates and Pastors of the Church, in those most bitter Letters to their Friends; and such practices as these did the Quakers extol as Noble do, and Glorious actions, etc. Again, p. 97. And others in their Sermons and Libels cast all manner of Reproaches upon those Magistrates before all Men, and imprecated all Evils upon them, and as it were, pronounce them by the command of God; forgetting the Monitor and Author of that saying; that we should daily confess our own Failings, and love our Enemies. In which relation I find the Historian very partial; for certainly, never did People amplify their Sufferings, and conceal their own Crimes, like the Quakers; never so Insolently defame both Magistracy and Ministry, and extol themselves and their actions like the Quakers. And that the World may see Mr. Croese is in the right, I shall cite some few Instances of the Titles of their Books, as a demonstration to confirm what Mr. Croese hath said, with some little matter out of some of them, as well as some observations upon them: But I cannot enlarge lest I swell my Book beyond my intention, which is only to show by what means Quakerism hath Advanced, etc. Burrow's Works p. 223. A just and lawful Trial of the Ministers of this Age, by a perfect proceeding against them; and hereby they are righteously examined, and justly weighed, and truly measured and condemned, to disagree and be contrary to all the Ministers of Christ in former Ages; and to agree and concur with all the false Prophets and Deceivers, in their Call, in their Maintenance, and in their Doctrines, Conversations, and Practice; and being brought to the Bar of Justice, are truly charged and legally proved upon them, and found guilty, etc. I forbear to recite their proofs, but by the Title aforesaid 'tis easy to see their Insolence, Impudence, and Arrogancy: That a dissenting People should thus Arraign, Try, and Condemn the national Ministry to be contrary to all the Ministers of Christ, and to agree and concur with all the false Prophets and Deceivers. This is such a Charge as is worthy observation; and yet if they be Arraigned, oh! how they take it? Witness their Books against me for Arraigning them, etc. next Burrow's Works, p. 523. why, they see that the wicked Clergy's Interest is more prospering than the just freedom of the People: And this I say unto you (the Parliament) in the Name of the Lord, that whilst that Interest of the Priesthood is so much favoured and defended you can never prosper, nor the Nations be happy under you; for it is one of the greatest Oppressions this day of the Nation, the maintaining and upholding of this Ministry by Tithes, and the very Land groans under the Oppression of this Church and Ministry, which lies as a heavy burden, both upon Persons and Estates, and Consciences of many good People, even of your dearest Friends: Their own do are a sufficient Testimony of the malice of their Hearts against you, and all good Men in the Nation; yet nevertheless some of you seem to shut your Eyes, crying up your Godly Ministers; and thus are you blinded and see not were the Cause lies of your interruptions; I say 'tis the favouring of that Interest which stops the issue of good things, and while you oppress people's Persons, Estates, and Consciences to uphold this Ministry and Priesthood aforesaid, the Lord shall never prosper you, nor make the Nations happy under your charge; wherefore I do say unto you, it is high time for you to lay aside the Interest of this oppressing Clergy so much levened of the Whore of Rome; yourselves do know that the Spirit of the Romish Clergy was in the late Bishops, which you cast out for their wickedness, and the very Spirit of those Bishops is entered into these Priests, and bears Rule in their Hearts, and thus by succession, hath the Whore of Rome levened the Clergy of England. Therefore clear yourselves; do not any longer Drink the Whore's Cup, neither be you carriers of her, and leave this false Church and Ministry to themselves; for while you maintain and uphold this Ministry, Church and Worship, you do but cause People to drink the Whore's Cup; and you are but them which carry the Whore, viz. the false Church, and this is plain dealing to tell you the truth, whether you will reject it or receive it: Wherefore cast them off, and let them not surk under your Wings, for one day they will rebel against you, and another day flatter you; and for a season they will show forth much love and kindness to you in Hypocrisy; you had better be in a just opposition against them, than in an unjust peace with them. I know it appears to many of you a thing very hard to be born; what! to forsake our Godly Ministers think ye? to hear tell of laying them aside is an amazement to some of your minds; was it not the same concerning the King and Bishops? Was it not as much terrible to him and his Lords, and Councils to think of the overthrow of the then called Godly Fathers and Bishops; but better had he cast them off and saved himself, than to have perished with them; for I tell you again, that the very Spirit of the old Idolatrous Bishops is entered into the Hearts of these Men, and there is as great a measure of Tyranny and Injustice, and Abomination lying upon these, as once was upon the Bishops; and these are no less free from the abomination than they were, and these are nigh as ripe for Vengeance, etc. Burrows Epistle, etc. And the word of the Lord we sounded and did not spare, & caused the deaf to hear, and the blind to see, and the dread of the Lord went before us and behind us, and terror took hold on our Enemies. And first of all our mouths were opened, and and our Spirits filled with indignation against the Priests and Teachers, and with them and against them we first began to War, as being the causers of the People to err, and the blind leaders that carried the blind into the Ditch; and against them as the Fountain of all wickedness abounding in the Nations, and as being the issue of Profaneness, and against them we cried, showing unto all these People that they were not lawful Ministers of Christ, but Deceivers and Antichrists; and we spared not publicly, and at all seasons, to utter forth the Judgements of the Lord against them, and their Ways, and their Churches, and Worships, and Practices; and this was our first Work we entered upon, to thresh down the Deceivers and lay them open, that all People may see their shame and come to turn from them. Reader I gave you an account of their Rise, and when, and now of their Progress, and how. These are the Say of Edw. Burrow the Quakers great Prophet; spoken about 1658. by the motion of Edward Burrow's Spirit, and reprinted by the order and approbation of George Whitehead, Geo. Fox, Josh, Coal, and others of their Teachers, Anno 1672. And the whole community own, stand by, and at all turns are ready to defend my Lord chief Justice Burrow's, who you see, first by a just and lawful Trial hath arraigned and condemned the Clergy by wholesale, and for a crime, if it were true, would deserve it too, tho' not from them, viz. being contrary to all the Ministers of Christ, in all things, and according to all the false Prophets and Diviners in all things; oh dreadful! You see also their Petition to the Parliament, it needs no comment; they plead hearty against the Clergy, against their Interest, against their Tithes; they tell the Parliament they can never prosper, if they do not throw off the wicked Clergy; leave them to themselves, stand in a just opposition to them; that their first Work was to make War against the Clergy, as the Deceivers of the Nation, the Issue of Profaneness, yea, the Fountain of all Wickedness; and with them, and against them they first began to War; for their Mouths were filled with indignation against them [I believe them;] and in all Places, public and private; in Churches, in Markets, on the high Ways, and in private Meetings; oh how did they lay them open? But Reader give me leave to insist now largely on this Head, it being the Quakers Masterpiece. Burrow 's Works 846. Antichrists Government detected; Dedicated to all the Rulers, etc. Now I come to declare who are true Judges of Heresy and Heretics; None are able to discern of Heresy, nor to Try and Judge rightly who are Heretics; none but they [I say] that have the infallible Spirit of God in them to guide them, and have infallibility and perfect certainty of Judgement and Knowledge in that case of Heresy: None else, I say, are rightly able to judge who are Heretics; But such as have the infallible Spirit of Christ, and are infallible and certain in their judgement, these only, and none else, are able to judge; they only are competent judges in this case of Heresy, and who are Heretics. It is but out of Envy, if they have not the infallible Spirit of God, and infallibility of Judgement to discern by, for no Man can justly judge another in the matter of Heresy, as a Heretic by their own Thoughts or Suppositions, for the judgement in that matter must be Just, Equal, Holy, and True, and only by the Spirit of Jesus Christ which is infallible, and gives infallibility of judgement and discerning into all Cases and Things: For it was Christ Jesus and his Apostles and the Saints that had the infallible Spirit of God, and infallibility of Judgement. The Jews could not judge because they had not the infallible Spirit of Judgement, nor the certain infallible Knowledge, nor can the Christians: There's none can truly discern, nor justly judge what Heresy is, nor who is a Heretic, but such as are guided by the infallible Spirit of Christ, and have infallibility of Judgement: So both the Lawmakers and the Judges of the Law must; [what must they turn Quakers?] be infallible, etc. I think I have said enough of their infallibility as it lies in half a page; in their Book styled the Antichrists Government detected, etc. Dedicated to all the Rulers in the Christian World, boldly taking upon them the Power making Laws, or trying any in the case of Heresy [lest they themselves should be tried] unless they had infallibility of Judgement which Protestant Parliaments do not pretend too: The next is this, Entitled p. 793. Persecution impeached as a Traitor against God, etc. By which the Quakers boldly Impeach all Parliaments and Courts of Judicature. Thus can they Try, Judge, Arraign, and Condemn all the Protestant Clergy, and Impeach the Proceed of all our Courts: But if I Arraign the Quakers, as New Rome, and Impeach their yearly Meetings, this is accounted by them an unpardonable Crime, how justly soever: Behold their great presumption. But to the next. Burrow 's Works p. 588. A Message to the present Rulers of England, whether Committee of Safety, Council of Officers, or others, delivered unto them by an Ambassador from the only Right Heir of the Government, whose Right alone it is to Rule, and by special Authority from him this is sent unto them. My Master is a High and Mighty, and Powerful Prince, and very Honourable; Fear and Subjection belongs to him alone: Something you may and aught to do; but if to make the Whore the false Church more Naked, and to scourge her more than some others have done: And indeed my Lord requires something more of you to do, than others before you could do; and though some of you, present Rulers, be looked upon as great Traitors and Tyrants (in cutting off the King's Head, and extirpating Episcopacy) the Lord doth not account as Men; these things must needs have come to pass for the furtherance of the Kingdom of Jesus Christ, and if you were but faithful to what the Lord requires of you, what you have done to them (in the Murder aforesaid) should not be reckoned an account against you, neither by God nor good Men. Let all forced maintenance to Ministers, as Tithes, be speedily taken away; and let just Men, and righteous Men, and meek Men (i. e. Quakers) have the Power and judgement committed to them, to determine things between Man and Man; down with all that judge for Rewards, and away with all hireling Rulers that execute the Law for Money; and as for the Men called Ministers, the way of their setting up, sending forth, and maintenance, are the greatest oppression in the Nation; they are the woeful cause of the Nations groaning, their iniquities cry for vengeance, for they are full, they are full, and God's Eternal vengeance is their next Reward from the Eternal God: What shall I say of them but this? The Earth is oppressed by them, the Inhabitants groan under them, and God is vexed through them, and they are the Men of high Indignation and fierce Wrath; let this Ministry alone, and join not yourselves to Baal lest you perish; neither take part with Antichrist any longer; uphold not this Ministry against my Lord, and this is from the mouth of my Lord to you. Reader bear with me, I am now telling the growth and progress of Quakerism, and how and by what means I need not comment upon it. This was Writ in 1659. by E. B. but reprinted in 1672. by the order and approbation of (some words first being left out) Geo. Whitehead and others. See p. 592 to the same purpose. SECTION IU. Their Corrupt Principles, as their Light within, Infallibility, Enthusiasm, etc. and their pernicious Books proceeding therefrom, etc. and their censorious condemning others without a parallel. GEN. Hist. p. 53. The Quakers did always inveigh against the Liturgy, as stuffed with the Fopperies of Popish Darkness, superstitious and ill-placed Lessons and Prayers, Ornaments, Gestures, and Bodily actions, and many Rites of observing holidays. These the Quakers did vigorously oppose, etc. Reader as I have given a hint of the Quakers addressing themselves to the supreme Assembly [i. e. Parliaments] as well to prove the learned Author's Testimony true, as to let the World see how Quakerism advanced] by their bitter Letters, and invective seditious Petitions and Books, keeping therein to their old way of Accusations (as he well observes) concealing their own Crimes, and how their business was to defame others both Magistrates and. Ministers, imprecating all Evils upon them from the most High God: I am now come to prove what he says touching their enveighing against the Liturgy, for where I find him well informed I am willing to corroborate his Testimony from matter of Fact, as well as where I see him warp, to correct and set him right, viz. Smith 's Works p. 161. A general Summons, from the Authority of Truth, to all Ecclesiastical Courts and Officers. And now, upon what Foundation will your Building stand? for your work is found contrary to the Law of the Nation, and contrary to the Spirit of Truth, contrary to the Scriptures, contrary to Christianity, contrary to Reason, contrary to the Law and the Prophets, contrary to the Doctrine of Christ, contrary to the King's Mind. Where will you have a Foundation to build your Work upon? for as it is found contrary to all these weighty Things, so by their Authority, your Work in cases of Conscience may well be Questioned. The Law of the Nation may justly question you, the Spirit of Truth may justly question you, the Scriptures may justly question you, Christianity may justly question you, Reason may justly question you, Christ Jesus may justly question you, the King may justly question you, and what can your Foundation be but the love of Money, printed 1668. Mark Reader the Impudence of these Quakers, who twit others with their own Crimes; I am sure every particular may be applied to themselves rightly, and yet such is their insolent boldness [even whilst Dissenters, and acted as well contrary to the Laws as all the things by them mentioned] to give out a general Summons to all the Ecclesiastical Order Established by Law: But if I give them a Summons this is presumptuous, seditious, tumultuary; yea, if I Arraign them, as New Rome, and print without Licence, I must be by them indicted, and had I not had a Church of England Jury I might have been ruined: These are the meek Men, the righteous Men, the just Men that Burrows, and in him the Quakers prayed in the last recital of Burrow's Works to the Government, that they might have the executive part of the Law, and that Cases between Man and Man might be left to them; but thanks be to God who have given the Nation such a sight of their Hypocrisy, that hitherto they have not been thought worthy of a place in the Government, no not so much as Constable, a remembering their Anti-magistratical principle laid down by their first Founder, as in News coming up, etc. p. 20. Sing all ye Saints and Rejoice, clap your Hands and be glad, for the Lord Jehovah will Reign, and the Government shall be taken from you, pretended Rulers, Judges, and Justices, Lawyers, and Constables; all this tree must be cut down, and Jesus Christ (in us) will Rule alone, etc. But I thank God this Tree of Defence is still standing, which preserved me from your inveterate malice, who for not Licensing my Book (tho' it be your own daily practice) Indicted me, as one turbulent and unquiet, practising and intending falsely, unlawfully, seditiously, and maliciously, etc. as also to move, stir up, and cause discords, tumults and miserable slaughters, etc. and all because I printed unlicensed, Arraigned them as New Rome, etc. But behold they can Arraign, Try, Summons, and Judge, yea and Condemn Magistrates, Ministers, and whole Churches by whole sale: Are these the meek Men, the just Men, the righteous Men, that would so fain have the Administration of the Government, God forbidden, and let all good Protestants and sincere Christians say Amen. Reader, I must beg pardon for this Digression, 'tis a fault that sometimes better Writers fall into. The next I shall recite is a Dialogue or Catechism between Tradition and Truth. The Terms being interpreted are thus in the Original, Truth, that is the Quakers, and Tradition, that is the Church of England; and if I were to recite it all it is worse than Tho. Hicks' Dialogue between a Quaker and a Christian, for the substance of that is true to my certain knowledge; but this is so barbarous a Dialogue as none but such that are void of Charity and the Fear of God would ever have attempted; but the Quakers they may domineer and insult over their Superiors, yea, Summon, Arraign, Try, Judge and Condemn the Church of England, and thereby the Magistrates, Ministers and People; present their seditious Petitions to the Parliament: Advise and Council them to let the Ministers alone, stand not (say they) by Baal's Priests, down with all that judge for Money, alias take Money for their pains and labour, as the Quakers themselves do, yet none must say a word to them; Oh no, no touch the hem of their Garment, as if they had a Patent to commit all manner of reproaches, revile, scandalous, destructive, horrible Blasphemies, and all manner of impieties cum privilegio. Smith 's Works p. 157. A Catechism (by way of Dialogue) to all Priests and Prelates. Truth, lay down thy Fundamentals and what they are, that they may be known, and in their place come to Trial. Tradition, these be my Foundation principles of my Religion, believing they are sound, because I find in the Scriptures that the Saints performed them, and served God in them. I have Churches, Preaching, Praying, Singing, and Bishops, Ministers, and under them other Officers for order sake. Truth, these in their places must be examined, and by the Spirit of Truth [i. e. Quakers] proved whether they be right in the ground, and have their rise from the Power of God: Open thine Eye and behold thy Ceremonies, and see what Monsters thou hast generated and brought forth from thy Adulterous Womb.— And so hath the birth of thy Adulterous Womb deceived the Nations. Tradition, I am reasonably satisfied from what hath been said, as to the Ceremonies belonging to my Worship, but as to my Church, Preaching, Praying, Singing, Bishops, and Ministers, they must be duly observed. Truth, I shall try them in order, and if I find them right in the ground, shall approve them, if not, testify against them; therefore speak plainly what thy Church is that I may proceed to Trial. Tradition, my Church is a consecrated Place for my Worship to be performed in, and by many Ancient Father's Laws been set by, etc. Truth, now I shall try thy Church, and if it be not in God it is none of his, but an adulterated Harlot covered over with the Mystery of Iniquity; therefore Tradition be silent a little and Truth will show thee thy Error; so be cool and hear what Truth saith, for now thy Church comes to Trial. Tradition, I know that Praying in my Worship is right, for it is mentioned in the Scripture, and was practised very much by the Saints; and I have the Lord's Prayer, and have made many other Prayers which be useful and comfortable for all conditions, and on all occasions; and I have put them together in a Book which I call the Book of Common Prayer, and use it in my Devotion. Truth, Prayer in the Spirit the Saints practised, but thou art degenerated and hath form such Prayers as the Lord hath not required, neither doth he open his Ear to them; and that which thou call'st the Lord's Prayer, be thou silent and make no mention of it, for thou hast nothing to do with it;— Oh thou Adulterous Tradition! What Monstrous births hast thou brought forth? Thy Common Prayer Book is seen to be conceived in thy Adulterous Womb, and to branch forth from the Pope. Tradition, but, what if my Common Prayer Book do not fully agree with the Scriptures, and the Saints practice, yet there are many good things in it, and many Scripture sentences which may edify and comfort. Truth, that which is born of the Flesh is Flesh, and that is against the Spirit, and can neither edify nor comfort; though good Words and Scripture sentences may be spoken, for it is not speaking the Words of others that doth make a true Prayer, but in receiving a measure of the same Spirit of Prayer, which is not in thy Common Prayer Book to be found; therefore it is made of none effect because thy bowels bring it forth, and the Pope gives Life and Breath unto it, and from his Loins it draws its Strength, and not from the power of God. Tradition, what can I say to be received for truth? my Ceremonies, etc. are denied, but there can be nothing said against my Bishops and Ministers the Scriptures speak so plainly of them, etc. Truth, now Tradition hearken what Truth saith, and give thine Answer to what is demanded of thee: Who made thy Archbishops and Lord Bishops, and who gave them these Names? And who first divided unto them their several Dioceses, and appointed them to Rule within their own Diocese? And who first made Deans and prebend's, Doctors, Vicars, and Curates, and who gave them their Names? And who first set up certain Places for Schools? And who gave them the Names of Universities? And how came they to be called Christ's College, and Emanuel's College, John's College, and Jesus' College? And who set up Commencements and Degrees, that a Man must be made Bachelor of Art, and Master of Art, before he can be approved to be made a Minister in thy Order? And who first made that Law which forces and compels the payment of the Tenth part of things increased, to such a Ministry, and whether are such the Ministers of Christ, who make use of that Law to force their maintenance? Are these thy Bishops and Ministers which thou sayest there can be nothing said against them? Open thine Eye and behold them, for they are Monsters which from thy adulterous Conception are brought forth, and they are stamped with thy Image, and all thy abominations are denied and testified against; this is a Charge against thee. Tradition, this thing which make such discoveries of my Practices, and with such boldness reproves me for them, it is of God; for it is not in fear of me nor my power, which now is Strong and of great Authority. Truth, that which doth discover thee and thy deceitful Practices is the Truth [i. e. Quakers] of God, which was before thou hadst a Name, and will be when thy Name is lost; and it doth boldly reprove thee, and is without any fear of thee or thy power; and hath opened thee, and ripped up thy Bowels, and discovered thy adulterous Womb, and all the false Conceptions that hath been conceived their; and now behold! ye Archbishops, Lord Bishops, Deans, prebend's, Doctors, Vicars, and Curates, and all Prelaticals; here is the Womb of your Conception opened, and that made manifest from which you draw your breath, and prolong the length of your days, with all your Service and Worship which you so much esteem and promote: Therefore hear and consider ye Bishops, Deans, prebend's, Doctors, Vicars, and Curates, with all Prelaticals, you must come to the Bar, and if you will but soberly peruse this Catechism (or Dialogue) you may know and learn that which all your Universities could never give you the knowledge off, nor all your Learning and Wisdom could never teach you; so escape for your Lives, that the stroke may not fall upon you. Truth. Reader, marvel not too much at the Impudence of this Man, for it is the Heart of Quakerism: He was a right Quaker and no Mongrel, and Eminent Teacher, and a ready Sail. You see he feared not the Bishops nor their Power; he had no respect to the Law which Established the Book of Common Prayer; nay, should the Question be put to Geo. Whitehead whether he would, under his Hand, condemn this Antichristian piece to be burnt on Tower-hill, he would say no, not for a World, it is the Marrow of his Religion. I could give Instances of the like nature out of 100 of their Books, but for brevity's sake, and that I may not stay my Reader too long from something new, I shall only recite 2 or 3 Books more, that so the Author of the Gen. History may hear his Text fully proved, viz. that the Quakers inveigh against the Liturgy, and that bitterly too, together with the Ministry of the Church of England. A Touchstone, or perfect Trial of all Priests, Bishops, and Ministers. This Book contains more than 100 Pages in Quarto, printed 1667. by Margaret Fell, whom George Fox afterwards Married, the purport of which is to show them all the Clergy are false Prophets, Deceivers, etc. which being but a Woman, tho' a very proud imperious Dame, I pass her by. The Innocency and Consciousness of the Quakers, etc. p. 7. As for the purity of the Church of England it's out of our sight; we can see a great deal of impurity in it, and as much the Members of it confess themselves; indeed they confess enough of themselves to cause all wholesome sound understanding People to shun them, and their Church, and Worship, as Men eat a contagious Disease or Infection. I think this is so bold, as well as base, that it need no comment: But if they look into the Cage, I presume, they'll find little cause to boast, especially if I give them the right Key to open it, and that amongst their Teachers and Writers; but if I should make a Cage for their Hearers, it would be much enlarged every way. Truth exalted in a Short, but sure Testimony, etc. by W. Penn p. 9 Come Church of England, whence came your Forms of Prayer and Church Government? from the Scriptures or the Mass-Book and Popish Canons; and what Precedent do you find for Litanies, Responces, Singing, Organs, Altars, Bowings, etc. with much more such like dirty Trash, and soul Superstition? Stand up and answer me you Members of the Church of England: But are they not the Offspring of the Popish Generation? God is now breathing forth in Vengeance, to Thunder down and Consume all your fair Buildings and pleasant Pictures of Babilonish Inventions: But alas poor Souls! are you not at have mercy upon us miserable sinners; there is no health in us, from seven to seventy, etc. The Guide mistaken by W. Penn p. 18. And whilst the idle gormondizing Priests of England run away with above 1500000 l. a Year, under pretence of being God's Ministers; and that no sort of People have been so universally thorough Ages, the very bane of Soul and Body to the universe, as that abominable Tribe, for whom the Theatre of God's most Dreadful Vengeance wait to act their Eternal Tragedy upon. Burrow's Works p. 244. Oh what cruel Injustice and Tyranny in Civil Government! Oh what abominable Superstition and Idolatries have been in Church Government! It is a vexation to the Spirit of the Lord to consider it, and the righteous, Soul hath long cried out and mourned under it; and because of this is the Lord God of Heaven and Earth now Risen to, overturn, overturn Kings and Princes, Governments and Laws; and he will confound and break down all Tyranny and Oppression, under which the poor have groaned; and he will change Times, and Laws, and Government: There shall be no King Ruling but Jesus, nor no Government of force, but the Government of the Lamb; nor no Law of Effect but the Law of God, all that which is otherwise shall be ground to powder: The Kingdom of the most High shall Rule amongst Men; and the Kingdoms of this World shall be changed, etc. Sam. Fisher's Works p. 99 I will hold my peace no longer, saith the Lord, as concerning this Evil, which they so profanely commit, and do daily against my Chosen, but will utterly subvert and overturn them, and bring the Kingdoms and Dominions, and the greatness of the Kingdom under the whole Heaven, into the Hands of the Holy Ones of the most High, and give unto my Son and his Saints to Reign over all the Earth, and take all the Rule and Authority that shall stand up against my Son, in his Saints, and put it down among all the rest, as one of his greatest Enemies, under his Feet saith the Lord, p. 102. And so (saith Fisher) the Quakers are the truest Catholic Church in the World. Reader, compare these two last Citations with G. Fox's Quotation in this 4th Section, and you may perceive what principles they were off about 1655. etc. SECTION V. The World's wonder, and the historians mistake in W. Penn, who Wrote first in favour of the Protestants made and framed Tests, against the Papists called to the Parliament for penalties of the violators thereof: But when the late K. J. II. came to the Crown, a fierce despiser of the Protestants, and an Abbetter of the Papist; a great stickler for the abolishing and taking away of Tests and Penal Laws, etc. GEN. Hist. p. 43. Now as to what was the Wit and Spirit of W. Penn from his Youth, what promptness and dexterity in discoursing attended the acuteness of his Wit; what knowledge of Tongues, and of things, what temper and conversation of Life he was; I had rather the Quakers should give you an account than I; for I know well how difficult and troublesome it is to interpose his Judgement of a matter in which the Judgement of other Men is so various: But certainly tho' my Pen were silent of him, his own Writings will speak him forth to be the most eminent Member among all that Society, etc. I will and must acknowledge great part of this discourse of W. Penn's Wit, promptness of Speeeh and readiness, etc. yet since Mr. Croese has appealed to his Writings to his Writings let him go, and then let the World see how steady he has been, even like the Weathercock, fast and lose at every turn and changing as the Moon; vigorous for the Protestant Interest, at least seemingly; yea, in K. C. II. time so hot for Protestants that he had the applause of many; but in the late K. J. II. time, he shown the World what he was, and what many thought him to be all along, even a bitter Enemy to the Church of England, and consequently to Protestantism: But since an appeal is made to his Writings, I shall cite an abstract of three which he wrote in K. C. II. time, vigorous for the Protestant Interest: He gave direction for the choice of Members principled against Popery; cautioned all against Popery; wrote a Test against Popery, and what not; but when K. J. came on, he soon tacked about; as by others of his Books, wrote in favour of the late K. J. I shall make it appear; so that all that would know W. Penn rightly, must go to his Writings, of which I have 3 times 3 of each sort by me, but these may suffice to show how he looked one way and rowed another. A seasonable Caveat against Popery, etc. by W. Penn p. 3. We hope it may not be too late to militate for Truth, against the dark Suggestions of Papal Superstition; to vindicate that of Reformation from the quaintest Stratagems, and most unwearied endeavours of Romish Emissaries; to put both it and us into their Inquisition; We know they have so far mastered their Ancient fierceness, and masked their Sanguine Looks, with those more modest and familiar, that though we need not more Reason than before, yet we need more Skill and Caution, or else we may too fatally experience the force of that vulgar Proverb; Laugh in thy Face and cut thy Throat. They are grown so complaisant, that none seem more exasperated at Persecution than themselves, whilst the very Fathers of it decrying the fierceness of it in some Countries, whose Incendiaries they were, and still are; and imputing all the Blood of poor Protestants to some unwarrantable civil Score; Thereby abusing the Magistrates with their own Conspiracies; nay, for all their venerable Esteem for the Pope's Infallibility, they have not stuck to censure his roaring Bulls, tho' procured by their own means: And all that might express their new tenderness; that many unacquainted with their practices, are ready to believe them what they say themselves to be, whose moral is to have two strings to their Bow; to be ambo dexters, and furnished with meanings to suit the compass of all occasions p. 14. I stand amazed, how any Man of Sense can be a Papist, when the only demonstration of his Religion must be his not understanding it, p. 30. 31. In those frequent Bulls for Massacres, which can no more be denied than light at Noon day; by which People have been stirred up upon the promise of forgiuness of Sins, redemption from Purgatory, and Eternal Salvation, or Dreadful Denunciation of Eternal Damnation, to enterprise that Work of Murdering so many Hundred Thousands of Men, Women, and Children, without any Legal Presentment, Trial or Conviction: But the consideration of these things are out of fashion in England; that many embrace them upon their present disguises, and not in their true sanguinary Appearances p. 35. To conclude; If we would not receive a Thief until he has Repent, let the Papist first recant his voluminous Errors; but above all, let us have good Testimony of his hearty Sorrow for that Sea of Blood, shed in England, France, Holland, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Savoy, Switzerland, and Germany, of many Hundred Thousands of poor Protestants, that for pure Conscience could not conform to their most exorbitant Practices, as well as new Doctrine imposed upon them, such inhuman and Barbarous Inventions and Cruelties, as no Age could ever parallel, and are the only demonstrations of their wicked Wit that lived in that Age; and that not only upon the Parties themselves but their poor innocent Babes: For, that English Protestants should so far neglect these weighty considerations, as to be gulled and cheated out of their Religion purchased them by their Martyrs, Ancestors, and be persuaded to embrace that old bloody Apostatised Church again, with all her Slavish as well as Ridiculous Superstitions, is a crime so offensive to God, and intolerable to Men, as the time hastens, that the very Stones of the Street will rise up in Judgement against them p. 38. Question, whether in case they could not be conformed unto, they would allow a toleration; were they powerful, whether in case they should say yes, we ought to believe them, since it is one of their most Sacred maxims, not to keep Faith with Heretics, as was seen in the case of those in the Alpine Valleys, J. Hush, etc. and in that they have in all Ages brought so great a deluge of Blood upon the Europian World. Question, whether it be the Interest of the English Nation to Subject herself to a Popish Yoke, considering the incomparable Bloody Massacres of that sort of Men in several Reigns. Thus have I undertook, tho' with much brevity, an enervation of the Romans Faith, at least a detection of their Craft; their horrid Cozenage, and present way of Insinuation among the People. Next see his Book styled Engl. great Int. in the Choice of this new Parliam. etc. p 4. by W. P. Pray see that you choose sincere Protestants, Men that don't play the Protestant in design, and are indeed disguised Papists, ready to pull off their Mask when time serves; you will know such by their laughing at the Plot, disgracing the Evidence, admiring the Traitor's constancy: The contrary are Men that thank God for this discovery, and in their conversation zealously direct themselves in an opposition to the Papal Interest, which indeed is a Combination against good Sense, Reason and Conscience, and to introduce a blind obedience without, if not against, Conviction; and that principle which introduces implicit Faith, and blind Obedience in Religion, will also introduce implicit Faith and blind Obedience in Government; so that it is no more the Law in the one than the other, but the Will and Power of the Superior that shall be the Rule and Bound of our Subjection: This is that fatal mischief Popery brings with it to civil Society, and for which such Societies ought to be ware of it. One Project for the Good of England, etc. by W. Penn, p. 10. The New Test. I. A. B. do solemnly and in good Conscience in the sight of God and Men, declare that King Charles the 2d, is Lawful King of this Realm, and all the Dominions thereun to belonging; and that neither the Pope nor the See of Rome, nor any else by their Authority, have Right in any Case to depose the King, or dispose of his Kingdom, or upon any score whatever to absolve his Subjects of their Obedience, or to give leave to any of them to Plot or Conspire the hurt of the King's Person, his State or People; and that all such Pretences and Power, are False, Pernicious, and Damnable? And I do further sincerely profess, and in good Conscience declare, that I do not believe that the Pope is Christ's Vicar, or Peter's Lawful Successor; or that he, or the See of Rome, jointly, or severally, are the Rule of Faith, or Judge of Controversies, or that they can Absolve Sins; nor do I believe there is a Purgatory after Death; or that Saints should be Prayed too, or Images in any sense to be Worshipped: Nor do I believe that there is any Transubstantiation in the Lord's Supper; or Elements of Bread and Wine, at, or after the Consecration thereof, by any Person whatsoever. But I do firmly believe, that the present Communion of the Roman-Catholick-Church is both Superstitious and Idolatrous. And all this I do Acknowledge, Intent, Profess and Declare, without any Equivocation, or reservation, or other sense than the plain and usual signification of these Words; according to the real intention of the Law maker, and the common Acception of all true Protestants, etc. This is the Test I offer, large in Matter, because comprehensive of Oaths, and Test too; yet brief in Words. The Abuse of this Discrimination should be very Penal; for 'tis a great Lie upon a Man's own Conscience, and a Cheat put upon the Government. Your Wisdoms (i. e. Parliament) can best proportion and direct the Punishment; but it can scarcely be too severe, as our Case stands. Reader, There is a Proverb, that a triple Cord is not soon broken; but W. Penn break all these, and as many more on the same Subject; and yet that is not the worst on't; but led many thousands into the same Snare, peculiarly the Quakers, as anon will appear: And thereby, notwithstanding his Wit and Parts, became an ill Instrument, and the greatest Enemy the Church of England then had: But in regard his Writing, Pro and Con, say so much, and give such a Demonstration; I shall say the less, not being willing to stay too long on this Head. Good Advice to the Church of England, Roman - Catholic, and Protestant Dissenters; to Abolish the Penal Laws and Tests, etc. p. 39 42. It happens now, that God and Cesar are both of a mind; which perhaps does not always fall out, at least about the Point in hand. Edward the 6th, succeeded a Prince that promised Virtues, that might more than balance the Excesses of his Father; and yet by Archbishop Cranmer, was compelled to Sign a Warrant to burn poor Joan of Kent, a Famous Woman, but counted an Enthusiast; thus even Protestants begun with Blood, and taught the Romanists in succeeding Times, how to deal with them. I hope I may conclude, that the Penal Laws have been a makebate in the great Family of the Kingdom, setting the Father against the Children, and Brethren against Brethren; and for this the Church of England has paid a severe Reckoning; if she hope by her aversion to a general ease, to set up for a Bulwark against Popery. One Year will show the trick, and mightily deceive her, and the Opportunity will be lost, and another Bargain driven; I dare assure her, mightily to her disadvantage; Violence and Tyranny, are no natural Consequencies of Popery, etc. 2. A Reply to the Answer of the Man of no Name, etc. p. 22. 2. And one thing I must say, Roman Catholics have been Loyal in England and Holland, so that it is not necessarily true. The Gentlemen that tore the King's Declaration of the Indulgence from him, were high Churchmen; and they opposed his Political Capacity to his Natural, on purpose to overthrow that Act of Grace; by which Destination, the late Civil War was made; so that 41 overtook 73, or that returned to 41, and who knows not that they were such as hardly knew how to Pray, but out of our Liturgy; that attempted to Exclude the Presumptive Heir to the Crown, upon the score of Religion. A Defence of the Duke of Buckingham 's Book, etc. p. 12. Now, tho' this Man would think it imprudent in me, and I, that it is none of my business to vindicate the Persons charged from his Imputation; yet I have so much Justice, I confess, as not to condemn Parties by Particulars; and Charity as to be satisfied with their solemn disclaiming of such Practices. For I did never love, that one Man should have the making of another Man's Faith and Confession; especially if he were his Adversary. I must tell him also, I cannot admire his Wisdom, Manners, or Justice, in his Reflections on the Roman Catholics; after the Assurance that so great an one of their Communion has given him and his Friends of their Security and Protection; for if they are a People able to ruin the whole Earth, and lay the Foundations of Eternal Mischief to Mankind; believe me, England is in an ill pickle: And tho' I am an ill Judge, he has in it, put but a scurvy Compliment upon the King; let him be just, and he will find the Excluders almost every Sunday at their Parish Churches; and if three quarters of them were to pray for their Lives, it may be they could better read their Clergy than say their Prayers without the public Liturgy, &c, 3. Animadversions on the Apology of the clamorous Squire, etc. p. 3. But when he has done all he can, they were not Dissenters under Correction, that in 1680. prosecuted the Roman Catholics and refused them Liberty, but Church of England Men; and such of them too as would not allow it to some Protestant Dissenters, for fear that Dissenters should hid themselves amongst them, and that they therefore must swallow the most severe Tests that could be framed, † Whilst the same W. P. framed the said severe Tests. to show themselves * It seems it was but to show himself no Friend to that Communion. not Friends to that Communion (i. e. Papists) and to tell Truth; and I beseech the Gentleman not to take it amiss that I say the Dissenters were invited into the share they had in opposition to Popery by Church Men; ay, they were for a comprehension, to make the Church of England stand broader, the better to receive the assaults of Rome without hazard, p. 4. I do affirm the excluders were Conformists, and are yet Communicants of your Church; and the greatest part of them upon education and constant practice too; and that this is a Truth and no Slander, read the List, and 'tis a demonstration; nay, I challenge the Gentleman to name six Persons of all the excluders that descent from the Established Church; nor is this of yesterday, for if we look back, we shall see the most celebrated Bishops of our Church barring the succession in the Law, the 13 and 27 of Eliz, and when that Queen pleaded Conscience in not assenting to a Law to put our King's great Grandmother, Marry Queen of Scots, to Death, the same Reverend Bishops undertook to remove the Scruple p. 5. 'Twas the Gentlemen of that Communion, that impeached the Prerogative in the Declaration of Indulgence, and set the Political capacity of the King in opposition to his natural, and to make their business more popular, bestowed that comment upon it of a design in the Court, to let in Popery and Arbitrary Government, p. 2. Our Brave King. 4. A persuasive to moderation, submitted to the King, etc. p. 1. Pref. We have not to do with an insensible Prince, but one that has been touched with our Infirmities more than any Body, sit to judge our cause by the share he once had in it. 5. Reasons for the Repeal of the Tests, etc. p. 3. They ought to be taken away because they are unreasonable and unjust, p. 5. 'Tis highly necessary that these Tests be abrogated; this appears in that the King desires it, the Papists crave it, and the Interest of the whole Nation requires it. We are all then in prudence to consent thereto.— We have been Taught † who Taught that Doctrine more than W. P. See the first 3 Books quoted. to entertain very hard thoughts of their Religion, and as we learned to speak, so we stammered it out, no Papist, no Popery. Whence sprung this aversion, mainly I am sure from our apprehension, that Blood and Cruelty attended it. The Roman Catholics tho' sure of the King, are willing to concert and accommodate matters with us, and to deliver us from what we so dreaded, their persecution upon the most reasonable and equal Terms, of being freed from the danger of ours; I hope our Established Church will bethink herself, and better consider of things, than by her stubborn Adhesion to her Laws of severity and force, to incline us to love Popery when we find it gentle and easy to be entreated, p. 6. 7, 8. The King promised to maintain her, so he doth, and will undoubtedly persevere to do, if she runs not herself into a forfeiture of the Royal Grace. Let her cease to be angry, and rebuke her Sons very unmannerly sitting in Judgement upon, and censuring the King's Proceed: Let her, I say, be Wise, and know her Duty and Interest; the advice is requisite, she being at this day tampering to draw the fanatics into an Association against the King's most Gracious purpose to them and all his People: It is insinuated that undue and false returns [of Parliament Men] may be made, etc. But surely there lives not a Man without the Pale of the Church, we are talking of, so wicked as to think the King doth not detest the Thought of so base a practice; he that whispers a thing so greatly below the King, will, for aught I know, suggest, that to morrow his Majesty will return us a House of Commons from Hounslow-Heath: Discourses of this kind may not be heard but in Bedlam, or Newgate; therefore adjourning them thither for cure or correction. 6. The great and popular objection against the Repeal of the Penal Laws and Tests, briefly stated and considered, etc. p. 3. If the consequences that are imagined to follow the Repeal of the Penal Statutes and Tests, were indeed so terrible as they are industriously represented, I should readily fall in with the common jealousy, and help to augment the number of those that are for their continuance. But when I consider how long our Government was happy without them; how much of heat and partiality prevailed in their constitution, and how troublesome and impracticable their Execution are; and that in our present circumstances they appear a plain barriere to our happiness, p. 11. I own it may affect the present Ecclesiastical Policy of the Church of England, but I never took that for Protestancy. Reader, the reason why I have insisted so long on this Head. beyond my first intention, is, threefold; 1st. to show W. Penn by his 3 first Books in his Protestant Dress, and by his last six, with his Mask off in the contrary Dress. 2. That by comparing his last six Books with the Quakers Addresses to the late K. J. 11. from their Anniversary Synods, you will see they run in one and the same Channel, issuing from one and the same Fountain; especially when you consider that from their said yearly Meetings they never made one Address to his present Majesty, nor wrote one Book in favour of the present Government. 3. That by both their Addresses a Sample of them you'll have by and by, and by their Books they have jointly and severally born against the Church of England as with one Shoulder. Thus have I briefly shown what a Writer W. P. hath been, and how he has bestowed his parts even against the Protestant Interest, the Established Religion, and the common cause of Christianity, and so I conclude this Head. SECTION VII. Their horrid Blasphemies; their Self-exaltations, and vain boastings of their Learning, etc. GEN. Hist. p. 165. About this time came forth a Book called [a Battle-door for Teachers and Professors to learn singular and plural marked in every page with the Form Figure of a penny Hornbook: The work was neatly done by John Stubs and Benja. Furly; but Fox who besides his Engglish Tongue knew none of the Languages therein [being Thirty in number, as Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Caldee, Italic, Syriac, Arabic, etc.] was so desirous to seem to be the Author of this Book; and that what ever it contained of Industry and Praise-worthiness, had its Original from him; that he even here and there subscribed his Name to every page, and by him confirmed p. 240. George Fox sent a Letter to John III. King of Poland, Written originally in English, and sent into Holland, and there Translated into the Germane Tongue. This Epistle was so Learnedly done, that it looked not like the work of a single Person; yet so, as that they left it to Fox an ignorant Fellow, who Subscribed it only Geo. Fox. And hence it is apparent, that there is no Mind so humble but is apt to be carried away with the Air of vain Glory; yea, oftentimes applause is most coveted by those who most condemn it in others, etc. Now Reader, tho' my Learned Author and I differed about W. Penn in some Points, yet in this we agree in every punctilio, touching the Pride, vain Glory and Ambition of George Fox, who was an ignorant Fellow, yet would seem to be Author of a Learned Book containing Thirty Languages; as also of a Learned Letter sent to John III. King of Poland, in both which [as well as in divers cases] he gave out that himself was some great learned Man, attributing to himself that which he never had, which doubtless was the occasion of a discourse rumoured about our Country, about the Year 1663. or 1664. That George Fox had in one night's time 24 Languages given him by Divine Inspiration, and I did believe it, and divers others of us for near 20 years; I also spoke to a Quaker now living and still eminent amongst them, who told me he ever did believe it until the late divisions. Thus by his counterfeit Miracles, his gift of Tongues, he still like Simon Magus gave out that he was some great Man; for thus he wrote in the Introduction, viz. All Languages are to me no more than Dust, who was before Languages were, etc. and towards the end of the Book thus; next follow a few words to the whole matter by George Fox, who is before confusion and many Languages were, etc. This, together with what I elsewhere have quoted out of his Books and Journals, show that he was willing to be esteemed a great Man, an old Man, a learned Man, a wise Man, an Angel, one that see the Heaven's open as St. Stephen did, and much more to this purpose: By all which it appears, that he was a great Deceiver. And thus, Quakerism grew, and by deceit prevailed in its progress: And since this learned Author hath given such a full proof of Fox's Pride, who being an Ignorant Fellow, as he styles him, and yet desirous to be taken for the Author of the said Battle-door, containing Thirty Languages. I will give him a third Instance, viz. Anno 1659. George Fox puts forth a Book, Entitled A primer (in contempt of Learning) for all the Doctors and Scholars in Europe, etc. wherein are contained 2434 Queries in this Method, viz. What is a Participle, what is it in itself, and by whom it came, and out of what Ground? And why are these declined; who was the First and Author of it, and by whom it came? And why is the Word called Adverb, and what is an Adverb, the word itself, and who was its rise? And why do you call the word Conjunction? and who was its rise? and why the word Preposition? and who was its rise? And who was the Author of the word Interjection? and what are these two words in themselves, and whether or no these did not come by the Art of Man? What is a Vowel in itself, and what was the word Vowel? And what is the word Diphthong, and who was the Author of these, and where are they called by such Names in Scripture? so who was the Author of these Names in themselves, and of themselves, and came they not from the Art of Man, yea or nay? Why do you call the word Masculine, Feminine, Neuter, and Epicene; and what was the ground of these words in themselves? What are they, and why do they use the word Declension? and what is in the word itself, and what was its root? And why the word Comparative, Positive, and Superlative? and what be these words as they are words? of what Author and Root came they from, and who gave them these Terms first? who, was the first Rise and Author of them? etc. Thus have I taken out six entire Paragraphs as they lie in the said primer; but I profess I cannot answer these, why then should I cite more: I cannot tell who spoke these words first, no more than I can tell who spoke the word [too] first; or spoke the word [and] first, and who was the first Rise and Author of the word [of] which to know is as unnecessary, as it is ridiculous to query: Well take a few more as they lie scattered up and down the said primer. What is a Major? What is a Minor? What is Extraction? What is Geometry? What is Dog-madness? What is Badger-madness? and what is Wolf madness, etc. nay, what if I add one query; what was Fox-madness and folly; and whether was not Pride and Ambition the Author of Fox's Madness, answer G. W. Having thus far proceeded, I shall next recite a few of Fox's words by way of challenge to the Doctors and Scholars, viz. These queries are to call you out into the Field; let them come out now to little Children; little david's are risen, who have the Bags and the Slings, and the Stones; yea, that profess yourselves to be Wise and Learned Men, and Scholars, and are Novices and Fools; Answer me; draw out your Weapon if you have any, and Answer me these things; come out of your holes, do not hip nor skip from them; answer every word in particular, for you have Tongue enough sometimes, let us see now if it can wag, etc. Now Reader, this is one way by which they deceived the simple, and thereby Quakerism had its progress. Gen. Hist. 112. The Form of the Quakers Confession before the House of Commons was, I believe with my Heart, and confess with my Mouth the Sacred Scriptures to be Divine, left us by Men Inspired by God, as an exact rule of our Faith and Behaviour; and I profess to believe in one only God who is the Father, and in Jesus Christ his Eternal Son, very God, and very Man; and in the Holy Spirit, one and the same God with the Father and Son, blessed for evermore, etc. I must confess this Confession, if sincere, is somewhat to the purpose; but if sincere then there is a vast Change in their Minds, both from their frequent disputations, as well as their printed Books; and because we cannot well try them by the first, therefore we will examine their Sincerity by the latter; and if their Books teach the contrary, then until they first condemn those Books, we have no ground to believe them sincere in what they say to serve a turn; I will at this time quote only two of them, viz. The Sword of the Lord drawn, etc. p. 5. Your imagined God beyond the Stars, and your carnal Christ is utterly denied and testified against by the Light; and whereas you [the Priest] say, that Christ is God and Man in one Person, it is a lie, etc. Now, if they believe as they writ; how can they be sincere in what they say, as above? for contraries cannot be the same; white is not black, neither is black white; Men never gathered Grapes of Thorns, nor Figs of Thistles; ye shall know them [i. e. Deceivers] said Christ by their Fruit; this is an infallible rule. Again, News coming up out of the North, etc. p. 14. Your original is carnal, Hebrew, Greek and Latin; and your Word is carnal; the Letter and the Light is carnal; the Letter, their original is but Dust, which is but the Letter which is Death; and their Gospel is Dust; Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, which is but the Letter, etc. So then, if the Scriptures, be Dust, Carnal, and Serpents-Meat, how are they Divine; nay, how were they given forth by Divine Inspiration? What did George Fox mean? Divine Dust, Divine Food for Serpents; a Divine Carnal Letter. No sure: Then doubtless these expressions were cast upon the Scriptures by way of contempt, against such as professed them to be given by Divine Inspiration; and that they were in earnest the rule of our Faith and Behaviour, against which the Quakers have both Preached and Disputed this 40 years, as I can make appear by 40 of their Books now by me. One more I shall quote to strengthen what I say. Howthen can they be sincere in this their Confession? How can they at one and the same time believe the Scriptures are Death, Dust, Beastly Ware, Serpent's Food, and also that they are Divine and left us by Men Inspired of God for the rule of our Faith and Practice; I say, how can these contraries be reconciled; nay, it's impossible. If they shall say in answer to what I now affirm, that their Minds are really changed and better informed I could be hearty glad of it; but then let us have a sign of it, and some, ground to believe them, viz. Let them condemn these Books that Teach contrary to their Confession; for whilst then I boldly aver, to those who know them and their Doctrine, and their Books [which they prefer above the Scriptures,] they cannot, they are not to be believed. The Book I mention to cite is this: A brief discovery of a three fold Estate of Antichrist, etc. p. 7. 8, 9 The Priests of the World are 1st. Conjurers, raising dead Doctrines, dead Reasons, dead Uses, dead Motives, dead Trials out of the Letter which is death; raising Death out of Death, notable Conjurers. 2. Thiefs and Robbers. 3. Antichrists— the Priests of Baal cannot show any Scripture example for their Heathenish ways and Beastial Worships. 4. Witches. 5. Devils, the Serpent is Head in them. 6. Liars, the Commission and call of Baal Priests, come from Oxford and Cambridge; even the Sir Simons of our days, run to Oxford and Cambridge. 7. A viperous and serpentine Generation. 8. Blasphemers, living in the Kingdom and Government of the Prince of the Air, yea, of the Devils; fearful Blasphemers. 9 Scarlet coloured Beasts; a well favoured Harlot, having a golden Cup in her Hand full of abomination and filthiness of her Fornication. 10. Babylon's Merchants, selling Beastly ware for a large price; the Letter which is Dust and Death for filthy lucre sake. 11. Whited Walls, painted Sepulchers, professing something, possessing nothing but poisoned stuff. 12. Ravening Wolves. 13. Greedy Dogs; really they are Bloodhounds. 14. Eminent and Ambitious Pharisees, living in the same Antichristian steps that the Pharisees did that Christ cried out against; Woe! woe! woe! was their portion then, and woe! woe! woe! is their portion now; and woe and misery is the portion of the upholders (whether King or Parliament) of that Treacherous Crew, and Deceitful Generation; wherefore come from among the Babylonish Merchants, etc. Oh horrible and unheard of; and in this Book there are the Names of George Fox, Thomas Lawson, Thomas Aldham, Benjamen Nicolson, John Harrwood, five of their primitive Teachers and notable Doctors. Behold the way, manner, and method of the growth and progress of Quakerism; what, shall this be encouraged? shall this be established in a Christian Nation, God forbidden? Here is contempt cast upon the Scripture, upon the Ministry, upon the Magistracy, and People; no matter for their confession whilst these Books stand uncondemned; they keep these Books in their Families, read them and recommend them, as elsewhere I have observed: Even as Arias kept his opinion to himself, and yet deceitfully signed as fair a confession to please the Emperor Constantine; which is as followeth. See Hist. Socrates, cap. 38. Viz. I believe in one God the Father Almighty, and in Jesus Christ his Son; who was made by him before all Ages, God the Word by whom all things in Heaven and Earth were made; who came down and was incarnate; who suffered and risen again, and ascended, and shall come to judge the quick and the dead; and in the Holy Ghost, the Resurrection of the Flesh, and the Life to come; in one Catholic Church of God from one end of the World to another; this we believe as God shall judge us now and in the World to come. Constantine the Emperor was a good Man, and thought him sincere, and accepted of it; but the cheat lay here, which afterwards was found out he wrote a Paper of what he really believed, and said he believed as he had written; and the Quakers have wrote Books that for any to say that Christ is God and Man in one Person is a lie, and therefore they cannot believe that Christ is very God and very Man, but believe as they have written. They also have written, that the Scriptures are Death, Dust, Serpents-meat, Carnal, and Beastly Ware; and though they have made a confession that the Scriptures are Divine, and left by Men Inspired of God; and that they are a rule of Faith and Behaviour; yet they believe also that Geo. Fox was divinely Inspired and wrote from the Spirit of God; so they believe as they have written: If any think I wrong them, let their Books be laid before them which I have cited, and let them be asked. Come which do you abide by? which do contain your Faith and Belief? Do you believe as you have confessed? if you do, at the same time condemn your other Books which teach the contrary; if you say no, our Books are writ from the Eternal Spirit of God we cannot condemn them, then condemn your confession, for we will not have you halt between two opinions; if God be God serve him; if Baal serve him. This will be the Test, which were it put to them, you would soon see them to be Quakers still, and not Christians yet: And so I proceed to the next Head. SECTION VIII. Their horrid Blasphemies; their pretence to Miracles; their agreement with Simon Magus, their great Grandfather, who was admired, adored, and worshipped as well as George Fox. GEN. Hist. p. 27. Fox taught that the sick were cured, unclean Spirits cast out; his Followers who were as Rattles and Cymbals to blaze about his Fame, disguised the matter thus; that the Woman was possessed with a Devil, who had troubled her for the space of 32 years, that being brought to him after some hideous shrieks and outcries like the bellowing of a Cow, and a most noisome stink breathed from her Mouth, she was freed of that malignant Spirit. And to confirm the Quakers pretend to Miracles, see Fox's Journal p. 370. where one of them by himself is left upon Record, as also many more, but this I will recite, viz. There was one John Jay being to try a Horse got upon his back; and the Horse fell a running and cast him down upon his Head, and break his neck, as the people said. They that were near him took him up dead and carried him a good way, and laid him on a Tree: I got to him as soon as I could, and feeling on him concluded he was dead; and as I stood by him pitying him and his Family; I took hold of his Hair, and his Head turned any way his Head was so limber; whereupon throwing away my Stick, and my Gloves, I took his Head in both my Hands, and setting my knees against the Tree I raised his Head, and perceiving there was nothing out or broken that way, than I put one Hand under his Chin, and my other behind his Head, and raising his Head two or three times with all my Strength and brought it in, I soon perceived his Neck began to grow stiff again, and then he began to rattle in the Throat, and quickly after to breath; the People were amazed, but I bid them have a good Heart, and be of good Faith, and carry him into the House; they did so, and set him by the Fire, but I bid them get him some warm thing to drink and put him to Bed. After he had been in the House a while, he began to speak, but did not know where he had been the next day. We passed away, and he with us, about 16 Miles to a Meeting, etc. Now this is one of the Miracles directed too, in the third Table or Index, under the Letter M thus. Miracles wrought by the Power of God. And amongst the rest this being the chief, and to me seem most remarkable, I have set it down at large; and whereby it may appear, 1. That it was wrought in his own Name I, I, I, did so and so, and not as the Apostles did, In the name of Jesus of Nazareth arise, no, no, Geo. Fox like Simon Magus wrought counterfeit Miracles in his own Name only. 2. This is said to be done in 1672. and brought to light but in 1694 which is 22 years after it was said to be done; and there let me compare him to Simon Magus, and see how far they run parallel, read Acts 8. 9, 10. There was a certain Man called Simon, which before time in the same City used Sorcery, and bewitched the People of Samaria; giving out that himself was some great one, to whom they all gave heed from the least to the greatest, saying, this Man is the great Power of God, etc. This account the Holy Apostle gives on him, next let us hear what Justin Martin said of this Simon, viz. Many adored him as the supreme God; they gave heed to him; they believed and obeyed what he Taught; they placed their hopes and confidence in him, etc. See Pools Synopsis of the Critics, p. 14. 62. Erasmus in his paraphrase on that place, saith, viz. A Man there was among the Samaritans called Simon, a Deceiver of the People, and a Practiser of Delusions; who before Philip came there, practised in that City Magick-Art, and by his counterfeit Miracles had made the Samaritans fond of him, who by means of such falsehood and deceit vaunted himself before the simple and plain People, boasting that himself was an excellent Prophet, unto whom the Samaritans, from the highest to the lowest gave good heed; But nothing had he done in the name of Jesus: And therefore they as a People astonished at such monstrous sights said, this Fellow is God's own right hand, who is called Mighty: Many a day had he been with them, and long had he made them, with his Sorcery, to dote upon him; and therefore when he had oncegotten himself a name with them of great estimation, many believed all he Taught. From whence we may observe, by way of parallel, 1. That this Simon the Sorcerer was a great while, and many days with the Samaritans; so was George Fox with the Quakers. 2. Simon Magus wrought counterfeit Miracles in his own Name only, and never in the Name of Jesus; so did George Fox, and thereby (like Simon) got himself a great Name of estimation amongst the Quakers. 3. That the Samaritans adored Simon Magus and called him the power of God; so did the Quakers, whilst living, witness Josiah Coal's Letter, and others in the first part recited, and now dead, they have printed him to be the power of God, saying, Miracles wrought by the power of God. Third Table under the Letter M and for more of this Nature, see his Journal p. 167, 170, 103, 28, 29, 258, 370. Where he would make us believe he was an Angel; that he saw the Heaven opened; that he was seen at the Judgement Day; that he cured the Sick, restored the Lame, and wrought many other Miracles which will complete the parallel. But this story of John Jay is surely as idle, and unworthy of being esteemed a Miracle, as any thing can be found in the Popish Legends; for if setting a Man's Neck aright, that had gone awry by a fall, be a Miracle, than many Miracles have been wrought in England and elsewhere, for it is very common, and yet was never called a Miracle until now, that these who published his Journal, have so called it; and like to this is, that one recovered from Sickness, after G. Fox had prayed, and if this was a Miracle, many such Miracles are wrought by Ministers of the Church of England and others. SECTION IX. Divers particulars contracted out of the General History, and branched into six distinct Heads, where their Anniversary Synods, and their Church Government, and private Devotions are Treated of; showing the effects to be disparaging the Scripture, withholding Tithes, refusing to pay Church Rates; neglecting to read the Bible in their Meetings; refusing to vindicate it from the aspersions of the Papists; throwing of the Sacraments; allowing Women to Teach and Usurp Authority, in their distinct women's Meetings; omitting private Duties; censuring and reproaching the Church Liturgy, Magistrates, Ministers, such as write against them, and for Conscience sake separate from them; their gross Hypocrisy, in making Legal punishments to be persecutions; in saying and recording that they suffer great penalties, when they really do not, etc. GEN. Hist. p. 50. to 56. They (the Quakers) have likewise Meetings like to those we call Classes, and Provincial and National Synods or Councils; these Conventions are celebrated, but so as to allot each Sex, both Men and Women, their distinct and particular Meetings, other Meetings are appointed every Month; others every three Months; in which they consider their Provincial affairs: In these they inspect into, and recognize all Books that are to be printed, after they have been perused and approved by the Censors appointed for that purpose. The Acts of these Meetings are put into Registers; they have Anniversary Synods in every considerable Kingdom, to whom belong the Care and Administration of all the Affairs of that Kingdom. In England (their Metropolis) they have a fixed Anniversary Synod on the third day of Penticost, continuing sittting 4 or 5 days together. They have Delegates also come to this Synod, from all their Churches, in all Counties or Places where the Quakers obtain footing; but these must be such as are in the Ministry. At this Meeting they make a Catalogue of the Sufferers for their Religion, discovering what their Sufferings were, and for what causes they were inflicted [and by whom;] when the Synods are dismissed all their Acts and Decisions are enregistered by the public Authority of the Synod, which are afterwards copied from the Records in order to be printed and sent to all the Synods of their Associates throughout the World. They have no Precedent to their Synod, which place say they, is supplied by the Holy Ghost; but they have a Clerk who marks down every thing moved by the Assembly. Moreover, it is their custom in their Houses never to express a Religious Duty with an outward voice; as Praying to God, craving a Blessing e'er they take Meat or go to Bed, till they feel the impulsion of the Spirit, &c., Having contracted the sense of several pages wherein my Author relate the Way, Manner, and Method of the Quakers Church Government and Family Behaviour; now I shall make it my business to show how Quakerism grows, increases, and makes its progress in and by these Ways and Methods; and thereby discover not only that Quakerism tends to root up the Foundations of the Christian Religion, Instituted by our Lord Jesus Christ, who so loved the World, that he laid down his precious Life for lost Man, but also tends to unhinge the Government both of Church and State; and in order to make some further discovery hereof, I shall digest the matter into a few Heads, and speak briefly and distinctly to each in their place. 1. The Quakers in their Synods have no Precedent; the Holy Ghost supplying that Office. 2. The Quakers at their Synods make a Catalogue of them which suffer for their Religion, what they suffer, and by whom. 3. That the Quakers at their Synods inspect Books to be printed, and recognize the same. 4. About the women's distinct Meetings, and their way of Government. 5. The Quakers custom observed in not Praying to God in their Families, nor craving a blessing before they Eat. 6. About their Anniversary Synods, particularly that at London, with some of its Fruits and Effects. And lastly with some observations upon a passage in the General History p. 110. The Quakers also could not but Love King William, and embrace him as their most effectual Defender, etc. And so shall conclude these seven particulars. 1. The Quakers have no Precedent in their Synod, which place they say is supplied by the Holy Ghost, etc. This is the great Foundation upon which the Church of Rome build their Faith, touching the Doctrine of infallibility; and of which they mightily boast over all Protestant Churches: For, tho' all true Protestants believe that the Holy Ghost is with, and will continue with his Church to the end of the World, according to Matth. 28. yet that thereby any Synod, Council, or Church is infallible in their Precepts and Counsels; that as such, they are to be indispensably obeyed, as was the Precepts of the inspired Apostles; this they deny; and none hold it but the Papists and Quakers: And as this vain glorying of infallibility in the Papists has been refuted, so it will be in the Quakers also; and in order to it let us examine how, and in what manner the Holy Ghost is the Precedent of the Quakers Counsels and Synods, etc. It is written John 5. 23. For the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgement to the Son v. 27. and hath given him Authority to execute judgement also, because he is the Son of man: And to this agrees that Apostolical saying, Acts 17. 31. Because he hath appointed a day in which he will judge the world in righteousness, by that man whom he hath ordained; whereof he hath given assurance unto all men, in that he hath raised him from the dead. Now this Text in St. John the Quakers do not like it as translated, and therefore to bend the Scripture to serve their design, and to quadrate to their principles, they have perverted these Scriptures in Josiah Coal's Works p. 93. saying; All Judgement being committed to the Light that Lighteth every Man, the Light that is in every Man, must of necessity be Judge of all controversies, etc. So that, it plainly appears from hence, as also in my First Chapter in the First Part. That whereas God Almighty hath committed all Judgement to the Son; and hath ordained him to be Judge of quick and dead, because he is the Son of Man. Therefore the Quakers translate this Prerogative from the Son of God, Christ Jesus, to their Light, which by their Logic is the Son of Man which I deny; and this Light to whom they say all Judgement is committed, and which they have in them, must be Judge of all controversies, and consequently their Precedent, which deserves the casting Voice. No marvel then that the Quakers are not concerned to vindicate our Bible against the contempt cast upon it by the Papists, as saith the same Josiah Coal ibid. p. 104. I find the rest of his Book [i. e. A. S. the Roman Catholic] consists of divers Arguments, in which he controverts with Sectaries, and their Bibles and Ministers whose cause I am not engaged in; therefore it doth not concern me to Answer his Charges against them, etc. No, what neither Sectaries, their Bibles nor Ministers? Surely tho' he thought himself not engaged to vindicate the Sectaries, nor their Ministers; yet, if as they pretend to the Parliament, they do believe the Scriptures to be Divine, and left us by Men Divinely Inspired; and that they are a rule of Faith and Behaviour, they ought to have vindicated the Bible at least. Well, but some may say what did this A. S. the Papists call the Bible, that they the Quakers think themselves thus unconcerned to vindicate. I Answer, 'tis his 14th Chapter, and which the same Josiah Coal hath printed, as an Abettor and Co-workers with him in p. 113. to 116 of his Works. The contempt the Papists cast on the Bible, and which the Quakers are not at all concerned to vindicate is, viz. Protestant Sectarian Ministers and Preachers, who stand in a Pulpit or Tub, with such a brazen Faced Book as is their unjust, corrupt, and perverse Bible in their hand, etc. Oh the deceit of this People! What do they pretend to own the Bible only for their own ends, to obtain their Liberty? and when the Papists vilify and contemn it, and call it a brazen Faced Book, a corrupt and perverse Book, and they not concerned hereat: Well, I do still hope that some will be concerned to vindicate the Holy Bible from the contempt of the Papists, calling it a brazen Faced Book, perverse Book; and from the contempt of the Quakers who call it Death, Dust, Beastly ware, Carnal, Serpents-meat, etc. 2. That the Quakers at their Synods make Catalogues of Sufferers for their Religion, and what they Suffer, and by whom, etc. I have spoken to this Head largely in the 4th Chapter of the first Part, and therein shown how they boast of their Sufferings; how they Augment and make them more than they are; yea, put them in their Monuments Sufferers 20 l. when they are so far from that, that they have gotten 10 l. clear into pocket, as in the case of Samuel Cater. I have made it appear likewise, as my Author says, Gen. Hist. p. 137. that they amplify their Sufferings, viz. A scratch, a pinch, or a blue spot for a grievous Torment and bloody Wound, which may be well observed in most of the Monuments which these Men have left of their Sufferings, etc. 3. That the Quakers inspect their Books to be printed after approved by their Censors, etc. From whence let it be noted, that if their Books be thus inspected and approved by their approved Censors than are the whole answerable for the Errors contained in those Books, and for all the horrible Blasphemies in them. But their case is still worse; for suppose any one or more of them, be moved as he pretends to write a Message, Warning or Exhortation to a Nation, People, or Society, as the Word of the Lord God, their frequent pretence. This Book is first sent up to London for inspection and approbation, to one of these Meetings or Synods; where their Light is Precedent, and made infallible Judge, having all Judgement committed to it in Heaven and in Earth: this Synod thus Assembled shall afterwards vary the Title and change the Matter to make it harmonise with their design; and when this Writer Dies and leaves 20 or 30 Books thus approved, and thus sent abroad; the surviving Synod shall take these Books, and again alter them; put in and take out a second time what they please, than re-print them again: And what is become of their Infallibility now? They had their Precedent at their first inspection; what, could he not then see and discern clearly? but that here must be a new inspection? was not their Precedent [their Light] the same? For, either the Quakers write as they are moved by the Eternal Spirit of God, or they do not; if they do, than they are equal with the Apostles Writings, and then the Judgement denounced Rev. 22. 18, 19 If any man shall add unto these things, God shall add unto them the plagues that are written in this Book: And if any man shall take away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are written in this book, etc. This reward they must expect; Again, if they do not, then are they most horrible Deluders and great Deceivers when they writ thus, this is the word of the Lord God to you the Inhabitants of Bristol, or the like; and they believe it not; they do not believe the Author to be so moved and commissioned; and forasmuch as they served the Works of Edward Burrow, W. Smith, George Fox, Is. Pennington; so viz. altered, added and diminished to my certain knowledge: I do thereupon affirm that they are not the Works of Fox, Burrow, Pennington and Smith, but the Quakers in general, and they are answerable for their Errors notwithstanding each title assert the same. Thus hath Quakerism been carried on; thus hath it grown and taken its progress, by Cheats Frauds and Hypocrisies. 4. About their women's Meetings, and their manner and way of their Female Government. Having by my Book de Christiana Libertate, etc. not only treated at large on this head, but also been instrumental thereby, in giving that Image a deadly blow, insomuch as that in some part of the County of Suffolk, as well as in divers other Counties in England, there is not a distinct Woman's Meeting to be seen nor heard of: But yet since 'tis mentioned in the Gen. Hist. p. 50. They have likewise Meetings like those we call Classes and Provincial, and National Synods, or Councils. These Conventions are celebrated oftener or seldomer as the number of their Churches is, but so as to allot each Sex, Men and Women, their distinct and particular Meetings, etc. I say, since the Relation of their women's Meetings are here brought to light, which many think are so dead and dying as that it's hard to find one in many places, and that by way of commendation as I take it, I shall therefore briefly touch upon the principal Heads, and Orders, both of its novel, rise, and arbitrary Government; and chief for this reason, because in all the Orders there is not so much as one Scripture proof mentioned to confirm and to strengthen the same, even like William Smith's primer and Catechism, which contain more than a 100 pages; yet, in all the Treatise there is not one verse of Scripture quoted, nor that I remember, one exhortation to read the Scriptures in their Family; and in his Works in Folio do I find very few Scriptures quoted, if any, and them that are quoted much perverted and abused; but to the matter. Of women's Meetings see an abstract of a Letter from G. F. who was the first mover and setter of them up, viz. Dear Friends, To whom is my Love: It would be well, and be of service to have a Woman's Meeting that you may assist and inform the Men of necessities in what you cannot do yourselves, and so it would do well for the Women to have a distinct Meeting by themselves once a Month in the County Town, meeting together about the Tenth hour of the day, and keep a little Stock amongst themselves. George Fox. This Letter was wrote about 1670. pursuant to his motion for the Establishment of a Woman's distinct Meetings; but yet in many places they came on slowly, and they made but small progress in this Administration of their Female Church Government, for it met very early with opposition from amongst themselves; and especially when the observation of it came to be imposed, as a thing necessary, which many looked upon a thing indifferent; and therefore the Anniversary Synod confirmed it in all Points by one of their Acts, Anno 1675. A Copy thereof followeth, viz. London, th'. 3d. Month 1675. To all Monthly and Quarterly Meetings and elsewhere, etc. touching women's Meetings. It is our Judgement and Testimony in the word of God's Wisdom, that the Rise and Practice setting up and establishing men's and women's [distinct] Meetings in the Church of Christ in this our Day and Generation, is according to the Mind and Counsel of God, and done in the ordering and leading of his Eternal Spirit; and that it is the duty of all Friends and Brethren, in all places, to be diligent therein, and to encourage and further each other in that blessed Work; and particularly that Friends and Brethren in their respective Counties, encourage their faithful Women in the settlement of the said Meetings; and if any professing Truth [i.e. Quakerism] shall either directly or indirectly discountenance or weaken the Hands of either Men or Women in the Work and Service of the Lord, let such be admonished according to the order of the Gospel, and if they receive it not but reject it, resist Counsel and persist in the work of Division; We cannot but look upon them not in the unity of the Church of Christ and order of the Gospel. Therefore let Friends go on in the power of God, and in that, work for him, his Truth, and People, and not be swayed or hindered by them or their opsitions. Signed by William Penn Stephen Crispe John Burnyet George Whitehead Thomas Salthouse Alex. Parker, etc. This new order of George Fox's for women's distinct Meetings being ratified, and in all Points confirmed, and special orders (from above) given for the strict observation of them. There was then but few that in plain words did care to oppose them, notwitstanding their was not a word of Scripture, neither by Fox nor their yearly Meeting offered to prove their proceed Apostolical, nor to warrant their Precept, nor to show a Precedent since the days of Christ, or before, that Women should hold a Court or Synod distinct by themselves, have a Clerk, a Book, a Purse, and the management of Church Government once a Month, to meet in the County Town about the tenth hour, etc. according to the Order and Institution of George Fox: And notwithstanding there was no Scripture Precedent nor Divine Authority to confirm this Order of George Fox: Yet you see by this Anniversary Synod, it was ordained, enacted, and decreed, by, and with the Assent of the Delegates and Representatives; that whoever discountenanced them directly or indirectly, was ipso facto to be declared excommunicate, out of the unity of their Church. I might enlarge, and show the Decree which went forth from their Anniversary Synod 1677. Signed with 66 Names of the Foxonian Quakers; condemning John Story, and John Wilkinson and their Party for refusing subjection to the Decree above mentioned; as likewise another Letter from the Storian Quakers out of the North, signed by 67 Quakers disdaining and utterly condemning the Foxonian Quakers, and their Pride and Arrogancy, who look upon them not only to make Laws unscriptural, but when done to condemn such as did not obey them, and over whom they had no power; but I rather refer to a Book styled a Testimony against the 66 Judges, etc. and W. Rogers styled The Christian Quaker distinguished from the Apostate and Innovator, etc. and my Book aforecited, where both the said Letters are at large, and the controversy thereabouts more largely handled. I shall only add a Prophecy delivered in the Name of the Lord, in a Letter to John Story, one of the opposers of the women's Meetings before several Witnesses the first of the first Month 1677. viz. Oh John Story! what hast thou done against the Lord and thy own Soul? Thou hast divided the Heritage of the Lord, and the good Ordinances which Christ Jesus hath set up in his Church, hast thou contemned, especially women's Preaching, and women's Meetings; therefore the Lord will throw contempt upon thee; and if thou dost not repent speedily, miserable will be thy end. Oh how hast thou lost thy Place and Dignity which thou hadst among the Saints in Light? and now to be numbered amongst the Rebellious: If ever thou findest Mercy with the Lord, go home to the North with speed, and break up the divided Meetings which thou and John Wilkinson has been Instrumental to divide from the Body of our Lord Jesus Christ. The Anger of the Lord is chief against thee; and thou art bound with two bonds, for the Church and Brethren have bound thee on Earth, and thou art surely bound in Heaven; and this is the Testimony of Jesus to thee; neither shalt thou be able to get from under these bonds, till thou art reconciled to the Brethren [i. e. submit to G. F. etc.] Oh hast to the Work abovesaid, lest the wrath of the Lord overtake thee before it be done, and be reconciled to George Fox, who is God's Friend, and the Servant of the living God, and great Apostle of the Lord Jesus Christ; hast away into the North for thy time is short; and go quickly, thou and thy brother, if possible, you may bring again to the Body of Jesus Christ those ye have scattered, lest their blood be required at your hands: Arise quickly and be going, for this is the word of the Lord to thee, viz. That this year shalt thou [John Story] die, because thou hast taught Rebellion against the living God. Solomon Eccles. I have recited the more of this Letter of Solomon Eccles for that it shows, 1. That the Quakers believe that women's Meetings are the Ordinances of Jesus Christ. 2. That they pretend to have power to bind and lose. 3. That the only way to find Mercy was to submit to George Fox, and consequently to obey and observe his Laws. 4. That this false Prophecy, delivered in the Name of the Lord, might be from Age to Age continued upon the Quakers, as a brand upon their pretence to Prophecy; for when the said Solomon delivered this Message by Letter to John Story, the said John was very ill, and not like to live; yet it pleased God for the honour of his Name, and that these false pretenders might be manifest, to give him length of days about 4 years after. 5. That they accounted George Fox the great Apostle of our Lord Jesus Christ from the First Instance. 'tis no marvel then that the Quakers have thrown off and rejected the Ordinances of Baptism and the Lord's Supper, Instituted by Christ himself; since Fox their Apostle have ordained women's Meetings. From the 2d. That they are one with the Pope, touching the power of the Church. From the 3d. That the Merits and Satisfaction of Christ, as our Mediator and Intercessor, of his Death and bitter Passion, are by the Quakers laid aside, if the only way to find Mercy with God, be to be reconciled to the Quaker Church. From the 4th. That the Quakers are not zealous for God by their cloaking and excusing this false Prophecy of Solomon Eccles as well as divers others of his Idolatrous Practices; and by their owning him and his Books to the last, and never passing a public censure upon him and his Books. From the 5th. That 'tis no marvel that they are so much concerned to vindicate every little Pamphlet of their own with great charge and industry; but when the Papists call our Bible a brazen Faced, corrupt and false Bible; this they say in so many words, they are not concerned to vindicate, this they leave to the Sectarian and Episcopalians to do; for alas they have work enough besides; and as to the Bible, though the Papists call it a brazen Faced Book false and corrupt, yet the Quakers are not concerned to vindicate the Bible; and indeed how can they against the Papists, for the Papists would soon reply, what do the Quakers blame us for calling your Bible a brazen Faced Book, whilst you yourselves call it Death, Dust, Beastly Wares, Serpent's Food? How then can you blame us, since we are Cousin Jermains, and Dear Brethren in the common cause against the Church of England? Good God, when I consider their deep Hypocrisy in their confession to the Parliament, I am astonished at their impudence, and so I proceed to the next Head. 5. Moreover, saith the Historian p. 55. it's also their custom in their Houses, never to express a Religious Duty with an outward Voice, as praying to God, craving his Blessing e'er they take Meat, or go to Bed, till they feel the impulsion of the Spirit. This also is the fruit of Quakerism; read one of their Books styled A Music Lecture, etc. p. 25. For where they [i. e. Christians] are, I was in Performances, in Ordinances, in Family Duties, in Hearing, in Reading, in Prayers, in Fast; well, but when I came to bend my Mind to that of God in me, which is Christ, than I begun to learn to be a Fool, insomuch, that I durst not give God thanks for the Victuals that were set before me, etc. Reader, this their practice is so well known in England, as well as in Holland, that I need not to enlarge upon it; only take up a Lamentation when I consider how many Thousand Families of Quakers there are in England, that never prayed to God in their Houses, nor gave thanks for Blessings received with outward Voice, since they turned Quakers, perhaps 20 or 30 years: What account then will they be able to give at the great and terrible Day? Who have thus bewitched the People from the practice of the Primitive Christians, Saints and Martyrs, and all Protestant Churches to this day, unto the practice of the Heathen that know no God, read Jeremiah 10. 25. Pour out thy fury upon the heathen, and upon the families that call not on thy name! But, possibly they'll say, they think of God when they go to Bed, and when they receive the Comforts of this Life; to which I answer; if that be enough, and that words are useless, why then do their Teachers speak and pray in their Meetings with an audible Voice, and sometimes at your own Houses when People are there? Is this their practice only that they may be seen of Men? a thing I am jealous of; for if they look upon it their Duty, why not a Duty incumbent upon the hearers also? But they say in Burrow's Works p. 47. That is no command of God to thee, which God commanded to others, unless they receive it a new as the Inspired Apostles did. Thus have they taken away they Key of Knowledge from the People, I mean the use of the Holy Scripture, which would instruct them better: Nay, this is not all, but where the Spirit of Quakerism is in its full vigour; if they happen to be in company with a Man of another Profession, whether Episcopalian, Presbyterian, Independent, or Baptist, who crave a Blessing upon what they receive, ☞ sits the Quaker with his Hat on, as a Testimony against that laudable Practice. 6. They have Anniversary Synods in every considerable Kingdom, to whom belong the Care and Administration of all the Affairs of that Kingdom. In England they have a fixed Anniversary Synod on the third day of Penticost. Gen. Hist. p. 51. This may be true, but of how dangerous a consequence both to Church and State I am not able to determine, but time will further manifest: But the more they increase and gain upon their People, and believe that they are the only true Church, and as such, cannot err; that they have power to bind and lose; and that their Precepts and Prescriptions are of equal Authority to that of the Apostles, and thereupon aught to be indispensibly obeyed; I say, as this comes to be received and embraced, the danger of these Anniversary Synods will be seen more and more, and it may be when 'tis too late; for they not only already think themselves capable to teach Judges, Justices, yea, and the Parliament too. What is their Duty, what they may do, and what they may not do, and the utmost confines of their Jurisdiction? particularly in the case of Heresy, of which I have recited some Instances, and can hundreds more; as also by two of their Anniversary Synods they have virtually, tho' not verbally, repealed great part of two Statute Laws that of the 22 of C. II. and that clause of an Act of Parliament made in the First of K. W. iii. relating to Tithes by their yearly Epistles, enregistered by Authority of their Anniversary Synods; I need not here relate what an Influence their first Epistle had, and how little the Law was regarded or observed the whole Nation is witness; and as to the last about Tithes and Churchwarden Rates, which the Parliament took care to preserve in their old Channel, in the same Law which indulge the Quakers in the exercise of their persuasion; yet this very Law they Anno 1696. Charged implicitly with Antichristianism, saying, p. 1. That all due care be taken against that grand Oppression, and Antichristian Yoke of Tithes; that our Christian Testimony born and greatly suffered for, be faithfully maintained against them, in all respects, and against Steeple-house-rates, or Lays; as also against the burden and imposition of Oaths, etc. Here we see Tithes are Antichristian, and their Testimony Christian; a perfect Map of their whole Doctrine; the Parliament Antichristian, the Quakers Christian; the Parliament great Oppressors, the Quakers Oppressed, tho' they pay no more than their Neighbours; the Parliament lay Antichristian Yokes upon the Quakers, the Quakers the only Christian sufferers, and persecuted People of God; whose sufferings and persecutions are greater and more unjust, than the sufferings of Christ, his Apostles and Martyrs; for what was inflicted upon them, was duly executed by a Law; and to this practice of ours agree that Doctrine of St. Edw. Burrow's, as it is written in our Gospel, in the Book of our Holy Scriptures, which we at all times stand ready to vindicate; vulgarly called Ed. Burrow's Works p. 501. Witnesses we stand against Parliaments, Counsels, Judges, Justice's, who make and execute Laws in their own wills over the Consciences of Men; and to such Laws, Customs, Courts, or Arbitrary Usurped Dominion we cannot yield obedience, etc. And therefore by this our Anniversary Decree, we Ordain and Enact, that the Members of all our Monthly and Quarterly Meetings, and all other our Associates in every Kingdom, Nation and County that adhere to us, and believe us to be the universal Church of the First born, who cannot err, but are led by an infallible Spirit; that all and every of our Disciples throw off all these Antichristian Yokes of grand Oppression; and from henceforth stand faithful Witnesses against Tithes as Antichristian, against Church Rates, against lawful Oaths, against carrying Guns; and this, as the Historian says, is to go through England and Wales, yea all the World over; and all that suffer for their Stubborness and Antimagistratical Principles, by the same Edict is to be taken into Record, who it is that suffer, for what cause they suffer, and on what account. I have not time to set forth the dangerous consequences of these Anniversary Synods, when they once gain upon the People that they are the only universal Catholic Church, and as such cannot err; that as G. Whitehead Teaches, the People are to believe as she believes: I say, on this Doctrine of Infallibility hangs a load of dangers; the Parliament say one thing, the Anniversary Synod at Devonshire-house another; they now argue privately, but in time may dispute the Point publicly: Infallibility sticks at nothing provided it be for the Holy Church in the Papists Dialect, or for Truth's sake in the Quakers: They are Terms Synonymous, respecting their Authors, and W. Penns Books cited declare plainly how vigorous he was for his near Friends and dear kindred in the late Reign; and the Quakers addressed from their Anniversary Synods run in the same Channel, and flow from the same Fountain, for K. J. II. and against the Church of England, there came forth public Addresses Annually, besides Books every Month in favour of the then Government and against the Church: But since King William came to the Crown, never a public Anniversary Address to King W. nor one Book wrote in favour of the present Governments, as anon will appear. And thus Quakerism, like the Snake in the Grass, creeps on undiscovered, or at least little notice taken how she secretly Smites, and privately Stings, and throws out her Poison both at Church and State; She'll Arraign, Impeach, Try, Judge, Summons, Dialogue, Condemn both Magistrate and Minister, Ruler and People; yet if she be but touched, Oh how she winches and giffles up and down! crying she's wronged, she's abused, and all is malice that's said of her; whilst she takes the liberty to abuse, traduce, stigmatize and calumniate all other People. This is the Temper of this clamorous Woman; and tho' I do solemnly profess, as in the sight of God, Angels and Men, I am not for Persecution, neither do I desire, nor none need to fear that our King and Parliament should follow the French King's example in what is of the nature of Persecution or Cruelty; yet on the other hand, when they perceive the Ingratitude of this insolent People, they probably may take some measures to stop the stream of Heresy which spreads like a Leprosy through the Nation: And forasmuch as something that is praise worthy on the French King's part, in granting the Ministry of the reformed Churches leave to hold a national Synod, and for the exemplariness of the French Protestant's zeal for God, care of his Church, subjection to the Laws according to the Evangelical Doctrine of Christ, his Apostles and Martyrs. I shall set down a few things worthy observation, from the 28 Synod held at Charenton near Paris the 26 day of December 1644. as in the 2 Vol. of John Quick's Hist. p. 4. 28. to 437. viz. The Sessions being opened with Prayer, the Lord Marquis of Clermont, General Deputy, presented the Writ given forth by His Majesty's Command, for calling the Synod as followeth. This day being the 12 of February 1644. the King being then at Paris, upon the most humble Petition of his Subjects of the pretended reformed Religion, to permit them the calling and holding a national Synod, desiring to gratify, and treat favourably his said Subjects, hath permitted, and doth permit them, the Convocation of a national Synod next to Charenton; but with this condition, that they treat in it of none other matters but of those which he allowed them; and that the Commissioner, whom His Majesty shall please to appoint, be present in the said Synod, as hath been accustomed, in witness whereof, His Majesty hath commanded me to issue out this Writ, which he hath Signed with his own Hand, and caused it to be counter-signed by me his Commissioner and Secretary of State, and of his Command, Signed in the Original Lewis, and a litt'e lower Phelipeaux. The Lord Commissioner unto the Synod. Messieurs, AS it is a very great honour to me to be Commissionated to assist in your Synod, and to acquaint you with his Will and Pleasure, so also have I great deal of joy and satisfaction to behold this illustrious Assembly, chosen out of all the Provinces of this Kingdom, and that I can tell you by word of Mouth, which is to assure you of their Majesty's good will unto you, and protection of you, and of all your Churches; and of the entire execution of the Edicts of Pacification, so long as you continue yourselves within the bounds of your Duty, Subjection, and Fidelity, which you own unto their Majesties, they being the higher Powers set over you by God, entrusted with the supreme Authority, and your lot and portion being the honour of obedience unto them; whereunto you stand obliged by your Birth, the dictates of your Consciences, and the Favours you daily receive from their Majesties, and by all kinds of consideration both general and particular; and observe it I beseech you as a singular mark of their Majesty's Favour unto you, that there be of your Religion in the Kingdom Persons of the highest Quality; There be amongst you most Noble and Illustrious Dukes and Peers, Mareschals of France, Generals of Armies, Magistrates and Judges of Sovereign Courts; and their Majesties now this very day, out of their great confidence they have of your Loyalty and Fidelity have granted you this Assembly at the very Gates of the Metropolis of this Kingdom, in the very face and view of all France, and of this infinite People of Paris, vastly different from you in Manners and Humours, Inclination and Religion, who will be severe Witnesses and Judges over all your Actions. And that all things may be done in that Order prescribed me by their Majesties, I am in their Names commanded to acquaint you, that all Ministers who are not Natural born Subjects but Strangers, are to be excluded this Synod, and that none may assist to Vote in it who hath not Letters of Deputation from his Provincial Synod; and that during the time it be held, you may have no Communication with Foreigners or other suspected Persons; and forasmuch as your Assemblies are not by any legal constitution a Body Politic, their Majesties have forbidden you to meddle in State Affairs or matters of Justice, because your Synod hath no power to judge of such matters; but only to treat of Points of Doctrine, and Church Discipline. Moreover their Majesties do forbid you to print any Books in any place whatsoever, concerning your Religion, which are not attested [i. e. licenced] by two manuel Certificates of two Ministers at the least, under pain of confiscation of the whole Impression; nor may you denounce any excommunication against any Minister or others, who shall change their Religion for that of the Roman Catholics, nor treat them reproachfully neither by Word nor Writing. Moreover, when they speak of the Pope, they are not to call him Antichrist, nor to treat him disrespectfully; nor shall they tax the Roman Church with Idolatry, nor the Sacraments, nor Ceremonies thereof as humane Inventions and Idolatry, etc. Nor to make Collections of Money. The Moderator's Answer. We thankfully acknowledge the great Goodness and Mercy of Almighty God, in answering the Prayers of his poor Churches with his heavenly Blessing, and their Majesty's condescension in accepting our most humble Petition, presented by the Lords of our general Deputies, and granting us this privilege of holding this Synod, and committing the inspection of it unto a Person most Illustrious for his Virtues, and well deserving that high Place of Dignity and Honour in the first and chiefest Parliament of the Kingdom: All these and many other considerations do enforce our Souls with a sweet and pleasing violence, to break forth into enlarged Praises, and inflamed Thankfulness unto their Majesties, yea, and in most ardent Supplications unto our God, for the preservation of their Sacred Persons, his Benediction upon their Government, the Glory of their Crowns, under whose comortable shadows the Churches enjoying a sweet Peace, will never have any other desire or thought than to practise faithfully, and conscientiously, that most express command of our Lord and Saviour by his Apostle St. Peter, to fear God and honour the King; and that with a most entire and sincere obedience. And as we have no design to do it, so we shall never admit any persons to sit as a Member of our National Synod, who hath not a Deputation, etc. nor shall we hold any correspondency with, nor receive any Letters coming from Foreigners, nor return any answers to them, unless that my Lord Commissioner, who represents His Majesty's Person, shall have first perused them; nor will we debate about matters of State, nor make any Orders in relation to them; nor shall we set up Provincial Counsels in opposition to His Majesty's Will; nor, as His Majesty hath demanded of us, will we suffer those Canons of our National Synods, concerning the approbation of Books, that shall be printed on matters of Religion to be violated nor shall we excommunicate any of those Persons who quit the Communion of our Churches, for we do not arrogate to ourselves any Jurisdiction over them, from that minute in which they left us; nor shall we tolerate any Sermons fraught with any injurious and reproachful Language against the Members of the Church of Rome; nor suffer that moneys be collected, etc. Thus Reader you see, the Protestants ask and the King grants; the King limits them, sets them bounds; the Protestants promise to obey. 1. Not to admit Strangers to sit in their Synods. 2. Nor to hold correspondency with Foreigners. 3. Nor will they debate about State matters. 4. Nor make any Orders relating to them. 5. Nor print Books unlicens'd. 6. Nor excommunicate Persons that quit their Society; for they do not arrogate to themselves such a power, nor conceive themselves the only true Church in the World, like the old Strumpet and the young Harlot. 7. Nor will they tolerate any Sermons [or Books] fraught with injurious and reproachful Language; nor will they suffer Money to be collected, which as it's called the Sinew of War, so it may be called the Nerve of Heresy. I hope to such as will read this Book, and others I have wrote, will not stand in need of proof that the Quakers are guilty of all that the Christians are herein said to be thus innocent of. Having showed the danger of the Quakers Anniversary Synods, upon their Principle of Infallibility, read Mat. 22. 21. Tit. 3. 1. 1 Pet. 2. 13, 14, 17. Rom. 13. 1, 2, 3. and Tindal's Works (i. e.) The obedience of a Christian Man, etc. p. 111. viz. For God hath made the King in every Realm Judge over all; he that resisteth the King resisteth God; if the Subject's Sin, they must be brought to the King's Judgement; if the King Sin he must be brought to the Judgement of God, and as it is to resist the King, so it is to resist his Officers, which are sent to execute the King's Commandment; for it is written, let every Soul be subject to the higher Power; here is no Man exempt, but all Souls must obey; and so I proceed to the next Head. 7. Gen. Hist. p. 110. The Quakers also could not but love him (King William) and Embrace him as their most Effectual Defender, without the hindrance or fear of Molestation. HEre I find my Author as far out proportionably, as in his high Commendation of William Penn, Sect. 2. For alas! As streams run from a full Fountain, so do and did the Quakers run to the late K. J. II. for out of the abundance of the Heart the Mouth speaketh. But of this I will not be mine own Judge; but as a Demonstration thereof, I will recite a few of their words out of some of their Addresses to the late K. J. II. And 1st. London, April, 1687. We pray God to bless the King, His Royal Family and People with Grace and Peace; and that after a long and prosperous Reign here, he may receive a better Crown amongst the Blessed: Which is the Prayer of, etc. The second. Scotland, June, 1687. We cannot but with grateful Hearts both admire and acknowledge the Providence of God that made the Kings retiring into our Country (i. e. Scotland, 1679) give a happy turn to his Affairs, to the defeating and disappointing the designs of his Enemies.— We do justly conceive ourselves obliged, by a special tie, to praise God for his Goodness, in carrying the King thorough, and over all his troubles, since by the same Providence, and at the same time, by which the Lord began in that more observable manner, to evidence his care of him, he made him the happy Instrument to deliver us from our troubles. So that the prosperity of his Affairs, and our peaceable fruition of the exercise of our Consciences beareth the same date the 3d. London, August 1678. We pray God save the King, and deliver him out of all his Enemy's Hands; both Spiritual and Temporal Enemies, Amen. Mark Reader, here is Address upon Address, and Prayer after Prayer for the late King James II. which sound his Fame from England to Scotland, and from thence Eccoed back from Stotland to England, in the highest strain, and most elegant Style the Quakers could invent, suitable to their singular Dialect. I do not mention this practice whilst he was King of England, and seated on the Throne as an Evil in itself, or inconsistent with their Duty, and the Duty of all his Subjects; for 'tis my Judgement that we ought to pray for all Kings which God in his Providence sets over us, without disputing their Titles; and to obey every Ordinance of Man for the Lord's sake, knowing that there is no Power but of God, the Powers that be are ordained of God, and who so resist the Powers, they resist the Ordinance of God, and they that resist shall receive to themselves Damnation according to these Scriptures, Rom. 13. Tit. 3. 1. 1 Pet. 2 cap. Mat. 22. 21. I say I do not recite these Addresses and Prayers made by the Quakers to, and for the late King, as an Evil in itself, for I do believe we ought to pray for all Kings, whether they be Pagan or Christian, Papist or Protestant, good or bad, Orthodox, or Hetrodox, Protectors or Persecutors, for such was the practice of all Gods faithful Saints and Servants, from Abraham downwards to this day, as these Scriptures show in the Margin. Ger. 20. and 47. 7. 10. Exod. 1. 6. to the end cap. 2. 23, 24, 25. cap. 3. 7, 10. 10 Acts 7. 18. to 35. Psal 90. 1. Josephus Anti. l. 6. cap. 5. 67, 1. Sam. 8. 22. cap. 9 16. 17. cap. 15. 1, 9 1 Tim. 2. 1, 2. 1 Chron. 28. 4. 1 Kings 18. 25. Jer. 33. 20. Ps. 132. 11. to 14. 2 Sam. 7. 25. cap. 16. 16. Ezr. 6. 3. to 14. Joseph An. 11. cap. 4. Ezek. 19 10. Exod. 22. 26. 1 Pet. 2. Mat. 22. etc. But that which disappoints both the Author of this Gen. Hist. myself and thousands more is, that they should thus hearty pray for, and address themselves unto the late King, and write so many Books in favour of the then Government, calling him brave King, etc. God and Cesar are both of a mind, etc. A sensible Prince, etc. An Instrument in God's hand, etc. and notwithstanding all this and much more that might be said on the same Subject, yet when King William, his present Majesty, whom God preserve, came to the Crown, and the very first Year of His Reign, did, by Law indulge them in the exercise of their persuasion, and give them all the ease they reasonably could desire, yet they made not one Address to him, nor one Prayer for him, as they did for the late King; no, nor yet wrote one Book in favour of the Government, which made me and others admire at their ingratitude; for, I was so far of the same mind with the Author of the Gen. Hist. That I thought the Quakers could not but love K. W. III. and embrace him as their most effectual Defender; but when I came to prove them, and try them, and measure them by their Fruits, and to consider that in two years' space they made 4 Addresses to the late K. J. II. and that in 4 years' time they had not made one Address to K. W. III. I then altered my mind, and by reading of their said Addresses, and their Books wrote by W. Penn, I found that the stream of their Affections did run like a mighty torrent to the late K. J. II. when there was not the least issuing drop of Affection run to His present Majesty; and this put me upon writing a Letter to the Quakers, August 1690. p. 2. Now if you would be constant; then, why do you not pray for, and address yourselves to K. William and Q. Marry as hearty, and as publicly as you did to, and for, K. J. whom you called and said, a Brave King, God and Cesar are both of a mind, pray Godbless the King and His Royal Family. These and many more [magnifying Expressions] were published thro' the Nations: But no Salutation, no Message, no Prayer for, nor no Address to K. W. and Q. M. as if you were struck mute at the loss of your brave King, whom you said was of the same mind with God: What can you say for yourselves? Are you like those 1 Sam. 10. 27. viz. The Children of Belial, who said, how shall this Man save us? And they despised him, and they brought him no presents [no Addresses nor Prayers] but the King held his peace. Oh you unworthy and ungrateful Persons! Hath not King William granted you the Liberty of your Consciences, and confirmed it by a Law? What, have you nothing to say for King William? Nay, you are so far from that, that when His Majesty appointed a Fast, for the prosperity of his Armies, you not only Preached against the Fast, but also, to weaken the Hearts and Hands of his Friends, you did vehemently cry down all Wars and Fight. Is your zeal for the Protestant cause, and the Protestant interest quite lost and gone, or is it gone to Rome? You have had several yearly Meetings since this King's Reign, but not the least public acknowledgement of the special Favour shown you by the King and Parliament; I will not say but some of your People may be hearty thankful, yet it plainly appears, that your Leaders and Teachers [and Anniversary Synods] are of another mind; for had you been as hearty and zealous for the present Government, as in point of gratitude you should and ought to have been, your People had not been so divided, and so confused touching the Protestant interest, as now they are; the sad and evil Effects of which must, and will be laid at your doors. Consider what is said, repent and amend your ways, for this Government and the Protestant Interest are so linked together, that those who are not true to the one cannot be true to the other, whatever their pretences are, or may be. This I wrote, and caused it to be printed and dispersed as a Testimony against their lukewarmness to the present Government, and their Zeal to, and for the late Reign as this Section, and Sections 5 6 do make plainly appear. Obj. But possibly some may object, that these are private Addresses by some few particulars, and be ready to demand, whether they ever made a public Anniversary Address, that thereby they might, in all Kingdoms, show their Loyalty to the late King, etc. Ans. Yea, that they did, and that it may more evidently appear, that William Penn's Books mentioned in Section V. VI run in the same channel, I will write part of their said Anniversary Address, Anno 1688. viz. The humble Address of the People called Quakers, from their yearly Meeting, the 6th. of the Month called June, 1688. viz. We the King's peaceable Subjects, from divers parts of his Dominions, being met together in this City, after our usual manner to inspect the affairs of our Christian Society throughout the World, think it our Duty humbly to represent to him the blessed Effects, the Liberty he has graciously granted his People to worship God, according to their Consciences, hath had both on our Persons and Estates; for whereas we formerly had long and sorrowful Lists brought to us, from almost all parts of his Territories, of Prisoners and the spoil of Goods by violent and ill Men, upon account of Conscience. We bless God, and thank the King, the Goals are every where clear, except in cases of Tithes, and the repairs of Parish Churches, and some few about Oaths; and we do in all Humility lay it before the King to consider the hardships our Friends are yet under for Conscience sake, in those respects, being in the one chiefly exposed to the present Anger of the offended Clergy, who have therefore imprisoned some of them till death, and in the other they are rendered very unprofitable to the public and themselves; for both in reference to Freedoms in Corporations, Probates of Wills and Testaments, and Administrations, Answers in Chancery and Exchequer, Trials of our just Titles and Debts, proceeding in our Trades in the Custom house, serving the Office of Constables, etc. They are disabled and great advantages taken against them; unless the King's Favour do interpose; and as we humbly hope he may relieve us, so we confidently assure ourselves he will ease us what he can. Now since it hath pleased thee, O King, to renew to all thy Subjects by thy last Declaration, thy gracious Assurances to pursue the Establishment of this Liberty and Property, upon an unalterable Foundation; and in order to it to hold a Parliament in Nou. next at farthest; we think ourselves deeply engaged to renew our assurances of Fidelity and Affection, and with God's help, intent to do our part for the effecting so blessed and glorious a Work; that so it may be out of the power of any one party to hurt another upon the account of Conscience: And as we firmly believe that God will never desert this righteous cause of Liberty, nor the King in maintaining of it; so we hope by God's Grace to let the World see, we can honestly and hearty appear for Liberty of Conscience, and be inviolably true to our own Religion, whatever the Folly or Madness of some Men on that account may suggest to the contrary. These are the say of their Anniversary Synod. Here you see is nothing wanting but bended knees; here is in all Humility, in all Fidelity, with all Affection, yea, all, all, all, all Prayers for him; for long Life, for a prosperous Reign, Laud and Praise in the highest; for his Deliverance, for the defeating his Enemies [the excluders,] yea, it would be too long to enumerate them: Besides, Book after Book in favour of the Government; and Letter after Letter printed and dispersed; a first, a second and a third for the repealing the Penal Laws and Tests, that so the Papists might sit in Parliament to Establish them a new Order, even St. George's Order as completely as their Grandfather Ignatius Loyola had his Order confirmed by the Pope's Bulls, October 3d. Anno 1540 as at large set forth in a Discourse concerning the Idolatry of the Church of Rome, etc. p. 281. But God in his righteous Judgement deserted their King, their Cause; and will in time more fully discover their Order to be of the same tendency, and carried on by the same Holy cheats, that Ignatius Loyola's Order of the Jesuits was. And so much briefly to show how Quakerism grew, and after what manner it made its progress; and how they bent their strength against the Protestant Interest, Church of England, and all Orthodox Religion. But Reader, did you ever hear of an Anniversary Address to King William? No such matter: Did you ever see a Book put forth in favour of the present Government? No such matter; no, no, 'tis as in my printed Letter 1690. above recited. No Salutation, no Message, no Prayer for, nor no Address to, King William III from this their yearly Synod, nor a Book wrote in favour of the Government; no, in all Humility, no, in all Affection, no public Prayers for his long and prosperous Reign, no Laud and Praise that his Enemies are defeated; here is no, no, no, no. Come George Whitehead, and foreman of your Anniversary Synod; what can you say for yourselves? Why are you mute? Why have you not brought forth one public Anniversary Synodical Address this seven years? nor public Prayers; or, are you still like those we read on, 1 Sam. 10. 27. But the children of Beliel said, how shall this man save us? and they despised him, and brought him no presents [no Prayers, no Addresses] but the King held his peace. But, that I may not leave out one cluster of the Quakers Vine by which Quakerism has been nourished, I shall now mention a notable passage, to discover the Quakers aversion to the present Government, viz. The Widow Whitrow, formerly a Quaker, wrote a Book in favour of the Government about four years since, but it did so cross the Quakers current, that they made an Order for the calling it in, and suppressing the same; the which I have, together with their not addressing His present Majesty, more largely handled in my Book New Rome unmasked p. 26. to 32. Obj. Well, but may some say, tho' it be granted that since His Majesty King William came to the Crown, the Quakers have made no public address to him, tho' it was frequent with them so to do to the late King, which we must acknowledge do show of what stamp they are; yet Anno 95. they gave out a Paper they styled Their Ancient Testimony renewed, with respect to the King and Government; and touching the present Association; where they have these words. And we believe that the timely discovery and prevention of the late barbarous Design, and Mischievous Plot against the King and Government, and the sad Effects it might have had, is an eminent Mercy from Almighty God; for which we, and the whole Nation have great cause to be humbly thankful to him, and to pray for the continuance of his Mercies to them and us. From a Meeting of the said People in London, the 23d. of the first Month called March 1695/6. The recited Paper was given into the Lord's House, where their Bill for their Affirmation, to pass instead of an Oath, was under the Lord's consideration, it having passed the House of Commons, and I being there, asked one of the Clarks to give me one of the said Papers, which having perused, I saw clearly their Juggles: For, first it was not signed by any Body, neither had they once mentioned what King they meant; and I knowing their reserve and cunning way of insinuating, and yet to leave a back door to creep out at on occasion, I wrote a Reply to their Paper, which is as followeth, somewhat contracted, viz. A brief Reply to the Quakers Paper, Entitled The Ancient Testimony of the People called Quakers, renewed with respect to the King and Government, and touching the present Association, etc. By Fra. Bugg, Sen. Friends, YOur Paper is not signed, and thereby seems fallacious from the top to the bottom; for what credit can be given to a Paper not signed, only said to be given out at a Meeting in London; the King's Proclamations are said to be given out at His Court at Whitehall, but not without his Name W. Rex; but it seems the Quakers conceive themselves of that credit, that they need not sign their Papers, that's below them, or else it must be to leave room for an excuse, or a back door when time serves; I grant they say they pray for the King, but what King they do not tell; no, that's a secret; they also say they cannot sign the Association, and thereby declare the King their rightful and lawful King, for Conscience sake; and yet they tell you, that their not signing is not in opposition to his being declared the rightful and lawful King; who says so? no Body, for there is no Name to it, nor from what Meeting it was given out; whether Yearly, Quarterly, Monthly, or second-day Meeting; or whether from 2 or 3 Quakers under a Hedge. Again, you say you cannot sign the Association, in regard you cannot take revenge for ourselves nor others: That's strange; what, had you not a Quaker lately Murdered on the Road, between Kingsland and Shoreditch, you know you had; and did you not prosecute the Murderer? you know you did, and proffered 50 l. reward for the discovery of the Person, and found him, apprehended him, and had him tried at the Old-Baily, London, where he was condemned, and afterwards hanged in Chains near Stone-Bridge, and all this prosecution by Quakers. Can you revenge yourselves of the Blood of a private Person, and can you not sign the Association to avenge the Blood of your Prince for Conscience sake? what, are your Consciences so nice, that you can neither say nor do any thing for the public good? What, can you receive benefit and protection from the Government; and see your Prince every day ventures his Life to defend you in your Liberty and Property? and can you not sign the Association, Defend your Prince, and Assist the Government for Conscience sake: You may yet remember how frequent it was with you to address the late King James; but you know you never made a public Address to His present Majesty; no, your Consciences will not allow you, neither to pray for, address yourselves to, nor yet to sign the Association in defence of His Majesty; nor yet sign your Paper, wherein you pretend to pay some kind of respect for the Liberty you enjoy: you could tell Richard Cromwell he should prosper, and that you would be a strength to him, and stand by him in the day of Trouble; and defend him in his just Government; see Burrow's Works, etc. You could tell the late King in your Anniversary Address above mentioned, that you thought yourselves deeply engaged to renew your assurances of Fidelity and Affection; and that by God's help you did intent to do your parts; but you cannot sign the Association, and thereby, stand by, and defend King William, nor renew your assurances of Fidelity and Affection for Conscience sake: What Conscience then is yours, that thus differs from the Consciences of the Lords and Commons, and all other dutiful Subjects of our Sovereign Lord the King? Or, has no body any Conscience but you? Signed in concurrence with the loyal Association this 27th of March, 1696. by Fra. Bugg, Sen. This Reply I presented to the Lords on the 28th of March 1696. which was very well accepted of; and soon after one of the Peers came out and said to this effect: Mr. Whitehead this Paper of yours will not do, you must be plain, and declare what King you mean, and also sign your Paper; and if you do so, and appear plain and sincere, I will do the best I can for you, and possibly your Bill may pass the House, etc. But this did so startle the Quakers, and made them so angry with Fra. Bugg, that Gilbert Laytey could not contain himself, but before several Lords and other Gentlemen, abused me to my Face; as also, Jacob Franklin and some others, to whom I replied what was needful at that time, in my own defence, and to the great satisfaction of the Lords and other Gentlemen present. But, this was not all, but by and by came out a Bishop of the Church of England and said, Mr. Whitehead, we have considered of your Bill, but we shall insert a clause for the payment of Tithes; and a power, in case of neglect of payment, to distrain for any sum not exceeding 10 l. what think you of that? If you will not accept of it so, it will be thrown out. But, ah poor George, methinks I see him how he rubbed his Elbow, and scratched his Head, and looked up as demurely as a Puritan, and said, at least thought, viz. What hard things are now upon us poor innocent Quakers? that our Papers will not pass without signing, nor will our meaning pass, but we must declare in plain words what King we mean; this does indeed pinch us, and forely trouble us; and, which is still as had, we must have a clause put in to bind us to pay Tithes, and this will go down but ruggedly with the Friends: What shall I say, or how shall I come off? If I accept of it on these Terms I shall displease many; if I lose the Bill, and with it our Money spent to obtain it [tho' when all is done, 'tis no less, nor more an Oath than I took myself in the Lord Mayor's Court, upon a Bill exhibited against me by Thomas Daniel and Elizabeth his Wife, April 9th 1695.] I shall displease others; what shall I do? I am beset round on every side; without are fears, within are doubts; one sort of Friends will blame me for accepting of it; thus I A. B. do declare in the presence of Almighty God, the witness of the Truth of what I say; which the World's people will say 'tis equivalent to an Oath, and at the end of it there is such Rider as enjoins us to pay Tithes etc. and yet this will not do neither, unless we sign our Association, and mention King William; these things are hard, yet we will submit to Parliaments for once, etc. Reader, this is the case, their first Paper dated March 3 1695/6 not signed, nor King W. named, was thrown out, and poor G W. and his Associates signed another dated the 3 d day of April 1696. A Copy thereof a Person of Quality sent me, which Paper was signed, and the King's Name at large in it; that part of it which answers to the other part already recited I will set down, viz. And we believe that the timely discovery and prevention of the late barbarous Design and mischievous Plot against King William and the Government, and the sad Effects it might have had is an eminent Mercy from Almighty God, etc. At a Meeting of the said People the 3d of April 96. Signed by many of us on behalf of ourselves, and the rest of our Friends, etc. Note Reader, that this Paper presented to the King April 8. 1696. dated April 3. 96. was never dispersed among the Quakers, but kept private: But that Paper dated March 3. 1695/ 6. wherein the King is not named, and which therefore the Lords threw out; that Paper was dispersed far and near; so the poor Quakers still may be to seek what King their Teachers mean, etc. Reader, I have already put down the Form of the Quakers Oath, I A. B. etc. I shall now add another clause in the said Act, which will prevent them from coming into any share of the Government, which they have long waited for; but thanks be to God Quakerism has by this Act got such a blow, as they will not easily rub off, viz. Provided and be it Enacted, that no Quaker, or reputed Quaker shall by virtue of this Act be qualified or permitted to give evidence in any Criminal Causes; to serve on any Juries, or bear any Office or place of [Trust] or Profit in the Government; any thing in this Act contained to the contrary, in any wise notwithstanding. And having thus far showed Mr. Croese his mistake of the Quakers loving King William as their effectual Defender, as well as in some other things in his General History: I am about leaving him until the next opportunity, hoping when he considers and sees how Quakerism first rose, and how it has grown, and by what means and methods it has had its progress, that he will not blame me for dealing plainly with them, especially when he sees and considers the scurrilous Names and ignominious Terms they have cast upon the Learned Clergy of this British Nation, as Robbers, Thiefs, Witches, Devils, Antichrists, Bloodhounds, the Sir Simons of the Age, Monsters, Baal's Priests, Sodomites, and what not, which might render them and their function odious to the People; as also their Pamphlets to the Parliaments to leave and forsake them; and so I take my leave of this learned Historian and bid him farewel. By this time some may say, you seem to know the distemper of this corrupted Body of Quakerism; pray let us know a Remedy to stop the gangreen; for many wise and learned Men have endeavoured to apply a Remedy, but have hitherto miss; yea, sometimes by Corrasives which have been too severe to stop the running thereof; and sometimes by Lenetives which have taken no place at all. Ans. I do acknowledge, and experience teacheth us, that sometimes the ablest Physician for want of knowing the Disease has miss, when one not so noted, has with the help of Herbs, and what is common, wrought a Cure. First then, the most proper way to Cure this Distemper which lies in the Brain, and affects the Heart also, is to let George W. and some few of the most eminent Teachers and Writers amongst the Quakers, be summoned by Authority, and by the same examined, whether these Books quoted as theirs, be really so or no. Next, if proved upon them, let them either justify or retract them. Secondly, after this is done, let them set forth certain Articles of their Faith, and if it be agreeable to the Christian Religion, then let them condemn all their Books which teach the contrary: This was the way of the French Protestants; and when so done, let each Congregation of Quakers have their Teacher, and each Teacher have their Congregation, and take care of the same, that so the Generation of Youth be not corrupted and poisoned by sucking in false Notions, and imbibing false Principles in their young years: This is what pleases all Protestant Dissenters, both Presbyterians, Independants, and Baptists and for which they are very thankful to the Government, and in their Meetings pray hearty for the preservation thereof, as I have heard in all their Societies. And if nothing less than Anniversary Synods, and General Counsels will please these aspiring Quakers; before they have them, let them ask leave of the Government to hold them, and how long to continue the sitting thereof; and if the Government think good to bestow that Favour of them, it would be very proper that there should be a Commissioner or two, Ordered and Commissioned by His Majesty to reside in their Council, the doors being open, and free ingress for their Deputies, and liberty for them to speak freely; and their Acts put into Writing for preventing confusion; and when this is done, it will be proper to limit and set them bounds (who of themselves are boundless) and to restrain them from these things following. 1. That all their Ministers who are not natural born Subjects, but Foreigners, [whose coming may be to spy out the weaknesses of our Country, to alienate the King's Subjects from their obedience to their Sovereign] may be excluded out of their Synod, and have neither place nor voice in their general Counsel. 2. And that during the time granted them by Authority to hold their Synod, they may have no communication with Foreigners, or other suspected Persons, as Jesuits, etc. 3. And forasmuch as the Quakers are not by any legal constitution a body Politic; therefore they should not meddle in State Affairs, viz. to condemn Acts of Parliaments as Antichristian and Oppressive to the Subject; and thereby absolve their Disciples from their obedience to their Lawful Magistrates, whom they ought to obey as the higher Powers, set over them by God, entrusted with the supreme Authority, and their part is to yield a dutiful subjection and faithful obedience, as whereunto they stand obliged by the commands of Christ and his Apostles, and the practice of God's faithful Saints and Servants, holy Apostles and Martyrs in all Ages, by their Birth as natural born Subjects of these Realms; by the dictates of their Consciences, and the many Favours they daily receive in being defended and protected in their Liberty and Property, and by all kinds of consideration both general and particular, etc. 4. That they print no Books but what are licenced by Commissioners, appointed by His Majesty for that purpose, under pain of forfeiting the whole impression; this would be a great means to restore England to its Pristine Glory, which once it had, when it was famous for extirpating Heresy; whereas of latter years 'tis reported by the Historian of the Quakers History, to be a Nurse for Heresy, etc. 5. That they do not arrogate to themselves the power of excommunicating such as descent from them, and conform themselves to the Established Religion, nor treat them Reproachfully, but that they study to be quiet and mind their own business. 6. That they be not permitted in their Books and Sermons to call legal Punishments Persecution; calling the Magistrates Persecutors, thereby rendering them odious to the common People. 7. That they be not permitted in these Synods to approve of such Books, nor to teach such Doctrine as call the national Ministry Witches, Devils, Antichrists; nor the Parliaments, Judges, Justices, and other Magistrates, the Beasts that carry the Whore, Persecutors of the Saints, nor to impeach their judicial Proceed. 8. That they be not permitted to Summons, Try, Judge, Arraign, Condemn, and Dialogue the national Ministry, Magistracy and People, and thereby lift up and extol themselves, as the only Catholic Universal Church of the Firstborn, which cannot err; and Curse, Damn, and Reprobate all other Christians. This has been their frequent practice, and a main Pillar of their Heresy; for, when they gain upon the common People, that the Apostolic Order of the Church of Christ is re-established only amongst them; and that all other Societies are Apostates, Antichrists, Heathens, and Infidels, they then have gained the point, and will soon claim the Chair, and reach at the Sceptre. 9 That they be forbidden to make Collections, and Tax the People, and lay by Funds as their manner is; for, as Money is said to be the Sinews of War, so may it be called the Nerve of Heresy; but let each Society of Quakers maintain their own Teacher, and not have a common Bank at London and Feoffees entrusted therewith to give 8 10 or 20 l. at a time to their Travelling Teachers, who range all the World over, bantering all other Ministers who have a settled maintenance, and are far less chargeable to their Hearers than are the Quakers Teachers, who come uncalled for, like Flies and Mice eat up the provision of others, as saith the Historian. 10. That they be not permitted to call the Scriptures of the Prophets, Christ and his Apostles, by those contemptible Names of Death, Dust, Beastly-Ware, Serpents-Food, and the like. 11. But that they be compelled to condemn those Books of theirs which so teach; for, thus do they bring the Christian Religion into contempt, in order to raise Quakerism as the most excellent of all Religions. 12. Let them not be permitted to call the Church of England an Adulterated Harlot, nor to charge her with Witchcraft and Sorceries; to be an Adulterous Womb, which brings forth monstrous Births; neither let them be permitted to call the Book of Common Prayer [which is grounded on the Holy Scriptures, composed and professed by our Martyred Ancestors, and confirmed by Authority of King and Parliament] a branch which proceeded from the Pope, and from his Loins [say they] it draws its Strength: Neither let them be permitted to print and publish to the Nations, that they have ripped up the Bowels of the Church of England, and discovered her Adulterous Womb, and all the false Conceptions conceived by her, and that without any fear of her or her power. 13. Neither let them be permitted to teach Schools, for there they read W. Smith's primer, and Geo. Fox's primer, and a certain portion every day of Geo. Fox's Journal, all which inveigh bitterly against the Church of England, and all instituted Religion, which tends to instil corrupt Principles, whilst the Bible and other good Books are laid aside: These things ought to be noted, and for the Generation of years' sake to be guarded against. 14. Upon the whole matter, these say contained in the 12 particulars being great contempt upon the Magistracy and Ministry, upon the King and his People, and upon the whole Nation: Yet thus do their Books Teach, thus do they print and publish, even in so many words, if they deny it, I am ready to prove it. And notwithstanding this, and much more that might be said of the same nature; yet they are so high and rampant, that when I printed my Book New Rome Arraigned, etc. and laid open some of these Errors, they indicted me, and prosecuted me at Law, to my great cost and damage; seized my Books and prosecuted me with all the aggravations imaginable: And, that it may yet further appear how tender they are of their own Church, their own Ministers, their own Writings, and Epistles, I shall recite one of their Anniversary Injunctions, viz. From our Yearly Meeting in London 27 of 3d Month 1675. To all our Quarterly and Monthly Meetings in England, etc. Concerning men's and women's Meetings, it is our Judgement and Testimony in the Word of God's Wisdom, that the rise and practice, setting up and establishing of men's and women's Meetings in the Churches of Christ in this our Day and Generation, is according to the Mind and Counsel of God, and done in the ordering and leading of his Eternal Spirit— And it is our Sense, Advice, Admonition and Judgement in the fear of God, and in the Authority of his Power and Spirit to Friends and Brethren in their several Meetings, that no such slight and contemptible Names and Expressions, as calling men's and women's Meetings, Courts Sessions, or Synods, that they are Popish Impositions, useless and burdensome; that faithful Friends Papers which we Testify, have been given forth by the Spirit and Power of God, are men's Edicts or Cannons, Elders in the Service of the Church, Popes and Bishops, with such scornful say, be permitted among them, etc. Behold what Names and Expressions are contained in the recited 12 particulars, given by themselves to the Scripture, Bishops and Clergy, Ministry and People; yet, none must say why do they so, but it must be accounted malicious; and yet, how tender are these Men of their own blasphemous Books and defamatory Libels; insomuch, that as I am willing to note some things from the French King, so would I have some observe the Quakers method in this matter for their example, and not suffer the Holy Scripture, the Book of Common Prayer, the Christian Magistracy, and Ministry to be thus contemned, vilifyed, and set at naught by this irreligious spawn of the Jesuits; and so I conclude this matter, and subscribe my Name. Fra. Bugg, Sen. January the 28th. 1696. A Supplement to the former History, containing a further correction of the learned Croese's General History of Quakerism. GEN. Hist. p. 62. ' They (the Quakers) condemn no Man till they hear him, etc. My Author, the Historian, is now so far besides the matter, and gives a Relation so contrary to their practice, that He and I must part again; for I may not keep company with him at present, but I must show him his mistakes. 1st. In general, They Summons all Archbishops, Lordbishops, Deans, prebend's, Doctors, Vicars, Curates, and all Prelaticals, as this Book sets forth at large, not personally but fictiously; and when this is done, they Arraign, Try, and Judge them unheard, to be Monsters, Witches, Devils, Antichrists, Bloodhounds, Conjurers, and false Prophets; but to come closer to matter of fact, viz. Particularly about the Year 1676. A difference happened between me and Sam. Cater, and one of their Speakers touching a Fine of 15 l. which I suffered for him, for that his Name and Habitation was unknown to the Justices so as to levy a Fine upon his Goods and Chattels; and in regard I thought it but reasonable, that he should make me restitution; and also finding by their Books that in the loss of 13550 l. by Fines and Distresses, by an Act of Parliament made the 22 of King Charles II. Entitled An Act to prevent and suppress seditious Conventicles, etc. The Preachers, where strangers never lost 50 l. and thereupon (not barely for my own sake, but my Fellow Hearers) I prosecuted Sam. Cater for restitution of the said 15 l. suffered for him as aforesaid, in that he did not declare his Name and Habitation, when he saw the Informers convicting the Meeting, as at large set forth in my Book, The painted Harlot both Stripped and Whipped, etc. and that Entitled Reason against Railing, etc. and to which I refer the Reader for further satisfaction. Yet to show that they condemn Persons unheard, and that their judicial proceed are Arbitrary and Partial, as well as Illegal; and therein, like the high Court of Justice, which would not permit King Charles I. to give his Reasons, nor to be heard in his just defence, as at large in The History of Independency, etc. I shall transcribe some passages of that Transaction, viz. Anno 1676. I went to the Yearly Meeting in London, and in the Face of their Assembly I proposed this Question, viz. Whether Friends in the Ministry, where they are strangers, ought not to tell their Names, and Habitations upon their apparent sight of Informers coming into the Meeting, taking the Names of Friends in order to convict the Meeting; that so they may stand in the same capacity, relating to sufferings with the Hearers; and not the Ministers in one capacity free from Sufferings, and the Hearers in another capacity i. e. always liable to Sufferings, and not for themselves only, but also for the Meeting-houses, for the Poor and Indigent, for Strangers and Foreigners, and for the Preachers, unless they declare their Names and Places of Abode, etc. This was such an unexpected and terrifying Question, that it set the Synod on Fire, and startled the most Eloquent Orator of them all; insomuch, that W. Penn steps upon a Form and adjourned the Meeting to Horsly-down Meetinghouse in Southwark, the next day at 7 in the Morning, where (after some private debate) it terminated thus; that unless a Magistrate, or a Constable with his Staff came to a Meeting to demand the Speaker's Name and Habitation, he was at his liberty whether to declare it or no; upon which, finding which way the Hare run, I came home; and the Month of September following I gave Sam. Cater a personal Summons to appear at our Monthly Meeting next following, at Chattirise in the Isle of Ely, where I demanded Justice against Sam. Cater; but the Meeting refused and rejected my Reasons; and then I appealed from thence to the Quarterly Meeting as Superior; but that Meeting also, through the influence of Sam. Cater, refused to do me right: Then I appealed from thence to the Yearly Meeting Anno 1677. as Superior to them all; and as a preparatory for my matter, I wrote seven sheets of Paper to W. Penn, called Speeches and Passages grounded upon an Edict made at the Yearly Meeting Anno 1675. Whereby the Hearers were obliged neither to forsake, decline, nor remove their Meetings, like worldly, fearful and Cowardly Professors; and on that bottom, and for divers reasons grounded thereupon, I set forth the reasonableness that the Preachers [who thus advise and enjoin the Hearers, and exhort them to stand valiant and give up all] should likewise stand the brunt, and not shrink and turn back like Cowardly Officers, and become the same worldly and politic Professors they advise us not to be like. I also wrote a Letter to W. Penn, J. Crook, and R. Barkley, referring the matter in controversy to them. Thus being prepared, I went to the Yearly Meeting Anno 1677. and after some discourse with W. Penn, to give him his due, he used great diligence to get me a Meeting, which was at Ed. Man's House in Bishops-gate-street, June 9th. 1677. and there we came to this Agreement, viz. Memorandum, That on condition that Friends of the Quarterly Meeting do choose and elect 10 or 12 Friends to hear and determine the controversy between F. B. and S. C. relating to the 15 l. Fine, etc. They the said F. B. and S. C. do hereby promise to stand to their final determination, witness our Hands this 9th. of June 1677. Fra. Bugg Sam. Cater Witnesses, Jo. Whitehead, G. Barnadiston, W. Whaley, Jo. Burnyate, Amb. Rigg, Leo. Fell, and others. But when the Quarterly Meeting came, which was the 5th. of Sept. 1677. I called for the written agreement; but Sam. Fulbig with whom it was entrusted, being Sam. Cater's Creature would not produce it, neither would Sam Cater allow, that the Meeting should choose any but themselves. Moreover, the Meeting resolved against any other Election but themselves, by which I perceived their design; but, being tired with an endless prosecution, I at last, though very unwillingly, submitted to the Meeting, who chose 12 out of themselves to examine the matter, and to put an end to the controversy, contrary to the condition of the recited agreement, which only impower'd the said Quarterly Meeting to choose and elect, and not to judge and determine: However, they pretending they would do us equally Justice; I gave them my Writings which I had drawn from the Records of Conviction, and Warrant, and other things to set forth my right to the restitution of the said 15 l. being Fined for myself, for being at the said Meeting 10 s. besides this 15 l. for Sam. Cater, as by the Books above quoted I have largely set forth. Well, the 12 Persons took my Writings, and going up Rob. Letchworth's Chamber, thorough the Kitchen, one of the 12 threw all my Writings into the Fire, and burned them unexamined, and unheard, or so much as looked on any one passage to demonstrate my right, etc. And about a quarter of an hour after, they sent for us; and we being come up the Chamber to them, one of the self-chosen Arbitrators directed his speech to us, that they had determined the matter, and found Sam. Cater clear, and my demand unreasonable; and that they had acquitted Sam. Cater, and hoped that I would be quiet for the time to come, etc. to whom I replied, that they had given away my right; and that I was able to demonstrate the same if they would hear me; they replied it was ended, and that they hoped I would now sit down quiet, and rest satisfied, but they would not give me the Award, and so me parted; but going home, one— Dan. a Quaker called me to him, and said, Francis I am grieved to behold what foul play thou hast had to day; wherein said I? What dost thou mean? Why replied— Dan. I sat in the Kitchen as thy 12 Arbitrators came through the House to go up the Chamber, and I saw one of them throw all the Papers thou gav'st them in the Meeting to peruse, and did burn them all without looking on any one of them. Whereupon I sent the said Arbitrators a large Paper called a Prescript, and Postscripts with Summons to appear at the next Quarterly Meeting, concluding them accountable for their actions upon their own Principles, in Ed. Burrow's Works p. 442. viz. And we believe that all Governors and Rulers ought to be accountable to the People, and to the next succeeding Rulers for all their Actions, which may be enquired into upon occasion, etc. My charge to them was 1. In that they did not pursue the Terms of the recited Agreement. 2. That according to the said Agreement they ought to have chosen Men, and not to Arbitrate the matter themselves, when by the condition thereof they were only to choose and elect. 3. That contrary to all rules of Law in that case, they refused me a Copy of their Award, and thereupon I looked upon myself at liberty from their Award. 4. In that they burned my Evidences which set forth my Title to the restitution of the said 15 l. without any examination, and thereupon condemned me upheard; all which put me upon writing the said Prescript in Prose, and Postscript in Verse; the latter follows in these words. 1. In Ages past as I heard tell Some Men did judgement hate, And it abhorred, I know full well, So woeful was their State. 2. And equity they did pervert Which made the good Man cry, Justice and Right do not pervert, For that's Iniquity. 3. A parallel you see alas, As plain, as plain may be, Which answereth, as in a Glass Face answers Face you see. 4. Even in a Trial now on foot Where Justice finds no place, But will and power bear it out, This is the very case. 5. But witty, witty William Penn Hath drawn a fair scroll, 'Gainst arbitrary force of Men Which none can back recall. 6. Where property he vindicates, And each Man's right maintain, And partial deal there he hates, As nothing worse, so vain 7. But, why should I or any one Proceed to Trial then, If judgement true be fled and gone, And loathed by such Men? 8. Surely 'tis vain for to expect A full and ample hearing, When Evidences they reject As good for nought but fearing. 9 Yet put on courage once again And call them to account; Who gave away what's not your own; Who chose themselves to mount. 10. The place of Arbitrators great, 'Twixt those that differ much, As if resolved to do right, But it was nothing such. 11. Wherefore do not conceive I pray That there is any Treason, In calling you up to the Bar Because it's now in season. 12. But how darest thou or any one, Thus speak, thus writ, or say; Yea, some may query hereupon, Saying is their cause I pray. 13. For any one thus to rebuke Men who pretend to judge, Infallibler than ever Luke, Paul, Peter, James, or Judas. 14. Let such receive an answer short, And search the matter well, If Precedent than they find not There's cause enough to tell. 15. And to be bold for to unfold Such falsifying tricks, As Man thereof hath not been told, Nor read the like in Hicks. 16. So why should I or any other Such partial deal hid, Or such in justice go and smother, Such things I can't abide. 17. Neither could Micah, Paul, nor John The Scripture witness bear Silent keep, but must go on, Saying, House of Jacob hear. 18. Wherefore let no Man think I pray That such a fool I am, As to be scared or frayed away, For wrong me no Man can. 19 As I keep to the truth in which I preservation have, And therein trace a constant path Where none can me bereave. 20. Of blessings and of peace also, Whatever some may fear, Tho' sufferings great and many too, I therefore must endure. 21. Like them of old which practised not Soft pillows for to sew, Who witnessed suffering their lot From the self-saving crew. 22. Whereof sometime the leaders they Greatest polititions be Tho' they profess another way More noble, just and free. 23. Yet do but look within the Veil And there you may behold, Of being valiant some do fail Which seemeth to be bold. 24. Thus false, thus base, and proud Are these aspiring Judges, Who for justice cries aloud, Whilst others they make drudges. Upon this the said Arbitrators met me at the next Quarterly Meeting, where we had a large Conference; and to convince my Author that they condemn Persons unheard, contrary to his relation, I shall cite so much as will demonstrate the same; and for more of the same nature, I refer him and others to the Books quoted. Proceed at the Quarterly Meeting. Meeting, We desire thee, Fra. Bugg to give up the matter. F. B. Nay hold, you have done me wrong by perverting Justice, burning my Writings, and detaining the Award; all which I shall make appear, if you please to hear me. J. W. We have judged for Truth, and so there must be no more of it. F. B. Is your judgement so infallible, as that you cannot err; if not, why may not my cause be reheard? S. Fulbigg, No, no, we will not hear any more of it, we have heard enough of it already. F. B. I desire to be heard. J. Prime, We will not hear thee. F. B. I desire you to hear me, that is the least you can do. Pet. Watson, No, no, we will not hear thee, we have heard too much of it already. F. B. I desire a Copy of the Award, that the self-chosen Arbitrators made. P. Watson, No, thou shalt not have a Copy of it; what wilt thou do with a Copy of it? F. B. It is but reasonable that I should have a Copy of it, and thereupon I demand it. J. Ainsloe, E. Love, R. Smith, Friends let him have a Copy of the Award, it is indeed but reasonable he should have a Copy of it. P. Watson, Nay, he shall not have a Copy of it. F. B. I have something material to offer, and therefore desire to be heard; and I marvel that you will neither hear me nor give me a Copy of your Award, this shows your guilty Consciences. J. Ainsloe, For my part I would have F. B. heard what he can say; really if we proceed thus, we shall be the most Arbitrary People in the whole World; if you will not hear him it shall be put to the Vote. R. Smith, We shall not be like the Israelites unless we hear him: What shall we not hear the complaint of the oppressed? We ought to hear the complaint of a Servant, yea, of a Stranger, much more of F. B. who has been so serviceable to us, and a great sufferer for Truth's sake, etc. But all would not do, they could not be prevailed upon, either to give me a Copy of their Award, or a full hearing before they condemned me. Whereupon I drew a Figure of, the proceed of their Monthly, Quarterly, and Yearly Meeting, The painted Harlot, etc. p. 28. 29. together with the proceed of the High Court of Justice, wherein K. Charles I. was Arraigned, Tried, Judged and Condemned; and not once suffered to give his reasons for what he had to say, and to offer against their Arbitrary proceed, as in The History of Independency, etc. On the one hand showing their Affinity, and meek Moses, and Scripture Judges; on the other hand showing their contrariety; and when I had so done, I set this motto, and the reason for it, as you may there read at large. Here is a Figure pray mark it well, Another I can make I do you tell; But this may serve to be a Looking-glass, To show you plainly how things come to pass. But if you say, we never did profess The Scripture for our Rule in any case, But Judgement we'll give out as we see cause, Not minding Justice, Equity, or Laws. Then I do say, another there needs not To manifest the same, since 'tis my lot. Which, for to do, I here declare and tell The Scripture I must take to do it well; Because 'tis, however in my esteem, The truest standing Record I have seen; Condemning errors in the Judgement Seat, But Truth and Justice it maintains complete. Having proceeded thus far in this old controversy, it will not be amiss to let the World see how Sam. Cater's case was managed. First by partial Judges, as above told; and next by lying Lawyers: For, Tho. Rudyard, S. Cater's Lawyer, thus said in his defence, about the 15 l. I suffered for Sam. Cater as aforesaid, viz. The Fine of 15 l. was paid in Money voluntarily, before distress was made, which is a payment that our Testimony was ever against; and has been oftentimes 3 or 4 times the value of the thing demanded, and charge; because they could neither pay, nor compound for such spoiling their Goods, etc. Now this went a great way with many against me, that I should pay the Money voluntarily before distress was made; and the further in that Geo. Whitehead, who says in his Preface to his Book styled Judgement Fixed, etc. If I did not feel the Lord my God laying a real necessity upon me to be publicly concerned in this controversy, I would rather choose to sit down mute: But the Lord has laid the necessity, and in discharging my Duty, I neither consult events, nor fear effects, etc. Now Reader observe, and I will show thee one instance of many that might be mentioned, by which thou may'st measure the reality of this necessity which G. W. pretends God [that cannot lie, nor move any to lie] laid upon him in such a degree, that he in writing that Book, neither consulted events nor yet feared effects: For, this T. Rudyard the Lawyer had said in defence of his Client Sam. Cater, that I Fra. Bugg paid my 15 l. Fine voluntarily, before distress was made. And Reader this was a lie, as I can prove by 20 Witnesses still alive; for my Goods were distrained, and carried to an Inn, viz. the White Hart in our Town; and there lay until I entered my Appeal, at which time I paid the Money, and took my Goods again; and to the truth of what I say, and to prove G. Whitehead's lying necessity, I may recite a Certificate under the Man and Woman's hand, who at that time kept the House, viz. Memorandum, and that we who subscribe our Names do testify, that the Goods of F. B. which were distrained for the Fine of 15l. 10 s. [the 10 s. being for my own offence, and the 15 l. for Sam. Cater] by virtue of a Warrant from Tho. Shelly Esq; late deceased, was after they were distrained, carried to the White Hart, and afterwards the said F. Bugg came and paid down his Money, and took Home his Goods; this my Wife, and I [who was then Constable] can testify; Witness our Hands the 6th of Sept. 1691. Peter and Judith Maxey. Thus is it manifest that Sam's Lawyer told an absolute lie, in saying I paid my Money voluntarily, before distress was made of my Goods; and as manifest that God never laid a necessity upon G. Whitehead to vindicate the said Rudyard, as he did in the recited Book i. e. Judgement Fixed, etc. p. 219 220. of which I have taken notice in my Book Entitled New Rome unmasked, etc. p. 33. to 36. And so I shall leave poor Sam's Lawyer with the same motto I set upon him in Painted Harlot, etc. p. 50. viz. A Lawyer and a Friend, can he be found Professing Truth, I say, on English ground; Who truth will speak upon occasion free, From lying words, and base partiality: If not, the woe was nor pronounced in vain, Since to such Lawyers it doth appertain; Who can pervert and wrest an honest Cause, Their refuge being lies, and not our Laws. Having done with this Lawyer's lies, and Whitehead's vindication of him, saying, where is now thy lying Lawyer? Art not thou herein manifest to be the lying Defamer, etc. and much more to that purpose. I say, having briefly passed over Rudyard the Lawyer, and Whitehead the Forger; let me now answer an Objection. Obj. But possibly some may say that Sam. Cater has wrote a Narrative of this controversy, which tho' it be fully answered, yet it will not be amiss to say something to invalidate it if you can, etc. Ans. I have always stood ready to maintain what I writ; and have been enabled to confute my Adversaries; and to make this appear, as I already have, so I shall still give 2 or 3 demonstrations thereof. And First of Same Cater's not owning his said Narrative, attested by credible witnesses, one whereof is still alive, viz. 1. Demon. Memorandum, that Sept. 30. 1683. Fra. Bugg went to Samuel Cater and shown him his Narrative styled The Lib. of an Apost. cons. etc. and asked him if he would own it; Sam. replied, what he had wrote, he had wrote; still Fra. Bugg pressed him whether he would own it, showing him his Name to it: Well, said he, if my Name be to it, none will question but I wrote it. But still Fra. Bugg pressed whether he would own the printing and publishing of it; but Sam would not confess to that. Then Fra. Bugg offered on the penalty of 100 l. to prove his said Narrative false, if he would come to the Test, that also he evaded; to this we subscribe our Names. Gab. Ellington Philip Craniss Reader, bear with me insisting so long on this Head; for when Sam. Cater dies, possibly his Works may be reprinted; and then his Narrative may come forth anew; and therefore 'tis proper to invalidate it. 2. Demon. F. B. 's Proposition. Whereas there is a Book published by S. C. and others Entitled The Lib. of an Apost. conf. etc. These are therefore to signify, that I Fra. Bugg offer to prove the said Book false in Fact, on the penalty of 100 l. on condition nevertheless, that if I do make evident proof thereof, that he the said Sam. be recorded out of the Unity. F. Bugg. Sept. 23. 1683. This I gave to Jos. Banks and others of his Creatures; and not long after Friends belonging to our own Meeting, in Mildenhal, gave me the following Certificate, who knew both of us, and the Nature of the controversy depending, viz. At a public Meeting at Mildenhal, the 21 of October, 1683. Whereas there is a Book put forth by Sa. Cater and others, wherein our ancient Friend Fra. Bugg is called, and often termed Informer; and we knowing what an Informer is, according to common acceptation, and that he is clear of their practice; and not only so, but one of the greatest Sufferers by Informers in all these parts; and also in Remembrance of his labour of love, and great exercises for the Truth's sake. We can do no less than signify our dislike thereunto, and testify against the said treatment, as not being of a Christian tendency. And whereas 'tis in the said Book signified, that F. Bugg is not fit to treat on Christian Liberty; this we do say, that hitherto we have looked upon him a Man as fitly qualifyed to treat with any Magistrate on that Point, as any Man belonging to our Meeting; and his endeavours have proved as successful; and to this day, tho' much is said, yet we cannot see any thing proved to the contrary; and this we signify not to promote controversy, subscribed by us. Thomas Bird, Sarah Bird, John Thrift, Elizabeth Thrift, William Rolf, Eliz. Rolf, Jos. Ellington, Rach. Ellington, Will. Belslam, Marg. Belslam, Rob. Suckerman, Frances Suckerman, Will. Hawkins, John Kitson, John Harvy, John Poel, Will. Tailor, Margaret Huttly, Anne Hible, Ka. Hanslip, Frances Foulkes, Dorcas Abbott, Eliz. Root, Sarah Bird, Joseph Mason, Jane Mason, Sarah Holton, Jos. Testall. But these Testimonies proved so fatal to the design of the Quakers, which was to lay waste my Reputation, both as a Man and Christian, that it made them rage and fret, and call me Beast, Dog, Wolf, Enemy of all Righteousness, Child of the Devil, Devil Incarnate, Apostate, and what not, which made me conclude the Painted Harlot with this motto. To the Painted Harlot. I smile to see thee storm, thy rage A speedy downfall doth presage: The day is come that will discover, Thy nakedness to every Lover. Thy pious Frauds, thy curious Trade Of merchandizing Souls doth fade; The mountain Stone hath broke thy Toes; Thy vitals now must feel its blows. Thy George's both must be brought down, And to the Truth must veil their Crowns; For they have long abused Men, By Tongue, by Writing, and by Pen. But now their day of Troubles come, And they must reap what they have sown; Even so let all Imposers fall, Who brethren's Consciences would enthral. What's writ for Conscience, Liberty Confounds all sorts of Popery. May skilful Archers every hour Shoot Truth's Arrows from their Tower, Against thy persecuting Power. Gen. Hist. As for their Minister's maintenance, this is their method, they order Stipends to be taken, etc. Here the Author of the Gen. Hist. and I meet again, and both agree in opinion; yet some amongst them [and of the honester sort] complain of this private method, and of their Bank, and their Pursemongers; and some again have the Impudence to deny what the Historian says, pretending they take no Money for Preaching; and on that Foot Banter the National Ministry, as Hirelings, etc. But to confirm what the said Historian suggests, I may recite some Proofs; one is a Letter which I received from one still eminent amongst them, viz. Dear Friend, I understand that there is a new controversy lately risen, about the Money thou once told me was gathered amongst Friends, for the Relief of J. C. Friends, here are much concerned about it; knowing that Friends gave it freely; expecting nothing again; I suppose they did not make the Common Bankers their Executors: The Doners will must be fulfilled in all things, and not the common Pursemongers; some Friends have a Testimony against Common Bankers: I have been examined by the Law Professors, whether we had a Common Purse or Bank, I answered we had none; this * This a Lye. gave so much satisfaction, that Friends in this Town have been quiet ever since. The Magistrates look upon Common Bankers to be as bad as those that hoard up Arms and Ammunition; † And well they may. and not without Reason, for Money Answers all things; If Friends would put away this Dagon, and take Money only for their present necessities, things would soon be better with them: God will not bless those that break his Commandments, by hoarding up Common Banks, and quarrelling with those that do not bring in Money fast enough; * To furnish S. Cat. and other Rich Preachers with 10 l. at a time. to them I have observed, that it hath been frequent with some to reckon those that brought in most Money into their Common Bank to be the best Christians. I have heard something concerning this controversy now on foot; about a Maid that was choosing a Husband for herself; and also 'tis expected she should give up her concerns in that affair to some of our Preachers, which was never practised until of late, amongst any that profess true Religion. It is that which hath made the Jesuits to be abhorred amongst some of the honestest of the Papists themselves; so that they would not let them come into their Houses. If the Maid be a wise Woman, and of Age to dispose of herself, she will not let any of our Preachers meddle wi●h her concerns, of choosing a Husband for her; that is none of their business; they should only meddle with their own business, and let honest Friends make their choice themselves; we have no Law nor Custom among us for such as defame lawful Marriages, or obstruct lawful Marriages. The Church of England is honester upon that account than we. They make such as obstruct or defame Marriages, either to make good their charge, or to make sufficient satisfaction to the Parties wronged, etc. Again, see W. Rogers second scourge for G. Whitehead, who has been many years acquainted with their private way of raising Money and hoarding up Common Banks, which indeed is as bad as hoarding up Arms and Ammunition; for, as Money is said to be the Sinews of War, so have I often said it is the Nerve of Heresy. For, this Dagon Money, raised by the Common Bankers amongst the Quakers, has an ill tendency many ways. Well, let us hear W. Roger's opinion thereof, and Ellwoods' answer thereto. And yet when she Rome's Sister is but called, She winches like touched Horses that are gauled: Confusion her attends, next follows woe, For thus she whirls, but God knows whether she'll go: Who when they wanted money to proceed The Church her cash, than did supply her need; And therefore when her cash was emptied, she Craved money to supply her ministry; And when that practice was disliked by some, She seemed like some whose downfals near to come. This Church will fall, her load will be her guile, If you, O Flock, keep Purse-strings fast a while: When that Spring fails, by her you'll not be prized; Usurpers then o'er you you'll see despised. And woes may long attend such prating Preachers, As for preferment turned deceitful Teachers. Fox is termed Head, yet Whitehead steered the course, Till both was scorned, and they grew worse and worse. Thus Reader, you see Testimony after Testimony against their raising Money for their Teachers in a clandestine way, pretending they do all things free, without Money, or without Reward. Now hear Tho. Ellwoods' Answer, by his Book styled Rogero Mastix, where instead of denying matter of plain Fact, he confesses all what is said, and laid to their charge, viz. But that Christ's Ministers should be supplied With necessaries by his Church, his Bride, Is such a known and certain truth as none Perhaps has e'er opposed but thee alone. That 'tis the Church's duty to supply The needful wants of all her Ministry; And truth it is too plain to be denied; Christ's Church should for Christ's Ministers provide. What carps thou at then [William] would thy muse Plead that St. Paul did not this privilege use; That what was lacking to him privately, The Macedonian Brethren did supply. Thus it appeared the Apostle did partake Of that Provision that the Church did make; Christ's Ministers to furnish, and their need Supply when they want money to proceed. Pretend thou canst not that this Stock is given To such as have no need thereof, but even Thy flirt at Richardson for taking pay, For what as Clerk he writes, do much bewray Thy folly and injustice, is't not fit Who works for others should be paid for it; And that by them who him to work desire, The labourer is worthy of his hire. Thus has Ellwood confessed the whole matter, and tells us 'tis too plain to be denied, as indeed it is. Thus you see, they confess their Ministers take Money; their Clarks take Money. Why then do they so bitterly inveigh against the Clergy for taking Money; and pretend that their Ministers take none? But if Mr. Mead would open his Books of Accounts, we should see how many Thousand Pounds their Speakers have in a Year, besides their private Quarters, who comes like Flies and Mice uncalled, or unsent for; and so live on the Provision of others: And this I may say, that their Ministry hath cost me as much in 4 Weeks, as the public Ministry has cost me in 4 Years; and yet, these are the free Preachers, free Writers, and free People if you will believe them. But, having been more large on this Head in my Book, Battering Rams against new Rome: etc. And that Entitled New Rome unmasked, etc. I shall conclude this Head; since they are first charged to preach for Money, writ for Money, contrary to their pretences; and that T. Ellwood [whether at unawares or no, I will not here determine] has confessed to be matter of fact, and thereby puts the thing out of doubt, etc. I find the Author of the Gen. Hist. p. 63. treat about their Marriages; and also, a few days after a Child is born, of their calling the Midwife. Of the first he seems only to speak by way of commendation, not mentioning so much as one of their Orders; and as to the latter, as if he were wholly a stranger to them; there being no such matter as calling the Midwife or Neighbours on such an account. However, that he may the better be informed, I shall show several of their Forms for Marriages, which are at large treated on in my Book, Innocency vindicated, and Envy rebuked, etc. The First Order for Marriage, by George Fox printed by Tho. Symons the 7 of the 11th. month, 1659. Somewhat abstracted, viz. And if any Friends go together in the power of the Lord, after the thing hath been made known between themselves, and laid before able Friends, and nothing appear to the contrary, they may declare it in the end of the next general Meeting, or as they are moved, they may declare it in the midtime of the Market, on the Market day, in the next Market Town, or they may not, as their freedom is: And if they are moved, they may declare it to the next Magistrate if they will, or they may not; then after, in an Assembly not less than 12, they may speak their Testimony; and then a Certificate may be given of the Day, Month, and Year, and Recorded; but that nothing be Recorded for money in these things, but freely a free; People, serve one another in love, etc. A Second Order for Marriage by George Fox Anno 1662. — And when they take one another in Marriage, let not less than a dozen Friends and Relations be present, according to your former Order; having first acquainted your men's Meeting, and that it be Recorded in a Book, etc. A Third Order for Marriage, Anno 1667. That as any are moved of the Lord, and in his Light called to take a Brother or Sister in Marriage, let it be made known to the Children of Light; and being by the Light made manifest to be of God, let them be joined together in the presence of many Witnesses; and a Record in Writing. witnessing the Day, Place, and Year, Subscribed by Witnesses. A Fourth Order for Marriage. At a Quarterly Meeting in Hadenham in the Isle of Ely, 1st of the 10th. Month 1675. viz. It is ordered and agreed upon at this Quarterly Meeting, that no Friends for time to come, may permit or suffer marriages without the consent of Friends at two men's and women's Meetings, and the Man and Woman to come both to the said Meetings to receive the answer of Friends; that so no disorderly and indirect proceed may be carried on any more, contrary to the unity of Friends, etc. From whence several things are observable. First their alteration in Judgement about taking money for Recording, at first none, now 50 l. per Ann. if they say there is more work, there is more Persons to do it; so that, if it was criminal at first, 'tis criminal still. Secondly, at first they might publish at the market-cross, or they might not as their Light bids them; but now they are not permitted so to do, but must come to their men's and women's distinct Meetings in manner and Form. All liberty is taken away, and imposition and forms erected amongst them, which in others they condemned: But, it was but whilst they could graft themselves into a Government; for I. A. took his Wife according to the 3 former Orders, but transgressing this last, he was excommunicated, or declared out of their unity for nonconformity; I shall show that, and then conclude this Head. At a Quarterly Meeting in Hadenham the 4th of the 7th month, 1678. We at this Quarterly meeting having the business of John Ainsloes taking his Wife contrary to the Order of Friends, brought before us, and Friends having several times spoke to him about it, and he not giving Friends satisfaction, we do testify that we have no union with him in this his so doing, etc. Here is Liberty given, and Liberty taken away: an Order that nothing should be paid in money for Recording marriages, etc. and now common. They formerly cried out against Forms, and now impose Forms, and enjoin a conformity to them; and for non-submission Record out of the unity, which is all they yet can do; when they can do more look for it, they will do more; and this time will manifest. A Postscript by way of Dialogue. READER, by the First Part of this Book I have set forth the Quakers claim to their Title, to be the true Church of the First Born; and from their Books have proved the contrary; as also cleared the Magistracy from the Odium of Persecution: And by the second part I have Historically treated of the Rise, Growth, and Progress of Quakerism; showing not so much the Names and Handicraft Professions of that People, the Places of their abode, with some other particulars thereabout; the same being excellently well done by the Author of the General History of the Quakers, but how and by what means Quakerism hath advanced; and therein have modestly corrected the said Historian, and shown him his mistakes in many things; as also corroborated and strengthened him wherein he is right; and now I am come, for diversion's sake by way of Dialogue, to handle some points relating to both Parts, in which I shall suggest nothing, but what I stand ready to make appear: And this familiar Discourse between Thomas a Preacher, and Benjamen their Clerk, I shall endeavour further to illustrate the matter in hand, viz. Teacher, Friend Benjamen how dost thee do? I am glad to see thee; prithee let us smoke a Pipe and drink a Glass, and have a little serious Discourse about the affairs of Truth; and let us be free, for who can argue these points better than we? Clark Friend Thomas with all my Heart; let us go to Jacob Francklins, for there is a glass of good Claret, known by all, and many of the World's People come thithet which is a demonstration. I know you travel from East to West, from North to South, and from one Nation to another, like our Grandfather Ignatius Loyola. Teacher, Drawer, bring us a Bottle of good Claret, and 2 or 3 Pipes. I profess Benjamen I am glad to see thee; and how goes things relating to Truth. Clark, Pretty well here away; only here are some Apostate Quakers that are like thorns in our sides, who hinder the progress of Truth, and seem to follow the steps of Luther and others, who you know were great Enemies to our elder Sister Rome. However, there is but few that go from us prove Champions for the cause of others against us; yet I must confess G. Keith hath done us more hurt than any that ever went from us; for, he does charge us boldly, without fear of us or our power, with these Four things. 1. To deny Faith in Christ, as he died outwardy, Suffering without the Gates of Jerusalem to our Salvation. 2. Justification and Sanctification by the Blood of Christ outwardly shed. 3. The Resurrection of the Body that died. 4. And that we deny Christ's coming outwardly in his glorified Body, to Judge both the quick and the dead; and the general day of Judgement, as in his Narrative p. 14. And I perceive the Apostate Christians are generally pleased with this his Work, both Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Independants, and Baptists; for, they all acknowledge and confess to all these Points, tho' in some things they differ each from others; and to be plain with you, I fear there is too much truth in what G. Keith says; pray how is it in Barbadoes, Merryland, East and West Jersy, Pensilvania, Burmodoes', Antego, Mevis, Holland, and other parts where you Travel, holding forth Truth. Teacher, I do acknowledge that our Friend Barkly in his Anarchy p. 16. saith, I find Professors make but small boasting of any Proselytes they get from us; I hear little of their proving Champions for the Principles of others against us, etc. But to be plain, they so far prevail, that I find G. Whitehead the cunningest Writer we have [except Friend Penn, and Ellwood] is hardly able to encounter them; and to be free with you, G. Keith hath proved such a Champion for them, and against us, as that the City and Country, as well as parts beyond the Sea, ring of his same, for he has lighted such a candle as we cannot blow out, nor extinguish the light thereof, for both he and others produce matter of Fact from our Books, which none of us, if we would speak truth, can deny; so that, to deal freely, I am of your mind; I fear there is too much truth in their Allegations against us on those four Heads, which are such four Fundamentals held by the Apostate Christians, and so proved by the Letter, which they call the word of God, that I know not what to think of these things. Clark, Pray what think you of George Fox's Miracles, mentioned in his Journal; some talk strangely of them, especially Fra. Bugg; and this I observe, that whereas the Miracle wrought by the Apostles in the Name of Jesus of Nazareth was a means to convert the Jews to the Christian Faith, and to confirm the believing Gentiles. But, these of G. Fox's, in regard he wrought them in his own Name only, they seem to be a means to shake the Faith and Confidence that some well wishers to us had of our Religion; nay, and to be plain, many amongst us begin to doubt of them, and to think them too like the Popish Legend, and the counterfeit Miracles of Simon Magus, that Sorcerer; and I myself am almost at a stand about them, and divers others of his assertions touching himself, which before our adversaries quoted them, I did not take so much notice of. Teacher; Friend Benjamen you are in the right of it; for, betwixt You and I, Christ never wrought Miracles in a corner, and published them 20 or 30 years after they are said to be done, but in the face of the World, before multitudes of mixed People, Friends and Enemies; witness that of Cand in Gallilee, where he turned Water into Wine; likewise his feeding many Thousands with a few barley Loves, and a few small Fishes. He healed all manner of Diseases, whether the Disease were present or absent; and some of his Miracles he wrought on the Sabbath day, which the Pharasees, his great Enemies, found fault with him for, though they could not deny matter of Fact. Likewise his Followers, who preached in his Name the Resurrection of the dead; they likewise wrought Miracles, saying, in the Name of Jesus of Nazareth rise up and walk; and he (the Cripple) walked, and leapt, and praised God. Clark, Ah, these were Miracles indeed: But this Fra. Bugg makes the World believe that G. Fox's Miracles are mere shams, lying wonders, and delusions: and I must tell thee, I fear so too; and to be free, some Friends (tho' they dare not say it openly) think so as well as I; and for my part I do not like them at all. Teacher, Like them, who can? I was at a Friend's House not long since, where I heard an eminent Friend say, that since some had wrote so much against the Journal and Miracles, etc. she had a mind to see it; and I asked her how she liked it; she said, she did not like it at all; and indeed, if we consider a few things, who can like it? For, 1. His Miracles were done in a corner no body knows where no● when, otherwise than by his own relation. 2. Never published till many years after they are said to be done. 3. They were wrought in his own Name only, and not in the Name of Jesus of Nazareth. 4. Here is not one Cripple that ever he cured, nor one dead Person that ever he raised; nor one blind that ever he gave sight too, to come forth and avouch that he was cured, was raised, was blind and now he sees: and to be very plain, I do believe there never was any thing of a Miracle at all, but only an Artifice to hold the people in admiration of G. Fox, and to confirm them in the belief that we are the only true Catholic Church of the Firstborn; and that the Apostolic order thereof, as well as Miracles, are restored and reestablished amongst us. But, let us have a care that no body hear us; for if this discourse were known to G. W. I should lose my place, and you might be in danger to lose yours. Clark, But pray what think you of his pretence to discerning, who said he knew who were Saints, who were Devils, and who were Apostates without speaking ever a word. Again, W. Penn said, none need to furnish him with discerning or judgement; Christ has furnished us already, and doth on all occasions. Teacher, Oh Friend, I have been a Quaker more than 20 years, and am ashamed to hear of such vain boasting: For indeed, if we were always thus furnished with discerning and judgement on all occasions, so that we knew who were Saints, Devils, and Apostates without speaking ever a word, how came it to pass that Sam. Cater in his Narrative p. 18. 19 was so mistaken; that Geo. Fox was so mistaken in Thomas Murford, Ste. Crispe, Tho. Rudyard, Ezekiel Woolly, etc. And how came it to pass that G. Whitehead was so mistaken in Christopher Atkinson, Tho. Leacock, W. Warwick, etc. Clark, But if this Journal be so erroneous, so stuffed with false and counterfeit Miracles, so thick larded with Antichristian, as well as Antiscriptural Principles, why do our Friends thus run a whoring after it, as to have it taught in Schools, and placed in all Quarterly Meetings in England and Wales, and parts beyond the Seas. Why is it sent to the University to be reserved to posterity in their Library? and to be free, I think our Friends run a whoring after it, as much as the revolting Israelites did after the golden Calf, etc. Teacher, Come Friend Benjamen, I will Answer you by what I have heard in my Travels. 1. By teaching our Youth it; they are the more weaned from the Professors Religion which is founded on the Letter. 2. For that it is sent to all Quarterly and Monthly Meetings; it has this service, namely, to prove the antiquity of our Religion, and to show how it was confirmed by Miracles. 3. And its being received into the Library in Oxford, it is to show our Errors, and to expose us as may be seen by a Letter sent from the Library-keeper to Fra. Bugg, which is as followeth, viz. Mr. Bugg, You must needs think it strange to receive a Letter from a Man so utterly unknown to you; yet the same motive which made you to publish your useful Books, I mean the public Good, causes me to become a Petitioner to you, in the behalf of the public Library of Oxford, in which place I have the honour of being a Servant to our Universary. I have seen your Book called The Quakers set in their true Light, etc. At the end of which is a Catalogue of 15 Books more, all written by you. The Quakers have already presented us with Fox's Journal, Barkly's Works, etc. I am satisfied it would be extremely well taken if you would be pleased to send us your own Works, which are so capable of instructing those, who are desirous of hearing what can be alleged on both sides: Here they will be for ever preserved; and your Donation shall be particularly Registered among the other Benefactors by Sir, your unknown, but humble Servant, etc. H. W. Bodlejan Library, April 6 1696. Clark, Come Brother, it grew late; if thee wilt answer me a few Questions Briefly, do, and we will part for this Time, and wait another Opportunity for a little more Familiar Discourse about Truth's Affairs. And, First. Why did our Brother, G. Whitehead, send a Paper to Turners-hall, April 29. 1697. called a Protestation against George Keith's Advertisement; and not come and defend our Books. Teach. Why? You need not ask the Reason why? For George Keith called us forth to clear ourselves from those four Fundamental Errors; which both he, you, and I know, we can no way clear ourselves; but by a Retractation: And you know, we no sooner Retract, then let fall our Infallibility; And this thee may'st assure thyself, G. Whitehead will never do. Clark. But Secondly, why then do he call George Keith's, a Usurped, Arbitrary, and Irregular Proceeding. Cannot we be content either to meet him, and clear ourselves; or if we think that impossible (as indeed I fear it is) then to lie contented under his Charge without Noise; besides, 'tis known well enough by the world's People, how we have Summoned all the Clergy, from the Bishops, to the lowest Order: We have Arraigned, Tried, and at the Bar of Justice, Condemned all the Clergy, as contrary to all the Ministers of Christ, and to Agree and Concur with all the false Prophets, Deceivers; and Heretics, in both their Call, Maintenance, and Doctrine; nay, moreover, we have Impeached the Proceed of all Courts of Judicatures; we have called the Church of England, the Whore, and the Parliament, the Beast that carry her. Moreover, we have Diologued the Prelates, and Church, and Common Prayer; and told them we have discovered their Deceitful Practices, and ripped up her Bowels, and Discovered her (the Churches) Adulterous Womb, and all her false Conceptions. p. 39 Saying, behold the Archbishops, Lordbishops, Deans, prebend's, Doctors, Vicars, and Curates, and all Prelaticals. Here is the Womb of your Conceptions opened; from which you draw your Breath, and prolong your Days; open your Eyes, and behold them, for they are Monsters. As for your Common Prayer, the Pope gives Life to it, and from his Loins it draws its Strength. Teach. My Dear Friend Ben. we must part; you ask me such home Questions, that I must Answer Affirmatively; that it is ten thousand times more tolerable for George Keith to call us out, than for us thus to Summons, Arraign, Try, Judge, and Condemn all the Protestant Clergy, unsent too, unheard behind their Backs, in this Clandestine, Obscure, Arbitrary, Pernicious, and Scandalous Manner, fit to raise the Mobb, to Invade their Property, raise Tumults, cause Divisions, like Turbulent and Seditious Incendiaries; as if we were about to erect the Star-chamber-court; and to Enact another Writ, de haeretico; comburendo: And instead of the six bloody Articles, six hundred, for really Brother, I must needs say; that if the Church of England, her Bishops, Pastors, and Teachers, be according to all the false Prophets, in all things, and contrary to all the Ministers of Christ. 'Tis high time to Arraign, Try, and Judge them, and all that Adhere to them. Clark. Thirdly, but good dear Brother Thomas; since we are thus closely in Argument, and very free one with another; what do you think of our Brother Whitehead, so often boasting of our being Recognized by Law; as that therefore they may not be Convicted of Error, nor their pernicious Principles be Condemned; for though they are Indulged in the Exercise of their Persuasion: Yet I do not think our Books, which hold the Errors Complained of, are Recognized. If so, than we are in a better Station than the Church Established; for thee knowest how we Writ against both Priests and People; we Summon, Arraign, Try, and Condemn them, as I said before; pray Answer me Cordially; do you think this is good Arguing? that because the Government have tolerated us, that therefore none may Write against us, that none may Challenge us. I am persuaded, that the Episcopolians, are much kinder to us, than we should be to them, had we the Swaying of the Sceptre. Teach. Very true, dear Brother; for if you look into the 227 page of our deceased Brother Hubberthorn's Works; there you shall find in Answer to the Baptists, who professed solemnly, that if they were in their Hands, they would give the Members of the Church of England Liberty of Conscience. In Answer to whom here our Brother Hubborthorn, an Eminent, and early Writer and Preacher, viz. It seems then, there is not so much difference betwixt them, (i. e. the Church of England) and you, [the Baptists] who will make them Antichristian, and you Christian. What Confusion is here? You will not tolerate Popery, nor such as Worship a false God, nor any that speak Contemptuously of the Lord Jesus Christ, nor any that deny the holy Scriptures to be the Word of God; and yet you are not against the tolerating Episcopacy Presbytetry, or any stinted form: Why will you not tolerate Popery, as well as Episcopacy? Have not the Professors of Episcopacy, Murdered and Slain, and do Labour to Murder and Slay the People of God, as well as the Papists; and will you tolerate the Common Prayer among the Episcopacy, and not the Mass-book among the Papists; seeing that the Mass was the Substance, out of which the Common Prayer was Extracted. Here is nothing but Partiality to tolerate one Thing, and not another of the same kind, etc. Now Brother, you see how we are against Episcopacy, even as much as against Popery, and should tolerate the one, as soon as the other. And to be plain, I think the Episcopal are kinder to us than we deserve. Clark. But say G. Whitehead, we do not believe the Civil Authority, or any concerned therein, will Countenance, or Permit such an Usurped Authority, or Pernicious Precedent, as G. Keith has Assumed, or Attempted in this Case. We presume the said G. Keith, can produce no Legal Commission, & c Now Friend Thomas, how came G. Whitehead to be thus Unbelieving, and Presumptuous; for I am told the Lord Mayor, (with the Concurrence of the Bishop of London) gave G. Keith leave, and sent his Marshal to keep the Peace; and that one of the Sheriffs was their also; and that the World's People (for so we call all but ourselves) were well satisfied, and glad of the Opportunity, to hear the gross Errors, and vile Heresies of our Brethren laid open, and exposed to public Notice. Teach. I must again answer on the Affirmative, that our Brother Whitehead was first Unbelieved, and secondly, very Presumptive, and thereby Reflected on the Wisdom and Conduct of the Civil Magistrate, Arroganely signifying and suggesting, that the Magistrates are more ready to Recognize, Help, and Assist us; who have Arraigned, Tried, and Condemned them all, who have Impeached their Proceed, in their Courts of Judicature; who have Dialogued the Bishops, Pastors, and Teachers, who say, the Common Prayer is a Branch, Sprung from the Pope, that the Pope gives Life and Breath to it; and that from the Pope's Loins it draws its Strength; that the Church of England is the Whore, and the Parliament the Beast that carry her. That the Bishops and Ministers are Monsters, which from the Adulterous Womb of the Church are brought forth, that we have ripped up the Bowels (of the Church) and discovered her Adulterous Womb. Saying, p. 39 And now behold ye Archbishops, Lordbishops, Deans, prebend's, Doctors, Vicars, and Curates, and all Prelaticals. Here is the Womb of your Conception opened, etc. Now Brother Ben. all these things considered, what reason had our dear Brother in Iniquity, G. Whitehead, to presume, (had not he been Impudent, as well as Presumptuous) That the Government should so far tolerate us, and not Assist G. Keith, who hold all the Essential Points of the Christian Faith, that the Men of the World hold, viz. First, That Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ, as he Suffered, and risen again from the Dead, is necessary to our Salvation. Secondly, That Justification, and Sanctification; is by Faith in the Blood of Christ outwardly shed, being applied by Faith and the Operation of his Holy Spirit in us. Thirdly, That after Death, there will be a Resurrection of the Body that dyeth. Fourthly, And that Christ will come without us in his Glorified Body, at the Day of Judgement, to Judge both the Quick and the Dead, and whose Principles lead him to submit to Authority; witness, his keeping the Fast, appointed by King William, April 28. 1697. When our brethren's Shops were open in Submission to the Commandment of our great Apostle G. Fox. I say all these things considered, I cannot but marvel at our Brother Whitehead's Presumption, not to say Impudence, really Brother Ben. I am persuaded we lose Ground, and I fear we are going downwards, and that our fall will be speedy, unless we sincerely Retract our Scandalous Books, and Erroneous Writings; and though our Brother Whitehead, neither consult Events, nor fear Effects, I think it will stand us in hand to look about us. So that we have little reason to boast of being Recognized Protestants, by such as we account Christians, and whom we would not tolerate no more than we would Tolera Papists, or such as Worship false Gods, as this Book of ours Teach. Clark. Fifthly, Well, come, 'tis not very late, and since we are entered into Discourse, let us talk freely, I will warrant thee, that John Pennyman, George Keith, Francis Bugg, and Thomas Crisp, before they left us, have had many an Hours Discourse of this Kind, pray then what think you of G. Whitehead; is he not very bold to send out the Quakers Protestation against the meeting appointed by G. Keith. And therein to be so Presumptuous, as to suggest, that G. Keith had not Licence of the Civil Authority, as if he knew the Lord Mayor's Place, and Power better than himself. Teach. I Answer, G. Whitehead, was not only Bold but Impudent. But what shall I say, I have of late seen his Books, and considered them, and 'tis like him every way; I remember I saw a Friend that was lately in the North, and saw his House where he was born, not worth Fifty Shillings: I Discoursed another, that said he came among us a poor Boy on foot, and lived upon Alms; yet lately Riding out of Town, he had Ben. Antrobus to ride before him, and Tho. Kent, one of our Ministers, worth many Hundreds of Pounds, rod behind him, carrying his Portmantel, and he in State in the mdidle, like some Peer; which answers the Old Proverb; set a Beggar on Horseback, and he knows not how to Ride. Again, for us that account the Church of England, the Whore of Babylon, and Antichristians, Summon the Bishops, Dialogue the Clergy, Arraign, Try, and Condemn the Protestants; and declare in our Books, that 'tis as Laudable to tolerate Popery, as Episcopacy: And after all this, to presume that the Government thus Condemned, will so stand by us, Assist us, and Defend us, as not to have our Errors exposed, this is such Presumption, and manifest Impudence, that I presume hath not a Parallel. Clark. Well, but I have heard, that in Scotland, as well as in France; that the Government do not permit the Presbyterians to hold a Synod, unless they have a Commissioner Reside therein; but I confess, we are above that. First, we scorn to ask the World's People leave; for we once a Year, in Whitsunweek hold a Synod, keep our Doors Locked, or else a good Guard to keep out the World's People, and when we are met, we consider what Laws the Worldly Magistrates have made, which suit not with our Light within. And if we find any for paying Tithes, or Repairing Churches, or the like; them we give warning to all our Associates, through the Kingdom of England, Dominion of Wales, and Town of Berwick upon Tweed; not to pay to them, but Testify against them, as a Grand, viz. a great Oppression; and not only so, but which is ten times worse, an Antichristian Yoke; and thereby Absolve our Disciples from their Obedience to the Laws of the Land. And if the King himself give forth a Proclamation to keep a Fast, we matter it no more than we do their Law for Tyth's; they being both against the Commandment of George Fox, our great Apostle, see part the first, p. 12. Now the Question is, whether this be not great Impudence. Teach. Answer, yea; and if I do answer, I must say yea, but 'tis like all our Proceed. For First, our Books teach, that George Fox was Glorified at Lancaster Assize, 1664. That none knew him, nor his Name, that he was before Languages were, part the first, p. 38. That he see the Heavens opened; that he was in the Paradise of God, so filled with Power, having on his Leather Bretches, that the World's People did fly before him; that in Beverly Church, he was like an Angel, and spoke the Wonderful things of God: The Voice of God came to a Trooper, and bid him go to G. Fox for Direction; F. howgil said of him, that he spoke with Authority, and not like the Scribes; Jos. Cole, said his Kingdom was Established in Righteousness, and of the Increase thereof, there shall be no end. Sol. Eccles, said of him, the World was made by him, John Audland, said, Dear and Precious one, in whom my Life is bound up, and my Strength in thee stands. Then he went through the City of Litchfield baresoot, crying, woe! woe! to the Bloody City of Litchfiield; I saw in the Street a Pole of Blood, etc. and a hundred Lies, Stories, and Fables, and pretended Miracles in his Journal, etc. And for us to think that the Government will be against the Discovery of these, and the like Errors; no, let us not be mistaken, I am truly Brother Ben. afraid that G. Keith, Francis Bugg, Thomas Crisp, and others follow us up so to the Heels, as at last we shall be forced either to Retract our Errors, or do worse, and then we shall go down faster than we got up: And so far thee well, till I see the next Volume of G. Fox. I must go hence, 'tis late. The Conclusion. Christian Reader, I think the Friends have spoke more truth in a corner in two or three hours' time, than all their Leaders have Preached this 20 years. But say some, if these things be so in very deed, how came they to obtain so many and frequent Favours of the Government? I Answer, because the Parliament do not know them, no more than Constantius knew the Hypocrisy of the Arrians, who at length, through their subtle delusions, and fair pretences, prevailed and got the Pulpit and the Orthodox banished; and I have heard some fear the like consequence respecting the Quakers: But, let such be satisfied that Quakerism is at the height and gins to tumble; and our Governors, both of Church and State, begin to see them. I remember that in 1693. They were very fair to obtain a Bill for their solemn Affirmation to go for an Oath; but when I delivered in my sheet, showing their Principles, in two hours' time it was thrown out, and, as Col. Goldwell told me, there was not a Man appeared for them; and when I came to London, March 1696. some worthy Members of the Commons House chid me for not coming sooner, saying they wanted matter of Fact; adding that the Quakers frequent and unwearied Solicitation prevailed with too many worthy Gentlemen, who understand not their undermining Principles. However much good may their obtained Bill do 'em, since the 10 l. clause is in, and they barred from any place of Trust, so much as of being Constable: And whereas their judgement is, whatever is more than yea, yea, and nay, nay, cometh of evil, and is Swearing, yet now they must call God to witness, etc. which is indeed not less nor more than an Oath; and this pleases some of them that could Swear before, but some it displeases who say, the Act do them no good; for whatever is more than yea, yea, nay, nay, is swearing. Well, but may some say, have not the Quakers Merited the favour bestowed on them, yea by the rule of contraries, for the Quakers have Recognised the Parliament Antichrists, the Beast that carry the Whore; and that it's as commendable to give Liberty of Conscience to the Papists, nay to a People that worship false Gods, graven Images, etc. as to tolerate Episcopacy, the false Church, whose Bowels they have ripped up; adding, that the Common Prayer Book is Popery, and from the Loins of the Pope received its Strength, etc. And the Parliament have, as they pretend and often boast, Recognised them Protestant Dissenters, give them their Liberty without any restraint; but how? not knowing them nor their Principles, but, as Constantius was; are mistaken in them, whose Books and Carriages are of two sorts. I remember the last Whitsuntide in Northcoat's Shop in George-yard Lombardstreet, W. Mead the great Quaker, asked me, if I broke Bread with the Church of England, I said yea; what, said he, dost thou lick up thy old Vomit? I'll warrant you he said no such word to the Worthy Members of the House of Commons, nor to the Bishops of the Church; no, no, as their Books carry two different Faces; so do their Carriage; and if it be Criminal to conceal Treason against my natural Prince, what is it to conceal these Impostors? who undervalue the Death and Sufferings of Christ; condemn his Laws, despise his Ordinances, revile his Magistrates, and reproach his Ministers, which I hope this Book fully sets forth; and which I stand ready to prove out of their Books upon G. W.'s Proposition to the Parliament, as cited by me, in the First Part p. 123. And until they do so meet, and if proved upon them, then Retract them, they are not to be believed, tho' in their Meetings they like the Magicians in Moses' time may make the likeness of the same Confession and Profession that G, Keith and others do, as well as in their late Books; yet while their other Books, which teach the contrary, stand uncondemned, the Quakers are Quakers still, and their Principles diametrically opposite to all Christians, Saints and Martyrs in all Ages; and they ought to be guarded against, as Enemies to Church and State. May 5. 97. F. E. A Short Map of Quakerism. Reader, HAving since the foregoing was Printed off, seen a Book, Entitled, Some Seasonable Reflections upon the Quakers Protestation against the Proceed at Turners-hall, April 29. 1697. etc. Wrote by an Ingenious Hand. Wherein the said Author marvels, (as well he may) that the Quakers should Accuse G. Keith for Invading of Property; who themselves hold it no Sin to Invade the Properties of others; as in the Case of Tyth's; which are as much the Property's of the Clergy (Confirmed by Act of Parliament) as any Man's Estate in England; nay, not only so, but (as the Author well observes) in other things, from several Particulars which G. Fox, etc. sent to the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England, Printed, 1659. p. 8. 32. Particular, viz. Let all those Fines that belong to Lords of Manors be given to the Poor, for Lords have enough. Particular 29. Let all those Abby-lands, Gleab-lands that is given to the Priests, be given to the Poor of the Nation; let all the Abbies, Steeple-houses, and Whitehall, be for Almshouses, for the Blind and the Lame to be there. And in the fore mentioned Address to the Parliament, 1659. Subscribed by above 7000 Quakers, p. 59 63, and 65. They require that the Late King, (as these Rebels Styled him) his Rents, Parks, and Houses should be Sold, and all the Colleges and Lands, and the very Bells out of the Churches, except one in a Town, to give notice of Fire, etc. This was no Invading of Property in them; but for G. Keith, or any others, to Detect their Errors; this is Encroaching upon their Properties, as Englishmen, yea forsooth Persecution: But says Edward Burrough, in his Word of Advice to the Soldiers, p. 2. Give the Priest's Blood to drink; for they are worthy, Slay Baal, turn the Hirelings out of the Kingdom, etc. Here was no design of Persecution, or hurting any Man's Property, or of Reviling, and Blemishing the Reputation of Freeborn Englishmen, and exposing them to the Fury of the Mob, to the Scorn, Contempt, and Rage of the mixed Multitude, who are Unmeet to Judge of Religious Controversies, as these Meek Lambs, the Quakers urge against G. Keith in their Protestation, etc. And that they are not changed, see their last Yearly Epistle, 1696. Wherein they Exhort their Disciples, not to be moved at the Objections against their Doctors; But to hold up the Holy Testimony of Truth, which hath made us, say they, a People to God, and Preserved us unto this Day: And that in all the parts of it; for Truth is one, and changes not; and what it convinced us of to be Evil in the beginning, it Reproves still, etc. i e. The Church of England, and all the Magistrates, Kings, Lords, and Commons, to be Serpents, Devils, and Scarlet-coloured Beasts, etc. For Truth is one (say they) and changes not, i. e. Quak. who are, and always have been in the Truth, have not changed at all since the beginning. So that 'tis plain, that as they are the same still, so have they made themselves answerable; for all that have been said by them since their beginning. And therefore in order to draw a perfect Map of Quakerism, I shall consider. 1. Who the Quakers Account False Ministers. 2. How they pass Sentence on them as such. 3. And particularly, what bitter Enemies they are against Episcopacy. 4. Who the Quakers account true Ministers, and the true Church, the Bride, the Lamb's Wife. And first, who they account False Ministers. 1. Such as Sprinkle Infants, and tell People it is an Ordinance of Christ. George Fox's Primer, p. 84. 2. Such as Preach Christ without, and bid People believe in him, as he is in Heaven above. W. Smith's primer, p. 8. 3. All that do study the Scriptures, and Preach out of them, etc. Saul's Errand to Damascus, etc. p. 7. 4. All that either Receive, or Pay Tyth's, etc. Thomas Ellwood's Antidote, p. 78. I could give a hundred Instances of the like Nature, by these Primmers and Books they Teach their Children, and Inculcate these horrible Principles into their Disciples, viz. That all that Baptise with Water, all that Preach out of the Scriptures, all that Preach Christ without, as he is in Heaven above at God's right Hand, making Intercession for us: As our for ever Blessed and Adored Advocate. In short, all that Pay, or Receive Tyths: And thus have they Sentenced, not only the Ministers of the Church of England. But Presbyterians, Independents, and Baptists, and the Deceased Martyr's, and Christians in all Ages, and they are the same still, they are not changed; and by this they shall be proved to be the same, in that, 1st. They so Profess to be, in all the Parts of Quakerism, and 2ly. In that they refuse to Retract and Condemn these their Antichristian Principles. Again, Thirdly, How they, i. e. the Quakers pass Sentence on them as such, see their Book. A Brief Discovery of a Threefold Estate of Antichrist, etc. p. 7. 8, 9, 10. In Manner and Form; thus stand their Superscription, viz. Of the False Ministry. 1. The Priests of the World are Conjurers, Raising dead Doctrine, dead Uses, dead Motives, dead Reasons out of the Letter which is Death; raising Death out of Death, notatable Conjurers! 2. Thiefs, and Robbers. 3. Antichrists, the Priests of Baal, who cannot show any Scripture for their Heathenish Ways, and Beastial Worships. 4. Witches, and blind Guides, who Bewitch poor Creatures. 5. Devils, the Serpent is Head in them: 6. Liars, the Commission and Call of Baal's Priests, come from Oxford and Cambridge; these are not Ministers of Christ, but Stewards of the Devil's Magazine, Dissemblers, and Liars, a Vaporous, and Serpentine Generation; going about to Strangle the Child Jesus, holding a Worm-eaten Beastly-form: 7. Blasphemers, yea, of the Devil. 8. Scarlet-coloured Beasts, a Harlot full of Abominations, and Filthiness. 9 Babylon's Merchants, Selling Beastly Wares for a large Price; the Letter which is Dust and Death, the day is coming when these Idol Merchants shall cry, etc. 10. Whited Walls, Painted Sepulchers, professing something, possessing nothing but Poisoned Stuff. 11. Ravening Wolves, evermore Persecuting the pure Truth that the Saints live in, Ringleaders of that Wicked Design. 12. Greedy Dogs, really they are Bloodhounds, still hunting and gasping after their Prey, like the Mouth of Hell. Barking and Raging like Sodomites. 13. Eminent and Ambitious Pharisees, living in the same Antichristian Steps that the Pharisees did, of the Devil; wear Gowns, woe! woe! woe! was the Portion of those Pharisees then; and woe! woe! woe! is their Portion now; and Woe and Misery is the Portion of the Upholders (whether King or Parliament) of that Treacherous Crew, and Deceitful Generation. Reader, I have showed how the Quakers Arraign, Try, Judge, and Condemn the Clergy. And now I have fairly Recited their Sentence of Condemnation, Pronounced by an Eminent Quaker, Thomas Lawson, and Witnessed too in York castle, by three other of their then Principal Speakers, viz. Thomas Aldam, Benjamin Nicholson, and John Harwood: In which is a Letter, Wrote by Ja. Nailer to George Fox, and George Fox's Blasphemy; and too much of that Nature: But least these five should not give Sentence sufficient, pray hear what my Lord Chief Justice, W. Penn says, who tho' he came in late, yet he drives the Nail to the Head, in his Witty Windy Wordy Book, Styled, The Guide Mistaken, etc. p. 18. And whilst the Idle Gormandizing Priests of England, run away with above 1500000 l. a Year, under pretence of being God's Ministers; and that no sort of People have been so Universally, through all Ages, the Bane of Soul and Body of the Universe; as that abominable Tribe; for whom the Theatre of God's most dreadful Vengeance, is reserved to Act their Eternal Tragedy upon, etc. The next Head I am upon, is to show, what Enemies the Quakers were, and still are to Episcopacy: But having showed already out of their Famous Smith's Works, how they Dialogue their Clergy, rip up the Bowels of Episcopacy, charge the Book of Divine Service Established by Law, and Confirmed by His Present Majesty's Royal Declaration) to spring from the Pope, etc. And many other Quaker Testimonies I have Cited; so that it seems needless; yet that I may leave nothing without President, or Proof, see Edward Burrough's Works, p. 618. 619. In Answer to the Baptists Declaration, Printed about the Year 1659. which also was Answered by Richard Hubberthorn, as in the Dialogue: But in regard that this Burrough's was a Prophet among them of the first Form; even one of their three Worthies: A Son of Thunder, one of whom 'tis Written in the Volumn of the Commendatory Epistles prefixed to his Works. That he Burrows was endued with the Almighty Power of God, and his Works Printed by the Approbation of G. Whitehead, G. Fox, and others of their Chief Leaders, Anno 1672. when Episcopacy was Settled by Law, and even when they Flocked to the Parliament every day; begging Favours; yet then was this Re-printing: And the like may be noted of Richard Hubberthorn's Answer to the Baptists Recited Declaration; well, to the Matter. In Answer (say E. B.) to the Baptists Declaration: Whereas (you Baptists) speak of the Public Ministers of the Nation; that you will not destroy them, but stand by them and preserve them from Violence and Injury, etc. To which (saith Burrows) I answer, what are you (Baptists) about to make a League, and a Covenant with Antichrist? Have you been opposing them in Words, and are you now Recanting of what you have have done, when you are sensible of a Danger upon you? And will you now bind yourselves to stand by them, and preserve them from all Injury, and even as they are Ministers too: But let me ask you (say this Innocent Quaker) do you look upon them as Ministers of Christ, or of Antichrist? If Ministers of Christ, wherefore do you oppose them? Oh ye Hippocrites! But if they are Ministers of Antichrist; then how is it that you will stand by them, and preserve them as such: Is not this a League with Hell and Death, etc. I think this very Testimony from this Great Prophet of theirs Printed, 1659. and Reprinted in 1672. by Whitehead, and the Chief Quakers Approbation: (and at the same time too, when the Quakers were seeking Favour; was such a piece of Impudence, as Arius never had. But to proceed to my 4th, and last Head proposed, viz. Who are in the Quakers Account True, and Orthodox Preachers since; all that Baptism with Water, all that Study the Scriptures, and Preach out of them; all that Preach Christ without, as he is in Heaven above; all that take, Receive, or pay Tyths, are false Ministers, Witches, Devils, etc. In a word, all not Quakers, for so they affirm, The Quakers Challenge, etc. p. ●. Come Protestants, Presbyterians, Independents, and Baptists, the Quakers deny you all, p. 3. The Quakers are in the Truth, and none but they, etc. And therefore 'tis highly necessary to know who they account true Preachers; which are these that follow, viz. 1. Such as Teach that the Name of Christ belong to every Member of the Body, as well as to him that Suffered at Jerusalem; that his Body was but a Veil, a Garment, etc. and which they can never call Christ; that his Person was no more to his Disciples, than another Person, but for the sake of the Spirit, Frame and Temper that dwelled in him, his Disciples loved him; that Christ is not God and Man in one Person. For Proof hereof, see Is. Pennington's Question to Professors, etc. p. 20. to 33. Will Bayly's Works, p. 300. 307. The Sword of the Lord Drawn, etc. p. 5. 2. Such as deny the Blessed Trinity, see W. Penn's Sandy Foundation, etc. p. 15. to 20. and W. Penn's Christian Quaker, and his Deu. Testimony, p. 98. 3. Such as Teach that the Scriptures are Dust, Death, Serpent's Food; that the Sacraments are Dust, that Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, are Serpent's Meat, Dust, and Beastly Ware; and such as propose it doubtful, whether Moses, or Hermes was the 1st. Penman of the Scripture; and whether some of it was not spoke by the Grand Imposter; some by Wicked Men, some by Wise Men, ill Applied, some by Good Men, ill Expressed, some by False Prophets, and yet True, some by True Prophets, and yet False; for Proof, see The Quakers Refuge Fixed, etc. p. 17. News coming out of the North, etc. p. 14. David's Enemies Discovered, etc. p. 7. 4. Such as Teach that the Scriptures are not the Word of God, and that so to Affirm is Blasphemy. See G. Fox's Book, Styled Firebrands, etc. 2 part, p. 159. Printed, 1678. and his Great Mist. etc. p. 240. Printed 1659. 5. Such who Teach that the Quakers Writings are the Word of God, given forth by the Eternal Spirit of God; that we may as well burn the Scriptures as their Books, Papers, and Queries: That if ever we own the Prophets, Christ, or the Apostles, we will own their Books; that what is spoken from the Spirit of Truth in any, is of as great Authority as the Scriptures and Chapters are, and greater for Proof. See Truth's Defence, etc. p. 2. 104, 107. Fox's his Answer to the Westmorland Petitioners, etc. p. 3. both Printed, 1653. likewise G. Whitehead's Serious Apology, etc. p. 49. A Brief Discovery, etc. p. 8. Several Papers given forth for spreading Truth, etc. p. 40. 6. Such as Teach that Water Baptism is no Ordinance of God, but an Institution of the Whore of Rome. And that the Practice of it is Idolatry, and that such are bewitched to accept of those two Institutions of Christ, Baptism, and the Lord's Supper: For Proof, News coming up out of the North, etc. p. 34. 35. A Music Lecture, p. 25. Burrough's Works, p. 51. 518. William Smith's primer, p. 36. 7. Such as Teach that the Quakers Sufferings are greater, and more unjust than the Sufferings of Christ, his Apostles, and all the Marters since: That the Sufferings Inflicted upon Christ, his Apostles, and Martyrs, were chief done by a Law, and in a great part by the due Execution of a Law, see Burrough's Works, p. 273. Behold Reader, not only how they Magnify their Sufferings, the Blasphemy of their Doctors: But the horrible Lie, far exceeding that of Mahomet's Journey to Heaven, as at large in that Learned Treatise, Wrote by Dr. Prideaux, archdeacon of Suffolk, Entitled, The Nature of an Imposture, in the Life of Mahomet, etc. Printed, 1697. Sold by W. Rogers, at the Sun in Fleetstreet, London. 8. Such as Teach, and leave it upon Record to Posterity that they Suffer 20 l. at a time for Preaching; when they not only not suffer a penny, but get ten pound clear by the Bargain, as in this Book at large showed in the Instance of that Self magnifying Teacher of theirs, Samuel Cater of Little Port, in the Isle of Ely: See The lamentable Cry of Oppression, etc. p. 40. to the end, Hadenham old Records, etc. 9 Such as Teach that the very Christ of God is within us, his Sufferings within us; that his offering himself as a Sacrifice, is within us; and by the scope of their Ancient Testimony, deny him that was nailed to the Cross, Pierced, etc. to be Christ, which their Light never was, etc. See Burrough's Works, etc. p. 149. W. Smith's primer, p. 8. 9 and his Catechism, p. 57 to 60. 10. Such as Teach that the Quakers have a a Spirit given them beyond all the Forefathers, and thereby know who are Saints, who are Devils, and who are Apostates, without speaking ever a word; and that none need to give the Quakers Discerning, or Judgement; for Christ, i. e. their Light doth furnish them at all times, and on all occasions, see G. Fox's Great Mist. p. 89. Judas and the Jews, etc. p. 58. 11. Such as Teach (and that truly too) that the Quakers are raised contrary to all Men, (yea, ever since Noah's Flood) and that they have given their Power only to God, and that they cannot seek (that's a grand Lie, the Parliament can bear me witness) to outward Authority. But stand Witness against Parliaments (that's true), Judges, Justices, and to such Laws, Customs, Courts, etc. they cannot yield Obedidience; that the Quakers Kingdom is from above, and that they reject the Beasts Authority (i. e. the Parliament) and the Dragon's Power: And that the Quakers are gathered up into the Life which the Holy Men of God lived in. That they (i. e. Quakers) are fallen from the World, and its Ways and Nature. That even the Father (oh dreadful Blasphemy!) bears Witness of them, and therefore their Witness is true (Alluding, as in many other Cases to Equalise themselves to Christ, John 5. 32. There is another that beareth witness of me, and I know the witness which he witnesseth of me is true) that Teach saying, What have you (the public Ministry) lost the Lord to be your Strength, that you must flee for Help to Men? Must they make Laws to Establish you, and set you up? Is not this the Whore that Road upon the Beast? and that the Beast (meaning the Parliament) carry her, Again, to the Parliament, viz. You do but cause People to drink of the Whore's Cup, and you are but them that do carry the Whore, viz. the False Church: And this is plain Dealing to tell you the Truth; for proof, see Burrough's Works, p. 50. 53, 501, 522, 507. 521. 12. Such as Teach that the public Ministry are Witches, Devils, Wolves, Antichrists, Sodomites, etc. The very bane of Soul and Body of the Universe: That the Dissenting Ministers are an Ill-bred Pedantic Crew, the bane of Religion, and pest of the World, the old Incendiaries to Mischief, and best to be spared of Mankind, against whom the boiling Vengeance of an Irritated God is ready to be poured out; that they should give them (i. e. the Clergy) Blood to drink; for they are worthy: Turn the Hirelings out of the Kingdom; that 'tis as warrantable to tolerate Popery, as Episcopacy; that tolerating Episcopacy, is making a League with Hell: That all Kings and Emperors have sprung up in the Night of Apostasy; that the Kings are Spiritual Egyptians, that such as dote on an Earthly King are Traitors; that 'tis a nasty and dirty thing to mention a House of Lords, that all those Fines which belongs to Lords of Manors, should be given to the Poor; that all Abby-lands, Gleab-lands, that is given to the Priests, be given to the Poor of the Nation (Judas was kind to the Poor) that all the great Houses, Abbeys, Steeple-houses, the King's Rents, Parks, and Houses should be Sold, and all Colledg-lands, and Bells out of the Churches, except one in a Town, to give notice of Fire: That to take away the Priests Hour glass, if you be moved to it, is owned by the Eternal Power. For proof of this Doctrine, and five hundred times as much of the same Nature, Read these Quotations, for this is but a short Map of Quakerism, viz. G. Fox 's Great Mist. p. 5. 30. to 40. A Serious Apol. etc. p. 156. A Brief Discovery, etc. p. 7. 8. Several Papers given forth by G. Fox, etc. p. 8. 9, 12, 16, 18. G. Fox's 59 Particulars sent to the Parliament, Printed, 1659. p. 8. 59, 63, 65. Burrough's Advice to the Soldiers, p. 2. The Guide Mistaken, by W. Penn, etc. p. 18. Reader, I have in this little Map, given thee a hint of the Doctrines of the Quaker Church: I think they are so abominable Erroneous, Blasphemous, and Uncharitable, that they need no Comment; and as to the Quaker Church, their Bride, and their Lamb's Wife; if you still ask me for a Description of her; I tell you they are a broken divided Sect; who adhear to the Teachers of this Doctrine; tho' in their Meetings before the World's People; they sometimes talk a little otherwise, but search their Books, especially their old ones (and they are not changed) and this is the perfect Figure, nay, plain Words of their Doctrine. But if any one, or more will Condemn their Recited Errors publicly under their Hands; they thenceforth are not of their Church, but aught to be taken in as Protestants, even as G. Keith and his Friends have done, whom I neither Interrogate nor Accuse. And now if after all, their deluded Disciples, will not be so noble, as to search, and after searching to to Renounce them, and their Errors, but will still remain willingly Ignorant; it is a great sign that God has given them up to strong Delusion. Reader, the design of the Recited Book, Entitled, Some Reflections upon the Quakers Protestation, etc. And all that's Wrote against them, is only to bring them to a thorough Conviction of their Errors; and to such an Acknowledgement, and Confession of them, as is Indispensible to a true Conviction; there is nothing more desired of them than to Retract, and disown what is proved to be Faulty in their Writings, and such Faults too, as are either Destructive to the Faith, or Scandalous (and so Sinful) to the Reputation of their Neighbours, in giving False and Uncharitable Representations of them: And this they are obliged to do by all the Rulers of Christianity; it being the smallest Satisfaction they can make, to repair (so far at least) the Injuries that are thereby done to the Christian Doctrine, and the Good Name of those they have Wrongfully Traduced; they are the Aggressors, they have Attacked our Religion in all the Parts of it, our Bishops, and Clergy, and our whole Constitution; and we require no greater Amends for all that they have done against us, then to say that they are sorry for it, and though they should refuse us, even this Justice, and reasonable Security for the future; yet we press for no Persecution against them, for no Fines, or Imprisonment; but only that we should not be obliged to acknowledge them as true Protestants; and that we may have Liberty to Justify ourselves and Reliligion, against the Calumnies with which they have loaded both: And if this be refused us, the Cry of Persecution will run on our side: Is it no Persecution of the Tongue for the Quakers to Represent our Bishops and Clergy, as the most odious of Mankind. We grant their is a Toleration, but 'tis only for Religious Worship, but with all caution, that the Doors be open; so as any may go in and see what they do; but not to hold General Counsels, with their Doors Locked up, or a Guard of three or four Stout Men to keep all out, but whom they'll admit; and their Business is Government, that's plain, which is no way within the Act of Parliament; for there is a Clause in the Act, p, 307. Be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid, That if any Assembly of Persons, Dissenting from the Church of England, shall be had in any Place for Religious Worship † with the Doors locked, bar Mark, tho' they do not always Bolt and Barr, yet have they 3 or 4 lusty Fellows to keep Guard during their Convocation. or bolted, during any time of such Meeting together, they shall not receive any benefit from this Law; but be liable to all the Pains and Penalties of all the aforesaid Laws, etc. which Prohibit all Convocations, etc. without the King's Licence; much more to Enact, Promulgate, or Decree any Orders or Constitutions whatsoever. Now if the Bishops and Clergy of England, tho' Recognised and Established by Law, would incur a Praemunire; so much as to meet consult, and debate, tho' concerning only their own Order and Spiritual Jurisdiction, without the King's Licence. How then have the Quakers this Authority to hold their yearly Convocation without control; and with their Doors either locked and barred, or a Guard at them; and when there, not only to make Laws for their People to observe, but to Repeal, if not Verbally, yet Virtually the Laws of the Land. And further, If when the Clergy do meet in Council, Convocation, or Synod; the King may have his Commissioners present to Inspect and even to Regulate their Proceed, That nothing may be their Transacted prejudicial to the Government: How much more reasonable is it to have the Quakers Synods Inspected, who have given such demonstration of their Antimagistratical Principles. If Christian Emperors and Princes have had their Ambassadors and Ministers present in general Councils; If the Hugonots in France have submitted, nay desired and requested to have the King's Commissioners present in their Synods, which by His Majesty's Grace and Favour they have been suffered to hold: If the Presbyterians in Scotland, tho' now Established as the National Religion, have a Commissioner present in their general Assemblies, why should the Quakers not be obliged to receive a Commissioner from the Government to reside in their Anniversary Synods. If at their beginning they were too Inconsiderable for the notice of the Government; they are now become a numerous and wealthy People; and in all respects worthy not to be neglected; especially if their Principles be as their Writings set forth: And their not meeting G. Keith, and others who have in like manner challenged them, is not the least demonstration of their Gild. The Postscript to the Map. Being told that the Quakers had Answered my Book The Qua. Set, I went yesterday to their Booksellers Shop, in White-hart court for one, but found it not; but seeing G. Whitehead's Antidote against the venom of the Snake, etc. I found two Passages, which being Replied to, may indifferently serve for an Answer to the Book. For, no Charge can be undeniably true upon them: Why? Because they can deny any Charge how true soever it be. Again, if they will not Determine a Point in Controversy, being proved out of their most Authentic Authors; unless we can produce the Original Manuscript Copy, which is impossible for us to do; then farewell all Answering Books: Behold the Quakers run, and are ready to give up their Cause, the Passages are these. viz. The Author of the Snake, etc. said, That Mr. John Pennyman, was an Ancient, Worthy, and most Sincere Gentleman (as indeed none that know him, can with any Colour of Justice say the contrary) who had been invegled with their False Show and Pretence, to Piety, till he discovered their Gross Immoralities; which being complained of, tho' the Fact could not be denied; yet they could not Censure any, that remained in their Unity, for which Reason he at last left them: G. W's. Antidote, 252. Answer, as his Character of John Pennyman, is in the Superlative Degree, appears Flattery, and his Scandalous Story's on his behalf; and reason of leaving us, appears neither True, nor Impartial: I never had any undeniable Proof of the Matter of Fact heard from John Pennyman, etc. Reply, Well done George, thou art in the right on't; for I never knew any Matter of Evil Fact Charged on the Quakers, and their Errors; but thou hast had the Impudence to deny it, at least as Stated, or in some other Sophistical manner: So that 'tis Morally Impossible to prove Matter of Fact against the Quakers undeniably True. Why? because they have a Face of Brass, to deny any Matter of Fact against them; how true soever it be, of which this Antidote is not the least Instance; and for which Reason, I could wish the Author of the Snake may not trouble himself to Reply: Again, 2dly, p. 254. G. Whitehead, has Cited a Passage in the Snake, etc. viz. Quakers Registering their Sufferings for the Truth (as they call it) would make them exceed all the Ten Persecutions, and to be more Undescerving than the Sufferings of Christ himself, or the Apostles, etc. To which G. Whitehead Answers. These are False Suggestions, we have no such hopes he (i. e. Snake) Cites Edward Burrough's Unfairly, and Partially in this Point: And yet the Comparison of the Quakers Sufferings, as Greater, and more Unjust than in the Days of Christ, and his Apostles, or any time since, is a mistake. And whether it was so first Verbally Stated by Edward Burrough's, or some time since; I shall not Determine, unless I see the Original Copy, etc. Reply, I do positively Affirm, and before any Ten Ministers of the Protestant Churches, viz. Episcopal, Presbyterian Independent, or Baptists, will prove that the from Recited Authors Charge is undeniably true Matter of Fact. But what then, G. W. still complains of Evil Suggestions, of Unfair, and Partial Citations; tho' poor Heart he is so Stung with this Snake, that he is forced to acknowledge a Mistake, some where, but dust not determine where; oh horrible! what, a Book Wrote in 1657. by one of their Inspired Prophets, as the Word of the Lord, and dispersed 15 Years up and down the Nations, and then Reprinted, by thy own Approbation, dear George, with thine, and G. Fox's Epistles of Recommendations. And now to tell us of a Mistake, but know not where, and to call for Original Manuscripts, Wrote 40 Years since; is such a piece of Fallible Infallibility; that had I room, I should farther enlarge upon it. Francis Bugg. Sen. May 13. 1697. BOOKS Wrote by Fra. Bugg. Sen. 1. DE Christianae Libertate, etc. in 8vo. bound. 2. The Painted Harlot, both Stripped and Whipped, etc. 3. Reason against Railing, etc. 4. Innocency Vindicated, and Envy Rebuked, etc. 5. The Quakers Detected, and their Errors Confuted. 6. A Let to the Quakers, showing their Frequent Addresses to K. J. 2. 7. Battering Rams against New Rome, etc. 8. One Blow more against New Rome etc. 9 New Rome Unmasked, and her Foundation shaken, etc. 10. New Rome Arraigned, and out of her own Mouth Condemned, etc. 11. A Sheet delivered to the Parliament. Dec. 1693. Entitled, Something in Answer to the Quakers Allegation, etc. 12. Quakerism Withering, and Christianity Reviving, etc. 13. Quakerism Annotonized, etc. 14. A Sheet Entit. The Quakers Yearly Meeting Impeached, etc. 15. A second Summons to the City Abel, by way of Metaphor, to deliver up Sheba the Son of Bichri, 2 Sam. 20. i. e. G. Whitehead, etc. 16. The Quakers set in their true Light, etc. 17. A Brief History of the Rise, Growth, and Progress of Quakerism. 18. The Picture of Quakerism drawn to the Life, etc. FINIS.