THREE LETTERS DECLARING The strange odd Proceedings of Protestant Divines, when they write against Catholics: by the Example of Dr tailor's Dissuasive against Popery; Mr Whitbies Reply in the behalf of Dr Pierce against Cressy; and Dr Owen's Animadversions on Fiat Lux. Written by J. V. C. The one of them to a Friend; The other to a Foe; The third to a Person Indifferent. Sepulchrum patens est guttur eorum, linguis sui● dolose agunt. Judica illos Deus. 1671. The Occasion of this Epistle. THe Author had wrote a little Book called Fiat Lux, to show that wrangling about Religion is irrational and fruitless. A Protestant, understood afterward to be Dr Owen, set forth Animadversions against that Book. And this Epistle acquaints the Doctor of some of the ill qualities of those his Animadversions. I. An Epistle to the Author of the Animadversions upon Fiat Lux. SIR, I Was in my Journey in the North, far enough from London, when your Animadversions upon Fiat Lux came forth. Nor did I ever set eye upon them, till my return in February, about half a year after: which I tell you Sir, to excuse my silence. And now in brief: For your labour I thank you; for your endeavour I pity you; for your purpose I pardon you: that being as I believe, intended for gentlemen's satisfaction, the other for Fiat Lux his confutation, this for the Author's coufusion. I may not go about to reply unto you; because this would be against the very end and principles of Fiat Lux itself, which speaks forth nothing more than this, That Controversies about Religion are vain and fruitless. And lest this should not be able to detain me from any such reply, you add your own threats, That if I shall dare to write again, you will make me know what manner of man you are. However Sir, let we crave leave to thank you for the pastime your Animadversions have given me since my return. But Sir, you mistake the very drift and design of Fiat Lux, which makes you to err ever and anon, throughout your whole Book, whiles you take that as spoken absolutely which is only said upon an hypothesis of our present condition here in England, distraction, disputes, and wars, in order to a contrary end of unity, love, and concord, designed by Fiat Lux; and the Prosopopeia's brought in by me, as Solomon in his Ecclesiastes makes the fool and atheist ever and anon to speak their minds, these you conceiv to be my doctrine. By virtue of these capital mistakes, what by me is said of the obscurity of God, Nature, and Providence, is with you impertinent; that of Light and Spirit, impious; that of Plea of Parties, frivolous; that of Reason, dissonant and to no purpose; that of Scripture blasphemous; that of the History of Religion, no less inconsequent than untrue. In a word, this thing, that thing, every thing, a wild, dishonest illiterate discourse. Some would wonder, that he who writes in confutation of a Book, should be himself the only man that understands it not. But the reason is apparent: It is your only advantage to mistake. The whole discourse of Fiat Lux chained together, one part with another, from that which is supposed to that which is designed, would breathe so much of charity and soberness, that my Commentatour could not have told how to make any mad versions upon it. It is not yet too late. Now that you have finished your Animadversions, or Comment, or Notes upon it, you may do well to take my Book again into your hands; read it calmly, and understand it. That which you speak so frequently of Fiat Lux his ignorance, is not altogether amiss: for he pretends not much to learning, although he knows what he says. But yet Sir, if you had defied and vilified him with less violence, and more seldom, and not so universally in every point of history, language, and philosophy, nor just then when you had least cause, it had been more for your honour. A third part of your Book, which is taken up in talking of my ignorance and other qualities, might well have been spared, had you had arguments to demonstrate it. And in my mind you too much forget yourself, when you recount so often with regret and anger, that some gentlemen of the land should through their own inconsideration, have any liking of a Book which you judge so slight, airy, vain, fallacious, and simple. As if they had none, and you all the judgement of discerning, Gentlemen, Sir, must be allowed a since of Religion as well as Ministers; and their portion of reason must not therefore be less, because their Blood is more noble, the company they keep more accomplished, and their education better. They have the body, although they wear not the Cloak of Religion, and masters they are of their own reason, though not of yours. This is one difference between Catholic countries and ours; that there the Clergyman is only regarded for his virtue & the power he hath received, or is at least believed to have received from God in the great ministry of our reconciliation. And if he have any addition of learning besides, it is looked upon as a good accidental ornament, but not as any essential compliment of his Profession. So that it often happens, without any wonderment at all, that the Gentleman Patron is the learned man, and the Priest his Chaplain of little or no science in comparison. But here in England our Gentlemen are disparaged by their own Black Coats; and not suffered to use their judgements in any kind of learning, without a gibe from them. The Gentleman is reasonles, and the scribbling Cassock is the only Scholar: he alone must speak all, know all, and only understand. I cannot but smile to see you turn so dexterously every thing that is said in Fiat Lux, to your own use. His discourse of innocence and moderation, gives you occasion to speak, and amply dilate of wars, murders, adulteries, lies, hypocrisies, villainies: And when he cries, Peace, Peace, it is motive enough for you to cry, Guns and Daggers. You rave and rage against him and the whole earth; you load your pen and pages with the tyrannies, desolations, disorders have been aforetime in the world, not heeding that you had not so much as heard at this day of any such abuses, if their holy and renowned Clergymen, who still declaimed against the vices of their times, had not left them upon record; or so much as considering, that even now in these best times of Reformation are as grand disorders in all kinds as ever were in the worst times of Popish corruption. Nay there was never any crow or magpie so pecked and cawed upon the back of a sheep, as you do upon Fiat Lux; and if he do but stir or wag, you threaten, if I understand you right, to peck out his eyes. And all this, because Fiat Lux endeavours to show, that animosities about matters of Religion are groundless, prejudicial to peace and neighbourhood, ruinous, desolatory, endless, and consequently vain, fruitless, and sinful; (there may indeed be some advantage on the Defendants side, which is not in the Plaintiff or Actor, but this at present I am not to take notice of) nay finally, that they have ever done much harm in Kingdoms, but never good. In all this Sir, you do like yourself, you love nois and whirlwinds, and when you hear of Peace, prepare yourself to Battle: so ill do you understand the sound of a retreat, or, because it suits not with your ends and inclinations, will not. But all this discourse of Fiat Lux, tends, say you, to Popery. A fearful thing, and ungrateful news to Ministers; for whose foolish, endless, and ungrounded quarrels, we have lately engaged our honour, peace, livelihood, lives, and all that is dear unto us; and yet we are still, but where we were before we began. Nay, we are ten times farther off from any reconcilement, unity, or satisfaction then before. And such success have all wars ever had, where the alarm was given in the Pulpit. But why must it tend to Popery? Because that Fiat Lux is bold to say, that Popery in its own likeness is not so ugly as we imagine it. Lord! what a strange thing is this, that either Fiat Lux or any else should presume to say, that we in England, or other Nations may be carried by the reports of some interested men, to think worse of a thing than it may deserv; especially considering that we come all to Church to hear God's Words, and there meet with a man, who in the first opening of his lips, cries, Harken my Beloved to the word of the Lord; and so having with that airy honeycomb sweetened the edges of our ears, pours into them afterward what poison of his own conceived interests he pleases; all which we his dearly beloved let down greedily into our hearts, as that precious word of the Lord which he at first proclaimed. By which fallacies, we have been in the time of these our late wars, so far inveigled, (I speak to men now alive, who all know I speak true) that it became than a most dangerous thing, yea, treason itself, to say, God save the King, who was by this our Pulpit rhetoric made as odious then throughout the land, as Popery, what ever it be, ever was or can be. And are not neighbours thus abused daily almost in every thing? Where is that man, who hath not by such like means been one time or other induced to think amiss, even of his most innocent and dearest friends, till himself by trial found the contrary? O but God forbid, you will say, that ever we should come by trial to know what Popery is. Sir, may it be far from us, so long as heaven pleases. But i'th' interim, what harm can it be to us to mitigate our passions? which if there be no mistake, are prejudicial notwithstanding to our own peace; and if a mistake there should be, are double injurious, and desperately sinful before God and man, Oh but mistake there can be none! Sir, let me tell you roundly. By your own Book of Animadversions I do as clearly see, as ever I beheld Sun in the Firmament, that you do not yourself understand what Popery is; even no more, than the poorest meanest peasant in the Parish. But who is able to make this good and clear unto you? no body Sir, so long as you are in passion, in a calm of indifferency your very self. Nor could I without that serenity, have been ever able to discern it. But yet, there is one thing more, which will hinder your acknowledgement, although you should come to know it. It is their interest to justify themselves, and yours to condemn them. Had not you with your threats so much frighted me from any thought of writing any more, I could I think myself, who am in your judgement one of the greatest ingrams in the Land, make it yet appear, that the present Popish Religion, if to pleas you they will give me leave to call it so, is not only less ugly than we conceive it, but far more innocent and amiable than I have made it. And, if there were not so much as one Catholic, or Romanist, or Papist upon earth, yet so far am I from any interest herein, that in that judgement I would notwithstanding die alone. Nor had I set before my cyes any other end in that my Fiat of moderation, against which you write your hot Animadversions, than the peace and welfar of my Country, which under the pretended shadow of Popery, inflamed by the alarms of Vicars and their Wives, for whom we fight as it were pro aris & focis, hates and mischiess, strikes and destroys one another without end. And yet, which is a strange thing, whilst every one conceits himself to fight for Purity of Gospel against Popery, they fight all for Popery against Purity of Gospel. And this you must affirm yourself, if you do but remember what in your Book of Animadversions you so frequently assert; that what good soever the Papists or Roman catholics either do or have amongst them, they have and do the same as Christians and not as Papists; and that Popery is itself nothing else, but pride, interest ambition, tyranny, worldly respects, thirst of blood, affectation of dominion, & c. As I am sure on the other side, that grace, charity, and peace is the pure quintessence of Gospel, and the very extract of true Religion. Either then I had reason to tell you, that you understand not what Popery is; or if you do, you must needs acknowledge, that those who here in England, betwixt the years of 1640. and 1660. with guns and daggers, as you often phrase it, with field rhetoric and pulpit cannon, subverted all before them, even Church and State too, let them call themselves Puritan, Independents, Presbyterians, or what they pleas, were all of them by this your own rule, as arch Papists as ever trod upon the earth. Nor is it of concernment, so they have the reality of the thing, whence they may borrow their name; whether some man upon earth be their Pope, or whether the Devil be himself their ghostly father. And I fear Sir, you were yourself some part of that dismal tempest; which in the last years of our woeful Anarchy overbore all before it, not only Church and State, but reason, right, honesty, all true Religion, and even good nature too. The very flashings of your pen move me to this thought. The whole physiognomy of your Book speaks the hot and fiery spirit of the Author. First, you cannot abide to hear of moderation, it is with you most wicked, hypocritical, and devilish, especially as it comes from me. And for this one thing Fiat Lux suffers more from you, then for all the contents of the Book put together. My reason is your passion; my moderation inflames your wrath; and you are therefore stark wild, because I utter so much of sobriety. Secondly, your so frequent talking of sword and blood, fire and faggot, guns and daggers, do more than show, you have not yet let go those hot and surious imaginations. It is a phrase so ordinary with you, that when another writer of your own judgement would have told me, that my words are false or besides the purpose, or the like, you in a phrase of your own tell me still that I speak guns and daggers. If he mean, say you of me, p 27. that there is in good works an intrinsical worth, etc. he speaks daggers, and doth not himself believe what he says. And again, p. 94. For men to come now in the end of the world, and tell us, That we must rest in the authority of the present Church, etc. is to speak daggers and swords to us, upon a confidence that we will suffer ourselves to be befoold. So likewise p. 340. He tells us, say you of me, it is good to prefer a Translation before the Originals. What shall we do with those men that speak such swords and daggers, and are well neither full nor fasting. I pray Sir where did you borrow this trope? had you it from the school of Aristotle, or Mars his camp? Thirdly, your prophetic assurance so often inculcated, that if you could but once come to whisper me in the ear, I would plainly acknowledge, either that I understand not myself what I say, or if I do, believe it not, gius a fair character of those fanatic times, wherein ignorance and hypocrisy prevailed over worth and truth; whereof if yourself were any part, it is no wonder you should think that I or any man else, should either speak he knows not what, or believe not, what himself speaks. It was the proper badge of those times, when after the alarm sounded in the Pulpit, that our people thereupon went forth in troops to battle, neither did the peasant understand, nor the man in black believe, although the sound rung generally in their ears, that it was the sword of the Lord and of Gideon, which they brandished against the loyal band, their foes, Measuring me it seems by yourself, you tell me no loss than seven times in your book, that I believe not, and I think seaventy times, that I understand not what I speak myself. It is a kind of charity in you to think your neighbour is as you know yourself to be. But I do not much care for that charity, except you were better than I find you are. Fourthly, your pert assertion so often occurring in your book, that there is neither reason, truth, nor honesty in my words, is but the overflowing of that former intemperate zeal: and the more frequent it occurs, the less approbation it will find. Fiftly, your sharp and frequent menaces, that if I write or speak again, I shall hear more, find more, feel more, more to my smart, more than I imagine, more than I would, relishes too much of that insulting humour our bleeding Land then groaned under, the many years of our anarchical confusion. Sixthly, the absence of your name in the frontispiece of your book, which I have never before observed in all my life of any Protestant writer, that hath ever in my time set forth a book here in England against Popery, givs no small suspicion that the Author of our Animadversione is no such Protestant as he would be thought to be. Lastly, that I may omit other special reasons, your other general trick of charging me then most of all with sraud, ignonorance, and wickedness, when in your own heart you find me most clear from any such blemish, thereby to put a vail upon your own cause, which would otherways be disparaged, makes me smell a fox, a notorious one. Sic notus Ulysses. This has been too often acted here in England to be soon forgotten. The better the cause, the louder still was the cry against those who stood for it; that the blustering nois of calumnies might drown all report of their innocence. And by all this I cannot Sir but suspect, that if the description of Popery your Animadversions givs us be right, you are a Papist yourself, and no true Protestant, a notorious Papist. But as it is, so let it be. Thus much I only tell you, that you may see I am neither neglective of your book, nor idle; but have perused and read it over. And although what for the threats of your Animadversions, and what for the reasons of my own Fiat, I may not enter into controversy: yet I hope I may let you know that I have seen your work. And that you may the better credit me, I will give you a short account of it, first in general, then in particular. And this is all I mean here to do. The whole design of Fiat Lux you do utterly mistake, throughout all your book of Animadversions; so that you conceiv that to be a controversy, which is none; that to be absolutely asserted, which is but hypothetically discoursed out of the exceptions of other men; that to be only for one side, which is indifferently for all; although I speak most for them that are most spoken against, and am in very deed absolutely against all speaking, quarrelling, disputing about Religion. If you will but have patience to hear my purpose and design, which to all men not interested and blinded with a prejudice, is clear enough relucent in the whole context of my Fiat, what I say will easily appear to yourself. Fiat Lux says one thing, and supposes it; another thing he desires and aims at: that he dislikes; this he commends. We are at this day at variance about Religion, this Fiat Lux supposes. But it were better to have peace; this he aims at and desires. And both these things are intermingled up and down in my book, according to that small faculty that God hath given me, though not according to the usual method that is found now adays in books. Here Sir in few words you have the sum of my Fiat. And I hope you will grant that to be the scope of my book, which I made it for. That we are now at variance is most clear and certain; by me supposed, and not to be denied. And that it were better to have peace, is as absolutely expedient, as the other is evidently true. These then being things both of them which no man can resist; either by denying the one, or disliking the other; I thought them better intermingled then set apart; and with more reason to be supposed, then industriously proved. Yet to superinduce a disposition unto peace, my only work was to demonstrate an uselesnes, an endlesnes, an unprofitableness of quarrels, which I laboured quite through my book; beginning it with an intimation of our quarrels, which St. Paul calls the fruits and works of the flesh; and ending it with a commendation of charity, which is the great fruit and blessing of God's holy Spirit. Now the easier to persuade my Countrymen to a belief both of the one and the other, first is insinuated in Fiat Lux, both the ill grounds and worst effects of feuds; then is the plea of parties specified; their probabilities acknowledged; and lastly an impossibility of ever bringing our debates to a conclusion, either by light or spirit, reason or scripture texts, so long as we stand separated from any superior judicative power, unto which all parties will submit, is I think with a strong probability, if not demonstrative evidence concluded. And therefore is it thought by Fiat Lux to be more rational and Christianlike, to leave these endless, groundless, and ruinous contentions, and resign our selus to humility and peace. This is the design and whole sum of my book. And although I speak up and down, here for Papists, there for Protestants, elsewhere for Presbyterians or Independants, commonly out of the very discourses they make for themselves; yet do I not defend either their ways, or their arguments. Nor do I teach any doctrine at all, or hold there any opinion. But I only give to understand in that one little book, what is largely discoursed in a hundred, That all parties do make out to themselves such a probability, which as it stands joined with the actors resolution, and separated from any superior visible power to which they will submit, can never be subdued. And hath not long experience proved this as true as any thing else? What then is there in Fiat Lux that can be denied? Is it not evident that we are now at variance? and too long indeed have been. Is it not also clear, that peace, charity, and neighbourhood is better than variance, dissension, and wars? Do not parties strongly plead for themselves, so far persuaded each one that himself is in the right, that he will not yield, the truth to be with any but himself. Is not all this evident? I am sure it is; and all England will witness it. And if any one should be able to evince, that any reasonings made in Fiat Lux either for Papists, Protestants, or others, be not certain, or perhaps not probable; yet he does nothing, except he be able to prove likewise, that they are not probable to Fiat Lux, or to those that use them, whether Protestants or Papists; which he can no more do, than he can pull a star out of the firmament. I say Sir again, and mark I pray you, what I say. If you should chance to evince that the reasons brought by Fiat Lux either for the doctrine or practices of Papists or others, be either not probable or untrue, yet is your labour all in vain, except you be able to demonstrate likewise, that they are not probable to Fiat Lux, or to Papists and others who use those reasons; which you can no more do, than any thing that is absolutely impossible. By this time Sir, you may discern how hard it is to deal with Fiat Lux, and impossible to confute him. Sith he speaks nothing, but what is as clearly true and evident, as what we see at midday. Nor do I in this any way exalt the ability of the Author, whom you are pleased so much and frequently to disable. A Tom-fool may say that, which all the wisemen in the world cannot gainsay: as he did, who said the Sun was higher at noon, than any other hour of the day. It was Fiat Lux his fortune rather than choice, to utter words which will no sooner be read, than acknowledged. And it was your misfortune Sir, to employ your greater talents in refuting evident truths; perhaps for no other reason, but because they issued from the pen of a man, who is not so great a friend to faction, as you could wish. And although you proceed very harsh and furiously; yet am I verily persuaded, you now discern, though too late for your credit, that you had all this while, according to our English proverb, good Mr. Doctor, a wrong sow by the ear. Thus far in general. Now briefly to give you some account in particular. You spend four Chapters, and a hundred and eighteen pages, which is the fourth part of your book, before you come to the first line and paragraff of mine, The applaus and honour of this world, etc. And it is not unwittily done. For being to be led, as you heavily complain, out of your ordinary road of controversies, by the wild chase of Fiat Lux, it behoved you to draw some general common places of your own, for yourself to walk in, and exercise your rhetoric and anger, before you pursue a bird that flies not, you say, in any usual tract. Preface from page 1. to page 19 Your preface, wherein you speak of my subtlety and your own pretence, affords me nothing but the beginning of your own mistake, which will run quite through your book. 1 Chap. from page 19 to 29. Your first chapter beats me about the pate, for saying that I conceal my method, with a terrible syllogistical dilemma, He that useth no method, say you, cannot conceal it, and if he hath concealed it, he hath used one. But I must pass by store of such doughty stuff, being only fit for the young Oxford Scholar, who being come home to take air, would prove before his father and mother, that two eggs were three. Then going on you deny, that Protestants ever opposed the doctrine and merit of good works; which at first I wondered at, seeing the sound of it has rung so often in mine own ears, and so many hundred books written in this last age, so apparently witness it in all places, till I found afterwards in my thorough perusal of your book, that you neither heed what you say, or how much you do deny. But you perhaps love to talk of them better than your forefathers did, though your thoughts be all the same. And you will all equally bless your selus from building of Churches as the Papists have done, however your prattle goes. 2 Chap. from page 29. to 110. Your second chapter collects our of Fiat Lux, as you say, ten general conclusions, spread all over like veins and arteries, in the body of that my book. And this you do, that you may make yourself a campus Martius to sport in, without confinement to my method. But you name not any page of my book, where those principles may all or any of them be found. And you do wisely: For in the sense those words do either naturally make out, or in which you understand them, of all the whole ten I cannot own any one for mine own, set down in my book. The first of my principles must be this, That we received the Gospel first from Rome. In your sense I never spoke this. We, that is, we English first received it thence. But you talk against it, as if I meant that Britain's had it first from Rome. We had it not first from Rome, say you, but by Joseph of Arimathea from Palestin, as Fiat Lux himself acknowledges. Sir, if Fiat Lux say both these things, he cannot mean in your contradictory falls sense, but in his own true one. We, that is, we Englishmen, the now actual inhabitants of this Land, and progeny of the Saxons, received first our Gospel and Christendom from Rome; though the Britain's who inhabited this Land before us, differing as much from us as Antipodes, had some of them been Christened long before us. And yet the Christendom that prevailed and lasted among the Britain's, even they also as well as we, had it from Rome too: mark this likewise. But you reply, Though persons from Rome did first plant Christianity among the Saxons, was it the Pope's Religion they taught? did the Pope first find it out? or did they Baptism in the name of the Pope? Good Sir, it was the Pope's Religion, not invented by him, as your cavil fond imagines, but owned, professed, and put in practice by him, and from him derived unto us by his missioners. You add, Did not the Gospel come to Rome as well as to us? for it was not first preached there. Sir, properly speaking, it came not so to Rome, as it came to us. For one of the twelve fountains, nay two of the thirteen, and those the largest and greatest, was transferred to Rome, which they watered with their blood: we had never any such standing fountain of Christian Religion here, but only a stream derived to us from thence. My second assertion must be, From whom we first received our Religion, with them we must still abide. This principle as it is never delivered by Fiat Lux, though you put it upon me, so is it in the latitude it carries, and wherein you understand it, absolutely falls, never thought of by me, and indeed impossible. For how can we abide with them in any truth, who may perhaps not abide in it themselves. Great part of Flanders was first converted by Englishmen, and yet are they not obliged, either by Fiat Lux, or any lux whatsoever, to accompany the English in our now present ways. If Rome first taught us Christianity, she may then rather plead a power to guide us, than we her. This or some such like thing I might speak, and rationally speak it. But that we or any other should be obliged still to abide or rather to follow them who first taught us Religion, though they should themselves forsake their own doctrine, as you would make me speak, is a piece of folly never came into my thoughts. And you may be ashamed to put it upon me: Why do you not set down my own words, and the page of my book where I delivered this principle. My third must be, The Roman Religion is still the same. This also I do no where formally express, nor enter into any such common place: You will say I suppose it. But doth this justify you who say here, that I assert it as a principle; let it then be supposed, for I do indeed suppose it, because I know it hath been demonstratiuly proved a hundred times over. You deny it has been proved, why do you not then disprove it? Because you decline, say you, all common places. Very good, so do, ay; let us come to proper ones. You fall then upon my Queries in the end of my book. The Roman was once a true flourishing Church, and if she ever fell, she must fall either by apostasy, heresy, or schism, etc. So I speak there. And to this you reply, that the Church that then was in the Apostles time, was indeed true, not that Roman Church that now is. So, so; then say I, that former true Church must fall then, some time or other; when did she fall, and how did she fall? by apostasy, heresy, or schism? Perhaps, say you, neither way: for she might fall by an earthquake. Sir, we speak not here of any casual or natural downfall or death of mortals by plague, famine, or earthquake, but a moral and voluntary laps in faith. What do you speak to me of earthquakes! You add therefore the second time, that she might fall by idolatry; and so neither by apostasy, heresy, or schism. Good Sir, idolatry is a mixed misdemeanour both in faith and manners: I speak of the single one of faith. And he that falls by idolatry, if he keep still some parts of Christianity entire, he falls by heresy; by apostasy, if he keep none. At last finding yourself puzzled, in the third place you lay on load; She fell, say you, by apostasy, idolatry, heresy, schism, licentiousness, and profaneness of life. And in this you do, not much unlike the drunken youth, who being bid to hit his master's finger with his, when he perceived he could not do it, he ran his whole fist against it. But did she fall by apostasy? By a partial one, say you, not a total one. Good Sir, in this division, apostasy is set to express a total relapse; in opposition to heresy, which is the partial. Did she then fall by heresy, or partial apostasy, in adhering to any error in faith, contrary to the approved doctrine of the Church? Here you smile seriously, and tell me, that since I take the Roman and Catholic Church to be one, she could not indeed adhere to any thing but what she did adhere unto. Sir I take them indeed to be one; but here I speak ad hominem, to one that does not take them so. And then, if indeed the Roman Church had ever swerved in faith, as you say she has, and be herself but as another ordinary particular Church, as you say she is; then might you find some one or other more general Church, if any there were, positively to judge her; some Ecumenical council to condemn her; some father's either greek or latin, expressly to write against her, as Protestants now do; some or other grave solemn authority to censur her; or at least some company of believers out of whose body she went, and from whose faith she fell. Since you are no ways able to assign any of these particulars, my Query remains unanswered, and the Roman still as flourishing a Church, as ever she was. The fourth assertion, frequently, say you, pleaded by our Author is; that all things as to religion were ever quiet and in peace, before the Protestants relinquishment of the Roman Sea. This principle you pretend is drawn out of Fiat Lux, not because it is there; but only to open a door for yourself, to expatiate into some wide general discourse, about the many wars, distractions, and factious altercations, that have been aforetime up and down the world, in some several ages of Christianity: And you therefore say it is frequently pleaded by me, because indeed I never speak one word of it. And it is in truth a falls and fond assertion. Though neither you nor I can deny, that such as keep unity of faith with that Church, can never so long as they hold it, fall out upon that account. If you had either cited the place, or set down my own words, they would have spoke their meaning. I might say perhaps, that our Land had no part of those disturbances upon the account of religion all the thousand years it was Catholik, which it hath suffered in one age since, or the like. But that all things should ever be at quiet throughout the world, that there should no heresies rise, no seditions, no wars any where; this is a fancy that was never in my head; and I wonder how it should drop into my paper. But you are a martial man, and resolved to bring me in with pikes and guns, as the red-coat soldiers did the Cavaliers in the time of our late anarchy, to suffer not only for the good they acted, but for the ill they never thought of. fifth must be, that the first reformers were most of them contemptible persons, their means indirect, and ends sinister. Where is it Sir, where is it, that I meddle with any men's persons, or say they are contemptible, or their means indirect, or ends sinister? Where do I say all this? Do I speak any word of Reformers of Religion in general, as you make me to do. But this you add of your own, in a vast universal notion, to the end you may bring in the apostles and prophets, and kings, into the list of persons by me surnamed contemptible, and liken my speech, who never speak any such thing, to the sarcasms of Celsus, Lucian, Porphiry, Julian, and other Pagans. So likewise in the very beginning of this your second chapter you spend four leaves in a parallel betwixt me and the pagan Celsus, whereof there is not any one member of it true. Doth Fiat Lux, say you, lay the cause of all the troubles, disorders, tumults, wars within the nations of Europe upon the Protestants? Doth he charge the Protestants, that by their schisms and seditions they make a way for other revolts? doth he gather a rhapsody of insignificant words? doth he insist upon their divisions? doth he manage the argument of the Jews against Christ, etc. So doth Celsus, who is confuted by learned Origen, etc. Where does Fiat Lux, where does he, does he, does he any such thing? Are you not ashamed to talk at this rate? I give a hint indeed of the divisions that be amongst us, and the frequent argumentations that are made to embroil and puzzle one another, with our much evil, and little appearance of any good, in order to unity and peace, which is the end of my discourse. But must I therefore be Celsus? Did Celsus do any such thing to such an end? It is the end that moralises and specifies the action. To diminish Christianity by upbraiding our frailties is paganish: to exhort to unity by representing the inconvenience of factor, is a Christian and pious work. When honest Protestants in the Pulpit speak ten times more full and vehemently against the divisions, wars, and contentions that be amongst us, than ever came into my thoughts; must they therefore be, every one of them a Celsus, a pagan Celsus? what stuff is this! But it is not only my defamation you aim at, your own glory comes in the rear. If I be Celsus, the pagan Celsus; then must you forsooth be Origen that wrote against him, honest Origen. That is the thing. Pray Sir, it is but a word, let me me advise you by the way, that you do not forget yourself in your heat, and give your wife occasion to fall out with you. However you may, yet will not she like it perhaps so well, that her husband should be Origen. My sixth principle must be, That our departure from Rome hath been the cause of all our evils. This is but the same with the fourth, in other words, but added for one to make up the number. And it is, you say, every where spread over the face of Fiat Lux. Sir you may say what you pleas, to be in his face, but I know best what is in the heart and bowels, both of Fiat Lux, and his Author. And sure I am this never came into my thoughts. Our dissensions in faith may well multiply, as we see with our eyes they do, by our further departur from unity; and this may cause much evil. But the branches of our too too manifold evils found among the sons of men, spread all, as Fiat Lux also speaks, from that fertile root of our innate concupiscence, which by evil customs rises up into a thick bowl of vicious inclinations, while we study not to impair, but rather to augment and nourish it. However I must give you leave to number this among my silly principles, to the end you may talk more copiously of the disputes, and wars and broils that are and have been in several parts of Christendom, and fall again into your much affected and often iterated strain. So the Pagans judged the Primitive Christians, etc. And I must still be the Pagan, and you the Primitive Christian. Seventh is, There is no remedy of our evils, but by a returning to the Roman Sea. This and the principle foregoing, had not you warily cloven a hair, had been all one, and both are equally mine. But Sir, that may remedy our difference in faith, which neither can nor will prevent varieties in philosophy or other worldly judgements: nor considering the infinite diversity of men's humours, is there any one thing equally prevalent with all men, and at all times, to the like good effect; and if it do certainly help one evil, it is not therefore a remedy for all. But it seems you have yet a little more mirth and choler to vent, and therefore I must permit you to add this principle for mine, that you may smilingly consider, how the Romans should cure our evils, that cannot prevent disorders, differences, and sins amongst themselves. I can tell you Sir another remedy of our evils, that we suffer about dissensions in Religion, besides that. If the King and Parliament would pleas to give back all the ecclesiastical livings into the hands of secular gentlemen, who out of a blind zeal, as you phrase it, gave them up aforetime unto the pious uses of spiritual men now no more extant, all our controversies and the evils thence ensuing would soon cease. Even you zealous Sir, would be then as quiet, as a wolf tumbled into a pitfall. Other remedies I could yet acquaint you with, more than one or two. If you did Sir really, and not in words only acknowledge any one superior governor in the land, unto whose power and judgement you would heartily all of you resign, the word of that Oracle would solve all doubts, and end all your quarrels. But you will never do it. The very genius of the Reformation is wholly set against it. The eight follows, That Scripture on sundry accounts is insufficient to settle us in the truth. And in this you flourish and triumph most copiously for fifteen pages together, as the champion of the word of God. But Sir, you speak not one word to the purpose, or against me at all, if I had delivered any such principle, which I never did. God's word is both the sufficient and only necessary means both of our conversion and settlement as well in truth as virtue. But Sir, the thing you heed not, and unto which I only speak, if I any where hint at such a thing, is this: If the Scripture be in two hands, for example of the Protestant Church in England, and of the Puritan, who with that scripture rose up and rebelled against her, can the scripture alone of it self decide the business, how shall it do it, has it ever done it? or can that written word now folitary and in private hands so settle any in a way that neither himself nor present adherents, nor future generations shall question it, or with as much probability descent from it either totally or in part, as himself first set it. This Sir is the case, unto which you do neither here nor in all your whole book speak one word. And what you speak otherwis of the Scriptures excellency, I allow it for good. What is not against me, is with me. But no law whatsoever, whether divine or humane can be a sufficient rule to men, if no judge oversee it. Ninth, The Pope is a good man, and seeks nothing but our good. This also I no where aver. I might mention the care and industry of that Sea, and affirm it to be unworthily traduced. But I never saw any Pope, nor have I any such acquaintance with him, as to know whether he be a good man in your sense or no, free from pride, anger, covetousness, etc. though in charity I do not use to judge hardly of any body. Much less could I say, that he whom I know to have a general solicitude for all Churches, seeks nothing but our good. Sir, if I had pondered my words in Fiat Lux, no better than you heed yours in your Animadversions upon it, they might even go together both of them to lap pepper and spice, or some other yet more vile employment. Tenth, that the devotion of Catholics far transcends that of Protestants. But Sir I never made in Fiat Lux any comparison between their devotions, nor do I remember that I ever so much as mentioned the devotion of Protestants. But you are the maddest Commentatour I have ever seen, you first make the Text, and then Animadversions upon it. Here at length you conclude your chapter, and would, say you, your book also; if you had none to deal with, but ingenious and judicious readers. It seems what follows, is for readers neither judicious nor ingenious. And because I knew you took me for one of those, I went on in my view. Indeed, had I not undertaken to give you an account of your whole book, I could have been well content to stop here with ingenious and judicious readers, and look no further. Doubtless in this affair good wits will jump. You would write no more, had you none but judicious readers; and these will read no more, because they are judicious. But I poor ass must jog on. 3 ch. from page 110. to 119. Your third chapter concerns my preface, which in part you allow, and partly dislike. And I am equally content with both. 4 or 5 ch. from page 119. to 148. Your fourth chapter by mistake of press is named fifth, and so I must here call it. It begins my book, and takes up five of my paragraffs at once. You have loitered long about the gate like a trifling idlesbee, and means now it seems, when you come to my own words, to go nimbly over them, as of lesser concernment than your own forestalled conceits, which you have hitherto made sport with. You first set up a maypole, and then danced about it, and now at length half tired, and almost out of breath, you come home to me. My first paragraff about Diversity of feuds you do not much except against. But I see you do not affect the schoolmen, haply for the same reason the French love not Talbot, having been used in their infancy to be frighted with that name. However you think I have good reason to make honourable mention of them, because they were, say you, the hammerers and forgers of Popery. Alas Sir, I see that anger spoils your memory; for in the twelfth and thirteenth chapter of that very book of your Animadversions, you make Popery to be hammered and forged not a few hundred of years, before any schoolmen were extant. You check me also for saying, that reformation of religion is pretended by emulous Plebians, as though, say you, Hezekiah, Josiah, and other good Kings and Princes also of our own were emulous Plebeians. But Sir, when I say in Fiat Lux, p. 20. what glory the emulous Plebeian sees given to higher spirits, etc. I only speak of the times of vulgar insurrection against authority; as all men see except yourself, who will not. My second paragraff of the Ground of quarrels you like well enough, and explicate it with a text to help me out. I could not haply tell, how to cite James, the fourth chapter, the first and second verse of that chapter, without your help. However, it is kindness though it be but course, as Sir Thomas Moor told his maid, when she kissed him as he was going to execution; and so I take it. My third paragraff about nullity of title, would, you think, every period of it confute myself. But that saying of S. Paul, An à vobis verbum Dei processit, an ad vos solos pervenit, which I make use of to stop the mouths of all vitilitigatours in religion, was cited by me, you think, in an unhappy hour; because, say you, there is not any one single text of scripture more satal to papal pretensions. And why so Sir? Because the Gospel you say, came to Rome as well as it came to us here in England. And this is all you say, to prove that text to be so fatal to papal pretensions. To this Sir I have already told you, that it came not to us as it came to Rome: and now I tell you again, that it came to us from Rome, and not to Rome from us. And therefore is that text fatal to us, not to them: It may open their mouths, but I am sure it stops ours. Heats and resolutions, the subject of my fourth paragraff, which yourself will not countenance, you will not permit me to dislike. You may talk against them, and I may not. But I may be excused; for I knew not then, such a man of art as yourself, would speak of that he understood better than I do. The motives of moderation in my sixth paragraff you laugh at; and I will not stop your merriment. But in all this say you Fiat Lux hath a secret design, which your eagle-sighted eye has discovered. And in vain is the net spread before the eyes of a thing that hath a wing. And I must know, that the author of Animadversions, it that thing that hath a wing. 6 ch. from page 148. to 177. Your sixth chapter, which meets just with my sixth paragraff of the Obscurity of God, in the beginning, where you declare the sufficient knowledge we have of God by divine revelation, whereunto by our humble belief we have subscribed our consent, is right and good; but not at all against me, who there treat a case of metaphysical concernment, which you apprehend not. It is no wonder then, you should so much dislike all that my plea of uncertainty, not only before any teacher appear, but after too; whiles you take the teacher and his words as they walk hand in hand actually linked together with our belief in him; which actual belief my supposition suspends and separates, to the end I may consider whether any such teacher can appear so accomplished as to move us, who live in this present age, and coin religion anew, to a belief invariable: so that through your too much haste, you utterly mistake all my whole discourse, and speak nothing at all to the case I treat of. I speak wholly there, as in other parts of Fiat Lux, upon a supposition of the condition, the generality of people are now actually in, here in England, where every one lets himself loose at pleasure to frame opinions and religions of themselves. And so cannot be thought to speak of a settled belief, but only of settling one, or one to be settled; which there and elsewhere in that book, I endeavour to show impossible to be so fixedly stated by any private man, but that himself and others may rationally doubt it. And that therefore our only way is to believe and not dispute, to submit to the old way we have formerly received, and not to surmise a new. This is the very substance, scope and purpose not only of that paragraff, but of my whole book, which you do as utterly swerve from, as ever any blinded man, put to thrash a cock, misplaced his blow. Perhaps it is hard for you to conceiv yourself in a state you are not actually in at present: And if you cannot do this, you will be absolutely unfit to deal with such hypothetik discourses, as I see indeed you are. Beauties' little catechise had been a fitter book for you to write Animadversions upon, than my Fiat Lux. There is good positive doctrine, signed hic & nunc, and specified to your inclination and capacity. I meddle not with any; I deliver no positive doctrine at all; I never descend to any particular conclusion or thesis of faith; I defend no opinion but only this, That every opinion is defensible, and yet nonc impregnable. Do you not blush Sir, to see your own gross mistake. God is my witness, when I find you, misled by your own error, so furiously to tax me with ignorance, fraud, blasphemy, atheism, I cannot but pity you. And generally you talk at random, as well in this chapter as others. Let me give some little hint of it in particular, for this once. Where I in my foresaid paragraff say, that differences of faith in its branches are apt to infer a suspicion in its very root, and consequently atheism. To this you reply, that That discourse of mine is all rotten: that Christian religion itself might thus be questioned: that it is the argument of the Pagan Celsus: that such contests have ever been: that Protestants are resolved: that Catholics turn atheists as well as others: that our religion is the same yesterday and to day: that our evils are from ourselves, & c. Doth this talk concern or plead to my assertion? I know all this, as well as you; but that it is nothing to the purpose, that I know, and you it seems do not. Though all this you say be true, yet still it remains notwithstanding as true and certain as it was before, and that is certain enough, That difference of faith in its branches are apt to infer a suspicion in its very root, and consequently atheism. You have but beaten the air. So likewise unto all that discourse of mine, If the Papist or Roman Catholik, who first brought us the news of our Christianity, be now become so odious, then may likewise the whole story of our Christianity be at length thought a Romance. You speak with the like extravagancy, and mind not my hypothetick at all, to speak directly to my inference, as it became a man of art to do. But neglecting my consequence, which in that discourse is principally and solely intended, you seem to deny my supposition; which, if my discourse had been drawn into a syllogism, would have been the minor part of it. And it consists of two categories; first, that the Papist is now become odious: second, that the Papist delivered us the first news of Christianity. The first of these you little heed; the second you deny; That the Papist, say you, or Roman Catholic first brought Christ and his Christianity into this land is most untrue, I wonder, etc. And your reason is, because if any Romans came hither, they were not Papists, and indeed our Christianity came from the East, namely by Joseph of Arimathea, etc. And this is all you say to my hypothetick or conditional ratiocination; as if I had said nothing at all but that one absolute category, which being delivered before, I now only suppose. You use to call me a civil logician, but I fear a natural one as you are, will hardly be able to justify this motion of yours as artificial. A conditional hath a verity of its own, so far differing from the supposed category, that this being falls that may yet be true. For example, if I should say thus: A man who hath wings as an eagle, or if a man had wings as an eagle, he might fly in the air, as well as another bird. Such an assertion is not to be confuted by proving that a man hath not the wings of an eagle. Yet so you deal with me here, a great master of arts with a civil logician. But, that I may go along with you, we had not Sir our Christianity immediately from the East, nor from Joseph of Arimathea, as I have already told you, we Englishmen had not. For as he delivered his Christianity to some Britons, when our land was not called England but Albion, or Britain, and the inhabitants were not Englishmen but Britons or Kimbrians, so likewise did that Christianity and the whole news of it quite vanish, being suddenly overwhelmed by the ancient deluge of paganism: nor did it ever come from them to us. Nay, the Britons themselves had so forgot and lost it, that even they also needed a second conversion, which they received from Pope Eleutherius. And that was the only news of Christianity which prevailed and lasted even amongst the very Britain's: which seems to me a great secret of divine providence in planting and governing his Church; as if he would have nothing to stand firm and lasting, but what was immediately fixed and seated upon that rock. For all other conversions have vanished, and the very seats of the other Apostles failed, that all might the better cement in an unity of one head. Nay the tables which God made with his own hand were broken, but the other framed by Moses remained, that we might learn to give a due respect to him whom God hath set over us as our head and ruler under him, and none exalt himself against him. I know you will laugh at this my observation, but I cannot but tell you what I think. To return then to my former discourse; when I speak good Sir, of the news of Christianity first brought to this land, I mean not that which was first brought upon the earth or soil of this land, and spoken to any body then dwelling here; but which was delivered to the forefathers of the now present inhabitants, who be Saxes or Englishmen. And I say that we, the now present inhabitants of England, offspring of the English or Saxons, had the first news of our Christianity immediately from Rome, and from Pope Gregorius the Roman Patriarch, by the hands of his missioner St. Austin. And this all men know to be as true, as they know that Papists are now become odious. Sith then the categorick assertions are both clear; namely, that the Papist first brought us the news of Christianity; and secondly, that the Papist is now become odious amongst us; what say you to my consequence? that the whole story of Christianity may as well be deemed a Romance, as any part of that Christianity we at first received, as now judged to be part of a Romance. This consequence of mine it behoved a man of those great parts you would be thought to have, to heed attentively; and yet you never mind it. You add in the close of your discourse, that many things delivered us at first with the first news of Christianity may be afterwards rejected for the love of Christ, and by the commission of Christ? But Sir, what love of Christ dictates, what commission of Christ allows you, to choos and reject at your own pleasure? what heretic was ever so much a fool, as not to pretend the love of Christ, and commission of Christ for what he did? How shall any one know you do it, out of any such either love or commission? sith those who delivered the articles of faith now rejected, pretended equal love of Christ and commission of Christ, for the delivery of them, as of any other. And why may we not at length reject all the rest, for love of something else? when this love of Christ, which is now crept out into the very outside of our lips, is slipped off thence. Do you think men cannot find a cavil against him, as well as his law delivered unto us with the first news of him? and as easily dig up the root, as cut up the branches? Is not the thing already done, and many become atheists upon that account? Pray speak to me something of reason. Did not the Jews by pretense of their love to that immortal God, whom their forefathers served, reject the whole Gospel at once? and why may not we possibly as well do it by peece-meals! Let us leave cavils: Grant my supposition which you know you cannot deny: then speak to my consequence, which I deem most strong and good, to infer a conclusion which neither you nor I can grant. I tell you plainly and without tergiversation, before God and all his holy angels, what I should think, if I descended unto any conclusion in this affair. And it is this: either the Papist, who holds at this day all those articles of faith which were delivered at the first conversion of this land by St. Austin, is unjustly become odious amongst us; or else my honest Parsons throw off your cassocks, and resign your benefices and glebe-lands into the hands of your neighbours, whose they were aforetime: my consequence is irrefragable. If any part, much more if many parts, great substantial parts of religion brought into the land with the first news of Christianity, be once rejected (as they are now amongst us) as Romish or Romancical, and that rejection or reformation be permitted, then may other parts and all parts, if the gap be not stopped, be looked upon at length as points of no better a condition. Nay it must needs be so: for the same way and means that lopped off some branches, will do the like to others, and root too: A vilification of that Church, wherein they find themselves, who have a mind to prevaricate, upon pretense of Scritur and power of interpreting, light, spirit, or reason, adjoined with a personal obstinacy that will not submit, will do it roundly and to effect. This first brought off the Protestants from the Roman catholic Church; this lately separated the Presbyterian from the English Protestant Church, the Independent from the Presbyterian, the Quaker from other Independents. And this last good man heeds nothing of Christian religion but only the moral part, which in deed and truth is but honest paganism. This speech is worthy of all serious consideration. And I could with you would ponder it seriously. See if the Quaker deny not as resolutely the regenerating power of baptism, as you the efficacy of absolution. See if the Presbyterian do not with as much reason evacuate the prelacy of Protestants, as they the Papacy. See if the Socinian arguments against the Trinity, be not as strong as your against the real presence in the Eucharist. See if the Jew do not with as much plausibility deride Christ, as you his Church. See if Porphiry, Julian, and other ancient pagans, do not as strongly confute all Christianity, as we any part of it. He is a fool, that having a will and power enough, cannot find out as plausible a pretence for the pulling down of Churches, as we had any for the destroying of Monasteries. There be books lately set forth, and by more than one author here in this land, which do as powerfully dissipate the conceit we once had of hell, as any ever did elude Purgatory. Did we not lately find out texts and reasonings against out King and monarchy, as many as we found out long ago against Pope and popery? God's providence and our souls immortality if any list to deny, he may have more abundant argumentations every where occurring, than any other piece of popery now rejected ever felt. If one text of scripture be by a trope of rhetoric made to speak a sens, contrarty to what was believed in catholic times in any one point, cannot another text by some such slight be forced to frustrate another. I am sure it may do so, and has done so. And thus when all articles are at last by such tricks of wit cashiered, can there be wanting several appearing incongruities, contradictions, tautologies, improbabilities, to disable all holy writ at once. And cannot the Jew afford us at last arguments enough, to dissipate at length the very name of Christ out of the world, which after the whole extirpation of his law, will but float on men's lips like an empty shadow, till it quite vanish. These things Sir, are not only true, but clear and evident. And nothing is wanting to justify them, but a serious consideration. These few words Sir, which I have bestowed upon you by way of supererogation, above what I needed, will somewhat enlighten you to discern the goodness and necessity of my consequence. If the Papist who first brought us the news of Christianity be now become odious, then may all Christianity at length be thought a Romance, etc. Religion like a house, if a breach be once made and not repaired to former unity, will by degrees all moulder away, till no one room be left entire. 7 ch. from page 177. to 188. Your seventh chapter finished in five leaves, runs, or flies over two or three of my paragraffs at once, which make up above fifty pages, concerning the obscurity of Nature and Providence. All which discourse of mine is, you say, nothing to my purpose, but foisted in for a blind to entertain my readers. But Sir, those judicious readers you lately left behind you, who discern my purpose better than I see you do, will tell you, that it is so much to my purpose, that nothing could be more. At least you let all pass without either censure or commendation, till you meet happily at length with a word or two of mine (let fall in my ninth paragraff called Help) about scripture. This makes your heart leap; it is a common place you know how to sport in, and you never meet with that sound, but it makes you dance. Your chapter then, which is written against all my philosophical discourse of nature and providence, is called scripture vindicated, as though I had industriously wrote against scripture. And therein you sweetly dilate upon the excellency and goodness of the word of God, as if I had any way diminished it, or wrote against it; just according to the tone of our late dismal times, Lord, I am for thy cause Lord, I am left alone to plead thy cause Lord against thine enemies. But Sir, the few words I there speak, only incidentally, in the end of that my paragraff called Help, concerning the surmises that men have about scriptures as they be but a small part of the many, which I know to be now vented up and down the land in this our present state of separation one from another; so if I had not given some touch of them in that metaphysic abstracted discourse of Fiat Lux, which proceeds, as I have said upon a supposition of our choosing and making religions here in England at pleasure, unto endless differences and divisions, it had been a maimed and imperfect work, and no ways satisfactory unto those judicious readers unto whom I write, though you do not. And I cannot but tell you, whatsoever you think of yourself, you are in truth, except you dissemble and mistake on purpose, but a weak man, to take that as spoken absolutely by me, and by way of positive doctrine, which I only deliver upon an hypothesis apparent to all the world besides yourself. You would make a mad commentatour upon Solomon's Ecclesiastes. I speak upon a supposition of doubting, which these times have brought upon us, of interpreting, accepting, rejecting, framing, forging religions and opinions to ourselves; and you reply against me words and discourses that presuppose an assent of believing. If a man believe, he cannot doubt. And if he doubt not of the scriptures truth, he cannot make exceptions against any of its properties. But if any begin to question this or that, or other part of doctrine contained in scripture, and delivered by those who first brought it, as every one does who swerves from the Church he found himself in; then I suppose such a one doubts. And being now thereby separated from that body of believers to which he before by faith adhered, he cannot now left to himself, but proceed, if he give attendance to the conduct of his own surmising thoughts, to more suspicions than I was willing to express. But Sir, what you say here, and so often up and down your book, of Papists contempt of scripture, I beseech you will please to abstain from it for the time to come: I have conversed with the Roman catholics' of France, Flanders, and Germany; I have read more of their books, both histories, contemplatives, and scholastic divines, than I believe you have ever seen or heard of. I have seen the devotion both of common people, colleges of sacred priests, and religious houses, I have communed with all sorts of people, and perused their counsels. And after all this, I tell you, and out of my love I tell you, that their respect to scripture is real, absolute and cordial even to admiration. Others may talk of it, but they act it, and would be ready to stone that man that should diminish holy writ. Let us not wrong the innocent. The scripture is theirs, and Jesus Christ is theirs, who also will plead their cause when he sees time. 8 ch. from page 188 to 198. In your eight chapter, which falls upon my paragraff of Reason, you are absolutely in a wood, and wonder more than ordinary, how that discourse of mine, concerning reason to be excluded from the employment of framing articles of religion, can any ways concern Protestants, or be a confutation of Protestants. As though Fiat Lux were written to any such concernment against Protestants. Your head is so full, it seems of that controverting faculty for Protestants against Papists, that if Popery be but mentioned in a book without an epithet of detestation, you conclude presently, that the book is written for Popery against Protestants. And if every thing therein contained, answer not the idea of your brain, than it is impertinent with you, it is silly, it is besides the purpose. And this censur you have given, still as you have gone along all my whole book hitherto, of every part and parcel of it, even from my preface to this present paragraff of Reason. You cannot see how all that vain flourishing discourse of mine, concerning diversity of feuds, ground of quarrels, nullity of title, heats and resolution, motives to moderation, obscurity of God, nature and providence, or the like, should confute Protestancy, or any way concern Protestants. And therefore it is wholly impertinent. Thus the famous Knight, when he had once conceived an idea of his own errantry, every flock of sheep must be an army, and every windmill a giant, or else it is impertinent to Don Quixot. 9 ch. from page 198 to 213. Your ninth chapter upon my paragraff of Light and Spirit; is wholly spent, neglecting all my other discourse, in solving the Jewish objection, which I answer myself. And if you have added any thing better than mine, I shall be thankful for it as soon as I see it. But I fear your vaunting flourishes about scripture which you love to talk on, will not without the help of your Credo and humble resignation, solve the argument; which that you may the easilier be quit of, you never examine; but only run on in your usual flourishes about the use and excellency of God's word. I told you in Fiat Lux, what the Jew will reply to all such reasonings, but you have the pregnant wit not to heed any thing that may hinder your flourishes. But Sir, if you were kept up in a chamber with a learned Jew, without bread water and fire, till you had satisfied him in that objection; I am still well enough assured, for all your airy vaunts, that if you do not make use of your Credo, which here you contemn, you might there stay till hunger and cold had made an end of you. But I believe you love not such dry blows; however you may be delighted with pen encounters at a distance, where after your suppositum has been well inspired with the warm spirits blown hither out of the fortunate islands, you may cavil revile and threaten at your pleasure, and knock down the shadow of your adversary which your own spirits have raised up, and presented to you in your chamber. 10 ch. from page 213 to 228. Your tenth chapter runs over two of my paragraffs, which speak the plea of Independents, Presbyterians, and Protestants. That you esteem idle, the other senseless, the last insufficient. And to make this last good, you endeavour to disable both what I have set down to make against the prelate Protestant, and also what I have said for him. I said in Fiat Lux, that it made not a little against our Protestants, that after the prelate Protestancy was settled in England, they were forced for their own preservation against Puritans, to take up some of those principles again, which former Protestants had cast down for Popish, as is the authority of a visible Church, efficacy of ordination, difference between clergy and laiety, etc. Here first you deny that those principles are popish. But Sir, there be some Jews even at this day, who will deny any such man as Pontius Pilate, to have ever been in Jury. I have other things to do, than to fill volumes with useless texts, which here I might easily do, out of the books both of the first reformers, and catholic divines and counsels. Then secondly you challenge me to prove, that those principles were ever denied by our prelate Protestants. And this you do wittily and like yourself. You therefore bid me prove that those principles were ever denied by our prelate Protestants, because I say, that our prelate Protestant's here in England, as soon as they became such, took up again those forenamed principles, which Protestants their forefathers both here in England and beyond the seas, before our prelacy was set up, had still rejected. When I say then, that our prelate Protestant affirmed and asserted those principles which former Protestants denied; you bid me prove that our prelate Protestant ever denied them. Thus you contradict what I say is pleaded against our prelate Protestant. And again you do as stiffly gainsay what I plead for him myself. You laugh at me even with head and shoulders, and tell me, that the prelate-Protestant has far better arguments for themselves, then either mine is, or any I can bring; nor do they need the help of such a weak logician as myself, in this their cause. Sir give me leave to tell you here once for all, that I thought it sufficient for my design, to set down either for Papist or Protestant, when occasion required, such reasons as appeared plausible to myself; and to say all for them that can be said, was neither the work of my small ability, nor any purpose of my design. And it is enough to me, that I know no better. But let us see what my argument is, and how you crush it. The Church, say I, must have a bishop, or otherwise she will not have such a visible head, as she had at first, etc. This that you may evacuate, you tell me, that the Church hath still the same head she had, which is Christ, who is present with his Church by his Spirit and laws, and is man-God still as much as ever he was, and ever the same will be: and if I would have any other visible bishop to be that head, than it seems I would not have the same head, and so would have the same and yet not the same. Thus you speak. But Sir, I cannot in any reason be thought to speak otherwise, if we would use true logic, of the identity of the head, than I do of the identity of the body of the Church. This body is not numerically the same: for the men of the first age are long ago gone out of the world, and another generation come, who yet are a body of Christians of the same kind; because they adhere to the same principles of faith. And as the body is of the same kind, though not numerically the same; so do I require, that since Jesus Christ as man, the head immediate of other believing men, is departed hence to the glory of his Father, that the Church should still have a head of the same kind, as visibly now present, as she had in the beginning; or else say I, she cannot be completely the same body, or a body of the same kind she was. But this she hath not, this she is not, except she have a visible by shop, as she had in the beginning, present with her, guiding and ruling under God. Christ our Lord is indeed still man-God, but this manhood is now separate; nor is he visibly now present as man, which immediately headed his believers under God, on whose influence that nature depended. His Godhead is still the same in all things, not only in itself, but in order also to his Church, as it was before, equally invisible, and in the like manner believed; but the nature delegate under God, and once ruling visibly amongst us by words and examples, is now utterly withdrawn. And if a nature of the same kind, be not now delegate with a power of exterior government, as at the first there was, then hath not the Church the same head now, which she had then, nor is she the same polity or body she was before: Qui habet aures audiendi audiat. And here by the way we may take notice what a sincere English Protestant you are, who labour so stoutly to evacuate my argument for episcopacy, and leave none of your own behind you, nor acquaint the world with any, although you know far better; but would make us believe notwithstanding those far better reasons for prelacy, that Christ himself, as he is the immediate and only head of the invisible influence, so is he likewise the only and immediate head of visible direction and government among us, without the interposition of any person delegate in his stead, to oversee and rule under him in his Church on earth: which is against the tenor both of sacred gospel, and S. Paul's epistles, and all antiquity, and the present ecclesiastic polity of England; and is the doctrine not of any English Protestant, but of the Presbyterian, Independent, and Quaker. Christ then in your way is immediate head not only of subministration and influence, but of exterior direction and government to his Church. Pray tell me, is he such an immediate head to all believers, or no? if he be to all, then is no man to be governed in affairs of religion by any other man; and Presbyterian Ministers are as needless, as either Catholic or Protestant bishops. On the other side, if he be not immediate head to all, but ministers head the people, and Christ heads the ministers, this in effect is nothing else, but to make every minister a bishop. Why do you not plainly say, what it is more than manifest you would have. All this while you heed no more the laws of the land, than constitutions of gospel. As for gospel; That Lord, who had been visible governor and pastor of his flock on earth, when he was now to depart hence, as all the apostles expected one to be chosen to succeed him in his care, so did he, notwithstanding his own invisible presence and providence over his flock, publicly appoint one. And when he taught them, that he who were greatest among them should be as the least, he did not deny but suppose one greater, and taught in one and the same breath, both that he was over them, and for what he was over them, namely to feed, not to tyrannize, not to domineer, abuse, and hurt, but to direct, comfort, and conduct his flock in all humility and tenderness, as the servant of all their spiritual necessities. And if a bishop be otherwise affected, it is the fault of his person, not his place. As for the laws of the land, it is there most strongly decreed by the consent and authority of the whole Kingdom, not only that bishops are over ministers, but that the King's majesty is head of bishops also in the line of hierarchy, from whose hand they receiv both their place and jurisdiction. This was established not only by one, but several acts and constitutions, both in the reign of King Edward and Queen Elizabeth. So that by the laws of the land there be two greeces between ministers and Christ; which you cut off, to the end you may secretly usurp the authority and place of both, to the overthrow at once both of gospel and our law too. By the laws of our land our series of ecclesiastical government stands thus. God Christ King Bishop Ministers People the Presbyterian predicament is this, God Christ Minister People. So that the Ministers head in the Presbyterian predicament, touches Christ's feet immediately, and nothing intervenes. You pretend indeed, that hereby you do exalt Christ; but this is a mere cheat, as all men may see with their eyes; for Christ is but where he was; but the minister indeed is exalted, being now set in the King's place, one degree higher than the bishops, who by the law is under both King and bishop too. You will here say to me, What is the Papists line of Church government. There the Pope must sit next Christ, and Kings under his feet. Sir, I have not time in this short letter to discourse this subject as it deserves. Nor does it now concern me, who have no more here to say than only this; that my argument for prelacy, howsoever in your words you may disable it, is not weakened by you in deeds at all, and as far as I can perceiv, not understood. Yet two things I shall tell you over and above what I need in this affair also. First is, that Roman catholics' do more truly and cordially acknowledge the respective Christian King of any Kingdom to be supreme head of his catholic subjects even in affairs of religion, than any other, whether Independents, Presbyterians, or even prelate Protestant's have, if we speak of truth and reality, ever done. And this I could easily make good both by the laws and practices of all catholic kingdoms upon earth in any age on one side, and the opposite practices of all Protestants on the other. Second is, that for what reasons Roman catholics' deny a prince to be head of the Church, for the same aught all others as they deny it in deeds, so, if they would speak sincerely as they think and act, to deny it in words also as well as they. For catholics' do believe him to be head of the Church, from whom the channel of religion and all direction in it is derived and slows; for which reason a spring is said to be head of a river. But neither does any King upon earth, except he be priest and prophet too, ever trouble himself to derive religion, as the Pope has ever done: neither does either Protestant, Presbyterian or Independent, either in England or elsewhere, ever seek for religion from the lips of the king, or supplicate unto him when any doubt arises in those affairs, as they ought in conscience and honesty to do, for a final decision, any more than the Roman catholic does. So that whatever any of them may say, all Protestants do as much deny the thing in their behaviour, as catholics' do in words; and catholics' do in their behaviour observe as much, as Protestants either practise or pretend. What is the reason that Roman catholics' in all occurring difficulties of faith, both have their recours unto their papal Pastor, (unto whom Kings themselves remit them) and acquiesce also to his decision and judgement, but only because they believe him to be head of the Church. And if Protestants have no such recours, nor will not acquiesce to his Majesty's authority in affairs of religion, but proceed to wars and quarrels without end, the prince neglected as wholly unconcerned in those resolus, they do as manifestly deny his headship, as if they professed none. Nay, to acknowledge a headship in words, and deny it in deeds, is but mockery. By these two words Sir, it may appear, that the King's majesty is as much head of the Church to Roman catholics as to any Protestants; and these no more than they either derive religion or decision of their doubts from the king's chair, Ith' interim it is a shame and general scandal to the whole world, that we in England should neither supplicate nor acquiesce in affairs of religion to his Majesty's judgement, whom in words we acknowledge head of the Church, but fight and quarrel without end; and yet have the confidence to upbraid Roman catholics' with a contrary belief, who although they ever looked upon their papal patriarch as spiritual head and pastor and deriver of their faith, unto whom they so submit, that he who after his decision remains contumacious forfeits his Christianity, yet have they notwithstanding in all ages and kingdoms resigned with a most ready cordial reverence unto all decisions, orders and acts of their temporal princes even in spiritual and ecclesiastical affairs, as well as civil, so far as their laws reached, as supreme head and governor's of their respective kingdoms. And all kings and princes find in a very short space, however others may utter hypocritical words of flattery, that indeed none but catholic subjects do heed and fear and observe them universally, in all whatever their commands, being taught by their religion, of which they alone give account at times appointed for penance, to hearken and obey for conscience sake all higher powers, constituted over them for good. That catholics' do universally observe their King in all affairs as well ecclesiastic as civil, I need not, to make it good, send you Sir either to the testimonies of civil law and Codex of Justinian, or the othervarious constitutions of so many several provinces and kingdoms, as are and have been in Christendom, our own home will suffice to justify it. Were not the spiritual courts, both court Christian, Prerogative court and Chancery, all set up in catholic times, about matters of religion, and affairs of conscience, and all managed by clerks or clergymen under the King? In brief, where ever any civil coaction or coactive power intervenes, be it in what affair it will, all such power and action who ever uses it, hath it autoritatively only from the King. For neither Pope, nor Bishop, nor any Priest ought to be a striker, as S. Paul teaches: nor have they any lands, or livings, or court, or power to compel or punish either in goods or body, but what is lent or given by princes and princely men, out of their love and respect to Jesus Christ and his holy gospel, whose news they first conveyed about the world; although a just donation is, I should think, as good a title, as either emption, inheritance, or conquest, if it be irrevocable. The King is the only striker in the land ex jure, and the sword of the almighty is only in his hand; and none can compel or punish either in body or goods, but only himself, or others by his commission, in any whatever affair. He can either by his authority and laws blunt the sword of those who have one in their hand, whether by pact or nature, as have masters over servants, and parents over children; or put a civil power into the hands of those who otherwise have none, as prelate's, priests, and bishops. So that although the Pope derive religion, and chiefly direct in it, yet is the King the only head of all civil coercition, as well in Church affairs as any other, which his commands and laws do reach unto. So that the line of Church government amongst catholics', since the conversion of kings, runs in two streams; the one is of direction, the other of coercition. That of direction is from Christ to the chief pastor, from him to patriarches, then to metropolitans, archbyshops, bishops, priests, and people: and in this line is no corporal coaction at all, except it be borrowed; nor any other power to punish, but only by debarring men from sacraments. In the other line of corporal power and authority the King is immediately under God the Almighty, from whom he receivs the sword to keep and defend the dictates of truth and justice, as fupream governor, though himself for direction and faith be subject to the Church from whose hands he received it, as well as other people his subjects; after the King succeed his princes and governor's in order, with that portion of power all of them, which they have from him their liege sovereign received. This in brief of papal Church government, which we in England by our canting talk of the Lord Christ, to the end we may be all lords and all Christ's, have utterly subverted. Indeed in primitive times the channel of religion for three hundred years ran apart, and separate from civil government which in those days persecuted it. And then the line of Christian government was unmixed. None but priests guided, defended, governed the Church and Christian flock; which they did by the power of their faith, virtue, secret strength, and courage in Jesus their Lord invisible. Afterward it pleased the God of mercies, to move the hearts of emperor's and king's of the earth, to submit unto a participation of grace; which they were more easily inclined by the innocence and sanctity of Christian faith, especially in that particular of peaceful obedience unto kings and rulers, though aliens, and pagans, and persecutors of religion. And now kings being made Christian were looked upon by their subjects with a double reverence, more loved, more feared, more honoured than before. Nor could Christian people now tell how to express that ineffable respect they bore their Kings, now coheirs of heaven, with them, whom before in their very paganism they were taught by their priests to observe as gods upon earth, not for wrath only or fear of punishment, but for conscience also, and danger of hazarding not only their temporal contents, but their eternal salvation also, for their resisting authority though resident in pagans. And Kings on the other side, who aforetime by the counsel of worldly senators enacted laws, such as they thought fit for present policy, and defended them by the sword of justice, wielden under God to the terror of evil doers and defence of the innocent, began now, as was incumbent on their duty, to use that sword for the protection of Christianity, and faith, and the better way now chalked out unto them by Christian priests, from Jesus the wisdom and Son of God. And by the direction of the same holy prelate's, abbots, and other priests, who were now admitted with other senators into counsel, did they in all places enact special and particular laws answerable to the general rule of faith, which they found to be more excellent and perfect, than any judgement they had by natural reason hitherto difcovered. Thus poor Christians, who had hitherto but only a head of derivation, of counsel and direction, which could but only bid them have patience for Christ's sake, and conform themselves to his meek passion, when they suffered from aliens, and when they suffered injury from one another, could only debar the evil doer, if he gave not satisfaction, from further use of sacraments; those Christians I say, who could hitherto have no other comfort or assistance in this world under their spiritual pastor, than what words of piety could afford, had now by the grace of heaven princely protectors, royal defenders, and head champions under God, to vindicate and make good all Christian rights, discipline, and truths now accepted and established from faith, as well as other civil rites and customs dictated aforetime from mere reason, equally revengers upon all evil doers indifferently, that were found criminal in affairs, as well purely Christian as civil, still using the advice and direction of their prelate's and Christian peers in the framing and establishing of all those laws they were now resolved to maintain. So it was done in England; so in all places of the Christian world. And then the line of Christian government ran mixed, which before was single. And Christians now had a Joshua to their Aaron, who were only led by Moses before. And although Aaron was head of the Church, yet Joshua was head and leader, prince and captain of all those people who were of that Church. The chief bishop is an Aaron, and every Christian king a Joshua. And as it is a content and support to Aaron to have a Joshua with him, to fight God's battles, and keep the people in awe; so is it not a little comfort to Joshua to have an Aaron by him, with whom he may consult. And indeed no kingdom can have a perfect accomplishment without the presence of these two swords, civil and spiritual. Ecce duo gladij hic satis est. And although Christians even at this day, when any heresy or novelty arises, have still recours unto the same head of their religion for a decision of the doubt, whom they consulted before, (for as the channel of Christianity is and must be still the same, so must the springhead be the same also) yet when the thing is once decided, they have none but kings and governor's under him, to see the direction executed, as the only overseers with coactive power to do it. And thus you see in brief how the Pope is head of the Church, and the King head likewise, and both immediately under God; but with this difference, that the king only governs Christianity established in his own royalty by law; the Pope without further law rules and guides all the streams and rivulets of religion, where ever it flows. He is head of primary direction; the king of sovereign execution: he of guidance and spiritual authority only; the king of civil and natural power invested in his place and dignity from God above, to maintain any laws as well purely Christian as civil, which himself shall accept, establish, and promulgate. The Pope persuades; but the King commands: and although the Pope should formally command, yet virtually and in effect such a command amounts only to a persuasion; and he that obeys not, feels no smart for it, except the king be pleased to espous his cause, and punish the contumacious; which if he justly do, then have kings a just authority in those affairs; if otherwise, then hath the Pope no means of help or defence in this world, any more after the conversion of kings than before it; and help himself he cannot any other way, than only by putting people out of his communion, who care not for it. The Pope is obeyed for conscience and love only to his religion; the King for wrath and conscience too: the Pope delivers the rule but in general only, and blunt on one side; the King particularises it, and gives it an edge: the Pope's headship is exercised in Aught and Should be; the Kings is Will and shall be: the Pope directs, but the King compels: the Pope secludes the contumacious from heaven, which he that beleeus not feels not; the King over and above that, cuts off malefactors from the face of the earth too, and they shall be made by feeling to believe it. And these two defend and secure one another, and keep both Christians and their faith inviolate. And while Christians themselves do both tenderly love their Pape and chief pastor, and springhead of their religion, which is believed beyond him to flow invisibly from God the great ocean of truth; and withal do honour fear and observe their King and princely governor, who only bears the sword of justice, and not in vain, to take revenge upon all those, whom the love of religion and spiritual sword of their pastor will not keep in awe, they do their duty as they ought, and shall find happiness therein. I must make haste, and can say no more at present to this business, which as I have told you is somewhat besides my purpose. Only one thing I must needs tell you before I pass on. Although a King is in a good and proper sense styled head as well of Church as State within his own dominions, as for all coersive power therein; yet head of the Church absolutely, or head of primary direction in faith, is so proper to the chief Prelate, that no man upon earth besides himself hath ever so much as pretended to it: and that for five reasons. First, because head of the Church absolutely, intimates an universal right over the guidance of religion, not in one kingdom only, but all, where ever that religion is. And the King of France, for example, neither did nor can pretend to be head of the Church of England, much less of Hungary, Spain, afric, Italy, Greece, Asia, etc. Yet such a head there must needs be, to the end the Church may be one mystic body, at unity in itself. And that head must be unlimited to time and place, as the Church itself is ever permanent, and universally spread; nor must the government alter, as governments of particular kingdoms do. Secondly, head of the Church absolutely, involves a primacy both of conveying and interpreting faith: and all princes in Europe received their faith at first from priests, who sent for that end from their spiritual superior converted their kingdoms; but they never gave faith either to them or their pastor. Thirdly, he that is head of the Church absolutely, must be of the same connatural condition with the whole hierarchy, to confirm, baptise, ordain, preach, atone the almighty by sacrifice, impose hands, segregate men from their worldly state unto his own spiritual one, and in a special manner to exercise those priestly functions, unto which he segregates them. Fourthly, head of the Church absolutely is to be indifferent unto kingdoms and all sorts of government, as the religion also is, and keep it like itself in all places unaltered in its nature, however in its general dictates it may concur to the direction and good of all people and governments. And therefore he cannot be confined to one place or government, but must be as it were separate and in a condition indifferent to all; as a general bishop, whose sole care is to heed those eradiations of faith spread up and down the world, may be and is; when princes heed but their own particular kingdoms, and care not how religion goes in another, any more than their wealth or polity. Thus the sunbeams, though they fall upon several soils diversely affected, yet they keep their own nature unaltered, by virtue of one general fountainhead of light which is indifferent to every kingdom, and dispenses, distributes, and keeps the rays unchanged. The ends and ways of religion are quite of another nature from all worldly businesses, and therefore require a particular superintendent set apart for them; as indeed they ever have had since the time of religions first master, who as he did educate his in order to a life eternal in a government apart, being himself a man distinct from Caesar, so used he to speak of religious duties as separate and differing from others; Reddite, saith he, quae Caesari sunt, Caesari, & quae Dei, Deo. In very truth, the Church and Christianity, as it is a thing accidental to all worldly states, so is it superinduced upon them as an influence of another rank and order, unto a particular end of future bliss; whereas all states do of themselves aim no further than the peace and happiness of this life. And so for the particular end and means answerable thereunto, which religion uses, it will require a particular and special overseer. Thus Aristotle, though he conceited the celestial orbs to be contiguous, and so all rapt together in a motion from East to West, yet because they had special motions of their own, he therefore allowed them particular intelligences to guide those motions. So we see in ordinary affairs, a man that hath several ways and ends is guided by several directours, in this by a lawyer, in that by a physician, by a gardener, by a tradesman, etc. Fistly, because head of the Church absolutely, must be one that succeeds in his chair, whom Jesus the master left and appointed personally to feed his flock. No King upon earth ever pretended to sit in that fisherman's chair, or to succeed him in it, which the Pope to my knowledge for sixteen hundred years hath both challenged as his right, and actually possessed. And Catholics are all so fixed in this judgement, that they can no more disbeleev it, than they can cease to believe in Jesus Christ. 11 ch. from page 228. to 246. Your eleventh chapter falls directly upon my fifteenth paragraff of Scripture. And therefore I may here expect, you should insult over me to the purpose. But Sir I told you before, and now tell you again, that I know no other rule to Christians either for faith or manners, no other hope, no other comfort, but what scripture and holy gospel affords. But this is not any part of the debate now in hand, however you would persuade the world to think so. When four or five men Sir of several judgements collected from the very scripture you and I talk of, rise up one against another with one and the same scripture in their hands, with such equal pretence of light, power, and reason, that no one will either yield to another, or remain himself in the same faith, but run endless divisions without control: does scripture prevent this evil? does it, has it, can it remedy it? can any one man make a religion by the authority of scripture alone, which neither himself nor any other, upon the same grounds he framed it, shall rationally doubt of. This is our case Sir, and only this; which you do not so much as take notice of, to the end you may with a more plausible rhetoric, insult over me as a contemner of God's word. Nor do you heed any particle of my discourse in this paragraff, but according to your manner, collect principles to the number of seven, out of it, you say, which I do not know to be so much as hinted in it; that as you did before, so you may now again play with your own bauble, and confute yourself. And they are in a manner the very same you sported with before in your second chapter. 1. from the Romans we received the gospel. 2. what is spoken in scripture of the Church, belongs to the Roman. 3. the Roman every way the same it was, etc. of all which I do not remember that I have in that my paragraff so much as any one word. Sir, either speak to my discourse as you find it, or else hold your peace. As if than you had overheard me aforehand, to give you this deserved check, at the close of your chapter, you bring in some few words of mine, with a short answer of your own, annexed to the skirts of it; which I here set down as you place them yourself. No man can say, speaks Fiat Lux, what ill popery ever did in the world, till Henry the eights days, when it was first rejected. Strange, say you in your Animadversions, when it did all the evils that ever were in the Christian world. With the Roman catholics' unity ever dwelled. Never. Protestants know their neighbour catholics', not their religion. They know both. Protestants are beholding to Catholics, for their benefices, books, pulpits, gospel. For some, not all. The Pope was once believed general pastor over all. Prove it. The scripture and gospel we had from the Pope. Not at all. You cannot believe the scripture, but upon the authority of the Church. We can and do. You count them who brought the scripture as liars. No otherwise. The gospel separated from the Church can prove nothing. Yes itself. This short work you make with me. And to all that serious discourse of mine concerning scripture, which takes up sixteen pages in Fiat Lux, we have got now in reply thereunto, this your Laconick-confutation. Strang. Never. Know both. Some not all. Prove it. Not at all. Can and do. No otherwis. Yes itself. 12 ch. from page 246. to 262. Your twelfth chapter meets with my history of religion, as a flint with steel, only to strike fire. For not heeding my story which is serious, temperate, and sober, you tell another of your own, fraught with defamations and wrath, against all ages and people: and yet speak as confidently, as calm truth could do. First you say, that Joseph of Arimathea was in England, but he taught the same religion that is in England now. But what religion is that Sir? Then, you tell us that the story of Fugatius and Damian missioners of Pope Eleutherius you do suspect for many reasons. But because you assign none, I am therefore moved to think they may be all reduced to one, which is, that you will not acknowledge any good thing ever to have come from Rome: Then, say you, succeeded times of luxury, sloth, pride, ambition, scandalous riots, and corruption both of faith and manners, over all the Christian world, both princes, priests, prelate's and people. Not a grain of virtue or any goodness we must think, in so many Christian kingdoms and ages. Then did Goths and Vandals, and other pagans overflow the Christian world. To teach them we may think, how to mend their manners. These pagans took at last to Christianity. Haply, because it was a more loose and wicked life, than their own pagan profession. These men now Christened advanced the Pope's authority, when Christian religion was now grown degenerate. And now we come to know, how the Roman bishop became a patriarch above the rest, by means namely of new converted pagans. It was an odd chance, they should think of advancing him to what they never knew, either himself, or any other advanced before amongst Christians, whose rotten and corrupt faith they had lately embraced. And yet more odd and strange it was, that all Christendom should calmly submit to a power, set up anew by young converted pagans; no prince or bishop either there or of any other Christian Kingdom, either then or ever after to this day excepting against it. Had not all the bishops and priests of Africa, Egypt, Syria, Thrace, Greece, and all the Christian world acknowledged by a hundred experiments the supreme spiritual authority of the Roman patriarch in all times, before this deluge of Goths and Vandals? But why do I expostulate with you, who write these things not to judicious readers, but fools and children, who are not more apt to tell a truth, then believe a lie. But what follows next Towards the beginning of this lurry, say you, were the Britons extirpated by the Saxes, who in aftertimes received Austin from Rome, a man very little acquainted with the Gospel. Here's the thanks good S. Austin hath, who out of his love and tenderness to our nations welfare, after so long and tedious journeys, entered upon the wild forest of our paganism, with great hazards and inexpressible sufferings of hunger, cold, and other corporal inconveniences, to communicate Christ Jesus, and his life and grace unto our nation. After this, say you, religion daily more and more declined till the Reformation rose. This is the sum of your story; which if I like not, I may thank myself, say you, for putting you in mind of it. Indeed Sir, it is so falls and defamatory, and loaden with foul language, not only against all nations, ages and people of all conditions, but against the honour of sacred gospel itself, which must utterly die, and have no life or power in the world for so many ages together, that I think neither I, or any else can like it, that bears any respect either to religion, modesty, or truth. You say in this your chapter that I am better at telling a tale then managing an argument: But I shall now believe, that you are equally good at both. Popery then is nothing but vice, and Protestancy is all virtue. I would we could see where this Protestancy dwells. 13 ch. from page 262. to 278. Your thirteenth chapter takes up my three following paragraffs about the history of religion; wherein, after that according to your wont manner you tell me, that I do not myself understand what this thing, that thing, the other thing means, although it be part of my own discourse, you say at length, that there is no such matter, as I speak; make another story of your own of the same mettle with your former, imposing afresh upon popery (by which I do not indeed know what you mean) a wain-load of adulteries, drunkenness, atheism, poison, avarice, pride, cruelties, tumults, blasphemy, rebellions, wars, crimes, and yet threatening to faith, if you should chance to be provoked, far harder things than these. Sir, may no man provoke a wasp, nor force you to your harder things. You are a terrible man of arms. But if this be the right character of Popery, which here and elsewhere up and down your book you give us, I tell you first, it will be a difficult matter to know in what age or place popery most reigns; secondly, that it is a thing I am so far from excusing, that I wish it back to the pit of hell from whence it issued; thirdly, that Roman catholics', if you be indeed against this popery, are all on your side; for to my knowledge their religion is as opposite to it, as light to darkness, or God to Belial; lastly, that you need not be so tenderly fearful for the spreading of popery; for honest men will be ready to stone him that teaches it; and knaves, hypocrites adulterers, traitors, thiefs, drunkards, atheists rebels, if you have given a right description of poperty, are all Papists already; these need no conversion, the other will by no rhetoric be moved to it. Indeed you fright us all from papistry. For though some love iniquity as it is gainful or pleasursom, and must needs suffee for it when they are condemned at the sessions, and cannot avoid it; yet is no man willing to suffer either loss of goods or imprisonment, death or banishment, for the bare name of popery, that hath neither good nor gain in it. In a word, wicked men will act your popery, but not own it. And they which own a popery, which I see you are not acquainted withal, will not only dislike others, but hate themselves, if through any frailty or passion they should ever fall into any article of your Popery here described. Good Sir, take heed of blaspheming that innocent Catholic flock, which the Angels of God watch over to protect them. Be afraid to curs them, whom God hath blessed, or impose that upon their Religion, which it detests. 14 ch. from page 278. to 286. Your fourteenth chapter, which is upon my title of Discovery, labours to show that some of the contradictions, which I mentioned in Fiat Lux to be put upon popery, are no contradictions at all; and labour may. Well Sir, although slanders put upon them be never so contradictory and opposite, yet must they have patience. All is true enough, if it be but bad enough. While our King's reign in peace, than the Papists religion is persecuted, as contrary to monarchy: when we have destroyed that government, then is the papist harassed, spoiled, pillaged, murdered, because their religion is wholly addicted to monarchy, and papists are all for Kings. Have not these things been done over and over, within the space of a few years here lately in England? All men now alive have been eye-witnesses of it, These things as put upon papists cease to be contradictions: And if they should be contradictions, both parts are therefore true in our country logic, because they are put upon papists. Is there not something of the power of darkness in this? One latin word of mine which shuts up that my paragraff of Discovery. Ejice ancillam cum puero suo, because I english it not, you translate it for me, or rather interpret it, Banish all men out of England but Papists: this according to your gloss must be my meaning. And you seem to exult, that Fiat Lux, who in outward show pretends so much moderation, should let fall a word that betrays no little mischief in his heart. Good Lord whither does passion hurry man's spirit! All that period of mine in the end of the foresaid § is but merely copied out of one of Saint Paul's letters, which he wrote to the Galatians, the fourth chapter of that Epistle, wherein those very words, alluding to a passage in Moses his pentateuch, are expressed. Do you either read in your English Bible, Banish all men out of England, or understand any such meaning of Ejice ancillam cum puero suo? Gal. 4. 30. Pray peruse the ten last verses of that chapter attentively; and see if I have not in my discourse so copied out their meaning and very words too, so far as it behoved; that I have done nothing else. Abraham had two sons, saith St. Paul, one of a handmaid, the other of a free woman, etc. These things are an allegory, etc. But as then, he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the spirit, even so it is now. But what saith the scripture? Cast out the bondwoman with her son: for the son of the bondwoman shall not be heir with the son of the freewoman, etc. Pray tell me soberly; Did the apostle mean by those words, Cast out the Bondwoman with her son, that the sons of Ishmael should be put to the sword, or banished out of their kingdom? Now pray hear my discourse which I copied out of that original; If my reader here be cautious, he may easily discern a reason, why all these sects are so boisterous one against another, and every one of them against the Roman catholic. Ishmael disturbed the whole house, and was ever quarrelling and bustling against Isaac. The reason is the same both here and there. Ishmael was a natural son, and Isaac the legitimate heir. And natural sons be generally seditious, violent and clamorous. As Ishmael therefore was Isaac his natural brother; so is a Protestant Minister but the byblow of a catholic Priest; the Presbyterian likewise to him: and so forward, till you come to the Quaker, who was begot by a delusion, and brought into the world by a fright: his hand is against every man, and every man's hand against him. The remedy and only means of peace is, Ejice ancillam cum puero suo. These be my words out of S. Paul; and what is his meaning, the same is mine. But you will have me in spite of my teeth, because I speak nothing but good, still to mean some evil. I thought S. Paul had meant by those words, if I must needs discover my understanding to you, that the peaceable isaac's were the only sons of God's promised love and favour, the inheritance of which blessing boisterous ishmael's can never work out to themselves, by all their persecutions and bustling contentions. And according to this meaning I concluded, that to consider and think seriously of this, were the only remedy and means of peace amongst us here in England. Ejice ancillam cum puero suo is an antidote against all contentions emulations, which are a suspicious mark not of an elect, but of a reprobate. But whatever I say, I must neither think, nor mean, but what you will have me to do; and that shall still be something that is odious. An emblem hereof was the rod of Moses, which in Moses hand was a walking-staff, but out of it a serpent. 15 ch. from page 286 to 304. In your fifteenth chapter, upon my paragraff of Messach, you are in a mighty plunge what this Messach should be, and what the ctimology of that word. Latin it is not, greek it is not, and you are sure it is not hebrew; surely it is, say you, some uncouth word, like that of the Gnostics Paldabaoth. Alas good Sir, it is English, a pure English word; used here in England all the Saxons time, and some hundred years after the conquest, till the French monosyllable had by little and little worn out the last syllable of the word. And you may find it yet in the old Saxon laws which I have read myself, those especially of King Ina, if I rightly remember the name, which be yet extant, wherein strict care and provision is made, that a due reverence be kept by all people in the Church all the time of their Messach, which now we call Mess or Mass. Then having laughed at my admiration of catholic Service, you carp at me for saying that the first Christians were never called together to hear a sermon; and to convince me, you bring some places out of S. Paul's Epistles, and the Acts, which commend the ministry of the word: This indeed is your usual way of refuting my speeches; you flourish copiously in that which is not at all against me, and never apply it to my words, lest it should appear, as it is, impertinent. I deny not that people were by God's word converted, or that converts were further instructed, or that the preaching of God's word is good and useful many ways; but that which I say is, that primitive. Christians were never called together for that end, as the great work of their Christianity. This I have so clearly proved, both in the second dialogue of the Reclaimed Papist, and also in the foresaid paragraff of Messach, that you divert from that, to declaim of the necessity and excellency of preaching, and bring neither text nor reason that may reach to my words at all. You go on, and wonder much, that we should hear nothing in scripture of this Christian sacrifice, is any such were. Sir, you will neither hear nor see. But, say you, the passion of our Lord is our Christian sacrifice. Do not I say so too? But that this incruent sacrifice was instituted by the same Lord before his death, to figur out daily before our eyes that passion of his, which was then approaching, in commemoration of his death, so long as the world should last; this, though I plainly speak it, you take no notice of it. But the Judaical sacrifice, say you, is said by the Apostle in his Epistle to the Hebrews, in this to differ from the sacrifice of Christians, that ours was done but once, theirs often. It is true, the sacrifice of our Lord's passion, of which the apostle in that whole discourse only treats, in opposition to that of bulls and goats, was so done but once, that it could not be done twice. But as the sacrifices of the old law, were instituted by almighty God, to be often iterated before the passion of the Messias for a continual exercise of religion; so did the same Lord for the very same purpose of religious exercise, institute another to be iterated after his death; unto which it were to have reference, when it should be passed, as the former had to the same death, when it was to come. And it hath a reference so much the more excellent, as that it doth by the almighty power of the same Messias, exhibit to the faith of his believers, that very true real body as crucified amongst us, whereof the former Mosaical sacrifices gave merely a shadow Did not our Lord do this? Were not the apostles according to this rite 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sacrificing to our great Lord God, when S. Paul was by imposition of hands segregated from the laiety for his divine service, as I clearly in that my paragraff evince out of the history of the Acts of the apostles. No, say you, the apostles were not then about any sacrifice, but only preaching God's word, or some such thing to the people, in the name and behalf of God. But Sir, is this to be in earnest or to jest? The sacred text says, they were sacrificing to our Lord, liturgying, and ministering to him. You say, They were not sacrificing to God, but only preaching to the people. And now the question is, whether you or I more rightly understand that Apostolical book. For my sense and meaning I have all antiquity, as well as the plain words of sacred text, you have neither. 16 ch. from page 304 to 313. Your sixteenth chapter upon my paragraff of the Virgin Mary, which is, you say, the most disingenuous of all my book, is spent in an invective against calumnies, which brings you upon your often iterated common place of Pagan's reproaches of Christians. And whatever my paragraff may be, this your chapter seems to me as ingenious as the very best of your book, and absolutely frivolous. And must you invegh against calumnies, whose whole book is nothing else? It is a bundle of slanders, and a mere quiver of fiery darts of desolation and malice. 17. ch. from page 313 to 325. Your seventeenth chapter upon my paragraff of Images or Figures, nibbles at more of my discourse made in that one paragraff, than you have taken notice of in ten of my others. A man, say you, may indeed have such thoughts of devotion, as Fiat Lux speaks of, upon the sight of images, which he sees hanging in Churches, if he be a man distraught of his wits, not if he be himself and sober. So then; mad men it seems can tell what figures represent, sober and wise men cannot. Again, The violation of an image, say you, redounds to the prototype, if it be rightly and duly represented, not else. And when then is Christ crucified, for example, rightly and duly represented? Are you one of those mad men can tell what figures represent, yea or no. The hanging up of traitors in effigy is done, say you, only to make a declaration of the fact, and not to cast a dishonour upon the person. So you say: Because you know it done long after the fact has rung all the whole Kingdom over; and done, not in places of concourse, but ignominy; not in the Exchange, but Tyburn; not with any characters declaring the fact, but with a halter about his neck, to denote the death and ignominy inflicted, as far as is possible, upon him. You go on. Where the psalmist complains of God's enemies breaking down his sculptures, he means not thereby any images or figures, but only wainscot or carved ceiling. Surely the Prophet wanted a word then to express himself, or translatours to express the Prophet. If we must guests at his meaning without heeding his words, one might think it as probable, what also holy scripture tells us, that the house of God was ordained with sculptures of Cherubims, and other angels, to represent his true house that is above; as with the circles, quadrats, triangels, rhombos, and rhomboides of wainscot. The eye, say you again, may not have her species as well as the ear, because God has commanded the one and not the other. This Sir you only say. Fiat Lux makes it appear, that God commands and commends both, and the nature of man requires both: nor can you give any reason, why I may not look upon him who was crucified, as well as hear of him. You add. Nor is the sole end of preaching as Fiat Lux would have it, only to move the mind of the hearers unto corresponding affections. Why do not you say then, what else it is for? you deny my words, but declare yourself no other end, but what I have in those short words expressed. You may haply conceal in your heart some other end of your preaching, which you are loath to speak; as to procure applaus, to vent your rhetoric, to get good benefices, to show your fine cloth and silks, your pure neat white starched bands and cuffs, buttoned handkerchiefs and ladies gloves, to inflame factions, get wives, or the like; but I could not think of all things at once; nor needed I to express any more, than that one end of preaching which is connatural, apostolical, and legal. You go on. God indeed commanded the Cherubims to be set upon the ark, but those cherubims were images of nothing; of what should they be images? Nor were they set up to be adored. Besides God who commanded them to be set up, did no more gainsay his own prohibition of images to be made, than he contradicted his own rule which forbids to steal, when he commanded his people to spoil the Egyptians. But Sir, since the real Cherubims are not made of our beaten gold, those set up by Moses must be only figures. And of what else should they be figures but of those real ones. Nor is it either to my purpose or yours, that they are set up to be adored. For images in catholic Churches, are not set up for any such purpose; nor do I any where say it. No man alive has any such thought, nor tradition, no council hath delivered it, no practice infers it. Christian Philosophers or Schoolmen have indeed raised a philosophical question; Whether any respect may be terminated upon the figure, purely as it such an absolute entity in itself, besides that relative one that falls only upon the prototype: But what they question, or what they talk, or what they resolve, does no more belong, because they say it, unto catholic faith, then if they had been asleep and said nothing. All catholic counsels and practice declares such sacred figures, to be expedient assistants to our thoughts in our divine meditation and prayers: and that is all that I know of it. And the relative respect that is given to any figure as it is such a figure, whether in a glass, or in any more fixed posture to supply the defects of a mirror, that it terminates naturally upon the sampler or prototype is evident to right reason and philosophy. And it cannot be otherwise. That which you speak of the Israelites spoiling the Egyptians by God's command, hath some species of an argument in it. But Sir, we must know, you as well as I, that God who forbids men to steal, did not then command to steal, as you say he did, when he bade his people spoil the Egyptians under the species of a loan. Many things legitimate that their act of spoil, and clear it from any notion of theft or robbery or stealing. First, they might have of themselves a right to those few goods, in satisfaction of the long oppression they had unjustly undergon: and it may be that in that their great haste, their own allowance was not then paid them. But secondly, because it is a thing of danger, that any servant should be allowed to right himself, by putting his hand to his master's goods, though his case of wrong be never so clear, therefore did the command of God intervene to justify their action. And the absolute dominion of the whole earth and all that is in it, being inseparably in the hands of God, made that by God's express command to be truly now and justly the Hebrews right, which by an inferior and subordinate title, such as is in the hand of creatures, belonged to the Egyptians before. So that the Hebrews in taking those goods with them, did not steal: nor did God command them to steal, when he bade them carry those goods of the Egyptians with them; for that upon that very command of God they now ceased to be the Egyptians any more. But this can no ways be applied to the business of Images: nor could God command the Hebrews to make any images, if he had absolutely forbidden to have any at all made. For this concerns not any affair between neighbour and neighbour, whereof the supreme Lord hath absolute dominion, but the service only and adoration due from man to his maker, which God being essentially good and immutably true, cannot alter or dispens with. Nor doth it stand with his nature and deity to change, dispens, or vary the first table of his law concerning himself; I mean as to the substance of it, by commanding us now to have but one God, then to worship two; now not to take his name in vain, and then to blaspheme it, as he may do the second, which concerns neighbours; for want of that dominion over himself, which he hath over any creature, to give or take away its right, to preserv or destroy it, as himself pleases. God may disable my neighbours right, and enable me to take to myself that which before was his, but he cannot command me to commit idolatry or dishonour himself. If he should deny himself, he would not be God. From hence it must needs follow, that if it be the sens and mind of the almighty, that to set up any images in Churches be derogatory to his glory, then could not God possibly command any to be there set up. For these two precepts, Thou shalt set up images, and Thou shalt set up none, are not only contradictory in terms of the law proposed, enounced and promulgated, but infer also in God himself that contradiction, opposition and self-denial, which is inconsisting with such an unchangeable veracity. God may possibly allow me either to curs or spoil my neighbour, or in a case expressed not to help him; but he should deny himself, (which the deity cannot do) if either he should command me to blaspheme himself, or the honour due to him either to refuse it him, or give it to another. When therefore one and the same God so often forbids his people to make to themselves any images; and yet in the same divine law commands them to set up Cherubims in his own temple; it cannot, being a concernment of his worship, be otherways meant, than that they should make no sculptures or figures, but what himself commands, and which may assuredly represent persons dear to himself, as Fiat Lux interprets it. And if an image in itself be opposite to God's glory, as Anticatholiks' think; then could not God possibly command the making or setting up of any, in his holy temple or place of divine worship. But you go on. Fiat Lux says, God forbade foreign images, such as Moloch, Dagon, and Astaroth, but he commanded his own. But Fiat lux is deceived in this as well as other things, for God forbade any likenesses of himself; and he gives the reason, because, saith he, in Horeb ye saw no similitude of me. Sir, you may know and consider, that the statues and graven images of the heathens, towards whose land Israel then in the wilderness was journeying, to enter and take possession, were ever made by the pagans to represent God, and not any devils, although they were deluded in it. And therefore were they called the gods of the mountains, the gods of the valleys, the gods of Accaron, Moab, etc. There was therefore good reason, that the Hebrews, who should be cautioned from such snares, should be forbidden to make to themselves any similitude or likeness of God. What figure or similitude the true God had allowed his people, that let them hold and use, until the fullness of time should come, when the figure of his substance, the splendour of his glory, and only image of his nature should appear. And now good Sir, since God has been pleased to show us his face, pray give Christians leave to use, and keep, and honour it. If you be otherwise minded, and take pleasure in defacing his figurs, I think they have good reason on their sides, who honour them. You proceed. It is a pretty fancy in Fiat Lux, to say we have as well a precept, Thou shalt make graven images, as we have, Thou shalt not. I wonder where Fiat Lux finds that precept, sith all ancients have it, and all translations read it, Thou shalt not. What is that It they have, what is that It they read? Do you think that Fiat lux reads one and the same text, both Thou shalt and Thou shalt not. Moses his making, and the command given him to make Cherubims, is a rule good enough to Fiat lux, that some images may be made, and set up in Churches: as also is that precept, Thou shall not make to thyself any images, another rule to show him, that some images we are not to make to ourselves on our own heads, in imitation of pagans. No less whimsical, say you, is that relation Fiat lux says an image hath to some one Prototype, for example, to S. Peter rather then to Simon Magus: for there can be no relation, but what the imagination either of the framer or spectator makes. Sir, speaking as I do of a formal representation or relation, and not of the efficient cause of it, I cannot but wonder at this your illogical assertion. Is the pictur made by the spectators imagination to represent this or that thing? or the imagination rather guided to it by the pictur? By this rule of yours the image of Caesar, did not my imagination help it, would no more represent a man than a mous. I know the imagination can, for want of real pictures, make fantastical ones to its self; in the clouds, walls, air, or fire, & c. But when she hath real ones, made her either by art or nature, she cannot make them to be otherways then they are; nor think or say, except she will abuse herself to derision, that a cat is a dog, or an ox a hare. Nor does it help you at all, that there may be mistakes; for we treat not here of the errors but natures of things. And you will not I hope maintain, that there is no real heat any where, but what the imagination makes, because the good poor man of Norway sent out of his own country upon an errand, stood warming his fingers there, at a hedge of red roses. 18 ch. from page 325. to 365. Your eighteenth chapter, which is upon my paragraff of Tongues or Latin service, hath some colour of plausibility. But because you neither do, nor will understand the customs of that Church, which you are eager to oppose; all your words are but wind. I have heard many grave protestant divines, ingeniously acknowledge, that divine comfort and sanctity of life requisite to salvation which religion aims at, may with more perfection and less inconvenience be attained by the customs of the Roman Church, which gives the sense, life, and meaning of God's word to the people, without the hard shell of the letter, than that of ours, which gives it in the shell to break people's teeth. Religion is not to sit pierching upon the lips, but to be got by heart, it consists not in reading but doing; and in this, not in that, lives the substance of it, which is soon and easily conveyed. Christ our Lord drew a compendium of all divine truths into two words, which his great apostle again abridged into one. And if the several gospels for every day in the year, which are or may be in the hands of all catholics', the chiefest particles of divine epistles, books of sacred history and meditation upon all the mysteries of salvation, and spiritual treatises for all occasions and uses, which be numberless amongst catholics', adjoined to the many several rites of examination of conscience, daily and continual practice of prayer and fasting, and an orderly commemoration of the things God hath wrought for us throughout the year, which all by law are tied to observe, and do observe them, may not give a sufficient acquaintance of what concerns our salvation, and promote them enough towards it, I am to seek what it is that can; or what further good it may do, to read the letter of Saint Paul's epistles, to the Romans for example, or Corinthians, wherein questions, and cases and theological discourses are treated, that vulgar people can neither understand, nor are at all concerned to know. And I pray you tell me ingeniously, and without heat, what more of good could accrue to any by the translated letter of a book, whereof I will be bold to say, that nine parts in ten concern not my particular, either to know or practice, than by the conceived substance of Gods will to me, and my own duty towards him? or what is there now here in England when the letter of scripture is set open to every man's eye, any more either of peace or charity, piety or justice, than in former catholic times, when the substance of God's word and will was given people in short, and the observance of their duty prolixly pressed upon them. What did they do in those ancient catholic times? they flocked every day in the week to their Churches, which stood continually open, there to pray and meditate, and renew their good purposes; they sung psalms, hymns, and canticles all over the land both day and night; they built all our churches, that we have at this day remaining amongst us, and as many more, which we have razed and pulled down; they founded our universities, established our laws, set out tithes and glebe-land for their clergy, built hospitals, erected corporations; in a word, did all the good things we found done for our good in this our native kingdom. But Quid agitur in Anglia? Consulitur de religione. The former Christians practised, and we dispute: they had a religion, we are still seeking one: they exercised themselves in good works by the guidance of their holy catholic faith which leads to them; all these works we by our faith evacuate as menstruous rags: they had the substance of true religion in their hearts; we the text in our lips: they had nothing to do but to conform their lives to Gods will; all our endeavour is to apply God's word to our own factions. Sir mistake me not: The question between us, is not, Whether the people are to have God's word, or no? but whether that word consists in the letter left to the people's disposal; or in the substance urgently imposed upon people for their practice. And this because you understand not, but mistake the whole business, all your talk in this your eighteenth chapter vades into nothing. Where Fiat Lux says in that forenamed paragraff, that the Pentateuch or hagiography was never by any Highpriest among the Jews put into a vulgar tongue, nor the Gospel or Liturgy out of greek in the Eastern part of the Christian Church, or latin in the Western: You slight this discourse of mine, because hebrew, greek, and latin was, say you, vulgar tongues themselves. I know this well enough. But when and how long ago were they so? not for some hundreds of years to my knowledge. And was the Bible, Psalms, or Christian liturgy then put into vulgar tongues, when those they were first writ in, ceased to be vulgar? This you should have spoke to, if you had meant to say any thing, or gainsay me. Nor is it to purpose, to tell me that S. Jerome translated the Bible into Dalmatian; I know well enough it has been so translated by some special persons into Gothish, Armenian, Ethiopian, and other particular dialects. But did the Church either of the Hebrews or Christians, either greek or latin, ever deliver it so translated to the generality of people, or use it in their service, or command it so to be done, as a thing of general concernment and necessity? So far is it from this, that they would never permit it. This I said, and I first said it, before you spoke, and your mere gainsay without further reason or probability of proof cannot dispossess me. Dr. Cousins, now bishop of Durham, lately sojourneying in Paris, when he understood of a graecian bishop's arrival there, did with some other English Gentlemen in his company give him a visit, and with the same or like company went afterwards to see him. The articles of our English Church were translated into greek, and shown him. Many questious were asked him about the service of the graecian Church, praying for the dead, invocation of Saints, real presence, confession, etc. Dr. Cousins can tell himself what answer he received from that venerable grave prolate Cyrillus, archbishop of Trapesond; for that was his name and title. In brief, he owned not those articles, as any way consonant to the faith of the Greeks, who believed and had ever practised the contrary. He also told them distinctly and openly, that Mass or Liturgy was, and had ever been the great work of their Christianity all over the greek Church; that confession of sins to a priest, praying for the dead, invocation of saints, and such like points wherein we in England differ from papists, were all great parts of their religion, and their constant practice. Finally, he let them know, that all the Liturgies, both those of St. Basil, St. Chrysostom, St. Gregory Nazianzen, were ever kept in the learned greek, differing from the vulgar language. And withal showed his own greek book of Liturgy, which he used himself at the altar. Dr. Cousins did himself see him officiate with his lay-brother a monk of St. Basil, belonging to St. Catherins' monastery in mount Sina, ministering to him at the altar; and found both by his words and practice, that in all those and other essential parts and observances of Christianity the Greeks agreed perfectly with the Roman Church. This testimony, Sir, of a venerable archbishop, to such a worthy person as Dr. Cousins, might I should think suffice to justify my words, and make you believe with me, that Christian Liturgies have ever been used, as Fiat Lux speaks in a learned language distinct from the vulgar. But we need not go far from home for a testimony. Neither the Bible nor Service-book was ever seen here in England for a thousand years' space in any other language but Latin, before Edward the sixth days, (except haply the Psalter, which the Saxons and almost all people, have ever had in their own tongue, being a chief part of Christians devotion) nor in British or Welsh, before the bishop of S. asaph's translation. And yet the people all that while wanted no know. knowledge of God's will, or comfort of his word. You mightily insult over me in your 336 page, for saying, that the bible was kept by the Hebrews in an ark or tabernacle, not touched by the people, but brought out at times to the priest, that he might instruct the people out of it. Here, say you, the author of Fiat Lux betrays his gross ignorance and something more: for the ark was placed in sanctum sanctorum, and not entered but by the priest only once a year, whereas the people were weekly instructed. But Sir, do I speak there of any sanctum sanctorum, or of any ark in that place? Was there, or could there be no more arks but one? If you had been only in these latter days, in any synagogue or convention of Jews, you might have seen even now how the bible is kept still with them in an ark or tabernacle, in imitation of their forefathers, when they have now no sanctum sanctorum amongst them. You may also discern, how according to their custom, they cringe and prostrate at the bringing out of the bible, which is the only solemn adoration left amongst them; and that there be more arks than that in sanctum sanctorum. If I had called it a box or chest or cupboard, you had let it pass. But I used the word Ark as more sacred. 19 ch. from page 365. to 386. I discerned in your nineteenth chapter, which is upon my paragraff of Communion in one kind, a somewhat more than ordinary swelling choler; which moved me to look over that my paragraff afresh. And I found my fault: there is in it so much of Christian reason and sobriety, that if I had since the time I first wrote it, swerved from my former judgement, of the probability I conceived to be in that Roman practice of communicating in one kind, I had there met with enough to convert myself. And therefore wondered no more, that you should load me so heavily with your wont imputations of fraud, ignorance, blasphemy, and the like. I ever perceiv you to be then most of all passionate, when you meet with most convincing reasons. When the exorcist is most innocent, his patient, they say, then frets and foams and curses most. There is not a word in this your chapter, which is not by way of anticipation answered in that my § of Fiat Lux, against which you write. 20 ch. from page 386. to 402. There is in your twentieth chapter, which prosecutes my paragraff of Saints or Hero's, one word of yours, that requires my notice. I say in that my paragraff, that the pagans derided the ancient Christians for three of their usages. First, for eating their own God: Secondly, for kneeling to the Priests genitals: Thirdly, for worshipping an ass' head. This last you except against, and impute my story to my own simplicity and ignorance, if not to something worse; for that imputation, say you, was not laid upon Christians at all, but only upon Jews, as may be seen in Josephus, etc. But Sir, you may know, that in odiosis the primitive Christians were ever numbered among the Jews; and what evil report lay upon these, was charged also upon them, though sometimes upon another ground. And although Josephus may excuse the Jews, and not the Christians; yet a long while after his time, if not even then also, that slander was generally all over the pagan world charged upon Christians also, as may be read in Tertullian, and other ancient writers; yea and very probably, by the very Jews themselves, who bitterly hated them, cast off from themselves upon the poor Christians on another account, which I specified in Fiat Lux. And through the whole Roman Empire did the sound of this scandal ring up and down for some ages together. Insomuch that Tertullian himself conceited, that as the Christian religion was derived from the Jews; so likewise that the imputation of the ass' head, first put upon the Jews, might from them be derived upon Christian religion. And the same Tertullian, in his Apologetic adds these words: The calumnies, saith he, invented to cry down our religion grew to such excess of impiety, that not long ago in this very city, a pictur of our God was shown by a certain infamous person, with the ears of an ass, and a hoof on one of his feet, clothed with a gown, and a book in his hand; with this inscription, This is Onochoetes the God of Christians. And he adds, that the Christians in the city, as they were much offended with the impiety; so did they not a little wonder at the strange uncouth name the villain had put upon their lord and master; Onochoetes forsooth, he must be called Onochoetes. And are not you Sir a strange man, to tell me, page 393. that what I speak of this business is notoriously falls, nay and that I know it is falls, and I cannot produce one authentic testimony, no not one of any such thing. But this is but your ordinary confidence. 21 ch. from page 402. to 416. I must not marvel that my following paragraff, called Dirge, is so wantonly played upon, in your one and twentieth chapter. You think of no body after they are dead; nor does it at all concern you, whether they be in hell, or heaven, or some third place, or not at all. But Sir, were not all the ancient monuments of the foundations of our churches, colleges, and chapels in England now destroyed, you would find yourself with that wretched opinion of yours, absolutely incapable to enter upon any benefice, cure, or employment in this land. But the times are changed, and you have nothing now to do, but to eat, drink, and preach; for to morrow you shall die. 22 ch. from page 416 to 435. In your two and twentieth chapter, which is of the Pope, you do but only repeat my words, and not understand, and deny, and laugh. 23 ch. from page 435. to Finis. Your last chapter is upon my paragraff of Popery, wherein I set down eleven other parcels of catholic profession, all of them innocent, unblamable and sacred. You only bite at the first of them; and having it seems enough filled yourself with that, your wearied bones go to rest. With Mas comedido, the title of my last paragraff you meddle not at all: It is doubtless to you who understand not the English word Messach, another Gnostick Paldabaoth. But I would you had Mas comedido by heart. You cannot but marvel, that I have taken so little notice all this while, of your only one strong and potent Argument, your stout Achilles that meets me in every paragraff and period, and beats me back into the walls of Troy. Wherever I am, whatsoever I say, your. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is upon me. All the discourse of my whole one and thirty paragraffs, is by it felled to the ground, miserably bruised and battered with that one and the same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. But I hope you will have me excused. I have not leasur; I am not willing; I want ability to answer it, or give you any corresponding satisfaction. The like to our Author, say you, for flourishing empty words and cunning sleights of subtlety hath been seldom etc. Here our Author falls into a great misadventure, etc. Here our Author discovers not only his gross ignorance, but something more, etc. Our Author beleeus not a word of all this, nor can, etc. We find our Author never to fail so palpably and grossly, as when, etc. Our Author speaks notoriously falls, nor hath he, etc. Our Authors history, philosophy and reason all alike, etc. Our Author speaks holdly, though he know it is not so, but, etc. Our Author, if I could come to speak to him, would not own any of this, etc. Never any such cunning dissembling hypocrite as our Author, etc. It is no marvel our Author should still fail both in philosophy, antiquity, etc. who hath not, etc. In these and such like arguments, which occur almost as oft as the pages of your book, you rout Our Author utterly. I am in all this not able to say boo to a goose. Although I be not conscious of any either fraud in my breast, or fault in my book, or lie in either; yet in all such talk you must, and will, and shall have both the first and last word too. Another argument of yours expressed in twenty places of your Animadversions, by which you would dissipate at once great part of Fiat Lux into the air, does as finely cant, as this does coarsely desy. The religion, say you, that is now professed in England, is that and only that which was first in ancient times received here, etc. This you speak, and the more confidently do you speak it, the less significant you know your words be, and yet sounding well enough for your design. What do you mean I pray you Sir, by that religion that is now professed in England? Why do you not specify it? Speak it in downright language. Is it Popery that has been peaceably professed in the land for almost a thousand years, and did all the good things we now find in it; as yet professed by some? No; this you will deny. Is it Prelate-Protestancy that for threescore years oppressed Popery here? If you had said this, you had praised that too much, which yourself approves not. Is it Presbytery that warred the last twenty years, and utterly destroyed the foresaid Protestancy? In saying this you had to your own danger disabled the English Protestant Church, now to the great heartburning of the Presbyterians established again by law. Is it Independency, that for six or seven years kerbed the Presbyterian here, in— Tectour oliver's time, and had almost past an Act for the abolishing of the three P. P. P. Papish, Protestant, and Presbyterian. Is it Quakery, that is now far enough spread, and openly professed by many, and judges the Papist stark naught, the Protestant half rotten, the Presbyterian a quarter addle, and other Independents imperfect? Is it some general abstracted religion, that is common to them all? If it be so, then Popery as well as any other may be justly styled the religion here first received. For that common notion in whatever you shall say it consists, so it be positive as it ought to be, will be found first and principally in the Papists faith. But this you have not thought good yourself to express, that you may seem to express something, that may be thought good to yourself, and ill to me. But you must deal candidly with me: I am an old ox that hath fixed his foot firmly, and am not to be outbraved either with your canting words or passionate execrations. I had told you Sir, of all your tricks from page to page in particular, if nothing had been required at my hands to write, but only my own reply: but being, if I should do so, obliged to set down your talk too, I think it not worth either my charge or labour to reflect upon you such your voluminous impertinencies. And I have I assure you taken notice of all in your book, that may seem to have any appearance of reason in it, (though really there be none at all against me) and is not either manifestly untrue, or absolutely improper. This is all. And now good Sir, I could wish you had given me the first letter of your name; that I might have known how to salute you. I have been told of late, that the Author of the Animadversions upon Fiat Lux is one Doctor O. N, a Protestant against Popery which you found down, a Presbyterian against Protestancy which you threw down, an Independent against Presbyterianry which you kept down. But whether you be Doctor O. N, or to turn your inside outwards, you be N. O Doctor; since I cannot be assured, it shall be all one to me. All that I have undertaken at this time is to let you know, who ever you be, that I have read over your Animadversions upon my Fiat. And I thank you for your book; for it confirms Fiat Lux, and all the whole design of it, I think irrefragably. It shows to the eye and really verrifies by your own example, what Fiat Lux did but speak in words: namely that controversies of religion are endless for want of some one thing to fix upon, which may not be depraved; that they are fraught with uncharitable animosities, which darken the understanding and deprave good manners; that they are mutable as men's fancies be, which can never be fixedly stated, sith every man hath a spirit, hath a method, hath an opinion of his own, and says and denies with endless diversity; that they are guileful and delusory, sometimes falls on both sides, ever on one, and yet still made out with subtle words, so plausible to the eye and ear, that men employed in the multitude of affairs and troubles of this world, can never be able to disentangle those knots of pro and con; then especially at a loss, when they consider, that such as manage those disputes are all of them interested persons; five, that they are mad and irrational, while all parties pretend one and the same rule of holy seriptur, and yet will admit of no exterior visible judge in their visible exterior contests: lastly, that they are mischievous and fatal to all places where they rise: as they have been of late to this our distressed Kingdom of England, where disputes and controversies about religion raised to a height, by the inferior scribes against their prelate's, drawn after them pikes and guns to make them good for twenty years together, with much desolation and ruin; which times I think I may not unjustly call the Vicar's Wars. For the inferior priests and levites, envying the dignities, glory and revenues of their prelate's, when they could not otherwise get them into their own hands, by their lamentable tones in Eloimi, raised up the people of the land, to further their design. This trick of theirs they learned from wolves. For these, when they spy a waifaring man whom they would devour, and yet by a narrow search perceiv him to be too strong for them, starting aside upon some hillock; there set upon their tails, they howl for help. And if any will not believe Fiat Lux, that such be the fruits of disputes and controversies, and such their nature and genius, let them believe the Author of Animadversions, who as he says what he pleases, and denies what he lists; so to his frequent reproaches, villifications and slanders he adjoins his own menaces of terror, to make my words good, and justify Fiat Lux. You frequently threaten me, that if I write again, I shall hear more, far more than you have said in your Animadversions: but I promise you Sir, if you write again, you shall never hear more from me. For now the flies begin to come into my chamber, which may haply expect I should heed their flight and hearken to their buzz; and I must not leave those greater employments to look upon your Animadversions, or any your other books. Farewell. Given this V. of the Ides of April in the year of our Lord MDCLXIII. J. V. C. EPISTOLA AD CROESUM, AGAINST Mr. Whitby. The occasion of this second Epistle. Doctor Pierce had preached a Sermon in the Court upon that text, In the beginning it was not so; from whence he took occasion to speak of Popery, which in this and that and the other particular, he said in the beginning was not so, and consequently all of it a novelty. This sermon was afterwards printed, and not a little applauded by those who are taken with such airs. Mr. Cressy a Catholic Gentleman, the Authors friend, then sojourning in London, wrote a book called, Catholic doctrine no novelties, in consutation of that Sermon, and went presently away to Paris. But after his departure Mr. Whitby set forth a huge bulk of a book against Cressy. The Author in this his epistle gives notice to Mr. Cressy his friend then in France, of the contents and tenor of that his adversaries book. II. Epistola ad Croesum, against Mr. Whitby, SIR, IT is now about a year, since Dr, Pierce made his pretty featous Sermon in the Court; where, by virtue of those few words of his text, In the beginning it was not so, Matth. 19 8. he confuted all Popery in the space of one hour, as a mere bundle of novelties. The Treatise you left here in the hands of some friends, before your departure to Paris, to prove against the tenor of the said Sermon, That Catholic doctrines are no novelties, printed afterward by I know not what good hand, gave us here in England, after your departur, a great deal of good satisfaction. This book of yours about a month or two after it was extant, was seconded by another, against Dr. Pierce penned by Jo. Si●, a small, but a very quick and lively piece to invalidate his reasons. So that Pierce had now two adversaries against him. The latter J. S. hears not yet of any reply. But your book Sir is lately answered, not by Dr. Pierce himself, (who hath other irons in the fire, and meets now with something in his own life, which in the beginning was not so) but by one Mr. Daniel Whitby, a young man, of a forward spirit, and possessed as it seems of a fair reformed library, who hath undertaken, or is willing at least to undergo the quarrel. This book of Whitbyes, whereof my ancient love and friendship hath here invited me to give you a brief account, is a great volume of 512 pages, so fruitful is the seed of controversy, when it is once sown, to increase and multiply. A compendium it is, I think, of his whole library. Whether this book of his be made up all by one hand, by reason of the unity of the name, and diversity of styles discerned in it, is not easy to guests. But that Mr. Whitby, if he had many coadjutors with him, either in his own chamber or abroad, should by their mutual consent, alone reap the honour of all their labours, whereof his own part may haply be the least; you need, Sir, neither grudge, nor fear, nor envy, nor any way dislike. The book is of that nature, that it more behoous, it should be thought to issue from one young head, than many old ones; that the insufficiency, when it shall appear, may be rather attributed to the weakness of the Author, than cause he pleads for. Of this, Sir, I may out of Whitbyes own words in his Epistle Dedicatory, and the whole progress of his book, assure you; that this volume of his, is wholly made up of the many several replies of divers Protestant writers, who have stretched their wits to the utmost in this last age, to evacuate the Catholic faith, and all their grounds, autorities and reasons for it; not only such as have written here in England, which are not a few, but those also beyond the seas, who are all met friendly here together, though never so much differing in their ways, twenty at least or thirty of the chiefest, to help to make up Mr. Whitbies' book. These writers he tells us in his Epistle, some of them, who they be; Hammond, Field, Salmasius, Baron, Ʋsher, Fern, Dally, Taylor, Crackanthorp, Hall, Andrews, Calixtus, Plessis, Chamier and Chillingworth. But he does not there mention Pareus, Blondel, Baxter, and several others, whom in the context of his book he makes as much use of, as any of those he there honours with the title of Champions, with whose sword and buckler he means to defend himself, and knock you down. You may easily guests the reason. Although indeed, even Chamier, Plessis, and Dally, his first and chiefest three, were as great Puritans, as Baxter, Pareus, or Blondel, and no less enemies to the English Protestant, than Roman Catholic Church. And Baxter himself, if he will but do so much as die, shall seven year hence, if not sooner, be put into the next calendar, and sit among the Champions of the English Church, cited no more then, as guilty of faction and heresy, but as a Protector and Patron of the truth, famous Baxter, incomparable Baxter. So p. 230. he citys Dr. Reynolds, as a great Champion of his Church, who was indeed a Champion of the Puritans against it. Every non-Papist is a good Protestant, especially when he is dead. When they fight for their wives and children against catholic traditions and faith, then are they all holy zealous champions: But they are damned, and swery notoriously from the truth, if they may be themselves believed, when they contest with one another; which ever happens after the first great victory with the common enemy obtained. One thing is singular in this book of Whithies, that he frames no answers out of any judgement of his own, ripened by a long and serious consideration of the things he speaks of, in this his reply; but recurres presently to the books of those his forenamed masters, in his library; and against your reasonings, only opposes their words and fore-studied evasions, such as they had invented, each one his own way, upon semblable occasions; not heeding at all, whether your discourse, against which he writes, hath anticipated those shifts aforehand, as generally it does, yea or no; nor how far they evacuate one another. This if he had pondered well, which perhaps poor man he could not do, it had prevented much of his collections, and sunk his huge book into a far smaller bulk. To this, quoth he, hath Chamier told you, that, etc. Can you not see what incomparable Chillingworth hath taught you, that, etc. You will still be impertinent, although great Plessis hath informed you, that, etc. Where were your eyes, when reverend Hall hath so plainly told you, that, etc. And he brings sometimes, not only four or five several answers of one author to the same thing, all I suppose he found there written in his book, but half a dozen of those his authors, with all their manifold evasions to one single catholic ground; and for the most part so confusedly, that the first answer of the first author hath presently another first, as consisting of two parts; and the first of them may haply have another first; so that three succeeding periods begin oftentimes with three firsts, one after an other, according as he penned them haud over head out of the books he wrote, venting his reasons, as some young children void worms, three or four, head and tails together. Nor heeds he at all, whether these his authors do chance to contradict one another, in those affairs for which he brings them in so unnaturally together; one affirming what the other denies, one rejecting what the other allows, one distinguishing what the other absolutely grants, etc. This benefit he will reap by this confused interlocution of his masters; that, if he come to be challenged upon any of the answers, which he makes by their lips, he shall not need, when he finds them either weak or falls, or any way prejudicial, to own then for his, what he had openly professed beforehand, to be another man's replies. So that they will serve a bird all bedecked with the feathers of many a fowl, for pride and pompous show unto such as will admire him, and to such as shall question him, for a present remedy of excuse, This is not my feather, but the Cuckoos. It is not my saying, but Chamiers. It is the reply of Chillingworth: It is the speech of Dr. Hammond, and not any assertion of mine, etc. What can any one do, Sir, to such a man, but neglect him? Truly I look upon Whitby, as a kind of master of Revels, that appoints other men who are to speak, every one their parts, and gives them their qu of entrance, whilst himself stands in some private place to look on, and see how they do perform. And he provides commonly against any one of your catholic grounds or reasons for it, four or five Protestant speakers, by their several ways to disable it: whereof one shall haply say, that the authority you bring is good, but carries another meaning; a second shall affirm, it is naught and forged; a third stands indifferent, whether it be admitted or no, but is sure it makes against you; a fourth acknowledges it for your purpose, but disparages the author, whence it is taken; a fifth admits both the authority of the author, and truth of his words, but tells you it is only one of his errors; Whitby himself not saying all the while, which of all these replies he holds himself for good; but imagining you wholly oppressed and overwhelmed with his various collection of contradicting drollery, he passes on exulting to your next point or following reason, in the same mode and method to be crushed. And truly Sir, one may see in this one book of Whitbies at a view, what a judicious examiner, who loves to read and ponder all things seriously, cannot but observe in all the writers since the reformation, put together. One admits the catholic ground and authority; another rejects and vilifies it; another accepts the words, but by some trope or other turns the since; another allows the natural sens, but says it is one of his errors; another will not have that, nor any other authority upon earth, to be of any force in those affairs, etc. And thus they do about every particular of ancient faith; still laughing, and hugging one another's fancies, though never so much contradictory, as well to one another, as to the common faith they all impugn. What a strange confusion would this cause in the world, if the like proceeding were countenanced in civil, as here in spiritual affairs; and men might be outed of their estates and possessions by half a score witty lawyers, with cunning quirks and subtle sophistries deluding his right and tenure, no judge admitted to give sentence. And indeed although this contest begin in spiritual affairs, yet it ever ends in civil. When they have once oated a Land of their old religion, and the prosperity and peace attending it, men's persons, estates, dignities, nay the very laws of the Land are apprehended, and brought into the power of these reformers, to the utter desolation of a Kingdom. And as this book of Whitbies, Sir, is a compendious mirror of all Anticatholiks' dealing with the old Roman faith; so will I give you in civil affairs a perfect emblem of all Whitbies book: That all may clearly see, if this proceeding be allowable, what confusion and injustice must needs follow. The Emblem of the old Roman religion I make Caius the seventeenth Knight, for example, of his family, which hath continued in the state time out of mind. A faction rises, to dispossess him of all that he and his ancestors had so long and peaceably enjoyed. They tell him in general, that his ancestors were intruders: but differ very much about the time, when the invasion was first made. One says 200 year ago, another 800, another 500, several men, several ways, and cannot agree. They come at last to his own particular title. Caius shows his forefather's succession legally descending, and quietly possessing for so many generations; and an evident testament also for himself, wherein it is expressly said, Ego Gonvillus, etc. constituo Caium silium meum beredem bonorum mcorum omnium, etc. I Gonvil do constitute my son Caius heir of all my goods, etc. The adversaries, put case Chamier, Dally, Plessis, Blondel, Baxter, Hammond, Hall, etc. laugh at this, and tell him it is all impertinent, and proves nothing. 1 Alas quoth Chamier, these words are plainly corrupted. It was not written Caium but Saium: And the corruption is easy, only the bottom of the first letter being razed out. 2. Let it be as you will, quoth Dally, this testament can be of no value. For it proceeds upon an uncertain, if not falls, supposition. Who can say assuredly, that either you are his son Caius, or that Caius is indeed his son. 3. Either, quoth Chillingworth, you must be his son and actual heir, while he was alive, or when he was dead. Not while he was alive; for the right can be but in one at once: Not when he was dead, for no man can be a son to one that is not; no more than any person that is alive, can be a father to one that has no being. 4. Were this right, quoth Baxter, which is conveyed to you, in your father only, or in some others also besides himself? If in himself alone, why doth he say constituo, which signifies simul statuo, or I appoint together with others. 5. It seems to me, quoth Blondel, that this testament, Mr Caius is rather against, then with you. Either you pretend to be his son, before his testament was made, or after. If before, your own evidence witnesses against you; Constituo Caium silium meum, I make Caius my son. If after; then by this testament you are made his son, but supposed only an heir: and a title for that here is none at all. 6. He does indeed, quoth Plessts, make him truly his heir. But of what? not of his estate, which we contend about; but only of his goods, all his goods. And can you think Mr. Caius, that a dying man would speak improperly? surely no. The goods of the mind, virtue, prudence, temperance, these, as Aristotle witnesses, are proprie bona, properly are only to be called goods: But the goods of the body, and goods of fortune, these are improperly and falsely so called. 7. Let it be what kind of goods you will, quoth Hall, this very word meorum, Mr. Caius, quite overthrows all your pretensions. These are your father's words you say; well then, if it be so, either the state you plead for is now his, or now not his. If it be now his, than it is not yours; if it be now not his, than the very title you rely upon is falls. 8. A testament is to be taken in its strict and rigorous sens, quoth Field, and so the word omnium spoils your plea Mr. Caius. You must either have all his goods or none; but you have neither his good face, nor other his good endowments, etc. 9 Come, come, quoth Crackanthorp, we needed not have gone so far, or used so many words. Caius pretends, that his father, who made this testament, is the last of seventeen Knights of his family. Out of his own mouth I will condemn him, and with the very first word of his will he says his father made, which is Ego. For it is clear enough, that Ego is the first person, and not the last. And all these are ushered in by a young Whitby. To this hath Chamier told you, that, etc. Can you not see what incomparable Chillingworth hath taught you, that, etc. You will still be impertinent, though learned Plessis hath informed you, that, etc. Where were your eyes, when great Dally hath told you, that, etc. In these few words Sir, I have given you a clear Emblem, not only of this book of Mr. Whitbies, but of all the writings have been made against catholic religion, since the reformation. There is no evidence so clear for that ancient religion, but it is endeavoared several ways to be made frustrate: Although unto catholics, who understand their religion, those evasions signify no more than these I have specified, against a title most irrefragable and firm. Yet in that contest children and unexperienced people, would judge poor Caius to be utterly lost. And so indeed he will, if those crafty Lawyers may determine the business without recours to any Judge: as is done in all our affairs and controversies of religion. How many sophistical evasions is he to answer about one and the same thing? How many captious snares to incur, in any one of his answers? to be overwhelmed without doubt, while no Judge interposes, either with their multitude of words, or force of arms. But enough of this, which indeed can never be too much thought of. Mr. Whitby, Sir, begins and ends his book just as you begin and end yours, against which he writes. For as you in the conclusion of your book set down some rules, which you desire him that shall reply unto it, for more clearness and order, and substantiallity of discourse, to observe; so Whitby in the end of this his reply against your book, wherein he hath not heeded to observe so much as any one of those your good rules, does also prescribe laws for you, if you mean to answer him again, whereof the first is, That you consider all the answers he hath given to any of your arguments: and that otherwis, if any one single answer remain, your agument must be invalid, p. 501. This is the first and wittiest of his conditions. For the several shifts and evasions of above twenty men, which he makes use of, about most of the substantial points of controversy, being all put together and multiplied, as they be, to some thousands, would, if they should be all spoken to in particular, though never so briefly, raise such a bulk of a book, as hath been seldom seen, and would never be read. But being, as I have already told you, contradictory one to another, and ten to one excessively childish, would no less disable the repute and gravity of that man, who should so much as take notice of them, then to play with boys at span-counter in the streets. And as he ends his book with the same method of prescribing laws, as you concluded yours; so doth he begin his in the very self-fame words as you enter yours. I cannot forbid myself to wonder that, etc. So begins your book. I cannot forbid myself to wonder that, etc. so begins this book of his, which he writes against you, imitating and repeating your very words for many lines together, and returning them hand over head upon yourself, by the method of our good women of Billingsgate, not caring, so he say again what you speak, how true or falls, just or unjust his words be. Thus much in general, I shall say more by and by, after I have briefly told you, what he does in each particular chapter of his book. His first ch. from page 1 to 7. Is a bitter invective against Papists, whom he concludes for their cruelties and disloyalty, unworthy of mercy or any affection. He acknowledges indeed, that Catholic religion cannot stand justly charged with any such crimes, p. 2. But yet he lays the crimes upon them all notwithstanding, so indefinitely, and only upon them, that he excludes universally all professors of that religion, and them alone, from all compassion and love: Although he knows in his heart, both that the religion, the very religion of some others in this land, stands justly charged with those crimes, whereof he acknowledges catholic religion free; and that Papists also or Roman catholics, are the only men, that have universally exhibited themselves unblamable, towards that breast of love and mercy, from whence he would have them all excluded. And to make these Papists odious, he names some wars and troubles of theirs in Ireland, Poland, Bohemia, Savoy. Indeed he needed not have wandered so far as Bohemia or Poland. The story of our own England would have afforded a large volume of matter, if all that Papists have ever done must be attributed to their religion, for wars and broils enough to tyre a reader. How many battles have there been here between the Scot and English, between the Sax and Norman, between the Norman and Britton, between the English and French at Agincourt, and all over France, with much bloodshed and slaughter; between the two houses of York and Lancaster at home, when all these parties were Papists, and no other religion known amongst them. Is there no other principle to attribute all these disorders unto, but that religion, which endeavours, as much as it is able, to stifle all these evil fruits of concupiscence amongst men; which some time or other will shoot up, notwithstanding all the heavenly endeavour of that divine seed, implanted in men on purpose to suppress it. Mu or can Protestants be justly charged, with the treasons, murders, robberies of all such as have been imprisoned in our jails, or hanged at Tyburn, since the reformation? And yet thus we deal with poor Catholics, to add affliction upon affliction, and extinguish that small sparkle of life which is left in their bodies. It is surely a general fault in Protestants, that we think in our hearts, whatever we speak outwardly, that Roman catholics' are, as they should be, all Saints, all spotless in their lives, all of them unblamable, universally unblameable. And hence it is, that if ever we discover one traitor, fool, or knave amongst any of that profession, we exult and make bonfires for joy, and record it in our books one age after another; that all the world may know, and ever remember, that even some of them have been transgressors. We do not wonder so at our own Protestants, though thousands of them should prove traitors together, and many are continually hanged, and some also burnt for their wicked crimes. I am sure the Papists have not themselves, any such opinion of men of their own religion, that they should so necessarily be honest and good, as that it is impossible any should be otherwise. But even in catholic countries, they have their whips and stocks, and gibbets and prisons, and tortures, provided for malefactors, as well as we have here. And Princes will there go to wars, as well as we. Did not the Kings of Israel and Judah do so? And the people too think themselves bound, even by their religion to follow them. Nor have any people rose in rebellious herds, to do mischief, but they would sometimes pretend religion for it, although they act indeed against the dictamen not only of other men's religion, but perhaps their own too. Catholics know their religion is good, and pure and holy, and apt to make all men so, that walk according to its direction. But if any swerv, they pity indeed, and pray for their serious repentance; but they wonder not, as we do at it; much less do they rejoice, when any of our Protestants are taken and hanged for treason; nor do they write; or spread it abroad in books, nor make bonfires, or keep holidays for joy of a thing, which is indeed the object of their grief and pity. But Mr. Whitby speaks here so much of equivocations and mental reservations, as proper and peculiar only unto Papists, which render them, although they should promise and swear allegiance never so seriously, not at all to be believed or trusted; that I began to doubt, whether all London, and the whole Land, may not haply be Papists, although I thought not of it. One thing I am sure of, and all men are of my mind, that when we go into a shop in London, or into any market or fair in England to buy wares, when they tell us, yea and swear too, that the thing we cheapen cost them so much out of their own purse, we do not believe a word they say, but think they have either some reservation in their mind, or use an equivocation or lie. And even Mr. Whitby himself, must either be a Papist too, if mental reservation be peculiar only unto them, when he says so often in his book, of which I treat, That there is not one reason in Mr. Cresseys' book that is pertinent, not one authority but corrupted, not one instance but ushered in with disadvantages to the truth, and sorgery: or if he be not a Papist, he must in these and several other passages in this his book, wherein he either secretly equivocates, or openly lies, at least Papistare, and act that, which he says only Papists practice. To give one example, he says p. 237. That one general council calls the respect given to images a hundred times by the name of worship. I have good reason to think, that one Council would not use that word much above fourscore times, if they be rightly numbered. So likewise he says here p. 4. That the whole college of Jesuits in London said, that they would rather promote the late King's ruin then hinder it, lest the Puritans should make use of his distresses to any advantage. O too too foolish and malicious calumny! For surely, this is something more than an equivocation. They rather promote then hinder it! How could they do either the one or the other? Thus some of our mad countrymen were not ashamed to tell it abroad, about ten years ago, even in catholic countries where they traveled, that they who sat in Court, and condemned our gracious King, were most of them Papists and Jesuits. And did all the whole college of Jesuits in London conclude this, so generally, that there was not any one against it? Who took the votes, that he could be so assured of this great seret? And where is this college of Jesuits in London? Who ever heard of any such thing? Will ever any of this wild talk pass for other, than the dream of a man in Bedlam? We shall ere long be frighted by such as Whitby and Baxter, from hanging our pot over the fire, lest the whole college of Jesuits in the moon, should conspire together, to water down upon our heads, and spoil our pottage. They would never tell us these things, or hope to be believed, were not the opinion they have of our reason as small, as the confidence they have of their own audacity is great? And what will the college, the whole college of Jesuits here in London determine next? If they should chance to decree, that no whale, or cod or herring should ever come into the North seas, as now it is not unlikely they may, they will undo many a family. In the end of this his first chapter, are cited some Councils severity against heretics, wherein Mr Whitby thinks himself concerned with much regret and anger. One of these, saith he, was kept at Lateran, the other at Leyden under Pope Innocent. I suppose concilium Lateranum is the council he says was kept at Lateran: though his Dictionary of proper words will not help him to understand, in what country that town of Lateran is to be found. And concilium Lugdunense is that which he englishes the council of Leyden; all the history and reading Mr. Whitby has, not been able to distinguish betwixt Ludunum Batavorum, and Lugdunum in Gallia; betwixt Leyden in Holland, where never any council was kept, and Lions in France, where Pope Innocent held that council, whilst he sojourned in Burgundy. But though he be yet but raw, you shall find him a greater proficient by and by. As for that council of Lateran, wherein is a confiscation of goods and other penalties decreed, upon such as run into disturbing heresies; it touched only exterior discipline or temporal statutes, and no article or business of religion. Nor did the Church make any such constitution by her own authority, but declared only, what secular power may justly do, when they think it expedient and necessary, to prevent further evils. What power have Priests and Bishops over men's estates and lives? But the Emperor and Kings were willing to have it so ordained in that venerable assembly; that with a more plausible colour they might be able to provide for their Kingdom's peace, even in those affairs which they themselves were to execute, though not to determine. Nor does any King in Christendom think himself any further obliged by that decree, to put such laws in execution, than he shall with his private council think fit. And all secular princes, will by the advice of their peers proceed to such penalties, when they pleas, whether any synod decree it or no. Nor is it the worse, if a council do say that in some cases may be done, which princes in their discretion think expedient. His 2 ch. from page 7 to 9 Tells us, that Mr. Whitby is here in a trembling sweat, good Sir, for your faults. I tremble, saith he, to consider that our Author should be so imprudent to say no worse, to call God to witness to his soul, that he hath studiously avoided all caviling distortion of texts, etc. And then he adds with a new fervour, That all Fathers are miserably corrupted by you, and allegations most disingeniously forged. And if it be not so, quoth he, I will forfeit presently my life. Good man, he engages very far, as you see, for you. He will die, die presently; if Fathers, all the Fathers, be not corrupted, miserably corrupted, by you. And this he will do without any trembling, if he do not make that good which he trembles to think of. But it is no wondrous matter I think, to hear him utter such daring words, although he use here none of his mental reservations. He knows himself as safe as a thief in a mill; and that it will never be put to a Jury, to find whether he be guilty or no. His first chapter was fuming wrath; this second a shivering fear: And so he proceeds, from one passion to another, quite through his book, even to the end, to verify his own words in his Epistle to his Patron, where upon the sight of your book, he saith, that he found himself put into such a passion, as vented itself into this reply. But these passions of his, and the various vilifications both of your book and person, wherewith this reply of his, and assault against catholics is stuffed, or any other of his calumnies and bitter invectives against Papists, which are many and heinous. I shall not trouble you with now. You must have patience, and let them pass, as other good people do, where ever you meet them. Ministers, good men, fight for their wives and children, either those they have or hope to have, which will be undone and lost, if the odium of Popery, and of all such as any way excuse and defend their innocence, be not smartly kept up. My adversary OeN did as much to innocent Fiat Lux, which had no other fault, but that it had excused the faultless. To do well and hear ill, this must be the lot, as that is the endeavour of all good men in this world. In his 3 ch. from page 9 to 17. The challenge of Bishop Jewel for the first 600 years against Papists, which all his graver brethren disliked, Mr. Whitby, if his word here be of any worth, will make it good, yea and enlarge it with Perkins, White, Baxter, and Crackanthorp to 800, yea 1200 years, wherein there was not, they say, any such creature as a Papist in the world. And he cares not a pin, though Beza, Melancton, and Luther, acknowledge to the contrary, that Popery hath the prerogative of Antiquity, before all other ways. Beza, saith he, and Melancton are strangers to us. Must we be accountable for Luther's words? And yet all over his book, he makes more use of strangers, & gives more credit to them, than any of our own, and would have us do so too. Are not Chamier, Dally, Plessis, Grotius, Blondel, as much strangers, and of as little credit, as Beza, Melancton, and Luther. But what if our own Dr. Willet speaks for the Papists antiquity above others? What if our own Whitaker say, that to believe by the testimony of the Church, is the very heresy of the Papists? O than his answer is ready at hand. What is all this to the purpose? did ever any Protestant say otherwis? do they therefore confess their antiquity? The stripling fears no colours. If any or many both of our own and foreign Protestants do acknowledge the Papists antiquity, why, what then? If some deny it, than it is so. It is as they say, who say as he says. And if any say otherwise, it is otherwise. It is not so. There is one assertion in this his third chapter, that deservs I think to be written in capital letters. For p. 16. having told you Sir, that Protestants either affront the evidence of Scripture against Papists, or the intent of the Apostles, or rather of God himself, etc. he thinks therefore, that Protestants rejection of Popery may well be excused, and especially, saith he, (these are his words so much remarkable) When you Papists know, we hold that in all matters of faith, it is all one with us, to be praeter Scripturam, and to be contra. That is, in plain English, what is not in Scripture, that Protestants hold to be against it. And is this so? First, it is hard to say, how far matters of faith reach. There is one sort of people now in England, that would have all things acted and disposed even in civil affairs, only according to the tenor of Gospel. And what is beside it, they conclude by this very axiom to be against it. And so they decry all our Courts, our very Justices of peace and Constables. But in ecclesiastical affairs, the proper businesses of the Church, and matters of religion, as distinct from civil, this is the plea which the good Quakers use against the Bishops and Priests, of not only the Roman, but even this our English Church, which Whitby defends. Why, say they to them, why are we harrassed, imprisoned, beaten and spoiled so many ways, by your instigation, who have made yourselves drunk with the blood of Saints? Do not we either confront the evidence of Scripture against you, or the intent of the Apostles, or rather of God himself, and tell you expressly, that you oppose the evidence of God's word, in your observances and ordinations, in your tithes and Lents, and Mass-tides, in your lawn sleeves and cassocks and canonical girdles, in your Pulpits, Universities, and Steeple-houses, in your Chapters and Deaneries, in your orders and degrees, in your oppressions of conscience and jurisdictions, in your surplices, copes, and preaching for hire, etc. Is it not enough to show our innocence, in not accepting these things, because in the beginning it was not so? nor were any of these things to be found amongst the apostles. Especially when you know, we hold, and we know also you hold, that in matters of faith and religion, it is all one, to be beside Scripture, and to be against it. Are your Chapters and Deaneries, your lawn sleeves and surplices, your Lents and common-prayers, your tithes and livings of five or six hundred a year, your universities, and steeple-houses in Scripture and Christiat. Gospel, yea or no? If they be there, show it us. If they are besides scripture or not in it, then are they by your own confession here, against it. Ch. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. from p. 17. to 90. These five following chapters speak against ecclesiastical Supremacy, either amongst the apostles or any other succeeding prelate's. And with so much earnestness and little heed doth Mr. Whitby whiff away all your defence of it, that he strikes off that authority, not only from the Pope's head, but from any Prince or Prelate whatsoever; not caring so the Roman fall, if the English Prelacy sink too. So earnest indeed is he bend against it, that he professes p. 39 he would sooner persuade himself of the truth of Mahomet's fables, than any such pretention. Thus well is he disposed against the coming of the Turk. These few propositions he advances here amongst others. 1. That the apostles had an equality of power and jurisdiction or dignity over the rest. But whence then comes our English Hierarchy, of by shops, arch-by shops, ministers, and deacons'? Whitby himself denies, that our Kings are the root of Episcopal jurisdiction here in England; Who ever thought so, quoth he, p. 88 I think I could show him out of the statutes and laws of the Land, that our English Episcopacy, and their whole jurisdiction, is from the King, as the sole fountain and root of it. But if it be not so; and no such subordination, as here he affirms, was ever found amongst the apostles, whence is our English Hierarchy? If it neither come from God nor from the King, it may not irrationally be suspected, to be from an insufficient it not an ill original. His second is, that such an ecclesiastical jurisdiction is useless, and unable to prevent schisms, whether they rise from breach of charity or difference of judgement, p. 20. And if it be useless for that, for God's sake what is it good for? Third is, that to submit to one, is to slight the judgement of thousands, that may be as wise as he; and to endanger the very being of religion. Ibid. And is it so indeed? why then are so many millions here in England subjected to one Bishop, much people to one minister, all the people, ministers, and bishops to one King? Is this to slight all that are subjected, or to endanger the very being of religion Fourth is, that general causes cannot be dispatched by one supreme governor over all, as may particular by inferior superintendents. And other such like fanatic assertions he has; which do as much evacuate the subordination of our English as the Roman Church, and civil government as well as ecclesiastical hierarchy. I am sure they have done both, even in this our Kingdom, and in our own days: a thing which will not be soon forgotten. And little did I think to see any prelatic minister broach such whimsies again here in our land, so lately made desolate thereby. What he means by it I cannot tell. But I am sure he is not so unadvised, but he understands the consequence. For p. 423. upon his grant of a liberty of judging to particular persons, in matters of religion; whence all our wars and animosities here in England do first flow, even so far as to deny obedience thereupon to their spiritual superiors, he speaks thus: Would a gracious King, think you, presently condemn all those to the utmost severity, who in such cases after consultation and deliberation duly made, by reason of some prejudices or weakness of reasoning, should be induced to think it their duty to follow the mutinous party? he craftily uses the phrase of utmost severity, the better to palliate his more secret judgement, who by his own principles here and elsewhere not obscurely expressed, must needs conceiv them liable to no severity at all. But that you may see, Sir, this adversary of yours, what a lively spark he is, he makes in his 5 chapter the very Popes themselves, when significantly they would express their own supremacy, either to say nothing for it, or altogether against it. If Pope Agatho speak of his own solicitude over the Churches of God, even to the utmost bounds of the ocean. Whitby thence infers, that his headship thersor is not universal, because it is bounded. Is not this witty? And thus the great Prophet, when he describes the vast unlimited extent of the Messias his dominion (dominabitur à mari usque ad mare, & à slumine usque ad terminos orbis terrarum) must be understood to limit and confine it. Again, if Pope Julius defend his acts of power and jurisdiction, by ancient cannons and custom; Whitby concludes from thence, that it is not therefore of divine institution; for custom and cannons are but humane. Witty still. Thus a master, when sending his servant on an errand, he tells him he may well go, for that he gave him lately a pair of new shoes, loses thereby all his other claim of commanding him. Again, if St. Gregory prefer the Apostolical See before other Churches. That is, quoth Whitby, not for itself, but for the Emperor's seat. And for the same reason must the Bishop of London or Abbot of Westminster, if any now were, be preferred before the Bishop of Canterbury. If Pope Leo derive his authority from St. Peter prince of the apostles, That may infer, quoth he, a precedency of order, but not any dignity. A Prince, it seems, signifies only one that is to go before, not one, that has any dignity or power to command those that follow after Thus will your adversary put authorities into his mouth, and draw them in an instant, most nimbly out of his throat, without ever touching his stomach. Can we think him unable, by such Huguenot evasions, to whiff away all the four gospels and apostles creed, as to its former sense and meaning, if there should once be a necessity urging him to submit to Mahomet's fables, or reconcile them and his creed together? Who dare say he cannot do it, and do it as wisely too, as perhaps he ever did thing in his life. I think it not amiss Sir, to give you yet a little further taste here of our Author, your adversaries nimbleness, only some little of much; for I mean to be very brief. Doth emperor Valentinian establish, that whatsoever is decreed by the See apostolic, which is raised upon the merits, of St. Peter, dignity of the city, and authority of counsels; should have the force of a law to all Bishops? Valentinian, faith Whitby, was a young man and easily seduced. What doth this conclude for the Pope's supremacy, etc. The laws then of Kings and Emperors are to be weighed, it seems, by the age of the lawmaker. And if he should be a young man, they signify nothing against any delinquent or transgressor, if he have but the wit to plead here with Whitby, that the King was young, when that law was made. This easily seduced young man's law was in force notwithstanding, in following times, and put into the code by the old mature grave man, and not easily seduced Emperor Justinian: And no man either young or old ever excepted against it, for the youth of the legislator. Young Princes do not make laws as boys tell tales, only by strength of their own wits. Valentinian was a young man, and his laws therefore, according to Whitby, not to be regarded: And what then shall we think of our English protestancy; which was here first publicly set up by King Edward the sixth, a child. Doth an ecclesiastical cannon say, that no decree can be established in the Church, without the assent of the Roman bishop. That is; quoth Whitby, except the Roman Bishop be present. What doth this make for supremacy? etc. But if he have no authority there, why may he not as well be absent. There is no certain number required for the making of a decree; and that bishop does no more, it seems, then make up a number. Doth the council of Ephesus refer the judgement of the Patriarch of Antioch his cause to the Pope? for that the Church of Antioch had been ever governed by the Roman. That was, saith Whitby, not to use his authority, but only to know his mind, etc. And what matters it, I pray, what his mind may be, if the others never mean to heed it. We consult any that are present, whether equal or inferiors, to know their minds, and yet do ourselves what we list: but we never trouble men a thousand miles off for that. Surely when a judgement is referred by parties to another power so far distant, with great expense and long expectation, and only upon this ground, that they are subject, and have ever been governed by that power, they cannot be thought only to require his mind, but use his authority. Our honest Quaker will not be unwilling thus to have his cause referred to the judgement of our English Bishops; not to use their authorities, but only to know their minds. Doth the Sardican council ordain, that in a controversy between bishops, Appeal should be made to the Bishop of Rome, to appoint Judges, and renew the process. That cannon, says he, is against the Papists; for it permits the Pope to receiv, not to command appeals, etc. So then: Papists, it seems, think the Pope may command, not receiv appeals. And besides, saith he, the appellation was there ordained ad Julium Romanum, not ad Papam Romanum: Not to the Pope who then was Julius; but to Julius who then was Pope. We have here surely another Hudibras; In logic a great critic, profoundly skilled in Analytick; he can distinguish and divide a hair 'twixt South and South-West side. Appeal to Julius' Pope, not to Pope Julius! And what does he think to gain by this subtlety? The cannon he hopes will cease forsooth, when Julius dies. O the wit of some men above other some, especially when it is assisted by French Hugonots who drink good wine. Our English ale could never have made us out so subtle a distinction as this is. Doth the council of Arles send their decrees to the Bishop of Rome, from whom all Christians are to receiv what to believe and practice? Here is something of trouble, quoth Whitby, but nothing of jurisdiction in the Pope, etc. Can any thing hang more tied than this? Conciliar decrees must be sent to Rome, from whence all Christians must receiv what they are either to believe or practice. But this is not to acknowledge his power, but to trouble his patience. Doth St. Basil say, it is convenient to write to the bishop of Rome to conclude affairs, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and to pass his sentence? O, quoth he, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, doth not signify to give sentence, but advice. Here you have a spice of his grammar to mix with his logic; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies counsel, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is greek for a juridical sentence. Doth Athanasius fly to Rome against the Eusebians, and Pope Julius appoint a day in his behalf 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for plea and judgement, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, following therein the law and method of the Church. He followed that law, saith Whitby, not in citing them, but in not condemning them uncited. etc. He was just then, in not condemning parties uncited. But by what authority he either cited or judged them, we must not here know. Is there any law of the Church, that justifies a condemnation of persons cited to judgement, when they are neither cited nor judged by any legal authority? And it is to be observed here, Sir, all this while, and quite through his book, that Whitby has forgot the fearful execration he made upon himself in the beginning, that all fathers are miserably corrupted by you, and allegations most disingeniously forged, etc. This I say he has quite forgot, even so far forgot, that there is not one authority in a hundred, that he does so much as challenge either of forgery or corruption. And is therefore in danger to forfeit presently his life. But he was then in his own heat, now he is amongst his Protestant authors, who afford him other kind of evasions. And we must leave him to their wits, when he has lost his own memory. Doth S. Augustin witness, that the cause of the Donatists in Africa was judged by Pope Melchiades in Rome. This was, saith Whitby, a brotherly, not an authorative decision. I make no doubt it was brotherly, but why not authorative? Mr. Whitby hath seen perhaps some elderly cockerel, to part the frays of younger chickens; and thinks tribunals of bishops do no more. The Pope, it seems, was ever a loving brother at least, still ready to decide the frays of all Churches and Bishops upon all occasions; which was a pious and good work, and not belonging to Antichrist. He would do well Sir, to part this fray of yours with Mr. Whitby, which otherwis will never be ended. Is the Roman Patriarch said, to have the care of all the Churches? Any one, saith Whitby, may have that repute; sor he that serves one Church serves all. And if Whitby get but the cure of any one little Chapel here in England, though it be but to read prayers in an hospital, he must then be believed to have the solicitude of all the English Churches upon him. In brief, doth S. Chrysostom, to declare a supremacy among the apostles, affirm, that St. James obtained the throne of Jerusalem, but St. Peter was constituted master and teacher, not of one throne, but of the whole world, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. That text, says he, is in all likelihood by negligence of transcribers, or some other way, mistaken. However it makes nothing for supremacy: were not all the apostles so? He gathers they were all so, because the peculiarity of the title, master and teacher of the whole world, is there attributed unto one, exclusively to all the rest. Every minister is a bishop or overseer, if we mind only the signification of the word, but is he therefore so in the whole meaning and peculiarity of the title? Finally, doth our Mr. Whitgift acknowledge, that the apostles were all equal as to their function, not as to government; equal quoad ministerium, not quoad polititiam; which is a plain and manifest assertion, Sir, of the supremacy you plead for? What is this, saith Whitby to the purpose? He finds never a word in that speech of Dr. Whitgift, which begins with s. u p. and therefore cries out, What is this to the purpose? what is this to supremacy? You must not expect, Sir, that in the succeeding chapters, I should give you any more account of the particular quicknesses of your adversary. They are all like these which I have here briefly hinted to you in this first controverted point of Supremacy; only that you may see, that he, or the several champions rather, which he makes use of, have more distinctions than one. But by such evasions, distinctions, and shifts, wherewith most men are now made so acquainted, that they can use them nimbly against any laws and authorities either divine or humane, are the people of our distressed Kingdom carried up and down, like a cork in water, or gossimor in the air, with every wind and billow of a fancy, now here, now there, being removed once from their ancient stability, unto endless disquiet. Cannot a man in this manner and method, evacuate, slight, and frustrate every thing? What authority, law, or custom, either human or divine, can stand in force, if it may be thus by Whitbean Sophomorismes laughed out of countenance? I will be bold to say, that the witty Presbyterian does more substantially resute all prelatic principles and practices, than these answer the Roman. Nay these in answering the Roman, have made way for the Presbyterian: And yet they will still be scribbling. But you must know Sir withal, that Mr. Whitby in his intervals or cooler moods, allows the Roman Patriarch, a priority of order and honour, although he will not afford him any authority of jurisdiction. A 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or uppermost seat he shall have, although no supremacy or power. For he says p. 52. The bishop of Rome was to do it, (judge causes he means, receiv appeals, and the like) more especially for the dignity of his seat, which made him prime in order of Bishops. And again p. 66. St. Basil calling the Bishop of Rome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the head or apex of Western Bishops, makes him only, saith he, the chief in order, and most eminent Bishop of the West, which title we can very well allow him. So that the Pope, if he should come hither to us, either for love or hospitality, although our bishops will not allow him authoratively to visit, keep chapter, make laws, or punish any of them for transgressing the ecclesiastical cannons, yet will they give him a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and suffer him, if Mr. Whitby be any legal master of ceremonies, to sit at the upper end of the table. And St. Peter, it seems, had no more. Nor had he any power, so much as to command any man to rise from the table, if he behaved himself unmannerly at his meat. And such a precedency he allows his own chief Superior, the Archbishop of Canterbury; and no more. A Metropolitan, saith he, p. 23. hath no jurisdiction over bishops: He can do nothing, etc. And again page 33. His grace of Canterbury hath no power of jurisdiction over bishops. And this he speaks boldly; although he assert withal, that a bishop hath jurisdiction over parish-priests, and these over their parishioners. So that according to Whitby, that authority, dignity, and power which is in the lowest, must be wanting in the highest degree of hierarchy, which must, if this be true, end with power, and begin with feebleness; contrary both to common reason, and that famous speech of learned Porphyry, In summis est unitas cum virtute, in insimis multitudo cum debilitate. Mr. Whitby has no hope perhaps ever to be made Metropolitan, although he may possibly see himself a bishop; and will not therefore divest himself aforehand, of the dignity he may one time or other arrive at, althought the fox call the grapes, he has no hopes to reach, unsavoury and sour stuff. But his grace of Canterbury, hath he no jurisdiction, Mr. Whitby, over bishops? What law, custom, or tradition gives bishops a power over parish-priests, which allows not a Metropolitan as much over bishops? And if he have only a precedency of place, then can these have no more: And it is as easy to say the one, as the other. And is all our hierarchy come only to a precedency of honour? Here will be fine work for a Quaker, who will as resolutely deny the honour, as you the power. How comes that eminent person to be styled his grace of Canterbury, but only for his power, dignity, and jurisdiction over the venerable bishops? And this power and dignity hath, I am sure, belonged to the See of Canterbury ever since the first planting of Christianity among the English, which enables that bishop to make laws, to visit his province, to call together his bishops, to censure, to punish even Prelates themselves, if they transgress the cannons: which is as much as any bishop can do to his parish priests. Is it not a strange presumption in a young man, thus to disable his own chief prelate before his face, and say peremptorily, that a Metropolitan can do nothing; that his grace of Canterbury hath no jurisdiction. I know, and am fully assured, there is not one of those poor catholic priests who were lately banished out of England, but would have defended even to extremity, if need were, this one most certain verity, That a Metropolitan hath a jurisdiction, as solid and good a jurisdiction over bishops, as any these can have or plead for over parish priests. And by as firm and good and ancient law is the one established as the other, and indeed by the very same; whilst a minister of his own presumes to tell the Archbishop his own prelate to his face, that he hath no jurisdiction at all. His 9 ch. from page 91. to 169. Is wholly fanatic. There he tells us plainly, That neither Convocations, Bishops, nor Parliaments are judges of our faith: That the English Church doth not punish for difference in opinions, nor require that all should believe as she beleeus, or submit to her determinations, but leaves every man to the liberty of his own judgement, so he do not make factions against her. Who ever urged men. saith he, to believe as the Church beleeus? p. 101. Also, that no decrees of any Church are further to be admitted, than they appear to particular' men's judgements to agree with scripture. That every private man must make use of his own reason, to judge or reject doctrine and rites propounded, though scripture be his guide. That the business must there end, without resigning to any further authority, which is all as fallible as we be ourselves: That points fund amental are as perspicuous as the sunbeam, and points not fundamental, the Church doth not determine them; and if any dispute should rise about them, she silences indeed, but expects not her children should be of her opinion, only would not have them gainsay her: That that Church does but mock us, which expects a belief to her proposals, because she pretends to guide herself by scripture. For if scripture must bend to their decrees, and we must have no sense of scripture, but what they think fit, than their decrees and not scripture is our last rule: And it is a pretty devise, quoth he, first to rule the rule, and then be ruled by it, etc. Can a good Quaker say more for himself, or desire more to be said for him. If we be not bound to believe, we are not bound to hear. Nay, we are bound not to hear any such Church, lest we should chance to believe what aforehand we condemn, and they themselves dare not justify. He hath much of this talk up and down in his book; Faith, saith he p. 439. cannot be compelled. By taking this liberty of discretion from men, we force them to become hypocrites, and so profess outwardly what inwardly they disbeleev. And again p. 450. We allow not any man openly to contradict the Church's decrees: But when he thinks contrary to the determination of our Church, he must keep his judgement to himself, only refusing obedience with all humility, till he be better informed. No fanatic will desire to refuse obedience any longer. Thus doth this champion deliver up himself and Church, unto the will and disposal of all whatever sects; and cares not, so he may avoid catholic obeisance, to make himself a prey to those, who upon these grounds here laid down, will soon turn him out of Church and pulpit too, and strip him not only of his cloak, but his coat also. At last he answers the catholic arguments for the Churches assured and infallible guidance, just as he did before your others for supremacy. Seeing him there, you see him every where. Finally he brings in, for a certain testimony of the Church's liability to error, the two opinions so rife in old time, about communicating infants, and the Millenaries thousand years of blessedness with Christ in this world, after doomsday: Which are both of them now condemned, saith he, by a contrary belief and practice of the present Church, although they were held by not a few very ancient Fathers in the primitive times. And in this he triumphs exceedingly. Surely without cause I should think. Those primitive doctors, we may be assured, knew something more than their Catechism, and committed to writing, something of that they conceived, beyond their Christian faith, as well as the present Fathers and Doctors of the Church now do. And if there were so great varieties of opinion among them concerning those two things, as there are now adays among catholic doctors about a thousand others, it is a sign that those two points did not belong to their Catechism of faith, then assuredly known, but only to scholastical Theology, especially sith they had neither clear scripture or general council, nor assured tradition for either side. And it is of no moment, that some of them should be so confident of their opinion, as to think it to be a right firm Christian belief. For so I have heard myself, many a school Divine in catholic countries, to say of his Thesis or school position, the better to countenance his own divinity, that it was either faith or very near it. Besides I do not know, that the present Church hath ever declared, in any cannon of her faith, either that the faithful shall not reign upon earth a thousand years with Christ, after doom's day: or that we may not communicate the Eucharist to children; although this last is declared not necessary. His 10 ch. from page 169. to 180. Is against prayer for the dead and Purgatory. Where, both by the testimonies which you, Sir, do cite in your book, and by the authorities he brings himself, Mr. Whitby acknowledges that praying and offering for the dead is a very ancient and general custom amongst Christians. Nay, that S. Paul himself prayed for his deceased friend Onesiphorus: This I say he plainly grants p. 182. But he adds, that all this does not infer Purgatory, or that Purgatory is a place under ground near hell, where is fire and darkness, or that all are in pain and torments there. And so he puzzles to the end of his chapter; acknowledging faith, and denying only theology. For whether Purgatory signify any one place, as our imagination is apt to fancy, or only a state and condition of some souls departed out of this visible world, I see Mr. Whitby understands not, that it is no Christian faith, but a mere scholastical divinity. But that our prayers, offerings, penances, and good deeds, do benefit the souls deceased; this the very testimonies cited by Mr. Whitby himself, as they do sufficiently evince, so do they confirm catholic faith, though they touch not upon theology at all. And so while he oppugns the divinity of some catholics', he establishes the catholic faith of all Divines. In the interim he ought to remember, although in this he often forgets himself, that by the very testimonies, not only which you Sir do bring for Purgatory, but those also which Mr. Whitby has against it, we may see manifestly, that our Protestant Church hath much swerved from the ancient primitive practice of former Christians. For Protestants have neither priests, nor altars, nor offerings, nor sacrifice, nor satisfactions, nor expiations for the dead, which those authorities speak of. Ch. 11. from page 188. to 203. The real presence under the elements of the Eucharist, Mr. Whitby here will not by any means endure. And he hath one shield of a word, which consists of almost as many syllables, as Ajax his buckler of bulls hides, to repel all autorities that may witness it. Representatively, that is the word. Thou seest, saith St. Chrisostom, upon the altar the very body which the wisemen saw and worshipped. Representatively, saith Whitby. Again, The most precious thing in heaven I will show thee upon earth, saith the same father. It is showed represent atively, saith Whitby; it is seen representatively. I dare not adore the earth, saith St. Augustin, and yet I have learned how the earth is to be adored; because flesh is of the earth, and our Lord gave us his flesh to eat, which no man eats except he first adore. It is Christ, saith Whitby, who is adored representatively. And if any words will not bear that distinction, then are they all spurious. Nay, if any should say expressly, that not only Cbrist in heaven, but his very Sacrament is worshipped, this man will tells us presently, who hath as many shifts in readiness, where one will not serve his turn, as Achelous had to slip out of the hands of Hercules, that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and adoro have other significations. But he has, poor man, no very good memory. For after he had in this one chapter, spent many of his pages, to show that the real presence was not the former faith of Christians, and that they never adored the Eucharist, he lets fall a word by chance in the very close, which spoils all; by giving us to understand, that this was so universal a belief and practice among Christians, that it came even to the notice of Infidels; and that it was withal of so great concernment amongst believers, that it expressed their whole religion, as the abridgement of their faith, and great capital work of their devotion. Quandoquidem Christiani adorant quod comedunt, sit anima mea cum Philosophis. It was the speech of Avicen, saith Whitby, although I think it was Averro, who well enough understood both of them the nature of Cbristian religion, not only by what they saw themselves, but what they had read from more ancient writers, both Christian, pagan, and Mahometan up and down the world, concerning the religion of Christians. Since the Christians worship that which they eat, saith that Infidel, let my soul be with Philosophers. Ch. 12. from page 203. to 218. Labours much for the general use of the Cup in all Communions. But neither does Mr. Whitby, nor can he distinguish, as appears by his discourse, wherein he says, that otherwise there would not be a representation of Christ's death, which is the wisest word he speaks in all this whole chapter; I say he knows not, and cannot distinguish, that there is in that one Eucharistian liturgy a double action, the one of sanctifying and offering to God, the other of giving or communicating to the people. In the sanctifying and offering of the sacred simbols does only the sacrifice, which is a representation of Christ's death, consist. But the communicating of these symbols to the people, is only a consequent of the former, and no formal representation of our Lord's death at all. But he does not know, and you need not heed what he says. The concomitance of our Lord's body and blood, where ever it be in any one or other of the species or symbols, which may enough justify communion in one kind, he tells you very roundly, it is a figment. But if he had heeded the very practice of his own Church, which indeed he never does, he would have forborn those words. For when the Protestant minister gives the people first the bread, and says, Take, and eat this in remembrance that Christ died for thee, and seed upon him in thy heart by faith with thanksgiving; Do not the ministers words there imply a concomitance before the cup come; even as perfect a concomitance, as you Sir can plead for? I think they do. For surely they intent not, to feed only upon one half of him. Chap. 13. from page 218 to 230. Declares, that alms-deeds and preaching of the Gospel is a sacrifice. But the Eucharist he will not allow to be any true sacrifice at all. Although to put by your arguments and solid reasonings for it, he grants it may be called a Symbolical sacrifice. And so he has caught hold of another distinction, which runs quite through this matter; or rather put the same distinction into other characters. And if any ancient writers, as there are enough, do give testimony, that our Lord's body and blood in the Eucharist is offered, immolated, and sacrificed on Christian altars, by the priest, for our atonement; It is to be understood, faith Whitby, to be offered symbolically, immolated symbolically, sacrificed symbolically, figuratively, significatively, representatively. And though you beat his head never so much with your autorities and reasons, so long as symbolically remains there, you do but beat the air. But where are any altars in our English Churches, or any sacrifices offered, or immolated thereon? And how comes it to pass, that all these hundred years of our separation from Roman unity, our people have never been told, that they have priests still amongst them, and altars, and sacrifice, although they be but symbolical ones; symbolical sacrifice, symbolical altars, and symbolical priests. For sacrifice is the very form and essence of all religion. And they that know so much, would have been much satisfied, to hear, that they have yet a sacrifice, at least a symbolical sacrifice amongst them. I will be bold to say, that not one man of a million has ever heard of any such thing in an English pulpit, or ever read it in a catechism. The minister of the word and word of the minister, that is all we ever hear of. But it is thought perhaps, that symbolical Priest would make but a jarring sound, like two voices in a defective octave, which have a semblance and shadow of a perfect concord, but coming short of it, produce the harshest and worst of discords in our car. That our Lords death upon the Cross was a true and real sacrifice to God for mankind, all Catholics know well enough, and our Ministers need not put them in mind of that, which already they believe. But as the sacrifices of the old law were instituted by almighty God, to be often iterated, before the passion of the great Messias, for a continual exercise of religion, in order to his future death: So did the same Lord, for the very same purpose of religious exercise, institute another to be iterated after his death, unto which once passed, it was to have reference, as the former had a relation to the same death and passion when it was to come. And this the very gospel, if we would but understand it by the ancient practice of the Church, which interprets all written words, sufficiently declares. And though this great sacrifice be exhibited in Eucharistian species and symbols, yet do all Fathers and ancient Counsels speak clearly, that it is a real, true, and propitiatory sacrifice, though accompanied also with a figure; and not only a figurative and symbolical one. A child may be the figure of his father, and yet is he not rightly said to be only a figurative and symbolical child. A sacrifice only symbolical, a figurative altar, and representative priesthood, make only a symbolical, figurative and representative religion. Chap. 14. from page 230 to 247. Rejects images and sacred figures, as both useless and sinful: And Mr. Whitby seems here (good Sir pardon me) to have got indeed a real advantage over you. Doubtless you were somewhat overseen, when you wrote in your book, most advised in other things and serious, these ill pondered words to Protestants. Were there represented to any of you, thinking of other matters, a pictur of our Lord hanging upon a Cross, could you possibly avoid the calling to mind, who our Lord was, and what he hath done and suffered for you? etc. And again, Ask your heart, and you will find, that you would not place St. Peter's pictur or the Kings in an unclean place, etc. I say you are to blame, Sir, to think men of that way so scrupulous, or prone to devotion. For Whitby confutes you by an evident demonstration. Alas, quoth he, I see every day Crucifixes in our College windows, and yet never find any such effect wrought in me, as you talk of. Indeed neither those Colleges, nor windows in the colleges, nor Crucifixes in the windows, were ever set up by their good Catholic founders, for any such students, as Whitby is, who finds, it seems, no effect wrought in him there, by the sight of any thing, but his good chamber, distributions, and dinner provided for him in the hall. So likewise the connatural respect you plead for, as due to figures by force of their representation of respected persons, by an example of a King's pictur, he confutes it nimbly. I would not fear, quoth Whitby, to tear his Majesty's pictures, which sometimes may be found in smoky Alehouses, etc. he puts them in smoky Alehouses, the better to cover his own rudeness; nor would I scruple, says he, to put a piece of Popish Mass, wherein were haply an Epistle or Gospel extant, unto an unclean use. And here also, he puts the Gospel in a Mass-book, as before he set the King's pictur in a smoky alehouse, to prevent offence, that some tender one amongst themselves, might take at his uncivil talk. In brief, he will not allow any figure or image, though it were a Curcifix, to have any influence upon our minds unto good thoughts, any more than the pictur of Bradshaw or Cromwell, hell or the devil. Sometimes he says they cause bad thoughts, but never any good ones. And yet he adds, that Protestants do keep up pictures notwithstanding, though the cries of fanatics be never so loud against them, because of the historical use they have. What historical use can they have, in the name of God, if the fight of them, as Whitby himself here speaks, can bring no part of sacred history to our minds; nor the very Crucifix have so much influence upon us, as to mind us who our Lord was, or what he hath done or suffered for us,? Unless he will say, according to his usual method of answering, that they bring into our minds the history of the civil wars betwixt Cesar and Pompey. But surely, if these kind of sacred images and figures cause only evil thoughts, and no good ones, the cry of fanatics against them, notwithstanding any historical use, which according to Whitby, although he talk of it, is none at all, will not be judged unjust. In conclusion he will needs have the Papists both to worship their Images, and pray to them. And this, because they use them commonly in their Oratories, whither they retire from places of worldly business, to recollect themselves, and pray, when time and devotion invites them to it. But if for this the Papist must suffer his doom, what will Whitby say, when he shall be accused himself, for worshipping the roof and rafters of the Church, towards which he casts up his eyes, when he stands in his pulpit to pray, before and after his sermon. Even the poor Jews were derided by the Roman Satirist, as adorers of the Welkin and clouds. And who can escape the censur, whether he have some pious representation before him, to fix his fancy, or turn only to the wall and stones. He must still kneel before something, whether he be within door, or without in the open air. And if he have the assistance of his crucified redeemer represented before him, it is probable enough it may help to recollect his mind, to humble his spirit, and fix his fancy; at least it can do no hurt. And if I may and needs must frame an idea or pictur of him in my mind, why may I not have it in mine eye too? But Mr. Whitby will have it, whatever you, or the whole world knows to the contrary, that Papists pray to pictures, and consequently make a God of them. And he will not have them any more excusable, than those Israelites who worshipped God in a Calf. Here Sir I learn what I never knew before, that the idolarrous Israelites worshipped God in a calf. He that shall worship a calf for God, I could never in my life yet conceiv how he should worship God in a calf. Moses worshipped God in a flaming bush. And why? Because God was by a peculiar presence in that bush or flame, to terminate that worship. Nor was he blamable in worshipping God so present there. But God was not so present in that golden statue of the molten heifer, which the Hebrews had set up in Moses absence, as the very God which brought them out of Egypt, that they could be said to worship God in it. And if he had been so present in it, they might surely as well have fallen down before him there, as any where else. The heathen, whom the holy Prophet rebuked so earnestly for worshipping the stars and host of heaven, did they also worship God in the stars or heavens? surely than they were not blame-worthy. Where ever God is by a peculiar presence, as in heaven and Moses his flame, there may and ought he to be worshipped. And so Christians worshipped God even in the man Jesus, our great and blessed lord But his figure or effigies has no more of God's presence in it, than the wall it hangs upon; save only the reflection of his outward effigies, to recollect the fancy. And the respect, if we will speak properly, does not terminate upon the pictur, but upon the person whom it represents; which infers a worship of God in it, not by it. Chap. 15. from page 247 to 273. Is very earnest for scripture and liturgy in a vulgar tongue. This plea of Protestant ministers makes a plausible found. And they know it well enough. For it was the first thing that by their rhetorical colours cast upon it, commended them to the people, after the A postacy of the first reformers; by whose persuasion, the people was then made to believe, they should now be as gods, all of them, knowing good and evil. The word of God, saith Whitby, is kept from the knowledge of the vulgar people in the Roman Church. And thus they all say and ever will say; be they never so much satisfied by Catholic writers to the contrary: because it is to their own advantage it should be so thought in England, and all other places, where Protestants have invaded, and now actually sit upon the Catholic Clergies benefice and byshoppricks. But is there any part or particle of Christian faith or religion, or of the word of God, that is kept from Catholics, or not made known to them, in Books, Catechisines, Sermons, all in their own language, and in daily practice of that Church, whereof they are members? Do they not hear, and read, and see all the mysteries of our Christian faith, Christ our Lord's birth and passion, resurrection and ascension into glory? what he acted, what he suffered, what he taught, what he constituted and ordained for our salvation; what we are to hope, what to believe, what to practice in order thereunto, set before their eyes, not only by continual sermons, made to them, all over the catholic world, in their own vulgar tongue, but by their Gospels and Epistles, which they have lying by them, collected for the course of the whole year, and translated into their own language, together with several pious treatises, and meditations upon all these rules and mysteries of faith, unto so ample use, that if they do but walk accordingly, which is all that religion intends, they cannot miss salvation. Is not all this God's word? It is nothing else. And what is there more of the word of God, except we will count letters and syllables? The word of God than is not kept from the knowledge of the vulgar people in the Roman Church. But why have they not the Bible translated, as it lies, in all languages, where catholic faith is prosest? Because it is obscure as it lies, in that short and ambiguous phrase, and under so many several tropes of rhetoric, and schemes also of logic, wherein it was wrote, apt thereby to be perverted and misunderstood, as we see by experience to be true, unto endless factions. Nor does the word of God consist so much in letters and syllables, as in the marrow and meaning of his will. And not the sense and meaning, but the letter of the scripture is that which makes heretics. But is not that the word of God which is kept from the people? It is the word of God, but not kept from the people. For it is but the same with that, which is delivered and made known unto the people. So much as it contains, whatever it be either of saith or morality, either of what is to be believed, or hoped, or practised, they have it all; but disintangled from those artificial schemes of logic and rhetoric, whereof the holy writ is fuller than any book was ever writ by man, which there inwrap and render it obscure. There is no instruction, no rule of piety, no particle of comfort, either for this world or the other, in St. Paul's epistles, for example, but Catholics have it; they read it in their own language, if they be able to read, they know it all. And they have it in a better and more facile manner, than they could find it out, by perusing those high theological discourses of his, which the learnedst of men can hardly, and very hardly understand. The like I say of other portions of holy writ. Only the disputative part, with the interwoven systems of rhetoric, this may exercise great and more sublime divines, who by help of their various literature may consider, not only the plain truths therein contained, which are common to them with other vulgar believers, but the nature of the Metonymies, Synechdoche's, Metaphors, together with the several modes of argumentation, refutation, objections and inopinate transitions in the context. This, if my adversary OeN had understood, it had saved one fourth part of his Animadversions upon Fiat Lux; and Whitby here had been utterly silent. But it is their only advantage both in this and other controverted points of faith with Roman catholics, either to be ignorant, or dissemble their knowledge. And therefore I have good reason to think, they will never seem to understand. But God grant they may. The wonder is, that English Protestants should still be as fiercely eager in this point, when they write controversies, as ever they were; when they do themselves most heartily repent, (I have heard several great clergymen amongst them speak it) that they had ever given the Bible in that short ambiguous phrase it is penned, into the hands of people in their own tongue, to be thus perverted, as it is, every one his own way, unto endless and irreconcilable schisms. It would glad their hearts, no doubt, to see the Roman Church do indiscreetly as they have done. But that will never be. Holy catholic Church has revealed, translated, and several ways made known the will of God to her people, appointing most divine ways and methods, such as she had herself received from God, to inure and keep them in the practice of that their holy faith. And the disputative and sublimer divinity, or, as I may so speak, the philosophical part of holy writ, such as can may read on God's name, and the Church will commend them for it; while these, with all the rest, attend unto those duties and good works, every one in his calling, which their holy faith prescribes. These are and ever were the ways and method of the now present and ancient catholic Church, most wise and holy. And her subjects and believers have profited thereby, many thousands of them, unto angelical sanctity; and all of them unto something more, than otherwise they would have had: whilst others that swerv from these ways, promote themselves unto wildness and schism without end, missing indeed the word of God in the very scripture they read, and never attaining to the true life and power in that form of words, which they use not, unto intended sanctification, but by their own misinterpretations wrest and deprave daily unto their own destruction. Nor will people be ruled now by their ministers, but thinking it their own right to interpret as they pleas, make it their only work to read, and cant sentences, and coin opinions as they list. Excepting only this one fruit of our vulgar reading of scripture, as it lies, which in all men's judgements is an evil fruit, I do not see, nor can I know, what our Protestants can have, if all other things were equal, above vulgar Catholics by their scripture translated, as it lies, in its own phrase. Do they know any more of the mysteries of salvation, Sacraments, or hopes of a life to come, or sincerity of a pious life, than the other? I am sure they do less, whatever they know, and are so taught to do. Or does any Protestant, after he has read a chapter, know any more of what is expedient for salvation, then before he began it. It renews, you will say, and moveth devotion. Devotion to what? Are they not taught by the Reformation, that the good works there commended to our practice, are all mortal sins? And therefore do our people so read and hear, that in hearing and reading they wholly acquiesce, and trouble themselves no further. And they do wisely in it. For who would chastise his body, or mortify his appetites, or give alms, and sin so many ways, with so much expenses and trouble, when he may as well do nothing, and sin less. And do not the sacred gospels, which catholics read in their own language, with pious meditations annexed for that very purpose, which also they are taught to read for no other end, move devotion too? And this I judge to be right piety. Whereas to read, only to say that I have read, or to find out new ways, or strengthen myself therein, is but vanity and sin. After a duty is once known, catholics conceiv then no further thing remains, but only their corresponding practice, which is with all their forces to be put in ure, according to the dictates of that their rule of faith, now sufficiently understood, unto their sanctification and merit. Whilst others think nothing behind, but only to read over again what they knew before, that they may have words in their head to talk of. Which of these is right Christianity, he knew well enough who said, Fidelis sermo, & de his volo te confirmare, at curent bonis operibus praeesse qui credunt Deo: It is a faithful saying, and of this I would have you to be strongly confirmed, that such as once have believed in God, attend unto good works: These things are good and profitable to men, but other questions, controversies, and contentions, (which are the only fruit of our vulgar reading of scripture in its own short ambiguous phrase) these do thou avoid; for they are useless and vain. This is Saint Paul's mind, and I think he had the Spirit of God in him. As for the sacred liturgy which Mr. Whitby would also have in a vulgar tongue, if he knew what the Messach or Catholic Liturgy is, which here I do not intend to teach him, he would know that it could no more be understood in English then in Hebrew, Latin or Greek. For in it the Priest does but offer and pray submissively for the people's atonement, unto him who equally understands all languages; and people offer with him, as they are taught, and know well enough to do, all their several necessities, either with words or without them, in the mediation of his blood, who reconciled the world in his flesh to God, which reconciliation is figured and repeated in their Messach, for their religious exercise and comfort. And the great capital work of a true religion ought to be common unto all, not to those only who hear, and speak, and see, but even to the deaf and blind and dumb; how ever these may fail in other inferior and less necessary duties. Ch. 16. from p. 273. to 369. Maintains very stoutly, first, that the Saints and Angels of God do not pray for us in heaven, either in general or in particular: Secondly, that they do not assist, help or protect us by their presence on earth. And thirdly, that to trust to any such help, is to rest in them, as our final end, and to make them our Gods. Though the two first be as much dissonant to any true religion, as the last to reason; yet will Mr. Whitby hold them all three. And he has an evasion for any grounds or reasonings you or any Catholic can make; an evasion at hand as smart and senseless, as any of those he gave before against Supremacy, etc. But this your catholic doctrine about Angels he butts and runs at it, with most frightful and horned dilemmas. So many millions of Angel-guardians, quoth he, if for example upon the festival of St. Peter, they go up to heaven to St. Peter with their pupil's prayers, who guards their persons? And if they do not go up, who presents their prayers? Again, When, saith he, these Angel messengers come so may thousand of them at once to tell the Virgin Mary of her new suitors, how can she have any quiet to say her prayers? And if she say her own prayers quietly, how can they tell her continually of so many new suitors? Again, Have all the houses in London, and all the Papist houses in Rome, so many Angels as will guard them, and keep the Devil from setting them on fire, or not? If they have, then are the Angels finely employed: If they have not, why doth not the enemy set a fire on them every night? Again, Had jobs camels, oxen and asses their Angel-guardian, or no? If not, why then did Satan complain he could not come at them? If they had, then must we allow our Author Mr. Cressy one. Is not this notable divinity? Surely Hudibras was but an ass to Whitby. This, this is the man of whom the poet sings Canto I. This is he, In school divinity as able, As he that height irrefragable, A second Thomas, or at once. To name them all another Duns. But all this country divinity Mr. Whitby gathered, I know well enough, à sensibilibus, from the nature and property of his serving-boy, who cannot go of an errand and stay too; cannot sup and blow together; cannot tell a tale and whistle both at once; cannot speak of Jobs asses, but he must remember Mr. Cressy. In truth, though Mr. Whitby be thus extravagant, yet can I not persuade myself, that other graver Protestant's are so likewise. For when Christ our Lord comforts his poor believers, and terrifies their oppressing adversaries, with this his divine ratiocination, See that you do not abuse or contemn any of these my little ones. For I say unto you, that their Angels do always behold the face of my Father who is in heaven, he seems apparently to speak something, that serves directly for the catholic belief, and is consequently against these three assertions of Whitby to the contrary. For those angel-guardians, whom our Lord calls their angels, the angels of his believers, and of his little ones, either they must be so perspicatious, as one way or other to see even in heaven, where they behold the face of God in glory, all the persecutions and necessities of them whose angels they are: or at least, whilst they are present on earth, with them whose angels they be, they must still see and enjoy the God of glory who is in heaven: Both these things are possible; and whether it be this or that, they must needs be both so potent and good, as to be able and willing, when they see time, to assist and help them in their afflictions and need, whose angels they are, either by praying for them in general, or in particular, or by strengthening, comforting, protecting their persons. And lastly, poor man may comfort himself in this invisible assistance, whatever it be, and however it be wrought, without making those angels his gods, or relying upon them as his final end. And all this must be intended by our Lord and Saviour in that his comfortable ratiocination, I should think, if it conclude any thing. If they be not there insinuated, it is very hard to say what it may conclude. If the angels do neither pray for us, nor any way assist and help us, nor we can without danger of sin rely on any such assistance, then surely to say, Let none abuse my little ones, for their angels, etc. would be a ratiocination as impertinent, as to say, Let none abuse, etc. for the North and South poles are half the heavens distant: and far more dangerous. For man could hardly be persuaded by such a speech, to put any trust in that distance of the poles, as here he cannot but be moved to take comfort in that acquaintance and nearnes we have with angels, which any way to rely on, Mr. Whitby tell us, is to rest in them as our final end, and make them our gods. I could wish Mr. Whitby would first consult his own reason, whether any way to rely on the comfort of second causes visible or invisible, infer necessarily, that we do rely upon them as our ultimate end, and make them our gods, as he affirms more than once in this his 16 chapter: And again, I desire him, that he would be more wary, and take heed how he speaks against the angels of God, and deride those hosts of heaven, in whom our Lord Christ advised us, if I understand him right, to take comfort; lest they strike him, as some others they have done, with sudden death. Poor Catholics are yet in their pilgrimage and place of sufferance, who must therefore patiently endure all scoffs, contumelies and slanders, for their futur merit. But the Angels of God are in glory, and blessed, and therefore not to be blasphemed or mocked at by insolent dust; or their protection and assistance to be slighted. What is the essence of Angels, what their presence, or how great their power, we cannot here under our thick corporeal veil conceiv. They may, for aught we can tell, be as completely present all at once, both here on earth, and heaven too, unto any effect of perceiving or operating, as a man is present within the four walls of his chamber. At least if our Lord whom we pretend all of us equally to believe, hath so clearly allowed us, to support ourselves in their assistance, however it be wrought, no man I should think, who bears the name of Christian, can with any modesty affirm, as Whitby does here, that they neither pray for us in heaven, nor assist us on earth; nor that we can any way support our selus in any comfort from them, without making them our gods. Ch. 17. from page 369 to 410. Is very bitter against the celibacy and single life of priests, and exclaims on the contrary, with very broad language, that you may see he is very sensible of what he says, against the uncleanness of the clergy, not excepting any, nor allowing so much as a possibility to do otherwise. And I doubt not, saith he, p. 378. whether such advocates of Celibacy, as M. C. if strict inquiry were made, might not be often found where the Card. of Crema was. Where that man was found, I do not know. In all likelihood it was in some place where Jobs asses use to graze, for he lately made you, Sir, one of them. Good Sir, do not hate the man, as he deservs, but pity, pardon, and pray for him. He has mocked away his own angel-guardian, and cannot therefore be civil towards men. Mr. Whitby understands not the several ways and means prescribed by catholic religion, as a preservative against the incursions of that, or any other sensual temptation. He is unacquainted either with their frequent fastings, or disciplines, or haircloth, or continual and hourly exercise of psalms, hymns, and canticles, which take up in a manner all the whole life of the Roman Clergy. That man who uses heartily such like exercises, commended by catholic religion, will easily subdue any whatever temptation, if ever it should assault him, as they know well enough who practice that their religion seriously, and prevent oftentimes its very assault. But if any will be so forgetful of his own welfare, as utterly to neglect those sacred means, he may fall deservedly into a lower religion, and become a Whitby. Ministers are either in bed with their wives, or thinking haply after one, when the catholic clergy, if they correspond with their duty and calling, are watching and saying their sacred matin's, which consist of many divine lessons, psalms, anthems, responsories, hymns, canticles, which put divine and spiritual thoughts into their minds. When ministers are feasting, they fast: When they are caressing their mistresses, these chastise their body with disciplines: When they, got out of their beds, are at their morning's draught, these are saying their laud's and Prime, and devoutly disposing themselves by prayer and meditation upon their knees, unto their sacred liturgy: When they are eating and drinking, and managing worldly affairs about their wives and children, these are at their sixth and None, and Vespars', and Compline, that they may fulfil their daily task of prayers and devotions to their Redeemer. I say no more, but of this I am and will be confident, that if Mr. Whitby had ever practised, or seen the lives and conversations of Roman Priests, those visible angels of God, or been otherwise acquainted therewith, he would not have so boldly affirmed as he does, even against the very tenor of gospel, (which saith, that some are made eunuches by men, and some again make themselves so for the kingdom of heaven) that it is impossible to be chaste. Nor would he so universally calumniat all professors of chastity for the wickedness of some few, who have in some particular ages and places given offence by their evil lives unto Catholics, whose testimony Mr. Whitby uses against them. But commonly men judge of others as they act themselves. And he that keeps himself chaste, will in charity think so of other men. When you say Sir, and all catholics' with you, that it is indeed a doctrine of devils both pernicious and falls, to forbid marriage absolutely as evil and unlawful in itself, as did the Encratites, Montanists, Marcionites, and Manichees; but yet relatively and upon some particular account may some persons notwithstanding be withheld from marriage for diviner purposes, as catholic Church uses. For so the women, which were particularly addicted to the service of the altar, St. Paul would have them to be elderly and mature, lest being young, they should grow wanton from Christ, and desire to marry. This distinction will in no wise serve Mr. Whitby. For saith he with his reverend Hall, the doctrine thus stigmatised by the apostle as the doctrine of Devils is in general of such as do forbid marriage, and not upon this or that particular account. And the act is all one whether the prohibition be relative or absolute, as poison is poison whether absolutely or conditionally taken. Thus speaks Whitby with his reverend Hall, thence inferring, if I understand him, that it is as full and truly the doctrine of devils to forbid marriage to any one upon any account, of serving God more purely and the like, as it is to forbid it absolutely as evil and unlawful in itself; as poison, etc. But is this true? Poison conditionally taken, or taken upon condition, either of a preservative against it, or of some disease, whereof it is a proper remedy, may not poison or hurt the man that takes it, but rather help perhaps and cure him. And if it do not poison but help, then is it no poison to him, but physic. And do they forbid marriage as in itself unlawful, who do relatively prohibit it? Or is it equally the doctrine of devils to withhold it, as unlawful to all, or only to some upon a special occasion? Do they condemn it in itself who withhold it in relation to some times or persons? That I may omit other several reasons, which may convince this assertion of folly and falsehood, how comes our Church of England to forbid marriage in Advent and Lent, and some other times of the year? Is not this a relative prohibition? And doth our Church of England therefore absolutely forbid it in itself, because she relatively forbids it? I am sure the prohibition is as much relative, to forbid marriage to all persons at some times, as to forbid it to some persons at all times. And if the doctrine be stigmatised in general, upon what account soever it run, then doth the Church of England hold and teach the doctrine of devils, when upon this or that particular account, she prohibits marriage, although she absolutely allows it, as the Roman Church does. The rubric of our English Church now put into our Almanac runs thus. Times prohibiting Marriage. Marriage comes in the 23 of January, and by the 7 of February it goes out again until Low Sunday, at which time it comes in again, and goes not out till Rogation Sunday from that time it is unforbidden until Advent Sunday. But than it goes out, and comes not in again till the 23. of January following: All which in the phrase of Dr. Pierce and Whitby his champion runs thus. Times commanding the doctrine of devils. The doctrine of devils goes out the 23 of January, and by the 7 of February it comes in again; until Low Sunday, at which time it goes out again; and comes not in till Rogation Sunday; from that time it goes out until Advent Sunday. But then the doctrine of devils comes in; and it goes not out again till the 23 of January. The same is also to be said about abstaining from flesh in Lent. For this prohibition is equally stigmatised by the same Apostle in the very selfsame text, as the devil's doctrine. And a dispensation to eat flesh in Lent, cannot be obtained in our Bishops' Courts, without a sum of moneys; and generally to abstain from the doctrine of devils we give an angel, either a gold angel or a silver one. Truth is; it is no devils doctrine or evil counsel to refrain either from flesh or marriage, or any way to bridle, and mortify our carnal appetites, which our holy apostles have counselled us carefully to do, but a blessed angelical conversation. For the angels of God, saith Christ our Lord, do neither marry nor are given in marriage. And the flesh of bulls and goats neither doth God nor his angels feed on. And both the counsel and practice of Christ and his apostles lead us that way. When the Bridegroom is taken away, then, saith Christ, shall my disciples fast; that is, they shall then enter upon their austerities of life after their solemn profession in Pentecost, which now in their noviceship I will not put upon them, while they are yet weak in faith. Unto those very same disciples he also persuaded continence and coelibacy, both by his own example and words of counsel. And devils are all friends to the contrary uncleanness and gluttony. But why then are these two abstinencies so opposite both of them to the devils will and inclination, called by St. Paul Doctrina daemoniorum; whereas devils were never known to move any man to those abstinencies, but rather to the contrary excesses, being enemies themselves to all cleanliness & temperance? Doth the devil approve of that which our Lord advises us to follow? Or does he labour to promote Christ's counsel and practice? No, in no wise. But whatsoever he may pretend of good, he ever does it to some evil end, and for snares and subversion. He likes not of continence, he loves not temperance, he hate; cleanliness. But so to praise that which himself indeed dislikes, and persuade men to believe, that such an act of high virtue and counsel is also of such necessity, that no man can be a Christian without it. This is one of his demoniacal subtleties. The Greek hath two several words to express those evil spirits in general, Daemonium, and Diabolus, the one speaks his crafty subtleties, the other his malicious will. But we in English have but one, and it renders properly the last. For the old Saxes our forefathers called that evil spirit Deuvill or Doill, which relates to the will or practice. But Daemonium or Daemon, for which we have no English word, has a reference to the understanding, and to the perverting of it. And it signifies intelligent or knowing. Now this doctrine of abstinence from meats and marriage as things unlawful, is called by St. Paul doctrina daemous, the doctrine of daemons, or of those evil spirits, not as they are wicked practisers, but cunning seducers; not as they corrupt the will, but delude the understanding. They hate continence, and never have or will move any man towards it. But if under colour of its excellency, they could once persuade men to believe, that salvation is not possible for married people, as in primitive times of Christianity they did, then have they acted the part of demons or cunning seducers indeed, and brought much ruin and disorder and snares upon the Christian world, which, it is indifferent to them, what way it suffer, so it receiv a damage. This craft of demons consists generally in this, that to make themselves and temptations plausible, they still advance one ability or virtue, to depress another. In primitive times of the Church they exalted that of the right hand, to depress the left; in these later times they exalt the virtue of the left hand, to depress the right. Thus marriage is good, and continence also is good; they are both good: Nay S. Paul says, that continence is better, or the virtue of the right hand: For he that is unmarried only cares, says he, how to serve God well, and pleas him; but he that is married is solicitous for many worldly affairs concerning his wife and children, and so is distracted and divided two ways. To exalt then the one of these two, which are both good things, unto such a monopoly of goodness and excellency, that the other shall be thought unlawful and evil; this is doctrina daemoniorum, the doctrine of demons, who were cunning seducers from the beginning. Thus faith is good, and other works of piety, justice, and sobriety, unto which Christ and his apostles exhort us, are good also, and necessary and healthful. He therefore that so magnifies the one, as to evacuate the other, teaches doctrinam daemontorum, the doctrine of demons, who were cunning seducers from the beginning. Meat is good, and fasting is good; good to eat with thanksgiving; and good in times and occasions to abstain. But that man, who so exalts the one, as to exclude the other out of Christianity, is a seducer, and teaches the doctrine of demons. So likewise doth he, who either so highly magnifies free will, as to exclude God's grace; or so defends grace, that he abolishes all concurrence of free will unto works of piety and merit, teach both of them equally the doctrine of demons, who were cunning seducers from the beginning. In a word, not to mention more examples, wherein I might be copious, so to commend continence, as to make marriage unlawful, is the doctrine of demons, who were cunning seducers from the beginning. And so agian, to set up marriage, as to teach continence to be both sinful and impossible, is the doctrine both of demons and devils too, implacable enemies both to truth and continence. And Christ is equally crucified between both the thiefs. Ch. 18. from page 410. to 420. Begins to justify the departure or schism of the English from the Roman Church, as good and lawful. For if Schism, faith he, be a crime, it lies upon the Church, not which separated, but which gave the cause of separation, the Roman, not the English Church: Causal schism, which gives the occasion, bears all the blame; but formal schism, which separates from an offensive society, is an action of necessary virtue. Nor can there be, quoth he, any necessity of communicating with others in wicked actions; but a necessty rather of going out of Babylon. Nor does every schism turn the Church of Christ into a synagogue of Satan, but only schism in sundamentals, which fundamentals, he saith elsewhere, are as clear and perspicuous to all men, as that twice two make four. These Sir be his capital assertions in this chapter, which howlittle they will serve his purpose against the Roman Church, he that seriously reads your book against which this reply is made, will soon perceiv: But how much they will disadvantage him before the Presbyterian, Quaker, and other ways here in England, who separating from our English Church, do thus justify their schism, either by mincing the fault, or laying it upon her from whom they have revolted, it behoous him well to consider. Ch. 19 from page 420 to 428. Endeavours yet more to diminish the fault, and justify the secession. Schism, faith he, that proceeds from weakness, in persons that desire to know the truth, and endeavour after it, is free from crime. And again, External unity is not essential to the Church. And schism that is contrary to that unity, divides not from Christ's body in things absolutely necessary to be united, but only in things not so necessary, as in the same liturgies or ceremonies about matters not sundamental, wherein an union is neither necessary nor yet possible. This is, I am sure, the voice of a Presbyterian, and no Prelatic Protestant, as Whitby speaks himself to be. And if it be indeed the sense of our English Church, as her spokesman here would make us believe it is, then are surely our English Bishops in charity all obliged, earnestly to intercede with his royal Majesty, who for civil respects hath forbidden all meetings out of ordinary Churches and Chapels, that the poor Quaker, who endeavours after truth and light with an innocent and unfeigned heart, may be permitted for religious respects to meet at Bull and Mouth, and other such like places, where they may think fit, being now resolved never to resort more to Protestant Steeple-houses, or to any of their liturgies or ceremonies; which communion is neither necessary unto any unity, any substantial unity in Christ's body, nor yet possible; that they may declare amongst themselves the sons of light, the power and truth in simplicity of heart, without impeachment of the wicked. Ch. 20. from page 428. to 448. Falls again to speak against Infallibility. which he had battered before in his whole 9 chapter of above 30 pages, and that with as much earnestness here, as if nothing had been yet said of it. But this chapter was written haply by some other hand, which knew not what the former had performed; till coming together both of the papers to the Press, it was perceived they might both pass. And here all general Counsels, and their determinations are disabled, as destitute of any assurance of truth. Is this Infallibility, quoth he out of Chillingworth, in the Council alone, or Pope alone, etc. What shall we do, if they run counter, etc. To whom must we hearken when many pretend to the Popedom, etc. What if the Pope's misdemeanour be the thing to be judged, etc. How can we be assured that any one is true Pope, not Synioniacally ordained, not illegally elected, not invalidly baptised, etc. which are, saith he, uncertainties propounded by Mr. Chillingworth, not possible to be resolved. This kind of discourse fills up this whole chapter. By virtue of these uncertainties, we can never tell, whether Mr. Whitby be any minister or no; or whether he be a Christian, or so much as a Whitby. If titulus coloratus and moral evidence may not suffice us, we can be sure of no authority either spritual or civil in this world, And if any one should learn by this wise master, thus to except against the obliging power of acts and decrees of King or Parliament. Is that power in the King alone, or in the Parliament alone, etc. What if they run counter etc. What if they should not be rightly chosen, etc. would he not talk as wise as this man and his little Doctor Chillingworth? It ought to suffice an honest man and a good subject, that an authority is set over him and peaceably accepted, whom he ought indefinitely to obey, not only for wrath but conscience. It is not his part to weaken due loyalty with these seditious quirks and quibbles, Who can tell whether he be legitimatly begotten, or rightly baptised, or legally elected, etc. Catholics have as much ground for their obedience to civil and spiritual Superiors, as they have for their observance of their own natural father. And I think that is enough. If we had it not promised in Gospel as we have, that Christ would preserv his Church from failing and error; yet the very belief we have in his divinity, would naturally infer such a confidence, as Catholics have in the Church's truth. But Mr. Whitby understands not in whom this infallibility does originally reside, as I perceiv by his fond interrogatories, nor consequently what it is If he had ever had the happy hour to read the System of that learned Doctor Franciscus Davenport, by whose light I have lately, Sir, since your departure hence to Paris, sufficiently declared in our English tongue, all this whole business of infallibility, he had saved a multitude of idle words drawn out of his famous fanatic Mr. Chillingworth. Catholik Divines may several ways defend and declare this business of Infallibility, as well as other points of religion, according to their several conceptions and abilities, and may go some of them so far, as to defend even an intrinsical inherent Infallibility either in the Pope or Council. And although this may suffer more difficulty than the extrinsecall one of God's providence and guidance, yet do I not see how any one can disprove a possibility of it. However faith does not require so much at their hands. If God be but infallible, and Christ be true, the church is safe. Very many bitter books have been written against catholics and their religion, injuriously diminishing both them and it, upon the mistake of this one business of Infallibility, perhaps a wilful one; two very lately by Mr. Moulin and Denton, to the great hurt and damage of the innocent, if men believe them. It is a very pious and good rule, that of the Canon and civil law, Cum sunt jura partium obscura, reo favendum est potius quam actori. But I doubt much whether the people of England, who may read these invective books against Papists, follow that rule or no. When the right of Parties is obscure, saith the law, the defendant is rather to be favoured than the plaintiff. If it were so here, we should not have been by such bitter books, so highly incensed, as I see we are, against poor Catholics; but against those rather who slander them. Mr. Moulin would prove, that Catholic religion and not Protestancy, is guilty of sedition; and he does it by a relation of passionate words and actions of some Popes recorded in stories. And this he takes to be a sufficient proof that Catholic religion is guilty of sedition. It were indeed to be wished, that all Pope's words and actions were answerable to their religion and rule. But that is hardly to be expected in this world. The very place, and honour that has ever been given to that seat, is no small temptation of pride, or other passions incident thereupon into a mind not more then ordinarily furnished with all Christian virtues. But if we will believe histories concerning them, we shall find no series or succession of men in any one place or dignity of this world, to have held forth so many lights of virtue, as that one chair hath done. And if some have been faulty, they gave no doubt much cause of grief or scandal, but none of wonderment to the world. They may surely fail in a greater temptation; since other Christians who have the same means of grace, do fail in lesser. But Catholics, saith Mr. Moulin, are bound by the very tenor of their religion to hold for good and justify, all that any of their Popes have ever said or done. This would be very strange, why so? Because, saith he, they believe them infallible. Who beleeus them infallible? How infallible? that they can neither do nor speak amiss? Who ever thought that? Insallible is a word taken up lately by schoolmen, to express the sovereign power and indeficiency of God's Church, and not any inherent endowments of a Pope, who is brought up when he is young, like one of us, in the Catechise and practise of Christian religion, and when he is ripe and placed by God's providence in that supreme chair is eminently to practise those holy rules, and carefully to keep and maintain that depositum fidei, the treasury of faith which he hath received; and if he fail therein, shall give an account and suffer for it in another world, as severely as any other for their faults: Nor are his words and actions a rule to other men of Christian religion, but Christian religion is a rule to him both for his actions and words. And all that Infallibility which Catholik writers, to express more than one thing in one short word, make use of in their discourses with Protestants, is only an extrinsical providence of God watching over his Church, to preserv the primitive apostolic spirit in her, and to keep her always even to the consummation of the world from error and deficiency, notwithstanding any opposition from without, or the misdemeanours of any one or other within herself; even the providence of that good God, whose property it is not only to prevent evil from the good, but even to work good out of evil; that his Church which he hath promised to preserv may be ever safe. And if ever this insallible providence do show it self, it must surely be then, when the ship is ready to be split by heresies and schisms, that rise from some violent spirits breaking unity with that body so dangerously, that Prelates are called together from all parts of the world as a help extraordinary, in a general Council to prevent the ruin. And this is that which Divines mean, when they say, that the Pope is infallible in Cathedra, in the Chair, that is to say, in consessu Seniorum & Presbyterorum ecclesiae, in a general convention of Christian Prelates. So that Moulin speaks not one word to the purpose. But Doctor Dentons' book is not any such mistake, but pure malice. He intends to show, that Papists were never punished for religion, but for treason. And his book is altogether made up of several stories of men, Papists men, sent over hither from beyond seas, as he says, to kill, poison, and destroy people. Some, when they had read his book, took the Author for a fool; but I heard afterwards, that he is Physician. And upon that account I had him excused. For if he be as bad at physic, as he is in affairs of religion, he had cause to be angry with them, who came hither from foreign parts, to take his office and employment out of his hands, kill and poison people. If the villains, who ever they were, had been only sent over to make folks sick, they had done him some service; but to poison men, and kill them downright, that may give the Physician a just cause of wrath against those intruding empyricks. He begins his book thus. I suppose it is a matter of faith with all Papists, that the Pope is infallible, and that he can depose Kings, etc. Thus doth that wise man open his mouth and begin his Recipe. Two things very seldom seen in any Academic conclusions, when students defend a whole body of divinity in the schools, but never delivered in Gospel or declared in Counsels, or heard or thought of by any one Catholic in the world, as any thing of his religion, these Mr. Denton supposes to be matter of faith with all Papists. I would ask Mr. Denton, whether he thinks it a matter of faith among Papists, That the earth moves, or no. If one Catholic hold those two assertions, which in his sense I cannot tell whether any one do or no; I will be bold to say, a thousand hold this. The next book Dr. Denton writes against Papists, will haply begin thus: I suppose it is a matter of faith with all Papists, that the earth moves. And then he may go on with his moon-stories, and build castles in the air, and Dentonise, as here he hath done. Ch. 21. from p. 448. to 456. Allows that general Counsels, although they be not infallible, are highly notwithstanding, both themselves and their decrees to be esteemed; provided that they keep to God's rule; that clear reason be not against them; that men of worth do not gainsay them; and that their proceedings be legal. Not otherwis. Thus he recalls himself and mends the matter. All these four things, if general Counsels observe, they shall be observed themselves, notwithstanding they may haply be a company of bastards and buffoons, neither legitimately begotten, nor rightly baptised, nor validly elected, nor legally ordained. And whether these specified conditions be, or be not in counsels and their decrees, every man, as Whitby here and several other places of his book speaks, is to judge according to his own pleasure and discretion. So that according to his rule, the discretion and will of particular men is the final resolve of all religion, faith, and practice. Whence it will follow, that if there be as many religions as men, they must be all good. When you object Sir, that such a liberty as this will be destructive even of all articles, canons, and acts of Parliament, in order to our established Protestancy or other affairs. To this Whitby replies according to his custom, very hotly. Doth it become a consuter of Mr. Chillingworth, saith he, thus to trifle? Hath he not told you that others may make the same defence as we? as murderers may cry not guilty, as well as innocent persons; but not so justly, not so truly. For God's sake who trifles here? when both Chillingworth and Whitby too, had put into every private man's hand an equal power of judging, admitting or rejecting the decrees, orders, and laws of their superiors, he now distinguishes with Chillingworth his fanatic Master, that some do it justly and truly; others not so justly, not so truly. But who shall pass judgement upon the final and only irrefragable judge, or aver such a thing of any one, who hath an equal and unlimited power beforehand, to take and reject what himself pleases. Both truth and justice must solely be in his will, who may admit and refuse as himself willeth. But the party now esteemed faulty will be meal-mouthed we must think, and not dare to say, he both truly and justly does what he does; or to affirm, that he uses his own discretion, in that which he takes or refuses by his own liking. The Protestant forsooth, separated from the Roman, both truly and justly: but the Presbyterian, Independent and Quaker, these refuse the Protestants communion, not so truly, not so justly, although they do it upon the same right and title, and by the same principles the other used himself, and allows to other men. The Protestant shall reject the Parliament of Prelates. who established Catholik religion, and do it justly and truly, only for this reason, that they do it upon their own discretion; but another if he shall except against a Council of Lords and Commons, that shall set up Prelate Protestancy, although according to Whitby they be no judges of our faith, he does it not so justly, not so truly, though he do it by his own discretion allowed him to be his final resolve. What is this but to do wickedly, and talk fond? First to subjugate all degrees of authority to every man's judgement, as the final and last rule; and then to question that rule, which he made subject unto nothing. But that we may understand what a worthy respect Mr. Whitby has for general Counsels, he tells us here, that it is neither impossible nor improbable that general Counsels may err. Nay our writers, quoth he, do not acknowledge general Counsels to be infallible even in fundamentals. And Whitby writes, we all know by this time, what his writers writ before him. I cannot but marvel at this his talk. For Whitby in several places of his book affirms himself, that fundamentals are so perspicuous and clear, that no man can be so ignorant, if he be not a natural fool, as to mistake therein. We, saith he p. 104. distinguish between points fundamental and not fundamental. These are clearly revealed, and so of necessary belief. And to determine their sense, there is no more need of a judge, then for any other perspicuous truth. What need of a judge to decide whether scripture affirms that there is but one God, that this God cannot lie, that Jesus Christ was sent by his commission into the world, that he was crucified and rose again, that without faith and obedience we cannot come to heaven. These and such like are the truths which we entitle fundamental. And if the sense of this needs an infallible judge, then let us bring Euclids elements to the bar, and call for a judge to decide whether twice two make four. So he likewise avers, p. 441. that fundamentals are as perspicuous, as if they were written by a sunbeam. He reckons not the Trinity amongst his fundamentals; perhaps he does not take it for one; or will have no fundamentals, but what are perspicuous. I could make it easily appear, that even fundamentals have been denied; and that with as great reason, as any he calls otherwis, are denied now. But I must be brief. That which I here note is this; What is as perspicuous as a sunbeam, as certain as Euclids elements, as evident as that which is most clearly revealed, as notorious a known truth, as that twice two make four, so clear that there needs no judge to determine it; This the Prelates of the Christian world met together, which none but a natural fool can mistake, must not be able to discern. They and none but they, can err in fundamentals. And yet, which does not a little encreas our admiration, he acknowledges withal p. 439. That general Counsels have 1 a greater assistance of the Spirit of God, 2 greater means of finding out the truth, 3 better reason of discovering what is the opinion of the whole Church, 4 an authority delegated from Christ to decide controversies. After all this, and with all this, it is neither impossible with him, nor unprobable, that general counsels may err, even in fundamentals, which himself affirms as perspicuous, as if they were writ with a sunbeam, as clear and evident as that twice two make four. Prelates, Christian Prelates, these must be the only natural fools of the world. Ch. 22. from page 456. to 465. Descends to Patriarchal Counsels, which saith he, may be disobeyed and rejected, because such conventions are fallible, and may obtrude heresies and unlawful practices upon the world; and that a judgement of discretion is to be allowed unto private men, whether they are to submit to their determinations or no. This whole chapter might well have been spared. For if a greater, much more may a particular and lesser Church obtrude heresies and unlawful practices upon men. But Mr. Whitby is desirous, that all should be made plain, and not any rub lie in the Presbyterian and good Quakers way, when he shall plead an excuse for his separation from a Metropolitan Church here in England, which he hath made with a judgement of discretion here allowed him. Ch. 23. from page 465 to 478 Says that the Protestant never separated from the internal communion of the universal Church, which unity is only essential, but only from external union with som. And such an union external with any Church on earth, is no ways necessary to any one's being a member of the Church. Why then is the poor Quaker so grievously persecuted, imprisoned, and beaten, only for separating from an external communion with other Protestants? Especially since he separates from it, for no other end, but to have the internal communion in pure faith, and light, and grace, and charity, more perfect. Let any man read the Quakers books, which are now not a few, and see if they speak not for themselves, as Whitby here does for his own cause. But the professed errors of the Roman Church justify the Protestant separation. And does not the Quaker justify his separation both from Roman and Protestant too by the same argument of notorious abuses, errors, sins, falsities, disorders, superstitions, excesses, of ministers, priests, bishops, deaneries, chapters, lawn sleeves, universities and steeple-houses. Ch. 24. from page 478 to 494. Endeavours finally to justify the English reformation upon the account, that it was made here by the supreme magistrate, who may reform the Church either with a Synod or without it. And that supreme power I hope then may be permitted to set up the Presbyterian or Quaker, at least to give them freedom of Conscience, if himself pleas, without any bishop's consent, no man daring to gainsay or murmur against it, which not a few do heartily wish to see in this Land. Ch. 25. with the Appendix, from p. 494 to 512. Prescribes conditions and forms of disputing and replying, with some additions to his former discourses. Thus have you, Sir, the particular design of each several chapter of Mr. Whitby's book, the negative part whereof denies your Church, and the positive betrays his own. Why he gainsays yours, it is not hard to read. But why he should so much endanger his own, I cannot so easily say, whether it be ignorance, malice, or necessity moves him to it. Surely no Son of the English Church, as Whitby professes himself to be, could thus open a gap for the incursion of all sects, who are now ready to swallow her up, if he be in sound senses, but he must either not have what he may, or not will what he should, or not know what positively he ought, to affirm and teach for her better preservation. This book of Whitbies can never bring any man to that Church; nor keep any in that is there. If an enemy attempt the subversion of a house, it may chance to scape. But if the owner and inhabitant begin once to pull it down himself, he that passes by may not improbably conjectur it will not long stand. Well may the Church of England take up that heavy complaint against this her either ignorant or malicious son. If an enemy had done me mischief, I could have endured it. And if one who openly hated had maligned me, I could have kept myself from him. But thou man! thou my intimate friend! thou my leader and acquaintance! Thus unworthily to be betrayed by her own White boy, must be no small aggravation to the mother's sorrow. I might easily gather out of Whitbies own words, consequently put together, a complete play for all the several ways that are now of late risen up against our English Church; even so complete, that they never have nor ever need to say more. This sad fate accompanies erroneous ways, that even in defending they destroy themselves. If witty Presbyterians assisted him in his book, they did their own work not his. And if he did it himself by some Presbyterian principles, received accidentally from them, he hath done thereby not his own work, but theirs. Notable is this Gentleman's art in citing of authorities, which he does in most of his chapters, against the points of catholic belief, which are either not expressed in his book, where they may be found; or not there found, where they are expressed; or express no such thing, as he citys them in his book to utter. I had in my chamber but one of those many authors which Whitby citys for himself: and I found in it all this to be true. But this Sir, to spare here partly the man's modesty, and partly my own pains and expense of time, I now omit. And indeed, what would it avail, to give you or the world to understand, that Whitby never read the authors himself citys, or understood not, or wilfully wrested them. Let him live and learn. And God give him grace to make use of his time, to his own advantage. This thing I may assure you of, that Whitby is an enemy not only to Catholics, but Protestants also of all profession, here in England: or if you had rather have me so speak, an equal friend to all. For he will not have the Church of Christ to be any organical body, as he calls it, or company of people linked together in Sacraments, lyturgy, belief, and government; but to be only such and all such people, who hold God and a life to come, and some other fundamentals, which he names not himself, all of them: and therefore, as I suppose, leavs unto others, each man as he pleases, to determine. Nor will he have men bound either to an internal belief, or any exterior conformity to any Church. This himself avers in many several places of his book, that we may not miss his meaning. This new way of his I think he borrowed of some French Hugonots. For all the ways that be here now in England concur each one unto a body, an organical body; not only Roman Catholics, but our English Prelacy and Presbyterians too. Yea, the very Quakers to my knowledge esteem none to be so much as Christians, who assemble not with them. And they have with them some ministers of the gospel too, though extemporary ones. A wary reader may observe, by the sole mirror of this book of Whitbies, which is a collection of most of the chief authors that have written against Popery, since the Reformation, how unsettled all Protestants be in all the controverted points of religion, whereof there is not any one by some of them denied, but is by some others of them affirmed. They know what Church to oppose; but how much of her doctrine they should evacuate, they could never yet unanimously agree, nor what answer to fix steadily to any Catholic ground. He will find also amongst other things, that our present Protestants now adays, do generally swerv from the first reformers, almost in all points both of discipline and faith; about supremacy, good works, free will, possibility of keeping Gods commands, the real presence, prayer for the dead, tradition, etc. which former Protestants for the first forty years would not abide to hear of; but now they are all in a manner so allowed by most Protestants, that there appears little difference between their way and catholic faith; but only, that this stands unchanged, the other may alter again to morrow. Indeed every Protestant writer is in one thing or other a new reformer, as Whitby is here. And every half-score years brings forth new scenes; nor is there any now that heeds any Protestant writer that is gone, if he speak contrary to him, though he were never so eminent, even in the very point and business of Reformation. This is enough for Whitby. I heard Sir above half a year ago, that Dr. Barlow had made ready for the Press another book of his own against Mr. Cressy: and therefore detained this my letter with me, till I might give you an account of his with it. Truly Sir, I watched as earnestly for it, as any cat watches for a mous. But it will not yet appear. In the interim, one Mr. Stillingfleet has lately written a great book against Popery, even so big a book in folio, that none may buy it, but only such as hate Popery more than they love sixteen shillings. And he also proceeds this new french Huguenot way, insisted on by Whitby. He is only for a Church diffusive, that holds fundamentals what ever they be, and makes no account of any Church organical. Whereby he utterly disables not the Roman Hierarchy only, but even our English Protestant Church and government; if men do but understand what he says. And yet this man is mightily applauded by our English by shops: which I cannot but marvel at; and do thence conclude, that they all begin now to think, our English Church itself, that it may be made good, must be pulled down. Counsels he holds with Whitby, that they can have no authority to move our assent, although they be general, as there has never been any he says, these thousand years. And what is there then for God's sake shall move the Presbyterians, Independents, and others here in England to approve of the constitutions and government of our English Church, set up by a far lesser assembly. In a word, this whole book of Stillingfleets is a large discourse against a Theological argument of some Catholic disputant. The argument it seems was this; Christian faith cannot be divine, except it have its birth from an infallible proposer; and consequently the Church must either be infallible, or else our faith is not divine. The answer of this argument is the very life and vitals of Mr. Stillingfleets whole book. That same argument of the Catholic Gentleman is indeed a pretty theological ratiocination: and Stillingfleets answer, evasions, and distinctions, both concerning the argument in general, and all the particulars it runs into are not unwitty. But this is no part of our business. Alas we in our controversies about religion are not come thus far. Such a discourse had been handsomely fitted to theological schools, and very proper amongst learned divines there: but here not so: What is it to our business in hand, whether faith can or cannot be divine, except the proposer be infallible, and as it were divine. This is a mere theological dispute. And he that answers Stillingfleets book, defends not faith immediately, but an argumentators syllogism. Religion indeed, as soon as ever it is questioned or disputed, runs presently into Philosophy. And therein, if great heed be not taken, it is quite lost. And thence it comes to pass, that most part of our controversy books is about school philosophy and human reasonings. I blame not the Catholic Gentleman, who ever he was, for his argumenting. Nor will Stillingfleet be blamed for defending his place. But I let my countrymen, spectators of the contest, understand, that in deed and truth, so often as we dispute, we are beyond the business. All writers of controversy speak more than faith, when they either defend or oppose it. And in reading controversies we see not so much the nature of the faith, as the wit of him who opposes or defends it; and so much this some times, that the other is nothing at all discerned. This the world must know and understand well; or else they will be miserably mistaken, as indeed I see all men are. When two lawyers plead about a case of right, perhaps three hours together; all that three hours' talk is not law, or the right they talk of, but only their ratiocinations about it. And such are all our controversies about religion. And he does best therein, who still puts his adversary in mind what is his talk, and what is the faith they talk of. But he that defends both of them equally, forgets himself. And thus I see that generally men do miscarry on both sides: the Protestant by calling that Romanish doctrine, which is but a Catholics discourse for it; and the Catholic by maintaining that talk of his, which it is not a pin matter whether it stand or fall. For faith is firm and constant, though all my talk for it be miserably weak. Now all the whole business of faith, which Stillingfleet and his adversary talk of, is, as I take it, only this; That the Church of Christ hath by God's divine promise of being ever with her, a power to oblige her subjects to hear and obey her, if they mean to be happy in their way. The Catholic affirms this: Stillingfleet with his Protestants deny it. And this is all the faith that is in it: which is not here touched. And a theological business of Infallibility only spoke of. And therefore Stillingfleet is much to blame, when he speaks so often in his book, of the Romanists way of resolving faith; the Romanists arguments for their faith; the Romanists doctrine about infallibility not divine, but as it were divine; the Romanists tenet about fundamentals; the Romanists motives of credibility; the Romanists doctrine about the material and formal object of faith, etc. For all this and several such like talk is but the theological discourse of that Catholic Gentleman, and of itself no Romanists doctrine at all. For I know well enough what Stillingfleet means, and would have meant by Romanists doctrine. And all his Protestant readers understand thereby only Catholic religion: and he knows it well enough. I should take it ill and be sorry, and look upon it as an injury to the Church of God, if any one should call my way of defending her faith, the Romanists way; or my talk, the Romanists doctrine: however the thing itself defended or excused by me is Roman or Catholic faith. The Church has no one way, but several methods, and several schools, and several ways to declare and explicate, and defend her religion. And every writer does it according to his personal endowments and judgement; some better, some worse, though the religion so explicated, defended, and declared be still and ever, one and the very same. And if indeed I had been to speak in that business, I should never have made any such argument as that Catholic Gentleman did: nor will another man think himself obliged to discourse as I do, although he and I defend both of us the same thing. This if Mr. Stillingfleet consider as he ought, he will soon perceiv his own pitiful childishness. But thus Doctor OeN dealt with me to my very great pity and regret. Ever and anon, Is this your Roman doctrine, quoth he? ‛ Who would have thought, that the Romish Church should dare to utter so wicked blasphemies, etc. First misinterpreting my words, and calling that a doctrine which was none at all, but only a prosopopy of atheistical objections; and then styling that a Roman doctrine, which was but the talk of a particular man. So that what he called Roman doctrine, and Romish doctrine, was neither Romish nor doctrine neither. But ministers care not what they say. And so much the more wary does it behoove all men to be, who deal with them. Too much care cannot be taken with such men, who either cannot or will not distinguish between general faith and particular men's doctrine; between religion, and several school-methods of defending it; between the faith of the whole Church of God, and discourses of writers concerning it. So ignorant they are all of them, or wilfully malicious. I find in my heart even a longing desire to express to you in particular the various shifts and misdemeanours of Stillingfleet. But here is now no time or place for it; and such a thing if it were done, would be but of little use to morrow. I mention him only, to let you know, how much the French Huguenot religion begins here to prevail by means of Whitby, Stillingfleet, and others, to the overthrow of our own Protestant Church here established; and to let posterity, who shall haply see any of these small writings, have some little glimmerings of these our present times. They doubtless will be glad to see the general course of things now done, even as we are to read the ways of former reformers: although neither we nor they can take any great pleasure in any long particular narrations of their fallacies either against logic or morality, when the men are once past and gone. Dr. Jeremy Taylor hath also put forth lately a very bitter, insulting, injurious book against Catholic religion, which he calls a Dissuasive from Popery. Reddet illi dominus secundum opera ejus. And God will bless his Catholic believers who trust in him, and walk according to their holy rule, in his fear and love, unblamable, the very contumelies of adversaries working at length to their greater good. And I beseech God, who revives all things, and Jesus our Lord, who gave his testimony under Pontius Pilate, a good confession, that they may ever observe the commandments of God, and the Church his Spous, possessing their souls in perfect patience, unreprovable unto the coming of Jesus Christ our Lord, whom in his own times will the blessed God show forth, the only potent one, the King of kings, and Lord of Lords, who alone hath immortality, and inhabits light inaccessible, whom no mortal man hath ever seen, nor yet can see him; to whom be all honour, domimion and power for evermore. Amen. This is the earnest desire and prayer of Sir, Your real friend, Given in the Nones of March. 1664. J. V. C. EPISTOLA AD AMPHIBOLUM. AGAINST Dr. Taylor. The occasion of this Epistle. THe first epistle was written to an adversary: the second to a friend: this third to a neuter; who after he had began to think more moderately of Catholic religion, returned, upon his reading of Dr. Jeremy Taylor his Dissuasive from Popery, to his former misconceit. And he is by this Epistle given to understand, that the said Dissuasive is of that nature, that it can have no such force upon any judicious man. Sermo Horatianus inter Davum & Herum. D. I Amdudum ausculto, & cupiens tibi dicere servus Pauca reformido. H. Davusne? D. It a Davus, amicum Mancipium Domino, & frugi, quod sit satis: hoc est Ut vitale putes. H. Age, libertate Decembri, Quando ita majores voluerunt, utere. Narra. D. Pars hominum vitiis gaudet constanter, & urget Propositum: pars multa natat, modo recta capessens, Interdum pravis obnoxia.— H. Non dices hodie, quorsum haec tam putida tendunt Furcifer? D. Ad te inquam. H. Quo pacto pessime? D. Laudas Fortunam & mores antiquae plebis: & idem, Si quis ad illa Deus subitò te agat, usque, recuses: Aut quia non sentis, quod clamas, rectius esse: Aut quia non firmus rectum defendis, & haeres, Nequicquam coeno cupiens evellere plantam. Non horam tecum esse potes: non otia recte Ponere, teque, ipsum vitas fugitivus, & erro. H. Unde mihi lapides? D. Quorsum est opus? H. Unde sagittas? Aut insanit homo aut versus facit. Ocyus hinc te Ni rapis, accedes opera agro nona Dunano. III. Epistola ad Amphibolum, against Doctor Taylor. SIR, YOu were pleased to say, upon your reading of Flat Lux, that Popery may, for ought you knew, be more innocent then commonly it is reputed, and no ways so odious as some would make it. But now, upon the reading of Dr. tailor's Dissuasive, which you desire me to peruse, I perceiv you look towards your former thoughts concerning this maligned Popery, and invite them home again. To deal freely with you, I was amazed myself at the reading of that book, though not Sir with your amazement, but another of my own. You startled at Popery, whole ugliness was there set before your eyes with such fresh colours. I at those ugly colours which so injuriously defaced that Religion, that most innocent Religion, which under the name of Popery lies here traduced by the pen of her own ungrateful Scribe. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What; Doctor Taylor against Popery? And such a Dissuasive as this! But my amazement, Sir, is now blown over. The Doctor appeared to me after some serious thoughts, to be for a special reason, that touches none so much as himself, in some manner excusable. That none should love Popery, or ever come to know it, concerns not only his wealth and dignity, and life of ease, which is the common cause of others also with himself, but all the honour and fame he hath hitherto got by transcribing popish, as now he calls, but in former times named Catholik, authors. For, having been twenty years and upwards deeply plunged in reading and transcribing some of the innumerous spiritual books, that are amongst Catholics, not only in Latin, but other languages of several Kingdoms where that Religion flourishes, he hath culled out thence many fine treatises, which he hath set forth in his own name and language, to his much renown, and no small wealth and dignity amongst us. Nor is it to be doubted, but that he means for his yet further glory, reaped from other men's labours, and that spirit of piety which thence he got into his own pen, to write out yet one book more. The same store-house that furnished him with the life of Christ, will dictate to him also the lives of his twelve Apostles, and many other raptures of divine love, and heavenly devotion. And if people be but kept from Popery, as he hopes and labours they may, it will never be known, whence he gathers those his fragrant pieties. It was not handsome, yet a piece of wisdom it was in the Grecian Cynic, to spit in the dish which pleased him best, lest others should taste how good it was, and deprive him thereby of some of his content. This book of Doctor Tailors called a Dissuasive, printed in Dublin, and as I understand, reprinted here in London, (I suppose in the very same words by reason of the Author's absence) is large enough, containing 173 pages in quarto, marvellously bitter, and contumeliously insulting over that Religion, which he cannot but know he misreports. Indeed, Sir, there is more popery in one page of Dr. Tailor's Life of Christ, which he transcribed from popish Authors, than is in all this whole book which he writes against those Author's popery: that is owned by them to be their religion; all this he puts upon them under the notion of popery, throughout his whole hundred and seventy three pages, except haply some three or four words, whose sense also he perverts, no Catholic upon earth acknowledges for any parcel of his faith. Is not this strange disingenuous dealing? How he comes to act thus, and what is the feat he makes use of, to discolour their Religion, you shall hear by and by, when I have first opened his book, and the things contained in it. His Dissuasive hath three chapters, and each chapter several sections. The first chapter is entitled thus; The Doctrine of the Roman Church in the conroverted articles is neither Catholik, Apostolic, nor Primitive. The second thus; The Church of Rome as it is at this day disordered, teaches doctrines, and uses practices, which are in themselves, or in their true and immediate consequences, direct impieties, and give warranty to a wicked life. The third thus; The Church of Rome teaches doctrines, which in many things are destructive of Christian society in general, and of Monarchy in special: both which the Religion of the Church of England and Ireland, does by her doctrines greatly and Christianly support. These three be things of importance, and must either be great notorious crimes in the Defendant, or monstrous slanders in the Plaintiff. A Religion that is new, impious, and unsociable; that is against antiquity, piety, and society, is hardly good enough for Hell. Who is he that shall dare to profess or countenance such a religion upon earth. But let us see in order how all this is demonstrated to us by an old, pious, and sociable Doctor. His first Chapter. First then; That the doctrine of the Roman Church in the controverted Articles is neither Catholik, Apostolic, nor Primitive, he declares in eleven sections, which make up that his first chapter. First section says, that the Roman Church pretends a power to make new Articles of faith, and doubtless uses that power, and for that end corrupts the Fathers, and makes expurgatory Indices to alter their works. The second, that this power of making new articles is a novelty, and yet believed by Papists. Third, that the Roman doctrine of Indulgences is unknown to antiquity. Fourth, that Purgatory is another novelty. fifth, Transubstantiation another. sixth, Half-communion another. Seventh, Liturgy in an unknown tongue another. Eighth, Veneration of Images the like. Ninth, Pictures the same. Tenth, the Pope's general Episcopacy likewise. And the eleventh and last speaks almost as many more all of a heap, to make up his one last section; as Invocation of Saints, sufficiency of scriptures, absolving sinners before penance, simple Priests giving Confirmation, selling Masses for nine pence, circumgestation of the Eucharist, intention in Sacraments, Mass-sacrifice, and supper without Communion. All this is Popery, all new, and therefore the Roman Church is neither Catholik, Apostolic, nor Primitive. This is the sum of his first Chapter. What in the name of God does this Author of the Dissuasive, your learned Doctor, mean by the Church of Rome, and by the doctrine of the Roman Church? This Sir, is a main business, and aught, if he had meant sincerity, to have been firmly stated, before any thing were treated, either of the one or the other. But this he utterly here omits, which he should principally have heeded, that he may speak loosely and hand over head, anything he may deem fit to black his own paper and other men's fame. If he take them as he ought; the Church of Rome, for that universality of Catholic believers, who live in several kingdoms of the world united in faith and sacraments under the Spirit of Jesus Christ, and one visible Pastor; and the doctrine of that Church, for the body of faith and religion handed to them from age to age, as taught and delivered from Christ and his Apostles, which they call in the phrase of St. Paul Depositum fidei, or treasure of faith: I say if he mean this by the Roman Church, and doctrine of that Church, as he ought to do, I will be bold to aver, that there is not any one claus or period in his book true, and three parts of his book absolutely impertinent. If he mean otherwis then catholics themselves conceiv or profess, he was bound in honour to make his mind known, that the renown of an innocent Religion, and worthy persons might not suffer prejudice by his ambiguous speech. But perhaps he studied how to abuse that Religion, that he may be thought worthy of the dignity and wealth he has now obtained in another, slipped out of it. But concerning the way he takes to vilify the Roman faith and Church, which is indeed the common road of all her adversaries, I shall speak more fully, if I have time, by and by. Now I hasten to his text, which I shall give, and my own judgement of it very briefly. §. 1. Which is about Novelties in general. Says, that the Protestant hath the word of God, and Gospel, and Apostles writings, and if need be, the four first general Counsels, and cannot be therefore doubted to be Apostolical; but the Roman Church cannot so much as pretend, that all her Religion is primitive, since she pretends a power of making new articles of faith: for Turrecremata, Triumphus, Ancorano, and Panormitan affirm she can do it. And this power Pope Leo the tenth challenged, when he condemned Luther for denying him to have it. To further this their pretended power, the Papists corrupt, and alter the Father's works: insomuch that Saurius the corrector of the Press at Lions, complained to Junius, that he was forced to blot out many sayings of St. Ambrose, which had been in a former edition printed there. For this care of purging Catholic writers Sixtus Senensis commends Pope Pius. Nay, they correct the very Indices made by Printers, as those of Probens and Chevallonius. Thus the Doctor begins his book: and I cannot but commend his wit. For he wisely assumes that to himself, which is the very one great business, wherein every particular controversy sticks, and which, if it were once agreed on, would put an end to all controversies; that either now are, or ever shall be in the world. For they all come at length to this question, which of the many Professors of Christianity, now so much divided in their ways, have the Gospel and word of God on their side, in this, that, and the other particular. We, saith Dr. Taylor, we Protestants have the word of God, we have the Gospel of Christ, we have the Apostles writings with us and for us, and therefore our Religion is for certain, both ancient, primitive, and Apostolical. This is, Sir, a very good consequence, That Religion must needs be ancient, which hath God for his Author, that must be a primitive Christianity which Christ founded, and what the Apostles writings confirm, must needs be Apostolical faith. But is it proved here by the Doctor, that Protestants and not catholics have the word of God and of Christ, and of his Apostles on their side? No, it is all supposed: and his whole endeavour is to tell us, that the religion which issued from God and Christ, and his holy Apostles, must needs be Apostolical, primitive, and ancient. He supposes Protestancy, as distinct from Catholic faith, to have come all of it from those divine hands, which is the only thing to be proved: and declares at large, that a religion which came from such hands, must needs be ancient and primitive, which is a thing no man can ever doubt. It is certain and manifestly known, that Protestants received both Law and Gospel, and Apostles writings, from the hands of Roman Catholics, who had kept and canonised, and lived by those rules fifteen hundred years before Protestancy rose up in the world, and all the whole hundred years since. The only question is about the sense and mind of that holy writ, in the many particular points now controverted in the world. He has the law, that has the mind and purpose and meaning of the law; not he that hath the form of words without it. This is the great business, and the very extract and quintessence of all controversies: which your quick Doctor assumes as granted on his side, without any more ado. We, saith he, we Protestants have the Law and Gospel, and Apostles writings, and the old Counsels too if need be, and therefore is not the ancientness of our Religion to be doubted. But the Papists! what of them? the Papists Religion cannot so much as be pretended to be Apostolical, old, or primitive. Why so? Have not they the law and Gospel, and Apostolical writings? He does not plainly say they have not, but he hopes his reader will think so. What then of the Papists? They, saith he, can make new Articles, and therefore cannot their Religion be ancient. Sir, although they could make new articles, so long as they do not, their Religion may be old still for all that. A man may live in an old house, although he be able to build a new one. And this seems indeed to be the case here. For the Dissuader in confirmation of his speech, brings in, although unjustly, the testimony of some Catholic Doctors, who should say, The Church can make new Articles; but not one that says she has made any. That I may yet go further; although the Church should make new obliging Articles: so long as these do not contrary the former, but declare them more amply in such and such circumstances, they annul not, but rather confirm and explicate the old ones. Is not our Law the same old Law of England, and we the same polity our forefathers were, although the King and Parliament upon occasion of new disorders, make new acts and statutes continually? But let us go on, yet one step more. The Roman Church does plead, Sir, whatever your Dissuader would have you think, that her religion is Catholic, Apostolic, and primitive: because all her Counsels, by which that Church is governed, have openly and continually declared, when they came together to decide any affair which had raised new disturbance in the Christian world, that they must firmly adhere to that which is Primitive, to that which is Apostolical, to that which is Catholic, to that which has been delivered and received from forefathers. And by that rule they decided the difference. How then can this Church pretend to make new Articles? Does your Doctor bring any General Conncel, which is the loud voice of that Church; or any Tradition, which is the Churches still voice, to speak it? No, not any at all. But this he ought to have done, if he would prove that Church to pretend any such power. What then? Why, Turrecramata and some other doctors says, she can do it. But Sir, if some one or other clergyman should think that the Church can make new articles, does it therefore follow, that the Church itself does pretend any such power. Surely the voice of one or two Ministers here in England cannot in reason be thought the voice of our whole Protestant Church, especially when they speak against the tenor of her doctrine and practice. But your Dissuader has been many years picking in cobweb holes, and obscure writings, that he might, where he could find any half sentence apt to be wrested from the common judgement of Catholic Religion, mark that out for Popery; to the end it may be thought either naught or new. This is the chief ingredient of your Disswaders Policy, Catholic Doctors, Sir, though they may have written many other most excellent, catholic, and pious things, yet through humane infirmity, in this and that particular, may they at one time or other trip and fail. And particular men's failings are to be rectified by the straightness and integrity of the General Canon; but they are not to be esteemed that Canon, as your Doctor Tailor, not inclined to mend things but mar them rather, would here have them to be, throughout this whole book of his Dissuasive; where whatever he can read or hear of amongst the writings of any one in the Catholic world, that may either swerv or be wrested from the universal judgement and belief of Papists, that he calls Popery: and what they speak, that the Roman Church must pretend. O the strange perverseness and wickedness of man's heart! And yet this book of his thus made up, has carried away, not the weaker sort of men only, but it seems has made even your discretion, Sir, to stagger. For when I gave you lately a visit, I perceived within a while, that I had but gone forth to see a reed shaken with the wind. What the Church can do, is but one of the Questions of School-divinity, and no Catholic faith: Consequently no Popery. And if two or three in the Schools should chance to aver this power in the Church, where more than two or three thousands deny it, why should not the opinion of three thousand Papist doctors be esteemed Popery, as well as that of only three. Whilst all of them agree in their faith, which is, that the Church hath a power authoritatively to decide controversies, and dispute only of a further power than their faith reaches unto, I should think, that the opinion of three thousand Papist doctors is rather to be esteemed Popery, if one of them must be called so, rather than the single opinion of two or three, if any such be to the contrary. But truth is, there is no such opinion, of any one I know to the contrary. Nor does Turrecremata, nor any else teach, that the Church hath power to make new articles, in that sense your Dr. Taylor means, who thereby would infer, that Catholic faith is therefore not primitive, but new. Nay, it is rather Popery, and a part of Catholic faith, that no new articles can be made. For General Counsels have determined, that nothing is to be believed or held, but id quod traditum est, that which has been received from Christ and his Apostles. Nor can the Religion otherwise be the faith of Christ, or Christian Religion. Sir, if you do but seriously peruse the last one general Council, which all Protestants hold to be rank popish; that I mean which was kept at Trent: you will find that they testify almost in every Session, and profess to make all their determinations according to that which had been delivered, according to that they had received, according to that which had been conserved by continual succession, to that which was conformable to Apostolical tradition, to that which had been perpetually and uninterruptedly retained, to that which ancestors professed, to that which the Church of God ever taught, ever understood, ever believed, that which hath been received down by hands, that which was the ancient judgement, and custom, that which has been approved since the apostles days, etc. These are all the very words of the Council in several of their Sessions. And shall a Doctor Taylor come now after all this, and tell the world, that Popery is neither Catholik, Apostolic, nor Primitive, and that Papists pretend to make new faith, etc. after a general Synod, which all Protestants look upon, as the most popish Council that ever was, and that too the last and nearest to us, hath so manifestly, so pathetically, so generally professed the contrary. What should we say to such a Doctor? And other general Counsels in like manner, never determined any thing for the quieting of dissensions, for which end they met together, but what was latent at least in the seed of Christ's word, and so no new article in this Doctors sense: as did that Council for example, which determined two wills in Christ, which was no new article, because the former old faith, which had made known two perfect natures in our Lord, the one divine, the other humane, apparently dictated that truth against all those, who would acknowledge but one will in him. And this being defined by the Council, received a new strength against a novel heresy, but not a new birth. For this cause Counsels do not determine the varieties that are in Schoolmen; because these are superstructures, and none of them more latent in ancient tradition, than is the opinion that is opposite to it. But Turrecremata, Triumphus, Ancoran, and Panormitan teach that the Church can make new articles. If they should say any such thing, I have already made it enough evident, that it cannot be thence inferred to be popery, or any part of popery. But what if they speak no such thing? What shall we think then of this your Dr. Taylor? Turrecremata in the place cited by him, never so much as dreamt, as any man may there see, that the Pope is the rule of faith, as the Doctor would have him speak: but in that whole chapter labours only to show, that it belongs to him principally to regulate disputes in faith, as being the chief Prelate. In the like manner does he most unworthily abuse the other three, brought by him as witnesses, that the Pope can make new Creeds, and new faith: whereas Panormitan teaches expressly, that he cannot make, but only declare faith; Ancorano says the like, adding that what he so declares, may be new to us, though not in itself: and Triumphus no less manifestly speaks in the very place cited by him, that there is one and the same faith in the ancients and moderns, and that in our holy Creed are inserted all those things, which universally pertain to Catholic faith: although he say withal, which is also very true, that to add, explicate, or declare a truth, which is contained in holy Scripture, hath always been lawful for the Church. But is this to make new faith which is not Apostolic, and primitive, as this your Doctor would have them to assert? Do you Siry yourself judge. And him that thus abuses the world, God Almighty judge. So that when we come to the close of all, there is not any one Catholic Doctor, that ever said that the Church can make new articles of faith in Doctor Tailor's sense. Why then did Pope Leo the 10. condemn Luther for denying the Pope to have this power? Neither did Luther, or Pope Leo ever dream of any such thing. For Luther wholly busied himself about his old Catholic Religion, from which he had revolted, which he called an Egyptian darkness that had overspread the earth even from the Apostles days, and never thought of this school question, which in his days was not heard of. And he denied the then present Pope who was Leo the tenth, to be any judge in those Controversies of Religion, or to have any power statuendi, of deciding or determining in such affairs. Nor is there any the least mention, either in Luther's resistance, or Leo his censure, about constituting new articles, but only deciding the old, which Luther would have thought to be erroneous, however strengthened by antiquity, and from which old errors he would make himself a reformation and innovation by the right, which was in himself not subjected to any man, no not to the Pope himself in those affairs. Is this a mistake think you in your Dissuader or something worse? Truly I cannot think he was so ignorant. The like insincerity doth this your Dissuader exhibit in all that his talk of the Catholics dealing with the Father's works, and the indices or tables adjoined to them, jumbling his words so confusedly together, that his reader might believe that to be done to the Father's writings themselves, which the Churches care provided to be done to the false glosses, tables and indices annexed to those writings; and that to be taken out of those writings, which ever was, and still is in them; and Printers and Correctors complaining of that fault of making alterations in the Father's Editions, which they did not so much as think of. Which is a most slupendious insincerity. And thus, saith he, are the Father's maimed and curtailed by Papists; insomuch that Sixtus Senensis praises Pope Pius 5. for this his care in purging the Father's works. I say this whole talk of his is most prodigiously unjust. For that Index Expurgatorius extended not to any writings or works of the Fathers, but only to the marginal notes and false glosses and indices or tables put to them by the heretics; and therefore are Tertullian, Origen, and some others still printed entire, though there be not a few things in them contrary to Catholic faith. And this the very words of Junius a Corrector of a Press cited by the Doctor clearly intimates. What, saith he, Papists dare not do with the Fathers, they practise upon us, he means Protestant printers and writers: and with their little forks thrust out our annotations in the margin, and our sayings in the indices, although they be consonant to the Father's minds. But, saith he, this care was so great in Pius 5. that Sixtus Senensis commends the Pope for his industry in purging the Father's works. He did so indeed: but if the Doctor had spoken out the sentence, he had betrayed his own false heart, which he would not willingly do. Expurgari, saith Senensis, & emaculari curasti omnium Catholicorum Scriptorum, ac praecipue veterum Patrum scripta, haereticorum aetatis nostrae faecibus contaminata & venenis infecta. Your Doctor our Dissuader makes Senensis praise the Pope, for his purging the Fathers, as though he had scoured and scraped off the substance: whereas he commended him only for his care in cleansing them from the infectious notes and glosses superadded to them by the heretics of our times. But Sir, that I may tell you once for all. The falsifications of Authors perverted by this your Dissuader, are so many, so notorious and gross ones, that in the very relating them I shall tyre both myself and you. My design is only to let you know, that this whole work of his Dissuasive from Popery, if the proofs and citations he brings for his talk were true, as they are all false, signifies nothing at all. Two worthy Catholic Gentlemen have discovered by the help of the Libraries in London and Oxford so many most gross falsifications, one of them a hundred and fifty, the other yet more and greater, that it cannot but amaze an honest minded render to behold them. Pray read them Sir, and ponder seriously; and so rid of that trouble, I shall make the more haste in my own design. It was their endeavour it seems to show him to be dishonest, mine is only to prove him impertinent. God reward them for their pains, and help me in mine. For my hand denies me now his office, not able to write with that facility it was wont. But because I saw no abler pen to appear, as I thought they would in the confutation of this slanderous book: I judged it my part, Sir, to give you some general hints of light concerning it, till there might issue some more plenary confutation by a better hand. And here, Sir, you must know too, that I had no sooner finished this my Epistle, but that I understood of another book against this Doctor Tailor's Dissuasive, a very solid book written by Ja. Ser. in order to his own book called Surefooting lately set forth, which made me doubt for a while, whether I should let this of mine appear; especially when I considered the industry, care, and solidity of those three men; the last whereof had so taken up what the other two had left for me to say, and so utterly confounded this Dissuasive, that I might well be silent. But I remembered a story which I had sometime read in holy writ, of Joas the King of Israel; who coming to visit Elizeus the Prophet when he lay sick on his deathbed, was bid by him for his encouragement against his enemies, to strike the ground with the javelin he had in his hand. Joas at his word struck the floor three times. But the holy man of God was angry with him and said; If thou hadst struck five or six or seven times, thou hadst smote Syria even to an utter consummation; but now thou shalt smite it but thrice. So very faulty is this Dissuasive, that it cannot be smote too often, even to an utter consummation. §. 2 Which is about a leash of new Articles. Says, that in the Church of Rome faith and Christianity encreas like the moon: and that there be now two new articles of faith a coining, namely the immaculate Conception, and the Pope's being above the Council: and one other lately produced in the Council of Trent, sess. 21. which is, That although the ancient Fathers did give the Communion to Infants. yet they did not believe it necessary to salvation: Which decree is, saith he, beyond all bounds of modesty and evident truth. Here your Doctor tells news of one Article lately made, and two more a coining, which will shortly, be out of the mint: both which news he knows, but we know not. Indeed Sir, this section belongs more to a writer of Diurnals or weakly Intelligencer, than to a Doctor of Divinity. And therefore at the reading of it, I turned suddenly to the frontispiece of the book, to see whose Imprimatur it had to it. And I found it licenced, not by Mr. l'Estrange, but Geo. Stfadling. First then he tells us news to come, and then news past. A pair of faith articles are now, he saith, in the mint, and will shortly come forth, The Virgin's immaculate Conception, and the Pope's being above a Council. But how can your Dissuader say, that these two are shortly to come forth, whereas in this very section he tells us a little afterward, that the Council of Basil decreed the second Article against the Pope. And I am sure the same Council of Basil decreed the first article of the immaculate Conception, sess. 36. Surely the year of our Lord 1431. when that Council was kept, is not now to come. Where and when, and how can they be more than they are already? I suppose he prophesies this by reason of some vehement disputes about those points. If this be it, he may add yet five hundred more, which are more vehemently disputed than these be. One of them it is much he could miss. For the superiority betwixt the King of France and Spain has been often agitated not only by their Ambassadors in Kingdoms where they reside, but even in Counsels also, and that with too much of vehemency there. As concerning the Conception, I know the two schools of divine S. Thomas and subtle Scotus have much altercation about an instant of time, an Aristotelical Instant, so swift and short an instant, that no thought of man, though never so nimble, can ever catch it. And the general Pastor has silenced that School-dispute, because it sounded ill, and signified nothing. What is it to action, or any esteem towards that Blessed Virgin, that she was pure in her Conception by Gods preventing grace, as one school speaks, or by his sanctifying grace, as the other school declares it; that she was ever Immaculate, God's mercy providing that in no instant imaginable she should be liable to original sin, as Scotus teaches; or God's grace so working, that immediately after that instant she should be made pure and holy, as Saint Thomas speaks. For this is the school dispute, which your Dissuader, if he understands himself, here talks of. And those very Doctors who dispute this, and all pious Christians have ever unanimously believed, that the Blessed Virgin was not only most pure and unspotted in her whole life, but even from her first animation in the womb. So that if we speak of a real and complete Conception, she is already believed to be Immaculate. And from this universal Tradition, wherein catholics agree, and are already resolved, the first reforming Protestants departed, as well as from many others. Nor in any probability will ever that Aristotelical School instant, which signifies just nothing, as to any Christian action, be ever thought of: unless some greater disorder than I have yet heard of, exact a further decision about a thing, which it is not the weight of a hair, whether it be expressed according to the school of S. Thomas or of Scotus. The like I say to that other article, which your Dissuader prophecies will shortly come forth, concerning the Pope's being above a Council. For that there is, and aught to be, one visible Pastor over all Christ's flock upon earth, whether essential or representative, is a Christian Tradition; which catholics still embrace. but Protestants have left. And this tradition, together with the former of the immaculate Conception, if your Dissuader had endeavoured to show, either not to have been, or likely not to be perpetual, his endeavour however insufficient, had not been at least impertinent. But instead of that, he tells us, that this and that will shortly come forth new articles, not heeding that himself and such as he have departed from the old. And this his prophecy in this, is as vain as in the other. For that the Pope, who is and ever was believed the head and Prince of the whole Council, should be also above it, and his authority there greater than all the rest beside, is a speculative querk, that ambition may think, but sober reason will never deem of moment. For whether he be above the Council, that is to say, of greater authority than all the other Prelates put together; or not above, but their authority joined together as great, or greater than his: neither they without him, nor he without them, can positively declare any thing with authentic authority, for the silencing of differences which arise in faith. I'th' interim the chief Prelate is for certain above the Council in this sense: that he is their Prince and Superior: as also he has in himself a negative voice, both with the Council, and without it. For this is a right engrafted naturally in the condition of all whatever superiority, spiritual or civil: without which they could not rule or manage their charge. By it they silence disquiets, and end debates, according to the tenor of laws already made, which in such cases, they are by their place and office to interpret; so far at least, that one party shall not carry it against the other, which he shall judge in such and such circumstances to come nearer to law and right, than he. This power I say every superior must have over his subjects, whether his authority be greater than all theirs put together in the making of laws, or not. Nor is it of any concernment at all, since one without the other can enact no laws, that may have their full and perpetual force, which of them is the greater. The statutes and acts that are made in any Kingdom by the King and Parliament of the place, have the same force, whether the King's Majesty, who is superior prince, and head of the Parliament, be above the whole Parliament, that is, of more authority than all the rest there put together, and weighed in a balance against him, yea or no. Nor would he gain or lose any one jot of his dignity, authority, or reverence, whatever should be concluded in a pair of subtle speculatours scales, concerning that point. Although for my part, I hold it little better than busy sedition, to raise such fantastic doubts. And the danger of it we experienced here in this Kingdom but the other day. And I may be bold to say, by what I know and heard myself, that the hint was given them by Ministers talking upon this point of the Popes not being above his Council. Catholics know how to obey their Pope and Pastor, whether he be above or not above a Council, which silly querk concerns not them to think of. But others are apt to catch fire at any thing, which may any ways dissolve the bands of their due obedience. Thus much concerning the two points of school-speculation, which your Dissuader prophecies will shortly be determined. But he does but dream, and so let him sleep on. The third new article, is that which was lately produced, saith he, in the Council of Trent, sess. 21. which is, That although the ancient Fathers did give the Communion to Infants, yet they did not believe it necessary to salvation. Your Dissuader seems here tacitly to grant, that all the other Canons and Decrees of the Council of Trent are old and primitive doctrine. He would not otherwis have culled out from thence this one only article for new. I looked into the Council of Trent, and found there no such article of faith as this your Dissuader speaks. The Canon or Article of saith concerning this point runs thus. Si quis dixerit parvulis, antequam ad annos discretionis pervenerint, necessariam esse Ettcharistiae communionem, anathema sit. And this is all the articles of faith determined in that Council upon this affair: wherein the faithful are forbid to hold that the Communion of Infants is necessary to salvation. If any one, says the Council, shall say, that communion of the Eucharist is necessary to babes before they come to years of discretion, let him be Anathema. And this doctrine I am persuaded your Dissuader himself holds for good. But this would not make him sport enough. And therefore he lets pass the Canon or Article of saith, and speaks of the doctrine or Declaration of it, which is not propounded for faith at all to any believer, although all Catholics that know it, adhere to it as good and solid. And this is his first legerdemain, to propound that for an Article of faith, which is only a doctrine or declaration of faith. His next trick is, to make it run short like a Canon of faith, whereas it is a large and serious explication, wherein those words he catches at are so connexed with others, that their rationality there appears, which here is hid. Third is, that he makes it the Counsels business to determine only a matter of fact of the ancient Fathers not believing infant's communion necessary, though themselves used it. which was none of the Counsels intention; but insinuated only by way of anticipation to cut off the arguments of heretics, who strengthened their error about the necessity of infant's communion, by example of the ancient Fathers who practised it. Denique eadem sancta Synodus docet parvulos ufu rationis carentes nulla obligari necessitate ad Sacramentalem Eucharistiae Communionem: Siquidein per Baptismi lavacrum regencrati, & Christo incorporati, adeptam jam filiorum Dei gratiam in illa aetate amittere non possunt. Neque ideo tamen daninanda est antiquitas, si eum morent in quibusdam locis aliquando servavit. Ut enim sanctissimi illi Patres sui sacti probabilem causam pro illius temporis ratione habuerunt, ita certe eos nulla salutis necessitate id fecisse sine controversia credendum est. Thus speaks the Council in their doctrine or declaration of that Article of faith. Si quis dixerit. But enough of this business. And although your Disswaders talk deserv it not, yet your own satisfaction concerning these three novelties here specified, because I thought it might haply require what I have said thereof, pray take it in good part. And be assured that faith and Christianity in the Roman Church increases not like the moon; although out of that Church it decreas indeed like the moon in her wain, daily and in all Reformations to the worse. §. 3. Which is about Indulgences. Says that the doctrine of Indulgences is wholly new and unknown to antiquity, as Antonius, Prierias, Bishop Fisher, Agrippa, and Durandus, Popish doctors do acknowledge. And hence it is, that Gratian and Magister sententiarum, both of them eminent doctors among the Papists, have not a word of them. Indeed in primitive times, when the Bishop imposed several pennances, and that they were almost quite performed, and a great cause of pity intervened or danger of death, or an excellent repentance, or that the martyrs interceded, the Bishop did sometimes indulge to the penitent, and relax some remaining parts of his penance. But the Roman doctrine of Indulgence is another thing. They talk of Jubilees and treasure of the Church, and pilgrimages, which ancient Fathers either speak against, or never heard of In sine, theirs is become a doctrine of solution not absolution, that is, the sinner is to go free without any punishment: which is destructive to true repentance, and right hope, to Christ's merits, and free pardon, nourishes pride and brings in money, condemned by holy Scriptures and ancient Fathers, who teach repentance reducing to a good life, faith in Christ's merits, and hope in his promises. Neither can any Papists tell what they are the better for their Indulgences; or whether they be absolutions or compensations; whether they take off actual pennances, or potential; such as be due in the court of man, or of God; whether they avail, if the receiver do nothing for them, or not; whether they depend only of Christ's satisfaction, or the Saints likewis. And therefore the Council of Trent durst determine nothing about all these things, but contented themselves only to declare this, That there is in the Church a power of granting Indulgences; advising catholics to set other superfluous and curious questions aside. Sir, if I had had the opportunity to print the four paragraffs, which to lessen the book I left out of my Fiat Lux, because one of them was about Indulgence, I should need to say the less to this section; wherein I must notwithstanding be brief, that I may speak somewhat also to those that follow. Three things are in this his third section consusedly jumbled together by your Dissuader concerning this business of Indulgence; Faith, School-philosophy, and Abuses. Catholic faith and Tradition he sets down himself p. 17. and acknowledges it for good. Now lest the Roman Emissaries, saith he, should deceiv any of the good sons of the Church, we think it fit to acquaint them that in the primitive Church when the Bishop imposed severe pennances, and that they were almost quite performed, and a great cause of pity intervened or danger of death; or an excellent repentance; or that the Martyrs interceded, the Bishop did sometimes indulge to the Penitent, and relax some of the parts of his penance, and according to the example of S. Paul in the case of the incestuous Corinthian, gave them ease, left they should be swallowed up with too much sorrow. These are his words. And in them he hath set down exactly, not only the faith, but all the faith of Roman catholics in this point, to stop the mouths of Roman Emissaries: which faith and practice he acknowledges also expressly to be ancient and primitive. And thus much he would have us believe that Protestants hold and allow; although not their books and writings only which manitestly gainsay it, but their very practice, which hath long ago abandoned, and is now utterly ignorant either of confession or penance, or relaxation or indulgence; and the very Articles of the English Protestant Church refute him. But he that writes against Popery, need not heed what he says. If another say the contrary, so that he speak against Popery too, they will both pass for good. But the Papists, laith your Dissuader, they are quite gone from this primitive way: their doctrine of Indulgence is another thing, quite another thing. And then jumbles together heaps of their school-disputes, about solutions, absolutions, compensations, relaxations, and such like stuff; which together with some abuses that time has brought forth, as well in that as other affairs, and which Counsels and Pastors have in all ages endeavoured to rectify, must make up a Miscellan, which he would have to be thought the Popery of this business. Good Lord! Is this ignorance in your dissuading Doctor, or illud quod dicere nolo. He acknowledges manifestly, that the Council of Trent decided no more than that very Tradition, which the Church hath kept in all ages, acknowledged here by the Dissuader himself to be primitive. Nor can he bring any Catholic Council that hath decided any more, or any Gospel or Tradition for more. If school-divines questions, that are raised beyond faith in this point as well as hundreds of others, may suffice to infer that Roman catholics are departed from the ancient primitive way, although they keep it, he may as well say they are departed from the old faith of the Trinity, Creation, Incarnation, Sacraments, Resurrection, Justice, Grace, and the whole contents of the old and new Testament. For though they keep the ancient faith concerning all these things, yet have their schoolmen raised many hundreds, nay thousands of questions and conclusions beyond that faith, that be variously agitated in the schools amongst them. Your Disswaders craft lies in this, that whilst he brings in here these school-disputes for popish faith and popery; and points out eminent Doctors amongst Papists, who witness these fancies to be new and unknown to antiquity, as Antonius, Prierias, Fisher, Durandus, Maironis, Cajetan; and the Council of Trent, either not able, or not willing to determine them: he hopes his reader will easily believe, without much labour of his, that Popery is not only a new foppery, but a confusion inextricable. This is his drift not only in this section, but all his whole book. But he is entangled in his own snare. For if neither the Council of Trent determined those things, nor yet any other Council in the Catholic world, nor any ancient Tradition delivered, nor her Doctors acknowledge them, than is there not any popery therein: nor is popery any such thing. Wherefore your Dissawader is very angry with the Council of Trent, for that they would not there, either justify the abuses, or determine the school-disputes in that point; but rather condemned the one, and exploded the other. I will set down the Counsels decree word for word, that you may see without any further discourse of mine, how much your Doctor has abused his reader. It runs thus. cum potestas conferendi indulgentias à Christo Ecclesiae concessa sit, atque hujusmodi potestate divinitus sibi tradit â antiquissimis etiam temporibus illa usa fuerit; sacrosancta Synodus Indulgentiarum usum Christiano populo maximè salutarem, & sacrorum Conciliorum autoritate probatum, in Ecclesia retinendum esse docet & praecipit, eosque anathemate damnat, qui aut inutiles esse asserant, veleas concedendiis Ecclesia potestatem esse negant. In his tamen concedendis moderationem juxta veterem & probatam in Ecclesia consuetudinem adhiberi cupit, ne nimia facilitate. Ecclesiae disciplina enervetur. Abusus verò qui in his irrepserunt, & quorum occasione insigne hoc Indulgentiarum nomen ab haereticis blasphematur, emendatos & correctos cupiens, praesenti decreto generaliter statust pravos quaeftus omnes pro his consequendis, unde plurima in Christiano populo abusuum causa fluxit, omnino abolendos esse. Caeteros vero qui ex superstitione, ignorantia, irreverentia, aut aliunde quomodocunque provenerunt, cum ob multiplices locorum & provinciarum apud quas hi committuntur corruptelas, commodè nequeant specialiter prohiberi, mandat omnibus Episcopis, ut diligenter quisque hujusmodi abusus Ecclesiae suae colligat, eosque in prima Synodo Provinciali referat, etc. Thus the holy Council condemns, and lahours with all fatherly and pastourly care possible, to prevent and amend the abuses, which your Dissuader here sets down as one part of Popery in this point; and the school-philosophy, which he makes the other part thereof, the self same Council explodes in their decree of Purgatory, which your Dissuader calls the mother of Indulgences. Praecipit san●●● Syndous Episcopis, saith the Council, ut sanam doctrinam à sanctis Patribus & sacris Conciliis traditam à Christi sidelibus credi, teneri, doceri, & ubique praedicari diligenter studeant. Apud rudem verò plebem difficiliores ac subtiliores quaestiones, quaeque ad aedificationem non faciunt, & ex quibus plerumque nulla fit pietatis accessio, à popularibus concionibus secludantur. Incerta item & quae specie falsi laborant, evulgari, actractari non permittant. Ea vero quae ad curiositatem quandam aut superstitionem spectant, vel turpe lucrum sapiant, tanquam scandala & fidelium ossendicala prohibeant. I would we could see our English Bishops meet together in a Council, and make such pious and fatherly provisions against scandalous books, seditious sermons, and vicious customs, as this Popish Council has done. They would then give some help to temporal authority, and not lay all the burden upon their shoulders, whilst themselves sit like drones in their fat benefices, and do nothing. But here you may see Sir, that all that which your Dissuader makes here to be Popery; abusive customs, and school-philosophy, is by a general Popish Council expressly excluded from it. What strange kind of audacity is this, to call that Popery or Catholic faith, which Catholic Doctors deny, Catholic Counsels exclude, and Catholic Professors never think of. But what your Dissuader knows to be new, he first puts that upon Papists for their faith; and then tells them that their faith is new. And your Dissuader, as I told you before, is much troubled, and murmurs bitterly against the Council of Trent: for that they would not determine those philosophical subtleties, whether Indulgences be solutions or absolutions, whether donations or compensations, whether for potential or actual pennances, whether in the Court of God or man, whether out of the treasure of Christ or Saints, whether upon condition of doing something or nothing. The Council, quoth he, slubbereth all the whole matter both in the question of Indulgences and Purgatory, in general and recommendatory terms; affirming that the power of giving Indulgence is in the Church, and that the use is wholesome; and that all hard and subtle questions concerning Purgatory, (which although if it be at all, it is a fire, yet is it the fuel of Indulgences, and maintain them wholly) and all that is suspected to be false, and all that is uncertain, and whatsoever is curious and superstitious, scandalous, or for filthy lucre, be laid aside. And in the mean time they tell us not what is and what is not superstitious, nor what is scandalous, nor what they mean by the general term of Indulgence. And they establish no doctrine, neither curious nor incurious. Nor durst they decree the very foundation of this whole matter the Church's treasure, neither durst they meddle with it, but left it as they found it, and continued in the abuses, and proceed in the practice, and set their Doctors as well as they can to defend all the new curious and scandalous questions, and to uphold the gainful trade. Thus heavily poor man does your Dissuader complain of the Counsels silence in those philosophical points, neither resolving the doubts, nor so much as explicating the terms thereof, that he might understand, what is superstitious, and what is scandalous, and what they mean by Indulgence, and what by curious, and the like hard words. Ith'interim while the Council sends him to school to learn the meaning of those hard words, and the result of those disputes, which belonging not to faith, make little to edification, and from whence no accession to piety can be made, nor indeed any useful knowledge, all your Disswaders sport is spoiled. And he has some reason indeed to complain and weep. But I pray you Sir consider; If I have a releasement granted me from some temporal penalties due to my misdoings, what does it concern me to know, whether that releasement be a substance or an accident, whether it be in the predicament of quantity or quality, whether it be a solution or absolution, whether it be from power or bounty, whether it issue as out of a treasure, or from a tribunal, or the like. The Schoolmen whence your Doctor picked those curious questions, would I am sure have acquainted him with their opinions concerning all such things, if he had stayed to read their answers. But he was in haste; and indeed it concerned him not to know their resolution. He had enough, to pick out their philosophical prattle in the general heads of it, which because it is found in the school-books of such as are Catholic believers, he makes no doubt, but the very naming of it will suffice to persuade the Land, that it is all popish doctrine and Popery; and that Papists cannot agree in it; and that it is new. Indeed Sir, he has great need to go to school to those Doctors, not only to hear their resolutions, but to understand the very terms of the question. For had he known, what those very words of solution and absolution mean, he had never added that absurd interpretation of his own, which he gives p. 20. It is a very strange thing, saith he, a solution not an absolution, that is the sinner is let go free without punishment in this world, or world to come: a wise interpretation of a pitiful Divine. But I cannot stand here to give notice of his special mistakes, simple inferences, vain insultings, and particular falsifications, all which are gross and various. I do only assure you Sir, that if he mean by Popery the Religion and faith of Roman catholics concerning this business of Indulgences, in one period above named, he approves, establishes, and ratifies it all. And in all the rest he says nothing against it, and indeed nothing at all to it. For the subtle curious theories that are made by wits upon this subject, over and above what their faith extends unto, as well as in all other things even from the world's first creation to its final consummation, all whatever is contained in the whole Bible, about which they have raised many thousands of disputes, over and above that which is there plainly delivered by their faith, these for such as are at leisure and love them, may serve for Academic exercise and discourse. The disorders and abuses that have been in this, as well as other affairs, all good men and sacred Counsels have laboured to their power to suppress and rectify. And are there not abuses of all kinds in the Protestant world, notwithstanding any endeavours to the contrary? But the faith that is in this point and all the whole practice of it, Catholics still hold, and Protestants have forsaken it: For these have neither confession of sins, nor penance for those sins confessed, nor indulgence of any such pennances enjoined, as catholics have. Indeed the Prelate Protestant keeps still one ancient custom of commuting, as they call it, which is but a new word for Indulgence, when the penance of standing in a white sheet for one kind of sin imposed, is upon some considerations released. For although the Reformation have taught, that Matrimony is no Sacrament, but a mere secular contract, yet Ministers I know not how keep still that Spiritual Court (as they call it) unto themselves; as being it seems the only men that are able to judge in those affairs. But there be other sins that require penance and satisfaction, besides that one: and other penance besides a white sheet to be commuted. §. 4. Which is about Purgatory. Says that Purgatory is another ill novelty: both because the Greek Fathers never make any mention of Purgatory, and also because the doctrines on which it is built are either falls or at least dubious; as that there is distinction betwixt mortal sins and venial; that sin may be taken away, the obligation to punishment remaining; that God requires of us a full exchange of pennances for the pleasure of sin, notwithstanding Christ suffering for us. But Papists are deceived in this point upon two mistakes; the first whereof is, that ancient Fathers used to pray for the dead: but they prayed not in relation to Purgatory: and so the Church of England allows to pray for the departed, namely as the Fathers did. The second is, that the Fathers speak of a fire of purgation after this life, which was but an opinion of such a thing after the day of judgement. And this is also refuted by those other Fathers, who hold the souls to be kept in secret receptacles until doomsday, which opinion cannot stand with Purgatory. Beside St. Austin in his time, doubted whether Purgatory was, or no. And though ancient Fathers speak much of intermedial states and purgations, and fires, and common receptacles and delivery of souls, yet they never agreed throughout with the Church of Rome. But Papists have been brought into this belief by frightful relations of apparitions, which the wiser sort believe not. And Tertullian denies that the souls of the dead do ever appear. How the Greek Church denies this purgatory doctrine, appears in the Council of Florence. Moreover S. Cyprian and others teach against it, that after death is no place for penance, no purgation: and no less holy scripture, who saith, Blessed are those who die in the Lord. What a rhapsody of stuff is here? Papists gathered this doctrine of Purgatory out of falls grounds: Papists have been frighted into this doctrine of Purgatory by apparitions. The Fathers speak of a fire of purgation after this life, but they meant not as Papists do. The Fathers held secret receptacles for souls until doomsday; but that cannot stand with Papists Purgatory: though they speak much of intermedial states, yet that does not agree throughout with the Roman doctrine of Purgatory. And blessed are the dead; for they rest from their labours. Blessed surely had your Dissuader been, if he had rested from his labours too. Sir, if your Dissuader had meant to say any thing to the purpose in this affair, he should have clearly set down in this his section, before he had discoursed further, what is the Papists belief and practice in this business. But this he utterly omits and neglects to do, lest he should spoil his own sport; and thinks it enough, in a rambling talk to say, that the Fathers prayed for the dead, the Fathers spoke much of intermedial states, but no Greek Fathers, no Latin Fathers agree with the Roman doctrine of Purgatory, S. Cyprian denied it, S. Austin doubted it, the Scripture is against it, the grounds for it are dubious, apparitions for it are frivolous. And he never speaks one word what that Roman doctrine of Purgatory is: nor can I imagine what he fancies it to be. If he do but speak against it, be it what it will, he has said enough. So he thinks. But Sir, had he declared it as he ought to have done, it had then clearly appeared, that those Fathers who prayed for a joyful Resurrection to their friends departed, who speak of a fire of purgation after this life, of an intermedial state and purgations and delivery of souls thence, were directly and perfectly of the now present Papists belief: and that St. Augustine's doubting, whatever it was, and the Greeks disagreeing in Florence, and S. Cyprians affirming that there is no place of repentance after this life, so far as they are truly cited, stand all very well, perfect, and completely with the Roman Catholic belief and practice. But what think you, Sir, of our English Protestant Church? Does she pray, or so much as leave it indifferent to pray for the dead, as this Dissuader speaks, if it be not done in relation to Purgatory? the name Purgatory I mean. For if they pray for the refreshment, ease, and comfort of souls departed as ancient holy Fathers did, there is nothing else but the bare name remaining, if those prayers bear any sense. Hath the Protestant Church any altar, or priesthood, or sacrifice for the dead, which all ancient Fathers both Greek and Latin speak of, as the usage and custom of the Christian Church in their times? Does any amongst them, when he dies, give alms either to priests or poor people, or other friends to pray for his soul when he is departed hence? Is not he looked upon, that shall be heard to say for his deceased friend, God give him rest, or God grant him a joysul Resurrection, as either some professed, or at least a tacit and concealed Papist? What is it this Doctor than tells us, of the English Churches allowing prayer for the dead, which our very Protestant articles condemn, and all their writers have hitherto opposed. Nor have they any Priests amongst them to perform any such rite in that way the Fathers speak of, and used themselves on their altars, which are all razed here to the ground. And as for the people, they neither do, nor dare, under the danger of being thought Papists, if they had the mind, either practice or commend any such custom. But Greek Fathers never mention Purgatory, as Polydore and Rossensis witness. Where does Polydore and Roffensis witness that? How would your Dissuader have them mention it? Purgatorium is a latin word, and not to be found in greek writings. Did not S. Basil pray to God, for rest and pardon for the soul of thy servant N. N. Does not S. Chrysostom speak of his offering sacrifice for all those who slept before us, etc. and for the rest and pardon of thy servant N etc. Does not S. Cyril frequently say, We offer this sacrifice for our deceased Fathers and Bishops, and all those who have departed this life, etc. And S. Epiphanius, We make mention both of just and sinners, etc. And what is the Papists Purgatory for God's sake, but only such a condition of souls deceased, as requires help from the prayers of the faithful living. This I take to be the Roman doctrine, or Catholic belief, both of the Eastern and Western part of the Church, both Greeks and Latins, wherein all ancient Christians unanimously agreed. And your Dissuader, that he may leave it free for every man's thoughts to imagine what he lists, never speaks himself what it should be. But the Fathers prayed for those who perhaps never were in Purgatory, as Apostles, etc. And they prayed too for those who perhaps were there, or in that condition that required their prayers. Truth is, they prayed far differently for the just ones and other men: as any one may see in those very Fathers, insinuated in those your Disswaders words. And if some just ones commemorated by the Fathers wanted not our prayers, does this infer that no condition of souls deceased wants them, or that those Fathers who prayed also for others then deceased, as wanting those helps, although in another manner than for the just, should think so? I trow not, however your Doctor throws his ink about confusedly to blind our eyes. But S. Austin doubted whether there were any Purgatory or no. And is it likely Sir, that he who in his Enchiridion. Cura pro mortuis, Civitate Dei, and several other of his works speaks so expressly of souls expiation after death, and of the sacrifices which himself made being a Priest for sols deceased, in particular for his mother Monica, and her husband, for that end so expressly I say and clearly, that no Roman Catholic now, either does or could possibly say more, should doubt whether there were after this life any expiatory place or condition? I will but set down two or three places of many in that holy Father's works, which may sutlice to show his mind. Temporarias poenas alii in hac vita tantùm, alii post mortem, alii & nunc & tunc patiuntur, 1. 21. de Civitate Dei. Again, Orationilus vero sanctae Ecclesiae & sacrificio salutari, & eleemosynis quae eorum spiritibus erogantur, non est dubitandum mortuos adjuvati, ut cum eis misericordius agatur à Domino, quam-eorum peccata meruerunt: hoc enim à patribus traditum universa observat Ecclesia. De verb. apost. serm. 34. Again, Neque negandum est defunctorum animas pietate suorum viventium relevari, cum pro illis sacrificium mediatoris offortur, Ench. c. 10. The Dissuader cannot but have read several such like passages in that eminent Doctor. And the jest is, that the place he citys for S. Augustine's doubting of Purgatory, is one of those wherein he expressly teaches it. So expert a Doctor is this of yours. What is it then St. Austin doubted? For he must needs doubt something. Otherwise there had been nothing for your Dissuader to catch hold of. Speaking therefore of those sufferings after this life, before eternal bliss can be obtained, in which condition such as upon a good foundation have built some light matter, which the Apostle calls wood, hay, and straw, may be saved, yet so as by fire, S. Austin doubts whether those very affections men bear to things in this life, which are lawfully had, but lost with some grief, may not burn, and afflict them in that place of expiation, as well as other venial offences, and be some part of the wood, hay, and straw the Apostle mentions. And truly the doubt is very rational, and remains still a doubt. But when your Dissuader takes hereupon occasion to say, that St. Austin doubted Purgatory, I cannot doubt but that he wanted either sincerity in his heart, or eyes in his head. But in the time of Otho, in the twelfth age of the Church, the doctrine of Purgatory was got no further than a Quidam asserunt, Some say so. Sir, Otho here cited to say quidam asserunt, speaks not at all of any expiation after death, as your Dissuader would have us think, but after judgement, which some divines in those days held over and above that which their faith had delivered: which opinion had then but a some say so for it, as it hath also now: and it was then, and is now but a philosophical opinion. Can you believe your Dissuader did not seo this? It was truly, if he did see it, a gross and inexcusable insincerity, to make Otho say it was only the opinion of some, that there was a purgation after death, who expressly treats of that particular opinion concerning a purgation after judgement, which their faith and religion did not reach unto. But as I told you before, I must not insist upon your Disswaders falsifications, however they be various and very gross, because that work is well done already, and my design looks another way. As he is to blame, for making some Fathers think and speak what they did not; so is he, while he makes all the Fathers in general to acknowledge and practise as much in this point, as any Roman Catholic beleeus, and yet adds withal, that those Fathers notwithstanding agreed not with the Roman doctrine, which himself never declares what it is, most palpably ridiculous. But the doctrine of Purgatory is grounded, faith your Dissuader, upon false principles, as upon a supposed distinction betwixt venial sins and mortal, between sin and its obligation to punishment, etc. Sir, if we would speak properly, neither is this belief of future expiations, nor any other point of Catholic Religion to be called a doctrine, or opinion, or judgement, of some divines or all divines, or any such like thing. For it is the faith as well of divines, as other Christians; unto which they as well as these submit all equally with the same resignation, and no doctrine of any man's. Upon the pin of this one mistake, if it be a mistake, and not rather a malicious wilfulness, hangs all this your Doctors Dissuasive, which being removed, all his whole book falls to the ground. And therefore it were worth the labour to discourse more copiously upon this subject; which all Anticatholiks' either understand not, or dissemble, that they may have the more ample field of scholastical Divines, and some rotten Casuists to ride a hunting in, when they chase Popery; which the world must believe to be a doctrine of divines. And this doctrine must not be the doctrine of any one of their schools, much less of all their schools, but of this or that obscure man, who followed no school at all: nor any good thing that he delivered, but some uncouth odd speech unheedfully dropped from his pen: nor this candidly delivered neither, as he spoke it, but wrested and perverted against his meaning. And this is the mode of chase that wild beast of Popery, with seven heads and ten horns, made by the slight of ministers both terrible, and yet at the selfsame time ridiculous to people: not to all: for God be thanked there be very many grave and wise men in the land, but only to the inferior and more numerous sort of people, such as will stand to hear Jack Pudding talk in Bartholomew Fair. But I have not now time to enlarge myself upon this subject, as it may deserv. I say then that no Catholic faith, which ministers express by the odions name of Popery, is properly speaking, any man's doctrine; much less is it a doctrine grounded upon this or that principle, as indeed all school doctrine is; but it is a Catholic faith and belief, grounded immediately upon the veracity and truth of the Revealer our Lord and his Apostles. But your Dissuader speaks still of doctrine, and Roman doctrine, and grounds of doctrine, as if he were utterly unacquainted with faith, Christian faith and of all he is to speak; imagining Religion to be some school conclusion of Philosophers wherein he is either notoriously mistaken, or would in his heart have others most notoriously to mistake. Wherefore, although I could easily defend those scholastical grounds, whereon he says the doctrine of Purgatory is built; yet I must first tell him that which is of more concern both for himself and others to know; namely that those are not, be they true or falls, any grounds of Purgatory at all: nor is Purgatory a doctrine built upon those grounds. What then are those assertions, that some sins are mortal, some not, that the pardon of sin may stand with an obligation to temporal punishment, etc. They are, Sir, rational congruities invented by Catholic Divines, the more fully to clear unto weak believers the rationality and truth of that old Christian Tradition concerning our expiatory sufferings after this life, before entrance into glory. But if we will look for more ancient and Christianlike grounds for this expiation, so far as one business of faith may be said to be grounded on another, (even as God's attributes are said by school-divines one to flow from the other, namely in order to our understanding, which cannot otherwise think or speak of that most simple and infinite being) the great depositum fidei affords other grounds, far better, more intelligible, simple and easy grounds of Purgatory, than those your Dissuader catches at, although even they be solid and good ones too. As for example these; Christians are culled and called out of darkness by the mercy of their gracious Redeemer unto purity, light and holiness, which they are to practice and act all their whole life after: and if they do otherwise, they shall suffer accordingly, so much of pain as they have had of unlawful pleasures, to the despite of that precious blood, that redeemed and brought them out of sin and darkness, and of that holy Spirit of his, wherewith they have been anointed; every one as he hath acted in his body, whether good or evil, being to receiv accordingly after this life. So that he who shall at all times, cooperating faithfully with God's holy grace, keep his hands pure, and heart clean from such enormities, as may violate friendship with his Redeemer, shall be in another condition at his departure, than he who hath in his life time polluted himself and done injury to the sanctifying blood of Christ by his many filthy adulteries, drunkennesses, cheats, slanders, murders, or the like, although by God's grace, he should find mercy at his last hour. These, if I could stand to enlarge myself upon them, being themselves Christian Traditions and Apostolical doctrine, might in some sense be said to be the grounds of expiatory penalties after this life, commonly called Purgatory. But those others which your Dissuader mentions, are but some congruities latelier put together by Doctors to clear unto unstable Christians, as far as they may be able, the rationality of their Christian Tradition concerning expiations after this life: which Preachers in their sermons, and Doctoars in their chairs usually invent and utter as well in this affair as other businesses of faith, some with more firmitude and some with less, according to their learning and capacity: I say they are congruities for it, and good ones too: but no grounds of it. For faith is not deduced by reasons, or drawn from premises, or concluded from grounds. And although this faith be manifold and about sundry matters, as the Creation, Redemption, Justification, Resurrection, and the like, yet all these particular faiths, depend immediately like several rays on one sun, upon the one only authority and truth of the first Revealer, which is the foundation and ground of all. And if those abovenamed affections be no grounds of this faith concerning future expiations, much less is that true and firm tradition, Blessed are those that die in our Lord, any ground against it. For they are happy, and happy that ever they were born who die in our Lord: that is to say, in his faith and fear, in his love and grace. But there are as many degrees of dying in our Lord, as there be varieties of the lives and actions of those that die in him. And they all rest from the labours of this life, and some also are freed from the pains of the other, who depart hence in a more complete reconciliation with him. §. 5. Which is about Transubstantiation. Says that Transubstantiation is another novelty in the Roman Church, so much a novelty, that we know the very time of its birth, and how it was introduced. For Scotus, Occam, Biel, Fisher, Bassolis, Cajetan, Melchior Caen acknowledge, that it is not expressed in Scripture; and in Peter Lombard's time they knew not whether it was true or no. Durandus a good Catholic after the Lateran Council where it was first declared, said it was not faith, as Scotus says it was no faith before it: Nor did the Lateran Council determine that which now the Roman Church holds: which doctrine of theirs is a stranger to antiquity, as Alphonsus à Castro acknowledges: and the same is made good by the testimonies of Tertallian, Justin Martyr, Eusebius, Macarius, Ephrem, Gregory Nazianzen, Chrysostom, Austin, the Canon law itself, Theodoret, and Pope Gelasius, who all witness that the bread is our Lord's body spiritually. And your Dissuader therefore advises his charge, to take heed they be not led away by rhetorical words, to believe the Roman doctrine, which is an innovation and dangerous practice: about which they make many foolish questions: as whether a mouse may run away with her maker, whether a Priest is the Creator of God, etc. In fine, Transubstantiation is absolutely impossible. For Christ's glorious body cannot be broken, nor yet the mere accidents, nor one body multiplied, as be many wafers; and it is against the demonstration of our senses. Sir, I know well enough, that Tertullian, Justin Martyr, Eusebius, Macarius, Ephrem, Gregory Nazianzen, Theodoret, Chrysostom, and S. Austin, were all of them not only Roman Catholics, but Catholic priests too, and could easily prove it. But if your Dissuader should have the confidence to deny that: I hope yet he will grant me, that Scotus, Occam, Biel, Bassolis, Cajetan, Melchior Caen, Durand, and Alphonsus à Castro Papish Schoolmen and Doctors of the Church, and Friars, were all such: and as for Bishop Fisher, Peter Lombard, and Pope Gelasius, these I may almost presume he will let pass for Papists. What is then this Roman doctrine, which so many Roman Doctors, whereof each one had such a multitude of disciples and followers in the Catholic world, do not so much as acknowledge? Where shall we find it? For your Dissuader names heaps of Popish Doctors, that deny it, and not any one that owns it; nor ever so much as tells us what it is. What strange kind of proceeding is this? Nay in the beginning of the section, he tells us that this Popery of Transubstantiation is so new, that it is well enough known to have begun in the Council of Lateran: and yet in the middle of the very same section says expressly, that the opinion was not determined in the Lateran Council, as it is now held at Rome. The Popery or popish doctrine of Transubstantiation now held at Rome, it is very well known to all, saith he, that it had its first beginning in the Lateran Council; and yet adds, that the opinion was not determined in the Lateran Council, as it is now held at Rome. What opinion, Sir, was determined in the Lateran Council, and what is that which is now held at Rome? Does not your Dissuader speak of the doctrine now held at Rome, when beginning his section, he speaks thus? The doctrine of Transubstantiation is so fan from being Primitive and Apostolic, that we know the very time it began to be owned publicly for an opinion, and the very Council in which it passed for a public doctrine: which Council two or three lines afterward he says was the Council of Lateran under Pope Innocent the third, twelve hundred years after Christ. And against that new doctrine which began, he says, twelve hundred years after Christ, and thereby convicted of novelty, he writes this his whole section. What means he then in the name of God, but only two pages after, namely p. 39 to say, that the opinion was not determined in the Later an as it is now held at Rome. Is that opinion now held at Rome, younger or older than the Council Lateran; and when began that opinion held at Rome, or was it from the beginning? And against which of the opinions does he speak in this section? For against both of them together he cannot. The very head and principal, and as it were the sum of all his discourse in this section, The doctrine of Transubstantiation is so far from being Primitive and Apostolic, that we know the very time it began, and the Council it passed for a doctrine, etc. It was but a disputable question till the Council of Lateran in the time of Pope Innocent 1200. and more after Christ, etc. This I say cannot agree with the doctrine now held at Rome, which he says afterward is another thing from that which was determined in the Council of Lateran. If then this parcel of Popery, which he says in one place, is not that which was determined in the Council of Lateran, and in another place is that which was determined in the Council of Lateran, be the matter and subject of his discourse in this section, ought he not in plain terms to have told us, what this piece of popery is, that we may know what he speaks of. Surely he ought. If it neither be owned by so many popish doctors which here he names, and names not any one popish doctor that owns it: if it neither be determined in the Council of Lateran, nor he himself can name any other Council wherein it was lately or otherwise determined, how is it Popery? What doctors own it? What Council has declared it? What people profess it? And what is that thing they should profess, declare, or own? What is it I say? This he ought to have spoken openly, sincerely, and plainly. And yet he endeavours not at all, which he should one would think have principally heeded, either to set down what doctors own it, or what it is they own: but spends his whole time in telling us only of a great company of popish doctors that like not of that Roman doctrine, which he never declares himself what it is. And then exhorts all his charge and all good people to take heed of that Roman doctrine, that scandalous doctrine, that blasphemous novelty, which was determined in the Council of Lateran, and yet is another thing from that which was determined in the Council of Lateran; not any part of Catholic belief until that Council, nor yet esteemed to belong to faith after that Council, by the greatest of popish doctors, about which they make many foolish questions, as whether a mouse may run away with her maker, etc. Sir, your Doctor, who pretending a Dissuasive from Popery, by which he doubts not but his reader will understand the Roman Catholik faith, never meant to touch at all their real Religion, which is universally in their hearts and hands, and no power of man is able to confute, but either some obscure parcels of philosophy, or abuses of men, which he is better able to make sport withal, was fallen here it seems upon the Catholic faith, afore he was aware. And therefore he suddenly drew back; and so blundered up and down in the affrightment, that he seems neither to know what to speak, nor against what he is to speak of. The Roman doctrine of Transubstantiation was first determined in the Lateran Council: The opinion was not determined in the Lateran Council, as it is now held in Rome. What would this man have? What does he speak of? What opinion, is that which is now held in Rome, differing from that of the Lateran Council? What is that doctrine of the Lateran Council, differing from that is now held in Rome? What is that Rome? the Church of Rome or Court of Rome, the City of Rome or schools in Rome? And is it in all Rome or some particular streets, or parishes, or schools, or shops? And how do they hold it? with their hands or teeth, or pens or hearts? as a matter of faith, or business of dispute, as delivered to them, or invented by them, in their confession of Religion, or profession of Philosophy? These things ought all of them to have been expressed, that we might rightly understand who in Rome hold it, and how they hold it, and what is that same It they hold. But your Dissuader hopes, that upon those general words of his, The opinion was not determined in the Lateran Council, as it is now held in Rome, his unwary reader will be bold to think more, than he dares himself utter. And perhaps he is not deceived. For few readers are wiser than their book. But the Romans make many foolish and blasphemous questions about it. The more blasphemous and foolish they, who urge them to it; if any one amongst them have resolved such doubts, as infidelity in derision of holy things hath raised. They who aforetime denied God's Incarnation, gave occasion of as foolish and blasphemous disputes as any these be. And if any then studied to give an answer to such fordid, unmanly, and scurrilous opposition, although they might fail in discretion, yet their heart was innocent, and intention good. The business which I suppose your Doctor would be at here, is the real presence of our Lords blessed and glorious body under the species of corruptible elements, which is one of the paragraffs I left out of my Fiat. And I am sorry now with all my heart it was left out: because here is no time or place to treat of it, as that great and weighty subject would require. Neither is it my intention here to declare the old Christian Tradition: but only to give you, Sir, to understand, that this Dissuader, though he may hurt his unwary reader, yet he nothing at all indammages the old Catholic faith, by any words of his, which speak it to be new. Large volumes have been written upon this subject, enough to satisfy any moderate well disposed mind: qui legit intelligat. Let me only give you notice Sir, that this parcel of Christian faith now abolished here in England, was so ancient, that the very old Pagans and Jews derided the primitive Christians above a thousand years ago, for their worshipping a breaden God, as they pleased then, and the infidels of our times are not ashamed now, to misname that sacred mystery: It was so universally believed, that their adversaries by that one only mark expressed as it were in short the very substance of their Religion; Since the Christians adore that which they eat, said one of the Infidel writers, well enough acquainted with the course of Christian Religion, let my soul be with Philosophers: It was so sure and undoubted in their hearts, that some ancient holy Fathers have elucidated the mystery of the Incarnation, by this of the real presence in the Eucharist, as the more manifest: It was so grave and solemn, that all the Churches or Temples in the Christian world, were built principally for it: and the devotion of those times studied to erect them with a strength and magnificence answerable, as far as they could, to the majesty of that divine mystery: It was such a princely leading point of faith, that it drew all other pieties after it, frequent prayers and meditations, alms-deeds, contrition for sins, singing of psalms, hymns and canticles in the Choir before that presence in the Altar, Confessions, Sermons, Catechise, Processions, Fasts, Festivals, and all that real fear and love of God, that has been ever found in Christian hearts: Finally, it is the very legacy of Jesus Christ the holy One, to his Spouse the Church, whereby he proved himself both to be a poor and most loving and also omnipotent Espouse. Another man might leave wealth and possessions; but though he be never so kind and loving, he cannot leave his body to his wife, to remain ever with her for exercise of her love, for comfort of her heart, and glorifying of her soul, by virtue whereof she should be raised up to follow and join with him in the eternal glory of another world. This was a Testament only fit for Jesus Prince of Angels and men to make. And this I suppose is that piece of Popery, your Dissuader here so fumbles at, that he knows not what to call it, or how to express it in his words. O, but it is Transubstantiation which the Dissuader dislikes. And what is Transubstantiation? what does it mean? What is that long wound hard word of Transubstantiation, what is the meaning of it? For Catholic Religion, which your Dissuader calls Popery, is not words: nor are words Catholic Religion; but the sense, and life, and meaning delivered us by help of words for faith, hope, and charity to feed upon. Neither Consubstantiality, nor Trinity, nor Incarnation, nor Transubstantiation, and such other like phrases, are any thing at all of any Religion. Your Dissuader abuses the world, when he tells you, he knows when Transubstantiation first came up. The meaning of it was in the Christian world, all those many ages before that Lateran Council he speaks of: or else it had not been in the world then. Pray let him tell me, whether the consubstantiality of the Son of God with his eternal Father who made all things, be a novelty or new article, yea or no. He knows the very time, as himself here speaks, when it began to be owned publicly for an opinion, and that very Council in which it was said to be passed into a public doctrine, and by what arts it was promoted, and by what persons it was introduced. And if he do not know all this, I can tell him. Does this prove that same Consubstantiation to be a novelty yea or no? Let him answer me directly. I am a plain man, and love plain dealing. Was Jesus the Son of God and Saviour of mankind believed any otherways to be true and really God after that Council had declared him to be consubstantial to Almighty God his heavenly Father, than he was before Christians ever heard of that word Constsubstantiality or Consubstantiation? If Christians notwithstanding that new word still believed and adhered to one and the same old faith they did before, then say I the same of Transubstantiation. And if that new word made no new article, no more does this: Nor doth the one word any more belong to Christian Religion than the other: and both indeed only so far, as they convey the old faith, by this new invented word, guarded against the subtleties of the heretics then living, who by their circumventing sophistry deluded all other expressions concerning the real presence of the Godhead in our Lord's humanity, and of his humanity in the Eucharist, save only that other of Consubstantatiion, and this of Transubstantiation, both words in those days equally new. And when those heresies and heretics are once vanished, there is no further use of the words amongst Christians, who believe and worship by verthe of their Christian Tradition, the very thing itself, God's divinity in his humanity, and Christ's humanity in his sacred Eucharist, without troubling their heads with those hard words, which were invented against subtle heretics, unless haply the same heresies should rise again. And the Catholic flock acts and beleeus after both those Counsels, just as their Christian predecessors did before. They acknowledge Christ our Lord really God, and fear, and love, and hope in him, whether they ever hear of his consubstantiality or consubstantiation with God, or no. Nor do they ever trouble their heads to know, what is the meaning of con, or what is substance; or what be accidents, or what substantiation, or consubstantiation, no more after that Council of Nice than before it. Such terms and phrases are besides the simplicity of their holy and innocent belief, which holds notwithstanding all that is really meant by those words, taught them in a more natural and plainer way. So likewise do Catholic believers after the Council of Lateran worship their crucified Redeemer in the Eucharist, in the same manner others did before it, being the very same Christians with those that lived the age before, and think no more of Transubstantiation many thousands of these now, than those others did: that word making no more difference before and after this Council of Lateran, then had Consubstantiation made amongst the Catholic Christians, which were before and after that other Council of Nice. By those words some cunning wolves had been by their Pastors discovered and separated from the sheep; and after that the whole flock fed quietly in the same hills, and by the same fountains they did before. And in this sense Catholik Divines might say, and truly say, that Transubstantiation is not of faith either before the Council or after, if any one of them did indeed ever say so. For Christian faith is not words, as I said before, nor words any Religion. And if those Catholic Divines, who ever they were, meant any thing else; as namely, that the Christians before that Council of Lateran, who indeed worshipped their Redeemer in the Eucharist as true and fully as any that lived after that Council ever did or can, were not given generally to understand explicitly, that Christ our Lord is so present in the Eucharist, that there is there no other substance but himself: in this sense they spoke true, that so much had not been spoken expressly by a Council, but yet that the faith and practice of Christians both before and after that Council was the same. And so consequently there was no more of faith after that Council than was before it; whether we consider the learned or the common flock of Christians. For these worship Christ in the Eucharist after that Council, as others did before it; though neither of them think of Transubstantiation: and those learned ones spoke and wrote of our Lord's presence in the Eucharist before that Council, as others do after it: and both do equally believe the thing that is meant by Transubstantianon, which in a divers sense, according as men speak either of the word or meaning of the word, may be either said to be or not to be of faith, either before the Lateran Council or after it. Those words of Tertullian in his 2. book ad uxorem, where he speaks of the marriage of a Gentile with a Christian woman, Non sciet maritus, quid secretò ante omnem cibum gustet, & si sciverit, panem non illum credat esse qui dicitur, etc. Those also of S. Cyprian in his Coena Domini. Panis iste communis in carnem & sanguinem mutatus, etc. And again; Panis iste non in specie sed natur â mutatur, etc. Those likewise of St. Chrysostom, the penitent serm. 5. Non quod panis sit respicias, neque quod vinum sit reputes, etc. And again; Mysteria hic consumi Christi corporis substantiâ, etc. Those too of S. Greg. Nyssen in his magna Catechista. Rectè ergo nunc quoque Dei verbo sanctificatum panem, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and again; Haec autem dat virtute benedictionis, in illud transelement at â eorum quae apparent naturâ. Lastly, (that I may not forget my own design, which is not here to prove Catholic faith, but only to take a little view of this Dissuasive from it) those words of S. Cyril in his Mystagogica quarta; Hoc sciens & pro certissimo habens panem bunc qui videtur â nobis non esse panem, etiamsi gustus panem esse sentiat, sed corpus Christi; & vinum quod à nobis conspicitur, tametsi & sensu gustus vinum esse videatur, non tamen vinum, sed sanguinem esse Christi, etc. I say these and such like words of ancient Christian Divines, many hundreds of years before the Council of Lateran, speak as much the thing meant by Transubstantiation, as any Doctor can express it now; though these may know more of the word than they. And indeed the definition of the Catholic Council makes no alteration at all in the practice of Catholic faith, which so considers their Lord's presence in the Eucharist, that it never heeds the Quomodo or concomitances; the adoration, love, and devotion being still and ever in all things the very same. If Christ our Lord should appear to two Christians now, as he did once to S. Paul in a splendour of light; and a voice out of that shining brightness should issue so efficacious, that they should both of them be fully persuaded in their hearts to worship him whom they believed both of them there present. I suppose these two would equally do well, and equally do the same thing, although one of them should haply think there was no other thing there, but his Lord in an appearance of light, and the other should not think at all of the light, whether it were a substance or only an appearance of it. But if a third man should deny the real presence of our Lord in that light, he would for certain be of another faith. So it is here, Protestants who deny the real presence, are of another belief from catholics who acknowledge it; but catholics who equally adore it, are all of one belief, though perhaps not one of a million ever thinks of Transubstantiation. O but Christ might be present in the Eucharist, although Transubstantiation were not. He might so: and Christ likewise may be owned for God, though Consubstantiation were never thought of. Both there and here something is explicately spoken, which was latitant in the former practice and belief, and he that can may understand it. But the millions that never heard of it, so long as they believe and worship their Crucified Redeemer, as they ought, in the Eucharist, are never the worse. Had it not been for heretics, neither Consubstantiation, nor Transubstantiation had been ever heard of: and yet the practice and faith of Catholic Christians the same it is. The holy Fathers which your Dissuader citys against this particle of Catholic belief, some say nothing at all there concerning that thing, some speak what he citys in another manner, some teach quite contrary. But this I intent not now to insist upon. Only thus much in general, and I pray you, Sir, mark it well. Those ancient Fathers, who say sometimes, that the words of our Lord are to be understood spiritually not carnally; and that those symbols are a figure of his body, agree with all Catholics that are now in the world no less in the meaning of those their words, than others wherein they manifestly assert the real presence in this Sacrament. For all Catholics say, that our Lord is not to be so understood, that his holy body in the Eucharist is to be fed upon in a carnal way, as though it should be divided into gobbets, and so digested by the stomach into flesh and blood, as other meats are: but that as that holy body now glorified is become a spiritual body, as good S. Paul speaks, totally spiritual and divine, and not now subject to any condition or laws of material corruptible bodies here on earth, so is it spiritually to be taken, as the food not of a mortal body, but the immortal spirit. So likewise do all Catholics acknowledge and believe that the symbols after the powerful blessing of Christ's consecration, do so become his sacred body, by conversion, mutation, or transelementation, as the same Fathers speak; that outward appearance which remains of them is not now any more a figure of bread and wine as it was before, but of our Lords precious body and blood which have succeeded in their place. So that those very words of the ancient Fathers, wherein they say, that the elements are now become a figure of Christ's body and blood, do prove not only a real presence, but a transelementation too, or Transubstantiation, which your Dissuader judges to sound somewhat more. For every material body (I pray you Sir mark this well) I say every material body here on earth, as a tree, a man, or beast, or other thing exhibits to the eye, ear, taste, or other senses an outward species of that which it is. And the substance ever goes along in nature with that appearance it exhibits, unless the power of God should interpose, and make it otherwise. Thus when I have bread before me, or milk for example, that I see taken from the cow, I see it, and feel it, and taste it, to be such as it shows itself; and such it is as it shows itself to be. Thus it is in all nature. But we are not, say those good holy Fathers, to think so here. For though here be the colour and touch and taste of bread; yet after this strange and powerful conversion made by God's omnipotent words, it is no more bread you see, it is not natural bread you touch, it is not material bread you taste, but the blessed body of your Redeemer which is touched, seen, and tasted under those remaining appearances, which are no more now the figure of bread, which they were before, but the figure of our Lord's body under the species, appearance or representation of bread now wonderfully concealed. And thus much is manifestly and clearly expressed by all those holy Fathers. Hoc sciens, faith great St. Cyril of Jerusalem, & pro certissimo habens panem hunc qui videtur à nobis, non esse panem, etiamsi gustus panem esse sentiat, sed est Corpus Christi: & vinum quod à nobis conspicitur, tametsi & sensu gustus vinum esse videatur, non tamen vinum, sed sanguinem esse Christi. And this speak all holy Fathers, both Greek and Latin. It would be endless to bring their testimonies. By these few words, if, Sir, you have heeded them well, you will presently conceiv the meaning of that speech of Tertullian in his third book against Martion. Acceptum panem & distributum discipulis Corpus suum illum fecit, Hoc est corpus meum dicendo, id est, figura corporis mei. Figura autem non fuisset, nisi veritatis esset Corpus. Caterum vacua res quod est phantasma figur am capere non posset, etc. And Ministers are grossly deceived to think the Fathers speak of a figure or trope in Rhetoric, it is manifestly apparent they speak of a figure in nature; that figure or shape, which accompanies natural things, which in this mysterious Sacrament is made by the power of God to accompany another substance. So that here the appearance of natural bread is no more the figure of bread, as naturally it is, but the figure now of our Lords blessed body, couched by the power of God under that appearance, which is naturally the figure of wine and bread. And a figure of the body it could not be, unless the substance of that body were really and truly there under that figure or appearance; Figura non fuisset, nisi veritatis esset corpus. But in Peter Lumbards' time, Transubstantiation was so far from being an article of Catholic faith, that they did not know whether it were true or no, as appears by the same author in his 4. book and eleventh distinction: so that it made haste to pass in the Lateran Council for faith, which about fifty years before, in Lumbards' time, was but a new disputable opinion. Your Dissuader had done wisely, if he had produced for himself, as frequently he does, only some obscure authors, which seldom fall into men's hands. But Peter Lombard the master of sentences, is an author so known by all, and in every man's hand, that your Dissuader, had he not utterly abandoned both honesty and reason too, had never mentioned him. For this great master from his eight to the fourteen distinction of his fourth book, doth with all solidity and art, so declare and confirm the real presence in this Sacrament of the Altar, and the conversion of the elements by Gods powerful word into the very substance of our Lord's body, as a great article of ancient Christian faith, that nothing can be said either more solidly, or with more earnest resolution. But, Quem Deus vult perdere, dementat. After your Dissuader had wilfully thrown away his honesty, God in his just judgement so darkened his reason, that he could not so much as heed what he said. There I say that learned Catholic Doctor does industriously and in a copious manner in thirty whole pages together according to the edition I have by me, printed at Colen, both declare and establish that Catholic Christianity of the real presence, and transmutation of the elements into Christ's sacred body, answering and clearing many things which heretics and pagan philosophers might object against it. And your Dissuader takes hold of one of the philosophical objections, which the great master presently solves, for an argument of the masters own doubting; although he could not but see him assert, declare and establish the contrary, the real presence I mean, and miraculous mutation of the elements into the substance of our Lord's flesh and blood, in all that his copious and learned discourse, both before and after that objection. O unhappy Kingdom of ours, by these lying falls teachers so woefully misled. This one only passage, which any one that hath but a mediocrity of learning may see with his own eyes, may suffice to show what a man your Dissuader is, and how little to be credited. But whom God will overthrow for his grand misdemeanours, him he in his justice blindeth. I could find in my heart to give here an abridgement of all that great master's discourse concerning this Sacrament of the altar, as he there calls it. But it is somewhat besides my way, and I have already been too long. Qui legit intelligat. The great weight and importance of this business hath made me speak something more of it, than I shall of other things. That I may therefore here recapitulate in brief, what I have hitherto said to manifest your Disswaders insignisicancy, and to speak plainly, his impertinency in this point: First he is faulty, in that he never declares this business of Transubstantiation, what it is, or what it means in the belief and judgement of that Roman Church he opposes: Secondly, that he makes all the Popish Doctors which he mentions concerning it, to speak against it, and to disown it, whatever he meant by it, and not any one of them to speak for it, or profess it. And how then is it Popish or Popery. Thirdly, that he says in the beginning of his section, that the piece of Popery he here writes against was first determined in the Council of Later an, and yet but two pages after, forgetting himself, he says, that the opinion was not determined in the Later an, as it is now held in Rome: and yet never expresses how it is now held in Rome, or what that is which is now held in Rome contrary to the Council, or by whom, or in what manner. Fourthly, because the business of the real Presence, which Protestants love to call Transubstantiation, that they may play with that fine long gingling word, as children with a rattle, is not touched at all by him. And yet that is all the substance of Popery in this point: which, that Berengarius the heretic, together with his associates might fully acknowledge without any slight of the manifold evasions used by him, this word was invented by the Prelates of the Council, as was Consubstantiation by those of Nice, for a firmer establishment of Catholic Tradition, and ancient truth. So that your Dissuader here touches but the lid and rind, not the heart and substance of Popery, which he is afraid indeed to deal with. And being weak in sense, he plays with words. §. 6. Which is against Popish Communion. Says, that the half-communion is another Innovation in Popery, swerving from the Apostles practice, and Christ's Institution: as appears in the Popish Council of Constance, where it is decreed, though Christ instituted, and primitive Christians received in both kinds, yet that no Priest under pain of Excommunication should communicate the people under both kinds, which is a bold affront to Christ himself: although even their own Cassander and Aquinas teach, that to be the ancient custom of the Church, and Paschasius resolves it dogmatically, that the one is not to be communicated without the other. This business, Sir, is more amply discussed and cleared in my Fiat Lux, which you have by you. If you do but read that, I shall have here less to say. But know Sir, that this business touches not any unalterable dogme of faith, but an alterable use and practice, as shall be declared by and by: and therefore is it not to be called Popery, upon that account. And a change in such things is so far from blame, that it is oftentimes necessary; so long as the substance of Religion is preserved entire, as here it is. Christians are to fast after the departure of the Espouse: and set times therefore to be appointed, that such a good work be not in the Church of God utterly neglected: yet the days and times are some of them for urgent reasons altered. They did fast on Wednesdays and not saturdays in many places; now on saturdays not Wednesdays. Christians did stand at their Liturgy all Paschall time; now they kneel. Little children were in old time communicated after Baptism in many places of the Catholic world; now no where. Absolution is now given upon an humble confession and a promise either expressed or tacit of performing the due penance; but it could not be in ancient times obtained, till the penance was fulfilled. Priest's may be consecrated now at twenty five years old, in former times not till thirty. Many holy days were then kept, which now cannot: Many now, which could not then. Communion was oftener in some ages, than it is now. There is a reason for all these changes of discipline and custom. But the substance of Religion remains ever the same, about Fasts, Liturgy, Baptism, Penance, Confession, Priesthood, Feasts, Communion, and such like things, though some circumstance may change. So concerning this point of the Eucharist the substance of Religion is, that in memory of our blessed Lords Passion, a benediction or consecration of bread and wine be made in the Church of God by his Priests for ever, until our Lords second coming: to the end that the Church his spouse may ever have his body with her to feed upon. This I say is the substance of religion in this point. But some circumstances, such as may, will change. For example, Priests rarely celebrated in some times of the Church, but yet when any Mass or Messach was kept by any one of them, all the other Priests and Clergy men that were near would assuredly be present at it, and hear and pray, and meditate with other people in most humble and fervent manner as became all good Christians to do: but now in this last age they go generally every one to the Altar daily. Which custom is the better, I will not here determine. But I am sure, that great S. Francis commanded all his children to hear Mass once a day both Priests and others; but forbade those that were Priests every day to celebrate: and I think he had the Spirit of God in him. In old times all Christian Priests had their head covered at the Altar with an Amictus or amice of pure linen, now they generally let it fall into their neck, and their heads are utterly bare. And time will come, that they will put it upon their heads again. So likewise for good and just reasons, were catholic people in some times and places communicated in the one kind, and some time in the other, and some time and place in both. But they were never debarred Communion; nor was ever the Sacrifice of the Altar stopped. Nor is it so indifferent a circumstance to consecrate or celebrate in one kind, as it is in one kind to communicate. For Communion respects the thing contained, the body and blood of Christ, which was ever believed to be equally present in either kind. But the sacrisice or consecration in one kind would not figure our Lord's death and passion, and the effusion of his blood, as it ought to do. But this great Christian work of sacrificing, which is essential Religion, and the very characteristical badge of Christianity, because our Protestant Reformers cast it off, they talk ever since, only of Communion of lay-people, as though the sacred benediction, or consecration and oblation, which indeed is the Christian sacrifice according to the rite and figure of Melchisedek, recounted, admired, and worshipped by all primitive Christians, were instituted only for that end. Whereas indeed Christ our Lord's institution touches immediately the figuration only of his death and passion, which is completly done in the sacrifice consummated by the Priest; although the people's communion, unto whose comfort and benefit all that work of consecration is exercised in the Church, aught to follow by sequel, when it is necessary or expedient. Now the ancient primitive Church so firmly believed, that the blessed body and blood, and whole humanity and divinity of Christ, were so present to those sacred symbols after the benediction or consecration of them by their Priests in Christ's name and virtue, though it be unconceivable and wholly ineffable unto us: that if a man with an indifferent and unprejudiced eye will but look back upon antiquity, he may plainly see, that in all ages it was indifferent to Christians, though not to consecrate, yet to communicate either in one kind or both. For the younger people, and such as were sick, were generally communicated only in the liquid kind; and others, though some also received in both when solemn Communion was made, yet that in the very primitive times, they thought it all one to receiv either in both or one, S. Cyprian, S. Blsil, and Tertullian, very ancient Priests and Fathers do abundantly witness. For Tertullian in his book the oratione, describing the Christian ways of old, Usque adeo accepto corpore, saith he, stationem liceret solvere. that is, when they had communicated the body of their Lord, no mention made of the chalice, they broke up their station, and had their Ite missa est, to be gone; as it is now even at this day among catholics. And as for S. Basil, he in his epistle to Caesarea Patricia, tells at large how Christians in those days communicated four times a week and oftener, if a Martyr's feast chanced to fall in the week: and how, that if persecution happened so violent, that a Priest could not be had to give the people Communion, they were forced with their own hands to touch that sacred body, which was consecrated and kept in ciboriums, boxes or pixis for them. And this the people's irreverence of touching the sacred body, good S. Basil labours to excuse, both by the urgency of their devotion and need; and also by the example of the Hermits, who leading a monastical life, for want of Priests at that time among them, kept the sacred Communion in their cells, and received it with their own hands, touching it, contrary to the general custom, when devotion and piety required: as also by that of the Christians in Alexandria, and Egypt, who in such times of persecution and danger, would have the sacred Communion at home in their own houses, lest upon any necessity they should chance to die without it: and lastly by the very custom of Priests in the Church, who then so delivered the host to communicants, that when it was put by the Priests into their mouths, they touched some part of it, who received it, with their own hands. All this S. Basil there discourses more at large: which agree well to the consecrated bread, thus touched by the people in time of necessity, thus put into their mouths by the help of the Priests and their own hands, thus kept at home in times of persecution, thus reserved in pixes or little arks, but not at all to the chalice And all those devout Christians, thought themselves sufficiently communicated in one kind, who understood Christianity as well surely, as we do now abov a thousand years after them. St. Cyprian likewise in his book de lapsis, has much to the same purpose, giving us also to understand by his testimony, that those ancient Christians for fear of death, and the grievances of persecution, had usually the Sacrament kept by them in a Repository or Ark in their houses, which with all devout reverence when they were necessitated to it, they put with their own hands into their mouths, and participated on such like occasion, although by general custom it used to be put into their mouths by the hands of Priests. And he relates amongst other things a frightful story of a certain woman, who for fear or other weakness had complied to the idol sacrifices: and when she came home, to repent and humble herself in her Oratory, and by holy communion both to expiate that her transgression, and strengthen her against the like temptation, as soon as she had opened her Ciborium or Pixis, wherein the body of her Lord and Redeemer was kept, a terrible flash of fire issuing thence upon her, did so affright her, that she durst not touch it. Quandam, saith he, mulierem sacrificiis idolorum contaminatam, cum Repositorium seu Arcam suam, in quâ sanctum Domini posuer at, manibus pollutis tentasset aperire, ignis efflans eam terrait, nec tangere erat ausa. This and much more might be brought to witness, that primitive Christians thought themselves completly communicated in one kind, and this very kind that is now in use amongst Catholics. But I must come to your Doctor. Half-Communion, saith he, is another Popish novelty, whereby they deprive the people of Christ's blood, Sir, if they eat in memory that Christ died for them, which they do, and which in all Protestancy makes a perfect communion, how are they deprived of his blood. Can they believe his death and passion without faith of his blood shed for them? But they ought to have wine as well as bread. So they have: as much as the Dissuader and his Church allows their people, whereby they may seed upon Christ, who shed his blood for us, in their heart by faith with thanksgiving; and which as your Dissuader here speaks, may make Christ's body and blood present to them by sacramental consequence. And how is it then a half-communion? O but the wine is not the blood of Christ. Not carnally as your Dissuader speaks of his Sacrament, but it is so by sacramental consequence. It is as much then as yours the blood of Christ. And how is it then a half-communion, and yours a whole one? O but their bread is believed to be the body of Christ. So it is: but yours is not. And therefore if theirs be but a half-communion, yours is none at all. But how good Doctor Dissuasive is half-communion either new Popery, or old Popery, or any Popery at all? Roman catholics or Papists use no such word: nor do they own any such thing as Half-Communion. They believe and call it a whole Communion. Is it lawful for you to forge a Popery of your own, and then put it upon them, who neither in thought, word, or any of their writings profess any such thing. But is not Communion in one kind all one with Half-Communion? No, Sir, it is not all one. It differs as much as half and whole. And that I think is something. It is a whole Communion Sir, both in the tenor of their belief, and according to that of yours. And why then should you call it a half-communion? According to theirs, whole Christ is equally present under either of those figures or appearances: and therefore according to their faith it is a whole Communion. And according to yours it is no less. When you yourselves give the bread to your people, and say, Take this in remembrance that Christ died for thee, and feed upon him in thy heart by faith with thanksgiving, you do not intend I suppose, nor do the people mean to feed only upon one half of him. Why then would your Dissuader injuriously misname that a half-communion, which in all opinions is a whole one. Neither Catholics nor Protestants feed upon the signs but thing signified. This difference too there is, that Catholics have all the mystery of the passion represented to them in their sacrifice, and the presence of the whole Lord in their Communion But Protestants have no such thing: although the mystery be preached to them. And therefore is the Catholic not a half but whole Communion; and that of the Protestants may well be doubted, whether it be any Communion at all, though it be a whole Sermon. For how can any one discern the Lords body there, where in reality it is not? If your Dissuader had a candour becoming a gentleman, he would neither falsify the ways, nor misname the practice of any Religion. But be it as it is. Since Papists, as he will have them called, have equally used the Communion in the liquid kind alone, as this in only the other, why should he call one of them more than the other by the name of Popery. And why is not Communion in both kinds, which he acknowledges to have been more in use amongst them, and proves it by the testimony of their own popish doctors, be rather Popery than either of the other. O but this half-communion began but in the Council of Constance. I have sufficiently shown you, Sir, that the custom was in the world, before the City of Constance knew what Christianity were. And even this Council of Constance is perverted by the Dissuader too: as if he had sworn to act nothing sincerely. That business in the Council was thus. Petrus Dresdensis, and other associates of Huz, had taught publicly, and with much scandal, that the Eucharist is necessarily to be given to lay-people after supper, and in both kinds. This doctrine and practice of theirs was censured by the Council, which at one and the same time declared those two circumstances of communicating in both kinds and after supper, not to be of necessary obligation, because the Canons and approved ancient custom of the Church, had never looked upon those two circumstances, as of necessity to be observed. But what does your Dissuader here? First he sets down the Counsels resolution in direct opposition to Christ. Whereas Christ instituted, etc. yet we command contrary, etc. as though the Council had absolutely annulled Christ's institution: which notwithstanding they acknowledge and allow for good: and only declare the two said circumstances in that institution of our Lord, not to be of that necessity as the substance of the institution itself, giving for their reason for it, which your Dissuader thinks not good to take notice of, that the Canons and ancient custom of the Church had sufficiently made manifest, that those two circumstances of communicating at night and in both kinds were not necessary, by allowing the contrary practice in primitive times. Secondly, whereas the Council joined both the circumstances together, namely of communicacating in both kinds and after supper, he quite leaves out that of receiving after supper: because it would as much have inferred the Protestant practice to be against Christ's institution as the Popish is: and so his talk would either have been of no value, or against himself. Thirdly, whereas the Council declared only against the opinion which those Heretics had of the necessity of those two circumstances, and corresponding practice, he makes them to condemn not their necessity, but the circumstances themselves, which the Council never thought of. Fourthly, he delivers that Counsels declaration against those circumstances, as if it had been a dogme of faith, and consequently Popery or Catholic Religion, whereas it was delivered in order to the circumstances themselves but as a temporal law and decree, though in order to the necessity of those circumstances it be a constant Catholic truth. And therefore the Council of Basil, which a little after determined the same doctrine, namely that Priests are not bound to communicate the people in both kinds, whereof they also give their reason, quia certa fide tenendum est, quod sub specie panis non tantum caro, & sub specie vini non sanguis tantum, sed sub qualibet specie Christus totus continetur, sess. 30; yet they allowed the Bohemians and Moravians, who desiring to submit to the Catholic Church, and yet in their weakness could not comply with that custom, to be communicated in both kinds. These four are shifts of much insincerity, but I must bear with him. His other authorities against this Catholic custom now generally in use, may be easily understood by what I have hitherto spoken what they mean. But that of Paschasius I cannot but give you notice of it. For Paschasius speaking of one certain ceremony in the Priest's celebration of Mass, wherein he drops a piece of the host into the consecrated chalice. Very rightly, saith he, is the flesh sociated with the blood, because neither the flesh without the blood, etc. And a little after, Therefore, saith he, they are well put together in the chalice, because from one cup of Christ's Passion, etc. From those words, which speak only the Priest's action in the sacrifice of Mass, your Protestant Dissuader would prove his communion of people in both kinds, of which Paschasius neither spoke nor thought. Is he not hard put to it think you? or is he ignorant rather of what he speaks. But he is gone to his next section, and I must follow him. §. 7. Which is against Service in an unknown Tongue. Says, that the Roman Church offends no less in another of their Novelties, of using an unknown tongue in their Service; which use can no more be reconciled with Saint Paul's fourteenth chapter to the Corinthians, than adultery with the seventh Commandment: and Origen, Ambrose, Basil, Chrysostom, Austin, Aquinas also and Lyra speak all against it: no less also the Civil and Canon Law. Indeed what profit can he receiv, who hears a sound and understands it not: a dumb Priest would serve as well: for God understands his thoughts. The popish people that pray in their churches they know not what, can have no affection, because they have no understanding of their own prayers. Therefore let every tongue prais the Lord. Here the Dissuader, that he may the better express the confusion and darkness that is in this popish custom, which he means here to speak against, uses a confused and dark speech of his own, and confutes it rather by emblem than reason. His reader no doubt will imagine, or else the Dissuader fails of his end, that Roman catholics do not understand their own prayers in the Church; that God is not praised by them in every tongue; that they are not at all edified by their Liturgy or Mass; that they join not their desires, nor understand what they say or ask of God; that their heart says nothing nor asks for nothing, and therefore receivs nothing; that they understand not in particular, what they should desire or beg of God; that their own souls have not any benefit by their prayers; and that the Church will not suffer them to be brought out of their intolerable ignorance. All these things are jumblingly said and asserted in this his section against the Roman liturgy, & must as he hopes be believed by his reader. But there is not a Roman catholic in the world, however ignorant and simple he be, but will be ready to tell your Dissuader to his face, that there is not of all this, any one word of it true. But he imagines that Roman catholics come to Church like Protestants, there standing or sitting, and looking upon one another, till a black-coat comes to read some prayers in their ears. But in this he is grossly mistaken, as all Catholics know, though others do not. They have their obsecrations, their meditations, their postulations, their psalms, their ejaculations, which humbly upon their knees they pour forth to their Redeemer, both while their priest is with them at the altar; and before, and after too. Nor is there a blesseder sight to be seen on earth, than devout Catholics in a Church; whereas others stand or sit, gazing about, till the Parson comes to make use of their ears, neither heart, nor lip, nor hand, nor knee, nor breast being to them of any use. And this every one would understand as well as I, if he understood Catholic customs and religion as I do. Nor does the Priest come to the altar to teach the people what they should say, but to pray and make an atonement for them. And in his confession, entrance, hymn of glory to God on high, prayer, epistle and gospel, and his whole work of consecration and offering, they go along with him in their meditations, humiliations and requests, understanding all the whole matter and business of that heavonly devotion, though they hear not his particular words, which it would be all one to them, whether they were in latin or in the mother tongue. I know alas, I speak but in vain, to such as are brought up in another way, and by fallacious slights of ministers are lead into a misconceit of the ancient religion of this Land; which till they see it again, they can hardly ever rightly understand. Prejudice is a lettance almost unremovable. And it concerns ministers, that such a prejudice should be continually riveted into people's minds, who must either be deceived, or ministers undone. But he that sees Catholic people at their devotions, and Protestants at theirs, would, if he be any ways disinterested, conclude with himself, that Catholic people serve God in earnest, Protestants but in jest. Truth is, the Catholic Liturgy is only a representation of Christ's death and passion, which our. Lord appointed should be exhibited to the eyes of his believers, so long as the world shall last: that coming still together, they may worship there their crucified Lord, and pour forth in him all their requests, every one according to their several necessities. So that the priest and people's great work is soon ended; the consecration, lifting up the host and chalice, and adoration, being all accomplished in half a quarter of an hour: and in some Churches, that especially of Ethiopia, in yet lesser time. And all the prayers and meditations, and what other things the Priest either speaks with his lips or heart besides, are only to dispose himself, before and after that great work. And in all times have Christian people ever made it their special care, to furnish themselves with such meditations and affections, as that their solemn work of adoration requires. I find in my heart here to set down the way I have been taught to hear Mass, and which I practise myself. Such an ocular pattern would I am sure give more satisfaction to my countrymen, than any general words I can speak concerning it. But I shall have some better place for that hereafter. The testimony of authorities which your Dissuader brings against this Roman custom of one and the same language all over the world, which he calls an unknown tongue, either speak nothing at all to that business, or say nothing but what Papists say themselves; and many of them by his usual trick either of total falsity, or partial depravation, are made by your Dissuader to speak against a custom, which they never so much as dreamt to impugn. If Origen say, that the Grecians in their prayers use Greek, and the Romans the Roman language, etc. so say all Papists too. The Maronites with some others use the Hebrew Liturgy, Grecians the Greek, and Western Christians the Roman; and so every one in his own tongue, that is proper to that part of the Church whereof he is a member, prayeth and praiseth God. And yet it was never thought necessary that any people in the Christian world should have their Liturgy in their mother tongue. Again, if St. Ambrose say, when people meet for edification in the Church, things ought to be spoken which hearers understand: so say, and so do Papists also. For all their Sermons, which are made for edification, are ever in the mother tongue, or vulgar language of the Country; and in so plain a manner they either are or should be uttered, that hearers may understand and edify thereby. But the Christian sacrifice is offered up to God, not for the people's edification or instruction, but for their reconciliation and peace. Likewise if S. Jerom and Ulphilas translated the Bible: so has it been translated by several other Priests since their time, I believe into all languages of the world, and is continually read and expounded in Catholic Countries, now one mystery of it, than another, unto people's constant edification. But this infers not that it ever was or ought to be read in the Churches, one chapter after another, instead of their Liturgy. No such thing did antiquity ever hear of. If the civil law of Justinian ordain all bishops and Prtests to celebrate the sacred oblation not in a low voice, but with a loud clear voice, which may be heard by people: so do Roman Priests at this day act all according to that Canon. But how came the first reforming Procestants to leave off the name of Priests, but only because they had no such sacred oblation, which was abolished by them, any longer now to make. Again, if there issued from Pope Innocent the third, a precept or decree in the Council of Lateran, that in the same city, as your disswader here speaks, thinking it I believe to be some City called Lateran, where people had then met together from several parts of the world, service should be celebrated according to the diversity of ceremonies and languages; no doubt but that precept or decree was then observed throughout all the City of Rome, where that Council was kept. And the Maronites with their adherents, had the sacred Liturgy in Chaldee or Hebrew, the Grecians in Greek, others in Latin, with such variety of ceremonies therein, as was used in these several nations, though they acted the same thing in substance. So that such as came from Syria, Egypt, or Greece, were not bound to be present at the Latin Liturgy, although they were then in Rome; nor yet the Romans to the Hebrew or Greek Mass. And if any were met there from our English Sarum Church, they might use their Sarum Missal, and not that of the Roman Diocese, although it might have shorter, or perhaps longer graduals, more or fewer meditations, or differing evangiles, or a longer solemnity of consecration. This difference is still in the world amongst Roman catholics at this day, and ever was and will be, although the whole substance of their Messach or Liturgy be every where the same. And for this reason a Dominican Friar, now deceased, coming over some years ago into England, because he began his Mass with Confitemini Domino, after the manner of the Dominicans, and not with the usual psalm, Judica me Deus, although they had patience with him till he had ended, yet the women that were present at it, got together afterwards, and in their indiscreet zeal fell upon him, and beat him for a counterfeit. And if the Council be of any force here, (otherwise why is it brought) then are catholics according to that Council to celebrate in the very same city here with Protestants without control, though they use diversity of ceremonies and languages. All these authorities then, make nothing against this piece of Popery, but rather confirm it. And the glosses which your Dissuader makes upon them, and all his insulting invectives, are but the froth of his own evil will. When your Dissuader tells us further, that Basil, chrysostom, Ambrose, Austin, Aquinas and Lyra speak against Service in an unknown tongue, as unapt to edify; the aforenamed Catholic Gentlemen, who have endeavoured with all care to search the Libraries for a trial of your Disswaders honesty, have found in some of those Fathers no such book as your Dissuader citys, and in none of them any such words. Which I am apt to believe, not only by reason of the industrious sincerity of the said Gentlemen, and palpable insincerity of this Dissuader, but for other special reasons drawn from the authors themselves. For St. Basil and St. chrysostom, St. Austin and St. Ambrose, the two first were Greek Priests that used a Greek Liturgy of their own, one of them an Archbishop or Patriarch, the other a monk; the two last, S. Ambrose a Priest and Bishop of Milan in Italy, S. Austin the like in Africa, and founder of the Augustin Canons regulars, and Hermits, used a Latin one: both which differed even in their times from the vulgar language of their respective places. And Aquinas and Lyra are manifestly known to be later popish Priests and Friars, using one and the same Latin Liturgy, differing from the languages of England and Spain. As also because it is unlikely, they would use this Disswaders reason, because such unknown tongues in the liturgy would not edify. For though edification in a large sense may well agree with the Mass or Liturgy; in that, it excites holy and heavenly affections; yet in its proper sense it is the effect of sermons and good preachers, edifying the people by their holy lives and wholesome doctrine, unto an emulation and care of observing what those people see and hear so frequently taught and practised by their pious preachers. Those words of S. Chrysostom, If one speak in an unknown tongue, he is a barvarian to himself and others, are absolutely true. For so, if an Ambassador, or any other here in England, should chatter words which neither himself nor others understand, he would be a barbarian both to others and to himself too. But when your Dissuader says, that S. Chrysostom spoke so, in order to a form of prayer, and urging the Apostles precept for it, he wrongs him wretchedly. For he does it not; nor can such a saying have any place in such a business. For the priest speaks not in his liturgy to the people, as your Dissuader simply imagines, but to God, where both speaker and hearer understand. But the testimony of Lyra who is made to say, that in the primitive Church all things were done in a vulgar language, is falsified in the very substance. For he says not omnia all things, but communia common things, some parts in Baptism, where the godfather or godmother makes a profession of faith; something in churching of women, benedictions, marriages, and such like, as is yet in use amongst Papists at this day, were so done. So that all the contents of this section, the testimonies your Dissuader brings against this Catholic custom, and your Disswaders own insultings, which I set down in the beginning, together with his glosses upon those testimonies, are either absolutely falls or totally impertinent, and in one word unconscionably slanderous. But it is as possibly, saith he, to reconcile adultery with the seventh Commandment, as Church service in a language not understood, to the fourteenth chapter of the first epistle to the Corinthians. And is it so? Let us look then into that strange fourteenth Chapter; and see what it says. 1. Follow after charity, and desire spiritual gists, but rather that you may prophesy. 2. For he that speaketh in an unknown tongue, speaketh not unto men, but unto God, for no man understandeth him: however in the spirit he speaketh mysteries. 3. But he that prophesieth, speaketh unto men to edification, exhortation, and comfort. 4. He that speaketh in an unknown tongue edifieth himself: but he that prophesieth edifieth the Church. 5. I would that you all spoke with tongues, but rather that ye prophesied: for greater is he that prophesieth than he that speaketh with tongues, except he interpret that the Church may receive edifying. 6. Now brethren if I come unto you speaking with tongues, what shall I profit you except I shall speak to you either by revelation or by knowledge, or by prophesying or by doctrine. 7. And even things without life giving sound, whether pipe or harp, except they give a distinction of the sound, how shall it be known what is piped or harped. 8. For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself for battle? 9 So likewise you, except you utter by the tongue words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken? for he shall speak unto the air. 10. There are it may be so many kinds of voices in the world, and none of them are without signification, 11. Therefore if I know not the meaning of the voice, I shall be unto him that speaketh a barbarian, and he that speaketh shall be a barbarian to me. 12. Even so ye for as much as ye are zealous of spiritual gifts, seek that ye may excel to the edifying of the Church. 13. Wherefor let him that speaketh in an unknown tongue, pray that he may interpret. 14. For if I pray in an unknown tongue, my spirit prays, but my understanding is unsruitful. 15. What is it then? I will pray with the spirit, I will pray with the understanding also. 16. Else when thou shalt bless with the spirit, how shall he that occupieth the room of the unlearned, say Amen to thy giving of thanks, seeing he understandeth not what thou sayest? 17. For thou verily givest thanks well, but the other is not edified. 18. I thank my God I speak with tongues more than you all. 19 Yet in the Church I had rather speak five words with my understanding, that by my voice I might teach others also, than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue. 20. Brethren, be not children in understanding, howbeit in malice be ye children, but in understanding men. 21. In the law it is written, with men of other tongues and other lips will I speak unto this people: and yet for all that, will they not hear me saith the Lord. 22. Wherefore tougues are for a sign not to them that believe, but to them that believe not: but prophesying serveth not to them that believe not, but to them who believe. 23. If therefore the whole Church be come together in some place, and all speak with tongues, and there come in those that are unlearned or unbelievers, will they not say that ye are mad? 24. But if all prophecy, and there come in one that believeth not, or one unlearned, he is convinced of all, he is judged of all. 25. And thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest, and so falling down on his face, he will worship God, and report that God is in you of a truth. 26. How is it then brethren, when ye come together, every one of you hath a psalm, hath a doctrine, hath a tongue, hath a revelation, hath an interpretation: let all things be done to edisying. 27. If any man speak in an unknown tongue, let it be by two, or at the most by three, and that by course, and let one interpret. 28. But if there be no interpreter, let him keep silence in the Church, and let him speak to himself and to God. 29. Let the prophets speak two or three, and let the other judge. 30. And if any thing be revealed to another that sitteth by, let the first hold his peace. 31. For ye may all prophesy one by one, that all may learn, and all may be comforted. 32. And the spirit of the prophets are subject to the prophets. 33. For God is not the author of confusion, but of peace, as in all Churches of the Saints I teach. 34. Let your women keep silence in the Churches, for it is not permitted to them to speak, but they are to be under obedience, as also saith the law. 35. And if they will learn any thing, let them ask their husbands at home: for it is a shame for a woman to speak in the Church. 36. What, came the word of God out from you, or came it unto you only? 37. If any think himself a prophet or spiritual, let him acknowledge that the things I write unto you are the commandments of God the Lord. 38. But if any be ignorant, let him be ignorant. 39 Wherefore brethren covet to prophesy, and forbid not to speak with tongues. 40. Let all things be done decently and in order. Thus runs this fourteenth Chapter in your own translation. And if it do nothing at all concern Church-service, why should the Roman Liturgy be reconciled to it, any more than adultery to the third commandment? Or what disparagement is it to this service, that it cannot be reconciled to that law which no way concerns it: If it do concern Church-service, then must all the Common prayer and Service of our Protestant Church of England be abolished; being as irreconcilable to this rule, as you say adultery is to the seventh Commandment. Say which you please. If it concern not any Church-service, you justify as to this account the custom of the Roman Church: if you say it do, you condemn your own. Truth is, the Spirit of our Lord magnified his primitive Church, when it began to spread and appear in the world, with many particular graces; that the Jew and Pagan might discern in it something extraordinary, and by that exterior siga be induced to believe that the founder of that Religion was no ordinary person: as gift of miracles, tongues, and prophecies. The new converts of Corinth seemed to be more pleased with the gift of tongues, than any other; and when they met together, fell a gambling all at once, not two or three only, but more, and perhaps the greatest part of them, all at one and the same time, as the Apostle here intimates, v. 23. one for example in the Congo language; the other that of Mexico, one Ethiopian, the other Arabian, one the Indian, another the Slavonian: and none understood another, nor could well hear one another for the confused noise, as we may gather by v. 2. and v. 11. and so became barbarians to one another. This gift then and special grace of God's Spirit, though it might astonish a Pagan, that should look upon them, which was all that holy Spirit intended by it; yet it could not edify him any further, or move him, if he should be left to himself, to think otherwise of them, than that they were a company of mad gambling distracted people; especially when he considered that some of them seemed to exhort, some to sing, some to pray, and all in a cluster at one and the same time, no man heeding the other, or understanding a word he said, if he should. And this disdorder the Apostle here labours to rectify in this whole fourteenth chapter. And it is manifest, that the apostle here neither spoke nor thought of any Church-service either in one language or other; but only of that temporal gift which is now past away long ago with the people that had it. Nor can it prudently be applied to any Church-service that I know in the world. For there is no such doing any where. Much less can it relate to any custom of the Roman Church, where all the people are devoutly praying to one and the same God, in quiet and silence, both in spirit and understanding, heart and mind too; the priest knowing what himself speaks or prays; and the people understanding both what he acts and does in their behalf and his own, and what also they beg of God themselves, either with words or without them. So that here is no kind of parity at all. Nay, if neither the Priest did understand himself what he speaks, nor the people what they pray, both which are absolutely falls, yet would the Apostle allow even that, as a good custom, though not so perfect; so long as the words contained piety, and the heart stood piously affected in pronouncing them. He that speaketh in an unknown tongue, saith he v. 2. speaketh not to men but to God, and though man understand not, yet in spirit he speaketh mysteries. And again v. 4. he saith, that such an one edifieth himself: and v. 14. he teaches, that such a ones spirit prayeth, though his mind or understanding doth not: and v. 17. that he gives thanks well. With these of our learned Apostle your Disswaders words throughout this his section, are I am sure absolutely irreconcilable. For he saith, such an one prays only with his lips, and not in spirit; that there is neither affection nor edification in any such prayer; and that the heart and spirit says nothing and asks for nothing, and so receives nothing, which Solomon calls the sacrifice of fools; thus speaks your Dissuader quite contrary to Apostolical sobriety. And not that custom, I should think, but your Disswaders invectives against it are irreconcilable with this fourteenth chapter. Saint Paul says, that such a one prays in spirit; the Dissuader, that he prays only in his lips. Saint Paul, that he edifies himself; the Dissuader, that his soul has no benefit, and that there is neither edification, nor affection, or any good by such prayers. Saint Paul, that he prays well, and giveth thanks well; the Dissuader, that he does ill. But I need not stand upon this now. There is no such thing in the use of the Roman Liturgy, where priests and people pray both in spirit and mind too, both with heart and understanding also. Only let me tell you thus much, that St. Paul in one verse of his chapter checks your Dissuader and all his whole discourse in this section: Linguis loqui nolite prohibere, faith he v. 39 Do not forbid to speak with tongues. But your Dissuader forbids, and labours here might and main against it. Doth the Apostle speak here of Church-service, or not? If he do, than Church-service in an unknown tongue is allowed: if he do not, than none of this chapter is against Church-service in an unknown tongue. Surely your Dissuader did never ponder these things, as he ought. Nay, if this discourse of the Apostle concern Church-service, so that your Dissuader hence may rightly gather, that the popish Mass in an unknown tongue is irreconcilable with it, I may upon the same ground prove more strongly, that S. Paul would have the popish Mass in an unknown tongue to be practised; Volo omnes vos linguis loqui, saith he v. 5. I will that ye all speak with tongues; or I would that you all spoke with tongues: which is according to your Disswaders meaning, I will have you all turn Papists, or I would ye were all turned Papists. But lastly, if this 14. chapter to the Corinthians be to be understood of Church-service and Church-preaching and Church-praying, as this dissuading Doctor would have it, than Sir must our Protestant pulpits and service-pews all down; and the Quakers way must come up infallibly. For what saith the text here. Sive lingua quis loquitur, secundum duos aut ad multum tres, & per parts; & unus interpretetur: si autem non fuerit interpres, taceat in ecclesia, sibi autem loquatur & Deo. Prophetae autem duo & tres dicant, & caeteri dijudicent. Quod si alii revelatem fuerit sedenti, prior taceat. Potestis enim omnes per singulos prophetari, ut omnes discant & omnes exhortentur. Et spiritus prophetarum prophetis subjecti sunt. This is the great result of this whole chapter: and the very utmost that the Quakers would have; and what they practise daily in their meetings. If any speak in a tongue, saith the Apostle, let it be by two, or at most by three, and that by course; and let one interpret. But if there be no interpreter, let him keep silence in the Church, and speak to himself and God. Let the Prophets speak two or three, and let the other judge; and if any thing be revealed to another that sitteth by, let the first hold his peace; for ye may all prophesy one by one; that all may learn, and all be exhorted or comforted. And the spirit of the prophets are subject to Prophets. Let your Dissuader now speak what he thinks; but speak it openly, that the good Quaker may as well hear him as the Papist: and speak it so effectually, that as far as in him lies, all the whole three Kingdoms may be persuaded, that this chapter concerns the public Service of the Church. If this were once done, I believe there would not be ere long so much as one bishop or minister left in the Land. And it were a less damage to your Dissuader, that adultery were reconciled to the seventh Commandment, than Church-service to his fourteenth Chapter of Corinthians. Why there is a language used in the Catholic liturgy, which though it be not the tongue of any one Country, yet it is the most universally known language of the whole Catholic family upon earth, is sufficiently discoursed in Fiat Lux. I need not stand here to repeat it. I must go on. §. 8. Which is about Images. Says, that Image-worship, wherein Papists give the same worship to the pictures as is due to the thing represented, is another novelty, and that a heathenish one too, brought in first by Simon Magus, and then the Gnostics, against which writes Clemens Alexandrinus, and others: insomuch that S. Cyril in the time of Emperor Julian, denies that Christians did worship the Cross, and Epiphanius is said to have cut in pieces a cloth picture, wherein was the image of Christ or some Saint. And therefore the decrees of the second Nicen Synod which had approved images, was abrogated by another general Council at Frankford; a little after which Council, the Emperor sent Claudius a godly preacher to preach against Images in Italy. And well he might, for the Council of Eliberis had long before that time declared against them. And all the devices of Roman writers to palliate this crime are frivolous; for the pure primitive times would not allow the making of Images, as witness Alexandrinus, Tertullian, and Origen. Here is much ado about a shadow. Whatsoever your Dissuader could pick up, that might sound but like his purpose, is here in a general mass heaped up together, whether it do touch his purpose, or not at all concern it, or be haply against himself. Theodoret, forsooth, S. Austin and Irenaeus, these must all testify, that Simon Magus first brought images into the Church, whereof they have not any one such word. The same fathers with Epiphanius must accuse the Gnostics and Carpocratians for the same thing; whereas they only blame them for placing the pictur of Jesus and S. Paul with Homer, Pythagoras, Plato, Aristotle, and other Heathens. Clemens and Origen disown and write against heathens Idolatry. So that all this concerns not our purpose. The two Counsels of Eiiberis and Frankford are against him, and so is likewise S. Cyril who in the very place cited objects extreme ignorance to Julian the Apostate, who had cast the Christians in the teeth with their worshipping a wooden Cross, which they would not do to great Jupiter, and their painting the images of it in their foreheads, and afore their houses. And Saint Cyril tells Julian, that the Cross put Christians in mind of the virtue and good which Christ their Lord had done and suffered for them, which the good Doctor calls the precious and health-giving wood. And we may see not only by S. Cyrils' answer, but by the objections of the Apostate Julian, what manner of Christians there were in those days, fourteen hundred years ago. The Council of Eliberis was kept in Spain, in the time of Emperor Galerius, when many Christians by reason of the bitterness of persecution, sacrificed through fear unto the heathen gods, and much contumely was done all over the world, and especially in Spain, both to Christians themselves, and the holy Gospel, and all sacred things. Wherefore the Council laid heavy pennances on all such Christians as should so apostatise either into heathensme, heresy, or the notorious sin of adultery; and amongst other things, c. 36. ordained that no sacred pictures should be painied upon the walls, because namely there they stood fixed, and were liable to the contumely of pagans, whereas such as were in frames and tables, might easily be removed and put into a safe place. That Council of Eliberis, because they adjoin not a reason unto their decree, may easily be mistaken; although the one may be discerned in the other, by a judicious and serious reader, Ne quod colitur aut adoratur, saith the Council, in parietibus deping atur. For the picture properly speaking, terminates neither respect nor contumely, but the thing represented by it, which if it be divine, must not receiv contumely, if it can be helped, from wicked men. But the Council of Frankford I cannot but wonder, why your Dissuader should cite it as an enemy to Images. Did not that Council consist of Catholic or popish Prelates, 300. of them gathered together under the Legates of Pope Adrian the first; in which also the Emperor Charles the Great, as stout a Champion of the Roman Church as any ever was in the world, was actually present. O but Eginard, Hincmar, Amonius, Blondus, and others testify that the said Council of Frankford condemned the second Nicen Synod, wherein images were established, calling it an Antichristian assembly. But how can this be thought probable, nay I may say possible, of those two Counsels? being so near one another, that there were not above eight or nine years' space between them, and both of them under one and the same Pope Adrian the first. Can any believe this, though twenty Eginards should say it? But he is not found indeed to speak aught of it. Hincmar says, that they of Frankford condemned the Synod assembled at Nice without the Pope's authority. But that Nicen Synod was both assembled and confirmed by the authority of that very same Pope who called and ratified this of Frankford. Blondus says, that they abrogated the seventh Synod, and the Faelician heresy de tollendis imaginibus. And none of them say, that they of Frankford called that Nicen Synod an Antichristian assembly, or that they published any book to that purpose. What strange confidence than is this of your Dissuader, to talk thus at random, without book, and besides all rule, and against truth. The occasion of assembling this Council of Frankford were the misdemeanours of Elipandus Bishop of Toledo in Spain. For Faelix Urgelitanus his Countryman having consulted Elipandus concerning that scholastic difficulty, Whether Christ as man ought to be called the natural, or only the adoptive Son of God, by means of his discourse, and a book written by him upon that subject, believed and said against the ancient language of the Church, that Christ was to be held an adoptive child of God, and not his natural son. And these two, together with Claudius Taurinensis, who came to them from Italy, filled all Spain with the clamour. This act of theirs was fond as well as wicked. For though in the schools it might haply be held, that Christ as man is not the natural but only the adoptive Son of God, if that particle as, be taken for a note of reduplication; yet they could not be igrant, that believers have nothing to do with such nice logical points. These conceiv Christ altogether specifically, as he is in himself. And so they had ever believed him to be the only begotten natural Son of God, and we all so many as are made partakers of his grace, adopted in him. And he that shall preach Christ to be as man, only his adoptive Son, whether that as of his be taken reduplicatively or specificatively, he makes but an ass of himself and a knave to boot. But these three, though often admonished, yet would they not desist. And therefore in a Council at Ratisbone, Faelix by name was condemned, respect being then had to the person and dignity of the Archbishop of Toledo, and the other Bishop. Faelix therefore was brought to the Emperor Charles his Court, who then wintered at Rheginum; where after a while, he humbly submitted to the Council, there then met together; and from thence sent to the presence of Pope Adrian, in the Cathedral of S. Peter he publicly acknowledged his error, and returned home to his own City. Elipand when he heard of all this, grew more violent than before; and laboured not only with his whole endeavour to reclaim Faelix to his former error, but by letters patent and large dated to all the Bishops of France and Germany, to draw those two Kingdoms to his opinion. Whereupon Faelix returned again to his vomic. And lest the infection should spread any further, by the agreement of the Pope and Charles the Emperor, a Council was called at Frankford. This was the very business and occasion of that Council: whereby every one may discern himself not only the improbability, that the said Council of Frankford, which purposely met together to maintain the honour of Christ, should deface his figures; but the falsity also of this your Dissuader; who tells us, that a while after this Council of Frankford, Ludovicus son to Charles the great, sent Claudius a famous Orator to preach against images in Italy, p. 60. Whereas Claudius had troubled Italy and Spain too, three or four years before that Council, nay before the Council of Ratisbone, which was two years before, and his way was condemned with himself both at Ratisbone and Frankford too. These things being so, how in the name of God comes your Dissuader here against so much reason to aver, that the Council of Frankford declared against images, that they condemned the second Nicen Synod, wherein the use of Images had been maintained, that they published a book wherein that Synod was declared Antichristian, and that Ludovicus Charlemains son sent down Claudius after that Council to preach against Images in Italy. I know that other Protestants have been guilty too of some part of this his story; so far at least as to say in particular, that the Frankford Council was against images. But they never set down any of that Counsels declaration against them, nor is there any extant. Binius, who set forth all the Counsels at large, both shows and copiously proves, that the acts of the second Nicen Council were all confirmed in the Council of Frankford; which is also averred by Alanus, Surius, Vasquez, and several other learned men. And since it is likely enough, that something was done in this Council about Images, whereof there is so much talk in the world, there can nothing be thought more rational, than that Pope Adrian, whose legates presided in both the Counsels, should according to the Church's custom send those decrees of Nice about the same time lately finished, unto the Council now at Frankford; that the definition of the Nicen Council might be made known to all the West, by their acceptation and promulgation at Frankford. Which also that it was absolutely done, and no other thing done but it, may sufficiently be gathered by the authority of the Council of Senon, which in the 14. of their decrees speaks thus: Carolus magnus Francorum rex Christianissimus in Francosordiensi conventu, ejusdem erroris I conomachorum suppressit insaniam quam infaelicissimus quidam Faelix in Gallias & Germanias' invexerat. And the same is ratified by Platina, who in the life of Pope Adrian, Biennio post, saith he, Theophylactus & Stephanus Episcopi insignes Adriani nomine Francorum & Germanorum Synodum habuerunt, in qua & Synodus quam septimam Graeci appellabant & haeresis Faeliciana de tollendis imaginibus abrog at a est: as also by Paulus Emilius, who in his second book de gestis Francorum, speaking of that Council of Frankford, Et imaginibus, saith he, suus honor restitutus est. The like may be proved out of Blondus in his Decades, Sabellicus his Aeneads, Gablisards Chronology, Alanus his Dialogues, Nauclerus, etc. All which various testimonies joined in one; together with the motives of that Frankford Council; the great procurer and protector of that Council, Charles the great, an eminent Champion of the Roman Church; the Precedents of that Council, Theophylact and Stephen, legates of the same Pope Adrian, who had lately finished and confirmed the second Council of Nice, may suffice, I should think, to refute the trifling humour of this Dissuader. But his confidence is greater in his reader's light believe, then either the weight or truth of his own words. But all the devices of Roman writers to palliate this their crime, he says, are frivolous. What are these devices, and what is their crimes? Sir, where there is no crime, there needs not any palliating devices. Is it a crime to keep an image of Christ crucified for us, that we may be often put in mind of the good and virtue of his holy passion, and our fancy assisted and kept in at our prayers, within the compass of their object? This is the business Sir, speak directly unto this, before you go any further. You will make all sorts of profane Images, either to some civil use or indifferent, or perhaps a naughty end. This is no crime with you. If it be, how comes it to pass, that never any bishop or other minister in England, who seribble with such a stiff impertinency against Popish Images, have never laboured at all against these Protestant pictures. O but Protestants do not worship these pictures. Do they not? I would to God, that all good Catholics could so heartily love, imitate, and worship those blessed persons represented in their portraitures, as Protestants do theirs, who by such amorous faces in their curious dresses are brought, I fear, too often on their knees. Motives to filthy iniquity, they may stand; but representation of austerity, of contemplation, of martyrdom, of divine ecstasies, of charity, of our Lord Jesus, and his Saints, these are popish, these are antichristian, these are abominable. If the God of holiness will not have any sacred figures to be made, surely he cannot allow lascivious, profane, and light ones. But though he do not, our Ministers will. O but the Papists give the same worship to the representation, and the thing represented. This your Dissuader may gather haply by his own experience. For the figure of a King, a father, and a wife, if they do raise any affections or thoughts, these must needs be so much differing, as the persons represented are. For the shadow, figure, or representation, if we would speak according to right philosophy, neither does nor can terminate any such respect, though it may its own. For example, (that I may declare this my speech) put case I have three or four Crucifixes before me, of a several make or form, and of a much differing art. All these four figures have but one and the same representation, because they represent but one and the same thing Christ Jesus our Lord crucified for our reconciliation and redemption: and whatever good affection may arise in my heart upon the sight and thought of it, must needs be the same to that representation and thing represented: because it is terminated upon the thing represented by means of the representation of it. And that is but one and the same respect, though the figures be many. For the representation or figure can terminate no such thought, although it be a means of directing it. But yet all those four figures have respects of their own, which they bound and terminate themselves; by reason, for example, of the excellency of their colours, the material on which they are wrought, the exactness of art in limning every part to the life, and the proportions of the whole in its due and full measure. These and such like considerations are ended fully in the picture, without any consideration had to its object represented. And they may be of such concerment in the business, that a man may be moved to prefer one of those four pictures before all the other three. This is that I mean Sir, when I say that a shadow, figure or representation neither does nor can terminate any such respect as refults naturally upon the sampler or prototype, though it may its own. And this is no sophistry of Aristotle, but mere natural and vulgar reason, common to all mankind. O but the Papists make their pictures their gods. ay, this is the talk of black ministers in the dark, to fools and children; while they sit warm in the Roman Catholik Benefices which they have invaded, it behoves them to say, what ever they can think against Popery, be it right, be it wrong, be it sense or nonsense. All goes down by a people once inveigled. And if they be not still kept warm in their mistake, the minister is lost. Good God, in what a world do we live! I did myself believe all this once. And I wondered, when I first saw Roman catholics to tear their pictures sometime, and put them into the fire. It is no such marvel, if Epiphanius should tear a Saints picture, which your Dissuader here tells us, although that story be not found in that epistle of Epiphanius translated by St. Jerom, Roman catholics do it ordinarily. For they use pictures but as they do their prayer-books, and when they are so sullied and worn they can use them no more, they are turned both into ashes, which is the last end of pictures, books, and men. And the respect they give to pictures, is but the very same kind, with what they give to the holy Gospels; save only that the Gospel is looked on as the inside, and a Crucifix the outside of their Redeemer; but both are still but shadows of him. I could say more concerning this business, and make it appear both that Christians have ever in all ages had images of their Lord and his Saints in their houses and Churches, and how profitable and useful they are, and that they are neither against the will of God, nor any right reason. And this I could clearly prove out of S. Basil, Eusebius Caesariensis, S. Gregory Nazianzen and Nyssen, S. Austin, Bede, Jo. Damascen, Athanasius, Ambrose, Chrysostom. But I have here said enough, if I have enough demonstrated, as I think I have, that your Dissuader has said nothing. §. 9 Which is an appendage to the former. Reprous the picturing of God the Father and holy Trinity, which many of the holy Fathers speak against, much to the blame of the Roman Church, which in their Mass-books and Breviaries, Portuises and Manuals picture the holy Trinity with three noses, and four eyes, and three faces in a knot. Though the Catholik Christian Church hath ever used and approved of the use of Images, as well as spiritual books, yet they allow not of any abuse in either. And Ordinaries, Bishops, Visitors, and Superiors in all places are to look to that. So that in this his appendage, as he calls it, your Dissuader acts but the part of a good visitor, to blame and mend that which is amiss; which must continually be done, and continually is done all over the Catholic world, as well in this, as other affairs. And if any Ordinary be negligent herein, he is worthy of blame. But Sir, this is nothing of Popery or Catholic Religion; which allows only in general the use of pious figures, to forward our thoughts and desires to that eternal felicity above, which so many holy Virgins, Confessors, Martyrs, Apostles, Monks, Hermits, and pious Princes, portrayed all before our eyes, arrived unto, by their austerities, alms-deeds, purity, fastings, disciplines, meditations, watchings, and patient sufferings, in love and conformity to their holy Redeemer, who is the prince, and leader, and crown of all those his glorious Saints, redeemed and sanctified by the virtue of his precious blood and passion, out of the thraldom of Satan and this wicked world. Nor has Catholic Religion ever descended unto the particular circumstances of these figures. This belongs to the care of Bishops and Ordinaries. Catholics have generally no figures, but of such only, as once have lived amongst them in their Church, either as head or members of it. Nor of many ages would bishops permit the holy Trinity, especially God the Father to be portrayed at all. And if now they suffer it, they have for it I make no doubt a sufficient reason; especially since they heed not at all, however your Dissuader imagines, any natural similitude in any of their pictures. If they be so made, as to raise the sansie to thoughts above, and the love and virtues that may bring us thither, they care not whether, for example, Saint Bennet were a man just of that complexion, or Christ their Redeemer of those direct features the limner has given him. They come not into their Churches, nor do they cast their eyes upon their pictures for any such end. And if God the Father be represented to their eyes, as he is to their ears, when he is called Father, I see no harm in it. If we may use such a form of words, when we speak to God, as this world we live in may afford our ears, why may not the eyes have such an answerable form too. But this is a business, which your Dissuader, if he were a Catholic, might well propound in the next general Council, and do otherwise in the mean time, if so he please in his own Diocese. For neither books nor pictures can be used in any Diocese, but what the Ordinary of the place allows. And the Bishop still guides himself by the general doctrine and discipline, the faith and custom, the tradition and laws of the Church in the whole mannagement of his care. And when these do not clearly descend to any particular which he is to deal with, he uses therein his own discretion, going that way, if he do well, that he finds comes nearest to the rule, as temporal superiors also do in their affairs. O but the Roman Church with much scandal, and against nature and the reason of mankind in their mass-books and breviaries, portuises and manuels picture the holy Trinity with three noses, and four eyes, and three faces in a knot. And do they so? I have seen I think as many Catholic countries, and mass-books, and breviaries, portuises, and manuels, as your Dissuader ever did; and yet I never saw any such picture therein all my life. He has been it seems an earnest pryer into the front and faces of books. But did he not mistake, trow you? and take some fortune-book, written in old letters, for a mass-book? and thence conclude, that all breviaries and mass-books, portuises and manuels were stored with such figures. However it were, the picture was to blame. For three noses and three faces ought to have more than four eyes. And if there were but four eyes, I cannot see how there should be three whole faces, although there were there three noses in it. But this is as good stuff, and as true, and as pertinent too, as any other part of this his book, which he calls a Dissuasive from Popery. §. 10. Which is against Papal authority. Says, that the Pope's universal bishopric is another novelty, though not so ridiculous, yet as dangerous as any other. And a novelty it is; for Christ left his Church in the hands of the Apostles, without any superiority of one above another. And in the Council of Jerusalem, James and not Peter gave the decisive sentence. Christ sent all his Apostles with the same whole power, as his Father sent him. Therefore. S. Paul bid the bishops of Miletum feed the whole flock. And well said S. Cyprian, that the Apostles were all the same that S. Peter was. And this equality of power must descend to all bishops, who succeed the Apostles in their ordinary power, as ambassadors for Christ. So then by the law of Christ one bishop is not superior to another. Christ made no head of bishops. Beyond the bishop is no step, till you rest in the great shepherd and bishop of souls. Under him every bishop is supreme in spirituals, and in all power which to any bishop is given by Christ. And that this was ever believed in ancient times, is proved by Pope Eleutherius his epistle to the bishops of France, by S. Ambrose, S. Cyprian, Pope Symmachus, S. Denyse, Ignace, Gelasius, Jerom, Fulgentius, and even Pope Gregory the great. Wherefore S. Paul expressly says, that Christ appointed in his Church first Apostles, but not S. Peter first. Nor did Peter ever rule but by common council, as S. Chrysostom witnesses. And it is even confessed by some of the Romish party, that the succession is not tied to Rome, as Cusanus, Soto, Driedo, Canus and Segovius. Nor was any thing known thereof in the primitive times, when the bishops of Asia and Africa opposed Pope Victor and Pope Stephen; and all bishops treated with the Roman bishop as with a brother not superior, and a whole general Council gave to the bishop of C. P. equal right and pre-eminence with the bishop of Rome. Finally, Christ gave no commandment to obey the bishop of Rome, and probably never intended any such thing. A man would surely think Sir, that this nail is knocked in to the head. What could be said more? But to be brief with you. If all the other sections of this your Dissuasive have said nothing, this I may say speaks something worse than nothing. For his reasons are senseless; his testimonies either impertinent or manifestly against himself; and his whole discourse contrary to the laws and constitutions of our English Protestant Church. To begin with the last: whether you look upon the statutes and acts of Parliament, whereby our English Church and government were first settled in England upon the reformation in the days of Edward the sixth, and afterwards ratified: or the articles, canons, and constitutions that were agreed upon by the bishops and clergy, and confirmed both by King Edward, Queen Elizabeth, King James, and our good King Charles, we shall clearly see, that our English Protestant Church and government is Monarchical; and that bishops are as much subjected to their Archbyshops, as Ministers to Bishops; and Archbyshops in like manner to the King, in whom the Episcopal power is radical and inherent, and in whom is the fullness of ecclesiastical authority, and from whom bishops do receiv their place, authority, power, and jurisdiction. And that Parson, Vicar, or other Doctor, who shall write or speak contrary to this; by the constitutions and canons ecclesiastical made in the time of our late good King Charles, he is to be suspended; and by the Canons and constitutions ecclesiastical made and confirmed in the Reign of King James, he is excommunicated ipso facto; and by the laws of Queen Elizabeth and King Edward to be further punished. How comes it then that this your dissuading Doctor utterly dissolves all this frame of government, under pretence of talking against papal power, as contrary to the mind and will of Christ; which will and mind is notwithstanding most resolutely asserted by the constitutions and laws of this our very English Church and Kingdom, which rejected indeed the Roman seat and person, but retained still the power and ordination of Church-government; which finally rested, now no longer in any Roman bishop, but in our own princely monarch. If any will but take the pains to look upon our constituions and statutes he will soon find all this to be most true. This your Dissuader in despite of all our laws to the contrary, will have the government of Christ's Church not to be monarchical; but a pure aristocracy, ruled by a company of bishops, standing like a company of trees, all in a row, one by another, but no one between the other and heaven. An order he admits or precedency, according as I suppose as one begins to count or number them, but no jurisdiction, no power, no authority, no superiority of any one over the rest. One bishop, says he, is not superior to another, Christ made no head of bishops. Beyond the bishop is no step, till you rest in the great shepherd and bishop of souls. Under him every bishop is supreme in spirituals, and in all power which to any bishop is given by Christ. But the laws of the land and constitutions of our English Protestant Church, teach us on the contrary, that one bishop is superior to another, and he therefore called an Archbishop; and that according to Christ there is a head both of Bishops and and Archbyshops; so that there is one other step yet, before you rest in the great shepherd and bishop of souls, even he who is under Christ supreme head and governor of his Church in these his Majesty's realms of England, Scotland, and Ireland; and that, under Christ every bishop is not supreme in spirituals, or in all power; mark, I say he is not supreme in all power, which to any bishop is given by Christ. The statutes and acts of Parliament are in every man's hands to look into. But the canons and ecclesiastical constitutions, because they are not so obvious, I shall name one or two of them, to justify this my speech. In our canonical law made in King's Edward's days, there is an act tit. 189. De officio & jurisdictione omnium judicum, which speaks thus. Si Episcopus fuerit negligens in administrand â justitiâ, pertinet ad ejus Archiepiscopum, ipsum compellere ad jus dicendum; illique terminum praescribet, quem si non observaverit absque, legitimo impedimento, non modò censaris ecclesiasticis puniet, verum & in estimationem justam litis damnabit. It is manifest by this canon, that every bishop is not supreme; but that one is superior and head over the other; so far, as to compel and punish him: which cannot justly be done, without authority and power. There is another canon or law yet more full than this, tit. 92. De ecclesia & ministris ejus, which speaks thus. Omnia quae de Episcopis constituta sunt, ad se pertinere Archiepiscopi quoque agnoscant. Et praeter illa, munus illorum est; in suà provinciâ episcopos collocare, cum à nobis, faith the King, electi fuerint. Utque totius provinciae suae statum melius intelligat Archiepiscopus, semel provinciam suam universam si possit ambibit & visitabit. Et quoties contigerit aliquas vacare sedes episcopales, episcoporum locos, non modo in visttatione, sed etiam in beneficiorum collocatione, & omnibus aliis sunctionibus ecclesiasticis implebit. Quin & ubi episcopi sunt, si eos animadvertat in suis muneribus curandis & praesertim in corrigendis vitiis cardiores & negligentiores esse, quam in gregis Domini praefectis ferri possit, primum illos paterne monebit. Quod si monitione non profuerit, illi jus esto alios in eorum loco collocare. Appellantium etiam ad se querelas causasque judicabit. Episcopi suae provinciae si qua de re inter se contenderint aut litigarint, judex & finitor inter eos esto Archiepiscopus. Ad haec audiet & judicabit accusationes contra episcopos suae provinciae. Ac denique, si ullae contentiones aut lites inter episcopum & archiepiscopum ortae fuerint, nostro judicio, saith the King, who ratifies these ecclesiastical canons, and puts them forth in his own name, cognoscentur & definientur. Archiepiscopi quoque munus esto synodos provinciales nostro jusses convocare. By this constitution of canon, one of those canons on which our very English Protestant Chuŕch is founded, it manifestly appears, that an Archbishop, or in plain English a prime bishop or chief bishop is not a name only of order or decent precedency, as your Dissuader here speaks, but of dignity, authority, power, superiority, and jurisdiction over bishops. And he is as much above them, as other ordinary bishops are above a Presbyter or parochial minister. For in administering Sacrarnents, and preaching God's word, every minister is empowered as fully as any bishop: but the government of ministers or presbyters within the Diocese, is proper only to one, who therefore has the name and title of bishop, which signifies an Overseer of the rest. This bishop admits of presbyters into a parish, and when any parish is vacant, he sees that one be put in: if any be careless and negligent in the duty of his parish, he first advises him like a father, and if he will not amend his manners, he puts him out, and furnishes the place with a better pastor: he judges the complaints between parishioners and parsons, or between parsons or presbyters among themselves, and decides them: he visits and keeps chapter, or should do at least, and finds and speaks, and punishes their faults. All these things are contained in the office of a bishop which therefore argue him to have an authority, power, or jurisdiction over other, Presbyters or pastors within his Diocese: although he bea presbyter or pastor himself; and a chief one too, that is to say, with a more ample and large authority, than any one of those who be under him hath given them, and therefore called a bishop or overseer by way of eminence. And if all these things do, as needs they must, argue not only an order or bare precedency, but a jurisdiction and power of a bishop over other presbyters; then must they needs conclude the same power to be in one bishop over another, in him namely, who by way of eminency is called the bishop or archbishop, or prime bishop amongst the rest, who is as truly the bishop of bishops, as these are overseers of presbyters. For this prime bishop is declared by the abovesaid canon, to be enabled by virtue of his office, to have all the power and charge that other bishops have; and then over and above that, first to place the bishops elect, and seat them each one in their provinces; then to go over and visit the whole province authoritatively, which none of the bishops under him can do: thirdly to see vacant feats supplied: fourthly, if such bishops as he shall find slow and negligent in their duty, after a fatherly admonishment, mend not, to put others in their place: five, to judge the complaints and causes of such as appeal unto him from their own bishops: sixthly, to decide the controversies that may happen between one bishop and another: seventhly, to judge the accusations that are against any bishop: lastly, to call synods, and there conclude and decide what may seem best for the welfare and spiritual government of his province. Are these the works of authority, power, and jurisdiction, yea or no? If they be not, how can any authority or power be proved? For all power is proved by its act; or how in particular may it appear, that bishops have any authority over their presbyters of ministers? But if they be; then is there more than a precedency or order amongst bishops: then did not Christ leave his Church in the hands of the Apostles without any superiority of one above another, as this Dissuader talks: For the laws and constitutions of this our Church and Kingdom, do publicly attest that this our English Church is settled according to the will of Christ, by archbyshops and bishops, which is absolutely true; then also did not Christ send all his apostles with the same whole power; then were not all the apostles the same that Peter was; then did not an equality of power descend from the apostles to all bishops; then is there a step beyond the ordinary bishop, nay two steps, before you come to rest in the great shepherd and bishop of souls; then, under Christ is not every byshap supreme in spirituals, nor yet in all the power which to any bishop is given by Christ; all this I say is true, whatsoever your Dissuader talks against not only the Catholic Church and government, which was here for above a thousand years together in England, but against the very frame and constitution of his own Protestant Church, whereof he is himself an unworthy member. But ministers when they begin to talk against popery, they are so heedlessly earnest, that they knock out their own brains; and either to get a benefice or honour in it, they destroy their own Church that gives it them. I can no more wonder now, that such an one as Whitby, in his book written against worthy Cressy, should say so peremptorily, that an archbishop hath no power or authority, and that his grace of Canterbury hath no jurisdiction, as he there talks, impar congressus Achill's; since a man of such renown, as Doctor Taylor, should speak the same here, and give the Presbyterians and other Sectaries in the Land, such a fair occasion and precedent to undermine and overthrow that Church, which is but lately lift out of the ruins of their hands. The same argument, that proves the bishop, an ordinary bishop to be under none but immediately under Christ, will prove as much for a single Presbyter or Presbyterian. And it is already done by the subtle pen of John Bastwick, in his Apologeticus ad praesules Anglicanos, which book is so strongly written both against Popish and Protestant Prelacy too, that upon the grounds on which all Protestants go, it can never be answered; and upon the grounds Doctor Taylor here lays, it is all of it in a manner confirmed and made good. What a strange madness is it for any one, that he may seem to weaken another Church, to overthrow his own. Truth is, here is no tye in England, that any one will be held with. The scripture is in every man's bosom to make what he will of it. Ancient canons, customs and counsels they slight as erroneous. Their own constitutions and statutes they do not so much as heed. What can be expected from hence but eternal dissension and wars. Nay the minister to get his orders and benefice, the bishop to enter into his See, make a solemn protestation of obedience and subjection. When they have got their ends, they wipe their mouths, and so far forget what they have done, that they write and act presently, as if they had never thought any such thing. See here the form of consecration of bishops prescribed and used by our English Protestant Church. ‛ In the name of God. Amen. I N. chosen bishop of the Church or See of N. do profess and promise all due reverence and obedience to the archbishop and to the Metropolitan Church of N. and to their successors. So help me God through Jesus Christ. Where reverence, subjection and obedience is due on one side, there must needs be authority, power and jurisdiction on the other. And that man, who hath One set over him with such an authority under Christ, cannot be immediately under Christ himself; and if he affirm he is so, then ipso facto doth he reject and rebel against that authority which in words he acknowledged. This is Dr. Tailor's case, who teaches here, that bishops are successors of the Apostles; and that there was no superiority amongst the Apostles; that by the law of Christ one bishop is not superior to another; that Christ made no head of bishops; that beyond the bishop is no step, till you rest in the great shepherd and bishop of souls, etc. What is this, but to reject all obedience and loyalty, solemnly vowed and promised? and to rebel against all the laws and constitutions of his own Church; and finally, which is worse than all the rest, to give an example to disaffected ministers of doing the like? But how does he prove all this? very copiously both by reasons of his own, and autorities of other men. Only the mishap is, those signify nothing at all for him; these, very much against him. But what are his reasons? Bishops are the Apostles successors, and there was no superior amongst the Apostles. Mr. Bastwick and such as he will tell you, Sir, that priest, minister, and bishop were but several synonomous words for one and the same thing upon divers respects: so that it is to be feared your Dissuader hath proved too much here, and hath spoken against himself; but if he hath not proved too much, he hath proved nothing. I am sure there was a superiority amongst the Apostles, and shall demonstrate it by and by, as well as I can. In the mean time, how prove you there was none? Christ sent all his apostles with the same whole power, his father sent him. Good Sir, our Lord says indeed, as my father sent me, so do I send you; giving them a legal commission from him, as himself had from God his eternal Father. But that he sent them every one with the same whole power, that is, so to teach and govern, that they should be subject to no one amongst them, these are your Disswaders words, cast in by fraud and fallacy, and no authority evangelical; and therefore prove nothing. Nay if Christ had so sent his Apostles, every one with the whole power of governing in himself, than had he changed his father's commission. For he was sent himself to be one head and governor, and yet he had then constituted many. But how can you dream, good Doctor, that Christ sent his apostles, each one with all his whole power he had received from God, since the very chiefest of his power, which is to confer grace upon the ministerial acts of his words and sacraments, cannot be given to man. You see how fond as well as falsely you have foisted in these words, with all his whole power. What follows next. S. Paul bid the bishops of Miletum feed the whole flock. Pray Sir how many bishops were there, do you think, in that one, no huge town of Miletum. Bastwick brings this for a proof, that bishops and priests were all one thing in those days. And if it be otherwise, the times are much changed. Then many bishops served one town; now many towns will hardly serve one bishop. But you cut off the sentence Sir, that it may sound better for your purpose, and, which is worse, change it too. The Apostle charges them to attend to themselves and all the flock, wherein the holy Ghost hath constituted them overseers. Which last words because they limit both their care and your own argument, you thought it prudence to leave them out. Pray Sir, would you have any bishop to enter upon another's Diocese? What then would you have here, when you make S. Paul bid the pastors all of them to feed all the whole stock, without any restriction? In all your heats remember still yourself. Go on. The equality of power must descend to all bishops, who are their successors. I can easily grant you, that they have all of them equal power of administering Sacraments, and looking to their flock, every one within his own precincts. And this is all your discourse infers. But an equality of power over one another, was neither amongst the Apostles; nor yet here in our English bishops, nor ever in the Church of God. How do you prove that? By the law of Christ one bishop is not superior to another; Christ made no head of bishops: beyond the bishop is no slep till you rest in the great shepherd and bishop of souls. Under him every bishop is supreme. This argument is in a mood and figure called Ita dico. You say so: and the statutes and canons of the Church of England say no. Whom shall we believe? I always prefer a Church before any one Churchman, though he be in her, when he is against her. But S. Paul says expressly, that Christ appointed in his Church first apostles, but not S. Peter first. I marry Sir! now we are come to an argument indeed. And it runs thus, According to S. Paul, the apostles were the first rank or dignity in the Church: but S. Peter was none of that rank or dignity; therefore he could not be first. Was not S. Peter then one of the apostles? or will you make it run thus? The apostles were the first rank or dignity in the Church, but S. Peter was not that rank or dignity, therefore he was not first. This is indeed the surer way. Because no one man can be reckoned for a rank or dignity, or so many persons in the plural number. This is an argument never yet thought of in Oxford or Cambridg, to prove they have no superior either over all, or over any one College. Not over all: For there be first Colleges, than Halls, than Inns, etc. therefore the Vicechancellor is not first. Not over one College: For there are first Fellows, than Scholars, than Pensioners, etc. and therefore Mr. such a one who is neither fellows, scholars, nor pensioners is not first. So here, Christ, faith S. Paul, set in his Church first of all apostles, therefore faith our learned Doctor, not first S. Peter, and secondarily apostles, but all the apostles were first. The apostles were the first rank of dignity, good Sir, but that rank had order in it too. And so there might be place for a first man, even in the first rank. But Peter did never rule but by common council, as S. chrysostom witnesses. He ruled then good Sir, it seems he ruled them. Will you bring this for an argument of his not ruling? You are shrewdly put to it in the mean time. And if he ruled and governed and managed all by common council, he was the better superior for that; but not therefore no superior. Will you admit no rulers but tyrants, who do all by their own will. But even some of their own popish writers do grant, that the succession is not tied to Rome, as Cusanus, Soto, Canus, Driedo, Segovius. What does that opinion of theirs, if they did say so, prove against the sovereignty of one bishop over the rest, which is the only thing now in hand, wherever he reside? I cannot in reason be thought to speak against our English monarchy, although I should haply say, that the King is not bound to reside still at Westminster. The papal pastor hath ever since S. Peter's time, ever resided yet in that Roman Diocese, which Catholics do indeed consider as a thing somewhat strange; since all other apostolical Sees besides that, are failed and gone; but no man knows the disposition of divine providence here on earth for future times. Perhaps that Roman See, I mean the particular Roman Diocese shall so remain to the world's end; and perhaps again it may not. And if it should not, or if that whole City should be destroyed, or Christian Religion in it; or if the City and all the whole Kingdom of Italy should lie under the ocean, quite overwhelmed and drowned, yet so long as the world lasts, there shall be a Church of Christ on earth; and so long as there is a Church, there will be one supreme pastor of it, where ever he reside. And this is that which some Catholic doctors mean, when they say that the succession is not tied to Rome. What doth this make to your purpose Mr. Dissuader? Go on then. No papal sovereignty was thought of in primitive times, when the bishops of Asia and Africa opposed Pope Victor and Pope Stephen. Does an opposition infer a nullity of power? Then Sir there would be no power upon earth either ecclesiastical or civil; which are all resisted one time or other. Was there no royalty or bishops in England so much as thought of thirty years ago, when they were both of them more than opposed by the rabble? What miserable shifts are these! You may find, and I am confident you do find and know well enough, that even in those times you speak of, and before and after them, the papal power was acknowledged and reverenced by the whole world: and yet you will take advantage of a dispute, that happens more or less in all ages, to say against your conscience, and from thence infer, that the papal power was not so much as thought of in those primitive times. God keep you Sir from contesting with any of your servants. For if you do, this argument of yours will prove, that your authority in your own house was not so much as thought of in those days, either by you, or them, or any else. Have you any thing else to say? A general Council of Chalcedon gave to the bishop of C. P. equal rights and pre-eminence with the bishop of Rome. What general Council was that? and who is that C. P. and what were those equal rights universal over all, or by way of similitude over some? A Constable may have given him equal rights and pre-eminence in his lesser charge unto some purposes, as a King hath in his whole Kingdom: what then? If this prove any thing, it is, that there is a sovereign power over all, in proportion to which, is measured out the right and authority of another in order to one particular. But all bishops ever treated with the Roman Bishop as with a brother, not as a superior. As brother and superior too, he both treated with them and they with him, as I could easily show at large. But to a bare falls affirmation one single negation will suffice. Christ gave no command to obey the bishop of Rome, and probably never intended any such thing. He commanded and probably intended, that all should obey those that were set over them. Is not that enough? I pray you Sir tell me, did he give any command to obey the bishop of Canterbury here in England, or the bishop of Armagh in Ireland, or probably ever intent any such thing? Speak out. If he did, the Roman Prelate will challenge obeisance upon the same title: if he did not, then is your promise and vow in episcopal ordination insignificant and fond. But James and not Peter gave the decisive sentence in the Council at Jerusalem. And why say you so? How prove you that his words and not the other were decisive, when one of them did but second the other. Now since your Dissuader hath proved after his manner, that there is not any one sovereign bishop over all, pray give me leave Sir to let you know, why I think on the contrary, that one such there is and aught to be. And to omit testimonies, which are in this point innumerable, I shall for brevity's sake only use two reasons. The first is: That Christ our Lord would have the whole company of Christians upon earth ever to be and remain one flock. This I conceiv can never be, except they be all under one visible pastor. Nor can it suffice to say here, that they are all under one Christ and one God: For this can never make them all, either really to be, or truly to be called one flock on earth. All the Kingdoms and people in the world, however they be governed, are under one God the supreme King, as the whole Church is said to be under one Christ: but this makes them not to be one Kingdom. Nay, those that have not a visible King, are not any Kingdom at all; but an aristocracy only, or commonwealth, or wild stragglers. But if you will have no visible flock of Christians upon earth, you teach the Quakers doctrine, and abolish all government. It is certain then, that if the ecclesiastical government of each place, do end in the bishop of that respective Diocese, as the Dissuader talks, that there must be then as many flocks of Christians, as there be bishops upon earth; which being not subordinate all of them to one general pastor, can never bring their flocks into one. Second is, That such a polity and government must ever be preserved in Christ's Church, which himself set up and practised. This is most certain. For if that polity or body be changed, it is no more Christ's polity or Christ's body, but that other, whatever it be which is introduced in his place, and the body of that man or men that introduced it: from whence also it receivs its name; as from Luther, his followers are called Lutherans, and Calvinists from Calvin: and consequently all the laws, which do ever follow the condition of the government, must alter with it. Thus it was with us here in England the other day. When our government was changed, we were no more the body of William the Conqueror, or any polity instituted by him; but another polity or body, set up by the Rump-Parliament; and all our laws became then liable to their arbitrary interpretation, to be wrested as themselves pleased. And they had been, if we had continued a while longer in that sad condition, by degrees utterly abolished. All this not our reason only, but heavy experience will acknowledge for a certain truth. But Christ our Lord did assuredly both set up and practise himself a visible sovereignty over all the whole flock of Christians, which he gathered together from other visible companies of Jews and Pagans. And therefore must there still and ever be, some one visible pastor over this one flock unto the world's end. For if that polity or body change, then is it no more Christ's body, but another thing. And his laws and religion will be then interpreted according to the pleasure of those who first rejected the government, and of their followers afterward, unto infinite and endless misery. And that this polity or government is ever to remain in Christ's Church on earth, may be gathered, first by this; That every wise legislatour knows well enough, that all his people under him look upon his example, as their rule to steer by ever after, so long as they mean to preserv his way, and be of his body. Thus, when any state is once founded either in aristocracy, democracy or monarchy, the founder of such a state has no need to tell the people, what he would have them to do afterwards; or whether they should choos themselves one governor or many; where they have his clear example to walk by. They will naturally follow his steps therein, so long as they mean to preserv the state he has established. Now the Apostles and all his disciples and believers knew and saw, that the Church of Christ, which is his state spiritual, was founded by him in monarchy, or the superintendency of one over all. And therefore as soon as our Lord spoke to them of his own departure, they began all of them naturally to think of one, who should succeed in his general care, and who that one should be. Nor did they doubt, whether one should be over all the flock, but who should be that one, that should preside and oversee it. And to prevent the faction, our Lord, as Catholic tradition teaches, and the letter of the Gossel not obscurely insinuates, pointed out one; giving him withal a good rule of humility and charity to remain for after ages, That he that is greatest among them should be as the least, most humble, most serve humble, most full of observance and charity: which rule if that chief pastor observe not, he is the more to blame. And all ages have ever looked upon the successor of that chief apostle, as Vicegerent of our Lord and master; under whom they are united in one flock, and so keep their laws and religion still one, and entirely the the same, from age to age; however they lie divided in place and time under several bishops up and down the world. Whereas all others besides this one Catholic flock, run into several bodies; and by their various interpretations, dissolve by little and little, according as themselves increase, all the whole frame of ancient religion. Secondly, it may be gathered by this, that Christ our Lord instituted a monarchical government of his Church, ruled so long as he lived by one; and therefore must that government ever remain. He set it up to remain. For surely he did not set it up to be pulled down again. Thirdly, because there is no power on earth to change it. What God has constituted, man cannot undo, lawfully I mean he cannot. Now we have no such body of Christians in England, that remain under one who is general pastor over all the Christian flock in the world, or do so much as pretend it, save only the few Roman catholics, that are yet here left alive, by the strange providence of that God, unto whose universal Church they have still adhered, notwithstanding the greatest trials that ever poor Christians were put to. Neither Quaker, Anabaptist, or Independent, Presbyterian or Prelate-Protestant do so much as pretend to any such thing; but they all oppose it. And as they do not pretend to belong to any general body, that hath a visible head overseeing the whole flock of Christ throughout the world; so neither is any of their Church governments monarchical in their respective place, if we may believe themselves. I know our English Protestant Church was first appointed in the days of King Edward and Queen Elizabeth to be respectively monarchical, that is to say, within the precincts of this Kingdom, the hierarchy ending in the King's majesty, who is doubtless the supreme head and governor both of the Protestant Church and the temporal or civil state, in all these his three Kingdoms. But indeed and truth none of them acknowledge it. For they do not, any of them, expect, as they ought all of them to do, a full decisive sentence from the King's Majesty's lips in all their controversies or doubts of faith; nor will they acquiesce in his judgement: which is a strange mad refractorines in our nation, and contrary to our own principles. The Independents last tribunal is in the light of his own breast. The Presbyterian will not look beyond his Presbyteral Consistory. And the Prelate-Protestant writer, which I most marvel at, ends all in the bishops, allowing no authority, power or jurisdiction to their Archbyshops, but only an order and decent precedency for manners sake, which in effect is wholly to dissolve the constituted frame of Church-government in this land. They speak not indeed of the King's majesty, for fear I suppose of the rod God hath put into his hands. But it is not hard to gather both by their words and actions, what they think. Whitby of late wrote a book against Dean Cressy; and there he says expesly, that an Archbishop hath a decent precedency, but no authority; and that his Grace of Canterbury hath no jurisdiction; and that the King's Majesty is not the root of Episcopal jurisdiction here in England: And yet he was approved and praised even by our Protestant bishops. Do they not see, that à pari, nay à fortiori the same be affirmed of our bishops? that they have no authority, and that they have but a decent precedency over Presbyters, and that they are not the root of ecclesiastical jurisdiction. With what a strange blindness are our eyes possessed! Nay, this great Dissuader an eminent man among Prelate-Protestants, here teaches publicly, that bishops are all supreme under Christ. So that this our Church-government by bishops, can be no other but Aristocracy: the Presbyterians a Democracy; and the rest a plain Anarchy, every man thinking and acting what is good in his own eyes. And none of these, who are all fallen from the general flock and general pastor, heed unto effect, any one thing that may restrain them, either statutes, canons, laws, constitutions, or aught else. But God blesses his true Church with a true obedience. Thus I have given you Sir my reason, why I think there is and must be one general pastor over all the whole flock of Christians. Pray ponder it well. Brief I am in it, because it is beyond my general design, which is only to show, that Doctor Tailor's Dissuasive from Popery is insignificant. I am now come to the testimonies your Dissuader citys for himself; which I told you before, are above half of them impertinent, and the rest, if he had not fraudulently maimed them, flatly against himself. As for the first sort, your Dissuader imagining in his head, that the Apostles had no superior, which is the grand falsity on which all his whole discourse runs, brings all those authors who either say, that bishops are the successors of the Apostles; or that they had received the keys of heaven; or that they are not to be contemned, and the like, for witnesses of his opinion, as Irenaeus, Cyprian, Ambrose, Anacletus, Clemens, Hieronimus, Gregorius, and various others. All this is impertinent. But the other autorities, had they not been curtailed and perverted by him, had openly and plainly spoken that Catholic truth, which he here opposes; namely that the Apostles had a superior; and that all the whole Christian flock have and aught to have one general pastor, and that he ever hitherto hath sat since S. Peter's death in the Roman See. I know it would be worth my labour to set down all those testimonies by him here cited, at large as they lie in those Catholic Fathers and Divines: as apt at one and the same time to convince this his whole section of falsity, and the Catholic doctrine to be no novelty, as he says it is. But because this is already done by the abovenamed Catholik Gentlemen, who with a greater patience than I am master of, turned over those many ancient authors, I will content myself with only the first of them. In the whole new testament, faith your Dissuader, there is no act or sign of superiority; or that one apostle exercised power over another: but to them whom Christ sent, he in common entrusted the Church of God, according to that excellent saying of S. Cyprian, the other apostles are the same that S. Peter was, endowed with an equal fellowship of honour and power, etc. This then is the excellent saying of S. Cyprian, The other apostles are the same that St. Peter was, endowed with an equal fellowship of honour and power. And he citys it out of his epistle de unit. Ecclesiae ad Novatian. But did S. Cyprian either say or mean by that saying, so much of it as is S. Cyprians, that there was no superiority among the apostles, or that the Church of God was entrusted to them in common? Nay, does not S Cyprian use those words in a discourse wherein he endeavours industriously to declare, that there was a superiority among the Apostles; in which as in a cone of unity they were all united, although they were all alike in power and commission of administering Sacraments. If it be so, what shall we think of this Dissuader, and of his excellent saying of S. Cyprian, to prove that the Church was entrusted to the apostles in common; and that no one apostle exercised a power over another. The text of S. Cyprian runs thus. Our Lord said to Peter, Upon this rock will I build my Church, and again feed thou my sheep: Upon the one Him Christ builds his Church, and unto Him he commends his sheep to be said. And although after his resurrection he gave to all his apostles equal power, and said, as my father sent me, so I send you; yet that he might manifest unity, he constituted one chair, and by his authority disposed the origin of unity beginning from one. The other apostles are the same that Peter was, etc. But the beginning comes from unity, the primacy is given to Peter, that one Church of Christ and one flock of Christ may be monstrated. Thus St. Cyprian testifies of the apostles, that although they were all equal in their spiritual commission of God's word and Sacraments, yet were they brought to an unity by the government of one superior, and one chair which oversaw them all. And is this a fit place to prove, that the Apostles had no superior over them, which expressly testifies that they had one? In the same manner doth our Dissuader deal with the other testimonies. But I have been too long upon this point. Here is enough Sir to let you see, what I said in the beginning of this discourse, that your Disswaders reasons are senseless; his testimonies either impertinent or manifestly against himself; and his whole talk and doctrine contrary to the laws and constitutions of our own Protestant English Church. §. 11. Which concludes the novelties. Gives notice of nine other popish novelties, Saints invocation, Scripture-insufficiency, absolution before penance, Priest's confirmation, nine-penny-masses, circumgestation of Eucharist, intention in Sacraments, mass-sacrifice, and communionless mass. After your Dissuader has mentioned these to show the fertility of his brain, he says nothing of them at all, but only that they be also innovations; and thence concludes, that the Roman Religion is neither old nor primitive nor catholic, and that it is easier for Protestants to tell where their religion was before Luther, then for Papists to tell where their religion was before Trent. And that when the enemy had sowed these tares, and honest men in the Church durst not complain, than England and other nations by the glass of Scripture resormed to pure antiquity, preferring a new cure before an old sore. In the beginning of the section it was a new sore, in the end it is an old sore, so long time was he a writing this one no-section. And he has so ordered the business, that it will be hard now for Papists to show their Religion before Trent, although he has neither deduced the original of these nine or his other ten novelties from Trent, nor can ever show that these or they are the Papists religion. For as he has handled them, there is not one of them any part of their Religion; much less doth their religion consist in them. His sirst business of the power of making articles (sect 1.) is so far from religion, that it is not so much as the philosophy of any one school in the Catholic world. His leash of new articles, (sect. 2) is partly a fond dream, and partly an erroneous vision of his own. His discourse of Indulgences (sect. 3.) is utterly besides the purpose; and what there is of Catholic faith in it, he allows himself as ancient. 4. His talk of Purgatory is so ridiculously absurd, that granting all that Roman faith teaches, to be both ancient and universal; he yet says at random, that Roman faith is not that, and yet never speaks himself what that Roman faith is. 5. In Transubstantiation he wholly plays with the word, which he knows when it came in, wholly neglecting the thing itself; and brings a multitude of Popish Doctors that own it not for their faith, and not any one popish man or woman that own it: he says it was defined in the Lateran Council first; and yet is not that which was defined in the Lateran Council, and never speaks what this thing is, which notwithstanding he will have called Popery. 6. The business of half-communion, as he calls it, is no Popery at all, that is to say, no Catholic faith, but a custom only in the exercise of their religion, and that neither universal for time or place. And although catholics believe, that it is not necessary to communicate in both kinds, yet do they not believe, that it is necessary to communicate only in one kind, either this kind or that; but have used all the three ways. 7. His discourse about service in an unknown tongue is a like mistake, taking custom for religion, and discipline for doctrine; and he perverts and falsifies the custom too, saying that Papists understand not their own prayers, nor know what they ask of God. 8. His talk of images passes by all the use of them that religion requires, and is wholly taken up in some school disputes and his own lies. 9 His exceptions against the pictures of the Trinity with so many eyes and noses and faces in a knot, is as much popery as Euclids book de Triangulis. 10. His section about the sovereignty of one bishop over all Christians had been about popery and catholic religion indeed, if he had handled it right; but as his reasons are fond, and autorities falls; so he mistakes the very thing itself, imagining that papists believe that spiritual supremacy to be tied to the walls of Rome, which is no faith of theirs, and consequently none of their popery. And so none of his sections, nor any part of his discourse touches either all or any part of Papists religion. And is not this a doughty piece of work to prove popery, by which all his readers understand the Roman Catholik religion, to be neither old, nor primitive, nor apostolical? How he would have handled the other nine points, because he says nothing of them, I will not trouble myself to read. But I am sure that seven of the nine have not any relation to Catholic religion; all of them I mean besides Saints invocation and the Sacrifice of the Mass. What Council hath determined, or what Catholic beleeus, that the sacred scripture is insufficient; or that absolution ought to be given before penance; or that single priests are to confirm; or that masses are to be sold for nine pence; or circumgestation; or any such intention in sacraments as to damn folks, which the Dissuader here speaks; or that mass is to be without communion. And I may now think, if he had spoke of the other two, Saint's invocation and Sacrifice, he would even there also have mistaken and strayed. For he has so behaved himself hitherto, as though he were resolved not to speak any one word true or to the purpose. And yet he would seem to do it, perhaps on the same motive, that Sir Toby Matthews flitted from the richer by shoprick of Durham, to that of York, because, as he himself gave the reason, he wanted Grace. But Doctor Taylor must remember his own doctrine, that an Archbishop, although he have Grace, yet he has no jurisdiction with it: and it is a question whether is better, to have power without grace, or grace without power. He is well enough as he is, if he could be content. But ambition and covetousness will know no bounds. And as your Doctor in this his Dissuasive prattles about a Popery which is no part of Catholic religion; so does he wholly pass by their chief religion, which is in a manner their whole popery; and all their religious customs attending it; not that only which the first reformers allowed of; as their faith of one God, all powerful, most wise and good, who made all things visible and invisible, and by his providence conserveses them in their being, who in the fullness of time sent his beloved son to reconcile the world to himself, etc. but that also which they rejected and principally inveighed against: as first internal sanctification and renovation of our spirits; which was the end of Christ's appearing in the world, the efsicacy of his grace in our hearts, and the intention of his counsels and laws: secondly, the comfort, merit and necessity of good works, unto which holy gospel by all sweet promises invites us, God's holy spirit moves, the very excellency of man's nature and condition suggests, the name and profession of Christian calls for, and future happiness requires. These by the first Protestants were all cried down as mortal sins, and of no value at all in the eyes of God; by which doctrines they debauched mankind, and made men so dissolute, careless and licentious, that if good nature, right reason, and the gracious working of God in our hearts had not more force upon some, than the principles of the first Protestancy, earth had become a mere hell by this. Thirdly, he passes by the priesthood, altar and sacrifice, which Christ our Lord instituted for our daily atonement in the figuration of his holy passion; at which old Christians with all fear and reverence offered up their daily praises, requests, and supplications to God, for themselves and allies and whole Church of Christ; for all distressed persons, for kings and princes, and for all men, that we may lead a quiet and godly life in this world. Fourthly, the seven sacraments of Christ's; which are so many conduits of sanctification for our several necessities, and for all conditions of men, and for all degrees of spiritual comforts. Fifthly, the obligations of vows, which any shall freely make for God's glory and his own advancement, in piety, in continency, in charity; and the blessed condition of singing and praising God in monastical retirement. Sixtly, the communion and union of the whole body of Christians under one visible pastor; by whom they are aptly knit and compaginated together into one flock and body of Christ; however they may differ otherwis in country, language, laws, civil government, and other affections. Sevently, the marks of the true Church, and the authority she hath to keep her people in unity of faith and observance of their Christian duties. Eightly, the danger of original sin and actual transgressions; which, however we may have heard of Christian faith, and believe it to be true, may notwithstanding exclude us eternally from the bliss of heaven now opened to believers, such, as by mortifying ungodly lusts shall render themselves conformable to their Lord and head, who is ascended into heaven, and gone before to prepare there a place for them in bliss with himself. Ninthly, the necessary concurrence of God's grace and man's will unto his justification, and sanctity and future glory in him; Qui creavit te sine te, non salvabit te sine te, as good S. Austin speaks. Tenthly, the necessity and great benefit of prayer, alms-deeds and fasting, which is practised in the Catholic Church, and commended to all as worthy fruits of that religion, which labours to root out, pride of life, concupiscence of eyes and concupiscence of flesh thereby: and our obligation to exact justice in all our contracts and dealings with our neighbour. Eleventhly, the danger of living and dying in sin to such as profess Christianity, and uselesnes of faith without the good works of grace attending it. Twelftly, the possibility of keeping Gods commandments with the assistance of his grace. Lastly, not to mention more, the great duty incumbent upon all Christians, when, led away by the deceit of Satan, flesh and this wicked world they shall chance to have strayed from their holy rule, to set all straight again by humble confession, restitution and other penal satisfactions for their fault. These and such like principles of ancient Christianity, our first reforming Protestants, Luther and Calvin with other their companions, all apostate priests from the mother Church, so stiffly cried down as notorious popery, that they have thereby corrupted the whole world. But your Doctor in this your Dissuasive from Popery, for reasons best known to himself, takes no notice of them at all. Protestant writers, however loath to practise them, yet ashamed they are now to speak against good works, as their forefathers did. Indeed every one of them that upon the hope of a richer benefice writes against Catholic Religion, makes both a new Popery, and a new Protestancy too; and whilo they speak in general against that, they may say in particular of this, what they pleas. For Protestants had never any Council to make them all agree, how much of Popery they should reject, or what they should positively establish: nor ever will nor can have; nor do they care, so they keep but their livings and places that they have extorted from Catholic hands, which they know they cannot keep, except by libelling against Popery they get the power of the land, honester and better men than themselves to back and support them in their ways, whether any thing be ever settled or no. I should also here set down the substantial customs of Catholic Christians, in their chapels and churches, oratory's, and private houses, wholly neglected by the Dissuader, though they be in the hearts and hands of them all throughout the whole earth. If he had declared either their substantial faith or customs, he had lost his credit with some, but he had saved his own soul, which now is become as black as hell with slanders, lies, and uncharitable depravations both of their customs and immaculate Religion. What he can pervert and make sport with, that he puts upon them for popery; and what he cannot, that must be thought no popery at all. But this I cannot now insist upon. My letter is already grown too long. ANd yet I cannot but give you notice Sir, that even these things specified here by your Dissuader for popish novelties, as they are rightly understood in the catholic sense and meaning; Indulgences; the real presence, under the apperances' or species of material symbols; Communion in one kind, Liturgy in hebrew, greek or latin tongues, unknown generally to vulgar people; Use and respect of images and sacred figures; Spiritual Supremcay in one bishop over the rest; Saints invocation, and sacrifice of mass, are all acknowledged by former Protestant Reformers, for old errors, errors indeed but old, very old ones, a thousand years older than your Dissuader makes them, who would here make us believe they are but fresh novelties. As for the antiquity of Indulgences, so far as they belong to Catholic belief, I need not trouble myself with further testimonies, than the only one of your Dissuader himself, who is instar omnium. For p. 17. he acknowledges their use to be ancient and primitive. As for the real presence, Humpred in his Jesuitism says, that Gregory the great, who lived a thousand years ago, taught Transubstantiation. The Century writers Cent. 5. teach, that Chrysostom, who was two hundred years before Gregory, is thought to confirm transubstantiation: and Cent. 4. they place under the title of hurtsul opinions and errors of the fathers, that saying of S. Greg Nyssen in his catechist sermon de devin● sacramento, Not because it is eaten doth the bread become the body of the word, but forthwith by the word it is changed into the body, as it is said by the word, This is my body. And they say in the same century c. 10. That Eusebius, Emissenus did speak unprofitably of Transubstantiation. Antony de Adamo in his anatomy of the mass says, That the book of Sacraments ascribed to Ambrose affirms the opinion of Christ's bodily presence in the sacrament. Peter Martyr in his defence, wholly dislikes the judgement of St. Cyril in this point. Mr. Whitgist in his defence against Cartwright, testifies of St. Ignatius disciple to St. John the Evangelist, that he should say of some heretics in his time, That they do not admit Eucharist and oblations, because they confess not the Eucharist to be the flesh of our Saviour Jesus Christ. which flesh suffered for our sins, Adamus Francisci in his margarita theologica, saith, Commentum papistarum de transubstantiatione maturè in ecclesiam irrepsit. And Antony de Adamo in his anatomy of the Mass, saith, I have not yet hitherto been able to know, when this opinion of the real and bodily being of Christ in the Sacrament did begin. This then according to the acknowledgement of Protestants and those very learned men, is no novelty. The indifferency of communion either in one kind or both is manifestly affirmed by Luther in his epistle ad Bohemos, by Melanchton in his century of theological epistles, and several other Protestants, convinced thereof by the current of primitive antiquity. That the Christian Liturgy was in ancient times ever celebrated in Greek, Chaldee, Latin or other language unknown to vulgar Christians, and in a part of the Church where lay people might not approach, and great part of it secretly, and out of the hearing of any body, and with much pomp of vestments, gold and silver chalices, etc. is amply testified by Theodore Beza, in his eight epistle theological. And therefore Queen Elizabeth did not think she acted against antiquity, when she caused the Service to be read in English all over Wales, where the people understand it not. For which very same reason the great Cardinal Richlieu deservedly taxed heretical ministers (who except at least in outward show, against this ancient custom) for their practising the very same thing, (as convinced in their own consciences that it was the ancient practice) both in Bearn, Narbo, Province, and other places, where the ministers of those places read Service in the French Tongue, which was not the language of those Provinces, nor by any of those people any more understood, than is Latin by the vulgar of mankind. And yet the case is far otherwise in this affair affair amongst Catholics than other people. For these do but only come together to hear and attend to the Minister what he says. But the Priests in the Catholic Church comes to make atonement for the people: which may well be done, so long as the said people are in a general disposition of heart fitly disposed to present themselves before the face of their Lord for that end, whether they hear and know the sighs and requests of their petitioner in particular for them or no, so long as they are assured they are of that true Church, by whom their priests are directed in their duty. For thus it was in the law of Moses dictated by God himself. There shall be no man, saith the sacred text, Leu. 16. in the tabernacle of the congregation, when the priest goeth in to make an atonment in the holy place, until he come out and have made an atonement for himself and for his household, and for all the congregation of Israel. If God allowed of this custom four thousand years ago, it can neither be a novelty nor ill. As for images and their due respect, the Magdeburgian Centuriators in their 4. Century testify, That Lactantius affirms many superstitious things concerning the efficacy of Christ's image. And in their 8. century, That S. Bede erred in the worshipping of images. So Bale in his pageant of Popes says, That Gregory by his indulgences established pilgrimages to images, and defended worshipping of images. As also, That S. Leo allowed the worshipping of Images. Functius another Protestant in his chronology at 494. adds, That Xenaias who lived thirteen hundred years ago, was specially noted and condemned for being the first that stirred up wars against images. This is then no novelty neither. As for Purgatory and prayer for the dead, Fulk in his Retentive affirms, That it prevailed within three hundred years after Christ. And in his confutation of Purgatory, That Ambrose allowed prayer for the dead, and that it was the common error of his time. And again in the same book, That Chrysostom and Jerom allowed prayer for the dead: and in another place of the same book, That Austin blindly defended it: and again there, That Tertullian, Cyprian, Austin, Jerom, and many others affirm, that sacrifice for the dead is the tradition of the Apostles. As also he had acknowledged about ten pages before, in the same book, That prayers for the dead is taught in the writings now extant under the name of Dionysius Areopagita, mentioned in the acts of the Apostles, which book, though he doubt whether it be his or no, yet himself writing against the Rhemish upon the 2. Thessalonians, allows it to have been written above thirteen hundred years ago. Chemnitius in his Examen says, That it was taught by Austin, Epiphanius, and Chrysostom: as nine pages before that, he had said, It was taught by Origen, Ambrose, Prudentius and Jerom. Mr. George Gifford in his Demonstration says, That it was generally in the Church long before Austin, as may be seen in Cyprian and Tertullian. And Bucer in his Enarrations upon the Gospels speaks, That prayer and alms were made for the dead almost from the very beginning of the Church. This is not a novelty then. As for Papal Superiority, the Protestant Centuriators acknowledge, That in the fifth age of the Church, above a thousand years ago, the Roman Bishops applied themselves to establish dominion over other Churches; and, That they usurped to themselves right of granting privileges and ornaments to other Archbyshops: and, That they confirmed Archbyshops in their Sees: and, That they deposed and excommunicated some, and absolved others: That they arrogated power to themselves of citing other Archbyshops to declare their cause before them: That against a bishop appealing to the Apostolic See, nothing should be determined, but what the bishop of Rome censured; That they appointed their legates in remote Provinces, challenging authority to hear and determine all uprising controversies; especially, in questions of faith: That they took upon them power of appointing general counsels, and to preside therein, either by themselves or their deputies, rejecting for unlawful those Synods that were called without their authority. They also add in the same century, That Roman Bishops had flatterers in those times, who affirmed, that without permission of the Roman bishop none might undertake the person of a judge. Nay, forgetting themselves they aver in the same century, Collat. 775. That antiquity had attributed the principality of Priesthood to the Roman bishop above all. I could allege also the like confession of Beza, Mr. Whitgift, and Cartwright: but those eminent Protestant Centuriators may serve for all, who testify further in that fifth century, That Victor called the Roman Church the head of all Churches: That Turbius Asturiensis flattered Pope Leo, and acknowledged his superiority: That sometimes bishops condemned in Synods appealed to the See of Rome, as did, say they, Flavianus Patriarch of Constantinople in the Council of Ephesus; and that Counsels also requested to have their acts confirmed by the bishop of Rome. And so indeed did not only Flavianus appeal to Pope Leo, but Talida Patriarch of Alexandria deposed by the Emperor Zeno, appealed also to Pope Simplicius; S. Athanasius to Pope Julius; etc. So did the Council of Chalcedon request to be confirmed by Pope Leo, the Council of Carthage by Pope Innocent, the Council of Ephesus by Pope Celestin, etc. The like superiority of the Roman bishop, not only over the neighbour Churches and Bishops of Italy, but over remote provinces, and the greatest Archbyshops and Patriarches of the world is acknowledged by Protestants to have been practised also before that, in the fourth age, when the Church first lift up her head by favour of Constantine the great, and appeared openly in the world. In this age say the Centuriators, the mystery of iniquity was not idle. And they say also, that then the bishop of Rome challenged by ecclesiastical canon, the disallowing of those Synods where at they were absent; That Theodoret a greek father, who lived about the latter end of this age, deposed by the Council of Ephesus, was restored to his bishopric by Pope Leo, unto whom he had made his appeal; and that S. Chrysostom appealed likewise to Pope Innocentius, who thereupon decreed his adversary Theophilus to be excommunicated and deposed: That the famous and ancient Council of Sardis, consisting of above 300 bishops assembled from Spain, France, Italy, Sardinia, Greece, Egypt, Thebias, Lybia, Palestin, Arabia, and sundry other places of the world, and whereat sundry fathers of the Nicen Council were present, decreed appeals to the bishop of Rome: for which fact the Centuriators blame the said council; as do also Osiander, Calvin, Peter Martyr and others. And lastly, that whereas the Arrians had expelled Athanasius bishop of Alexandria, Paulus bishop of Constantinople, and other Catholic bishops of the East, and brought their accusation to Julius then bishop of Rome, that he might ratify what they had done, he, the said bishop summoned Athanasius according to the canons, and when he had heard all sides speak, he restored Athanasius and his fellow bishops to their own place; fretus ecclesiae Romanae praerogativa, as the Centurists there speak. In the age before this, when raging persecution obscured both the government and most of the written monuments of that time, yet want there not monuments of the Pope's power in confirming, deposing, restoring bishops. Then it was, that S. Cyprian, as himself testifies, moved Pope Stephen, by his letters to depose Martianus from his bishopric, and appoint another in his place; and he tells us likewise in his fourth epistle, how Basilides went to Rome, hoping to beguile Pope Stephen then ignorant of the whole matter, so to procure himself to be restored to his bishopric, from which he had been justly, saith S. Cyprian, deposed. In this age the foresaid learned Centuriators reprove Pope Stephen for his undertaking to threaten excommunication to Helenus and Firmiltanus, and all others throughout Cilicia, Cappadocia, and Asia for rebaptising heretics; they reprove also, as became Protestants to do, both S. Cyprian and Tertullian in this point; Tertullian for saying, that the keys were committed to S. Peter, and the Church built on him; S. Cyprian, for affirming the Church to be built upon S. Peter, and one chair founded by our Lord's voice upon the rock; for calling Peter's chair the principal Church, from whence Priestly unity ariseth: and for saying, that there ought to be one bishop in the Catholic Church; and that the Roman Church ought to be acknowledged of all other for the mother and root of the Catholic Church. In the second age, the next after the apostles, whereof fewer monuments remain, yet be there some testimonies of this superiority acknowledged even by Protestants. Pope Victor is owned even by our Mr. Whitgift in his defence, to be a godly bishop and martyr, and the Church in his time in great purity, not being long after the apostles times; and yet Amandus Polonus a Protestant Professor at Basil says in his theological thesis of the same Pope Victor, That he showed a Papal mind and arregancy: and Mr. Spark in his answer against John Albines, thinks him, somewhat Pope-like to have exceeded his bounds, when he took upon him to excommunicate the bishops of the East: and Whitaker charges him with exercising jurisdiction upon other Churches. So that these three Protestants discerned a papal power even in this second pure age of the Church, although they liked it not. But the Protestant Centuriators do much except against a saying of S. Irenaeus, who lived in this age next after the apostles, and might well remember the apostles own lively preachings, (as Hamelmannus a Protestant writer in his book of traditions, speaks both of Irenaeus and Polycarp) recorded in the third chapter of his third book, Ad hanc enim ecclesiam Romanam, propter potentiorem principalitatem necesse est omnem convenire ecclesiam; It is necessary, that every other Church, saith Irenaeus, comply with the Roman, by reason of her greater principality. First, because he says it is necessary; secondly, that every Church; thirdly, for the Roman Church's more potent principality, to comply with her, the Centurists are much displeased at it, and censure it for a very corrupt speech. And indeed the papal power and jurisdiction was so eminent in all ages, that Philip Nicolai in his comment de regno Christi, refers the beginning of it to the infirmity of the Apostles, and bishops succeeding them. For there speaking of the origin and increase of papal power, Primatus affectatio, saith he, communis suit infirmit as apostolorum, ac etiam primorum urbis episcoporum. Finally, in the first age, that St. Peter had a primacy above the other apostles, is acknowledged by Calvin; The twelve apostles had one among them to govern the rest; by Musculus, The celestial spirits are not equal, the apostles themselves were not equal, Peter is found in many places to have been chief amongst the rest, which we deny not; by Mr. Whitgift, Amongst the Apostles themselves there was one chief; and by Dr. Covel, who in his examinations, teaches at large against the Puritans, both that there was one appointed over the rest amongst the apostles to keep them in unity; and that that government was not to cease with the apostles, but ever to continue in the Church; and that it is the only way to prevent dissension, and suppress heresies; and that otherwise the Church would be in a far worse case, than the meanest Commonwealth, nay almost than a den of thiefs. But the Centurists like not this; and therefore do they in their 4 Cent. reprehend many of the Fathers, for entituling Peter the head of the apostles, and the bishop of bishops. So indeed Optatus calls him apostolorum caput, and therefore Cephas; Origen apostolorum principem; Cyril of Jerusalem, principem & caput caeterorum; Cyril of Alexandria, Pastorem & caput ecclesiae, Arnobius Episcoporum episcopum; the Council of Chalcedon, Petram & verticem ecclesiae Cathobais, Thus much for that point; which by all this is proved to be far from any novelty. As for Saint's invocation and the antiquity of that belief and custom, it is acknowledged by the Centurists, Chemnitius, our Dr. Whitgift, and Fulk. Dr. Whitgift in his defence hath these words, Almost all the bishops and writers of the Greek Church and Latin also, for the most part were spotted with doctrines of freewill, of merit, of invocation of Saints, and such like. Fulk in his rejoinder to Brittow, I confess, saith he, that Ambrose, Austin, and Jerom held invocation of Saints to be lawful: and in his book against the Rhemish Testament, In Nazianzen, Basil, and Chrysostom I confess, faith he, is mention of invocation of Saints and again, that Theodoret also speaketh of prayers to martyrs: and again in the same book, that Leo ascribeth much to the prayers of S. Peter for him: and again, that many ancient fathers held, that Saints departed pray for us. Chemnitius in his examen, acknowledges as much of S. Basil, Nazianzen, Gregory Nyssen, Theodoret, S. Jerom, and even S. Austin himself. The Centurists charge the same upon S. Cyprian, who is ancienter than S. Austin; and again upon Origen, who was ancienter than Cyprian: adding, that there are manifest steps of Saints invocation in the doctors of that ancient age. So, this is no novelty then. Lastly, as for the Sacrifice of Mass, and Altars, (which as Dr. Reynolds says well in his conference with Hart, are linked together) Peter Martyr in his common places, reproveth Peter of Alexandria for attributing more, as he speaks, to the outward altar, than to the living temples of Christ: and he checks Optatus also for saying, what is the altar? even the seat of the body and blood of Christ; such sayings as these, saith Peter Martyr, edified not the people; and lastly, all the fathers in general he finds salt with, for their abusing so frequently the name Altar; which indeed is spoken of even by S Ignatius, the Apostles undoubted scholar, who is therefore carped at by Cartwright Calvin, Fulk, and Field acknowledge, that most ancient fathers, S. Athanasius, Ambrose, Austin, Arnobius, talked much of the Christian Sacrifice and Altar, and Priests, who offer and pour out daily on the holy table; adding, that the fathers without doubt received that their doctrine from the Jews and Gentiles whom therein they imitated. The Centuriators in 3. Cent. Hame Cyprian as superstitious in that point; and in their 2 Cent. say, that S. Irenaeus and Ignatius though disciples of the apostles, were dangerously erroneous in that account. Sebastianus Francus in his epistle de abrogandis in universum omnibus statutis ecclesiasticis affirms, that presently after the apostles times, the supper of our Lord was turned into a sacrifice, Andreas Chrastovius in his book de opificio missae, charges the most, ancient fathers with using a propitiatory sacrifice. And our own Ascham in his Apologet. pro coena Domini, is found to acknowledge, that sacrifice for the dead and living is so ancient in the Christian Church, that no beginning of it can be found: although he thinks also with Calvin, that it was derived, whensoever it first began, from the custom either of the Jews or Gentiles, or both; thus bespattering with his rash pen the very first sproutings of Christianity in the world. However it is in the mean time no novelty at least. And let any one in any age of Christianity look all over the Christian world, on any of those who profess that name, whether they kept communion with the Roman Church, or broke by schism from it, or perhaps never heard of it, as they say the Church in Ethiopia did not, and he shall find that they all had this Christian sacrifice amongst them, as the great capital work of their Religion. The Grecians under their Patriarch of Constantinople even still after their schism have their Priests celebrating in all their ancient robes this their sacred liturgy to this day in the learned greek tongue all over the world where they live, and may serve God, not only in Greece, Epirus, Macedon and islands of the Egoean sea, but in many parts of Anatolia, Circassia, Russia, Thrace, Bulgaria, Rascia, Servia, Bosnia, Walachia, Moldavia, Dalmatia, Croatia, Thracia, and up as far North as Trebisond. The Assyrians or Melchites, who are under the Archbishop of Damascus, whom they entitle Patriarch of Antioch: The Georgians that dwell between the Euxin and Caspian sea, under their Metropolitan who resides in the monastery of S. Catherine in Mount Sinai. The Circassians that live between them and the river Tanais: The Muscovites or Russians, under the primate of Moscow: The Nestorians dispersed up and down in Assyria, Mesopotamia, Parthia, Media even to Cataia and India, under their Patriarch residing either in Muzal, or the monastery of S. Ermes fast by it. The Indians or Christians of S. Thomas, about the cities of Coulan and Maliapar, Angamal and Cochin under their own archbishop, who is subject to the patriarch of Muzal, or patriarch of Babylon, as they call him: The Jacobites in Cyprus, Syria, Mesopotamia, and Palestin, under their patriarch resident in Caramit metropolis of Mesopotamia, or else in the monastery of S. Saphran near the city Merdin: The Cophti, or Christians of Egypt, subject to the patriarch of Alexandria: The Habassins or midland Ethiopians under their own patriarch or Abuna, who is ever a monk of S. Antony's order, consecrated for them by the patriarch of Alexandria: The Armenians, on this side and beyond Eaphrates, under their two patriarches, resident, one of them in Mitilene, or else in the city of Sis, not far from Tarsus in Cilicia, the other in Sebastia, or else in the monastery of ●●meazin: The Maronites resident in mount Libanus, under their patriarch, who is ever a monk, and resides either in Tripoli, or in the great monastery of S. Antony: All these, although many of them fell away long since from ecclesiastic uni●y upon their dislike of the Council of Ephesus and Chalcedon, where one person and two natures in Christ was declared, and others of them upon other such like occasion, yet do they still keep up all of them, their monasteries, altars, priesthood, sacred ordination, messach, and ancient Christian Liturgy. Nor do they know any other way of serving or appeasing the Almighty in order to heavenly bliss, than this propiatory sacrifice, which received from their forefathers they practise and exercise to this day. And this was ever the great devotion of all Christians, and still is, excepting only some few here in the North who have gone out of that primitive Christianity, the last age, by following the unhappy steps of Luther and Calvin; and not all of them neither. For Luther, although he fouled, yet did he not throw down the altar: and the pure Lutherans that be yet in Germany, Denmark and Sweathland, keep it up still. Thus Sir have other Protestants admitted all that to be ancient, which this your Dissuader calls a novelty unheard of in ancient times. Nay Luther and Calvin esteemed all Popery an old Egyptian darkness spread over the face of the Church all ages since the Apostles daves, and dissipated at length by that new light which they revealed. It is a strange thing that Popery which in Luther and calvin's days was old, should now after a hundred years be grown young again. But when Protestancy was new, than Popery was old; and now Popery must be thought new, when Protestancy is grown old and rotten. Truth is, it was the Minister's advantage, to acknowledge Popery to be old, when and where Catholic Religion spread all over the earth, had all her monuments entire by her, to show her antiquity to all people then living; who had also heard of the Catholic saith of their ancestors; although they made it by slight of fallacious oratory erroneous. But here and now in England, where all those monuments are destroyed, it is a double convenience to say, that Popery is erroneous and new too. When the first Reformers endeavoured to supplant the Catholic professors of their means and livings, it was best to accuse them of old errors. But now to keep their livings they have invaded, it is a wiser part it seems, to inveigh against Popery as a novelty. There novelty could no way be proved; and here in England antiquity cannot easily be shown Then matter of fact would have disproved novelty; now matter of fact will not prove antiquity here in this Kingdom, where the ancient religion is abrogated about a hundred years ago, and people now alive that behold Protestancy, never saw Catholic Religion, and are almost persuaded by their ministers there was never any such thing here. Nor will people read Catholic authors, nor believe them if they do; nor have they power to consider who built all their Churches, or made their laws, or any other good thing done for them by Catholic believers, but take all Papists to be in a manner Atheists, because they come not to hear their ministers talk in those Churches from whence poor Catholics were first solemnly banished; and then within a while after were punished for not coming there; at such a time, when their altar, sacrifice and priesthood were now abolished, and their priests put to death, and others made liable to it afterwards, when ever they should come into those Churches again to do their functions; and ministers had got into their places to rail against them and that holy ancient Religion, which had built those Churches to their hands. There is I think no better way imaginable to discover the nature of the ancient Christian Church, than by considering what was said to be her belief and practice then, when first she dared to show her face openly in the world, appearing at length as it were from under ground and her former lurking condition, wherein she had remained three hundred years under the cruel persecution of Pagan Emperors. As soon as Constantin the Great, God's heavenly grace so moving him, had first taken this holy Church by the hand, and clothed her with her ornaments of peace, then surely she would appear herself. And what she was then, may be easily gathered by such ancient writers, who either purposely spoke of the life of Constantin, or incidentally of the things which were done in those days, as Eusebius, Zozomen, S. Jerom, Bede, and others; who deliver us the form and features of the Christian Church in those times, so like unto the Popery that is now adays, after thirteen or fourteen hundred years, both in the particulars Dr. Taylor speaks of, and several others now canceled by our Protestant Reformation; that a man may safely swear, that the now present Popery and old Christianity are one and the same thing. Eusebius tells us, how Constantin the Emperor after the fashion of those good times, chastised his own body with fasting and disciplines; how he used to bless himself, and sign his face with the sign of the Cross; how highly he honoured and set up that triumphal ensign, having confidence of victory in virtue thereof; how he erected illustrious temples in memory of the Christian martyrs; how he refused to sit down in the general Council of Nice, till the Prelates there had given their consent; how he dedicated a sumptuous Church in memory of the apostles, and provided there a sepulchre for himself, to the end that after his death he might be partaker of the prayers there offered; how he assembled the priests to the dedication of his temple, whereof some preached, others offered sacrifice for the common peace, for the Church of God, and for the Emperor; and lastly how in his sickness he confessed his sins in a chapel of the martyrs, and prayer and sacrifice made for his soul after his deceas. Zozomen in his history tells us also of him, that because those primitive Christians used consecrated places and only then for their public Liturgy, Constantin had ever carried with him in the camp a portable altar and tabernacle, and priests and deacons' attending it, for celebration of divine mysteries; how much also he honoured the holy monk S. Anthony for the great austerities of his life; how he would have all conciliar decisions to be regarded as most sirm and unalterable; and that he would not undertake the judgement of ecclesiastical causes; and that he had great veneration for the sign of the Cross. These and such like things speaks Zozomen. So likewis, that Churches and Altars were consecrated in the time of Constantin the Great, with the sign of the Cross and sprinkling of holy water amongst other Catholic rites and ceremonies, is witnessed by S. Austin and S. Bede. That Constatin the Emperor translated to Constantinople the holy relics of S. Andrew, S. Luke, and S. Timothy, at which the devils even audibly yelled and roared out, is asserted by S. Jerom. That the Emperor in all his glory went to kiss the Martyr's Sepulchers, humbly praying those Saints, that they would be intercessoars to God for him, is told us by S. Chrysostom. And lastly, that in Constantins' days the Pope's authority was acknowledged and reverenced, is apparent by the great Synod of Arles then celebrated, who decreeing that Easter should be uniformly kept, entreated Pope Sylvester, to direct his letters according to the Church's custom all the world over for that end. Nay, the Century writers of Magdeburg, enemies of the Catholic Church, and so renowned Protestants, that they have been styled by their followers, Men worthy of eternal memory, even these do write of Constantin, (though with a design to diminish his honour) that he appointed a great holiday for the temples dedication, which we in English call a Wake: that he favoured consecrations and superstitious exornations of Churches; that he with other Christians in those times met for God's service only in consecrated places: that he would have candles to burn in Churches in the day time; that superstitiously he sent to Constantinople some relics of the Cross found by his mother Helena, for the prefervation of the City; that in Constantins' time pilgrimages were much in use, and that his mother Helena went to the holy land to worship: that Priests were forbid to marry by the Synod of Arles, in the time of Emperor Constantin and Pope Sylvester: that both under Constantin and long before his time were both Monks and Nuns spread all over Asia, Syria, Palestin, Egypt, Bythinia, etc. that Constantin did so reverence Bishops, that he would not sit amongst them in the Nicen Council, but in a lower seat: That the said Emperor checked Akesius for denying Priests to have power of forgiving sins, bidding him set up a ladder for himself, and go up to heaven his own way all alone: and lastly, that after his death they poured out tears and prays every where for the Emperors soul. And other Protestant writers many of them since, as Napper for example in an English treatise upon the Revelations, and Frigivillaeus in a latin one called Palma Christiana, dedicated to Queen Elizabeth, convinced by so palpable testimonies every where obvious, acknowledge the Christian Church in Constantins' time to have been wholly Papistical. After the year of God three hundred, saith Napper, the Emperor Constantin subjugated all Christian Churches to Pope Sylvester, from which time till these our days the Pope and his Clergy have possessed the outward visible Church. And Frigivillaeus in his wrath calls thereupon the noble Emperor Constantin, the great Dragon who gave power to the Beast. Take it all in their own words. Thus Eusebius; Ab omni licentiâ & vitae luxu diffluente sese vocavit, inediâ & corporis afflictione seipsum coercuit imperator, l. 2. de vitâ Constantini, c. 14. Atque interdum vultum salutari illâ signavit not â, l. 3. c. 2. Imperator triumphale signum honoravit: and again, In qua parte istud crucis vexillum visum fuit, hosts fugam capere, victores persequi. Quâ re intellect â imperator sicubi partem aliquam sui exercitus languentem cernebat, ibi salutare illud vexillum tanquam quoddam subsidium ad victoriam obtinendam locari mandavit, cujus adjumentis extemplò parta est victoria: quip dimicantium vires divina quadam potenti â suere admodum confirmatae, l. 2. c. 7. Civitatem multis templis in honorem martyrum illustrissimisque aedibus sacris adornavit, l. 3. c. 47. cum parva quaedam sella ex auro fabrificata illi esset loco posita, non prius consedit quam episcopi ad id annuissent, l. 3. c. 10. Apostolorum templum ad perpetuam illorum memoriam conservandam aedificare caepit, l. 4. c. 58. In oportunum ventura mortis diem hic locum sibi provida dispensatione designavit, ut defunctus quoque precationum, quae ibidem essent ad apostolorum gloriam offerendae, particeps efficeretur, l. 4. c. 60. Sacerdotes alii qui horum nihil poterant efficere, incruentis consecrationibus divinum numen placabant, & supplices Deo preces offerebant pro communi pace, pro ecclesia Dei, ipsoque imperatore, l. 4. c. 45. Humi procumbens genibus in ipsa martyrum aede errata sua confessus est, etc. Adhuc quidem licet contemplari ter beatae animae tumulum divinis ceremoniis & mystico sacrificio sanctarumque precationum societate perfrui, l. 4. c. 61. 71. Thus Zozomen; Tabernaculum ecclesiae figuram exprimens, cum contra hostes praelio contenderet, secum circumferre consuevit imperator Constantinus ad eum sinem, uti neque sibi in soiitudine agenti neque exercitui deesset aedes sacra, etc. Sacerdotes & diaconi tabernaculum assiduè secuti sunt, l. 1. c. 8. Antonium magum illum monachum in solitudinibus AEgypti magnâ cum nominis & famae celebritate vitam degentem Constantinus imperator propter ejus virtutis splendorem sibi amicum fecit, literas honorificè scriptas ad eum misit, l. 1. c. 13. Jussit Constantinus, ut Conciliorum decisiones firmae & immutabiles existerent, l. 1. c. 9 Mihi verò non est fas, cum homo sim, ejusmodi causarum cognitionem arrogare, l. 1. c. 16. Sanctae cruci plurimum tribuit honoris, tum propter subsidia in bello contra hostes gerendo ex ejus virtute sibi allatâ, tum propter divinam sibi de câ oblatam visionem, l. 1. c. 8. Thus the other Fathers; Crucis character● basilicae dedicantur, altaria consecrantur, Aug. serm. 19 de sanctis. Bed. l. 1. c. 30. l. 5. c. 4. Constantinus imperator sanctas reliquias Andreae, Lucae, & Timothei transtulit Constantinopolin, ad quas daemones rugiunt, Hieron contra Vig. Nam & ipse qui purpuram inductus est, accedit illa amplexus sepulchra, & fastu deposito stat sanctis supplicaturus, ut pro se ad Deum intercedat, Chrys. hom. 26. in ep. 2. Cor. De observatione Paschae Domini constitutum est in hac Synodo, ut uno die & tempore per omnem orbem observetur: & juxta consuetudinem, literas ad omnes Papa Sylvester tu dirigas, Conc. 1. Arelatense, can. 1. Thus the Century writers, Constantinus diem festum admodum solennem ad celebrandam dedicationem templi indixit, Cent. 4. coll. 452. Templorum recens ext●●ctorum consecrationes, exornationes superbas aliaque superstitiosa, quorum maximam partem Constantinus excegitavit, & in multas ecclesias propagavit, coll. 497. Chris●●anos in templis nondam consecratis non convenisse clarè ind●●at Athanasius, coll. 408. Accensiones candelarum interdiu in templis Constantinus instituit, coll. 497. Plane simili superstitione Constantinus reliquias quasdam de cruce ab Helenâ repert â Consantinopoli●●● dicitur transtulisse, ut esset ejus urbis conservatrix, coll. 1529. Caeperunt hoc ●oeculo primùm sub Constantino loca terrae sanctae, etc. in pretio haberi, etc. Helena mater imperatoris multer superstitiosa illuc profecta est adorandi causà, coll. 457. Secunda Synodus celebrata est Constantini imperatoris & Sylvestri tempore, etc. ubi can. 2. dicitur. Assumi aliquem ad sacerdotium, in vinculo conjugii constitutum, nisi fuerit promissa conversio, non oportet, coll. 704. Fuisse etiam ante Constantinum virgins seu mulieres continentes & ●astitatem perpetuam professas ex libro quarto Fusebii de vita Constantini apparet; ubi magnopere approbasse disciplinam ejusmodi imperatorem Constantinum affirmat; adeo ut frequenter corum contubernium adierit. Helenam vero Constantini matrem Hierosolymis virgines Deo sacras reperisse Socrates testatur, quarum professionem usque adeo probarit, ut ministram illis sese praebuerit, coll. 467. Monachi per Syriam, Palestinam, Bythiniam, & reliqua Asiae loca sub Constantino magno, coll. 1294. Notum est quam reverentiam & observantiam episcopis habuerit Constantinus in Synodo Nicaena; ubi nec consedere prius quam episcopi annuissent, voluit, coll. 460. Ad poenitentiam admoneri homines, spem verò remissionis non à sacerdotibus sed ab ipso Deo expectare, etc. cum haec dixisset Acesius, subjunxit imperator, P●ne scalam o Acesi, & solus ascend in coelum, coll. 653. Turba frequens preces cum fictu pro anima imperatoris fudit, coll. 454. Thus Frigivillaeus Gauvius, Constantinus t●●buit Romano episcopo primatum a●te omnes. And again, Ex eo apparet satale suisse, ut Constantinus daret potestatem bestiae, quam statim ●ulius exercuit. Nam etiam Constantinus magnus ferebat arma draconis in insignis suis, etc. ita ut ipse sit draco, qui dedit potestatem bestiae, & typus draconis serpentis antiqui, Apoc. 13. qui bestiae po●estatem dedit. These words are in his Palma, p. 34. And the same Centurists, learned and indastrious Protestants, do manifesty acknowledge, although they also dislike it, even in that fourth age above thirteen hundred years ago, when the Christian Church first lift up her head in the world, all in a manner practices, belief and rites yet held in the Roman Church, and utterly now abolished by the Protestant reformation, as then in vogue amongst the prelate's and people of those times: for example, the Primacy of the bishop of Rome deduced by divine right from that of S. Peter, coll. 515. 551. 556. 458. the single life of Priests, 616. 486. the sumptuousness of consecrating Churches and celebrating Masses in hallowed places, 497. the rites used in ordination of deacons', subdeacons', acolytes, exorcists, readers, doorkeepers, and in the unction and consecration, of Priests, 873 & 874. 435. ecclesiastical vestments, the alb, the stole, Dalmatick, cope, mitre, 504. 876. 835. saying of prayers upon little stones or beads, coll. 1329. worshipping and estimation of the Cross, 302. praying towards the East, 432. canonical hours, 433. matin's in the night, 459. solemn funeral rites and prayer for the souls of the deceased, 453, 454, 455. Priest's blessing of the bride and bridegroom after marriage, 453. prohibition of marriage as well as eating of flesh in Lent, 453. 441. consecration of monks and monastertes, 466. vowed chastity, poverty and abstinence, anchorets, hermits, their cells and austerity of life, 470. 488. 300, 301. 471. 474. Images in the Church, and candles there burning in the day time, 409, 410. solemn translation of Saints relics, and placing them under the altar, with pilgrimages to them, whereat sick persons were miraculously cured, 456, 457. 602. consecration of baptismal water, and confirmation by a byslop with chrism, 415. 420. 865. sign of the cross in baptism and exorcisms, 421. 417. freewill, interior justification and merit of good works, 291, 292, 293. confesston of sins to a priest, penance and absolution with imposition of hands, 425. 834. unwritten traditions, 299. invocation of Saints, 295. Purgatory, 304. altars consecrated with the sign of the cross and chrism, called the seat of Christ's body and blood, 409. real presence and transubstantiation, 209. 985. the reservation of that sacrament, and offering it up a sacrifice to God propitiatory both for the living and dead, 427. 430. 985. chalice, cover and holy vessels which lay people might not touch, 490. 835. mixtur of water with wine in the chalice, in time of consecration, 480. In a word; all things which the Roman Catholic Church now beleeus and practices contrary to themselves are acknowledged by those learned Protestants in that fourth age to be so spread over the face of Christianity, that many others of the same belief with them have not feared to say, that the Church in those days, when she first lift up her head in the world, was Antichristian and Papistical. Popery then is no such novelty, as Dr. Taylor imagines, or would have us at least imagine it to be. The dissuasives second Chapter. That the Church of Rome uses doctrines and practices that are directly or by consequent impions, and give warranty to a wicked life. IS declared in 12. Sections. For the Roman doctrine teaches, saith he, that a sinner is not bound presently to repent, and that contrition is of itself of no value, Sect. 1. Teaches also, a confession that is frivolous, and either of ill or no consequence, sect. 2. Teaches a penance that is ineffective, sect. 3. Teaches Indulgences of no use, sect. 4. Teaches other afsertions attending hereon both falls and wicked; as that a habit of sin is no sin, and that one sin is venial, another mortal, sect. 5. Teaches, that a probable opinion may safely be followed, sect. 6. Teaches fond battologies and prayers without attention, sect. 7. Teaches prayer to dead men, sect. 8. Teaches fond and wicked exorisations and incantations, sect. 9 Teaches new Sacraments without warrant, sect. 10. Teaches image-worship against good life and virtue, sect. 11. Lastly, teaches the abuse of faith, hope, and charity. And so is demonstrated your Disswaders second plea against Papists. But to answer all this in a word, The Roman Church or Catholic faith teaches none of this. His third Chapter. That the Roman Church teaches doctrines destructive of Christian society, and monarchy. IS shown in three sections. First, she teaches it is lawful to lie and speak falsities. Secondly, she does intolerable prejudice to government by exemption of Clergy. Thirdly, subjects Princes to the Pope, and separateth