ENGLAND'S Prospective-glass: A SERMON AT A Metropolical Visitation HELD AT The Cathedral Church of CHRIST in CANTERBURY, on the 29th of April 1663. PREACHED Before the Right Reverend Father in God HENRY Lord Bishop of Chichester, the then Representative of the Most Reverend Father in God, WILLIAM, by Divine Providence Lord Archbishop of Canterbury His Grace, and of all England Primate and Metropolitan, Our Most Worthy Diocesan. By Sam. Hind, one of His Majesty's Chaplains, and present Incumbent of Saint Mary's Church in Dover, then called to attend that Service for the Three Deaneries of Dover, Bridge and Elam. JEHOVA NISSI. Writ this for a Memorial in a Book, and rehearse it in the ears of joshua: For I will utterly put out the Remembrance of Amalek from under Heaven. Ex. 17.14. LONDON, Printed by J. Redmayne for John Crook at the Sign of the Ship in Saint Paul's Churchyard. 1663. Imprimatur. Geo. straddling S. T.P.Rev. in Christo Pat. D. Gilb. Episc. Lond. à Sac. Domestic. Ex Aed. Sabaud. Maii 14. 1663. TO THE Right Reverend Father in God HENRY Lord Bishop of CHICHESTER. MY LORD, YOur Lordship was then in the Archi-Episcopal Throne when I was in the Pulpit preaching the following Sermon, and became the Grand Exemplar of Attention to that great Confluence both of Clergy and Laity then present; What was then (though with much weakness) offered to Your Ear, is now with all becoming and imaginable Humility presented to Your Eye. I make my Address to Your Lordship at this time Instar Omnium, because at that time Your Lordship was more than Yourself, and in all Capacities fit to Patronise what now flies to Your umbrage for Shelter. In the ensuing Tract, Your Lordship will find I have ransacked Gods dreadful Artillery, and planted many rending and roaring Cannons against spiritual Wickedness then reigning and raging in High Places. None I hope will say, (as Laertius of the Writings of Chrysippus) I have taken up all that came in my way, since the Margin is able to make good the Text, and declare I have meddled with nothing but what was Analogical and Suitable to it; and yet with so much, that as Apollodorus the Athenian said of the same Chrysippus his Writings, If (the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) all were taken out that was not mine own, there would be much blank in this little Sermon. If the good People of the Land shall be bettered in their Devotion by the perusal of it, O well is me and happy shall I be! If any shall shuffle themselves out, because I have left them out in the Application, as unwilling either Pulpit or Press should remonstrate (I hope) their Forgiven Crimes both in Religion and Loyalty, I have but the same success the Prophet Isaiah compained of, Domine quis credidit Auditui nostro? Lord, who hath believed our Report, or to whom is the Arm of the Lord revealed? But, did I say Forgiven Crimes? I could wish it were so, even now when I labour under a godly Jealousy that it may be otherwise; Because the Whoredoms of their Mother Jezabel and their Witchcrafts are yet so many, The Lowing of the Oxen and the the Bleating of the Sheep is as loud as ever, Their Murmur and Complotting against David on the Throne, and Abiathar at the Altar declare it; The very show of their Countenances witness against them, Their Illegal and Schismatical Conventions publish it; Yea, their public and professed Disobedience to most Laws and Sanctiòns, holy and humane, do proclaim a Nolumus hunc regnare against their King, and a Nolumus scientiam Viarum tuarum against their God. We endeavour to draw them (as the Prophet Hosea says) with the Cords of a man, and the bands of Love, but our Cords are to weak, they snap them in pieces, as Samson did the Cords of the Philistims; nor must we ever expect a better return from the best of them, than Olympias had for Eurydice, who presented her with a Triple choice of a Sword, a Halter, or a Cup of Poison. By Your Lordship's leave, I declare to the world a known Truth, that I can show under the hand of a great Sectary, in a Letter written to myself, then going Commissioner to the Isle of Man; Anno 1661. in the behalf of some of them in that Island, that they call themselves, The elect and precious People of God, The Stone cut out of the Mountains, The same Stone which the Builders refused, with many such blasphemous Interjections in that Paper. Yet three of these were then presented in the Ecclesiastical Court (I being then Judge) two for Adultery, and one for Fornication. When Democritus had declared his opinion of a sort of men, that they were Good, and Just, and Sober, a By-stander said, Heu me miserum, quod nec uno quidem adhuc sum potitus! So for my part I could never find wherein lay the excellency of these People that so much and so loudly sound forth their own praises. This I do, that no Obligation will bind, no Friendship oblige them: The Friendship of Zenocrates was not to be purchased by Alexander; Amicitiam emere vero voluit, Philosophus vendere noluit. They are not unlike Phaonius in Plutarch, Bold and Barbarous. Take measure of them by their Loyalty to their KING their Nursing-Father, and among thousands you will not find a Craterus, or an Hephaestion, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that loves either the King in His Person, or the King in His Government, but are as ready as ever to slander the Footsteps of the Lords Anointed. And if you measure them by their Obedience to the CHURCH their Aged Mother, Malitia eorum excaecavit eos; their Hatred towards Her is like the Vestal Fires, inexstinguishable: For to set up a Capitol of their own Imaginations, they would destroy all the Churches of God in the Land. Inter haec quid agamus? Among all these Revolted Schismatics, what can the poor Ministers do, whose Flocks are (like Adonis' Gardens) beset and hedged with these Thorns and Briars of Contention? Only pray, That God would still the raging of this Sea and madness of this People; and in the mean time fly as I do now to a Gospel Remedy, Dic Ecclesiae. The Great and Good God put it into the hearts of that Great Renowned Assembly to provide some seasonable Remedy against the growth of this pestilent Contagion,— Ne pars sincera trahatur. And the same God subdue these incorrigible People to himself in Obedience, to themselves in Humility, to their King (Our Most Gracious Sovereign) in Loyalty, to the Church in Duty, to the World in Peace and Unity; that that may be true of them which Livy says of Val. Flaccus, Quantum prius Luxuriae exemplum fuerat, tantum postea Modestiae & Sanctitatis specimen evasit: And as they have given up their members instruments of unrighteousness unto sin; so they may give up themselves instruments of Righteousness unto Holiness. My LORD, I have transgressed the Rule of Phocion's Orator Verborum paucitate, being carried away (as with a violent and rapid Tide) Rerum magnitudine. Much being said in a little room, as to the Thing; and too much (I fear) only as to Your Lordships Concerns: For which (as before I craved Your Patronage, so now) I most humbly crave Your Lordship's Pardon; and (forasmuch as the Less is blessed of the Greater) Your Blessing and Benediction upon (My LORD) A true Son of the Church, and a devoted Servant of Your Lordships, SAM. HIND. From my Study in Dover, May 8. 1663. England's Prospective-glass: being a Sermon at a Metropolitical Visitation, held at the Cathedral Church of Christ in Canterbury, on the 29th. of April 1663. Hosea ix. 7. The days of Visitation are come; The days of Recompense are come; Israel shall know it. The Prophet is a Fool; the Spiritual man is mad; For the multitude of thine Iniquity, Great is the Hatred. RIght Reverend; Reverend and Beloved; Men, Brethren and Fathers; For the hope of Israel 's sake I stand here this day; Acts. 22.1. And as Saint Paul said to his Agrippa, Act. 28.20. Act. 26.2. I think myself happy to stand here before you in this Metropolitical Church; which, among other Churches, Act. 26.2. Psal. 54.13. jude 5.20. Act. 13.44. is like the King's Daughter among other Women, more Glorious. In this Assembly, composed of so many Glorious Stars, that each in their order fight against Cicera; In this City, where there are Some of many, though not of every Nation under Heaven; and especially upon this occasion, which I may call the Church's Resurrection after a tedious Ilyad of affliction, her glorious Triumphs after her bloody Vespers; Isai. 60.1. when the Sons of them that have afflicted her do come bending unto her, and they that despised her fall down at the soles of her feet. She that was afflicted and tossed with Tempests, Isai. 54.11. Act. 27.8. Isai. 60. is now arrived at the fair Havens; She that was forsaken and hated, is made an Eternal Glory, and the joy, I hope, of many Generations. It was not long since we might have complained with the Church of old, Lam. 4.3. Nudaverunt Lamiaes mammas, We had no suck but of the breasts of Dragons: But now, blessed be God, we suck the breasts of Kings; Isai. 60.16. The Lord is our Saviour; and our Redeemer, the mighty God of jacob. It was not above a few years since Those, Acts. 27.6. that with Jason and his Confederates turned the World upside down, had dealt with our Religion as Lycurgus did with his Country Coins; Plutarch. or as Rehoboam did with his Father's shields; 1 Chro. 12.10. Turned our Gold to Brass, our Religion to Rebellion, our Faith to Faction: But now our Brass is turned to Gold, Isai. 60.17, 18, etc. our Iron to Silver, and our Stones to Iron. Instead of Violence and Desolation, we have now Salvation for Walls and Bulwarks. It is not many Months since the Lying Spirit in the mouth of some of England's Prophets, 1 Kings 22.22. and Spiritual men, told the Nation, Isai. 28.15. Psal. 126.1 That these days of Visitation would never come, That these days of Recompense should not come nigh them: To them and to the amazed World, (in this miraculous and stupendious change) I bring my Text to speak, and speak in Thunder. THe Days of Visitation Are come, Text. The Days of Recompense are come: Israel shall know it, and know withal, Those Prophets were Fools, and those Spiritual men were mad. First to deceive Themselves, and then the People, and in the end to Destroy both; like Dragons sucking the blood of Elephants, Plin. lib. 7. which Pliny says, bring ruin to both the Dragon and the Elephant. Rebellion is ever of the nature of the Aspigo-Gorgon, a Serpent in Egypt, that when it hath lived a while on the destruction of others, at last it destroys itself. For this the Floodgates of God's indignation were opened upon them, and it burst out in a full Torrent in these words of my Text: The days of Visitation are come, etc. Three things I humbly offer to your Consideration, from the Text. 1. To look upon it in reference to the Context; That's our Retrospect. 2. To take a view of the words themselves; That's our Prospect. 3. To apply the Historical and Doctrinal part thereof to our present Purpose, which is the End of all Sermons, and the Queen of all Ends: Herein God's glory is most concerned, Because hereby God's People are best edified. I begin with the First General, 1 Retrospection. and take up the Particulars in our passage through the Whole. 1 Cor. 15.23. They will arise to us this day, as we ourselves shall at the last day, every one in his Order. Aaron was distinguished from other Men by his Apparel, Ex. 28.4. and therefore called, Merubba Begadim, Multiplicatus Vestibus, the man with many Clothes; he had his Ephod, his Breastplate, Mitre, Girdle, his Pallium, his Plate of Gold. Philc. jud. The Ephod was made up of variety of Colours; in which Aaron represented the whole World, all States and Conditions of Men, all Variety and Sorts of Sins: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All are represented in this Text as it stands in reference to the Context. In contemplation of their number I may say of them as Lea said of Gad, Behold a Troop cometh. Gen 30.11. In every Chapter you have a black and dreadful Catalogue; and in this Text you have the several parcels summed up to a multitude: For the Multitude of thine Iniquity, Great is the Hatred. God had drawn them with the cords of a Man, Hof. 11.4. and with the bands of Love; He had miraculously preserved them, Psal. 78.13. with the Rocks of Water in the Sea, and with the Seas of Water from the Flinty Rocks; He made the Sun to stand still in his course, that they might go on with Theirs; He multiplied Visions and Similitudes, Hos. 12.10. Neh. 9.26. Ps. 107.11. Deut. 32.15. Hosea 9.1. Psal. 78.8. 2. Chron. 11.1. jer. 7.9. Amos 3.10. Rom. 3.2. 1. King 12.31. Hos. 8.12. Mich. 6.16. 1 King. 15.34. 1 King. 12.29. 1 King. 12.16. Amos 4.4. Hos. 12.11. Hos 9.9. tried all ways, easy and difficult, by his own Prophets; But yet for all this they rebelled against him; and instead of being a Jesurun, a Righteous people, They, like to Jesurun in the worst sense, lightly esteemed of the God of their Salvation: and preferred Fools and Mad men, such as led them into Idolatry, Rebellion, Treason, Murders, Rapine, Robbery, Schism, Heresy, Apostasy, before Isaiah, Hosea, Amos, Joel, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, who were entrusted, and to whom was concredited the Oracular Truhs of Heaven, and preached and prophesied to them at the samettimes; and then when they made to themselves Priests, of the lowest of the People, the Law of God was accounted to them as a strange thing; The Statutes of Omri, which taught them to work Mischief by a Law, were preferred before the Statutes and the Hests of Heaven; And Jeroboam the Son of Nebat that made Israel to sin, and set up his Calves in Dan and Bethel, before Rehoboam their native King and Sovereign. Thus they multiplied their Transgressions at Gilgal, and their Altars as the Furrows of the Field. Profunde peccaverunt sient in diebus Gibeah: They have deeply sinned as in the days of Gibeah. Why, what days were those? Answ. Those very days when there was no King in Israel, when Fecit quisque, judges 17.6. when every Man did what seemed good in his own eyes; and when every thing that was Bad seemed Good; whole Floods of Disorder, and Seas of Confusion in Church and State, had now deluged all the Territories of Israel. The Idolatries of Micah, Bishop An. the Burglaries and Robberies of Dan, the Adulteries and Murders of Gibeah, Micah a private Man, judg. 17.1. Ephraim a public Court, Gibeah a thronged City, judg. 20.4. and Dan a glorious Tribe. Micah at Mount Ephraim at the middle of the Land, Gibeah at one end, and Dan at the other, all wrapped up in the same disorder and confusion. 2 Sam. 20.1. And who were the Sheba's that blew these Trumpets of Rebellion; Gen. 38.29. who the Pharez that made such wide and rude Breaches in the Church's sides. But the great pretender to Prophecy, the only Spirit-Mongers, Text. Hos. 13.16. Haba. 1.11. the Spiritual Men of time, such as endeavoured to bring even God himself into their Conspiracies. It was those days of Confusion that brought in these days of Visitation. It was those Men of whom my Text declares; The Prophet is a Fool, the Spiritual Man is mad. Jer. 5.9. And now shall not God visit for these things, shall not his soul be avenged on such a Nation as this; yea, he takes the Rod in his Hand, Psal. 89.32. Isa. 28.18. Isa. 28.14. and Catechises them. What? did your Prophet's covenant with Death and Hell? did they make a scorn of my Judgements, and bear you in hand, that the days of Visitation should never come? that Prophet is a Fool. Jer. 5.12, 13. Did your Spiritual Men tell you the days of recompense would not come nigh in your days and time: I tell you, Ezek. 13.10. your Spiritual Men are mad: For both Deus & Dies visitationis, the God of vengeance for which you never cared, and the Day of vengeance which you never feared, are come upon you as a Thief in the night; 1 Thes. 5.2. Luke 4.21. Text. and this day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears, The days of visitation are come, the days of recompense are come, and Israel shall know it both by their own and Prophet's ruin. Vers. 1.2, 3, 4, 6, 7, etc. What it is to change Joy into Mourning, Abundance into Scarcity, Cleanness to Filthiness, Religion to Idolatry, numerous Armies into a Kibroth-hattaavah, Graves of Lust, days of Triumph to days of Vengeance, days of Sinning to days of Recompense, of Knowledge to Ignorance, Wise Men to Fools, sober Men to mad Men, and Purity and Goodness to Iniquity and Hatred. For this ten fold prevarication they stand indicted in this Chapter and Text, sins which I do but touch I cannot stand to handle. And so from the sins committed by them, I come to the judgements inflicted on them; from the Retrospect to the Prospect: 2. Part. The days of visitation are come, etc. The visitations of Heaven are multifarious; and our God sometimes visits in Person, Hab. 3.3. Mat. 25.36. sometimes by Proxy: In Heaven he overlooks the Royal Orders and Armies of those Lights and Lamps of Glory, in their great and numberless variety: Psal. 65, 9 In Earth he visits several Persons, Parishes, Provinces, Kingdoms, Nations. He visits the Sons of Men, Psal. 106.4. sometime in mercy, to deliver them from their Vassalage and Slavery, from their Bondage and Captivity; So he visited Israel, Visitans Visitars, when he delivered them from the Amonite, ●o●d. 3.16. etc. whose height was as the height of Cedars, Amos 2.9. and the strength as the strength of Oakes. He visits the souls of Men by his Spirit, conveying through the Conduits of his mercy a thousand sweet influences of Grace and Piety, Acts 15.14. of Peace and Pardon in Christ Jesus Oriens ex alto, Zach. 3.8. Luke 1.78. ib. ver. 68 By his word. the dayspring from on high visits us, and gives a rice to that gratulatory Song of Zachary, Blessed be the Lord of Israel, for he hath visited and redeemed his people. 1 Cor. 11.24. Luke 22.19 1 Sam. 9.9. 2. By his Word and Sacraments in the Persons of those he calls Seers in the old Testament, and Overseers in the New. To these he gives a Faculty to cure the Blind, those that are born and bred in Blindness, Ignorance, and Superstition, and to open their Eyes with their Spiritual Eyesalve; Acts 20.28. Luke 14.13 Rev. 3.18. Acts 3.21, 22. 1 King. 18.21. By his Sacraments. D.D. Mat. 28.19.24. Psal. 80.14. 1 Cor. 11. to make the Deaf to hear, by thundering out the terrors of his Law, and the Dumb to speak, and speak loud and plain of the Gracious Promises of his Gospel; the Lame to walk, those that halt between two Opinions, are set right and strait by application of this Balm; he visits the hereditary Leper by our ministration in Baptism, the customary Leper in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper, washing us from Original, and cleansing us from our actual transgression. And all these are merciful and gracious visitations. But if these will not prevail, he knows how to shift Scenes, to turn over another Leaf, and to visit us after another manner. First our sins in Anger, and call us to account for all our licentious back-slidings, as holy Job speaks, Job 35.15. Secondly, Job 35.15. ourselves in Thunder, as the Prophet Isaiah says, Isa. 29.6. Thou shalt be visited of the Lord with thunder, and shaking and a great noise, a whirlwind, and a tempest, and a devouring fire. But alas! we are never able to stand out such a terrible visitation as this is. For as the same Prophet, Isa. 33.14. Who can stand before the devouring fire, and dwell before everlasting burning? Thirdly, Our posterity in punishment. Exod. 20.5. Now every punishment is a visitation, and the grievousness of a punishment is measured out by the greatness and extent of it; as here where God visits the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children to the third and fourth Generation, etc. But this is still with temporal punishments: OBS.! For as no Child can be saved by his Father's goodness, so shall never any be damned for his Father's wickedness. And now I see not why the Prophet might not take in all these three visitations, (those of mercy being neglected) and by conference of Scripture with Scripture, of Prophet with Prophet. It is very clear that God visits their sins in Anger, for they provoked him to anger with their Images, and in the furiousness of his anger he sent evil Angels among them. Psal. 78.50. and 58.1 Sam. 7.10.1 Sam. 12.18. Secondly, Themselves in thunder; So says Samnel, The Lord thundered with a great thunder: And the Lord sent thunder and rain; so that their Cattle were destroyed with Hail, and their Flocks with hot thunderbolts. Thirdly, Their posterity in punishment; so in the Verse before my Text, for those that were already born, Hos. 9.6. Egypt shall gather them, and Memphis shall bury them: And for the hopes of a future Progeny, that they may be wholly defeated of that; Give them: What wilt thou give them? Vers. 12. A miscarrying Womb, and dry Breasts, Verse 14. Vers. 14. Though they bring up Children, I will deprive them from being Men, woe unto them when I depart from them, Verse 12. I and woe when I come near them in any of these visitations, upon their sins themselves and their Posterity. And under All these dreadful Visitations did Israel groan and grieve, All those made up one Woe; a Bitter Pill for Israel to swallow, how fair soever it may seem to be Guilded under The Days of Visitation. That one Woe being past, Rev. 9.12. but Behold another is at hand; The days of Recompense are come; which is the second Branch of the Text, and which, though I sever from the other in the Paraphrase, I shall unite them in the Doctrinal and Applicatory part. The Prophet Jeremiah styles God the God of Recompense, jer. 51.36. one that will maintain his Cause with vengeance; and proportion that vengeance and recompense, to sins of his Adversaries. Eastern and Western Babylon, Real and Mystical, That of Caldea, and that of Italy shall find that true; That God shall reward her as she hath served us. Rev. 18.5, 6. Hosea in the Person of Christ, and Hosea signifies a Saviour, complains that they had forsaken him, jer. 2.13. jer. 9, 13, 14. the Foountain of living Waters; and now he will make them drink of those Waters that are more bitter than the waters of Mara, more venomous than the waters of Nonacridis. Be pleased to see in these days of Recompense, Observe. How the God of all Justice does proportion their punishments according to their sins. As their sins exceeded the sins of other People, so shall their sorrows, Hos. 9.1. Hos. 9.2. ibid. v. 1. The baynes of all public Joy and Exultation are forbidden, v. 1. They have surfeited with abundance of Corn and Wine, and now God in Justice says, The Floor and Wine-press shall not feed them, verse 2. Hos. 11.12. Hos. 12.1. Verse 3. Ephraim had compassed God about with Lies in their Sin, and now God compasseth them with Lies in their punishment. For Mentietur Vinum, the Wine shall lie under her; she shall be Vitis Foliata, a Vine full of Leaves, promising fair, performing nothing, serving but for a Flourish in This life, and a Flame in the Next; According to their own ways doth he recompense them, Now Israel is an empty Vine, Hos. 10. ●…. bringing forth Fruit to himself, etc. God looked for Grapes, Hos. 12.2. Isa. 5.2. and behold wild Grapes. Now Israel and Ephraim may look for Grapes, and behold no Grapes. They would not dwell in the Lord's Land; They thought scorn of that pleasant Land, Now they shall not; Ps. 106.4. for Ephraim shall return to Egypt: And they that would not eat clean things in the Land of Palestine, Verse 3. shall eat unclean in the Land of Ashur. They drank the Wine of their Condemned in the House of their God, Amos 2.8. and now they shall not offer Wine to the Lord; Verse 4. jer. 44.19. Verse 4. Psal. 78.30. They offered Cakes in sacrifice to the Queen of Heaven; and now the Sacrifices they offer to the Lord of Heaven shall be as the Bread of Mourners, v. 4. They have too long and too often Belched forth their Lies and Blasphemies in the House of the Lord. Now God will cut off all occasions of serving him or his People so any longer; for their Souls shall not come into the House of the Lord, verse 4. They did too Little like Fools, Ib. ver. 4. and too Much like Madmen, in the day of their Trial; and now they shall do Nothing in the day of their Trouble, verse 5. Verse 5. What will ye do in the solemn day? To others it shall be a Festival, to you a Funeral. They have set up Kings, but not by me; Hos. 8.4. But now instead of Kings, Tyrants shall rule over them. They prided themselves in the strength of Ephraim; the strength and number of the revolted Tribes; Now Ne glorientur in multitudine Filiorum. Egypt shall gather them, Memphis shall-bury them, Verse 13. and Ephraim shall bring forth Children for the Murderer. They had contributed their Jewels and Earrings of Gold to the setting up of their Golden Calf, Ex. 32.2, 3. and now Desiderabile Argentum, Hos. 9.6. Vrtica haereditabit Lappa in Tabernaculis eorum; The Nettle, that That shall sting and trouble, they shall possess the pleasant Places, Vita Ciceronis. and the Thorn shall be in their Tabernacles. So that now Israel is like Archimedes' Tomb visited by Cicero, which he found overgrown with Thorns and Nettles: And as they have done, so God hath rewarded them, judges 1.7. as Adonibezeck said; All these Instances you have in the Verses before my Text. To them I could add, as belonging to the same Story too, That as they have sown Wind, they have reaped the Whirlwind. At Best Ephraim was but as a Cake half baked, Hos. 7.8. Hos. 8.7. Hos. 8.9. Rev. 3.16. jer. 13.27. and at Last God spewed them out of his mouth. As Before they neighed (like pampered Horses) after forbidden beds: so Now they walk like solitary Asses in the Wilderness, Onager sibi Ephraim solitarius; nor is it the first time a Simple Ass hath been brought in to upbraid a false or forbidden Prophet. Their Abominations were as that that they most joved, 2 Pet. 2.16. Verse 10. Verse 10. And their Punishment shall be as that that they most hated. Text. For the multitude of their Iniquity, great is the Hatred; Verse 15. and Verse 15. of this Chapter, I hate them for their Inventions; Iosh. 4.19, 20. Iosh. 5.1, to 15. Iosh. 10.6, 7. Amos 5.5. Iosh. 22. ●…. 8 I will cast them out of my House, I will love them no more, All their Princes are Rebels; What would no place but Gilgal and Bethel, where I have given them so many signal Favours, serve them to multiply their Idolatry, to vent they r Foolery, to Act their mad Pranks in? why now Gilgal shall go into Captivity, and Bethel shall come to nought. What would no Iniquity but that of Peor serve them for a Precedent? And could they find none so fit Panders for their Impiety as the Prophet, and the Spiritualman? Go tell that Prophet He is a Fool, and Those Spiritual men that pretend so much of the Spirit, they are Mad men; For none but Bedlamers would ever have ravelled a People so in their Religion to their God, or shaken them in their Loyalty to their King; and he that to set up a false God instead of a true, and a barbarous and bloody Tyrant, 1 King. 12.10. whose Little finger was heavier than other King's Loins, before their just and right and Lawful King and Sovereign. You counted my Prophet (says God) that was filled with my Spirit at Ramath Gilead no better Man than a Fool and a Mad man: But who is the Fool now? and who the Mad men? Let me tell you, 2 King. 9.11. and let the 16. Verse speak loud and home to those that would have an Eradication of the true Prophets, and pronounce their Neck-Verse that were for a Root and Branch-Ordinance, That they be also punished both in Root and Branch, Hos. 9.16. as V 16. Their Root is dried up, and I will yet slay the dearest of their body. And thus the days of Recompense are come. Thus God does Culpae paenam coaptare; And those Priests and Prophets, Hos. 6.8. that preached up Murder in Gilead a City of Blood, shall perish in Gilead, And bring forth Children to the Sword and Slaughter; Hos. 8.11. And as Ephraim had made many Altars to sin, so Altars shall be made to him to sin. The Scripture is full of Paradigms and Examples of this way of Proceeding, of proportioning men's punishment according to their Sin: and History abounds. The Egyptians drowned the Children in the Rivers, Ex. 1.22. Ex. 15.10. Levit. 10.1. and themselves were drowned in the Sea; They sunk like Lead in the midst of the mighty Waters. Nadab and Abihu offered a strange Fire before the Lord, Ib. ver. 2. and a strange Fire did consume those Sons of Aaron. Elimas' the Sorcerer seeks to blind the eyes of Sergins Paulus, Act. 13.8, 12. and God does blind the eyes of Elimas' the Sorcerer. The like of Haman and his Gallows. Portia begged that the cruelty of Catiline might (Crudelissimo suppliciorum genere expiari) be expiated by some of the most cruel punishments or exquisite torments that could be invented. Hist, Rom. Olympus' Bishop of Carthage blaspheming the Trinity was struck dead with a Triple Thunderbolt. Gabellicus. Maxentius was drowned by the Treachery of that Bridge which he had made to destroy Constantine and his Army: Euseb. Pontibus devolutus est quos ad religiosi Principi paraverat exitium, Euseb. Hist. Alexander the Sixth was poisoned by a Mistake with the same Cup he prepared to have poisoned his Favourite Cardinal Adrianus. Card. Baron. An. Act. 12.1, 23. But to return to Scripture, Herod's cruel Life was punished with a cruel Death; He was smitten with an Angel, and he was eaten up with Worms. judas at first had no bowels for his Master, Act. 1.18. at last he had none for himself: Viscera Pietatis non habuit, & effusa sunt omnia Viscera ejus, Carthusianus. says Carthusianus. Israel had deeply sinned as in the days of Gibeah, and Israel must be deeply punished and spoilt in the days of Recompense. Ephraim had lived upon Rapine and Spoil and Plunder; Hos. 5.1. Prov. 5.22. Hos. 10.14. They were as a Snare upon Mizpah; and spread their Nets upon Mount Tabor, Now they are taken in their own Snare, catched in their own Net, and utterly spoilt, as when Shalman spoiled Beth-Arbel; the Mother with the Children. Thus they blow Wickedness, Hos. 10.13. Ez. 22.31. Ps. 50.21. Hos. 9.7. 1 Cor. 10.6. and reaped Iniquity; Eat the fruit of their Lies, and were recompensed according to the works of their own hands. Thus has God set their sins in order, before Himself in point of Indignation, before Them in point of Punishment, before His in point of Precedent, that We lust not after evil things as they also lusted; and be destroyed as they also were destroyed. These things were done and written for our Example, Lego Historiam, ne fiam Historia. And God proceeds in this way of Recompense: 1. For his Justice-sake; Ps. 58.11. jer. 51.36. to manifest his righteous dealing and proceed, that at one time or another He will surely requite. 2. For his Servant's sake; jer. 7.12. 1 Cor. 10.12. who he would have warned by other men's Woes, and have them learn to stand by others Falls, and learn and remember what others have forgot, to walk according to the golden Rule, and do no more to others, Matt. 7.12. than we would others should do to them. 3. For his Enemy's sake; Psal. 9.16. that in their punishment they may reflect upon their sin; and while the Chancery is open, they may sue their Pardon. Exod. 14.4. God can get honour by Pharaoh and all his Host, much more from Israel, Prov. 5.22. while he takes them in their own iniquities, and binds them with the Cords of their own sin; as Jupiter bond Eyson the Greekish Pirate in the same Chains wherewith he had bound his Captives. And so I pass forward to the next Stage. Israel shall know it, the Prophet is a fool, the Spiritual Man is mad. According to the Hebrew reading the words run thus: Hebr. Lectie. Know thou, O Israel, that thy Prophets have fooled thee into these days of Visitation, and thy spiritual Men have run thee up to this height of lewdness. They told thee they were far off, or would not come in your anger; and thou shalt know that by thy punishment which thou wouldst not know in thy prosperity and fullness: Gloss. ord. Nich. Ly. so the Ord. Gloss, and Nich. Lyra. The Septuagint reads it thus; Israel sicut vates insaniens, or homo habens spiritum malo spirtu & maligno agitatus, Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Saint Hierom. Affligetur Israel, Hierom. Israel. shall be afflicted for neglecting the true Prophets, and adhering to the false. Mercer. thus, Mercerus. thus, Dies poenae abest, somniant impij Deum caecum ut cupidimem nunquam puniturum. But those false or foolish Prophets that could not find a place for penitence, shall find a place for penance, and then let them thank their Prophets and Pretenders to the Spirit. OEcolampadius thus, Nec te vana jactes spe, OEcolampadius. quasi diu proroganda poena; En adsunt dies. Scies te seductum à falsis Prophetis, stultum, i.e. ex corde suo stulta locutum; arreptitios Actos maligno spiritu tuos Prophetas i. e. fanaticum vertiginosum, Led on by the Spirit that rules in, Ephes. 2.2. etc. The Hebrew Doctors thus. R. Selomo Jarchi says, Some that at first were true Prophets, after proved false, and deserved this reproach, R. Selomo jarchi. Jer. 28.1. R. Aben Ezra. as Ananias the son of Azure, that they closed rather with the false Prophets, and laid snares and traps for the true. Rependet-vobis Dominus, the Lord will be avenged on you for esteeming his Prophet's Fools and Madmen, and preferring your own that were so indeed before them. Your own Prophets were they that spread the snare of the Fowler. Hos. 5.1. Scient Israelitae & confitebuntur de pseudoprophetis à quibus seducti, R. David Kimchi. fuerunt; & dicebant illis, Pax Pax, Israel shall say that Prophet is a Fool, and that the multitude of their iniquity brought the hatred of God upon them; and the hatred of God was seen in permitting such Prophets and Spiritual Men to seduce the People. Agnoscent Israelitae stultus fuit Propheta cui aurem praebuimus. Agnoscent Prophetas stultos & furibundos fuisse non à Deo missos. Put all these together, and then as Israel shall know from God, so we shall know from Israel. That Sin finds no shelter, Rom. 8.31. Rom. 11.21 2 Pet. 2.4, 5 Hos. 2.23. That no external privilege can free us from the Arrest of vengeance, That days of Sin and provocation are the forerunners of days of visitation, and days of recompense, That no Sin, be it never so sweet in the Commission, will quit Cost in the Conclusion, Acts 8.23. Matth. 7.2. That with what measure we meet to others, the same shall be measured to us again, That God does not only bring wicked Men to confusion, but to shameful confusion. Psal. 44.1. 1 Kin. 9.7. Israel by listening to her false Prophets, hath brought themselves under the prediction of the true Proverb, Israel shall be a proverb, and a common talk among all people: and this we learn from the first part of the Text, The days of visitation are come, the days of recompense are come. From the second, Prov. 7.27. Hos. 9 6. Ibid. 13. 1 John 4.6. these, Israel's new lights have lodged their People in the Chambers of death and darkness, and made God weary of them and their posterity; Egypt shall gather them, etc. It is no new thing to pretend to the Spirit, when Men are altogether intending the works of the flesh. They that will not adhere to the God of Truth, 2 Thes. 2.12. Jer. 14.14. are in Justice given over to believe lies. Ahab will not believe Micaiah, therefore a lying Spirit in the mouth of his Prophet shall deceive Ahab: and he had no less than Four hundred after his own heart. 2 Chr. 18.5. No less than ten Tribes fall off from their Religion and Loyalty: the major part is not always the better part in these general defections. jer. 31.7. joel 2.32. And yet there is no defection so general, but there is a remnant that retain both Religion and Loyalty untainted. Rom. 9.27. By Ephraim is mea●… ten tribes. Isai. 7.2. & 9.8, 9 Hos. 5.3.9.7. Ephraim may compass God about with lies, but Judah is faithful. Lastly, Upon which I shall enlarge myself more fully, I shall commend two Doctrinal observations to your memories, and they are these. That false and faithless Teachers, whether Prophets or Priests being weight in the Balances of the Sanctuary differ nothing from Fools and Madmen. Such Teachers, jer. 50.38. 1 Sam. 12.25. such Leaders as these bring inevitable ruin to themselves, their Prince, and to their People; they render all odious and hateful to God and Man. For the multitude of thine iniquity great is the hatred. Hos. 4.9. Isa. 9.16. Prov. 26.6, 7. The leaders of my people cause them to err, and they that are led of them are destroyed. But to the first. That of Solomon must be allowed of all; He that sendeth a message by the hand of a Fool, is as one that cutteth off the legs. The legs of the lame are not equal, so is a parable in the hand of Fools. But these in the Text were not sent, jer. 23.21. Hos. 5.4. Sine Principali mandato. and yet they ran; they made themselves Ambiguity assadors, but without any Credentials; they made themselves Priests without any Aaronical call; they went like Ahimaaz the son of Zadock without their message, 2 Sam. 18.23. and therefore a Fool upon record; they left their errand and their wits behind them, August. Facti sunt fugitivi à cordibus suis. Every such Leader is a Magor-missa-bid, jer. 20.3. a terror to himself, and a terror to all that are about him; and according to our Saviour's decision, such soul-murthering Prophets are but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ravening Wolves, Matth. 7.45. and therefore he gives you a caution against them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Beware of these false Prophets. For all these false Prophets are foolish Prophets; Prov. 17.21. and as the Father of a Fool, so the Follower of a Fool hath no joy. All Graces in holy lines are ever numbered under the name of Wisdom, Prov. 1.7. and all Impieties and Profaneness under the name of Folly, which in my Text, like those of God and Elam, Eze. 32.24. are mustered by multitudes. For the multitude of thine iniquity, etc. And as I said before, A multitude of iniquity ever brings with it a multitude of sorrow, as the Prophet Jeremiah alleges; jer. 30.15. For the multitude of thine iniquity thy sorrow is incurable: In short, in Heaven there is no room for Fools, Prov. 1.32. and how can they bring others there, that cannot find the way themselves? And yet this is the first part of Israel's woe and misery in the day of her visitation: The Prophet is a Fool. The second is like unto it, widens it and worsens it, The Spiritual man is mad, That is the Man of the Spirit, that pretends so much to the Spirit, that Fathers all upon the Spirit; and which is worse, upon the Spirit of God, when he is malo & maligno spiritu arreptus, And which is worst of all, Gloss. Or. He brings in the Spirit of God to own things contrary to the word of God, to abett his Treason against his King and subvert the Religion of his God, to sow Rebellion in the State and Sedition in the Church; He will find Gospel Arguments against Gospel Principles; This is the highest of this Spiritual man's frenzy; and of Israel's misery, to have Fools, and Mad men for their Leaders. Folly and Madness do hang at the Duo ubera Sponsae, two Breasts of Christ's Spouse, & are as dangerou's as those Serpents at the Breasts of Cleopatra, and worse; Those could but kill the Body, These both Body and Soul. Hannibal was ill perplexed, Magis se à non pagnante Fabie, quàm à pugnante Marcello timeri. Plutarch. Ez. 13.10. as well with his Non pugnante Fabio, as this Pugnante Marcello. So Israel, between Fools that could do no good and Mad men that did much harm us (as between the upper and neither Millstone) was ground to Powder. They preached Peace, when there was an Vlscisci in Promptu; when Vengeance hovered over them, and like an unlucky Falcon, had nothing but Destruction and Ruin engraven upon her Varvels; jer. 7.4. 1 King. 9.22. Hos. 5.1. They cried up the Temple of the Lord, the Temple of the Lord; and yet the Whoredom of jezabel and her Witchcrafts lodged within them; and when the Trumpets of Peace were at their Mouths, Murders and Slaughters were in their Hearts; for they were profound to make Slaughter. They were a Snare in Mezpah, and spread their Nets upon Mount Tabor. When they should have preached the Oracular truths of Heaven, Mica 2.11. jer. 5.31. Isa. 1.23. Lam. 4.16. 1 King. 16.21. Mat. 11.17. Lam. 5.15. Psal. 78.31. they preached of Wine and strong drink, and my People loved to have it so; They had preached their Princes into Rebellion, and their People into Schism and Confusion. Israel's Priests were now like Athanaeus his Papers, Omnes Tibicines insaniunt, cùm semel efflant, avolat illicò mens, and all Israel and Ephraim danced after their Pipes. Rebellion is like a Sewer or Common Shore in a City; it gathers all the filth and rabble to it; Mille Puellarum, Puerorum, mille Furores, as if every one of the chosen men of Israel, had been a Hercules Furens, or a Corybantes; Madness among the Spiritual men was like a Torrent among the People, Velut aggere rupto Sternit agros, Sternit sata laeta, etc. or like the enchanted Horn of Astolphe, made all that heard it mad; Insanire parant certa ratione, etc. It was not doubtless too much Learning that made them mad; Acts 26.24. or if they were endowed with Abilities, allow them to have Magnas vires, & Cursum celerrimum; yet they were Extra viam, August. as Saint Augustine. Ulysses had all the winds given him but one, Ulysses. which was that that should have brought him to his Ithaca. By Aeolus. Pentheus. Pentheus' was Sapiens in omnibus, praeterquam in iis in avibus sapientem esse convenit; He was wise in every thing, but wherein his wisdom might advantage him: whatever other Eminencies were in them, they were possessed with Seneca 's insanam Libidinem, Seneca. Tullius. and with Tally 's insana Jurgia. The Spiritual man is mad; and like Priest, like People, whole Acres of Ellebore will not purge them. In Tyberim defluxis Oronces. They have infected the Age they lived in with Sin, and the World with Shame and Infamy, and stand in the Text, as Pontius Pilate in the Creed, to transfer their Obloquy to all Posterity; Omnia Pontus; Ovid. Ten Tribes revolted of Twelve, Ten Tribes infected. Schism and Rebellion (like Acefta's Arrows) have caught fire flying; Iosh. 7.9. And now as (joshua said) Quid facies magno Nomini two? What wilt thou do with thy glorious Name, if these Canaanites come in and destroy us? If they destroy a famous and a glorious Church, so richly endowed, so miraculously preserved, so strangely restored, what will become of thy Glorious name? Will it not be time for the Great Bishop of our Soul to set a Day, 2 Pet. 2.5. or appoint days of Visitation and days of Recompense, to put a stop to every Jannes and jambres, that resist the Truth? First that they proceed no farther; and secondly, 2 Tim. 3.8, 9 that their Folly be made manifest, that future Ages may take warning by their example, as the Apostle writes. Yes! God himself thinks it high time to have mercy upon Zion. Patesacta estinsania corum. Ps. 102.13. Ps. 74.6. It pityes him to see the Church so long in her Dust and Rubbish, and the Carved work of his Temples spoilt with Axes and Hammers; and therefore, as they have had their time, God now takes his, and Brandishes his Sword, Isa. 52.10. and makes bare his Arm, to be avenged on his Enemies, and take vengeance of his Adversaries. And in order to this, Text. our Prophet speaks in the Text, The days of Visitation are come, the days of Recompense are come; Israel shall know it; The Prophet is a Fool, the Spiritual man is mad For the multitude of thine Iniquity; Great is the hatred. And so I proceed to the Applicatory and Conclusive part both of the Text and Sermon. 3d. Part. And here I intent not to trouble myself or you with those lising Ephraimites that have started aside, like broken Bows, judges 12.6. Psal 78.9, 57 that have warped and shrunk either in their Religion or Loyalty; nor, as the Text would bear it, to run a Parallel between England and Israel. The Crimes of our Nation, as they are wrapped up in the Act, so may they for ever be buried in the Grave of Oblivion, as in the valley of Hamon-Gog. Ez. 39 11. Only a word or two to you, my Reverend Brethren of the Clergy, and you of the Laity, and I have done. Be pleased to divide among you these Apples of Gold in Pictures of Silver, Pro. 25.11. and may they be like Manna, as that that is best pleasing to every Palate. You have heard something of the Son, Psal. 78.3. Gen. 15.19, 20. and something of the Sorrows of Israel, what Havoc and Destruction they have made in former and latter Ages; Oh let this deluge of Sin, these overflowings of other men's Ungodliness raise up the Ark of our Devotion so many Cubits nearer Heaven! And now, O ye Priests, Mal. 2.1. Hag. 2.7. Mar. 11.15 1 Tim. 6.19. Ps. 118.22. Eph. 2.20. Mat. 7.24, 26. this Commandment is for you. God is about to rebuild his Temple, and Christ our Saviour to purge it; you are his Master bvilders; lay a good Foundation, let that stone which others have refused, be by you made the Headstone in the Corner; Fundamentum aliud nemo. Other foundation can no man lay, etc. We are denominated to be wise or foolish, according to our Carriage in this point, and let the Superstructure be answerable. We are not sent to build Lamiae's Turrets, jer. 9.14. Tit. 2.1. Castles in the Air (your own Imaginations,) but the Oracles of God in Truth, and sound Doctrine to your Congregations. As we are Spiritual men, Psal 23.3. let us suffer ourselves to be guided by that Good Spirit that leads us and your Flocks into the Land of Righteousness. The spirit of God will never dictate any thing against the word of God; As many as walk according to this Rule, Gal. 6.16. Mercy shall be upon them and Peace, as upon the Israel of God. We cannot miscarry, if we take in the Council of St. Paul, 2 Tim. 6.10, 11, 12, 13. who (having told us, That they that err from the Faith, pierce themselves through with many sorrows) said, But thou, O man of God, flee these things; and follow after Righteousness, Godliness, Faith, Love, Patience, Meekness. And again, Verse 13. I charge thee in the sight of God, who quickeneth all things, and before Christ jesus, who before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good Confession, That thou keep this Commandment without spot, unblameable, until the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ And in the Close; 1 Tim. 6.20. Leu. 22.4, 1 Pet. 1.15. O Timothy, Depositum custode, etc. It is a sin that any of the seed of Aaron should be a Leper. Together with this of Saint Paul, take in also that of Saint Peter; As he that hath called you is Holy, so be ye holy in all manner of Conversation. 1. He calls for an Illustrative Holiness. In the utmost extent in all manner of Conversation. In all the wind and change, and turn of divine providence. Luke 9.62. He that sets his Hand to this Blow, and looks back, is not fit for the kingdom of Heaven, not Fit Himself, less Fit to be a Guide or Conduct to Others. 2. He presses it by the best of Patterns, and the most probable Arguments. 1. As he that hath called you is Holy. Caesar said not Ite; but V●…i●e to his Soldiers. God that requires Holiness from us, is a Precedent of Holiness unto us. So should we be in ourselves, and to the Flock over which the Holy Ghost hath made us Overseers; lest whilst we preach to others should be Anathema. 1 Pet. 2.15. 1 Cor. 6.27. Ez. 34.19. Worse was not said of the Shepherd of Babylon, then, that they trampled upon that wherewith they fed their Flock. We have a better Precedent, to be Holy as he that hath called us is Holy, and to write after that Copy; though there be many Blots, yet we must do it as well as we can. 1 Sam. 2.2. But as Hanna in her Song: There is none Holy but the Lord! Essentially there is not: Representatively there is. Efficiently there is not: Instrumentally there is. Eminently there is not: Demonstratively there is. Though we cannot be Almighty as He is, Ez. 1.24. 1 Tim. 1.17. nor Alwise as He is, yet we may in some measure be Holy as he is, though not transcendently. 3ly. He calls for it for your Calling-sake; 1 Pet. 1.15. in common with all Christians, but in special being called to the high est form, the greatest Honour. Tribul. Plut. Kings and Princes have Gloried in it, Accessit titulis Pontificalis honos. The Ancient Romans chose their Priests out of their Philosophers, and their Kings out of their Priests. Bar. An. Constantine the Great refused to receive precedency of the Prelates and Bishops: Ita veneratus est, acsi divinam in ipsis Majestatem vidisset, Cassaneus says Cassaneus; he would not meddle with their Ecclesiastical affairs, Vos vestras Causas judicate, & disponite. In short, What we have upon the account of the Common salvation, Jud. 3. Ob. ult. what upon the Supernumerary to be accounted Saviour's ourselves, lays all manner of Obligation to Holiness upon us; and we are no better than Fools and Mad men, Deu. 32.29. if we consider it not. But to conclude. Peace is not so firmly settled in our Borders, Ps. 147.14. 2 Sam. 20.1. but the Trumpet of Rebellion may sound again; and who knows from whence, whether from Mount Ephraim, or from Mount Gilead; whether the Lord would not strengthen the hands of Eglon against Israel, Isa. 10 12. Ex. 17.8. or Amalek against Israel? We want no Enemies as we are; Let not us make ourselves more; Let nothing be done of strife and vain glory. The Canaanite and Perizite is yet in the Land; Gen. 13.7. After all this is come upon us, and thou hast given us such a Deliverance as this, Restored our King and Judges as at the first, If. 1.26. and our Counselors as at the beginning, Cemented the veil of the Temple; If we should again break thy Commandment, wouldst thou not be angry with us, Ezra 9.13. till thou hadst destroyed us? said Ezra in his Prayer to God. Forget not then that you are the Lords Remembrancers; Give him no rest night nor day, Is. 62.1. Gen. 6.27. till he persuade Japhet to dwell in the Tents of Sem; that till he have in some measure made the Priest as holy as he that hath called him, and till he have made the People as holy as the Priest, that zachary's Prophecy may take hold of us, Zach. 12.6. That he that is feeble may be like unto David, and David the while be like an Angel of God; That the advice and counsel of him that is the Great Shepherd, the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, may sink into our Hearts and Souls. C●…rat Oves, Oviumque ●…agistres. 1 Pet. 5.4. Feed the Flock of God which is among you, etc. Your Reward is before you, That ye may Receive a Crown of Glory which fadeth not away; Which, God of his mercy Grant unto us all, for his Son Christ Jesus sake: To whom, with the Father and the Holy Ghost be all Honour and Glory, Now and Ever. Amen. FINIS. TESTIMONIES CONCERNING The Renowned Dr. SANDERSON. Dr. Prideaux. NOne States a Question more punctually, Resolves it more satisfactorily, Answers all Objections more fully, than that clear and solid man Mr. Sanderson. Bishop Usher. And I Proposed the Case to the Judicious Dr. Sanderson, who Grasped all the Circumstances of it, and Returned that happy Answer that met with all my Thoughts, satisfied all my Scruples, and cleared up all my Doubts. Dr. Hammond. That stayed and well-weighed man Dr. Sanderson, conceives all Things deliberately, dwells upon them discreetly, discerns Things that differ exactly, passeth his Judgement rationally, and expresses it aptly, clearly and honestly. Mr. Baxter.— I do not intent by this Character such Episcopal Divines as the Reverend Dr. Sanderson, whom I honour for his Learning, Judgement, Moderation and Piety. Dr. Fuller. Amongst the Modern Worthies of this College still surviving, Dr. Robert Sanderson, late Regius Professor, moveth in the highest Sphere, a no less plain and profitable then able and profound Casuist, (a Learning almost lost amongst Protestants.) Bishop Reynolds.— There is no mention of it in that Table of the several Opinions drawn up by a Learned man of our Church, Dr. Sanderson. Bishop Hall. Alas, why do I wade further into the deep and large search of Cases of Conscience, wherein I hear so far a progress is made by the excellent Dr. Sanderson, the most exact and faithful Casuist living?