A LETTER To the D. of P. IN ANSWER TO THE Arguing Part OF HIS FIRST LETTER To Mr. G. Published with Allowance. LONDON, Printed by Henry Hills, Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty, for His Household and Chapel. 1687. A LETTER To the D. of P. In Answer to the Arguing Part of his First Letter. 1. THAT you may not take it unkindly the Arguing Part of your Letter to Mr. G. should pass unregarded, I have been prevailed upon to accept of his Commission to hold his Cards, while he is not in Circumstances to play out his Game himself. But can assure you beforehand, since Matter of Fact is clearing by other Hands more proper, I mean to confine myself to Matter of Right; and so shall give you the least and most excusable trouble that can be, a short one. 2. Your Letter tells us, that the Conference was for the sake of a Gentleman, who I heard desired to be satisfied that Protestants are absolutely certain of what they believe, and made account you could satisfy him, and professed, if you could not, he would quit your Communion. And you take care to inform us (p. 2.) that he was satisfied, and declared immediately after the Conference, that he was much more confirmed in the Communion of your Church by it, and resolved to continue in it. But could you not have afforded to inform us likewise by what he was satisfied? For there is many a Man who would be as glad, and is as much concerned to be satisfied in that Point as that Gentleman; and he would not have been a jot the less confirmed or the less resolved, if his Neighbour had been confirmed and resolved with him. I cannot for my life imagine why you should make a Secret of a thing, which, besides your own and your Church's Honour, concerns the Salvation of thousands and thousands to know. 3. Your Letter I perceive would shift it off to Mr. G. whom you desire (p. 7.) to prove that Protestants have no Absolute Certainty, etc. Of this Proposal there will be occasion to say more by and by. At the present I pray you consider how you deal with those Souls who rely on you. If you should move them to trust their Estates with a Man of your naming, of whom you would give no other satisfaction that he were able to manage them, and faithful, and responsible, but only to bid those who doubted, prove the contrary; I fancy there would need all the Credit you have to hinder the Motion from appearing very strange: And yet you have the confidence to make them one as much stranger as their Souls are more worth than their Money: For you would have them hazard their Souls where they are not safe, for any care you take to satisfy them that they are. Why, suppose Mr. G. could not prove that Protestants are not Certain, are they therefore Certain? Has Peter Twenty pounds in his Purse, because Paul cannot prove he has not? Or, ever the more Title to an Estate, because an Adversary may have the ill luck to be Nonsuited? Must not every body speak for himself one day, and bring in his own Account, which will pass or not pass as it is or is not faulty in itself, whether any fault have been found in it before or no? And will not the Happiness or Misery of their Souls for ever depend on that Account? Can you suffer them to run that terrible hazard, without making them able to justify their Accounts themselves, and furnishing them with assurance that they can, and with no more to say but that they hoped Dr. St. would make his Party good with Mr. G.? That things so precious to God as Souls should be of no more value with those who set up for Ministers of the Gospel! That their great and only care, as far as I see, should be to make a show, and pass for some body here, let every one take his chance hereafter! Besides, Truth is therefore Truth, because 'tis built on Intrinsecal Grounds which prove it to be such; and not on private men's Abilities, or their saying this or that; wherefore till those Grounds be produced, it cannot be with reason held Truth: And Dr. St. is more particularly obliged to make good he has such Grounds, having had such ill fortune formerly with the Principles to which he undertook to reduce Protestant Faith, as appears by the Account given of them in Error Nonplussed. 4. But, leaving these Matters to be Answered where we must all answer why we have believed so and so; pray let us have fair play in the mean time. Let every one bear his own Burden, and you not think to discharge yourself by throwing your Load on another Man's Shoulders. You affirm there is Absolute Certainty on the Protestants side and 'tis for him to prove it who affirms it. If you do it but half so well as Mr. G. can, and has, the Infallibility which he asserts, you will earn Thanks from one side, and Admiration from the other. But it is for you to do it: To trick off proving the contrary upon your Adversary, is to own that Proving is a thing which agrees not with your Constitution, and in which your Heart misgives you. 5. Yet even so you were uneasy still, and would not venture what Mr. G. could do, as slightly as you think, or would have others think of him. You know well enough, that to prove Protestants have no Absolute Certainty of their Faith, is no hard Task even for a weak Man: Dr. Tillotson 's Rule of Faith, p. 117, 118. You know any Man may find it confessed to his hand by Protestants. And therefore you had reason to bethink yourself of an Expedient to trick it off again from that Point, Pag. 7. and put Mr. G. to prove, That Protestants have no Absolute Certainty as to the Rule of their Faith, viz. the Scripture. The Merits of this Cause too I think will return hereafter more fitly; in this place I mind only the Art Pray, was not the very First Question at the Conference, Dr. St's Second Letter, p. 14. Whether Protestants are absolutely Certain that they hold now the same Tenets in Faith, and All that our Saviour taught to his Apostles? And your Answer that They are? Did our Saviour teach, and do Protestants believe no more, than that the Book so called is Scripture? Is Certainty of this more, and Certainty of this Book all one? And was not the Question plainly of the Certainty of this, and of All this more? Here is then an Enquiry after one thing plainly turned off to another. Yes; but this was one of the two things which the whole Conference depended upon. As if the whole Conference did not depend on that thing which was to be made manifest by the Conference, viz. the Absolute Certainty of Protestant Faith. Mr. G. indeed did himself ask some Questions about your Certainty of your Rule; Questions, whose course it was wisely done to cut off, before they had questioned away your Certainty of Faith. For, after they had caused it to be admitted, that the Certainty of Scripture is from Tradition, there was no refusing to admit that Tradition causes Certainty, and makes Faith as Certain as Scripture. And then it would have proved something difficult to satisfy even a willing Man, that the Faith is Certain which is opposite to a Faith come down by Tradition. But it was seen whereto it would come, and thought fit to break off in time, and not let the Conference proceed too far. In the mean time Absolute Certainty of Scripture was not the Point of the Conference, nor is it the Point of Concern. Besides that 'tis agreed on all hands, Men are Saved by Believing and Practising what Christ taught, not barely by believing Scripture is Scripture: And Salvation is the thing that imports us in these Disputes, and 'twere well that nothing else were minded by Disputers. But it imported you it seems both to shift off Proving from yourself, and to stifle any further Talk of the Certainty of Protestant Faith, and keep us from looking that way by fixing our Eyes on another Object. And this is all you do; but with so much Art, that I verily think many a Reader is persuaded you are talking all the while to the purpose. The truth is, you have reason to carry it as you do; for it is good to avoid undertaking what cannot be performed: And you cannot, and I believe know you cannot make out, That Protestants are Absolutely Certain, that they now hold all the same Doctrine that was taught by Christ and his Apostles, as you affirmed in your Answer to Mr. G's first Question. And this I thought it imported to tell you plainly and publicly, that it might be in your hands to pin the Controversie-basket, and bring all Catholics to your Church; where I will answer you will be sure to find us, if you make us sure we shall find this Certainty there when we come. 6. In the mean time why has not Mr. G. done already as much as should be done? It is plain, that where Churches differ in Faith, Infallible Faith in one, cannot stand with Certain Faith in the other. Wherefore if Mr. G. have fixed Infallibility in his own Church, he has removed Certainty from all that differ from her. Let us then take and sift Mr. G's Argument, even as you put it, who had not, I suppose, partiality enough for him, to make it better than it was. You put it thus, p. 4, 5. 7. All Traditionary Christians believe the same to day which they did yesterday, and so up to the time of our Blessed Saviour; and if they follow this Rule, they can never err in Faith, therefore are Infallible. And you (Mr. G.) proved they could not innovate in Faith, unless they did forget what they held the day before, or out of malice alter it. And now, That there may be no mistake, let us take each Proposition by itself. 8. The First is, [Alderman Traditionary Christians believe the same to day which they did yesterday, and so up to the time of our Blessed Saviour.] You have nothing to say to this, I hope: For since Traditionary Christians are those who proceed upon Tradition, and Tradition signifies Immediate Delivery, it follows, that unless they believe the same to day which they did yesterday, and so upwards, they cease to be Traditionary Christians, by proceeding not upon an Immediate, but an Interrupted Delivery, or some other Principle. And so there is no denying this Proposition, but by affirming that Traditionary Christians are not Traditionary Christians. 9 The second Proposition is this. [And if they follow this Rule, they can never err in Faith.] This is palpably self-evident: For, to follow this Rule is to believe still the same to day which they did yesterday: And so, if they did this from Christ's time, and so forwards, they must still continue to believe, to the end of the World, the selfsame that Christ and his Apostles taught; and, therefore, cannot err in Faith, unless those Authors of our Faith did: Which that they did not, is not to be proved to Christians. 10. There follows this Inference: [Therefore they are Infallible.] This is no less plainly self-evident. For these words [They can never err in Faith] in the Antecedent, and [They are Infallible] in the Consequent, are most manifestly the selfsame in sense, and perfectly equivalent. 11. The fourth and last (which according to you, aimed to prove, that they could not innovate) is this. [They could not innovate in Faith, unless they did forget what they held the day before, or out of malice alter it.] And this is no less unexceptionable than its Fellows. For, if they knew not they altered Faith, when they altered it, they had forgot what they believed the day before. If they altered it wittingly, excuse them from Malice who can; who, believing, as all who proceed upon Tradition do, that Tradition is the certain Means to convey the Doctrine of Christ, would notwithstanding alter the Doctrine conveyed to them by Tradition. Pray what ails this Argument? and what wants it, save bare Application, to conclude what was intended as fully and as rigorously as you can desire? And, pray, what need was there to apply it to the Roman Church, and say she followed Tradition, to you who deny it not either of the Roman or Greek Church? As every thing is true, and every thing clear; who now besides yourself would have thought of an evasion from it? And yet you venture at one, such as it is. 12. You tell us then, (p. 5.) That you thought the best way to show the vanity of this rare Demonstration, was to produce an Instance of such as followed Tradition, and yet Mr. G. could not deny to have erred, and that was of the Greek Church, etc. You had even as good have said, what Mr. G. says is true, but yet he does not say true for all that. For to pitch upon nothing for false, is, in Disputes, to own that every thing is true. The best way, say you? I should have thought it every jot as good a way to have said nothing when one has nothing to say. But yet the World is obliged to you for letting them know what Scholars knew before, that Protestants think it the best way to answer Catholic Arguments, to give them no Answer at all: For you are not to be told that this Instance of yours is not an Answer to Mr. G-'s Argument, but a new Argument against him of your own, which undoubtedly you might have produced as well as my Lord Falkland, if you had been, as my Lord Falkland was, arguing. But it is your turn now to answer. And must you be minded of what every Smatterer in Logic knows, that an Answerer is confined to his Concedo, his Nego, and Distinguo, as the Propositions which he is to speak to, are True, False or Ambiguous? He may deny the Inference too, if he find more or other Terms in the Conclusion than in the Premises. But these are his Bounds; and Answering turns Babbling, when they are exceeded. Must you be minded that the Business must be stopped before it come to the Conclusion, and that otherwise there is no speaking against it? For you know that if the Premises be right, and the Inference good, the Conclusion must be as necessarily True, as it is that the same thing cannot be, and not be at once; that is, must be more certain than that England, for Example, shall not crumble into Atoms, or be swallowed up in the Sea to morrow: For this, and a thousand such things may happen to all material Nature; that a Contradiction should prove True, cannot. And 'tis perfect Contradiction that Terms which cohere in the Premises, by being the same with a Third, should not cohere with one another in the Conclusion. Must you be minded that an Arguer is to prove his Conclusion, and an Answerer to show he does not, by assigning where and how he fails? Do you do any such matter? Do you so much as go about it? And would you have what you say pass for an Answer? Pray consider the Case: The Church of Rome is Infallible, says Mr. G.: She is not, say you. He brings his Argument, and you your Instance against it. What are People the wiser now? and which shall they be for; the Argument or the Instance? They have reason to think well of the Argument, because you have no fault to find with it; and they may think as they please of the Instance. You would not, I suppose, have them believe you both, and think the Church of Rome for your sake Fallible, and, for his, Infallible at once. Pray what assistance do you afford them to determine either way? And what do you more than even leave them to draw Cuts, and venture their Souls as handy-dandy shall decide, for you or Mr. G.? 'Tis true, when Zeno would needs be paradoxing against the possibility of Motion, his Vanity was not ill ridiculed by the walking of Diogenes before him. For 'twas palpably and ridiculously vain to talk against Motion with a Tongue, that must needs move to talk against it. And there may be vanity too in our Case, for aught I know: But where shall it be lodged? Why more with Mr. G's. Argument than your Instance? Why is it more vain to pretend to prove Infallibility, upon which depend the Hopes which Millions and Millions have of a blessed Eternity, and which is proved by Arguments, to which you think it your best way not to attempt to Answer, than it is to except against a Conclusion, against the Premises whereof there lies no Exception? That is, to find fault with a Sum Total, and find none in the particulars, or the casting up: For a Conclusion is a kind of Sum Total of the Premises. But it is infinitely more vain to talk against one Infallibility, unless you will set up another. For, if there be no Means, by which Men may be secured, that the ways they take to arrive at their greatest and only Good will not deceive them, it cannot be expected they will take all the pains that are necessary to compass that Good, which for aught they can tell, they may not compass with all their pains. 'Tis a pleasant thing in you to talk of the vanity of Mr. G's. Demonstration, when, by seeking to take Infallibility out of the World, you are making the whole Creation vain. For all Material Nature was made for Rational Nature, and Rational Nature requires Rational Satisfaction in all its proceedings, and most of all in the pursuit of Happiness: And what Rational Satisfaction can there be, if there may be Deceit in whatever can be proposed for Satisfaction? In short, the Result of your Instance, whatever was the Aim, it is to amuse and confound People, and hinder them perhaps from seeing what otherwise would be clear; but it shows them nothing, nor can; for that Argument of yours is not at all of a showing Nature. 13. 'Tis, at best, but an Argument (as they call it) ad hominem; which you know are of the worst sort of Arguments. They serve for nothing but to stop an Adversaries mouth, or shame him, if he cannot answer without contradicting himself; but are of no use towards the Discovery of Truth. For a thing is not the more or less True, because such a Man's Tongue is tied up for speaking against it. But is it so much as an Argument ad hominem? As all the little force of the Topic consists in the Obligation which a Man may have to grant or deny what it supposes he does, it affords no Argument at all against the Man who has no such Obligation. And pray where does it appear that Mr. G. is obliged not to deny that the Greek Church has erred in matters of Faith? And how can you, of all Men, suppose he is? You, who in your Rational Account (p. 32.) quote these words from Peter Lombard; The Difference between the Greeks and Latins, is in Words and not in Sense: Name Thomas à jesus, and Azorius, and tell us of other Roman Catholic Authors, of the same judgement, whom I suppose you could name. Pray, how comes Mr. G. to lie under an Obligation, from which Men of Reputation in his own Communion are exempt? And what a wise Argument ad hominem have you made against him, whom yourself have furnished with an Argument ad hominem to confute it when he pleases? In fine, he goes to work like a Scholar, puts his Premises, and infers his Conclusion, which you know cannot but be True, if there be no Fault in his Premises: And 'tis for you to find one when you can. You put nothing to show how the Inference you make should be True, but barely assume, without proof, that he cannot deny it (p. 5.): As if Truth depended on his Denying or Affirming, and that what People say or think, made things True or False. And even, for so much, you are at his Courtesy: If he be not the better Natured, and will crossly affirm or deny in the wrong place, you and your Argument are left in the lurch. In a word, one may see he aimed at Truth, who takes at least the way to it: what you aimed at, you best know; but no body shall ever discover what is, or is not True, by your Method. 14. But that you may not complain, your Cock is not suffered to fight, let us see what your Instance will do. You put it thus, (p. 5.) The Greek Church went upon Tradition from Father to Son, as much as ever the Roman did. And I desired to know of Mr. G. whether the Greek Church notwithstanding did not err in matters of Faith; And, if it did, than a Church holding to Tradition was not Infallible. How! If it did? Why then it is apparent if it did not, your Argument holds not. And will you assume that the Greek Church errs, who believe she does not? Will you take a Premise to infer a Conclusion, upon which the Salvation of People depends, which Premise yourself in your own heart think is not true? Can you deal thus with their Souls, who pin them upon you, persuade them of what you are not persuaded yourself, and offer them a Securiy for their Eternity, in which your own judgement tells you there is a flaw? For you have declared yourself upon this Matter in your Rational Account, and taken great pains to clear the Greek Church, at least upon the Article of the Holy Ghost, in which consists their main difference with the Latins, and to which the other two you mention were added, I suppose, for fashion sake. I know you there propose to free that Church from the charge of Heresy. But pray what difference betwixt Heresy and Error in matter of Faith? unless you will trifle about Obstinacy, and such collateral considerations; which neither concern us here, nor were any part of your Defence there. I see too that you word it here conditionally, and with reference to Mr. G's. Answer: As if his Answer made or marred, and the Greek Church did or did not err, as he says, ay, or No. Whatever Mr. G. may say, or you have said, unless the Greek Church actually does Err, your Instance is no Instance of a Church that goes upon Tradition and Errs; and your Inference that then a Church holding to Tradition was not Infallible, is wondrous pertinently inferred from the Example of a Church that errs not. Pray take it well that I entreat you by all the care you have of your own Soul, and should have of others, to manage Disputes about Faith a little otherwise, and not propose Arguments, in which you must needs think yourself there is no force. For there is plainly none in this, if the Greek Church does not err; and you at least think she does not. I am sure 'tis what I would not do myself for all the World. 15. But to proceed to Mr. G's. Answer, (p. 5.) It was say you, that the Greek Church followed Tradition, till the Arians left that Rule and took up a new one, etc. And why has he not answered well? You assumed that the Greek Church erred while it went upon Tradition; If you did not, you said nothing; for, that a Church may follow Tradition at one time, and leave it at another, is no news. 'Tis the case of all erring Churches which ever followed Tradition at all. Mr. G's Reply then that Tradition was followed till another Rule was taken up, denies that Tradition and Error were found together, as you contended, in the Greek Church. And pray what more direct or more full Answer can there be to an Argument, than to deny the Premises? As slightly as you would seem to think of him, he understood disputing better than to start aside into an Exception against your Conclusion, but answers fair and home by denying the Assumption from which you infer it; which now he has done, you know it rests with you to prove it; and yet you never think on't, as far as I see; but, as if you had no more to do, fall a complaining against Mr. G. for speaking of the Arians, and not of the present Greek Church; and against his Copy, for leaving out the Inference which you drew. In doing which, if he did so, he did you no small kindness; there being no Premises to draw the Inference from, as has been shown above; or if any, such as put you to contradict your own Doctrine ere any thing could follow from them. 16. As for the omission of the Inference, I know not how it happened, nor mean to meddle with matter of Fact. But I see they had reason, who observed before me, that 'tis a thing of no manner of Consequence, I verily think, in your own Judgement. Unless you think the Age we live in so dull, that, without much hammering it into their Heads, it cannot be perceived, that if a Church has erred which held to Tradition, a Church may err which holds to Tradition. Or, unless you think it of mighty Consequence to have an Inference stand in the Relation which fell with the Premises at the Conference. Mr. G. took them away by his denial, and you must begin again, and bring something from whence you may draw an Inference, if you will needs have an Inference; for an Inference cannot be drawn from nothing. Pray divert us not perpetually from minding what we are about; but remember the Question now is, Whether the Greek Church held to Tradition and erred at once? and bethink yourself, if you please of a Medium, which will infer that Point for you; for Mr. G. you see denies it. 17. From his mentioning the Arians you take occasi-to speak big, and bear us in hand he was hard put to it, and sought an occasion, and affirm (p. 6.) you could get no Answer at all to the Case of the present Greek Church. As if his Answer pinched on the Arians, and were not as full to the present as past Greek Church. It goes on this, That those who err in Faith, let them be who they will, and the Error what it will, and in what Time and Place you will, all leave Tradition. Whether the Case of the present Greek Church be the same with the Arians, is matter of Fact, with which Mr. G. did well not to meddle; it is for you to make it out, if you will make good your Argument. Modern or Ancient Heresy is all one to his Answer, which is applicable to all Heresy: And you complain of the want of an Answer when you have one. Pray, if a Man should put an Objection to you about an Animal, for Example, and you answer it of all Animals, would you think it just in him to quarrel with you for not mentioning the Rational or Irrational in particular? And yet this is your Quarrel to Mr. G. All your magnificent Talk (p. 6.) of undeniably true, granted by Mr. G. known to every one, etc. as apt as I see it is to make a Reader believe your Instance is notoriously true, and against which Mr. G. has nothing to say, cannot make me, or any Man of Reason, who examines the Point, believe he has any Reason to say more, till you do. He has answered directly, and positively denied, that Error and Tradition can be found together in the Greek Church, or any other, modern or ancient. There it sticks, and you may drive it on farther (it being your own Argument) if you please. Only when you tell us (p. 6.) that the present Greek Church in all its Differences with the Roman, still pleaded Tradition, and adhered to it, I wish you had told us whether you speak of Differences in matter of Faith, or no. For Differences may be occasioned by matters of Faith, which are not Differences in Faith. If you do not, you support your Instance very strongly, and prove the consistence of Tradition with Error in Faith very Learnedly, from Differences which belong not to Faith. If you do, as Nature itches after strange Sights, I long to see by what Differences, or any thing else, it can be made out, That an erring Church can still plead Tradition, and adhere to it. Not but that for Pleading much may be, there are such confident doings in the World. As certain as it is, that the Religion in England now, is not the same which it was before Henry the Eighth, I think there is confidence enough in England to plead Tradition for it. 'Tis but finding some Expression in an ancient Writer, not couched with Prophetical foresight enough to avoid being understood, as some will desire it should, and it will serve turn to pretend to Antiquity, and bear the Name of Tradition. So I suspect you take it yourself, when you say the Arians insisted on Tradition: For sure you do not think in earnest, that Doctrine contrary to Consubstantiality, was taught by Christ, and believed from Father to Son till the Council of Nice. This, or some such thing may perhaps have been pleaded; but for adhering to Tradition, Your Servant. For, pray, did Christ teach any Error? When a Father believed what Christ taught him, and the Son what the Father believed, did not the Son too believe what Christ taught? Run it on to the last Son that shall be born in the World, must not every one believe what Christ taught, if every one believed what his Father believed? And will you go about to persuade us, that there actually is a company of Men in the World who adhered to this Method, all Sons believing always as their Fathers did, whereof the First believed as Christ taught, and who notwithstanding erred in matters of Faith? They would thank you for making this out, who would be glad that Christ taught Error and were not God. But it is not plainer that Two and Three make Five, than it is that this cannot be. And yet you would top it upon us, and bear us in hand it is not only true, but apparent in the Greek Church, and known to every body who knows any thing of it. The comfort is, there is nothing for all these Assertions but your Word; in which, where you stick not to pass it for an arrant Impossibility, I for my part do not think there is Absolute Certainty. 18. I see not what there remains more, but to bear in mind where we are. At the Conference, instead of answering Mr. G's Argument, you would needs make one of your own, which was in short; The Greek Church goes upon Tradition and errs, therefore another Church may err which goes upon Tradition. There was no need to trouble the Greek Church for the matter: It had been altogether as methodical, and as much to purpose, to have instanced in the Latin Church itself, and never gone further; and shorter, to have spared Instancing too, and have said without more ado, Mr. G 's Conclusion is not true: For you do no more, till you make it appear, that the Church you pitch upon for an Instance, does indeed adhere to Tradition and err. But, because this had been too open, and People would have sooner perceived that it had been to say, I know not how to answer Mr. G 's Argument, but will notwithstanding stand to it, that his Conclusion is false, you thought the best way to divert the Reader's attention from what's before him, was to travel into Greece; and yet when you come there, do no more than if you had stayed at home: For you barely say there is both Tradition and Error in the Greek Church, and you might have said as much of the Latin; or, without mentioning either, have said, Tho' Mr. G. has proved a Traditionary Church cannot err, I say it can and has. All is but Saying till you come to Proving: Only to make a formal show with an Antecedent and a Conclusion, you say it with the Ceremony of an Argument; of which since Mr. G. denied the Antecedent, he had no more to do till you proved it. 19 So it stood at the Conference, and so it stands still, and for aught I see, is like to stand: For tho' you have writ two Letters since, there appears no word of Proof in either, or sign that you do so much as think on it: You only say your Instance over again, and would have the Face you set upon it, and great Words you give it, make it pass for plain and undeniable, when all the while it is plainly impossible, and actually denied. Mr. G. I hope, will bide by his Answer, because it is a good one, true in itself, and direct to the Point: For it denies just what you assumed, That the Greek Church stood upon Tradition, and fell at the same time into Error. And speaking as you do, or should do, of Error in matter of Faith, Euclid never made any thing plainer than it is, That where ever Error comes in, Tradition goes out. Of necessity therefore, if the present Greek Church have adhered to Tradition, it has not erred: If it have erred, it has not adhered to Tradition. Which of the two is the Case, neither concerns Mr. G. nor can he dispute it without following bad Example, that is, falling to Argue now it is his Part to Answer. You would pass it upon us, that the Greek Church has erred without swerving from Tradition; and you must either make it out, or acknowledge you have made much ado about nothing: For your Instance is no Instance, till it appears to be true; Till you do it, there is no Work for Mr. G. 20 At the close (p. 7.) you desire Mr. G. to make good two things, and tell us why you desire it, and what will follow if he accept or decline your Motion. I neither understand how your Proposals follow from your Reasons, nor your Consequences from your Proposals: But think it no more worth losing time upon: them, than you thought it worth boasting of the Victory. The First is, That we [Protestant's] have no Absolute Certainty as to the Rule of our Faith, viz. the Scripture; altho' we have a larger and firmer Tradition for it, viz. the Consent of all Christian Churches, than you [Catholics] can have for the Points of Faith in difference between us. 21. I can tell you a better Reason for this Proposal than any you give. There was no avoiding to own Absolute Certainty to a Man who talked of quitting your Communion without it. But you knew well enough that your Absolute Certainty would be thwittled into Sufficient Certainty, and Sufficient Certainty into no Certainty at last; and had your Wits about you when you thought of this Proposal: For it is in effect to say, This Certainty of Faith is a troublesome matter, and not for my turn; Let us go to something else, leave Faith and pass to Scripture; of which you, Mr. G. shall prove we have no Absolute Certainty: For, if I should go about to prove we have, I foresee, that while I am seeking harbour in my larger and firmer Tradition, I shall venture to split upon your Infallibility, There can be no necessity supposed of any Infallible Society of Men, either to attest or explain these Writings among Christians. Dr. St. Principle 15. to contradict my 15 th' Principle for the Faith of Protestants, and full at unawares into the Snares laid for me in Error Nonplussed, from p. 90 to p. 96, which I have no mind to come near. But whatever Reasons you had to make this Proposal, I see none that Mr. G. has to accept it. Do you prove, if you please, that you have Absolute Certainty; you, who bear those in hand who consult you, that you have; and Absolute Certainty too of that of which you professed yourself absolutely Certain, Dr. St's Copy. viz. That you now hold all the same Doctrine that was taught by Christ and his Apostles; which by your own confession there, is the true Point. For you know very well, one is not certain of his Faith by being certain of Scripture: Yourself take all who dissent from yours, to have not only an Uncertain, but a Wrong Faith, else why do you descent from them? And yet they have all as much Certainty of Scripture as you. The truth is, if you were pressed to make out your Absolute Certainty even of Scripture in your way, you would perhaps find a hard Task of it, for all your Appeal to Tradition. But it was not the Point for which the Conference was, nor ought it be the Point here, neither aught Mr. G. to meddle with it, and you trust much to his good Nature to propose it: For, besides that all the thanks he would have for his pains, would be to have the Arguments against your Certainty, turned against the Certainty of Scripture one day, as if he did not believe Scripture Certain: You would have him undertake a matter in which he has no concern, to save you from an Undertaking in which you are deeply concerned, but with which you know not how to go thorough; which is a very reasonable Request. In a word, it is for you either to make manifest now, what you should have made manifest at the Conference, viz. That Protestants have Absolute Certainty, not only of the Scripture, which they call their Rule, but of the Faith which they pretend to have from that Rule; or else to suffer another thing to be manifest, viz. That I said true when I said you cannot do it; and thither I am sure it will come. 22. However, I am glad to hear any Talk from you of Absolute Certainty, even tho' it be but Talk: 'Tis a great Stranger, as coming from your Quarters, and has a friendly and an accommodating look, and therefore for both regards deserves a hearty welcome. For this very Profession makes a fair approach towards the Doctrine of Infallibility, or rather 'tis the selfsame with it; it being against Common Sense to say you judge yourself Absolutely Certain of any thing, if at the same time you judge you may be deceived in thus judging. But I accept the Omen that you seem to grant you are thus Absolutely Certain, or Infallible, by virtue of Tradition; for this makes Tradition to be an Infallible Ascertainer in some things at least; and, so, unless some special difficulty be found in other things that light into the same Channel, it must needs bring them down infallibly too. Now I cannot for my heart discern what great difficulty there can be to remember all along the yesterdays Faith, or to be willing to be guided and instructed by their yesterday Fathers, Teachers and Pastors; especially the sense of the Points (to omit many other means) being determined by open and daily Practice. Yet I a little fear all this your seeming kindness for Tradition, is only for your own Interest; and that, because you were necessitated to make use of it to abet Scripture's Letter, you allow it in that regard, these high Compliments; but in other things, particularly in conveying down a Body of Christian Faith (which is incomparably more easy) it will presently become useless and good for nothing. In the former exigency you esteem it A worthy Rule, but in the later duty, A Rule worthy— 23. Now to let the Reader plainly see that it was mere Force, and not Inclination, which obliged you to grant an Absolute Certainty in Tradition conveying down Scriptures Letter, we will examine what you allowed it when you laid your Principles, and so spoke your own free thoughts unconstrained by any Adversary: Your fifteenth Principle is put down (p. 90.) in Error Nonplussed, and that part of it that concerns this present Point, is thus reflected upon by your Adversary (p. 92, 93.) [Again, though all this were true, and that the Scriptures were owned as containing in them the whole Will of God so plainly revealed, that no sober Enquirer can miss of what's necessary to Salvation, and that therefore there needed no Church to explain them: Yet 'tis a strange Consequence, that therefore there can be no necessity of any Infallible Society of Men to Attest them, or to witness that the Letter of Scripture is right. This is so far from following out of the former part of Dr. St's. Discourse, that the contrary aught to follow; or, from prejudicing his own pretence, that it conduces exceedingly to it. For certainly his Sober Enquirer would less be in doubt to miss of what's necessary to Salvation in case the Letter, on which all depends, be well attested, than if it be not; and most certainly an Infallible Society of Men can better attest that Letter than a Fallible one: and those Writings can with better show of Reason be owned to contain in them the Will of God, if their Letter be attested beyond possibility of being wrong, than if left in a possibility of being such; for if the Letter be wrong, All is wrong in this case.—] As manifest then as 'tis, that to be Absolutely Certain of any thing, is not to be Fallibly Certain of it; that is, as manifest as 'tis, that to be Absolutely Certain of a thing, is to be Infallibly Certain of it; so manifest it is, that you there contradict yourself here, and, that, however you may endeavour to come off, you allow not heartily, nor without some regret and reluctancy, an Absolute Certainty to Tradition, even in Attesting Scripture's Letter. 24. In these words of yours (p. 7) [As to the Rule of our Faith] give me leave to reflect on the word [OUR,] and thence to ask you, who are YOU? A Question which I ask not of your Name or Surname, but of your Judgement (as you call it) of Discretion. Are you a Socinian, an Arian, a Sabellian, an Eutychian, etc. or what are you? Are you a whole, or a half, or a Quarter-nine-and-thirty-Article Man? Do you take them for Snares, or Fences, and when for the one, and when for the other, and wherefore? These words [The Rule of OUR Faith] make you all these at once; for all these profess unanimously Scripture's Letter is their Rule of Faith. Mr. G. when he came to your House, imagined he was to treat with a Protestant, or something like it, and to have learned from you what Absolute Certainty you would assign for your, (that is, Protestant) Faith; and you give him only a Generical Latitudinarian Rule, common to all the Heresies in the World. The Project of the Comprehension-Bill was a trifle to this: It brings into one Fold all the most enormous Stragglers that have been since Christ's time, nay Wolves, and Sheep and all. It blends into one Mass the most heterogeneous and hitherto irreconcilable Sects. Nay, it miraculously makes Light and Darkness very consistent, and Christ and Belial very good Friends. For your own Credit sake then distinguish your kind of Protestants (if you be indeed one of that Church) from that infamous Rabble of stigmatised Heretics; and let us know what is the Proper Difference that restrains that Notion of a Common Rule to your particular, as such a kind of Protestant, and show us that specifical Rule to be Absolutely Certain. I say, such a kind; for even the word Protestant too is a Subaltern Genus, and has divers Species, and 'tis doubted by many, who are no Papists, under which Species you are to be ranked. But, why should I vex you with putting you upon manifest Impossibilities? For the Letter being the common Rule to them all, and, as daily experience shows us, variously explicable, that which particularizes it to belong specially to this or that Sect, as its proper Rule, can be only this, [According as myself, and those of my judgement understand or interpret it.] The Difference then constituting your Protestant Rule, as distinguished from that of those most abominable Heresies, can only be [as my own judgement, or others of my side, thus or thus interpret Scripture's Letter] and wriggle which way you please, there it will and must end at last. Go to work then, distinguish yourself by your Ground of Faith, and then make out this your proper Rule to be Absolutely Certain or Infallible; and then, who will not laugh at you for attempting it, and assuming that to yourself, which you deny to God's Church, and preferring yourself as to the Gift of Understanding Scripture right, before the whole body of those many and Learned Churches in Communion with Rome? Nay, and before the Socinians too; without so much as pretending to make out to the World, that you have better Means, either Natural or Supernatural, to interpret those Sacred Oracles, than had the others. 25. My last Exception is, that you pretend the Letter of Scripture is a Rule of Faith for your People, which not one in a Million, even of your own Protestants relies on; or ever thinks of relying on, in order to make choice of their Faith, or determining what to hold. This pretence of yours looks so like a mere Jest, that I cannot persuade myself you are in earnest, when you advance such a Paradox. For, 'tis manifest that while your Protestants are under Age, and not yet at years of Discretion to judge, they simply believe their Fathers and Teachers; that is, they follow the way of Tradition, however misplaced. And, when they come to Maturity, pray tell us truly, how many of your Sober Enquirers have you met with in your life, who endeavour to abstract from all the prejudices they have imbibed in their Minority, and, reducing their inclined thoughts to an equal Balance of Indifferency, do with a wise Jealousy, lest this Popish way of believing immediate Fathers and Pastors should delude them, as it has done the whole World formerly, resolve to examine the Book of Scripture itself, read it attentively, pray daily and fervently, that God's Spirit would discover to them, whether what they have learned hither to be true or no, and what is; and, in a word, use all the Fallible means (for you allow them no other) which your Sober Enquirers are to make use of to find out their Faith? I doubt, if you would please to answer sincerely, you would seriously confess you scarce ever met with such a one in your life; that is, never met with any one who relied upon Scripture's Letter practically for his Rule of Faith, whatever you may have taught them to talk by rote. Can any Man of Reason imagine, that all the Reformed in Denmark or Sueden (to omit others) did light to be so unanimously of one Religion merely by means of reading your Letter-Rule, and your Sober Enquiry? Or can any be so blind, as not to see, that 'tis the following the natural way of Tradition, or children's believing Fathers (that is, indeed, of Education) that such multitudes in several places, continue still of the same persuasion; and that you consequently owe to this way, which you so decry in Catholics, that any considerable number of you do voluntarily hang together at all? And that those Principles of yours, which you take up for a show, when you write against Catholics, would, if put in practice, in a short time crumble to Atoms all the Churches in the World? Perhaps, indeed, when your Protestants come at Age, they may receive some Confirmation from their Fathers and Preachers, quoting Scripture-places against what Catholics hold, or what they shall please to say they hold; and by the same means come to believe a Trinity, the Godhead of Christ, Christ's Body being absent in the Sacrament, and such like; but do the Hearers and Learners make it their business to use all careful disquisition (for a slubbering superficial diligence will not serve the turn in matters of such high Concern) whether the Catholics, and those great Scripturists, who deny those other Points, do not give more congruous explications of those places than their own Preachers do? unless they do this, or something equivalent, 'tis manifest the Letter of Scripture is not their Rule, but honest Tradition. And that they do no such thing, is hence very apparent, that they rest easily satisfied, and well apaid with their Parson's interpretation of Scripture, they presently accept it for right and good, and readily swallow that sense, which some Learned Men, of their own Judgement, assign it, without thinking themselves obliged to observe your Method of Sober Enquiry. You may rail against the Council of Trent, as you will, for forbidding any to interpret Scripture against the Sense which the Church holds; but 'tis no more than what your Hearers perpetually practise, and the Preachers too (for all their fair words) expect from them. And I much doubt even yourself (tho' your Principles are the most pernicious for taking matters out of the Church's, and putting them into private Hands, of any Protestant I ever yet read) would not take it very well if some Parishioner of yours, presuming upon his Prayers for Direction, etc. should tell you that you erred in Interpreting Scripture, and that the Sense he gave it, was sound and right Faith, yours wrong and Heretical; and I would be glad to know what you would say to him, according to your Principles, if he should hap to stand out against you, that he understands Scripture to be plainly against a Trinity and Christ's Divinity, as john Biddle did against the Minister of his Parish, and the whole Church of England to boot. 'Tis plain you ought to cherish and commend him for standing firm to his Rule; But I am much afraid you would be out of humour with him, and esteem yourself affronted. You may pretend what you please of high Expressions given by Antiquity, of Scripture's incomparable Excellency, and Sufficiency for the Ends it was intended for, which we do not deny to it; but I dare say, even yourself does not think, that either the Ancient Faithful, or the Modern Reformers, meant that any of the Ecclesia credens, or Believing Church, should have the liberty to Interpret Scripture against the Ecclesia docens, or Teaching Church, i. e. Pastors; or Coin a Faith out of it, contrary to the present or former Congregation of which he was a Member. 26. The sum is; 'Tis evident hence, that Tradition of your Fathers and Teachers, and not Scriptures Letter, is indeed your Rule; That by it you Interpret Scripture; which then only is called your Rule, and made use of as such, when you are Disputing against us; because having thus set it up, to avoid and counterbalance the Authority of the former Church you left, you make account your own private Interpretation of it may come to be thought Argumentative against the great Body of those Churches from whose Communion you departed; and yet you judge no private Parishioner should claim the same Privilege against you, without affronting your great Learning, and Pastoral Authority. But I much wonder you should still venture to call Scripture's Letter a Rule of Faith, having been beaten from that Tenet so pitifully in Error Nonplussed, from Pag. 59 to Pag. 72. where I believe you may observe divers Particulars requisite to be cleared ere the Letter can be in all regards Absolutely Certain, which the Consent of all Christian Churches will never reach to by their mere Authority, unless you will allow the Sense of Christ's Doctrine descending by Tradition, did preserve the Copy substantially right and entire. 27. Your pretended Rule of Faith then, being in reality the same that is challenged by all the Heretics in the World, viz. Scripture's Letter Interpreted by yourselves; I will let you see in this following short Discourse, how far it is from being Absolutely Certain. I. God has left us some Way to know surely what Christ and his Apostles taught. II. Therefore this Way must be such, that they who take it, shall arrive by it at the End it was intended for; that is, know surely what Christ and his Apostles taught. III. Scripture's Letter Interpretable by Private judgements, is not that Way; for we experience Presbyterians and Socinians (for example) both take that Way, yet differ in such high Fundamentals, as the Trinity, and the Godhead of Christ. IV. Therefore Scripture's Letter Interpretable by Private judgements, is not the Way left by God to know surely what Christ and his Apostles taught, or surely to arrive at right Faith. V. Therefore they who take only that Way, cannot by it arrive surely at right Faith, since 'tis impossible to arrive at the End, without the Means or Way that leads to it. 28. I do not expect any Answer to this Discourse, as short as it is, and as plain and as nearly as it touches your Copyhold; it may be served as Mr. G's Argument is, turned off so so with an Instance, if there be one at hand; or, with what always is at hand, an Irony or scornful Jest, your readiest; and, in truth, most useful Servants: But you must be excused from finding any Proposition or Inference to deny, or any thing, save the Conclusion itself: Which, tho' it will not be fairly avoided, I cannot hope should be fairly admitted, unless I could hope that Men would be more in love with Truth than their Credit. Till Truth be taken a little more to heart, Catholic Arguments will and must always be faulty; but they are the most unluckily and crossly faulty of any in the World; faulty still in the wrong place. When fault is found in other Arguments, it is always found in the Premises; in these, 'tis found in the Conclusion: In which, notwithstanding, all who know any thing of a Conclusion, know there can be no fault, if there be none in the Premises. Indeed, they show that to be true which Men cannot endure should be true; and that is their great and unpardonable fault. That you may not think I talk in the Air, I declare openly, that you cannot Answer this Discourse, unless you will call some unconcerning Return an Answer; and I engage myself to show the Proposition true, and the Inference good, which you shall pitch upon to deny; And the Distinction, if you will make any, not to purpose. The truth is, I engage for no great matter; for I know beforehand you can no more Answer now, than you could to Error Nonplussed, or can prove an Absolute Certainty in Protestant Faith. 29. To return now to Mr. G. the Second thing which you desire him to make good, is, That the Tradition from Father to Son is an infallible Conveyance of Matters of Faith, notwithstanding the Greek Church is charged by him with Error, which adhered to Tradition. That is, you desire him to prove over again, what you tell us yourself he has proved once already: For you tell us (p. 5.), he proved, That they [Traditionary Christians] could not innovate in Faith, unless they did forget what they held the day before, or out of malice alter it. Pray, when it is proved, that the Conveyance of Faith by Tradition, excludes the possibility of Change in Faith, save by forgetfulness or malice, is it not proved, That, where there could be neither forgetfulness nor malice, there could be no change in Faith? You do not, I suppose, desire he should prove, that Men had always Memories, or that Christians were never malicious enough to damn themselves and Posterity wittingly; and yet it can stick no where else: If it can, said Mr. G. assign where. Now you know very well, that a Conveyance which makes it impossible that Faith should ever be changed, is an Infallible Conveyance; and the very thing is proved which you desire should be proved. What reason has Mr. G. to prove it a second time? And what reason have you to desire it? If Proof would content you, you have it already; but a second cannot hope to content you better than the first, unless it be worse. 30. Yes, but you would have him prove, Notwithstanding the Greek Church, etc. (p. 7.) Notwithstanding? Why, do you think it is with Arguments as with Writs, where the want of a Non obstante spoils all? When a Truth is once proved, is it not proved, notwithstanding all Objections? And will any Notwithstanding unprove it again? Will your Notwithstanding show us there was a time in which Men were not Men, nor acted like Men? Will it show us, that a thing which cannot possibly be changed, may yet possibly remain not the same? Will it show us, that a Cause can be without its Effect, or an Effect without its Cause? Will it show us, that a thing can be and not be at once? Unless it can do such Feats as these, you may keep your Notwithstanding to yourself, for any Service it will do you here: For all the notwithstanding in the world cannot hinder a thing which is true, from being true; nor the Proof which proves it to be true, from being a Proof. Mr. G 's Proof shows, that Tradition from Father to Son is an Infallible Conveyance of Faith, as plainly, as that Men are Men: And would you persuade us with the Rhetoric of your Notwithstanding, that we do not see what we see? Tho' you had brought twenty of them instead of one, we could see nothing by them▪ but that you had a good Fancy; for they show us nothing of the Object, nor offer at it. You show us not how the Operations of Human Nature should be suspended in our present Case, nor any thing which should or could suspend them, but would have us believe Men were prodigiously forgetful or malicious, purely for the sake of an Imagination of yours. I pray rub up afresh your old Logical Notions, and reflect whether it were ever heard of in University Disputes, that when an Argument is advanced, the Defendant is allowed to make Objections against it; and instead of Answering, bid the Arguer prove his Conclusions to be true, Notwithstanding all his Objections? Consider how perfectly this confounds the Offices of the Disputant and Defendant, and makes all Regular Discourse impossible. Consider how this new Method of yours destroys the very possibility of ever concluding any thing, that is, the very Faculty of Reasoning; For Objections being generally multipliable without end, if all of them must be Solved ere any Argument concludes, nothing will be concluded, nor any Conclusion admitted: And so a long so Farewell to Rational Nature. Consider that Truth is built on its own intrinsical Grounds, and not on the Solving Objections. For your own Credit's sake then with Learned Men and Logicians, do not seek to evade with notwithstanding, but Answer fairly and squarely to the Argument as it lies: Consider, that who has found the Cause, has found the Effect. Mr. G. has found us a Cause of Infallible Conveyance, and therefore has showed us an Infallible Conveyance. You pretend, that tho' there was the Cause, there was not the Effect; and this 'tis known beforehand cannot be, and you knew it as well as any body: But you knew likewise there was no saving your Stakes without playing a new Game; and therefore, give you your due, did all that could be done, in trying to divert our sight from a Matter plain before us, and amuse us us with a Matter of Fact, which you are sure will be obscure enough, by that time it is handled long enough. The Terms you put, viz. Tradition, Error, and the Greek Church, must needs bring into Dispute, whether such and so many Quotations, or some one or two Men disclaiming their Tenet to be a Novelty, be a Proof of Tradition from Father to Son; whether the Error be any Error; and whether, and for how much, an Error in Faith, and how much of it belongs to Divinity; whether the Greek Church be engaged by a Citation from a Greek Author; of two that be cited, one against another, which shall be preferred, and thought to speak the sense of his Church; and which is a Latinized, which a frank Grecian. And who shall see through the Mists which these Disputes will raise? More too will fall in in process of time: There will be wrangling about the sense of Words, the propriety of Phrases, the preference of Readins, and twenty such important quarrels; which will tyre out every body, and satisfy no body. In short, you saw that if you could persuade People not to think the Church of Rome Infallible, till all be said, which will occur to be said of the Greek Church, you are safe enough; For Doomsday will come before that day. Till than you may carry it with a show of Erudition, because there must be abundance of Greek cited. And this is all which can come of your Instance; and I wish it were not all you had in your Eye. 31. In the mean time you have not answered Mr. G. because you have found no fault in any Proposition, or in the Inference of his Argument; and therefore it rests with you to answer it. He has answered you; because he has found this fault with your Instance, which you make your Antecedent, that it is not true; and that the Greek Church did not at once err in Faith, and adhere to Tradition: and therefore it rests again with you to prove it; and yet while you are Debtor both ways, you call upon him to pay. Ere we part, Take this along with you, that the Debt which you are precisely bound to satisfy, first is to answer his Argument, and till you do this, you can claim no right to Object or Argue. I am SIR Your humble Servant. The Second Catholic Letter; OR, REFLECTIONS ON THE Reflecters Defence OF Dr. Stillingfleet's First Letter to Mr. G. Against the ANSWER To the Arguing Part of it. Published with Allowance. LONDON, Printed, and sold by Matthew Turner at the Lamb in High-Holbourn. 1687. TO THE READER. PErhaps it has scarce been seen hitherto, that all our Polemical Contests were reduced within so narrow a compass. My First Letter insisted chiefly on Two short Discourses: Whereof the one undertook to show the Nullity of the Rule of Faith, claimed by Dr. St. and his Protestants. The other the Absolute Certainty of the Catholic Rule; and the whole Controversy was, in short, about the Certainty or Uncertainty of Christian Faith. Both of those Discourses were presumed by us to be Conclusive; and so we offered a fair Advantage to our Adversary, if he could show clearly any of our Propositions was false, or their Connexion slack. Hence I had good hopes that Reply of mine would have brought our Controversy very near an end, had Dr. St's Return been suitable to our Attempts. Especially, it had brought the Business to a Crisis, had he been pleased to show the Absolute Certainty of his Rule, or of his Faith, as grounded on that Rule, which was justly expected. But Error Nonplussed has already convinced the World, That the bringing any Dispute to Principles or Grounds, agrees not with their Constitution who have none. While our Expectations were thus raised, no News could we hear of Dr. St. An Answer comes out from another hand; not very obliging to him in my opinion, whether he were or were not preacquainted with it: For if he were (and 'tis hard to imagine that a Piece writ in his Defence had not both his Direction, Inspection, and Approbation) People will suspect he foresaw what would come of it, and was glad the Shame should fall on another; and that he has but little Kindness for his Friend, whom he suffers to Write on this manner. If he were not, they will suspect his Friends have as little Kindness for him, and less Regard, who manage his Cause without his Privity. However it be, the Answer affords no work for a Replier, but the most ungrateful one in the World; to be perpetually telling men of their Faults, without the least hopes of doing them good, or contributing to their amendment; They being of such a nature, that they are our Adversaries most necessary supports in their unlucky circumstances. And indeed, the whole Piece seems to have no other Design, but to bring the Dispute into a Wrangle. Yet this Profit may be hoped, that every moderate judgement will see by the very methods we take, which side desires and sincerely endeavours that Truth may appear. It would be much a greater, if Dr. St. or whom he pleases to employ, would plainly show the * Second Letter, P. 14. Absolute Certainty which he says they have; or else plainly confess they have it not. But this is not to be hoped. Yet I entreat the Reader, because I distrust my own Credit, to solicit him (if he thinks it not too dangerous for him) to do the one or the other; and in doing it, to use as much Reason as he will, and as little Laughing as he can. We are sufficiently satisfied of his faculty of Risibility, and would be glad to see a touch or two of his Rationality. REFLECTIONS ON Dr. St's Reflecters Defence Addressed to Himself. 1. I Inquire not, Sir, since it concerns me not to know, why you would needs become a Party, or rather an Advocate in a Cause, depending between Dr. St. and another. If it were desired of you, you are to be excused, so you perform well what you undertook; that is, to defend the Dr. especially his Logic, and his Absolute Certainty; But if you had nothing to draw you in, besides the Weight of what you had to say, I think you might very well have kept out. You begin like a man of Art, with prepossessing your Reader against your Adversary, and in favour of yourself: and so would have me pass for a pleasant, artificial, deluding Companion; and yourself for a man, Godly even to scruple, and who cannot barely repeat the Metaphor (of holding ones Cards) without * P. 2. ask Pardon. The Reader will find, by your writing, to which of us your former Character is most like. In the mean time, I own the Confidence of talking of Self-evidence, and Absolute Certainty, and Infallibility; and bless the Mercy of God, for making me of a Communion, in which that Language is Proper; and humbly pray Him to preserve me from the Face (if I must not say Confidence) of setting up for a Guide without them. For, between a blind Guide, and one who sees not his way, I think the difference is not great. Much good may your Modesty do you; your Obscurity; your Uncertainty and Fallibility. If your Conscience persuade you these are the best qualifications of Christian Doctrine, and best Security which God would provide for the Souls of men, mine would sooner use Twenty Metaphors, than persuade People to venture their Eternity upon them. But, at worst, it is no greater fault in me sure, than in * Dr. St 's first Letter, p. 7. & second, p. 14. Dr. St. to talk of Absolute Certainty. Unless he perhaps repent, and would be content an unfortunate Word inconsiderately blurted out, should be retracted for him by another, which 'tis not so handsome to retract himself; whereas I, like a man of Confidence, meant what I said, and stand to it; and can have no good opinion of those modest men, that say and unsay, as suits with the occasion. 2. To fall to our Business, your Discourse has Three Parts. The First reflects on what I said of turning Proof over from your Protestants to Catholics: The Second pretends to answer my Argument; And the Third, Mr. G's. Some Glean in your Language there are besides; but this is the main Crop. Upon the first Point, since Proof does or does not belong to Protestants, there is nothing more to be said to purpose, but either to show that Proof does not belong to them, or to bring it if it does. But let us see how you handle the matter. 3. I had expressed myself to grieve and wonder there should be so little value for Souls among your Party, as to send Men to the Tribunal of God, without furnishing them with assurance that they can justify their Accounts themselves. But if (say you) they may be assured they can give up a good account, P. 3. may they not be assured that they have the Grace of God, and of their justification and Salvation? And than what becomes of the Council of Trent? Of what Account do you speak, I beseech you? If, as I did, of an Account of Faith, I hope you will not persuade us a man cannot know why he believes, without knowing whether he be in the State of Grace, or sure of his Salvation; and therefore, P. 4. I hope you will not persist to think it hard to conceive how the bare assurance of the Truth of what is taught, should enable a man to justify his account, without an Assurance of Grace too; since his very Assurance of the Truth which he believes is a justification of his Account, for believing it. If you speak of an Account of our whole lives, it becomes you huge well to talk of my Confidence, who have yourself the Confidence to turn things against the plain Scope of my Discourse, against my plain Words, and (I much fear) against your own Knowledge. For where the only Question was of the Certainty of Protestant Faith, or (which is all one) of Christian Faith, upon your Protestant Grounds: an Account why your Protestants believe, who cannot tell whether Christ taught it, was the only Account that belongs to that Question. But what needs more? Are not you, I too, fully persuaded, while we are writing this very Controversy, that we maintain the Truth of our Faith by such arguments as can justify us not to have failed of that Duty; and if we do so, cannot both us justify ourselves in that particular, and all who assent upon them, to God as well as man? And cannot either of us bring a solid Argument to prove that Christ Taught what we hold, without being assured beforehand we are in the state of Grace, and shall be saved? Or, Is this any thing to the Council of Trent, as you pretend? What paltering is this then, to pretend, that no Controvertist can bring a Proof that concludes Christ Taught such a Doctrine, and so justifies them that adhere to the Truth it evinces; for fear (forsooth) of making men sure of their justification and Salvation, and of contradicting the Council of Trent. A pretty fetch, to excuse yourselves from bringing any Arguments worth a Straw to justify your Followers, for believing upon them! Alas! you have store enough of them; but out of pure Conscience (we must think) dare not produce them, for fear of enabling your People to justify themselves for not believing rashly; or for fear of making them sure of their Salvation. 4. I had alleged farther, that till Protestants produce the Grounds which prove their Faith to be True, it cannot with Reason be held Truth. You put my Discourse first in my Words, only leaving out those which did not please you, and then disguise it in your own, and laugh at it for being too plainly True: For plain Truth, it seems, is a ridiculous thing with you; and you are of opinion, that the more plain it is, that you ought to bring your Proofs, the less you are obliged to bring them. Thence you start aside to tell us, that the vulgar Catholic has less certainty than the vulgar Protestant; because the one has only the Word of his Priest, the other has the Word of his Minister and the Word of God in Scripture besides. Do you think Catholic Priests are at liberty to tell the vulgar what Faith they please, as your Ministers may interpret Scripture as seems best to their Judgement of Discretion! when you cannot but know, they dare not teach them any Faith, but what the Church holds; nor does the Church hold any but upon Tradition? Again, You do well to say your People have it in Scripture, or in a Book; for they have it no where else. And you know the vulgar Socinians and Presbyterians, and all the rest, have it as much there, as your vulgar Protestants, notwithstanding all you have said, or can say; and then, I suppose, you do not think they Truly have the Word of God on their side, unless you think the Word of God says different things to different Hearers. When you prove that you and your Ministers have any Certain means of making it out, that the Sense, which by their explaining and catechising they put upon the Written Characters, is truly God's Meaning, you will do something, make many Converts, and myself one among the rest: Till then, to possess your vulgar Protestants with a Conceit of having the Word of God, is merely to delude them. Sure you wanted a Common-place to furnish out your Paragraph, or else writ it in a Dream. For, * P. 5. to tell me, that Truth can depend no more upon the Saying of a Romish Priest, than of an English Minister, when I tell you, it depends not on any private man's Sayings, is not a Reply of a man well awake. In two words, Bring you Proofs, say I; the Saying, that is, the No-proof of a Minister, is as good as the No-proof of a Priest, say you; And the short and the long is; No Proof, I thank you. 5. But two things, say you, follow from my Position, Ibid. which you fear I will not grant. The First is, That if we cannot with Reason hold a Truth till the Intrinsical Grounds of it be produced, we cannot with reason hold any thing for a Truth, namely, because the Church of Rome hath determined it; for her Determination is no Intrinsical Ground of the Truth, but only an outward Testimony or Declaration of it; and then what's become either of her Infallibility or Authority to command our Faith! As slips of honest Ignorance deserve compassion and instruction, and I do not know this to be any more, I will be so charitable, as to set you right. Authority, amongst those who already admit it for True, has Force to prove that to be Truth, which depends on it, and will conclude against those who allow its veracity, if it be shown to be engaged against them. But it has not this Effect upon Human Nature by its proper Power as 'tis mere Authority; but, because Intrinsical Mediums justify it to be worthy to be relied on. Whence, let that Authority come into dispute, it will lose its Credit, unless it can be proved by such Mediums to deserve what it pretends to. And, hence, you see we go about to demonstrate the Infallibility of the Church's Human Authority, in deriving down Christian Faith. To clear this farther, I advance this Fundamental Position; viz. No Authority deserves any Assent farther than Reason gives it to deserve: And, therefore, without abating any thing of our respect, we may affirm, that the Authority of the whole Catholic Church would be no greater than that of an old Woman, (or one of your sober Enquirers) were there no more Reason to be given for believing the former, than there is for believing the later. And consonantly to this Doctrine, we declare to you, that, When Dr. St. comes to argue, either out of Authority of Writers, or Instances depending on their Authority, against Tradition; he shall be pressed to make out by Intrinsical Mediums they are Absolutely Certain; or they shall deservedly be looked upon and contemned as Inconclusive. By this time, I hope, you see that All Truths are built on Intrinsical Mediums; and, that whereas you apprehended they would overthrow our Church's Testimony or Authority, such Mediums (in case we produce them) are the best means to establish it, and give it force upon ourselves and others: As also, how it comes that the Church can oblige to Belief: which is not by a dry commanding our Faith, as you apprehend; but by having its Human Authority so solidly grounded upon Reason, that itself becomes a Motive able to beget, according to the best Maxims of Rational Nature, such an Assent in us, to this matter of Fact, that Christ and his Apostles taught such Doctrines. But, what a put off is this? We say Truth is not therefore Truth, because of men's bare Sayings or Authority; and therefore demand your Proofs from Intrinsical Mediums, (for thither it must come, ere it be known for Truth) to make out what you pretend; Your Answer, in effect, is, You are afraid to do it, lest you should destroy our Church's Infallibility and Authority. How much is our Church in your Debt, that the Care of Her makes you careless of those Souls in your own Church, to whom you owe this satisfaction. 6. The second thing you fear I will not grant, is, A judgement of Discretion to common People, P. 5. with which they may discern the Intrinsical Grounds of Truth. You gave yourself at first the Character of a scrupulous man; and I see by this, you have a mind to maintain it. You know, that those who write and print, can have no design their Books should not be read; and you know those that read, will and must judge of what they do read; and yet your scrupulosity can fear I will not allow the Common People to judge of the Intrinsical Grounds of Truth, who take pains they may judge, put it into their power to judge, and out of my own, and so cannot hinder them, tho' I would. Indeed, I think it no great sign of a Judgement of Discretion, to pretend to discern the Truth of Faith, by Lights that do not show it to be True; and, upon such a Judgement I wish and labour People should not venture their Souls. But I disallow no other judgement of Discretion; full well knowing, that the more Judgement a man has, and the more he uses it, the sooner and better he will discern, that the Doctrine of Christ cannot be securely learned from those of Your and Dr. St's Principles. But, Why all this? Or, How come I to stand in your way? Do I hinder you from showing Protestants that They are Certain of their Faith? They allow a Judgement of Discretion, if it stick there, whether I do or no. But you cannot gratify Catholics with Proof, it seems, because they are against Judgement of Discretion; nor Protestants, because they are for it; that is, in plain terms, you will not prove the Certainty of your Faith at all. You conclude very conformably, that I * P. 6. have set us all on even Ground: Yes, most Mathematically even: For I set Absolute Certainty on the one side, and Uncertainty on the other; and this, in your Language, is even Ground. P. 6. 7. Your next Paragraph says, I fall upon the Certainty of Protestant Faith; which I hope easily to overthrow. The Reader cannot but apprehend now, that I am making Arguments against it, of which you know very well I did not think. Where do I fall upon this Matter! Why, I said, Suppose Mr. G. could not prove Protestants are certain, are they therefore certain? The meaning of which words is clearly this, that the Certainty of Protestant Faith must depend on their own Proofs for it, not on any Man's being able or not able to prove the contrary, which is what Dr. St. would have put upon us. So that (to avoid proving, which was demanded) you put upon me the direct contrary to what I affirmed, viz. That the Certainty of Protestant Faith does depend upon our not proving they have none; whereas I contend it does not depend upon it. What shifts are you put to, that you may escape this dangerous business of proving your Faith Certain. Well, but did I say true, or no? You trouble not your Head with such impertinent thoughts, but fall to prophesy what I imagined. This (say you) he first imagines, that all the certainty of our Faith is this, That Papists cannot prove it to be uncertain, and that then I make sport with my own Imagination. Better and better! Not to take notice of your shuffling in, that Papists cannot prove Protestants are not Certain, which I am very far from imagining; because I said our not-proving the contrary, is no Certainty to Protestants, he will have me imagine it is their Certainty; nay, All their Certainty: when he knows I am aware, and confess they pretend to Scripture for it; and, p. 26. urged them to make out they had Absolute Certainty by It. The rest is, to tell me I play, and you will be serious: And your way of being serious, when you have chosen to fall upon this Question, whether Protestants become Certain by our not proving them Uncertain, is, without saying a word to it, to skip to another Paragraph of mine. 8. Where I had said, that Any man may find it confessed to his hand, by Protestants, that they have no Absolute Certainty of their Faith: For which I cited Dr. Tillotson. And you tell me first, that Dr. Tillotson is an excellent man; and so he is; for he excels even yourself (which requires a great Talon in your way of handling Controversy) in all your Arts. Next, to take your turn in imagining, you imagine single Dr. Tillotson too many for all the Traditionary Catholics to answer his Rule of Faith. P. 6. And I imagine, that Dr. Tillotson knows the contrary: For I have been informed, Dr. Tillotson had the offer of an Answer, from a Traditionary Catholic long ago, upon condition he would contribute his Credit to get it printed: which he thought not sit to do. Since I perceive you do not know an Answer when you see it, unless the word [Answer] be in the Title-page, I will not tell you it is answered already, tho' I believe I can make it good: But I will venture a fair Wager with you, it will be answered, in his own Formal way, every jot as soon as Reason against Raillery. Lastly, You deny that this Confession That Protestants have no Certainty (no Absolute Certainty, P. 7. if it please you) of their Faith, is to be found in the pages cited, or any other part of Dr. Tillotson's Book. If you do not understand English, I cannot help it; but any one that does, may find in the last of the pages cited. As far as silence gives consent, it is owned by Dr. Tillotson himself: See Reason against Raillery, p. 97. to p. 114. For it was laid before him by Reason against Raillery, and with him it has lain these fifteen Years; and yet you would persuade us you see it not, Ibid. nor I neither, if I may be believed against myself. 9 Your Rhetoric, Sir, is very great, if it will do you this piece of Service; but let us hear it however. I had said to Dr. St. p. 23. My First Letter, p. 23. You seem to grant you are thus Absolutely-Certain or Infallible, by virtue of Tradition. Upon which Theme you thus declaim. How? confess we have no Certainty (no Absolute Certainty, I beseech you again) and yet seem to grant we are Infallible, and that too by Virtue of Tradition.— Some people had need of good Memories. As if it were so strange a thing for Protestants to contradict one another, or the same man himself; or, that there needed Memory to observe what passes every day. By the favour of your Exclamations, Dr. St. did say at the Conference, Dr. St's second Letter, p. 14. that They are Absolutely Certain, that they now hold all the same Doctrine that was taught by Christ and his Apostles,— by the Divine Revelations contained in the Writings of the New Testament; and of those Revelations by the Universal Testimony of the Christian Church. Ibid. p. 15. And in his First Letter he did desire Mr. G. to prove that they have no Absolute Certainty as to the Rule of their Faith, Dr. St's First Letter, p. 7. altho' they have a larger and firmer Tradition for it than we can have for the points of Faith in difference. And Dr. Tillotson did say in his Rule of Faith, p. 118. We are not infallibly certain that any Book (speaking of Scripture) is so ancient as it pretends to be, or that it was written by him whose Name it bears; or, that this is the sense of such and such passages in it: It is possible all this may be otherwise. Now, if one of those Writers do not seem to grant that they are Absolutely Certain, (or Infallible) and that too by virtue of Tradition, and the Other confess, that they have no Absolute Certainty of their Faith, English is no intelligible Language in England. If you think this a Contradiction, you may talk with your excellent men about it, and let me alone; till you can show I talk against myself by relating barely what others say. Must my Memory be blamed, when their Judgements are in fault? For a Contradiction it is, if Absolutely Certain and Infallible be the same; which I both proved formerly, and it will come into play again e'er long. However I only said they seemed to grant, etc. For the Tenet of Faith's Uncertainty, if I may speak what I think, is hearty in them; it's Absolute Certainty is but seeming; and surely, 'tis lawful to say he seems to hold it, who in print avows it, whether he do indeed hold it or no. 10. From hence you pass to a company of Traditionary Gentlemen; with whom if you have business, P. 7. I have none, and think yours cannot be very great, since you take this time to dispatch it. You may dispatch with me, if you please, first; and say what you will to them afterwards. Dr. Tillotson, you say, in his Rule of Faith, p. 120. etc. said great matters of them, and if I find them wronged, I have the liberty to vindicate them. I know you would invent twenty impertinent Tasks for me, so I would but forget the point in hand, and excuse you from proving. But how careless are you of what you say. One of those Authors was occasionally vindicated in the Letter of Thanks, and the notorious Abuse of him, made good against that Dr's Excuse, in Reason against Raillery, p. 227. to p. 234. And were it seasonable, perhaps we should find the others abused too, or wilfully misunderstood. But, What is this to our present business? At last, you conclude with a seasonable Warning, as you call it; That, Ibid. if any Protestant shall begin to plead Infallibility by Virtue of Tradition, it will behoove Catholics in time to seek cut a new one. Why so, I beseech you! This is as much as to say, that, as soon as Protestants take a fancy to any thing that belongs to Catholics, it is their own, and Catholics must presently yield it up. Your reason is, because When both Parties pretend alike to Infallibility and Tradition, neither of these can be any longer a fit Medium to prove which is in the Right. What will be when both pretend alike, we shall see when the Time comes. But, Why must they, or how can they pretend alike? Can Tradition infallibly deliver contrary things? Why should Tradition be a Medium less fit to determine between Catholic and Protestant, which of them has right to Infallibility, when both pretend to it by Tradition, than a Deed to determine between Peter and Paul, which has right to the Estate, which both claim by the same Deed? Do their contrary Pretences hinder it from being seen whether the Deed be for Peter or Paul; or Tradition for Catholics or Protestants? Or do you think a Protestant, to get Tradition on his side, has no more to do, but to pretend to it. At this rate, Scripture cannot be a fit Medium for you, because all Heretics pretend to it, and alike too. But it seems, that with you, when two pretend, One with Right, the Other without it, they both pretend alike, or with equal Title. Of which it was, indeed, seasonable to warn us; for neither we, (nor any man well in his wits) would have hit on it of ourselves. Thus much in return to your present Excursion. But what's become of your Proof all this while? Instead of bringing that, you tell me, I fall upon Protestant Certainty, of which there was not the least show; that I speak against myself; that Dr. Tillotson is an Excellent man, that he did not confess, etc. Out of which rambling Talk we are to conclude, That your Protestant Proof needs not appear; but to make us amends for this constant Neglect, you will needs give us a seasonable Warning; and that's worth all the Proof in the World. 11. Yet we shall have this Proof, I hope, in the next Paragraph: For you give me notice then, When your Certainty (Absolute Certainty, P. 8. I pray you again for Dr. Stillingfleet's sake) is once proved, no more is needful to confute our Infallibility, and that you are not afraid to undertake making it good, even All that I here call upon you to prove. And you do not raise our Expectations sure only to defeat them. Yet it bodes ill, that you would have the word [Absolutely] left out a while: A motion which would make a jealous man suspect you had a design to palm a Certainty upon us which will prove no-Certainty. But you are Absolute Master of your own Proofs, and may put in and put out what you please. ay, for my part, cannot consent to leave that word out; because it is not fair to alter a word of Dr. St's; nor possible, tho' it were fair. For you and I cannot make him not have said what he has said; and, tho' we should agree to suppress that Word amongst ourselves, it will still be found in his Two Letters, do what we can. But, now we are thus far onward, 'tis pity to break for a single Word; and to give you your due, you begin to deal here very fair with us. We manifest, say you. Very well: Now the Business is on the Hinges again; and here is not only Proof, but Manifest Proof coming. But what is it which you manifest? Why, the Certainty you have of Scripture; Ibid. and that, after the same manner as we do our▪ Rule or Scripture, I know not which you mean. But, I see you need a good Memory too as well as your Neighbours: For you do not remember that Absolute Certainty of Scripture is not the Point to be proved, tho' I told you so in the very page you cite. I waved that point, not to be more severe than needs and put Protestants upon a Task which I told them withal They would find a hard one; but from which, while we both agree that Scripture is Certain, I was willing to excuse them. Again, You forget that just before you wondered at me for saying, You seem to grant you are thus Absolutely Certain or Infallible by virtue of Tradition; and now you say, you manifest your Certainty in the same manner as we do; and sure you do not forget, that Our manner of manifesting is by Tradition. But, to lose no more time about that which is not the point, pray How do you prove that which is▪ P. 9 12. Why, you think you do sufficiently prove the Certainty of every Article of your Faith, when you show it to be solidly grounded on God's Word; and, this being shown, wonderful things will follow. In the mean time you speak Oracle, and have all the reason in the world to think that you prove sufficiently, when you solidly show: Neither did you need to mince it with sufficiently, for 'tis very Absolutely Certain you do prove when you solidly show or prove; and this you might have said with less Ceremony if you had been pleased: For we can see well enough, that when there is Proof, there is Proof; tho' our Expectation had not been screwed up with your professions of Courage to undertake, or Shows to perform. This is just to invite your Company, say Grace to them, tell them you think you treat them sufficiently, when you set Solid Meat on the Board; and, all this done, send them hungry away. Pray, when will that When of yours be? When will the day come, in which you will show your Faith to be solidly-grounded on the Word of God? Every Article, as you word it, (to bring it, I suppose, to your solid Endless way of Quoting and Criticising) is too much at present. We are not got so far yet: It will be time to talk of This or That Article, when This or That Article is in Question. At present, you are to show, if you can, that you have any Means, unless you take Ours to ground any Article solidly on the Word of God. You are to show your interpretation of it is Absolutely Certain, and that God's Word means as you teach it does. Otherwise your Confident Talking will not hinder us from seeing that you wretchedly delude your Followers; while you are yourselves truly Uncertain, whether any thing you teach them be True, and Conscious that you are so. 13. And yet, tho' you have served us thus, you have a fetch to lay the blame upon me, for being harder to you than the Laws of Disputation are. I will have them, P. 9 he says, prove two things more: First, that they are absolutely certain of All This. By the way, I take for granted, that by All This, you mean All which Dr. St. affirmed, which was All of which I desired Proof. And Secondly, Not only this, but of All that more which Our Saviour taught his Apostles. Of this Charge I own the first half. I did demand proof of Absolute Certainty, and that for All This; and shall persist to demand it, till you show me the Disputation-Law-Book, which allows a Disputant to say what he pleases, and choose whether he will prove it or no when he has done. Dr. Stillingfleet did affirm, that You are Absolutely Certain; and, absolutely Certain that you now hold All the same Doctrine that was Taught by Christ & his Apostles. And of All this, Dr. St's second Letter, p. 14. all the Laws of Disputation that I ever read or heard of, warrant me to demand proof: And you shall permit me to believe there was something in the Wind, besides those Laws, which makes you decline to give it. I had been Logician good enough, if you had known how to have proved. Yes, but I make Absolutely-Certain and Infallible all one. I make them all one! Why, all Mankind made them so before I was born. Take all the Men who pretend to Absolute Certainty, and all the ways by which they pretend; Authority, Demonstration, Sense, Experience, or what you will; and see whether all Mankind agree not, that when there is room for Deceit, there is no Absolute Certainty; and let a man pretend to be Absolutely Certain as much as he will, if he be, or may be deceived, he will be but laughed at for his pains, and not thought Absolutely Certain by any man in the World, no not by your Reflecting self. And yet you would persuade us I break the Laws of Disputation by understanding that Word as every body else does. Certainly, you would make a pleasant Lawmaker for Disputation: For when you have forbid us to understand words as others do, we could dispute no longer, nor so much as converse; for there would be no knowing one another's meaning. 14. But if I take that word ill, how must I do to take it well? Not to mistake a second time, I would be glad to know how yourself take it, who to be sure take it right. But this you keep to yourself; and you have reason, if by Absolutely Certain you mean not Absolutely Certain, which I suspect is the true case; and must be, unless you would have it mean nothing. Otherwise, why might not we know what you will let it mean, if you will not let it mean what I and every body else think it does. Since you leave me to myself, I shall, at the hazard of incurring again the Penalties of your Laws of Disputation, venture to think that He, who will not suffer those who are Absolutely Certain to be Infallible, will have them Fallible; that is, Deceivable in that whereof they are Absolutely Certain; and for aught they can tell, actually deceived. And then he will have Protestants believe that their Religion is the same that is taught by Christ, stand firm, and draw over to it as many as they can, and vex and persecute their Neighbours whom they cannot; prefer it before the Unity of the Church, and keep up differences in Religion with as much jealous Concern, as if the Wall of Division in the Church were the only safe Fence of the Nation; in a word, stake their Souls and Eternity upon it: When, all the while, he cannot Absolutely tell whether it be True or No; nay, knows he cannot. Let him honestly tell Protestants so; and if they will venture Persecution, and Schism, and Salvation on those terms, the Fault is their own, and he has washed his Hands: Otherwise, he deludes them shamefully. If they waver, and stand upon Security, they are told, they are Absolutely Certain, and this confirms them; for it is as good Security as Heart can wish: But, when it comes to be sifted, it appears they may be deceived for all their Security; and their Absolutely-Certain Religion proves to be such as perhaps is arrantly False. In short, they have a bare Sound to rely upon for their Souls. Call their Security Absolutely Certain, and 'tis good Protestant Doctrine; but call it Infallible, (which is the same) and 'tis rank Popery, and your Protestants will none of it. And so, they may if they will, and must if they will continue to be of your principles, be content with Sounds: But, if they will stand upon Security from Deceit, they must look for it where it is to be had: With all they can get here, it remains They may be Deceived. 15. The second-half of your Charge is purely your own Invention, and as pleasant an Invention as ever roving Fancy suggested. Absolute Certainty of Protestant Faith was turned by Dr. St. to Absolute Certainty of Scripture. Since then, Protestants believe more than that Scripture is Scripture, I said, they were to prove their Absolute Certainty of the more which they believed besides. You have taken such extraordinary pains to mistake me, as plainly as I expressed myself, that you fancy I would have them say they are thus certain of those Points which they deny to be in Scripture, and think them to be added by the Council of Trent, and which, therefore, they believe not. And these Points you understand to be the more of which I demanded Proof; and so by your power in Reflection, to desire Proof of what they do believe, is to desire Proof of what they do not believe: Absolute Certainty of what is their Faith, is Absolute Certainty of what is not their Faith; and their not-Faith is their more-Faith. Ridiculous Folly! To pretend we expected Protestants should prove to us such Points as they denied, and ourselves held; whence they could need no Proof to us; and if they needed any to others, it was certainly our proper Duty, not theirs, to produce them. Many, when they are hard put to it, have waved the consideration of Shame, but 'tis a sad thing utterly to renounce Common Sense too. Yet, what is it you will not do? What absurd pretences not lay hold of, rather than be brought to this odious and dangerous thing called Proving? You reflect out your Paragraph with the H. Scripture, the good men, who penned it, with the Primitive Church, and Primitive Creeds, and the Council of Trent, and this you call Reflecting on my Letter. 16. Yet you set a good face on't at p●r●ing, and tell us, You decline no Proof that is incumbent on you; as if it were not incumbent on you to prove what you say. You add, That we see by this time— as if there were any thing to be seen in all your Reflections, but that they decline all Proof, and that with the most awkward shifts in the World, as, Because the Council of Trent had made a Declaration concerning Grace, p. 3. Because a Minister is as good a man as a Priest, p. 4. Because the Infallibility and Authority of the Church of Rome might run a risk, p. 5. Because Catholics and Protestants hit it not about Judgement of Discretion, Ibid. Because Dr. Tillotson is an Excellent man, p. 6. Because we will not dispense with the word [Absolute] which was Dr. St's, but will needs take it in its natural sense, and not admit of your no-sense of it, Ibid. These and many other such weighty Reflections have been our chief entertainment; and yet your scrupulous Modesty has the Confidence to say you decline no Proof that is incumbent on you, P. 11. when you have incumbed all the while, if that be the word, on nothing but throwing out Baits to draw us from your incumbent Proof, to other matters. You talk indeed of Proof at last; and that which you say of it, is, That you prove when you prove. Moreover, you blame me for desiring Proof of two things more; whereof One is the very thing yourselves have made the point to be proved, and the other I never desired you to prove at all. With this stuff you face it out, Ibid. that You prove Scripture to be the Word of God; which, if one should put you to it, you cannot; and every Article of your Faith by the Scripture (common words, which every Heretic may and does use); when I have been all this while soliciting with all the earnestness I can, to know which way you can prove any Article with Absolute Certainty by Scripture; and you will not tell me, and I am sure, cannot. Though you have the Confidence to say you do it, yet every body may perceive you know you cannot. For your very next words are, Thus we prove we have sufficient Certainty of our whole Faith; which is to say, You decline Dr. St's Absolute Certainty, nor know of any way to prove more than sufficient Certainty. And this sufficient Certainty of yours may be no-Certainty: For there goes no more to make a thing sufficient, than to make a man content with it. A Yard of Cloth will make a sufficient Garment for him who is content to go half naked; and a Table without Meat is a sufficient Meal for him who is contented to fast. And so, as long as you can prevail with your Protestants to be content without Certainty, you can prove they have Certainty abundantly Sufficient, because no-Certainty will suffice. Marry, if they will insist upon having at least this Sufficient Certainty which you promise, I know not how you will do without Weights and Scales to weigh out your Certainty, according to several men's Exigencies, and make down-weight Sufficient, except they will take your word; for you have no more to give them even for so much: But, for Absolute True Certainty, the only Certainty of which Dr. Stillingfleet spoke and I demanded Proof, They must absolutely excuse you. Poor Protestants, to be thus used! That Empty Words and solemn Outsides, and Confident Noise, should be offered to them for Truth, and, which is more deplorable, pass upon them! That they should not yet perceive they are but the Stratagems of those no-principled men, who impose on them, and secretly laugh at them for their Easiness; and yet reflect not that they must answer one day with their souls, for suffering themselves to be so imposed upon. 17. From your Proving Talon you pass to your Answering Talon; and will try to answer a Discourse of mine, in which there are but * See my first Letter, P. 30. Five Propositions. The First, [God has left us some way to know surely what Christ and his Apostles taught.] This you grant to be a Certain Truth: and so there is one step of our Journey made. I think you grant the second too, not that you positively say I or No; for that is too precise & dull a Method for a Man of your parts: But as Plain Truth seems always ridiculous to you; you laugh at it for a foolish Inference, because 'tis so visibly in the Antecedent. You are not aware I perceive, that your Raillery is Compliment. To be contained in the Antecedent, which you make the Fault, is the Praise of an Inference; without which it would indeed be good for nothing, or rather not be at all. For which way can an Inference be drawn from an Antecedent, in which it was not to be drawn? Would you have us draw Wine out of an empty Cask, or Beer out of a Jar of Oil. Again, the more we know the thing is where we would draw it, the surer our Draught. But you seem to be so little acquainted with Antecedents & Inferences, that 'tis no wonder; by making them your sport, you make yourself the sport of those who do understand them. In the mean time your laughing is owning that the Inference is contained in the Antecedent, and therefore Certain, as you before owned the Antecedent was. And so we are another step onwards; and might so forwards without stopping longer, if you could have let my Proposition alone. But, you must needs be wording on't your own way, to show that either you did not understand it, or that you had a mind to inform us how neatly and dexterously you could change and pervert words, as well as Answer. My Words were: Therefore this way must be such that they who take it, shall arrive by it at the End it was intended for; that is, know surely what Christ and his Apostles taught. Your Words which you pretend equivalent to mine, are these: * P. 12. [If God has left us a Way to know, then by that Way we may know.] Pray Sir, do You take my sense, or say what I do? Is shall know and may know all one? I say that they who take the Way left by God shall, that is, cannot choose but know; as he cannot choose but draw a strait Line, who draws it by a strait Rule; and he cannot choose but come to London who goes on the Right Way thither: If either could miss, provided they draw by the Rule, and travel on in the Road; the Rule of the One is not strait, nor the Way of the other Right. And, so, I make account that the Way to know the Faith of Christ, is not a Right Way, if those who take it can fail to know their Faith; and therefore not the Way left by God. You barely say, we may know with which it consists we may not know; and, so, you make us a Way in which they who travel may be always out of the Way; which is well enough for a Way of your making; but it is certainly no Way of God's making; for it is plainly no Way. But leaving this little trial of your skill; that which you say to my Proposition (unfalsifyed) if you say any thing is, that 'tis, indeed a little too visibly, but yet true, and so we may go on. 18. You Preface to the Third Proposition with ask, who I dispute against? and why if I would be thought to dispute against you, I do not use such and such Terms? Two very pleasant Questions! Your own and my Title Page tell as many as see them that I am disputing against D. of Paul's; and yet you stand enquiring after the secret again, to ask why I do not use Terms to your mind, is to ask why the Defendant does not go to the Plaintiff to draw his Answer. You shall excuse me from being beholding to you, if you please; till you have a better knack at making Arguments, for yourself, you shall make none for me, by my consent. But, where lies the Quarrel? You do not sure expect I should write to your liking; and if you think I speak not against you, and your party, you need not trouble yourself with what I say. What does not touch you, cannot hurt you; so you may say concedo totum, and rest secure by being unconcerned. Yet you speak at last, and not till then, to purpose; when you bear the Reader in hand I pack the Cards, P. 13. and you will play fair; 'tis that must carry the Cause, or nothing. To get the Readers Affection on his side much imports him, who has nothing but such little Rhetorical tricks to trust to. 19 But, as if I had not the gift of Prophecy to foresee with what a kind of Man I should have to do, I happened to propose first what I intended to prove, before I went about to prove it, which I thought was the clearest way. You at a venture take what comes first, and tho' you saw it was my Conclusion which I inferred from the following Proposition, will needs speak to it before you speak to the Premises. This has so blundered all things, that the Reader will not easily perceive what we are doing. I shall therefore, (as you should have done) mind only the Proof here, and reserve the Inference till we come to the place where I made it. I put then to be proved that [Scripture's Letter interpretable by private judgements is not that Way] viz. the Way left by God; and for my proof that [we experience Presbyterians and Socinians, for example, both take that Way [of private Interpretation] viz. and yet differ in such high Fundamentals as the Trinity and Godhead of Christ] 20. You, before you answer, would have it thought you might ridicule me in my own Language. Never spare me, good Sir, nor balk your mirth for me if I give a just Occasion: But where lies the Jest? Why, I quarrelled with Dr. St. for bringing an instance, and now bring one myself: If this be all, I shall be tempted to be merry in my turn. My First Letter, p. 10. I told Dr. St. he might undoubtedly have produced his Instance if he had been arguing, but minded him that his turn was then to Answer, and that his Instance was not an Answer, but a new Argument. And yet this is not plain enough for you to see that I faulted not the Instance, but the unseasonable Argument, as I should any other in such circumstances; and you would have it ridiculous in me who am arguing to do what I only excepted against, because he was not arguing; and freely acknowledged he might do, if he had been to argue. Sure you were in a pleasant humour, when you thought of turning me into ridicule, because yourself understood not where the stress lay, tho' it were never so plainly told you. But to let this pass, as you say, with your causelessly gleeking Reflections upon Scripture and Tradition, what say you to the Proof I bring? P. 15. 21. Why, the force of my Argument (say you) is this: If any men can be found who wrest or misinterpret Scripture, then can it not be the Way to know what Christ and his Apostles taught. One thing after another, if it please you. Talk of the force of my Argument as much as you will, but, ere you leave the Proposition before you, of the Presbyterians and Socinians, 'tis but fair to grant or deny it. I must entreat you too to leave translating my Arguments. They are New yet, and need no mending; when they do, I will be better satisfied of your Skill in the Trade, before I become your Customer. By your next words, rallying against the Validity of the Consequence, I guess you grant the Antecedent; and so, that care being over, we have nothing but the Consequence to mind. The Dispute would fall in more properly under the next Proposition which infers the Consequent; but now I am here, I will hear what you say, before I pass farther. You say then, That indeed this Argument proves nothing, but that I have no good opinion of the Scripture. Will this venomous Cant never be left? I think the Scripture too good and too sacred to be abused by wrong Interpretations, and labour to preserve it from them: You labour to keep it exposed to that Abuse; Pray, which of us two have a better Opinion and more Reverence for the Scripture? You proceed: Must a Rule be no good Rule, because some who use it misunderstand it and abuse it? What may you mean by this? I take my Ruler, and draw a Line by it; Does the Straightness or Crookedness of this Line depend upon my Understanding? What is't than you call Misunderstanding a Rule? If you make the Letter of Scripture the Rule, and so private Interpreting the Using it, or drawing the Line, and the Sense the Line drawn; unriddle to us, if you can, how the Sense drawn from the Letter can any more fail to be True, than the Line drawn by the Rule to be strait; and which way that Sense can be misunderstood; and how the Rule can be a good Rule if it be used, and the Sense to which it is a Rule be misunderstood? Or, do you mean perhaps that 'tis with the Scripture as with a Grammar-Rule; where he who understands not what 'tis for a Nominative Case and a Verb to agree, may make false Construction, and yet the Rule be a good Rule. Tho' you should go thither for your Notion of a Rule, we should be but where we were. For, as the Grammar-Rule, let it be never so ill understood, will make good Construction in case it be used; so the Scripture-Rule, if it be, as you put it, used, must needs produce right sense. But the truth is, a Grammar-Rule is not a Rule till it be understood; for he who understands not what 'tis for Cases and Verbs to agree, has no Rule to make them agree: And, then, if you will make the Letter of Scripture such a Rule, you will make the Letter first understood to be the Rule of understanding it, and people misunderstand what they understand, and the misunderstood Rule be a Rule, which is only a Rule by being understood. In short, turn it which way you will, you will (to borrow an Expression) be much beholden to the Reader to make Sense of what you say. 22. You question on; Must a Way be a wrong Way, because some that take it will not keep it? P. 15. Riddle my Riddle again. Pray, who are or can be those some who take it and will not keep it? As long as they take it, they keep it, I think; and they keep it not against their Wills sure. He who has no Will to keep it, may when he pleases go out of it, but then he does no longer take it, and is none of the some of whom the Question speaks, (for they all take it) and so we have nothing to do with him. When all is done, the Will here is to no more purpose than the Understanding before: For he who takes the Way, shall certainly arrive at his Journeys end, let him Will what he pleases, and the Way must needs be a wrong way if he do not. 'Tis great pity you are not in the right; You would save more men than the Benefit of their Clergy: For the Thief in a Cart, upon the Way to Tyburn, would never come there if willing not to keep that Way would keep him from it. But by affirming that some take the Way who yet will not keep it, you affirm that some do and do not Take it. And so Dr. St. is well holp up with a Reflecter, who imagines we are talking of one, who only takes the Way at first, and afterwards leaves it; whereas 'tis plain, the Argument proceeds of such as make the Way their Choice, and persist to follow no other to their life's End. Ibid. 23. Lastly, You tell us, that Till it be proved God has left such a Way or Rule, as no man can possibly err out of it, mistake it, or abuse it, etc. For you must permit me to stop by the way, I am too short breathed to run over the long period at a loose. But, let you alone to make all sure: You are safe enough if all must go on your side, till some body prove to you that no man can err out of the Way left by God, mistake or abuse it; that is, till some body prove that Ways are Prisons out of which there is no escaping; or that the man cannot possibly fall into Error who is out of the Way to Truth. As many as leave the Catholic Church, leave the Way left by God; and you, like a right pleasant man, would have it proved, that the thing cannot possibly be done which we see is done by millions; and would have us, who say, they all do err and mistake, prove they cannot. All this while I a little suspect you mean otherwise than you say; and that by your words, Error, and Mistake, and Abuse of the Way, you understand missing the End of the Way, Truth. But let us see what you will make of it: What would you have proved next? Why That it is not enough that God has left us such a Way or Rule, as men may understand and observe if they be not wanting to themselves. What do you call being wanting to themselves? I understand how a man that will not travel, or leaves a right and takes a wrong way, is wanting to himself: but he who puts himself upon the Way, continues on in it, and changes not his Road, is not wanting to himself in any thing I can imagine, which belongs to the Way: And the way of this Traveller I maintain against you, has not enough to be a Way, if it barely may, and yet may not, bring him to his Journeys End. What will this come to at last? Why, till these things be proved, It will not follow, that the Scripture's Letter, in the sense you have owned it, is not the Way, tho' not only Presbyterians and Socinians, but the greater number of Mankind should own it, and yet differ about Fundamental Points contained in it. What you call the Sense which you own of the Letter of Scripture, will come by and by. But will not that follow which you say here will not? Will it not follow, that the Way by which a man that goes in it comes to Error, is not the Way to Truth? Will it not follow, that he who at his Journeys End finds himself at York, did not go the Way to London? Pray, what's the Way to a Place? Is it not that Passage that he who has passed it, finds himself at that Place? And so the Way to know the Doctrine of Christ and his Apostles, is it not the Means which he who has used knows that Doctrine? Why then, since Presbyterians and Socinians both interpret by their private Judgements, and one side knows not the Doctrine of Christ, it follows as unavoidably, that the Way of private Interpretation is no sure way to know it, as that he who has gone through the Strand, and finds himself at Charing Cross, has not gone the way to moorfield's; That is, as certainly as that a Way is a Way or Means to bring a man to such a Place. 24. What do you talk then of erring for, and mistaking and abusing the Way? Or what do you mean? 'Tis true, those erring men do mistake the true Way, and for that reason err. But they mistake not the Way which you say is the true Way. They do interpret by their private Judgement, and so take, not mistake it; use, not abuse it. Sure you mean that they mistake the Doctrine of Christ; and, so, by mistaking the Way, you very wisely understand mistaking the End. And then, what a man are you to contend their way is a Way, and a sure Way too, to bring them to the Knowledge of Christ's Doctrine, when they pursue it and are not brought to that Knowledge? And what Eyes have you who perceive not that therefore it cannot be a sure way? Again, to what purpose do you tell us that men may understand and observe (as if Observing concerned our Question of Knowing) if they be not wanting to themselves? when they who take a right Way, not only may, but must, and cannot possibly fail of coming whither it leads, any more than the man who goes down the Strand, of coming to Charing-Cross; and when men have no more to do with a Way, but to travel in it; and so cannot be wanting to themselves, in that respect if they do. Of the same batch is your misunderstanding and not keeping the Way. As if they who interpret by their private Judgements did not keep the way of interpreting by private Judgements. And tho' their Understandings be none of the best when they take that for the sure Way to understand by, yet that very misunderstanding is their understanding it to be the Way; and so they, even in your opinion, misunderstand not the Way, however they misunderstand by it. In fine, you amuse us with a company of Words, which have a Sound; but either no sense at all, or none to purpose: And it remains, that, because a Way must bring every one that takes it to the End of that Way; and private Interpretation does not bring Socinians to the sure Knowledge of Christ's Doctrine, which is the End; that, therefore Private Interpretation of Scripture is not a way to know that Doctrine surely. 25. And yet you can bear us in hand that this follows no more than it follows that because we see men misinterpret and break good Laws daily, P. 16. therefore those Laws are unintelligible, or cannot be kept, and must be thought insufficient to show them what the Lawgiver expects from them. What breaking and keeping the Laws is brought in for, you best know that bring them in. Our Discourse is only about knowing the Doctrine of Faith, and not at all about Living up to it; and so has nothing to do with those who know, but will not keep the Laws, as is the case of most Malefactors. But you end your Discourse well I must needs say, and very suitably to all the rest, with an Instance directly against yourself. You see that Laws left to Private Interpretation are, by all Mankind, judged insufficient, and public Interpreters therefore set up every where; and, from the Parity with them which are Insufficient, you conclude the Letter of Scripture is not Insufficient. Any body but yourself would have made another Use of this Instance. As God can write much plainer than Men, when he thinks fit, and has more care of their Salvation than they of their Temporal Concerns; another man would have concluded that God did not intend their Salvation should depend on the privately-interpretable Letter of the Divine Law, which he left less plain than Men made the Letter of Humane Laws. But you, it seems, had a mind to make your Discourse all of a piece. The best is, 'tis now ended, & we are free to pass on to the fourth Proposition. To which, because the force of Exceptions against an Inference before it be inferred appears not so well, I reserve what you say against it, while I put it only to be proved. 26. It is this, Therefore Scriptures Letter interpretable by private judgements is not the way left by God to know surely what Christ and his Apostles taught, or surely to arrive at right Faith. And now I must look to myself, for you pour out here your distinguishing Talon upon me. If, say you, by Scripture's Letter, he means unsensed Characters, P. 13. than I confess Scriptures Letter cannot be the Rule or Way. There is one branch of your Distinction; and so the other, unless you will talk nonsense, must needs be, Scripture's Letter, meaning sensed Characters, can be or is the Rule. Your words are, Yet if he can think it reasonable to allow as much to the Scripture Scripture's Letter is not this way. As you have this Art, among the rest, to talk unintelligibly, when you have a mind to't, in very plain English, I wish some Body would tell me for you, whether you take scripture's Letter in this period for unsensed or sensed Characters; for truly I cannot tell myself. By the terms you put [intelligible] and [significant] one would guests you mean unsensed Characters; for [intelligible] imports what may be understood, but is not yet; and [significant] what may be perceived by the sign, whether it be or no. And then you have made a fair hand of it with your fair dealing, who distinguish the word [Letter] into Characters unsensed and Characters unsensed; and grant it to be a Rule in one of the two same meanings, and deny it in the other. But you shall talk sense for me, and mean Characters sensed; and then le's see how much you have mended the matter. A Character sensed signifies a Character with the sense joined to it: The sense of the Characters of Scripture is the sense of God, and the sense of God is that which we are to believe. And, so, Scripture-Characters sensed; signify Faith itself in conjunction with those Characters. Now Faith is the End to which we are looking for a Way to carry us. To tell us then that scripture's Letters taken for sensed Characters is this way, is to tell us that the end is the way to itself; that the means to get Faith is to have it first; that, when we know it, we know it; that, when we are at our Journeys End, we are in the direct Road to it, and such fine things, which would tempt a man not very fond of disputing, to leave it off and betake himself to some other business: For how can you or any think fit to vex poor controversy all your life, when your very sense proves Nonsense? And yet it is not that you have not served a Prenticeship long enough in the Mystery: But the best Shoemaker in the world cannot make a good shoe of Bad Leather. 27. Yet, as you are not a man to be discouraged with ill success, you are at your Distinctions again; and tell us that, if by these words, interpretable by private Judgements, Ibid. I mean the Scripture any way interpretable, as any private man may possibly wrest the words to make them comply with his own sentiments, or through Ignorance, and Laziness, and Neglect of such Helps and Means as are fit to be used, may misunderstand them, I must have a very bad Conscience, etc. As if the Question were about my Conscience. But you would say, I suppose that Scripture, so meant, is not the Way, and I say it is not too. Pray, what Conscience is yours, if mine be bad when I say as you do? P. 14. But if my meaning be, that Scripture as it may be understood by a Private Man of a competent judgement, using such Helps as are proper, is not the Way, you again deny my Assumption. Because it would render the Discourse unintelligibly confused to repeat so many lines at every turn, I shall, with your good leave; say in short, Good and Bad Judgements; understanding by the Bad all the qualifications of the First Branch, and all of your second by the Good. I take you then to say that Scripture's Letter, as interpretable by Bad Judgements is not the Way; but, as Interpretable by Good Judgements is the Way. By this account three parts in four of Mankind at a modest computation, have no Way. For so many Bad Judgements there are at least. But, the main Point is, while we are enquiring which the Way is which God has left, pray what have we to do with the judgements of men? Can they make or unmake it? Or does it depend on them to be or not be the Way he left, as they happen to be different? It is a Way only so long as good Judgements travel in it, and ceases to be a Way assoon as Bad Judgements come upon it. A Way, I think, is a Way whether it be beaten by the Lusty or the Lame, the Purblind or the Well-sighted. And, so if the Letter of Scripture, interpretable by Private Judgements, be the Way which God has left us, 'tis not the Goodness or Badness of Private Judgements which can make it not the Way. Wherefore, tho' you have chopped upon a Distinction for which we are beholden to you, for we might chance else not to have minded there are Good and Bad Judgements in the World; Yet your Distinction unluckily has no relation at all to the question. Nevertheless, it serves for Talk and Show, and bids fair to draw us from thinking what 'tis we are about, to wrangling about how much Brains go to a Competent judgement, how much Pains to Diligence, and such very useful Disputes: which, if you had any, was in likelihood your Design. For sure you cannot but see yourself, that your Distinction is no more to our purpose than News from Hungary or the Morea. 28. Again, your First Branch says that Bad Judgements may misunderstand the Letter of Scripture, and that it is not the Way to such; which I think is to say, that it is not the Way for that reason; for you do not, and I suppose, will not say that they may not understand it right, if luck serve, let them be never so Bad; but, because they may misunderstand it, therefore it is not the Way. Why then the very reason you give why it is not the Way in your First branch, bars you from making it a Way in your Second. For all you say of your competent and assisted Judgement, is, that they may understand it right; which is not denying, if it be not owning, they may likewise understand it wrong. And then, you may unriddle to us when you can, how the Bad Judgement, which may misunderstand it, makes it no Way, and the Good makes it a Way, which may misunderstand it too. You are strangely partial to Good judgements, to make the Possibility to misunderstand Scripture's Letter exclude the Bad and admit the Good; and the Possibility to understand it right, include the Good and shut out the Bad. Thus men have, or have not a Way as they find favour with you, and as you like their Judgements. As far as I see, your Favour is all in all. For, since you make the Letter of Scripture a Way to Good, but not to Bad Judgements, there is no knowing when it is and when it is not the Way, till we know which must pass for Good, and which for Bad Judgements: and so nothing can come of it till we have a Test to try them. Now, I am much afraid that your own Judgement is, like Bays his Play, your only Test; and that you make account all goes right as long as People think as you do. Marry, if they chance to deviate from you, they lose their judgements, or their Diligence, or their Proper Helps, or something, and stop up their way with their own Faults. There is no doing here without Scales again to weigh out the Brains which go to a Competent judgement, the Pains which go to Diligence, and the rest. Otherwise, we have lost Scripture; and, for our Comfort, get your Word instead of it. For, if Scripture interpretable by a Competent Judgement be our Way, and yours be a Competent Judgement (which no doubt you suppose as your First Principle) 'tis a plain Case that Your judgement is our Way; which in truth is the Sum of all. So long as we will believe as you would have us, we shall have the most magnificent words in the world, for our Souls. We shall all have Competent judgements from Nature, and Proper Helps from Grace. We shall (as many as will stand upon't) have Absolute Certainty, nay infinitely greater Certainty than Reason can afford, the Word of God. But, all is to be understood with the condition annexed of trusting You for all. Otherwise we have neither Diligence, nor judgement, nor Helps, nor Certainty, nor Word of God, nor any thing in the world but Your Word; who yet cannot for your life make any three words you say hang handsomely together. 29. But I have strayed after your Will-of-the-Wisp till I have almost lost sight of our Point. The Question is, Whether Scripture's Letter Interpretable by private judgements be the Way left by God. I maintain it is not; and prove it, because men who take that way err. For, I thought it needed no proving, that the Way left by God is not the Way to Error. You distinguish twice; First the Letter into Sensed and Vns●nsed Characters; that is, if you make there any Distinction at all. Now the Proposition is of the Letter Interpretable, that is, not yet Interpreted, or which has not yet the Sense put to it, and so is yet unsensed. When you then distinguish the Letter Interpretable, into Sensed and Vnsensed, you make a Distinction, whereof one branch is not comprehended in the Notion to be divided. 'Tis just the same as to distinguish Learned Men into Learned and Unlearned; or Men into Negroes and Horses. Your Second Distinction is, of judgements, into Competent and Incompetent, which is Twin to the former. I vouched for Proof the Presbyterians and Socinians; men of very Competent Judgements; and who are neither ignorant, nor lazy, nor negligent, nor balk any means or helps, which they judge can enable them to understand the Letter, or that you have, except that, for a Spiritual Guide (which, I suppose, is one of the Helps) they in likelihood use the Assistance of some body of their own, not of Your Persuasion. But if one of your Protestant Guides be a proper help to your Protestant, a Socinian sure is proper to a Socinian. In short, they fall under none of your ill Qualifications, and when I speak of Competent and Qualified Judgements, you distinguish the Competent into some which are Competent, and some which are not Competent; and, again, the Qualified, into those which are, and those which are not Qualified. The sum is this, I ask whether the Vnsensed Letter be the Way; and you answer, the Sensed Letter is; that is, the End is part of the way to the End. I propose you Competent judgements, and ask if the Letter be a Way to Them, and you reply, it is not a way to the Incompetent. And so you, who, good squeamish Gentleman, fall into a Scruple at the very name of Cards, can play at Cross-purposes all along very freely, even when Souls are at Stake. I desire you to remember that I speak of a Way, which they who take, shall, and that surely, arrive at Christ's Faith. You talk of a way by which men so and so qualified, may arrive at it. As if may be were any thing to shall and must be; or the qualifications of Travellers any thing to the way. I * My First Letter, P. 31. foretold I should have nothing but an unconcerning Return for an Answer: And you have made me, tho' against my will, prophecy; not bating so much of my Prediction as the scornful jest. For there is the Mountain and the Mouse, and Reading a Lecture in Logic to verify it. 30. You conclude with an Argument against my Conclusion: You, I say, who are Answering, and have nothing to do with Arguing. But, what would we have? Men who are uneasy will always be shifting places. All our earnest Solicitations could not wring one Argument out of you when it was your turn to prove; and now 'tis your turn to Answer, you thrust your Arguments upon us unbidden. Nor is there any keeping you from falling into the same Fault with your Suppositions, that Dr. St. did with his Instance. You suppose then 1. That the Scripture is God's Word. And so do I too, provided you mean the true Sense of it. For a false Sense, whatever you think, is, in my Judgement, not God's Word. 2. That it was written to be understood. Undoubtedly; but not by every one, barely by means of the Letter. All Books are written to be understood: Grammar, for Children to understand Construction; Mathematical Books for those who will understand Mathematics; and yet those Books without Masters will make but few Grammarians or Mathematicians. 3. That it is written for the Instruction of Private Men. Yes, but not for the only, or sufficient means of their Instruction, barely by the Letter. 4. That they are concerned to understand it. Yes again; and as much concerned not to misunderstand it. 5. That they may believe and live as it directs. They not only may, but aught. But, pray remember, that It directs no believing or living according to a false sense. 6. That they have means left them of God for the Understanding of it, so far as it is of necessary concernment to them. Yes, and that Absolutely Certain Means, the public Interpretation of the Church or Tradition. 7. And that, using those Means as they ought they may understand it. Never mince it with may; they shall and certainly shall understand it who use those means. From all you conclude at last. And thus it is to them the way to know surely what Christ and his Apostles taught as necessary to their salvation. How! The way to those who use those Means! Why this is just as I say. But what becomes of those who use not those Means? 'Twas ill forgot when your Hand was in at supposing, not to suppose in amongst the rest, that Private Interpretation is the Means lest by God for understanding Scripture. For, if public Interpretation be those Means, as it needs must, since I have proved that Private is not; the Scripture plainly is no Way to those who only rely on the Private Means to understand it. And your Protestants are much beholding to your Argument which shows that Scripture, interpreted, as they interpret it, by private judgement, is no Way to them. And I were very unreasonable if I should take offence at your Challenge, which bids me show, when I can, that your suppositions are Unreasonable or False. Not I, believe me; For I should be very cross-natured to fall out with a man who takes my part. 31. Thus you have tried * P. 12. as you call it, to answer my Argument; and have succeeded (even in your own Judgement, I guess) very sorrily. For had you been Confident of your performance against it as it is, you would never have thought of changing it, as you do here p. 17. Men who have put by a Thrust are not solicitous to instruct their Adversary how he should have Thrust. And yet you will needs be teaching me, how I should have done to have made sure work; that is, to have been sure to hit your Buckler. I mean not to lose time on your Argument. It were ridiculous for me to amuse myself with what never was nor will be said by any but yourself. No body else would have left out the principal Consideration, using the Rule, and, so, coming to Right Faith by using it. As if a Rule would make a Line of itself, tho' no body draw by it: And a Way bring to the Journeys End; even those who travel not in it. In a word, your Argument has all the faults of your Answer in short; and only shows you can speak from the purpose more solemnly and methodically, by way of Syllogism. 32. After you had thus nobly acquitted yourself in answering my short Discourse, you proceed in the same Method to answer Mr. G's Argument for the Infallibility of the Catholic Church. Which, ere I come to examine, I must first say something to your Preliminaries. 33. You doubt whether I think it needs any Proof that the Church of Rome is Infallible. To those who reflect on the force of a vast Human Testimony, attesting notorious matter of Fact, and what Assent it claims from Human Nature in parallel occasions, I do indeed judge it does not so much need Proof as Reflection. But, why should I think it needs no Proof against You; who, we see plainly, have interpreted yourselves out of your Natural Sentiments? Your reason, Sir, because I say 'Tis in vain to talk against one Infallibility, P. 17. without setting up another. Now it * Faith Vindicated, P. 37, 38. has been demonstrated to you, and never yet answered, That Infallibility and Certainty are the same; and Nature tells us, that All Discourse supposes something Certain, otherwise it may run on endlessly, and so nothing can ever come to be concluded. How is it possible then to discourse against Infallibility, or any thing else, without setting up and proceeding upon something that is Certain, or Infallibly true? By your constant jesting whenever Infallibility comes in the way, you discover your anger against it, because you know you can produce nothing that is truly Certain, to ground your Faith. Notwithstanding the vulgar use to say commonly, [I am infallibly Certain of such a thing] yet none laughs at them or thinks them extravagant: And must we be afraid to use the same Language in our Controversy, because your Ears are so tender, or rather your Grounds so soft, they cannot bear it? If you will needs declare against Infallible Certainty, be but so candid as to say still you are Fallibly Certain, and see how your Readers will smile at your Folly: And yet you ought to own one or the other, if you be Certain at all; for there can be no Third or Middle sort of Certainty, which is neither Fallible or Infallible. Pray speak to this Point, and let's have a little Reason from you at least, and not perpetual Rambling and Shuffling. How can you justify yourselves, that you are not Deserters of Human Nature, by affirming (or at least supposing) there is no Infallibility (that is, True Certainty) to be found amongst Men? Betrayers of Christian Faith, while you leave it all capable to be a Lie; nay, maintain the full Sense of that wicked Position [All Christian Faith is possible to be False] in Discourses directly framed for that set-purpose! Blasphemers of God's Providence, in declaring and asserting that he has left less Certain Grounds for Faith, and consequently for the Salvation of Mankind, for which the World was created, and God himself died, than he has for other things of a trifling importance! Will it expiate for those Crimes, to talk cantingly here of an Infallible and Living God, and his giving us His Word by Men endued with an Infallible Spirit; Sayings fit to take the good Women that are much pleased with Godly Talk in a Sermon, but frivolous in our Controversy! Who ever questioned that God was Living or Infallible; or that he has left us an Infallible Word? The only question is, whether you can settle for others, or have your self, any Absolutely-Certain way to know the sense of that Word which this Infallible God has left us. P. 18. You tell us indeed 'tis plainly written: but that's the Question still, and the Point we deny; and for which we are continually demanding your Proof, and such a one as may confute our daily Experience, assuring us, that 'tis not plain to Private judgements. Yet this only important Point, you only name, then slide over it and retreat to your old refuge, that weak insignificant pretence of Sufficient Certainty, (by which, I suppose, you mean a Certainty that is neither Infallible nor Fallible) and tell your People, if they will take your word against their own experience, the Plainness of it (for 'tis that must give them this Security) secures them from being dangerously deceived; then, as 'tis but fitting, follow again of course [in things necessary to Salvation] and [using the Proper helps] which (as we shall see anon) will cost one's life to peruse; and this you tell us, encourages them to take pains to be well assured of the Truth. Fine words, I must confess, if they had any Sense! Is it such a rare Encouragement to take pains to be well assured their Faith is True, when you tell them, that after all their pains they can never be satisfied, but it may be False; that is, they can never be satisfied that it is True? But, when all's done, and the Certainty of your Grounds fail you, your last refuge is, that the same Infallible God who has given the Means, has assured his Blessing to them that diligently use them. But this begs the Question: For, if the Rule you follow be not the Means ordained by God to arrive at Faith, you have neither the right Means, nor can you be assured of any Blessing by using them; unless you can prove God has promised his Assistance to those that use not the Means he appointed; or will certainly direct those to the right Place who take the wrong Way to it. Next, you fall into a Wonderment to hear me talk of men's being discouraged— for want of an Infallible Guide. And I wonder you should hear me talk what I never spoke. Not one Syllable was there of a Guide: All my Discourse was about an Infallible Rule. But the Truth is, you are sick of any Discourse that sifts the Uncertainty of your Rule; and therefore cared not what new pretence you started, nor whether it were a False or True one, so you could but get the Dispute transferred to another subject. Yet, upon this false pretence you run on with your Raillery to the end of the Section. 34. But, at last you have found Infallibility in Tradition, P. 18. after you have been sent from place to place to seek it. Pray, Sir, who sent you? We, with whom you are discoursing, never directed you to any other, but to that of Tradition: and you know well, and every Reader sees, we are treating of no Infallibility, but only that. Yet you triumph mightily, you have found a thing which was proffered to you unsought: and found it at last, which was both proposed to you and urged upon you at first. What an everlasting Trifler are you, to confess to your Reader you have been running after Butterflies all this while, and could not once turn your Eye to the Question which was just before you, nay pressed upon you! Well, but what are my * My First Letter, P. 7. words? [The Certainty of Scripture is from Tradition.] Do you deny this? No, you positively assert it, First Letter, p. 7. Let's proceed. [Therefore there is no refusing to admit, that Tradition causes Certainty.] Do you deny this? How can you without destroying the Certainty of your own Rule [Scripture] which depends upon it, and withal contradicting yourself? I added, [And makes Faith as Certain as Scripture.] Can you deny this? That is, will you affirm the same Virtue does not work the same Effect if the matter be capable? Let's see now how you answer. Yet it may be this Certainty comes not up to Infallibility. Yes, it does; for the Certainty here spoken of was Absolute Certainty, as was twice insisted on immediately before, from your own words, p. 6. and I * P. 23. proved it was the same with Infallibility which you have never disproven; and so, unless you give a better Answer, your own Acknowledgement that Tradition causes Absolute Certainty, forces you to grant we are Infallibly Certain of our Faith. But say * P. 19 you, The Tradition for Scripture was more Universal: Suppose it so, was not Tradition for Doctrine large enough to cause Absolute Certainty! Or, are not ten millions of Attesters as able to cause Absolute Certainty as Twenty? Pray, consider a little the Virtue of Witnessing Authority, and the force it has upon Human Nature. When the Number comes to that pitch, that it is seen to be impossible they should all be deceived in the thing they unanimously attest, or conspire to deceive us, their Testimony has its full Effect upon us, and begets in us that firm and unalterable Assent we call Absolute Certainty; and the Addition of myriads more adds nothing to the substance of that Assent, since it was wrought without it. But the main is, you quite misunderstand the nature of a long Successive Testimony. Let ten thousand men witness what two or three, who were the Original Attestors of a thing, said at first, and twenty thousand more witness in the next Age what those ten thousand told them, and so forwards, yet (taking them precisely as Witnesses) they amount to no more, in order to prove the Truth of that thing, than the Credit of those two or three First Witnesses goes. 'Tis the First Source of a Testimony, which gives the succeeding ones all their weight to prove the Thing that is witnessed to be True: 'Tis that from which the Largeness and Firmness of a Testimony, brought to evince the Truth of any thing, is to be measured or calculated. Since then the stream of Tradition for Doctrine had for its Source innumerable Multitudes of those Christians in the First Age, in many places of the World, who heard the Apostles preach it, and saw them settle the Practice of it in the respective Churches; but the Original Testifiers that such a Book was writ by such or such an Apostle or Evangelist, were very few in comparison, sometimes perhaps not past two or three: It cannot with any show of Sense be pretended, that the Tradition for the several Books of Scripture is in any degree comparable in either regard to the Tradition for Doctrine. Your next Answer is, that This Universal Tradition is no more but Human Testimony, P. 19 and that can be no ground for Infallibility which excludes all possibility of Error. Pray why not! If things were so ordered (as indeed they are that the Testifiers could neither be deceived in the Doctrine, being bred and brought up to it; nor conspire to deceive us, in telling the World in any Age that the new Doctrine they had invented was immediately delivered; then it was not possible any Error could come in, under the notion of a Doctrine delivered from the beginning. But is not your Tradition for Scripture Human Testimony too? And if that can be erroneous, may not all Christian Faith by your Principles be perhaps a company of Lying Stories? You must be forced by your own words here to confess it; but I dare say, your Parishioners, should you openly avow it, would hate you for the Blasphemy. You would tell them, I doubt not, as you do us, that Moral Certainty is enough to stand on such a Foundation: that is, such a Certainty as may deceive you, and, by a necessary consequence, may haste to overturn the whole Fabric of Christian Faith. In the mean time let's see how manifestly you contradict Dr. St. when you should defend him. He avowed * First Letter, P. 7. Absolute Certainty for the Book of Scripture, and this upon the Foundation of Tradition; and you tell us here Tradition can ground but Moral Certainty: Now all the World, till you writ, counter distinguished Absolute and Moral Certainty, which you jumble in one. But distinct they ever were, are, and shall be; for the Word [Moral] signifies a Diminution or Imperfection of Certainty, and [Absolute] plainly expresses the Perfection of it: whence 'tis Evident, that either you contradict Dr. St. (perhaps not without his private Order) or he himself. We shall have all words shortly lose their signification, for no other reason, but to give you room to shift this way and that, when you are too close pressed with Reason. 35. Now, since Dr. St. had granted, that Tradition is Absolutely Certain for Scripture, and I had proved that Absolute Certainty was the same with Infallibility, what should hinder me from inferring, My First Letter P. 21. that unless some special difficulty be found in other things that light into the same channel, it must bring them down infallibly too? Your Gifts of Interpretation expounds these Words of mine thus: These other things are things unwritten in that Holy Book. P. 21. I do assure you, Sir, you are mightily mistaken. I never told you yet that all Faith was not contained in Scripture explicitly or implicitly. What I meant was, that the whole Body of Christ's Doctrine; (and not only that such a Book was Scripture,) nay the selfsame Doctrine of Faith that is contained in Scripture, comes down by Tradition, or the Church's Testimony. But with this Difference, (as to the Manner of it,) among others, that the Church that testifies it, having the sense of it in her Breast, can explain her meaning so as to put it out of all Question to Learners, Doubters and Enquirers; which the Scripture cannot. Whence we need not fish for our Faith in the channel of Tiber, as your great Wit tells us; St. Peter's Ship, (the Church) that caught so many Fishes at first, (the Body of Primitive Christians, who were the first deliverers of Christ's Doctrine,) hath stored up provision enough for the succession of Faith to the World's end. There we find it to our Hands. 'Tis your sober Enquirers who Fish for it among dead unsensed Characters, and in the Lake of Geneva; from whence to save the labour of going thither, you and your Friends are deriving a great Channel to run into Thames, over-swell its Banks, and drown all the Churches. Lacus Lemanus is your Tiber, Geneva your Rome, and john Calvin (the Prime of your new Apostles) your St. Peter. 36. All this is but prelude: But, now comes Mr. G's Argument, and therefore we are to expect now, however you but trifled hitherto, more pertinent & close Discourse. The first Proposition was this: All Traditionary Christians believe the same to day they did yesterday, & so up to the time of our B. Saviour. This you seem to deny in regard they may perhaps be so called from their adhering to a Tradition which reaches not so high as our Saviour's time, but only pretends to it, whither we only pretend to it or no will be seen hereafter, when the Fourth Proposition comes to be examined. In the mean time pray jumble not two Questions which are distinct, and aught to be kept so. The whole Business here is about the use or Sense of the word [Traditionary] & how we both take it in our present Controversy. Now that we both agree in the Notion of [Tradition,] whence [Traditionary] is derived, is evident by this, that we lay claim to such a Tradition as reaches to Christ, and go about to prove it; you deny our Claim, and endeavour to disprove it: But 'tis evident you deny the same thing to us which we lay Claim to; otherwise we should not talk of the same Thing, and so should not understand one another, nor could discourse together; wherefore 'tis manifest we both agree in the Notion or Meaning of that Word, however we disagree in the Application of it to the Persons. Nor do we pretend in the least, what you would put upon us here, to infer hence that this body of Christians that now adheres to it, did always so; but only contend, that if they did not ever adhere to it, they must have deserted it and taken up another Rule, and so, cease to be true Claimers of a Tradition from Christ, or Traditionary Christians. Moreover, we judge we have right to lay Claim to it, till we be driven out of it by a former and better Title; since we were in possession of this Rule at the time of the Reformation, or held all our Faith upon that tenure. 37. The second Proposition is this: If they follow this Rule they can never err in Faith. Whence follows the Third; [And therefore they are Infallible.] Your Answer Sir, to this. Can they adhere still to what was delivered, and yet err in Faith, if what was still delivered, was Christ's Doctrine. Your Answer is; P. 21. His Friend tells us this is palpably self-evident. And does not his Adversary confess it too? Do not yourself acknowledge it in your 21st, and 22 d. Pages, and say you must lay by your Reason, turn Romanist, and renounce your Private judgement, if you did not grant it. And can the Reader, so well acquainted with your shuffles, judge it less than palpably self-evident, which your humour, so restiff to grant any thing, tho' never so clearly proved, is forced to yield to. Lastly, does his Friend only tell you 'tis self-evident? Does not he prove it to be as Evident as 'tis that the same is the same with itself? And is not such a thing Evident by its own light, or out of the very Terms, that is, self-evident? Pray, Sir, when I prove any thing, let the Reader know I did so; and do not thus constantly pretend still that I only said so, or told you so. A pretty Stratagem to avoid speaking to my Proofs; but how honest let the Reader judge. 38. But, say you, unless this Tradition be longer than it is yet proved to be, they may follow it, P. 21. and err all along in following it. No doubt of it; if it fall short of reaching up to Christ's, we may follow it, and Err by following it, as all Heretics do in following their novel Traditions. That (yet) is a very pretty Word; for it puts the Reader into a conceit that we have produced nothing from the beginning of the World, to the very time of your Writing, to prove our Tradition reaches to our Saviour's days; and yet, if we challenge you that we have proved it in the very next words of our Argument, you can make your escape, by saying, that you are not yet come to speak to that point, and that you meant no more. Who would think there should be such Virtue in a petty Monosyllable, as at once to disgrace us, and save you harmless! The second Answer to this Point is, Let it (the Tradition spoken of) be never so long, yet if they follow it not, they may err. Very good! The Arguers Words are, If they follow this Rule they cannot err in Faith; which implies, that, if they do not, they may err: and you say the selfsame over again, with an air of Opposition, and there's an Answer for us now. As if to conform to your Adversaries Words were to confute him, any thing will serve, rather than say nothing. 39 The fourth Proposition brought to prove that this Tradition we lay Claim to, does indeed reach to Christ and his Apostles, is this, They could not innovate in Faith, unless they did forget what they held the day before, or out of malice alter it. And here lies the main Stress of the Controversy between us; for you have granted here, Page 21.22. that were this Rule followed, they must still enjoy the same Faith Christ and his Apostles taught; and this Discourse is brought to show they did follow it. We are to expect then that your choicest Engines must be set on work to baffle a Proof, which, if it holds; brings such dangerous consequences after it, and indeed concludes the whole Controversy. Your first Attempt is in plain terms most Evident, & a most Unconscionable Falsification. After you had (P. 21.) recited this fourth Proposition, you immediately add. Our Author undertakes to make this out more clearly, & therefore we will hear what he saith for our better Information. P. 18. He asks, did Christ teach any Errors? and so you go on reciting that whole Argument, which proves, that if the first Fathers believed what Christ taught, and the succeeding Sons all along believed what their Fathers did, the last-born Son in the World believed the same that Christ taught. Pray, Sir, play fair above-board. You have directly falsified that whole Discourse, by pretending here that the words you cite were to make out that Fourth Proposition clearly, (viz. That we could not innovate in Faith etc.) whereas the truth of that Fourth Proposition was made out by me nine pages before (viz. p. 9) and the Discourse you mention here, as intended to make it out, is found p. 18, 19 and levelled at a quite different business: viz. that a Church could not adhere to Tradition, and at the same time err, as you pretended we must grant of the Greek Church. Clear your Credit when you can, I charge it upon you as a voluntary Insincerity: but you shall never clear it unless by putting out your Reader's eyes, or persuading him not to use them. So that it seems let us bring what Arguments we will, you need do no more when they are too hard to answer, but apply them to a wrong Point they were never meant to prove, and then 'tis easy to show manifestly they are frivolous and good for nothing. In the mean time, who sees not that your Cause as well as your Credit is run a ground and like to split, when you are put to such shifts! I wonder how this gross Fault could escape Dr. St's acute sight, if he perused and reviewed your Reflections. 40. Your Second Answer, or rather Cavil, is, that you could make as fine sport with the word [Notwithstanding] as I did, but that, it seems, it spoils your Gravity. Yet you can dispense with that Formal humour very easily, as oft as a hard Point presses you, especially when you are put to Proving: nor are we now to learn that you can laugh at a feather, when you have nothing of more weight to say. But, where lies the Jest? I never excepted against the Word, but the misapplying it by Dr. St. Who, when he was at a loss to give an Answer to Mr. G's Demonstration, very learnedly and advisedly thought it best to deny the Conclusion, Object an Argument of his own against it, and then bid the Opponent prove his Thesis (which he had proved already) notwithstanding his Argument. When you find me thus untowardly making use of That, or any other, Word, you are at liberty to except against me. In the mean time put this in the number of your Reflections, that when a man pretends to make sport when there is no occasion, he but discovers his own Folly. But the Point is, Can you make good his Logic in this irregular Proceeding? This is what we expected from a writer that undertakes to defend him. But the Task is so insuperable, that neither your wonderful Learning, nor Dr. St. himself, nor all the World to help him can ever be able to do it; unless he can make the Schools renounce all Rules of Art, and Mankind their Reason. But what were my words that were so mirthful? Why, I denied that a Body of men could adhere to Tradition, and notwithstanding err. Is here any occasion of fine sport? Or, cannot I use a plain word in the Context of my Discourse falling in naturally, because he had misused it unskillfully and inartificially? I see by this sliding over it so gently, this is all the Answer I am to expect to my 10, 11, 12, 13, 33 d. and 34 th'. pages; where such Errors against all Methods of Dispute are charged upon the Dr. as would bankrupt any man's Credit who had not a large stock of it laid in beforehand. And all the favour his best Friends can do him to excuse his Person, is to refund it upon his Cause. 41. But, tho' it was granted that Discourse of mine cited by you pag. 21. was so evident, that it was both Unreasonable and absurd to deny it, yet it must not scape without some animadversion. A Fault there must be in it, that's decreed; and what should that Fault be, but that good one of being too Evident. And this, as was shown formerly, is one of the new tricks taken up to evade Answering. When our Arguments are too clear to be baffled by any (even plausible) Reason, being next to self-evident, or easily reducible to it, to save us the labour you reduce it thither yourself, but first vilely deformed, that it may become a fit Subject for your Jesting way of Confuting. We will grant him (say you) it is impossible to prove that men have erred notwithstanding they never erred. Very excellent! But do you not grant much more; viz. that It is impossible they should adhere to our Rule, and yet err? You do, and, in doing so, you grant the whole substance of my Discourse. And so let them laugh that win. I am sure you have lost by this forced Confession, that Tradiction is a certain Rule, and that I have proved it evidently. Which no man will grant of your Rule that is in his wits, nor can the wit of all the men in the World ever prove it to be such as you have yielded ours to be. 42. The same disingenuity often repeated gives all the force to your next Sect. For, 1. * P. 22. You pretend we but suppose it hitherto, that these Traditionary Christians adhere undecliningly to a Tradition descending really, and invariably from Christ and his Apostles, etc. How! only supposed hitherto! Was it not proved, and not barely supposed in the Fourth Proposition, and made good by me, p. 9 If you will not come up to it, but stand hover, fencing, jesting, falsifying▪ and capering about by the way, must we be blamed as barely supposing it hitherto? 2. You falsify our words: For who ever said a Supposition is Self-evident, which every one sees, while 'tis barely a Supposition, is not Evident at all. Why quote you not the page where we say this? Because you would not be caught. 3. You falsify again without care of credit or regard to your Reader, in affirming, that from this self-evident Supposition I necessarily conclude thus; suppose Traditionary Christians neither did nor could err, it is certain they neither did nor could err. But why again no place quoted! Because you had again falsified it, and durst not hazard discovery. 43. I perceive, your play here (p. 22.) is to disjoint our Discourse, and jumble all the pieces of it confusedly together; and, so, it must be my Work to rectify what you had so industriously unravelled. Since than Mr. G. had made use of these words [Traditionary Christians] their Sense was first to be explained, and therefore I * My First Letter, p. 8. declared that the meaning of them was, such Christians as proceeded upon an Immediate Delivery not only at present, or since the Council of Trent, or some hundreds of years before, as you put upon us, p. 20. but upwards till Christ's time; and all the advantage I gained thence was that in case they did not adhere to it all along, it would follow that the pretended Traditionary Christians (ourselves) were not really such, and so the Subject of our Dispute would be lost, and we should receive a perfect foil. Could any thing be clearer or more candid? Yet, how many shuffles, and baffling Jests, you have been pleased to bestow on us instead of admitting so clear a Proposition; to how many wrong ends you have applied it, never thought on by us, we have already seen. For the Truth is, you are so horribly afraid of any connected Discourse, that you dare not so much as suffer it to peep out, but it alarms your Jealousy; no, not the very signification of the single words to be distinctly known, or the most Evident Proposition, tho' it be Indifferent to either Cause, to be admitted. Now let's see what you say to it; you make it amount to this: Suppose Traditionary Christians neither did nor could err, * P. 22. it is Certain they neither did nor could err. Which you call my necessary Conclusion from my self-evident Supposition. You improve mightily, Sir, in your Talon of Insincerity. Our entire Discourse runs thus, if we must needs put it into Form for you. Those who adhere to Tradition all along from the beginning, neither did nor could err in Faith, (otherwise they would not be Adherents to Tradition or Traditionary Christians). But this Body of Christians, called The Roman Catholic Church, does now, and did from time to time adhere to Tradition. Therefore this Body of Christians, called The Roman Catholic Church, neither did or could err in Faith. This is Mr. G's Argument: The Major is granted by * P. 21, 22. yourself. The Proof of the Minor is contained in Mr. G's Fourth Proposition, which I have shown to be valid in my First Letter, p. 9 and the Discussion of it is now under hand. The Conclusion is in greatest danger, lest you should, according to the new True-Protestant Logic, deny it again, and bring some Instance against it; otherwise, since it follows evidently, it will shift well enough for itself. This, I say, is our entire Discourse; all the rest is your flashy Drollery, your ever faithful Friend, when you are perplexed how to Answer. 44. The Argument then for the Perpetuity of our Tradition from Christ's time, runs thus. They could not innovate in Faith, unless they did forget what they held the day before, or, out of malice, alter it. To enforce this Argument, I discoursed * My First Letter, P. 32. thus. You do not, I suppose, desire we should prove that men had always Memories, or that Christians were never malicious enough to damn themselves and their Posterities wittingly; and yet, it can stick no where else. Yet you are such a bold Undertaker, that you will needs prove they may be both thus Forgetful and thus Malicious. A hard Task one would think; especially since the Argument proceeds upon Forgetting and Altering what they Remembered and Held Yesterday. Your First Reason to prove they might be thus Forgetful, P. 23. is; because Otherwise it is hard to say why the Penmen of the Scripture should have been at the needless pains to write it. Let's apply this to the Argument, and your Discourse is this. 'Tis hard to say that Christians could have remembered their Yesterday Faith, had not Scripture been writ. Now, pray Sir, be serious, and tell us, Do you think there is any danger, or even possibility of this among the very Protestants in England, tho' they had never a Bible to read to morrow? How many of them read not so much as a Chapter in three or four days, how many not in a much longer time; nay, how few of them read all their Faith there in a Year, or even in their whole Life; and yet they retain the memory not only of their Yesterdays, but last Years Faith? What a weakness is this, to suppose Miracles must be done for no other end, but that you may answer our Argument? The Reasons why Scripture was writ, you might have read in St. Paul to Timothy; 2 Tim. c. 3.16, 17. where there is no such thing as to make men remember their Yesterday Faith, nor that Scripture is of Necessity at all; but only that 'tis Profitable for many Uses there enumerated. Your Second Argument to confute our Demonstration, is a Text, 2 Pet. 1.15. by which you will convince us, men's memories are not always so faithful: You must mean to remember their Yesterday Faith; for this Degree of Memory only the Argument insists on. But what says that B. Apostle? I will endeavour, that you may be able, after my Decease, to have these things always in remembrance. Now, there is not so much as one Word in the whole Chapter concerning the remembering or forgetting their Faith, much less the Faith they held Yesterday; or leaving their Faith in Writing for that purpose, but only (Faith supposed) of remembering his particular Exhortations to Good Life; and, by thus inculcating them, to stir them up (as 'tis said, v. 13.) to Christian Virtue, and leaving such things in Writing to that end. Now, such Spiritual and Moral Instructions are both easily Intelligible, especially, since he had taught the same to them formerly; and Man's Natural Corruption making even good men apt to slide back from the high degree of Perfection in which they had been educated; no doubt a Letter left by that Holy Apostle, now near his death, as he there tells them, would strike them more feelingly, and excite them more effectually to pursue that Course of Holy Life, in which he had instructed them. What miserable Stuff is this? Would not Faith have an excellent Basis, did it depend on Scripture interpreted by your Private Judgements. When this one Instance manifests, you have the boldness to quote Scripture for any thing, tho' never so disparate and unconcerning, and then blasphemously nickname it God's Word, when 'tis nothing at all to the purpose. But, I beseech you, Sir, let's have the Return of one Scholar to another. If our Argument lie too open, or the Connexion in it be too slack, speak to it as you ought; but think not your Private Interpretations a competent Solution to Demonstrations. If such wretched Answers may serve the turn, the Schools and Universities may shut up Shop, and Reasoning bid adieu to the World: Every Fop will find a Text he can hook in, nor will he fail of interpreting it blindly to his own purpose, when he is graveled with an Argument; and of calling it God's Word when he has done. Who will not see you are sinking, when you catch at such Straws and weak Twigs to keep you above Water. 45. By this time the Reader will be satisfied, that Notwithstanding all you have answered, Men had Memory enough not to forget their Yesterday Faith: Next, you go about to prove Christians may be malicious enough to alter it. May not Christians (say you, p. 23.) through malice and wickedness, be as careless of preserving the Faith, as in maintaining Holiness in themselves or their Posterity, when they know that Sin is as damnable as Error? Be Judge yourself. Do not many of your Congregation (and the like may be said of all Sects) sin often, and yet few or none of them desert their Faith once? The reasons why the Parallel holds not, are these. 1. Sins are generally private; at least, Men do for the most part endeavour and hope to conceal their Faults, for fear of shame and discredit. But the Change of Faith must be professed and open; otherwise it altars not the case; and Posterity will still believe on, according as things appear outwardly. 2. Sinners are seldom Malicious to that degree, as to resolve firmly to persist so to the end of their Lives; but generally fall out of frailty, and intent and hope to repent. And so this very thing will oblige them still to hold to their former Faith, which (as Experience tells them) furnishes Sinners with means of Repentance. 3. Man's Nature being inclined to Truth, scarce one man tells a Lie, but hopes to cloak it. But here, when they deliver another Faith for the same that was held Yesterday, every man must know his Neighbour to be an abominable shameless Liar; and, the Concern being so Sacred, must hold himself and all his fellow-Alterers the wickedest men living▪ Unless it be said they went conscientiously upon some other ground than Tradition; for to pretend to be saved by Tenets held upon no ground at all, is absolutely impossible to consist with Rational Nature. But 'tis impossible they should take up another Ground: Because if they could not innovate in Faith, they could not innovate in that upon which they held all their Faith. Nor could they be certain, but all their former Faith might be renounced, if a new Rule of Faith were taken up. To hear of which, could not consist with the temper of Christians, to bear a loss for all their Faith. Besides, Men are more tenacious of their Principles, especially if they have gained a vast Credit by their long Continuance, than they are to relinquish all they have received upon those Principles. Again, Tradition is the Authority of the whole Ecclesia Docens, the Chiefest part of (I might say the Ecclesia Credens too) witnessing the delivered Faith; which is so vast a Body, that it could never (were there nothing but its own Interest) permit itself to be thought to have attested a Lie hitherto: Add, That none could be competent Judges what was fit to be a Rule of Faith, but They who were so concerned both in Duty and Interest, Tradition should not be set aside. Which considerations clearly evince an Universal Change in the Rule of Faith; and this over the whole Body of Believers is absolutely impracticable. Lastly, There must be some great time between their discarding Tradition and espousing a New Rule; during which time, we must imagine the whole Church (except perhaps some few that discourse it first) would be made up of Seekers; some hover one way, some another; in which case they would as yet have no Faith, and consequently there could be no Church. 'Tis left then, that if they could innovate in Faith, they must pretend to Tradition still when they had evidently deserted it; that is, they must profess to hold the Yesterdays Faith, when all the World must see, and every man's own Heart must tell him the contrary: Which is the highest Impossibility. Luther altered, Calvin altered, so did many others; but none of them had the face to say they still adhered to Tradition, or the Faith delivered immediately before, and that they had not altered. 4. Men fall into Sins through Temptations, and Temptations are various, according to men's Tempers and Circumstances; whence it happens, that one falls into one sort of Sin, others into another, as things light. But 'tis impossible there should have been Causes laid in the World, so Universal, as to reach a whole Body of men consisting of so many Millions of different Countries, Tempers, and Circumstances, so as to impel them effectually to fall into the same Individual sort of sin, and this such a horrid and shameful one, viz. The Altering the Faith they hoped to be saved by, and this so suddenly. The Nature of the thing shows evidently 'tis above Chance; and the very Interest of the World would forbid such a Conspiracy, were there neither Religion, Conscience, nor Common Humanity in it. Their very Passions, Disaffections, and Enmity to one another, would make them disagree in carrying on such a wicked Project: Their Natural Tempers, abstracting from their Common Propension to Truth, and the care of preserving their Credits utterly lost by speaking such open and pernicious falsehoods, would render them apt, out of a mere Antipathy of Humour, to oppose one another; and all this, supposing there were no Goodness at all in the World; to suppose which, evacuates all Christian Motives, and their Efficacy, and makes our dear Saviour preach and die in vain; especially, since there never wanted, no, not even in the worst times, a fair Degree of Discipline to apply those Motives. Nay, State-Interest, or the Quarrels of Princes, would make them glad to take hence an Advantage against their emulous Neighbours; and to think it the best Policy to lay hold on such an occasion, to fight in behalf of Faith and Common Honesty, against a pack of shameless Liars, and Deserters both of Religion and Human Nature, who cared not what became of their own Salvation, or that of others. Lastly, Th●se Causes thwarting the Universal Alteration of Faith, while Christians proceeded on the former Rule of Tradition; and full as much hindering the taking up a New Rule in opposition to the Testimony of the Universal Church; as there could be no Cause to make men conspire to alter the Yesterdays Faith, so Christian Motives, which contain the greatest Hopes and Fears imaginable, the Hopes of never-ending Bliss, and Fears of Eternal and Intolerable Misery, which were believed and applied to the generality of Christians, could not, on the contrary side, but influence them most powerfully to preserve unchanged and inviolate both the Rule and the Faith. 'Tis as Certain then, that a very Great Body of Adherers to Tradition, and consequently to the first delivered Faith, would still remain on Foot in the World, as that Effects could not be without Proper Causes, or that Motives, which are the Proper Causes to work upon Rational Nature, will produce their Effect: I mean such Motives as engage their very Nature. Add, That such a Change must needs have been publicly known; and, so, have excited the Pens, Tongues, Interests (perhaps Swords too) of the Traditionary and Innovating Party one against another, at the time of the Change; as we see has happened in our late Alterations or Reformations. Yet no such thing was ever mentioned in History; or come to us by Tradition; or any thing alleged, but some differences amongst particular Spectators, and their Adherents siding with them; which amounts to nothing comparable to that Universal and most Memorable Concussion, such a vast Change as this we speak of, must needs have made in the whole Body of the Church. 46. Summing up then this Discourse, 'tis manifest you have no way to answer our Argument, but by supposing there was a time (the Lord knows when) in which there were no considerable Body of Men in the World, either good Christians, honest men, or valuing their Credit; but only a company of brutish, Godless, Lying Ruffians, without the least Degree of Grace or Shame in them. Unfortunate Confuter! Aristotle looked upon things as they were; Plato on things as they should be; but, to make a show of an Answer to our Argument, you would have your Readers look upon the Christian World, as it neither is, was, should be, or can be. 47. But you object. What if all Sons did not understand aright all that Fathers had Taught them! P. 23. Answer. If All did not, most of the Intelligent and Pastors, who were of greater Authority than those, some less-understanding Persons, and tied by their Duty and Office to instruct their Ignorance, would and could easily do it, when the Doctrine, open Practice and Discipline of the Christian Church was settled, and made it both so obligatory and so easy. 2. What if some Sons were so negligent as to take no care either to remember or teach what they had been taught by their Fathers? Answ. If only some were so, than those who were diligent to do this, would reprehend them, and see to have things amended, and those careless Persons, especially if Pastors, reduced to their Duty; there being Orders on foot in the World to oblige them to it. Besides, 'tis an unheard-of Negligence, not to know or remember the next day the Faith they held the day before; nor did it require that care you pretend to retain the remembrance of it four and twenty hours. 3. What if some, through Ambition, Vainglory and Popularity, P. 24. set a broach New Doctrines, and taught them for Apostolical Tradition? Answ. If only some were so, than those others, who were good Men, and free from those Vices, would set themselves to oppose them, make known their false pretences, and lay open their Novelties: Both Reason assuring us, that Good men use not to be so stupidly careless in such Sacred Concerns; and History informing us they were ever very zealously vigilant to oppose Heretics, when ever they began to vent their Pestilent, Doctrines. 4. What if others, to save themselves from Persecution, concealed part, and corrupted more of the Doctrine of Christ by their own Traditions, taken not from Christ, but from their Forefathers, jews or Gentiles? Then those who were out of Persecution, or valued it not so much as they did their Conscience, would oppose their Unchristian Proceedings: Then the Fathers, Doctors, and Pastors of the Church would reveal what they had concealed, restore what they had corrupted, and manifest that their Pretences and Subterfuges were False, and that the Doctrine they subintroduced, had not descended by the open Channel of the Christian Church's Tradition. 5. What if some through a blind Zeal, ignorant Devotion, Superstitious, Rigour, and vain Credulity, added many things to the Doctrine of Christ; which by degrees grew into more general esteem, till at last they were owned, and imposed as necessary to be believed and practised? Answ. If they belonged to Faith, they could not come in, while the Rule of Tradition was adhered to, as has been proved and granted: Tho' perhaps some Points involved in the main Body of Faith, yet so particularly or universally known, might, on emergent occasions, be singled out, defined and more specially recommended than formerly; without any Detriment to the Faith received, but rather to the Advantage and farther Explication of it. And, as for unwarrantable Practices, as they belong not to Faith, so they do not concern our present business. 6. What if Error any of these Ways brought forth, grew, multiplied, spread, obtained most power, and drove out all that held the naked Truth out of all those Countries where it came; Of which all Histories furnish us with Instances. Answ. But does any History tell you this Error spread over the whole Church, without your supposing the Question that such or such a Tenet is an Error which you pretend such; which is above the Skill of Historians to decide; and is only to be determined by examining First who have, who have not a Certain Rule of Faith. Besides, Error in Faith never yet appeared, even though abetted by Great men in the Church, but it was opposed; and Truth grew clearer by the Opposition made to it; and tho' for a while it grew under the shadow of some Particular State, yet no History ever recorded, that all the States of Christendom ever joined to protect it. 48. Well, but what are all these rambling Questions to our Argument, which insists on the impossibility of Altering the yesterday Faith, but either out of want of Memory, or out of Malice? Apply them to this, and they lose all their force, how plausibly soever a witty man, that talks at rovers, supposes all to be Error, which the Revolting Party Held, and never considers the Nature of Christian Mankind and their Circumstances, may descant upon it: For what Paradox is there, tho' never so ridiculous, that Wit discoursing thus wildly and at random, cannot make plausible? Our General Objection then against * P. 23.24. your whole Paragraph is this, that you never apply your several What ifs? to our Argument. Besides, that you pretend in the beginning of it that you will show other Reasons of such an Alteration, which are neither Forgetfulness nor Malice; and yet most of those you here assign are Defects of Goodness, P. 23. which implies some degree of Malice, and some of them, the highest Malice that can be. 49. But (say you) we must seek out a new Medium to prove our Church Infallible, for this already brought, P. 25. proves only she does not err so long as she holds to Tradition; but still she may err, if she leaves it; wherefore we must prove she cannot leave Tradition, or else She is not Infallible, and so we are but where we were. And do not you see this is already proved to your Hand? For (not to repeat the many Reasons produced for this Point, Sect. 45.) Innovation and Tradition being formerly and diametrically opposite, what proves she could not Innovate, proves also that she could not leave Tradition; for this were to Innovate. And this, our Argument you see has already proved; nor is the force of that Proof weakened by any thing you have hitherto said. I wonder you should dissemble a thing so obvious, and run forwards upon that affected Inadvertence of yours, as if it were a business unthought of by us before, and required a new Medium, whereas it is the very thing our Argument chiefly aims at: and for which, we had of our own accord, without any one's bidding, made provision for before hand. P. 25. 50. Your next Sect. P. 25. would persuade us rather to prove our Church free from Error, which (say you) is a much easier task, if she be so, than to prove Herself Infallible. Very Good! Your wise advice amounts to this, that you would have us prove our Conclusion without beginning with our Premises, or Principles. If this be Yours and Dr. St's Logic, 'tis a very preposterous one; and can only be made good by a Figure called Hysteron Proteron, or Cart before Horse. Though I must confess it keeps decorum, and is perfectly of the same hue with all your Logic hitherto. Please then to know that all our Faith may be Error, if the Testimony of the Church, (our Rule) may be Erroneous: and, if it cannot, nothing we hold of Faith can be so. Again, what mean you by our proving her free from Error? Your meaning is, we should only prove she Embraces no Error now; but what Provision would this make for Her not falling perhaps into Error to morrow? We ought then to prove (and so ought you too of your Rule) that if we adhere to it, it can at no time permit us to Err; which could not be if at any time it might be deceived itself, or leave us deceived while we follow it. Besides, if it were granted Fallible or Liable to Error, by what more evident Light, or greater and clearer Testimony could we guide ourselves to know when it did actually Err, when not in deriving down Christ's Doctrine? Or by what more certain Way could we be directed to arrive at Christ's sense. If there were any such, It and not Tradition ought to be our Rule. We return you then your Counsel back with many Thanks, for it neither suits in any degree with Logic, Common Sense, our own, or any other Principles. But however it suits better with your convenience, than these crabbed Demonstrations: For you tell us One single Instance of her erring is enough to Answer all the Arguments can be brought for her Infallibility. Ibid. Sure you have a mind to convince all Scholars that read your Books, you never heard of Logic in your Life: Or else you would endeavour to baffle the whole Art of Discoursing, because you foresee 'tis like to baffle you. An Instance may perhaps make an Objection against the Conclusion taking it single for a mere proposition and not as standing under Proof; but Arguments are answered by finding defects in the Premises or the Consequence. You might have seen (to use your own words) better Logic read to the D. of P. in my Pag. 10 and 11. Where 'tis shown you, that if the Premises be right, and the Inference good, the Conclusion must be as necessarily True, as that the same Thing cannot be, and not be at once: Yet, you take no notice of it, but still run on obstinately to confute all the Schools and Universities that ever Writ or Taught Logic from the beginning of the World, to the Time of His and Your Writing. The Truth is, you are sick of the Argument, and would shift it off on any Fashion. Bring what Instances you please; But first you are to Answer our Argument, and next, to see the Authority that qualifies your Instance for an Argument, be above Morally Certain; otherwise it will be beyond the power of any Logic to make it conclude: For the force of that Maxim on which the Conclusiveness of any Argument is built, is far beyond any Moral Certainty; Nor let Dr. St. think to stand arguing still ad hominem; but let him be sure his Instance infers the Truth of his Conclusion, when it comes to be put to the Test of a Syllogism. This we will expect from him; since it is the Right of the Respondent to deny any thing that is not driven up to Evidence; and by that Test we will judge of your Instance and other Arguments, if you have any that you will vouch to be Demonstrative, that is, Conclusive. 51. You seem so kind as not to undertake to prove that an erring Church adheres to Tradition, if it be True Apostolical Tradition, and that it adheres to it wholly and solely. I a little wonder at this; for if you mean not by Tradition such a one as is built on Living voice and Practice, you ran quite away from the Point; If such a one; you quit your own Rule, by requiring men should adhere to the other wholly and Solely, and admit that a Church adhering to such a Tradition is not an Erring Church. I infer: Therefore, till you answer our Argument which proves that our Tradition could not be interrupted by any Innovation, you cannot with reason deny but ours is such. You think Infallibility a kind of bar against our mutual Agreement; as if there were any hopes or even possibility men's Minds should centre, unless it be in something that is Absolutely Certain or Evident. Show us something else endued with such an Evidence as is able to oblige Human Nature to an Universal Acceptation and Conviction, and then blame us for maintaining Infallibility. Till then pray, excuse us for making such Provision for Faith, as sets it beyond Possibility of Falsehood. You drop some insignificant Exceptions after the Shower of your shrewd (invisible) Reasons. As that our * P. 26. Argument must prove that no man that hath been taught the Faith can ever err from it; and yet still withal, confess that a Church, following Tradition now, may leave it afterwards. This were an Incoherence with a witness: But how do you show our Argument must prove this absurd position! Only with saying it here over and over again, without the least attempt to show from our words or Doctrine, this pretended necessity, that we must both contradict ourselves so grossly, and besides go against our daily experience. I do assure the Reader we have no where either such words or sense, and that 'tis merely a false shame or some weak deduction of yours, for want of some better thing to say. Our Tenet is that, tho' not one single man can err while he adheres to our Rule, yet even some particular Churches may leave off adhering to Tradition, and so err in Faith. Only we say that the main Body of the Church consisting of all particular Churches that compound Christianity, being supported by Motives of adhering to the former Faith, so Prevalent, and Universal, and applied to a very vast multitude of them, cannot conspire to relinquish this Rule, go against and disgrace their own Testimony, nor consequently err in Faith. The word [All] indeed, and [They] in each Proposition are distributive, and appliable to each single man; but do you find the least word in any of them, that says that single men or great multitudes may not out of malice alter Faith? Where find you that! Or that they cannot desert the Rule, and by Consequence their Faith. Pray, be not so liberal of our Concessions, without showing something under our hands for it. 52. But you sum up your Solution of our Demonstration with an admirable grace, or rather you give us the very Quintessence of your Answer to it in these few words. P. 27. The Church of Rome says all have broke the Rule of Tradition but she only, and proves it, by saying that she holds the same to day she did yesterday, and so up to our B. Saviour's time. You proceed. We call again for a Proof of this. She tells us, If she followed this Rule she could never err in Faith. But did she follow this Rule? She says she did; and if you will not believe her, there's an end. How smart and victorious this looks? But the best is, 'tis wholly built on some few of your own wilful Falsifications. Pray, where did we ever bring these Words, [If she followed this Rule, etc.] For a Proof that she holds the same to day which she did yesterday. Or where did we prove we followed this Rule only with iffs? But why are you so shy to quote the Pages or Paragraphs where we bring these absurd Proofs? because you would be at Liberty to say any thing and yet not expose your Credit. And 'tis worth noting, that you point out the Page in other occasions very diligently; but, when you have a mind to falsify, 'tis still suppressed. 'Tis observable too that this insincerity of yours here is of such advantage to you, that it gains the whole Cause. For, if we prove this main Point no better but with Iffs, & that our Argument has no force but by standing to your Kindness in Believing what Our Church says, then there's an End indeed; for nothing can be more Evident, than, 'tis that in that Supposition, we are utterly routed, & our whole Cause quite defeated. Now I would entreat the Reader (for You are resolved neither to use your Eyes nor Honesty, lest they should too openly accuse you) that he will once more review our Argument, as 'tis put down by Dr. St. himself, First Letter, p. 4. and 5. and made good by me, p. 8. and 9 and he will see clearly, the first half of it was to prove, that If they followed this Rule, viz. of believing the same to day they did yesterday, they could never err in Faith, or were Infallible: And the other part [And they could not innovate in Faith, unless they did forget what they held the day before, or out of malice alter it] was brought to prove they did ever follow that Rule. For since nothing but Innovation can break the Chain of Tradition, whoever proves they could not innovate, proves directly they could not recede from Tradition. Nay, 'twas confessed by Dr. St. himself, when he was as yet in better circumstances, (First Letter, p. 5. l. 4.) that we proved our Church could not innovate, by the Medium now mentioned. Yet you have the Confidence to tell the Reader, she only says she follows this Rule; and if you will not believe her, P. 27. there's an end: Whereas you ought in candour to have said, They proved she followed, and could not but follow this Rule; but I cannot answer their Argument, and there's an End. See what you have brought upon yourself, and how fatal it is to your pretended Answer, that as you * See above. Sect. 39 began your Reply to this 4th. Proposition with a most wicked Falsification, so you close it up here with a double one, and those too of so large a size, that were they True, they had carried all before them. Your intermediate Endeavours are many of them of the same kind; the rest Mistakes, (and generally wilful ones) which I thought at first to have reckoned up; but they thickened so upon me, that I saw it would be tedious to count them, and so gave it over. But your excuse for this insincere Carriage is, That you do no more than all Writers use to do, who have had the bad luck to defend an ill Cause, and come to be pressed with Close Truth. All they can do, when they are not able to give a good acount of themselves, is, to bend all their study and seek about for shifts, how they may give no account. And the D. of P. and you are of this prudent Generation. I say once again, 'Tis your Chief Study how to shift; and long Study of any thing, with frequent practice, makes a man Excellent at it; & every man loves most to do that he is Excellent at; and so we are to expect it. To convince the Reader whether I wrong you or no, Put you your Arguments for the Absolute Certainty of your Rule in conveying to us Christ's Sense, and for your following it, as close and home as you can possibly; and see whether I do not answer it directly, fairly & squarely, without any of these shifting Excursions or Falsifications: And let our different Carriage be the Test to distinguish the candid Asserters of Truth, from the Insincere Abetters of Error. 53. After I had showed that Scripture privately interpreted could not be a Rule of Faith, the nature and method of our Dispute led me into an Enquiry what was in reality your Rule, as you are such a kind of Protestant; and, to this End I discoursed thus; That Scripture was a Generical Rule, common to you and all Heresies in the world; and, That your Specifical Rule must be [as myself and those of my judgement understand or interpret it.] And can there be any thing more Evident? Do not they all strive to lay claim to the Letter of Scripture for their Rule, as well as you? Do not they all, as much as you, rely upon it, and avail themselves by quoting it still, and endeavouring to show it favourable to their respective Tenets? Plain Experience informs us and every one, they all do this, and that too, with an ardour and earnestness equal to yours, as far as we can discern. In this than you all agree; and therefore 'tis beyond all dispute, Scripture is your Common or Generical Rule, if we may believe your Carriage and Profession. Now let's see what 'tis you disagree in. And 'tis manifest you disagree in the Sense of Scripture; otherwise, the Sense of Scripture being God's Sense or your Faith, you would be of the same Faith; which cannot be pretended, since you contradict them, and they You, in matters belonging to Faith; and What's the Way to arrive at the Sense of Scripture? Certainly the Interpreting it; for Interpretation signifies in proper speech the Giving or Assigning to Words their sense; and do not you accept that Sense of Scripture for your Faith which your Private Judgement interpreting it, conceives to be truly its meaning; and they, in like manner, as they apprehend it, aught to be interpreted? Is it not for this very end you so cry up your Judgement of Discretion, and that you are not to submit to the Decrees of Councils or Consent of Fathers, farther than you conceive them agreeable to the Word of God? Does not Dr. St. profess openly, that his sober Enquirer may understand the Explicit Sense of Implicit Points that are Doubtful (such as all main Points of Faith are) without the Church's help, (Second Letter, p. 21.) that is, without any Public Interpreter? And, Will you after this deny that Scripture is your General Rule in which you agree with all Heretics; and your specifical, peculiar or proper Rule, in which you differ from them, and they from one another, is Scripture, as Interpreted by yourselves? The thing is plain, let's see what you say to it. You, with a very dexterous artifice, grant and not grant it, as we shall see anon: and tell us, 1. That Scripture is and aught to be common to all Heretics, tho' they miserably abuse it. Pray, Sir, use my words; I said, a Common Rule to them and you; and, Can that be truly a Rule, which they direct themselves by and yet warp into Error? You tell us indeed they miserably abuse it; and the Socinians will say the same of you, while you pretend to prove thence Christ is God. And how shall this Quarrel be decided? For 'tis hitherto a drawn Match between you, while you fight with that ambidextrous Weapon, Scripture's Letter interpretable by Private judgements. The Point still sticks: How can an indifferent man, seeking for Faith by your Rule, be satisfied They abuse it more than You? Must not you be obliged to show him some clearer Light than They have, and that this Light justifies you for judging thus harshly of them, that they are such miserable Abusers of Scripture? And, if you do not, must he not in true reason judge 'tis pretended by you gratis; as also, that you are highly uncharitable, to charge them downright with so heinous a Crime? 'Tis that farther degree of Light in You that must justify you for these pretences, which we would gladly see; for, whatever it is, 'tis That which distinguishes you from them, and sets you up to be Right users of Scripture; that is, it gives you the Right Sense of it, or your Faith; and so it must difference you Essentially from them in your Grounds or Rule. 'Tis this Light, I say, we would be at; Why is it so shy to show its Face? 2. Tho' 'tis hard to conceive how they can be said to abuse Scripture who follow it to their Power; yet, since you will have it allowed you gratis, Does not their pretended miserable Abuse of Scripture consist in misinterpreting it? Certainly, you must say it does. And if so, than your right Interpretation of it, or your taking it in a right sense, is that in which your right Use of it consists: wherefore your own Interpretation of it, is, beyond all Evasion, that which differences you from them; and so 'tis your peculiar or specifical Rule of Faith. 3. Do those Heretics who thus miserably abuse it, do this out of Wilfulness, that is, do they indeed understand it right, but pretend they do not; or do they use their endeavour to understand it, and yet hap to abuse it by misunderstanding it? If the former, then again you must tell us gratis, and aught to make it out to an Indifferent man seeking for Faith, that the Socinians (and all the erring Sects) are the most wickedly insincere, and the most blasphemous men in the World, nay, the greatest Hypocrites to boot; to know certainly by Scripture that Christ is God, and yet knowingly impugn his Divinity, voluntarily abuse Scripture they seem so highly to venerate, and pretend Conscience all the while: And yet none but you have such horrid apprehensions of them: and as for myself, seeing how they decline no Adversary at the alleging and comparing Places, how sedulously they make Scripture their Study, and in all appearance adhere to the Letter; I verily believe they follow it to their power, but fall into Error through their misfortune of espousing a wrong Rule. And if you still say they are thus voluntarily insincere, I desire to know of you by what outward signs can an indifferent man judge You and your Party are not as Insincere as They, or perhaps more? Acquaint us, I say, for what other Reason you say this, but because they frame another Sense of Scripture than you do, that is, interpret it differently from You? If you can give no other than your own Interpretation is the only Light you have to judge them Heretics, or to determine what's Heresy; and by consequence to judge what's True Faith; and so 'tis avoidable your Rule of Faith, of which more by and by. But, if you say they follow it to their power, and yet err in Faith, than the fault not being in Them, for not following their Rule, their fault must be (as it is yours) their adhering to a Rule which secures not men, tho' doing their best to understand it, from falling into Heresy; that is, it consists in their pitching upon that for their Rule, which is indeed no Rule at all. 54. Your Rule then equally patronising true Faith and Heresy, I had reason to affirm, that it inferred those blasphemous Propositions, as to make Light and Darkness very consistent, and Christ and Belial very good Friends. Now, this being my Charge, it was manifestly your Duty to show it does not patronise true Faith and Heresy, and by doing so, induce those horrid blasphemies; and to make out, that only true Faith can be grounded on Scripture privately interpreted; and therefore, that I had impeached it wrongfully. But this was too hard a Point to meddle with. Instead of doing this, and clearing yourself from Blasphemy, which was directly incumbent on you, you tell the Reader, with a great garb of Gravity, that I speak Blasphemy myself, Blasphemy against God and his Holy Word; when I only mention it while I am charging you with it. And hereupon, like a right Good man, you fall to talk Godly, and out of your pure Charity will needs bestow upon me the Benediction of your hearty Prayer, that God would give me Repentance unto Life. Indeed, had I said that Christ and Belial could ever be reconciled, or advanced any Position that employed it, as yours does, I confess, I must have been Guilty of a horrid Blasphemy. But, not knowing how to clear yourself, for owning no Rule but such a one as equally patronizes Truth and Falsehood, and therefore, by a necessary consequence, infers those Blasphemies; you very demurely put on a Godly Countenance, and betake yourself very charitably to your hearty Prayers. As much as to say, In good Truth, Sir, I cannot answer you, nor show I have any Rule, but what serves for Error as well as Truth; but yet if that may excuse me, I will be content in lieu of it, to pray for you with all my Heart. Is not this pleasant? 55. Thus much for your Rule as 'tis common to You and all Heretics. What's your particular Rule? Here 1. You take it ill that we will needs know what's your Rule better than yourselves do; P. 28. And we take it as ill of You, that you would have us believe you before our own Evident Reason. We know you cannot defend such an insignificant Rule as your own Interpretations; and therefore are forced to disown it, when we press you to give a good account of it; with which may very well consist, that you proceed upon it when the danger is remote. 2. You assure us Plain Scripture is your Rule; that is, Ibid. (as appears by your Discourse here) your Rule as you are such a kind of Protestant. Pray, will you explain and unriddle to us this most obscure word [Plain] in what kind of Points, to whom, and by what kind of Light, is Scripture taken as your Rule, Plain? And let's have something more than a blind Word to work on. Experience tells us Scripture is not plain, even in the highest Points of Faith, since so many follow it, and yet go astray. Again, if it be so plain, all your useful Helps are needless; and Lastly, Scripture conceived by you to be plain, which is your particular Rule, can never be made out to be Absolutely Certain; for the Socinians too proceed upon Scripture, Plain to them, as their Rule, and yet err; which evinces 'tis not so plain as to convince and certainly enlighten Human Reason attending to it: An evident Argument, that both the one and the other do but fancy it plain, but that, in reality, 'tis Plain to neither. 3. You declare, that the Interpretation of it by any Sect of people, Romanists or others, P. 28. is Extrinsical to it, and no constitutive difference of it. That the Interpretation of Romanists is not the particular Rule of Your Protestants, all the World knew before; which makes it frivolous to tell us so here. Nor do we challenge you, or pretend, that the Interpretation of any other Sect is your Rule; for we told you, that the Interpretation of each Sect, respectively, was its particular Rule. 'Tis Your own Interpretation we said was your Rule; instead of granting or denying which, you shuffle about, and talk of the Interpretation of Romanists, and other Sects. But, if (which is strangely expressed) in other Sects you include your own too, 'tis all one to my Discourse. For, whether you regard the Interpretation of your own Sect, or make account, that as each individual Angel is a distinct Species, so each individual Interpreter among you is a distinct Sect, still Scripture, as interpretable by yourselves, is your particular Rule, and not Extrinsical to it. For let me ask you once more, Is not the Sense of Scripture your Faith? and, Is not that Essentially your Particular Rule of Faith, that gives you your Particular Faith? and, Must I mind you again, that it is the very Essence (as I may say) or nature of Interpretation to give you the Sense of the Words of Scripture, which in our case is your Faith. Wriggle then still which way you please, you can never avoid, but your own Interpretation of Scripture is your Particular Rule; taking you either for a whole Sect, an Individual, or Both. 56. At length, as a man in danger when he is followed close at the Heels, and ready to be caught, takes a desperate leap, tho' he hazards himself a mischief; you venture boldly to declare what is your particular Rule, as differenced from both Romanists, and other Heretics and Sectaries; P. 28. viz. Scripture plainly delivering a Sense owned and declared by the Primitive Church of Christ in the Three Creeds, Four First General Councils, and Harmony of the Fathers. After which you add, This, I hope, is plain dealing, and no wriggling; and here we take up our stand, let him endeavour to draw us whither he can. Never fear it, Sir, you are out of danger of being drawn any whither. Ten thousand Cart-Ropes will not go round you, and we must be at least Twenty Years in fastening them. But let's examine this your particular Rule. 1. I ask, whether, since Differences use to be Essential, these words, [owned and declared by the Primitive Church, etc.] which are found in the Difference of your Rule from that of others, be at all Essential, or not: If not Essential, since, if you be Orthodox, you ought to have a Rule essentially distinct from that of Heretics and Sectaries, what is this Essentially-different Rule of yours; for 'tis this we are enquiring after? If you say 'tis Essential; then Scripture had not all the due power to regulate you as to your Faith, without their additional Light: And, by consequence, Scripture is not your Only and Entire Rule, as you ever pretended hitherto; since these are Part of it. 2 When you say your Rule is Scripture, plainly delivering a Sense, etc. I suppose you must mean such a particular Sense as is of Faith with you: and can any more be required to your particular Rule than Scripture plainly delivering your particular Faith? Certainly you will not say it. For, there is the Divine Authority in the Scripture, which is the Formal Motive of Divine Faith. There is Plainness, which gives it a Directive Virtue, and qualifies it for a Rule; and the Clear Light of this plain Rule must shine bright upon the particular Tenets you hold, for 'tis to shine there, and no where else. Which once put, what can all the other, esteemed by you but Human Authorities, serve for? Can they add weight to the Divine Authority, or clear that to us which is already so plain by Scripture? 3. Pray be candid, and tell us, After a thing is plain in Scripture, are you to value a straw, what either Primitive Church, Creeds, or Fathers say? I dare say you will grant you are not. Wherefore, all these are utterly useless, unless they be pretended to give you some light to interpret Scripture. But this cannot be neither; both because you tell us here plain Scripture is your Rule, and it would not be plain, but obscure, if it needed an Explainer: Besides, you put this as a constitutive difference of your Rule, and yet denied that any Interpretation of Scripture is such, but Extrinsical to it. 'Tis then a great Mystery still, how these Human Authorities affect your General Rule, or influence your Faith already had by plain Scripture, or to what end they serve but for a Show only. 4. The Lutherans proceed upon all these as much as you, and yet hold a Real Presence of Christ's very Body in the Sacrament, as much as we do. So that this does not difference you in your Grounds or Rule from all other Sects; for sure you will not deny that to be a Sect, that holds an Error, which Dr. St. has taken such pains to prove is Idolatry. My last question shall be, Whether your sober Enquirers are not to come to their particular Faith, by this their particular Rule of Faith? And, since 'tis Evident they must, we would know next how many of them are to arrive at any Faith at all? For it will take up many Years to examine and compare all the Fathers, and be sure of their Harmony with one another, and with the Scripture too. Nay, the Duration of the World will be too short to compass that Satisfaction, if we may believe the * Dissuasive from Popery, p 7. Bishop of Downs, who assures us, That out of the Father's succeeding the Primitive Times, both sides eternally and inconfutably shall bring Sayings for themselves respectively. Can any man living make Sense of such stuff, or ever come at his Faith by such a Rule? 57 For this last Reason chiefly, I affirmed, That not one Protestant in a million followed Dr. St's Rule, but honestly followed the Tradition of their own Church, Pastors or Fathers; that is, believed as they had been educated. To the first part of this Assertion you say little, but that if there be any Fault, 'tis the Fault of the People only. But if this peculiar Rule of yours, which takes in the seeing your Sense of Scripture owned and declared by the Primitive Church, P. 29. Four first General Councils, and the Harmony of the Fathers, be to be followed ere you can come at your Faith; I doubt the Fault will prove to be in the Rule. For very few Persons have Learning, fewer Leisure enough, and none of them security of having any Faith by this Method; unless you could ensure their Salvation by inspiring those who are ignorant with competent Learning to understand all the Fathers and their Harmony; and withal, by letting them good long Leases of their Lives; which I am of opinion you cannot. The second part, that they followed the Method of Tradition, puts you in a marvelvellous jocund humour; and, as if you had forgot your way (a thing not unusual with you) you ask, all amazed, Where are we now? In the Church of Rome ere we are aware of it: We are all good roman-catholics on a sudden, we are become an Infallible Church, etc. and away you run with the Jest, laughing and giggling as if you had found a mere's Nest. Surcease your fears, good Sir, you are not a jot the nearer being Catholics for following your own Tradition. It reaches no farther than john Calvin, Martin Luther, or some such Reforming Hero; and there it ends and stops in a flat Novelty. Whereas Catholics abhor a Tradition that has any known Beginning, or takes a Name from any Particular Author, or has any Original but Christ, his Apostles, and the Church in the very first Age, who were the Original Deliverers of it to the next, and so to the succeeding ones. Pray Sir, what's become of your Jest? All I said, was, that You * First Letter, p. 27. l. 3, 4. followed the Way of Tradition, however misplaced; I proved it by Reasons and Instances; you hint some, omit others, and pervert the rest. You tell us, 'tis all Scriptural Tradition. But we will trust our Eyes and Experience before your bare Word. We see some taught before they can read; we see them Catechised in Churches, and they repeat and believe what's there told them, tho' Scripture be not quoted for the distinct Passages. We see them read the Scripture afterwards; but we see withal not One in Thousands trusts his own Judgement of Discretion for the sense of it; but, without reluctancy or jealousy, accepts that which his Pastors assign to it; especially in Spiritual Points, or Mysteries of Faith, about which we are chiefly discoursing. But do not yourself incline to admit (as much as we can expect from a man that affects not too much candour) that very thing you so laugh at here. I affirmed, that Not one in a million thinks of relying on your Rule of Faith, in order to make choice of their Faith, etc. This you answer with hems and hahs: Tho' I fear— yet I hope he is out in his Account— I am apt to think they are more attentive— Yet be it as he would have it, P. 29. etc. Now, since they must either have their Faith by Reliance on their Pastors and Preachers, delivering it to them, and educating them in it, that is, by some kind of Tradition; or else by relying on Scripture; * Ibid. and yourself seems to doubt, or rather in a manner grants it, That they have it not the later way; you must at least doubt that they have it by the Way of Tradition. But your Fancy was so big with your empty Jest, that you had forgot what you had allowed but a little before. 58. Thus, Sir, I have traced you punctually step by step; not (as is your constant use) picked out a few words scattered here and there: which you thought you might most commodiously pervert: wherefore I have reason to expect the same exact measure from you. The Sum of your Answer is manifestly this. Shuffles and wilful Mistakes without number; Evasions endless; Falsifications frequent; Godly Talk frivolous; Jests groundless; and all these brought in still to stop Gaps when your Reason was Nonplussed. Be pleased to leave off your Affected Insincerities; otherwise I must be forced to Expose them yet farther; than which there can be no Task more Ungrateful imposed upon Your Servant, J. S. ERRATA. Page 3. l. 28. Read both of u●. p. 10. l. ult. find it in. p. 11. l. 11 notice there. p. 21. l. 24. go forwards. p. 22. l. 27. Secret. Again, p. 23. l. 9 as I had not. p. 32. l. 30. Is it a Way. Ibid. l. 32. upon it? p. 39 l. 7. Your Reason is, because. p. 44. l. 17. may hap. p. 45. l. 5. Gift. Ibid. l. 32. Prince of. p. 46. l. 7. it. Whether. p. 48. l. 27. a most. p. 53. l. 12. Adherers. p. 57 l. 14. to be at a loss. Ibid. l. ult. discovered it. p. 60. l. 8. Speculaters. p. 62. l. 9 Yet not so explicitly or. p. 63. l. 28. formally and. p. 73. l. 13. other, then. THE THIRD Catholic Letter IN ANSWER To the Arguing Part of Doctor Stillingfleet's SECOND LETTER To Mr. G. By I. S. Published with Allowance. LONDON, Printed, and sold by Matthew Turner at the Lamb in High-Holbourn. 1687. THE THIRD Catholic Letter, etc. SIR, 1. I Come now to take a view of your Second Letter, with my Eye, as in the former, fixed only upon what I think you mean for Argument. Whether you give us just your First Words at the Conference; or second Thoughts since; whether no troublesome Part of Mr. G's Discourse be left out; in short, whatever belongs to matter of Fact, shall be out of my prospect, which shall be bounded by what you think fit to open to it. You acquaint us here (Pag. 7.) that you put two Questions. 1. How does it appear that the Church of Rome is Infallible in the sense and meaning of Tradition? 2. Is this Tradition a Rule of Faith distinct from Scripture? And you complain of Mr. G. that his Copy makes you ask a very wise Question. viz. How does it appear that the Church of Rome is Infallible in Tradition. Why this Question should be ironically called a very wise one, I cannot imagine. I am sure it is very pertinent to the Intention of your Dispute, and directly points at one of the Chief Subjects of the Conference. But you shall have your Will; tho' I believe it will appear Mr. G's question made better Provision for your Credit in point of Wisdom than you have done for yourself. 2. For, your Second was in truth a very needless Question; because both yourself and all your Auditors, if they ever heard any thing of this kind of Controversy, knew beforehand without needing to ask, that the Tradition we lay claim to, pretends to derive down the Entire Body of Christ's Doctrine, and not only the Books of Scripture, of which (P. 9) you very learnedly seem to counterfeit yourself ignorant. And this is the first part of your distinguishing the plain Sense of this Word [Tradition] as held by Mr. G. By this Question you tell us (p. 9) you intended to put a difference between the Tradition held by us [Protestant's] and the Tradition disputed. For the first meaning of the Word [Tradition] which you grant, you put the Vniniversal Testimony of the Christian Church, as to the Books of Scripture. The second and denied meaning you contra distinguish from the former in these words. But if by Tradition be understood either some necessary Articles of Faith not contained in Scripture, or a Power in the Church to make unnecessary to become necessary, this I denied, etc. Certainly, Sir, you have a Logic of your own so peculiarly fitted to your designs, that no man living but yourself ever used it. I ever thought, and apprehended I had all the World on my side for thinking so, that all Differences or Distinctions were to be Opposites, and to divide the Common Genus, or the Notion that was to be distinguished; and, therefore, since the first sense of the Word [Tradition] was Tradition for Books of Scripture, which is your Tenet; I verily expected the opposite sense of it should have been Tradition for Doctrines, which is Ours; and that, as the former was Tradition for Christ's Words, so the latter should be Tradition for Christ's Sense. But while I was vainly imagining the second sense of the Word would be Tradition for Faith, instead of that I found nothing but such Articles, and such a Power. Did ever any mortal Man think or pretend that Tradition was an Article, or a Power, any more than that it was a Horse shoe? Did yourself when you granted the Latin and Greek Churches followed Tradition, Dr. St's First Letter. P. 5. intent to signify that they followed Articles and Powers? The sum then of your learned Distinction is in plain Terms this: Tradition is twofold: One is a Tradition for Books; the other is no Tradition at all, but only Articles and Power. Had it not been better then to have accepted of Mr. G's Civility, and have answered to the purpose, rather than out of a pique to his Copy, and a desire to make it stand in need to be corrected, thus to pervert common sense, and out of a too zealous care not to forfeit your Wisdom, to commit such an illogical Absurdity? But Sense and Logic, tho' they be plain and honest true Friends, yet I must own that, like the Queen's Old Courtiers, they may appear scandalous Companions to a man of your more polite and modish Education. However, I dare answer for you, it was not ignorance of their worth, but an unlucky necessity, which made you introduce in their room two New Questions to while away the time and escape the true one, which you had no mind to meet close and grapple with. Yet perhaps you may have better luck in your First Question; let us see: By your First Question then, and your Explication of your Design of it immediately after, P. 7. 'tis easy to discern that you again quite mistake the End and Use, and consequently the Nature of Tradition; which is a very inauspicious beginning, and puts us out of hopes you should ever discourse pertinently of it, since you go about to impugn you know not what. For Tradition does not bring us down set Forms of Words only, as you imagine, viz. (as you instance P. 7.) Christ was the Son of God, under which you say well a Heretical Sense may lie: But it derives down to us the very sense of those words, and all the rest of Christ's Doctrine; there being found in Tradition all the ways and means to signify and express the Determinate Meaning and Sense of Forefathers that can possibly be imagined. For, they not only deliver the Propositions of Faith in such or so many Words, as you apprehend; but, they signify to their Children the very Tenets they have in their hearts, in such expressions as best suits with the occasion, according as their different methods of explaining themselves may lead them. You may upon reflection observe it passes thus in yourself when you instruct people in their Faith: In which circumstance, you do not tie yourself up to rigorous Forms of Words made to your hands, but take your liberty to deliver yourself in any manner that you judge will make your meaning be best understood. The same Method is taken by the Pastors of the Church (and the Fathers of Families too according to their pitch and station.) They Catechise their Children; they Preach upon the Texts proper to such Points; they dilate themselves in their Discourse, with a full design to make their Sense be perfectly comprehended; they reply to the difficulties of those who are not yet perfectly instructed, or well satisfied; and accommodate themselves to all their Exigencies. Lastly, they lead their Christian Lives, and breed up others to do the same, by those Principles: And, Experience as well as Reason tells us, that nothing gives the determinate sense of Words which express Tenets, more distinctly than does perpetual Practice, and Living conformably to what's signified by those Words. The want of which Requisits in the Letter of Scripture, which can give no Answer to any difficulty, nor vary any expression to make its Meaning more Intelligible, nor live, and by Example make the Reader live according to such a sense, shows clearly, that, taking it alone and unassisted by the Church's Tradition (determining and ascertaining its meaning in Dogmatical Points) it cannot in any proper Speech be called a Rule of Faith. 3. If, notwithstanding what has been said, this Discourse should still seem to you more a Speculation than a Real Truth (which yet I judge impossible): pray reflect how yourself would go about to instruct your own Children in your Faith; and you will easily find by experience, when 'tis brought home to your own case, how connatural this Way is to clear to them your sense, in what you would have them Believe. Do not yourself use the same Method? Do you only deliver to them certain Forms of Speech, without endeavouring, by all the possible means you can invent, to imprint the true sense (that I may use your own Instance) of these Words [Christ is the Son of GOD] in their Souls; and to make it still clearer to them, as their budding capacities grow riper and riper? Do you not experience they come by degrees to understand you too; and that you have at length transfused into them the Sense of the Tenet you had in your own Breast? Do not you practically instil into them, that they ought to Pray to Christ; and exercise their Faith, Hope and Charity towards Him while they are Praying? Do not you tell them they are to give Divine Reverence to Christ; without stinting them, or making them scruple, lest they give too much, or commit Idolatry, by giving that to a Creature, which is only due to the True GOD? And does not this Practice, beyond all possibility of mistake, insinuate into them, that he is equally to be Adored with God the Father, or Coequal to him; and, so, not a Creature, but very God of very God? I doubt not but you do all this; at least, I am sure, if you do it not, you do not your Duty: Nor do I doubt but your Children come at length to understand you too, and, by understanding you, become of the same Religion. And can you imagine, that Men were not Men in all Ages, but (in the blind times of Popery forsooth!) degenerated into Parrots, and learned to prate set-Words, without minding their Sense? Or, that Christians were not always Christians, and endeavoured to imbue under-growing Posterity with the Meaning of the Tenets they professed; and hoped to be Saved by their propagating them to those whom they were bound to see Instructed in Faith? Or, lastly, can you conceive there can be any Means invented by Man's Wit, to make known and propagate the Sense of Words that express Points of Faith, which is not in the highest measure found in Tradition? If you cannot, (as I am sure you cannot) than you must withal either confess, that Tradition brings down the Sense of Christ's Law, and not the bare Words or Sounds only; or, you must advance this monstrous Paradox, that there is no possible way in the whole World for Mankind to communicate their Thoughts and Meanings to one another in such Points; the contrary to which you experience daily in yourself and others. And, were this so, then, to what end were Catechisms, Sermons and Controversies about such subjects? To what end all Instructions, Conferences, and Explications of them by the Pastors? Again, if you grant these (as you must) to be the best Expedients to transmit down the Sense of Christ's Words, that is, our Faith; how can you hold Scripture's Letter the Rule of Faith: which, taken as counterdistinguished to Tradition, wants all those most effectual Means of discovering to us its Meaning. Certainly, That must be the Rule of Faith that is best qualified to give us our Faith; and that must be best qualified to give us our Faith, which has the best Means to give us Christ's Sense; and not that which wants all the best Means to produce such an Effect. On the other side, supposing Christ's Doctrine once settled in the Body of the Church, how can you deny Tradition, thus abundantly furnished with the best Means imaginable to deliver down the first-taught Doctrine, to be such a Rule; seeing no more is required to be a Rule of Faith, but to be qualified with a Power to acquaint us who live at this distance with the true Sense of what was delivered by the Founders of the Church in the beginning, without danger of losing it by the way; which cannot be imagined as long as Tradition is held to, the same believed to day which was held yesterday, or that the immediately succeeding Fathers still delivered the same Doctrine. To do which there wanted no Power, as has been lately shown to the full; nor Will to use that Power; being obliged to it by the greatest Penalties GOD himself could inflict, the Damning Themselves and their Posterity. 4. But, say you (pag. 8.) If the Church may explain the Sense and Meaning of Tradition, so as to oblige men to believe that by Virtue of such Explication, which they were not obliged to before, then 'tis impossible the Infallibility of Tradition should lie in a constant Tradition from Father to Son; for they have no Power to oblige to any more than they received.] How Plausibly and smoothly this Discourse runs, and how shrewdly it seems to conclude? Would any well-meaning Reader imagine that it were perfect Nonsense all the while, and wholly built on your own Liberality, giving us another sort of Tradition which is no Tradition? This malignant word [Tradition] must not be taken in its right sense, that's resolved, for than it would grow too troublesome; but, take it in any other sense, that is, mistake it, and then have at it. For when you speak of explaining the sense and meaning of Tradition, you do not take Tradition, as, you know well, we do, and as the word plainly imports; for the Delivery of Doctrine, but for Doctrines Delivered; and so again, we have once more lost the Question. For, what can these words mean? If the Church may explain the sense and meaning of Tradition; that is, of the Method of conveying down Christ's Doctrine? The Method of Delivery is the very Signification of that Doctrine from Age to Age, and how can one Explain the Sense and meaning of a signification of Christ's sense, when it's self is that very Explication of it? This gives me occasion to reflect how oddly you have hampered our Tradition hitherto instead of handling it. P. 9 You seem to doubt by your [If no more were meant, etc.] Whether it does not mean Tradition for the Books of Scripture; and, this you knew well enough before, was none of our Tradition in dispute here; which, as may be seen by Mr. G's Demonstration put down by yourself, First Letter p. 4. and 5. is confessed to be Tradition for matters of Faith or Doctrine: Now in this new sense you give us there of Tradition, you kindly * P. 9 grant it; for 'tis your own, not that which we here mean by that word. Next comes * Ibid. another [If] and makes it seem to signify * P. 10. Articles and Power. And this is no Tradition at all; neither ours, nor yours, nor any bodies: For, neither those Articles nor that Power you speak of p. 10. are or can be the Delivery of Christ's Doctrine from day to day; for that speaks such a Method of bringing down things, not the things brought down. And this you very gravely deny. And so you may, with my good leave, either deny or expunge, or condemn it to what doom you please; for certainly it comes with a felonious Intention, to draw the Reader out of his Road into a Labyrinth of Nonsense, and then rob him of his Reason. Again, p. 7. you make it a Delivery of bare Words, at best, with a general (impossible) sense, and perhaps a Heretical one too, into the bargain; whereas you cannot but know Tradition, as We mean it, is a Delivery of the sense of Christian Tenets, and this a particular sense too; and such a one as cannot possibly be Heretical, while this Rule is adhered to; unless the First-Taught Faith were Heretical, which is Blasphemy to imagine. And, here again p. 8. you make Tradition or Delivery to mean the Point delivered, and would have us give you the signification and Explication of That which is its self the signification and Explication of Christ's Faith; and this too, the * See Sect. 2, & 3. very best that can be imagined. Is it possible to deform Tradition more untowardly, or wrest it into more misconstructions than has been done already? After a serious manner, certainly, 'tis impossible: But Drollery is now to act its part: And to cheer your spirits, which drooped under the difficulty of answering the Argument for Tradition, you put yourself in masquerade; and would make the Relation of perhaps two or three, it may be, partial Friends of yours, concerning Mr. G's Discourse about You, a perfect parallel to our Rule of Faith; and that, if they can mistake or misrepresent, down goes Tradition. Which amounts to this, that sooner may all the Christian Fathers in any Age, consisting of many millions, and those dispersed in far-distant Parts of the World, be mistaken in their Faith, which it imported them no less than their Salvation to know; sooner may all of them conspire to deliver to their Children another Doctrine than that which they held the way to Heaven; than that a very few of your own Party should, to gratify you, tell you a false Story, or Aggravate; tho' all of them were, besides, professed Adversaries to the Person against whom they witnessed; and, indeed, Witnesses in their Own Common Cause. I beseech you, Sir, tho' you be never so much to seek for a solid Answer, yet speak at least plausible things, and do not thus expose your Credit while you affect to play the Wit. Poor Tradition, what has it done to be thus misrepresented! Did it deserve no better for bringing down the Book of Scripture, but to be exposed in so many awkward Vizards, when it was to come upon the Stage, and not once suffered to show its true face, but still travesteeed into another Form, and put in all shapes but its own? This Carriage of yours is enough to make the Reader think you apprehend it to be some terrible Gorgon's Head, or some Basilisk; and, that the very sight of it, unless it came thus muffled up, would undo you. At least he will suspect from such an untoward broken Scene, that the Drama is not like to be regular: Indeed you shift too often, and to catch and confute you I must travel through the whole Compass; for no sooner can a man steer one way, but your Discourse, like the Wind, whips strait into another quarter; and about we must tack, or we must not make forwards at all. But I will insist no more at present on this dexterity of yours; you will afford your Friends many fresh Instances of it, through the whole course of this Letter hereafter. Only I must note your forgetfulness, or what else may I call it? For you took the Notion of Tradition very right, First Letter (p. 7.) where you alleged you had a larger and firmer Tradition for Scripture than we had for us: You did not there, take Tradition of that Book, for the Book delivered; for then that Book had been the Delivery of its self; and yet that Book had as good Title to be its own Tradition, as you had to make the Points delivered by our Tradition to be the Tradition or Delivery of those Points. You granted too in the same place that the Latin and Greek Churches proceeded upon it; and, by granting this, confessed there were as many Attesters went to make it up as there were Men, (at least Intelligent men) in the compass of the many vast Nations which those two Churches included: How come you then so much to forget yourself as to parallel it here to the pitiful Attestation of three or four possibly prejudiced Relaters. But the reason of this self-contradicting and extravagant representation of Tradition is clear; it was your Interest to take it right there, and the same reason prevailed with you to take it wrong here. 5. But I am weary of fencing with Shadows, when I can take any occasion that leads me to treat of what's Substantial. Mistake me not, 'tis not your Discourse that obliges me to it; it had been a sufficient Answer to That, to let the Reader see you purposely mistook the Nature of Tradition, to divert and perplex his Thoughts, and there let it rest. Yet, Because your taking Tradition wrong, for the Doctrines delivered, good use may be drawn from it, I shall, for the benefit of the Reader, not decline speaking to what you object. You make account (p. 7. & 8.) the Tradition of the Church delivered the Point of the ` Real Presence, & of Christ's being the Son of God, in General Words only. Which, waving what has been alleged in my 2 d. and 3 d. Sect. I judge for divers other Reasons to be Impossible. For, besides that, if the Forefathers delivered only the Words, they taught their Children (against the supposition) no Faith in these Points, for Faith has sense in it, and is not Faith if it have none, being in that case no true judgement or Truth; who knows not that Words were instituted and intended by Mankind to signify something; and, therefore, 'tis inconsistent with the nature of the same Mankind, when at Age, especially the Wiser sort, not to hold some Sense or other to be signified by those Words; and with the nature of Christians, not to instruct those whom they are to educate in Faith, with that Sense; as also with the nature of those who are to be Instructed, not to desire to know the Sense of the Tenets they are to believe. But, that Sense cannot be a General one, that is, Common to all the several Tenets now sound among us (for it will not be General if it exclude any one) it must therefore abstract from all particulars, and be applicable to every one. Now there is no such Generical Notion or Sense which can be abstracted from Christ's Body, which is Living, and a piece of Bread, unless this, that they are both Quantitative or Mixed Bodies; to believe which would make a very extravagant Point of Faith; much less can such an Abstraction be made from Christ's Real Living Body, and some supernatural Gifts or Qualities, either in the Bread, or wrought in our Souls by Means of our receiving the Eucharist; For a Substance and a Quality differ toto genere (as the Logicians express it) that is, belong to different Commonest Heads, which have no Genus above them, or that can abstract from them. Lest of all can any such Common Notion be abstracted from the Natural or True Son of God, and a mere Man; no more than there can from God and a Creature. Whence follows most evidently, that, since the Faithful must necessarily have always had some Meaning of those words in their hearts, and a general Sense of them is impossible, they must have ever had Particular Notions of those Words, determining their Sense to the one signification, or the other; that is, either to mean Christ's Real Body, or not his Real Body; a True and Essential Godhead, or a mere Creature. My second Reason is, because Faith is Ordained to work through Charity, or to stir up devour Affections in us; whence, as the distance is Infinite in both cases, between one of those Senses and the other, there being God on one side, on the other a Creature; so the Affections of the Soul wrought in us by our Faith, must either oblige us to pay an Infinite Veneration to a Creature if Christ's Real Body (and consequently God) be not there, or if Christ be not God; which is the greatest deviation from true Religion that is possible; or else, to be highly Irreverent, and to want the most efficacious Motive that can be imagined to excite and elevate our Devotion, if he be there, or Christ be indeed God. Nor can any middle disposition be invented that can make the Acts of the Soul hover between its tendency towards an Infinite and Finite Being, or between an Infinite and Finite Reverence. I dare confidently conclude then, and dare avow it to be Demonstrable out of the Nature of Mankind, that either the one or the other Determinate Sense of those Words must have been held in all Ages, ever since the Apostles time, by the Generality of the foregoing Faithful; more or less expressly, as those respective Points, broke out more or less into Christian Action; which their Duty could not but prompt and oblige them to deliver to their Children as occasion served; and consequently, that that Particular sense, and not only (as you fancy) the General Words, must have descended by Tradition. 6. Next, my Position is, that, taking the word [Tradition] for Points descending by Tradition, as you will needs have it, the Church has Power and Authority to explain the Sense and Meaning of them, and to oblige others to believe Her; and yet, that this hinders not the Infallibility of Tradition from consisting in holding the same to day that was delivered yesterday, etc. This is the difficulty, I conceive, that so much troubles you. To clear which, you may please to reflect on what you know already by experience; that, let any man advance a single Tenet, and afterwards, upon occasion, set himself to Explicate at large the Sense of that Proposition; 'tis plain, there will be found in that large Explication many particular Propositions; not adequately the same, but in part different from that which he went about thus elaborately and distinctly to explain; of which perhaps even himself was not aware while he did not reflect; not being yet invited to make it clearer, or dilate on it. And yet he held, even at first, the Sense (and not only the Words) nay the whole Sense of that main Tenet or Sentence; tho' he saw not distinctly every single Proposition contained in it, till he became obliged to Scan and Study his own undistinguished, but true, thoughts concerning it. The same may be said of every Sermon and its Text, supposing it be rigorously held to; and no more be attended to but to explain its intrinsic and full Meaning. In which case, the Preacher sticks not to assure his Auditory, that what he has Preached to them all the while, is God's Word; and to press them to regard it as such, as far as his small Authority over them can reach. And, had he more, in case he did verily judge his Explication of that Text was genuine, and, consequently, Christ's true Sense; he would questionless esteem himself bound to make use of that Authority to his utmost, to edify them with the Explicit Belief of each Particular contained in so Excellent a Truth. This being so, why should not the same Privilege be granted to the Church and her Pastors to explicate, upon due occasion, the Sense of Christ's Faith, in many particular Propositions involved in the main Tenet, (even tho' we should suppose them to be not heard of, perhaps not distinctly thought of, before) which is allowed to every private man, and any ordinary Preacher? And, if those Governors of the Church be, by their Office, Conservers of Christ's Law, and see that these Propositions, newly singled out, are included, in any Point of Faith received upon their Rule; why ought they not, out of their Duty and Zeal to preserve Christ's Faith Entire, both define these Points, and also use their Authority to oblige the Faithful to accept them as such; or, if they disaccept them and express themselves against them, to exclude them from their Communion? 7. But still, say you, these particular Points came not down by Tradition, nor were delivered as held yesterday, and so upwards till Christ's Time; for they were not held at all before they were defined or declared. I distinguish: These Propositions were held ever and descended ever as they were involved in the Entire Point; in the bowels of which, the Sense of those others were found: But, as singled out in such and such particularising manners of Expression, they were (perhaps) not held ever. I say, not held ever formerly, at least not universally. Which is the true reason why some Private Writers, nay possibly some Great Men, might (out of a dutiful fear not to add to Faith) have doubted of them, or disaccepted them, perhaps opposed them; till the Collective Church, or some Great Body of them, who are able to look more intelligently into those Points, declared and unfolded the Sense of the main Article, in which they were hitherto enwrapped: For, besides that it is their peculiar Office, and (as it were) Trade, to look deeper into the Sense of the several Points of Faith, than others do; 'tis very Rational to conceive, that those Tenets were found more particularly explicated in some parts of the Body of the Church than in others; which makes it difficult to affirm any particular Point defined since Christ's time, was not in many places of the Church held ever, tho' it was not in All; nor made as yet any great Noise, being as yet neither opposed, (which alarmed the Church to reflect heedfully upon it;) nor so powerfully recommended, which obliged the Faithful more briskly and manifestly to own it. What difficulty or disagreeableness to the connatural course of things there is in all this, I cannot imagine; Nor, I am confident, yourself; unless your thoughts, startling at the unwelcome Conclusion, should recoil back to your former mistake, that only Words came down by Tradition; or that Christ's Sense was never in the Breast of the Diffusive Church (his Spouse, and the Pillar and Ground of Truth) and in the Understandings of her Pastors; which takes all Faith out of the world, and destroys the very Essence of a Church: Or, lastly, that many particular (or rather partial) Propositions are not included in the Total Sense of every main Tenet, and disclosed by a full explication of it; whence it comes to be discovered to be a Part of It, that is, in part It. 8. I am sorry you will needs give me occasion to interrupt such Discourses, as tend to the clearing some Truth, to defend Tradition against your reproachful mistakes; with which, in defiance to all Sense, I had almost said against your own Conscience too, you have loaded it. But these are some of your Extrinsecal Arguments, which, for want of better, jealousy of your cause and reputation prevails with you still to make use of; and, so, you will triumph mightily if they be passed over unconfuted. You attempt, p. 8. to play your Politic Game, and to conquer us by dividing us in our Rule of Faith; tho' it cost your Credit very dear to effect it. To this end, running on in your former mistake of the plain word [Tradition] and that it means Points and Articles, you tell us sadly that this denying to the Church of Rome Power to explain Tradition takes off from its Power & Authority. That it resolves all into mere Humane Faith— mere Natural Reason— That the utmost it can amount to, p. 9 is resolving Faith into a Logical Demonstration. Then follows the Holy Cant. And is this the Faith Christians are to be saved by? what Grace of God, what Assistance of the Holy Spirit are necessary to such a Faith as this? But for this I refer you to the Haeresis Blacloana. You should have added See Haeresis Blacloana. [where Dr. Tillotson, and myself have the honour to be brought in for writing so Catholickly]. Truly Sir, you have given us a very pretty Period; in which many of your modish qualifications vy for the precedency, and 'tis hard to determine which has most Title to it. Nay, p. 13. you tell Mr. G. that our Grounds overthrow the Church's Authority in matters of Faith, and proceed upon Pelagian Principles. Your Charge, Sir, is very grievous and heavy; and therefore, unless the Evidence you bring to prove it, be answerable, you will manifest yourself to proceed upon a new Christian (in truth, an old Unchristian) Principle; but, which suits it seems with your humour, and is requisite to your Cause, Calumniare fortiter— I need not tell you whose it was. 9 To stop your mouth therefore once for all concerning Haeresis Blacloana, know that that Book, tho' Printed in a Catholic Country, could not be licenc't; but came out surreptitiously, without any Printers name at it, or any other than a fictitious name of the Author. Know that it was sent to Rome, and was compared there with the Doctrine of Tradition which it impugned. And yet it was not found that this Doctrine either overthrew the Church's Authority in matters of Faith, nor that there was any Pelagianism in it: Otherwise those Books which were accused of it, and defended Tradition to the height, had not escaped their Censure. This shows how shallow this Exception of yours is, and to what mean shifts you are reduced, since you can quote a squabbling Book of one Roman-Catholick against another about Tradition, in stead of answering the Argument for it. An ill-natured man might (you know very well) name Authors of another Communion, not too well thought and spoken of by Eminent Persons of their own side, and written against too by others. Yet I shall not be so like some I know, to turn a Dispute into a Wrangle; but shall apply myself to show how far the Doctrine of Tradition is from deserving to be charged with such injurious reflections. 10. But before I go farther, I must take notice of your quoting F. Warner here, p. 8. and your appealing to him, where you put Haeresis Blacloana in the Margin: By which you seem to hint, that he is the Author of that Book, and an Adversary to the Doctrine of Tradition; even so far as to judge it not sound in Faith: for, no less aversion could make you very much question whether F. W. would absolve any man who professed to embrace Catholic Faith on Mr. G's. Grounds. p. 13. But, as that very Reverend Person declares, he never saw that Book till some of them were presented him bound, so himself has forestalled your little policies, aiming to set us at variance in our Tenets, in his Anti-Haman p. 203. [We Catholics have Faith, because we believe firmly those Truths that God has revealed, because he revealed them to the Church: Which, as a faithful Witness, gives hitherto, and will give to the end of the World Testimony to that Revelation. And we cannot be Heretics because we never take the liberty to choose ourselves, or admit what others choose; but we take bona fide what is delivered us, revealed by the greatest Authority imaginable, on Earth, which is that of the Catholic Church.] He proceeds: [Hear then is the Tenure of our Faith. The Father sent his only begotten Son, consubstantial to himself, into the world; and what he heard of his Father he made known to us, Io. 15.11. The Father and Son sent the H. Ghost; and he did not speak of himself, but what he heard, that he spoke, Io. 16.13. The Holy Ghost sent the Apostles, and they declared unto us what they had seen and heard, 1 Io. 1.3. The Apostles sent the Highest and Lowest Prelates in the Church; and the Rule by which they framed their Decrees was, Let nothing be altered in the Depositum, Let no Innovation be admitted in what's delivered: Quod Traditum est non innovetur:] But he more expressly yet declares himself no Adversary to this way ibid. p. 267. Your Friend Mr. G. B. had called this way of proving Doctrines, that They had them from their Fathers, they from theirs, a New method of proving Popish Doctrines; and receives for Answer these words. You discover your Ignorance, in saying that Method was New, or that Arnaud invented it: Mr. Thomas White had it before Arnaud: Mr. Fisher a jesuit, before T. W. Bellarmin before him; & St. Austin, St. Stephen Pope, & Tertullian before them all. Where you see he both allows this very Method we take, as practised by Modern Controvertists of note; nay, by some of his own Order too, whom he is far from disapproving; and by Ancient Fathers also, whom he highly venerates. Your petty Project thus defeated, I shall endeavour to open your Eyes, if they be not (which God grant they be not) wilfully shut. 11. The Asserters of Tradition observing, that the Adversaries they had to deal with admitted Christ's Doctrine to be Divine, held it the most compendious way to put a speedier End to all Controversies, (which Experience taught them were otherwise liable to be spun out into a voluminous length) and the most efficacious Method to conclude all the Heterodox, of what denomination soever, to prove, That the Doctrine held now by the Catholic Church was Christ's, or the selfsame that was taught at first by Himself and his Apostles. It was bootless for them to attempt to prove this by Texts of Scripture, managed by their Private Wits; For, the Truth of our Faith depending on Christ's Teaching it, if it were not Absolutely Certain Christ taught it, it could not be evinced with Absolute Certainty to be True. Now, the same Experience informed them, that no Interpretation of Scripture, made by Private Judgements, (of themselves, or others) could arrive to such a pitch of Certainty; and, consequently, would leave Faith under the scandalous ignominy of being possibly, and, perhaps actually false. It was to as little purpose to allege against such Adversaries the Divine Assistance to the Church, or Christ's Promise of Infallibility to it, as you very weakly object to Mr. G. (p. 16.) as not once asserted by him. For, tho' this was believed by the Faithful, yet it was disowned by all those Heterodox; and, being itself a point of Faith, it seemed improper to be produced for a Rule of Faith. Besides, how should they prove this Divine Assistance? If by Scripture interpreted by their Private Judgements; these not being Absolutely Certain, it would have weakened the Establishment of that Grand Article, which to the Faithful was a kind of Principle to all the rest, in regard that upon the Certainty of it, the Security they had of all the other Articles was to depend. If, by the Divine Authority of the Church itself, it was not so easy to defend that method not to run round in a Circle; whereas all Regular Discourse ought to proceed strait forwards. These Considerations obliged them to set themselves to make out by Natural Mediums, that the Human Authority of such a Great Body, as was that of the Church, was Absolutely Certain, or Infallible, in conveying down many visible and notorious Matters of Fact; and, among the rest, (or rather far above the rest, the Subject being Practical, and of infinite Concern) that such and such a Doctrine was first taught to the Age contiguous to the Apostles, and continued ever since. By this means they resolved the Doctrine of the present Church into that of Christ, and his Authority; and, consequently, (these being supposed by both Parties to be Divine) into the Divine Authority, granted by all to be the Formal Motive of Divine Faith. 12. This is the true state of that Affair. And now, I beseech you, Learned Sir, Where's the Polagianism? Where is the least Ground, or shadow of Ground, for all these bugbear words and false accusations, which, to make them sink deeper into the Reader's Belief, and create a more perfect abhorrence of our Tenet, come masked here under an affected show of Godliness? All hold their Faith relies on the Divine (or Christ's) Authority, into which they finally resolve it: and all Catholics hold Grace necessary to believe the Mysteries of Divine Faith; tho' all, perhaps, do not judge Grace needful to believe upon Human Authority, this Matter of Fact, viz. That Christ taught it. Yet myself in * P. 154. Faith vindicated, seeing that the admitting this Truth would oblige the Heterodox to relinquish their ill-chosen Tenets, and return to the Church, against which they had a strong aversion; did there declare my particular Sentiment, That God's Grace and some Assistance of the Holy Ghost was required, to make them willing to see the force even of this Natural Demonstration, so much against their Humour and Interest. Is it Pelagianism to conclude, that Human Motives, which are Preliminaries to Faith, and on which the assuredness of Faith itself depends, as to us, are Truly Certain? And, Might you not with as much reason say the same, if one should maintain the Absolute Certainty of our Senses, which is one of those Preliminaries? How strangely do you misrepresent every thing you are to meddle with! How constantly do you make your voluntary mistake of every Point serve for a Confutation of it! 'Tis confessed, & ever was, That the Human Authority of the Church, or Tradition, begets only Human Faith, as its immediate Effect; but, by bringing it up to Christ, it leads us to what's Divine; yet not by its own force, but by Virtue of the Supposition agreed upon, That Christ's Doctrine is such. Is it Pelagianism to say, we must use our Reason to come to Faith; or, do you pretend all the World must be the worst of fanatics, and use none? Or, does it trouble you, we offer to justify, that the Reasons we bring to make good that Preliminary, which, in our way of Discoursing, is to introduce Faith, are not such as may deceive us? And that we do not confess they are Fallible, or may deceive us, as you grant of your Interpretations of Scripture, which ground your Belief? No surely, we shall not quit the Certainty we have, because you have none. For if it be not Certain such Doctrines are indeed Christ's, who is our Lawgiver, we cannot be sure they are True; their Truth depending on his Authority; and, would you have us for fear of Pelagianism confess all our Faith may perhaps be but a story? But, into what an unadvisedness does your Anger transport you, to run the Weapon through your own Side to do us a Mischief? You bore us in hand (First Letter p. 7.) that you had a larger and firmer Tradition for Scripture than we have for what we pretend to. Yet, this Tradition could cause no more but Human Faith; for I do not think you will say you had Divine Faith, before you were got to your Rule of Divine Faith. By your Discourse then yourself are an Arrant Pelagian too: Perhaps worse than we, because you pretend to a larger and firmer (Human) Tradition than you say we have; nay, you pretend it to be Absolutely Certain too, which is a dangerous Point indeed. Pray, have a care what you do; for, you are upon the very brink of Pelagianism. The knowing you have the true Books of Scripture, is a most necessary Preliminary to your Faith; for, without knowing that, you cannot pretend to have any Faith at all; and, if it be Pelagianism in us to hold such Preliminaries absolutely Certain, I fear the danger may come to reach you too. Yet you have one Way, and but one, to escape that damnable Heresy; which is, that you do not go about to demonstrate the Absolute Certainty of Your Tradition, as we do of Ours. That, that is the very Venom of Pelagianism. But, take comfort, Sir, my life for yours, you will never fall so abominably into the mire as to demonstrate or conclude any thing: (For, what Idea soever you may frame of it, we mean no more by Demonstrating, but plain honest Concluding.) Your way of Discoursing does not look as if it intended to conclude or demonstrate. 'Tis so wholly (pass for as great a Man as you will) made up of mistakes, misrepresentations, petty cavils, witty shifts, untoward explications of your own Words, constant prevarications, and many more such neat dexterities, that whatever fault it may through human frailty, provoked by powerful Necessity, be liable to, I dare pawn my life it will never be guilty of that heinous Crime of demonstrating or concluding any thing; no, not the Absolute Certainty of your firmer Tradition. And, yet, unless you can prove or conclude 'tis thus Certain, 'tis a Riddle to us, how can you either hold or say 'tis such. 13 Pray, be not offended, if on this occasion I ask You a plain downright Question. Is it not equally blamable to Falsify your Adversaries Tenet perpetually, as 'tis to falsify his Words? Nay, is it not worse, being less liable to discovery, and so more certainly and more perniciously Injurious? And can any thing excuse You from being thus faulty, but Ignorance of our Tenet? I fear that Plea will utterly sail you too, and leave you exposed to the Censure of every sincere Reader, when I show him to his Eye that You could not but know all this before. For, in Error Nonplussed p. 121. Sect. 8. You must needs have read the quite contrary Doctrine, and how those who maintain Tradition do resolve their Faith. [There is no necessity then of proving this Infallibility (viz. Of the Church) merely by Scripture interpreted by Virtue of this Infallibility. Error Nonplussed, P. 121. Nor do the Faithful or the Church commit a Circle in believing that the Church is Infallible, upon Tradition. For,— they believe only the supernatural Infallibility built on the Assistance of the Holy Ghost, that is on the Church's Sanctity; and, this is proved by the Human Authority of the Church to have been held ever from the Beginning; and the force of the Human Testimony of the Church is proved by Maxims of mere Reason] The same is more at large delivered in the foregoing Section, and in divers other places. Now, this Book was Writ against yourself; and, so, 'tis as hardly Conceivable you should never have read it, as 'tis Unconceivable how you should ever answer it: And, if you did read it, what was become of your sincerity when you counterfeited your Ignorance of our Tenet? All is resolved (say you, here, p. 9) into mere Human Faith, which is the unavoidable consequence of the Doctrine of Oral Tradition. How shrewdly positive you are in your Sayings, how modest and meek in your Proofs! Nothing can be more manifest from our constantly avowed Doctrine, and your own opposing it too, than 'tis, that Tradition resolves all into Christ's and the Apostles Teaching: And, pray, do you hold that Christ is a mere man, or that the Believing Him is a mere human Faith, or that the Doctrine taught by Him and Them is merely Human? If this be indeed your Tenet, I am sorry I knew it not before; for than I should have thought fit to begin with other Principles to confute you: And, I pray God, by your impugning known Truths, you may never need 'em. I see I had reason to allege in Faith Vindicated, that the Grace of God was requisite to make men assent to a Natural Conclusion when it came very cross to their Interest: For, it appears too plain 'tis exceedingly needful to assist you here in a mere Point of Common Morality; which is, to enable you not to speak and represent things directly contrary to your own knowledge. And, I am sorry I must tell you, and too evidently prove it, that the greatest part of your Writings against Catholics, when the Point is to be managed by Reason, is (in a manner) made up of such studied Insincerities. 14 You give us another Instance of this Indisposition of your Will, p. 13. where you tell us Mr. M. says, that the first thing which was proposed, and indeed the only subject Mr. G. had any purpose to discourse on was, whether Protestants had a Ground of Absolute Certainty for their Faith or not? This you do not deny; but turn it off to a quite different business; and then slide from that to another, till you had wheeled about the Question from what was intended to the Point you thought best served your turn to shuffle in. Here (say you) the Faith spoken of is that Faith whereby we are Christians. Ibid. How? Are Protestants and Christians then Convertible Terms or Synonyma's? Are there not many sorts of Christians which are not Protestants? And is it not plain, and not contradicted by yourself, that it was demanded, whether (your) Protestant's had a Ground of Absolute Certainty for their (that is Protestant) Faith? Does not the word [their] signify theirs as distinct from all other sorts of Christians? And is it come now to signify theirs simply as Christians, or as conjoined with all the rest? This is too open dodging to pass upon the Reader. 'Tis granted, you hold many of the same Christian Points which Catholics do; but 'tis denied, you can as you are Protestant's (I mean still such Protestants as are of your Principles) hold them to be Absolutely Certain, or hold them upon such Grounds as are able to support that Firm and Unalterable Assent, called Faith: The Grounds proper to your Protestants being (as was shown in my Former Letter, Sect. 24.) to hold them upon the Letter interpreted by yourselves. Of which Letter, by virtue of your Principles, you can have no Absolute Certainty (as shall be shown hereafter;) and of that Letter Interpreted by your private judgements, much less. In a word, either you speak of Points held by Protestants, p. 14. which you pretend to be all the same Doctrine that was taught by Christ and his Apostles; and than you are distinguished not only from those Christians called Catholics, but from Socinians, Lutherans, and (to omit others) Calvinists too, if you be one of those that hold Episcopacy to be of Divine Right: Or else you mean the Assent, given to those Points of Protestant Faith, on their pretended Rule; and then, you must show your Assent is more Absolutely Certain than that of the three last, and divers others who Dissent from you in their Tenets, and yet go upon the Same Rule; and make it out to us, that, tho' it be both theirs and yours, yet still' 'tis yours in particular, or peculiarly yours, as you are such Protestants. 15. Your next Prevarication is much worse. After you had shoved Protestant Faith into Christian Faith, you throw it a Bar and a half further off by virtue of an Id est. Absolute Certainty of the Christian Faith: i. e. (say you) of the Grounds on which we believe the Scripture to contain the Word of God, or all things necessary to be believed by us in order to salvation. This Id est, like Pacolets wooden Horse, has a Charm to transfer us from one Pole to the other in an instant. By virtue of its all-powerful Magic, Christian Faith is made to be the same with the Grounds on which we believe the Scripture to contain the Word of God; so that, according to you, Faith is the same with your Grounds for Scripture's being your Ground; that is, Faith is made the same with the Grounds for your Ground of Faith. What a medley of Sense is this, and how many folds have we here involving one another! Christian Faith is Divine, these Grounds and the Faith built on them is Human, being the Testimony of Men: Are these two the same Notion? Had I a mind to be Quarrelsome, how easily, how justly too, might I retort your former Calumny against Tradition; and object that this way of yours resolves all into mere Human Faith, mere Natural Reason, that it makes God's Grace and Assistance of the Holy Ghost unnecessary to Faith; and then ask, Is this the Faith Christians are to be saved by? And reckon up twenty other absurdities springing from this ill-grounded Position. But I am now to trace your transferring Faculty. In your First Letter p. 7. you speak only of Absolute Certainty as to the Rule of your Faith, viz. the Scripture; but here the case is altered; Dr. St. Second Letter, p. 14. and Certainty of Scripture is turned into Certainty of the Grounds on which we believe the Scripture to contain the Word of God. These slippery doings, and not any Reasons you bring, make you Inconfutable; for, we must set upon the Proteus in all his shapes ere we can bind him. The Question is not, whether Scripture Contains the Word of God, that is, his Sense, or our Faith, but (which we cannot mind you of too often, for all will be too little to make you take notice of it) how the Sense contained there can be got out thence, or be signified to us with Absolute Certainty, even in the very highest Points of Christian Faith, and what Grounds you have to bring about this Effect: For, you can profess no Absolute Certainty of any one point, till you have made it out with Absolute Certainty, that the Sense, you pretend contained in Scripture is it's genuine Meaning. This is your true task, if you would prove the Absolute Certainty of your Protestant Faith, or your Faith as depending on your Principles. But of this we hear not a syllable. 16. And I beseech you, to what end is it to tell us you are speaking of your Rule or Ground of Faith, if it carry you not thorough to any one particular; no, not those Points which are most Fundamental, and so most necessary for the Salvation of Mankind? Since, notwithstanding you have your Rule, you are still as far to seek as before in all a Rule should be good for? Remember, the Question and Mr. T'Tis expectation was about the Absolute Certainty of Protestant Faith, by virtue of your Rule or Ground; and, therefore, if your Rule does not reach to Absolute Certainty of the main Points of Faith at least, you are still at a loss both for your Faith, and for a Ground of your Faith. Yet this, conscious of its failure, you seem unwilling to stand to, by still sliding silently over it, or slipping by it when it lies just in your way. For, You tell us, pag. 20. that your Faith rests on the Word of God as its Absolute Ground of Certainty. Which by the way is another little shuffle; for you should have said absolutely-Certain Ground, not Absolute Ground of Certainty. But let that pass, and let the horse-mill go for the mill-horse. You proceed. But the particular▪ * Ibid. Certainty as to this or that Doctrine, depends on the Evidence that it is contained in Scripture. You ought to have said, if you would make your Faith so Certain as you pretended [We are absolutely Certain such and such particular Points are contained there] otherwise your General Ground comes not up to the Question, nor does your Faith any service at all, since it leaves it still Uncertain; of which more hereafter. Especially, since you pretended, or rather declared openly, p. 14. that you now held all the same Doctrine that was taught by Christ and his Apostles: Which Profession reaches to all the Points of Faith, and not only to your Ground of Faith. I must confess you rendered that Profession insignificant, and cancelled the obligation as soon as you had made it, in the Explication of those words immediately following; which makes those hearty expressions [Absolutely Certain of all the same Doctrine] amount to no more, but that you resolve your Faith into Scripture. We must, I see, deal with you as those who have a pretence in Court do with Great Courtiers; who lose their repute with them as illbred, and unmannerly, if they will needs take them at their word, and do not distinguish between what's spoken and what's meant. Your Answer was very honest and direct [We are absolutely Certain we now hold all the same Doctrine that was taught by Christ and his Apostles. The Comment is this, [I framed my Answer on purpose to show that our Faith is not to be resolved into what Christ taught, any otherwise than as it is conveyed to us by the Writings of the Apostles & Evangelists.] Whereas, if there be so much as one word of [Writing or Evangelists] even hinted in your Answer itself (unless the Word Taught meant Writ, which cannot be because we never read that Christ writ any Books) or the least Semblance of reason, for making this Skewing Explication, but to shuffle off your too large Concession, I will confess myself too shallow to fathom the profound depth of your inscrutable sense. Resolve then your Faith, in God's Name, into what you will, so you but show us an Absolutely Certain Connexion, between the Points resolved, and the Rule into which you profess to resolve it: Otherwise 'tis no Resolution of Faith, if the continued Chain of Motives winding it up to the First Truth, or God's infinite veracity, hangs slack. Such Incoherence serves not for Faith, which must be indissolubly connected to the Formal Motive of all our Faith; else the Resolution of it may be shattered, and broke to pieces by the way, ere we come there. Which if it may, than the Resolution is no Resolution, for that speaks Connexion of the Motives; and, Faith thus resolved may perhaps all be False, and so is no Faith. 'Tis your work then to show in particular, when you come to it, and at present in general, that your Rule gives you Absolute Certainty of the Points of Faith, more than it does the Socinian, who have the same Rule, and profess to follow it as much as you do for your heart, and yet err enormously. Nay, in effect they take the same Method too to interpret Scripture which you do; for, tho' you give good words to the consent of former ages, yet your Grounds do not allow it Absolute Certainty in bringing down Doctrine or interpreting Scripture; and less than such a Certainty, and in such things, signifies nothing in our case. And 'tis either by your Rule and Method, you can arrive thus certainly at the Sense of Scripture, or by nothing. If you could once with Absolute Certainty convince the Socinians of Obstinacy against a Clear Truth by your Rule, or Method, or both together; I mean, if you could make it clear to them that your Rule of Faith, cannot possibly bear any other Sense, so that the indifferent part of the world judged them wilful adherers to a false Interpretation, or that you could silence them, and put them to open shame for adhering to it, you would do something▪ Otherwise, your starting aside still from the Absolute Certainty of the Points, even though p. 14. you pretended to be Absolutely Certain you hold them All, and talking to us of nothing but a General Ground, is mere shuffling; and shows plainly you meant not really in that Answer of yours to Mr. G's first Question, where you spoke of all the Doctrine; which includes every Particular Point; so that by All it seems you meant None. 'Tis very paradoxical to see you distinguish here (p. 14) between the Doctrine taught by Christ, and that which was taught by the Apostles. The reason why you do it, is to insinuate into our Readers that we derive the source of our Tradition from Christ's Teaching orally (as the jews affirm of Moses delivering an unwritten Law) else to what purpose this Distinction? The Tradition we lay claim to has no such obscure Original; it takes its ●ife from the whole Body of Primitive Christians in the Apostles days, dispersed in Great multitudes over the World, and settled in the Knowledge of his Faith by means of their Preaching. So that Tradition starts into motion from a most Public, and notorious matter of Fact, viz. That the Apostles taught the First Christians such a Faith. To what imaginable purpose than was this frivolous distinction brought in? You knew this was our Tenet; and we knew well your Rule was Scripture. What needed then this shuffling Paraphrase? By Tradition, you know we mean a Testimony for Doctrine received. If the source be weak, or that the Body of the Witnessers of its Delivery at first, and successively afterwards, was small, the Tradition is, consequently, weak in proportion; if Great, it was stronger still, according as the multitude of the Attesters was more numerous, and their Credibleness more unexceptionable. Well, but admit your Faith be not resolved into what Christ taught by his own mouth, but what the Apostles taught us from him, why must you necessarily resolve your Faith into their Writings only? Did the Apostles when they went to convert the world go with Books in their hands, or Words in their Mouths? Or were those Words a jot less Sacred when it came from their Mouths, than when they put them in a Book? Or, lastly, does any Command from Christ appear to write the Book of Scripture, or any Revelation before hand that it was to be a Rule of Faith to the future Church? No such matter: and the Accidental occasions of its writing at first, and its Acceptation afterwards, bar any such Pretences? On the other side, their Grand Commission was not Scribite, but only Predicate Evangelium. Yet, you can slubber this over without taking notice of it, and carry it as if the Apostles Teaching meant Writing only, and that they taught the World no more than they writ. Sure you do not mean the Apostles took Texts out of their own Books, and preached Sermons upon then as you do now. Why must it be quite forgotten then, and buried in silence, that they taught any thing by word of mouth or preached the Gospel publicly? Allow that to be equally Sacred as what is writ, and to be embraced if well attested, and blame the Attestation, and Tradition as it may be found to deserve; but still, when you would put your own Tenet as distinguish't from ours, be so kind as to put ours too; and do not stand talking to us, and fooling your Readers, with the Rabbis pretended Tradition from Moses his mouth: no more like ours than an Apple is like an Oyster. Again, this Resolution of your Faith gives every one Absolute Certainty of his Faith, who believes he has Absolute Certainty of Scripture's letter, and that it contains the Word of God. And yet Experience tells us that whole bodies of Learned men believe all this, and yet differ (that is, one side errs) in the highest Mysteries of Christian Faith. Whence follows, that both sides, by this Doctrine, are Absolutely Certain of their Faith; one side (for example) is Absolutely Certain there is a Trinity, and that Christ is God; the other, that there is no Trinity, and that Christ is not God. This seems but a very odd account of the Certainty of Protestant Faith. 17. But you refine upon yourself, in your Answer to the 3 d Question. p. 15. It was asked there [By what Certain Rule do you know that the New Testament which we now have, does contain all the Divine Revelations of Christ, and his Apostles? This Question evidently aims at two things: viz. First whether some Books writ by the Apostles were not lost; (as appears by those words which we now have:) For if they were, then, being penned by men divinely inspired, they must necessarily contain some Divine Revelations in them too, as well as did the other; and then how does it appear there were not more or other Revelations, contained in them than were contained in the books now extant? The other is, that you know well very many hold that divers Divine Revelations were delivered down by Tradition, and not all by Writing. Let's see now how your Answer suits with this Question. By the Universal Testimony (say you) of the Christian Church from the Apostles times downwards. This Reply, if pertinent to that Question, must mean that this Universal Testimony ascertains us, that the Scriptures we have now, contains all the Divine Revelations. But, when you come to explain yourself, it comes to no more but that, The Testimony of the Apostolical, and the succeeding Churches did by degrees make men fix upon the Certain Canon of the New Testament. What a flight have you taken on a sudden! Where will you pitch when you light? I am sure not on the place where you took wing, and where you ought to have stayed. For, What is their Testimony for the Books we now have, to the Books which have or may have prerished and to their containing some other Divine Revelations? Or, what is the fixing upon the Certain Canon of the Books to the difficulty, whether some Divine Revelations did not descend by Tradition without Writing? Do the Apostolical or succeeding Churches testify either of these? Or, do you so much as pretend they do? Not a syllable of this do you say or take notice of▪ and, so, not a syllable have you Answered to his Question. Which was not about the Canon of Scripture, or how you would resolve your Faith, with which you keep such a pother over and over; but, whether the New Testament we have now, contained all the Divine Revelations? If you explicate Scripture no better for your Faith, than you do your own words here, you will questionless make a very extraordinary piece of work of it. Your Answers come now and then pretty home, the smartness of the Questions obliging you to it; but, your Explications of them immediately after, seem purposely framed that we should not take you at your Word in your Answers. 18. That Answer than prevaricating from the whole Question, Mr. G. endeavoured to press for a pertinent return to what was demanded; and therefore puts his fourth Question thus. Was that Universal Testimony an Infallible Rule to assure us certainly down to our time, p. 17. that the New Testament contained all the Divine Revelations of Christ and his Apostles? Your Answer was. The Universal Testimony of the Christian Church concerning the Book of Scripture and the Doctrine contained therein, is a sufficient Ground to make us certain of all matters necessary to our Salvation. 19 Here are many things worth our Admiration. In the First Letter p. 7. this Universal Testimony was only to ascertain the Scripture. In the Answer to the Third Question here, 'tis only to assure us that the New Testament contains all the Divine Revelations: But, here it is to certify us of the Doctrine too contained in it: which, if you mean as your Words seem to sound, is all we require in our Tradition-Rule. There may be some other subtle meaning lying yet couched in those Words, which Time may discover; tho' we cannot yet, till he that made the Lock bring the Key. Again, 'tis asked if it be an Infallible Rule? 'tis answered, 'tis a sufficient Ground. 'tis asked, whether this Testimony assures us certainly the New Testament contains all the Divine Revelations? 'tis answered, it makes us certain of all Matters necessary to our Salvation: which is clearly intended for a diminishing expression, and argues some fear of undertaking for All the Divine Revelations being contained there, or All the Doctrine that was taught by Christ and his Apostles, as was pretended p. 14. One would verily imagine by this unsuitable Answer, that Dr. St. and Mr. G. were playing at Cross-purposes, the Answer is so wide from the Question, at least that there is some indirect design lies lurking; it being so opposite to the ways of honest Nature. When one asks a positive Question, all Mankind expects a Positive Answer to the very words as they lie, I, or No: Or, if the words be ambiguous, 'tis the duty of the Answerer to desire to be satisfied of the meaning of the Asker, if present, ere he answers; without which, in that case, 'tis impossible to reply pertinently. But, it is not your temper nor interest to use such clear and open candour. For, you saw that great multitudes had the Letter thus secured to them, yet had not Absolute Certainty that all the Divine Revelations are contained in it; therefore by adding [and the Doctrine contained therein] you had some faint hopes you might be safe. Again, you saw well, that, should you grant Universal Testimony to be an Infallible Rule, you would hazard to grant too much to Tradition, and all the learned Jests you have broke upon us for asserting Infallibility would fly back upon yourself: therefore grant it you durst not. Nor, yet durst you deny it to be an Infallible Rule; for then (since one of the two it must forcibly be) you must affirm it to be a Fallible Rule: And then the common sense of all Mankind (Mr. T. amongst the rest) would be justly scandalised at the non sense: For an intellectual Ground that may perhaps let sink into Falsity, and overturn what's Built on it, deserves not the name of a Ground; and a Rule which may perhaps misled me when I follow it, is in reality no Rule: Besides, should you declare 'tis a Fallible Rule, Men would wonder with what sense you could pretend that a Fallible Testimony (nay, which you confess to be such) can make you Absolutely Certain of the thing it attests: it being the same as to profess I grant they may all be deceived in what they tell me, yet I am absolutely Certain, by their very Testimony, that what they tell me is True. What could you do then in that perplexity, being neither in condition to allow Infallibility, nor avow Fallibility; and standing gored with both the Horns of the Dilemma or Contradiction? Why, you were forced to call in your constant and dear Friend [sufficient Certainty] to help you out at a dead plunge. For, this is able to do more than Miracle; this can divide an Indivisible, and put a middle betwixt two Contradictories; by showing the World a Certainty, that is neither Infallible nor Fallible, but between both, or mixed of both; we may imagine, half the one, half the other. Lastly, fearing that you would be driven at length (as you must) to bring your Rule home to particular Points, and knowing t●e Socinians, and other late-sprung Heretical Congregations (whom you ought to acknowledge Christian Churches, since they hold stiffly to that which you maintain here is the only Rule of Christian Faith) denied many of those, which you hold Divine Revelations, to be contained in Scripture; nay, on the contrary, hold they are excluded thence; and that the opposite Tenets are contained there; therefore you very prudently and warily changed [All the Divine Revelations] which were the words of the Question, into [all matters necessary for our Salvation▪] Providing thus a security for their Souls at least, tho' you could not for their Errors; and a kind of Excuse for the Incertainty of your Rule, which permitted the followers of it to run astray; and withal, a Retreat for yourself. In all which dexterous Alterations, as this due commendation must be allowed you, to have acted very wisely and politicly; so it must be absolutely denied you have given any Answer at all to the Question. The Words which you would obtrude upon us for an Answer, carry indeed a pretty show, and shift it off with much cunning; but when we come to look into their sense, with an Eye directed to the Question, they squint aside to quite other matters; and the whole Reply, in a manner, is made up of different Notions from what was asked. Nor can I liken the Replies you generally make to our Questions, or the Explications you make of your own Answers, to any thing better than to that mock Exposition of the First Verse in Genesis, which Luther made for your Friend Zuinglius' jinterpretation of Hoc est Corpus meum. Deus (God) that is a Cuckoo; creavit (created) that is, devoured; Coelum & Terram (Heaven and Earth) that is a Hedge Sparrow with bones, and feathers and all. 20. You put a pretty Similitude indeed to Illustrate your own Tenet; P. 17, r 8. but in reference to our main Question, the Absolute Certainty of your kind of Protestant Faith by your Grounds, 'tis so far from running on four legs, that it is in many regards, lame on the right, (and indeed only) foot it ought to stand on, and (which is worse) is perhaps against yourself. You resemble the Holy Scripture to a purse full of Gold and Silver; left by a Father, and entrusted to Executours; who tell his Son, this is all his Father left him; and, if they deal truly with him, do certainly deliver all it contains. This the Primitive Church, Christ's Executours, did, by delivering us the Scripture; and assuring us all Divine Truths, which respect Man's Salvation, were contained there in the Lump; among which, some were Gold Points, some Sylver Points; but, having the Purse of Scripture, we have the one as well as the other, and, consequently, all matters necessary to our Salvation, these being of greatest moment. Thus stands the Similitude, for, run it cannot; and the sum of it (as far as I apprehend it) amounts to this; that, because Scripture contains all, and Protestants have Scripture, therefore, they have all. A strange kind of Discourse! As if, because they have it in a Book, therefore, they have it in their Minds or Souls, in which, and, no where else, Faith is to reside. And as if a Man, were a jot the more learned, for having purchased Aristotle's Works, and reading, and not understanding them. 21. I could except against divers particulars, presumed on, in this Similitude; as, that you have any Absolute Certainty of your having the whole Scripture that was writ, or, that it contains all Divine Revelations; or, that you have the right Copy, to every material particle in it, that may signify Faith, that is, indeed, right Scripture, etc. (or the right Purse, etc. But, I am more concerned for some plausible Insinuations in this Similitude, which may hazard to corrupt the Reader's Judgement. For, however, you decline and avoid it, yet the generality of Readers, whenever they hear any speech of the Certainty of the Grounds of their Faith, they immediately apprehend they are to be Certain of the particular Points of their Faith by virtue of those Grounds. And, 'tis a common Error in many, of an indifferent good Judgement, (I wish it did not sway with some who pass for great Scholars) that, when a thing easily sinks into their Apprehension, they are apt to conceit it to be a Truth. When, therefore they hear of a Purse, which is a thing very easy to open, (it being no more but pulling two strings which use to run very glib;) and, that Scripture is in many regards, here compared to a Purse; they are presently inclined to fancy, that, Scripture's sense is as easy to be come at, as 'tis to take money out of a Purse: 'Tis but plucking those easily following strings, and the deed is done. But, alas! Here lies all the difficulty. The Arians, Novatians, Socinians, etc. have all of them this Purse, yet are never the richer; but, for want of skill to open it, and get the Gold and Silver thence, they go away empty, or worse. Now, certainly, those high points, viz. A Trinity, Christ's Divinity; the Real Presence, etc. Should deserve to be reckoned amongst the Golden Ones; and, therefore, should be as most valuable, so most easily attainable; being of the highest import for the Church, or the Body of Christianity. Yet, 'tis granted the Socinians Err in the two first of those Points, for all their acuteness and wit. I except next against the resembling the Contents of it to Gold and Silver; which certainly enrich those who are Possessors of such a Purse: whereas, those Sects lay claim to that Purse too with equal Title, yet, coming to open it by their Interpretation, they take the Dross of Error for the pure Gold of Truth, and soul-poisoning Heresies for means of Salvation. Had I a mind to set up a similitude-mender, and, that you will needs have it a Purse, I should beg your leave to put it thus: Suppose that Purse's Mouth were tied up with a knot of such a mysterious contrivance, that none could open it (I mean still, as to the understanding the Mysteries of our Faith) but those who knew the Mind of the Bequeather; and, that the Church, to which it was left as a Legacy, had knowledge of his Mind, and so could open it; while others tortured their Wits with little tricks and inventions, turning and winding the ambiguous folds of it, some one way, some another; and yet entangled their own thoughts, more and more, while they went about to untie the Knots that so perplexed them. 22. This is the true case. You make account containing does all the business; whereas, 'tis nothing at all to our purpose, which is (in the final Intention of it) about the Absolute Certainty of your Faith; unless we have equal assurance that you can get out thence what's contained there, as you pretend to have, that 'tis contained. Now, it cannot be denied, but the Primitive Church was imbued with Christ's sense by the Preaching of the Apostles and their immediate Successors; and so had a sure and proper Way to interpret Scripture; and, while this sense was still delivered down, they could not fail of an absolutely Certain Rule to understand it right. But, there steps up now one Heretic, than another, opposing himself to the sense of the Church; and, relying on the dextery of his own wit, will needs find out contrivances how to open the Scripture's Meaning by ways of his private Skill: But falls into multitudes of Errors, finding no way to unfold the deeply-mysterious Book; having refused to make use of the right means, viz. Christ's sense descending in the Church by Tradition. Whence, notwithstanding all his little Arts and boasting presumption like the Fox in the Fable, Vas lambit, Pultem non attingit. 23. Mistake me not: I do not mean Scriptures Letter is not clear in such passages as concern Common Morality, or the Ten Commandments; with the Sense of which every one is imbued by the Light of Nature. Nor in matters of Fact, such as were most of those Marks or Signs to know the Messias by, foretold us by the Prophets; our Saviour's doing such and such Miracles, his going beyond jordan, etc. Nor in Parables explained by himself, and such like. But, in Dogmatical Points or Tenets, which are Spiritual, and oftentimes profound Mysteries, (and, of these, by the way, I desire still to be understood, when I speak of the Certainty of the Letter or Sense of Scripture, for with other Passages I meddle not) as the Tenet of a Trinity, Christ's Godhead, the Real Presence of his Body in the Sacrament; and such like; which have a vast Influence upon Christian Life; either immediately, or else in a higher Nature, being (as it were) Principles to many other Articles of Faith, which depend on their Truth: One would verily think, I say, that such as these should be some of your Golden Points, or else there were none at all contained in your Purse: Yet, we experience, That even in such as these, your Rule is not intelligible enough to keep the Followers of it from erring. So that, let your Purse have never so Golden and Silver a lining, you are never the richer, unless you can come at it, or can certainly distinguish the pure Gold of Truth from the impure Dross of Error. Your Similitude then comes not home to your purpose, nor shows that you have therefore all your Faith, or all Divine Revelations, because you have a Book which you judge contains them. Let's see now if it does not make against you. You put the Doctrine (or Points) of Faith to be the Gold and Silver contained in the Purse; and, consequently that must be the Purse into which that Doctrine of Faith was put by Christ our Saviour; and this was evidently the Heads, and Hearts of the Faithful. For the Points of Faith, being so many Divine Truths, are only contained in Men's Minds properly; and, Words being, by their very Definition, but Signs of what is in our Minds, Truths are no more really in a Book, than Wine is really in a Bush which signifies it. Since then those Truths were only in the Breast of Christ Originally, and, after him, in that of the Apostles; and their Thoughts could not be communicated, nor consequently the Gold and Silver delivered to the Legatees, otherwise than by signifying it, which can only be done by one of these ways, by Living Voice and Practice, or by Writing; that is by Tradition or Scripture, neither of these can with any Sense be likened to the Purse itself, into which the money is to be put, or answer comparatively to It; but they are both of them Ways, Means or Methods of putting these heavenly Riches into its Proper Purse, the Souls of the Faithful. Of these two Ways our Saviour chose the First; which was Teaching his Doctrine orally, for he writ nothing; and by doing thus, told us it was the better: For, it had been against his Infinite Wisdom to choose the worse way for Himself to make use of, and leave the better to his Servants. Nor, did his servants, the Apostles, affect the Way of Writing, so as to use it only; but, on the contrary, they made use of this Oral Way of Preaching constantly, and that of Writing (for the most part at least, if not altogether) occasionally. They converted the present Church by their Preaching; they comforted the future Church by leaving many most edifying Words, and Actions of our Blessed Saviour, Written; which being Particulars, and not breaking out openly into Christian Practice, might otherwise in likelihood, (at least to a great degree) have been lost to succeeding generations; besides the abetment their Writings give to Faith itself, when certainly interpreted, and rightly understood. So that, according to this discourse of yours we should either have never a Purse to put Points of Faith in, for you take no notice of the Souls of the Faithful into which they are properly put, and in which only they are in reality contained: Or, if you will needs call that a Purse which contains them merely as a Sign does the thing signified, or as that which may signify to us our Faith, you must put two Purses: Tradition and Scripture: And then the only Question is, out of which Purse, we can with more Certainty get it. That is, whether a Living Container, which can give us perfect light of its Sense by * See above, Sect. 2. & 3. all the best ways imaginable; or the Dead Letter, which, as Experience demonstrates, can neither clear its Sense to Private Understandings; nor, if we doubt of its Meaning, and had a mind to ask it, could either hear or reply, much less pertinently, and appositely speak to the Asker as oft as he had occasion to press still for satisfaction. Again, the Written Instrument or Means of putting this heaven-stampt coin in our Souls, is an Ignoble Instrument in comparison; being in reality, as to it's Material part, or taken as abstracted from the Sacred Sense which is signified by it, nothing but Ink thus figured on Paper. Whereas, the material part of the other is the most Noble that can be found under Heaven itself: viz. the Church which all Christians must acknowledge to be the Spouse of Christ, the Pillar and Ground of Truth, and consisting of the Living Temples of the Holy Ghost; That, for whose edification the Scripture was writ; and, so, holds proportion with it as the Means does with the End, which is in a manner Infinite. Nay, That, for which all the Material World was created, and the Oeconomy of it still carried on, from the first beginning of Time to its last Period. Lastly, That for whose sake God himself was made Man, and died a most cruel Death on a Cross. So that 'tis unconceivable, that it can enter into the thoughts of any intelligent man who believes this to be the due Character of the Church, there should be any competition betwixt the Letter of Scripture and it; or that it can possibly be doubted to which of them (all things considered) we ought to attribute most in looking after Faith. But, to return to your similitude. The sum of it is this: That the Gold and Silver you speak of, being the Doctrine of Faith; not the Scripture, but the Heads, and Hearts of the Faithful, (that is, of the Church) does really and indeed contain it; and, consequently, this only can with any propriety be compared to a Purse. That, both Tradition and Scripture are to be likened to the several Ways of putting the Heavenly Treasure of Faith, into this Purse, or Faith into the Souls of the Faithful. Lastly, that taking them as containing them, as signs do the things signified, it is not their containing this Treasure does us any good, but the delivering it out to us; no more than a man is better for having a Trunk full of Money so circumstanced that he could never come at it: and, that, between these two ways of coming at this Treasure, or their delivering it out to us there is no comparison, whether we regard the Intelligibleness, or Providential Establishment of those respective Instruments in order to such an End. So that your similitude, how prettily soever it looked at first, hath one misfortune very common to such fine useless toys, that is, to be good for nothing; for it neither comes up to the Question, nor suits with your own Tenet. 24. But ere we part from this Point, it were not amiss to examine a little that cautious expression of yours [all things necessary for salvation] into which you change that bold assertion that you are absolutely certain you now hold all the same Doctrine that was taught by Christ and his Apostles. I ask you then, what do you mean by those words [necessary for Salvation] which mince the matter so warily? Do you think Christ taught any unnecessary Points, or did a needless action! Sure you will not say it. And yet myself will grant too, and agree with you that fewer Means than the Knowledge of all Christ taught, may suffice for the Salvation of some particular persons. What follows then, but, that, since they are all necessary for some body, and yet not all necessary for every particular person, more of them are necessary for one man than for another, and all of them necessary for the body of the Church: whose Pastors are to instruct their Children in them, and apply the Efficacy of them to their Souls, as their capacities admit, and exigencies require. For, tho' some few may be saved without the knowledge of such & such Points, (slender Motives being enough for their circumstances,) yet multitudes of others may require incomparably more effectual Means, to buoy them up from the World, and raise them to heaven; and so, they would certainly miscarry for want of them. Particularly, the points now mentioned, are of such a high and general Influence, that, without these, the Devotion of a very great portion of the Church, would be enfeebled, many of the Souls that want them be lost eternally, and others be but dim Stars in the Glorious Firmament of Heaven, in comparison of what they might have been, had their Minds been cultivated with such elevating considerations. And, can the Church, which God has entrusted with those Souls, think that 'tis agreeable to his Will, his Flock should either die, or fall short of the full growth they might have had in the plentiful Pastorage he had provided for them? It rests then for you, either to show those Points not necessary for the Generality, and that your Grounds are sufficient to give men, both as able and as willing (for aught appears) to understand Scripture right as yourself is, Absolute Certainty of Them (which is to confute Experience, and dispute against your own Knowledge,) or else to confess ingenuously you have no Absolute Certainty of even the highest Fundamentals, and most necessary Points for the Salvation of Mankind. 25. Thus much to show that your Rule gives you no Absolute Certainty of all such matters as are necessary for your Salvation, with reference to the Points of Faith; to certify which, Experience assures us it does not reach. Now, should we speak of the Assent of Faith, the Short Discourse, p. 30, 31. of my former Letter, demonstrates clearly you can have no Absolute Certainty of any one, and so cannot with reason affirm your Faith is True; since, wanting Absolute Certainty that Christ taught it, it may be False. The same point has been pressed upon you in Faith vindicated, Reason against Raillery, Error nonplussed, and divers other Books: yet tho' it was the most important objection that is or can be imagined, as plucking up by the roots all your Faith, and destroying it from its very Foundation; no return could ever yet be obtained, nor candid Reason produced, but only a put-off with sufficient Certainty, and such dow-baked words; without being able or even endeavouring, to show that Grounds less than Absolutely Certain can possibly be thus sufficient for the Nature, the Ends and Uses of Faith. But 'tis high time to return to our Disputants. 26. Against this pretended Answer of yours, you introduce Mr. M. suggesting several things. P. 18. First, As to difference of Translations. To which you reply. Doth Mr. M. think our Faith is to be resolved into the Original Texts? What he thinks, you know better than you would seem to do. He cannot but think, if he may believe you, that you resolve your Faith into the Letter of Scripture. He cannot but think that by these words you mean the Right Letter; for, otherwise, it would not be Scripture: Nor can he think, or you either, it can be the Right Letter, unless it have a Right Translation, and this, from a True Copy; nor that any Copy can be True, unless conformable to the True Original. And, if there can be any failure in any of these, nay, if you have not Absolute Certainty of all these, you cannot have (by your Grounds) any Absolute Certainty of your Faith: For, if the Letter be wrong, all is wrong that is built on it: and it may be wrong, for ought you know, notwithstanding the Testimony of all Christian Churches relying on this Way of attesting the Truth of the Letter. For, you can never show that all those Churches consented to apply their utmost diligence to examine and attest all the several Translations, made in their respective languages; or witnessed that they came from the true Original; or took the most exquisite care that was possible, to see that the Translators and the Copiers did their duty. Which, had they held the Letter to be their only Rule of Faith, and, consequently, that All Faith, that is, the very Being of the present and future Church, and their own Salvation too, depended on the Scripture, they were obliged in conscience, and under the highest Sin, above all things in the World, to have done; and this, with the exactest care imaginable: Your Grounds then, notwithstanding all you have said or alleged hitherto to ensure the Letter, make no Provision for the Absolute Certainty of the Written-Rule, nor consequently of your Faith. 27. But what becomes then (say you) of the Vulgar Latin Translation? I answer, in our Grounds no harm at all: Ibid. For the Canon of the Books comes down by the Testimony of all Christian Churches that are truly Christian; and the Doctrine of Christ, transfused into the hearts of the succeeding Faithful ever since the beginning, both taught them how, and obliged them to correct the Copy in those particular Texts that concerned Faith, if any Error through the carelessness, unattentiveness or malice of the Translators or Transcribers at any time had crept in. By the same Means as you can now adays correct the Copy in those Texts, that aught to express some Point of Morality, in case it were corrupted, and deviated from Christian Manners; viz. by virtue of the Sense of that Practical Tenet you were imbued with formerly; & this, even tho' you had no other Copy or Text to amend it by: Insomuch that, how good an opinion so ever you had of the Copy, Translater, Printer or Correcter of the Press; yet, for all that, you would conclude they had erred, and the Letter was faulty, rather than forgo the Doctrine so firmly riveted in your heart by the constant Teaching and Practice of the Christian world. As for other particular Texts of an Inferior Concern, they could be best corrected by multitudes of other ancient Copies (the Churches Care still going along) in which too the greatest care that was possible to rectify its Errors was taken by the Council of Trent, that so it might be as exact as Human Diligence could well render it. A thing, as far as my memory reaches, never ordered or very much regarded by any Council formerly. 28. But I foresee, your method of confuting (which is to muster up Extrinsecall objections not at all to the purpose) will naturally lead you to discredit this way of correcting Scripture's Letter in passages belonging to Faith, as singular or New; This being the same your Friend G. B. objected to the Way of Tradition itself; as may be seen above, Sect. 10. Such piddling Exceptions, dressed up prettily in gay language, go a great way, and make a fine show in your Controversies; and, which is a benefit of most advantage to you, excuse you from bringing any intrinsical Arguments; tho' these only are such as conclude any thing, and tho' you are bound by your precise Duty to produce such: Wherefore, to ward this blow, I shall allege the Judgement of that Learned, and Excellent Personage, Sir Thomas More, our first Modern English Controvertist; who, writing, not against you in defence of our Grounds, but to another Catholic Divine, expresses candidly his Sentiment in these words. [Ego certe hoc persuadeo mihi, idque (ut opinor) vere; quicquid ad fidem astruendam faciat, non esse a quovis melius versum, quam ab ipsis Apostolis perscriptum. Ideoque fit ut, quoties in Latinis codicibus occurrat quidquam quod aut contra Fidem aut mores facere videatur; Epist· ad Martinum Dorpium. Scripturarum interpretes aut ex aliis alibi verbis quid illud sibi velit dubium expiscentur; aut ad vivum Evangelium Fidei, quod per universam Ecclesiam in corda Fidelium infusum est; quod etiam, priusquam scriberetur a quoquam, Apostolis a Christo, ab Apostolis Vniverso Mundo praedicatum est, dubios ejusmodi sermones applicent, atque ad inflexibilem veritatis Regulam examinent: ad quam si non satis adaptare queant, aut sese non intelligere, aut mendosum esse codicem, non dubitent.] This is my judgement, and (as I conceive) a True one; that whatever (Text) is useful to build Faith on, was not better translated by any than it was writ by the Apostles themselves. And therefore, as oft as any thing occurs in the Latin-Books, that seems to make against Faith or Good Manners, the Interpreters of Scripture, either gather from other Words in other places what that doubt should mean; or they compare those doubtful sayings to the living Gospel of Faith, which was infused into the Hearts of the Faithful, throughout the Universal Church; & which, before any man writ it, was Preached by Christ to the Apostles, and by the Apostles to the whole World; & examine them by the inflexible Rule of Faith; with which if they cannot make it square, they conclude, that either they do not understand it, or the Book is faulty] where he passes by the former way with a sleight word [expiscentur] fish out the sense; but insists on the latter way of preserving the Copy sincere, as Certain and Proper. 29. I must not pretermit your Objection p. 19 that the Ancient Christian Church never knew any thing concerning this Method of resolving Faith into mere Oral Tradition. I would desire you to add [Practical] to Oral; at least to conceive it to be understood all the way, that being our True and constantly-avowed Tenet. But, did the Ancient Church, in reality, never know any thing of this way? 'tis wonderful you should not understand they meant the same as we do, unless they speak the selfsame Words, and make the same Discourses we do now. Did not they all hold, that who taught any thing contrary to the Doctrine delivered down by the Church, was a Heretic? Did any of them say that the Church's Tradition of a Doctrine, as Christ's, was liable to Error? Did any of them hold that it was lawful for your Sober Enquirer to rely on his Private Interpretation of the Scripture, and relinquish the sense of the Church, which is the true Point? Not one. 'Tis one thing to say they oft quoted Scripture against Heretics, who had rejected the Authority of the Church, (even the Council of Trent does so;) another, to say they had no firmer Ground for their Faith, but their own private judgements of its sense. 'tis one thing to give it high Commendations for its Excellency, Divine Doctrine, Usefulness and Sufficiency for the Ends for which it was Ordained by God: 'Tis another, to say that, in those places which relate to Spiritual Points and high Mysteries of our Faith, it is so clear, that, private Fancies can with Absolute Certainty fix upon its true sense, and, on that, Ground their Faith. 'tis one thing to say sometimes, 'tis Plain and Evident, when they are Arguing against Heretics: this is a thing not unusual even among us, when we are disputing, and have an opinion that what we allege is manifest; and those Fathers or Councils which insisted on it, had good reason to have that opinion of what they alleged, having the Doctrine of Faith, (Scripture's best Interpreter▪) in their hearts: Besides, when there is full assurance of its sense, who doubts but it is of a vast Authority too; being in that case the same as if the Apostle or Christ himself were there, and spoke his Mind in the Point under debate. Whence they confuted Heretics with defining from Scripture; upon the assurance that they had the true sense of it another Way, than the Heretic had by his private Interpretations. But, 'tis another thing to say, that, as managed by Private Judgements, working on the bare Letter, or relying on Fallible Interpreters, it is so unavoidably convictive, beyond all possibility of giving it another plausible sense, that all Mankind must think him a Renouncer of the clear Light of Reason, or stark blind with Passion and Interest, and abhor him as such, who shall interpret it after another manner. And such the Rule of Faith must be, otherwise, none could with Conscience think or say any Heretic is obstinate, nor any man (no not the Church itself) condemn him, much less abhor him for being, such, as was ever her Custom. All the former Perfections we as heartily, fully, and constantly ascribe to Scripture as any Protestant in the world: nay, we say moreover, that this want of Clearness which unqualifies it for being a Rule, springs from a very high perfection in it; viz. It's deep Sense; only this one, of giving every particular man, who by his private Judgement Interprets it, such assurance of its sense as is competent to Ground his Faith on, we cannot grant; this being no less contrary to common Reason, than 'tis even to Experience also. To return then to your Objection. You see Sect. 10. that the Ancient Fathers were not such Strangers to this Method of Tradition we follow and explicate. And, you might have observed many others both named and cited, Surefooting p. 131. to 137. What matters it that they did not express That our Tenet, or Dilate upon it in such Terms as we do now; so they taught others to hold to what was delivered, and not to rely on their own private Interpretations of Scripture against the present Church's Doctrine? Since in doing this, they held the substance of that which we have since more diffusely explained, and reduced our Discourses to more Methodical and Formal Resolutions of Faith, which were not so much in fashion in former Ages. Besides, you are not to be told we both have & could allege Fathers enough for our Tenet, and the Obligation to hold to the Doctrine delivered from Fathers, that is to Tradition; and how smartly and unanswerably they pressed it against Heretics, as a certain Determiner of the Controversies between the Catholics and Them. On the other side, how often they complained of the Uncertainty of the Scripture interpreted by private Men, as Grounding all Heresies; by reason of the mysterious Obscurity of the Letter, and its liableness to be misinterpreted and misunderstood? Whereas, it was never heard that the Rule of Tradition taken in the sense, in which we hold it (viz. for a Delivery of a Practical Doctrine, publicly preached to great multitudes at first, practised by them, and held, and recommended as Divine, and the way to Salvation) did ever give rise to any Heresy, and impossible it should. Which one Reflection to a Considerate Man, is sufficient to conclude the whole present Controversy about the Rule of Faith. 30. From the Qualities requisite to make Scripture's Letter a Rule of your Faith, we come to consider the Quantity it ought to have, or the Number of Books; which you tell us p. 19 Mr. M. suggested. In order to which, I have only two things to ask you. 1. Whether, as I said formerly, you have any unanimous Consent of the Christian Church, that there was never a Book lost that was writ by some who were Divinely inspired; and, consequently, did contain some Divine Revelations? Or, if you cannot prove but there was, how do you know but those Divine Revelations, which that Book or Books contained, were not different from, or to be superadded to those, contained in the Canon we have now? If you cannot prove these two Points, then 'tis manifest you cannot prove with Absolute Certainty, that the Books We have now, contained all the Divine Revelations. 2. You insist only on this Universal Testimony for the Canonical Books of the New Testament; but, I would know whether this Testimony reaches to each Chapter and every Verse of those Chapters, nay, each material Word in those Verses? If it does not, as you neither say, nor with any Reason can say (for 'tis hard to prove the former, & impossible to prove the later but by our Rule) than you are as far from your Faith as ever; unless you bring some other Testimony that is Absolutely Certain, to assure you that such and such a Verse, which you would quote and rely on for such and such a Point of Faith, nay, the main and most significant Word in that Verse is true Scripture: which, I am sure you cannot: For, what Testimony else can be invented to do this, if the other, which was of the whole Christian Church, cannot reach it? Is there any possible way to ascertain this, but by our Doctrin-Rule? Upon this occasion, pray inform me with what reason you could reflect so severely pag. 15. on the Church of Rome; for not receiving the Epistle to the Hebrews in St. Hierom's Time, assoon as other Churches; and, not on the Greek Churches, (which you use to prefer before the Latin) who, in the same Father's time, refused to admit the Apocalypse? The accepting or not accepting such Books, even according to your own Doctrine, depended on their being satisfied of the Evidence produced for their Apostolical Authority; and so was an Act of Prudence, antecedent to the Judgement or Determination of any Church, whether Greek or Latin. But, so unreasonable is your pique against the Church of Rome, that she cannot act prudently without forfeiting her Infallibility. Tho', another man would have acknowledged, it was rather a very commendable cautiousness in the Latin & Greek Church too, not to admit into such a sacred Roll, Books that were not yet clearly proved to be authentically such; than a unblamable Lapse, or so heinous a Crime, that for committing it, she must needs lose all her Title to Christ's promised Assistance. 31. This gives me occasion to ask you what becomes of Your Rule, and, consequently, of Your Faith all that while? If the Letter of the Canonical Books, that is, of the whole Canon of the New Testament be your Rule, and those Books were part of this Canon, they must necessarily be part of your Rule too; whence it follows that your Rule was not Entire, but deficient for some hundreds of years, till the whole Canon was Collected and Acknowledged. I see you do but compliment with the Primitive Church of the first 300 years; and, that you only cry it up to avoid the unkindness, which the succeeding Ages show to your Cause; for, by your Doctrine, you cannot but hold that the Ages which followed it, are to be preferred: Since These had your entire Rule, the Others wanted some parts of it; and sometimes held but three parts of it, half of it, or less, (and so, by your Principles, were but three quarters or half Christians) according as the several pieces came by degrees to be acknowledged, and universally accepted. I doubt Mr. M's Discourse about the Number of Books, more perplexes you, than your are willing to make show of. For, pray, how many of these Books go to make up your Rule of Faith? If any one, or some few, than you should not have stood upon the Canon we have now; that is, all the Apostolical Books, or Scripture in general. If all the Canonical Writings be your Rule, than perhaps the Primitive Christians had but half their Faith, or less; it may be none at all, because, wanting yet those other Books, they wanted necessary places to compare those Texts with they already had; which is a great part of your Method to find out your Faith in Scripture. Pray, satisfy us about this exact Number of Books, and how many will just serve the turn; and, make something cohere; for, I cannot for my heart as yet find any thing that does. You talk to us of a Purse, and say it must be full; but, when we come to look at it more narrowly, it appears to have been for some time but half a Purse, and wanted one side of it, at least had a great Hole in it: so that you put us into an apprehension, that many of the Gold and Silver Points might have dropped out of it in the time of the Primitive Church; by which Church notwithstanding, and no other, in our disputes about Faith, you seem heartily willing to be judged. But, p. 31. let us examine a little the Consent of all (your) Christian Churches for Scripture, you make such brags of. Dr. St's first Letter. p. 7. In the first place marches and leads the Van, your Christian Church of the Noble Arch-Heretick Marciou; who blotted out of the Canon the Epistle to the (a) Epiphan. haer. 24. n. 9 Hebrews, that to Titus, and both those to Timothy; who admitted only St. Luke's Gospel to be Divine, and (b) Iren. lib. 3. rejected all the Epistles of St. Paul, as an Apostate from the Law. In the next rank, go abreast those three Famous Christian Churches of Ebion, Valentinus, and Cerinthus: Of which (c) Iren. lib. 3. cap. 1. the First admitted only St. Matthews Gospel; the (d) Iren. lib. 2. cap. 26. second, only St. John's; and the third, only St. Mark's. After them, come others, mentioned by St. Hierom and Epiphanius, who in a manner brought all into doubt; Hier. ad Paul at Eustoch. in Proem. Ep. add Philom. Epip. haer. 76. especially if Faith depended in those days on the comparing of places; for, they held that divers things both in the Old Testament and the New, were not inspired by GOD, but writ by a Human spirit. I need not acquaint you, that Luther, Brentius & Chemnitius, did revive the old Doubts about the Epistle to the Hebrews and the Apocalypse, of later days. Nor need it be recounted how many Orthodox Christian Churches did not accept divers Books formerly. And, tho' afterwards, as you say well, they came by degrees to fix on the Certain Canon of the New Testament, yet I am apt to judge that this was not performed by Immediate Testimony: P. 15. For, the Witnesses were long ago dead, and their Grandfather's too, who could attest that such a Book was indeed, to their knowledge, written by such an Apostle or Evangelist. It descended then by Oral Tradition in those respective Churches. Whence, as that Tradition was not so Practical, so it was restrained to some few in each Church, and was withal, very narrow at first in comparison of our Tradition for Christ's Doctrine; which was, in a manner, universally and publicly preached and practised. Now the strength of a Tradition, and the largeness of it are to be taken from the largeness of the first Attestation; and all that after-Ages can do, when they attest such things, is to witness that they received it from some others; but so, that the Tradition was still narrower as it came nearer the fountain; which very much weakens it. By what other Lights the Church guided herself in her accepting such and such Books for Canonical Scripture, belongs to another place. Your Tradition then was not Universal for Scripture in the first 300 years, and its Original Attestation was weak in comparison of that which was for Doctrine. P. 20. 32. I have little to say to your Explicit or Implicit Points contained in Scripture: For, I see they are both equally to no purpose, while but contained there, till you bring us a Rule to interpret the Letter with Absolute Certainty. If any aught to be explicitly there, none can have so good a Title to it as those high and most Fundamental Articles spoken of so often; yet we see there are no places producible for them, but may have other senses given them; and bear (as experience shows us) not yet ended, and, for aught we know, endless Disputes among your sober Enquirers attending to your Rule. Only I a little wonder you should say 'tis sufficient for your purpose, that all Doctrine of Faith necessary to Salvation are contained in (the Letter of) Scripture, either explicitly or implicitly. If they be necessary to Salvation, they must be necessary to be believed or known to be there; for they must save men by believing them, and acting according to that Belief, or no way; and, if they be only implicitly there, they are as yet unknown, or not believed: So that, according to you, that is a Point necessary to Salvation, which does not at all conduce to it. But, I wonder more at the happiness of your Sober Enquirer to whom, you affirm and stand to it stoutly, Ibid. those Implicit Points will become Explicit without the help of the Church; and yet you call it assuming, Ibid. in the Church of Rome, to do the same, or declare the Sense of such Articles. Certainly, this Sober Enquirer is your special Darling, and Favourite. He, tho' a private person, can discover those Explicit Points; and I suppose may declare them too, to as many as he pleases; for how can he in Charity do less? But alas! The silly insignificant Church, can do nothing at all; she must submit to the wondrous Gifts, you have bestowed upon the Rabble, and her Governors and Pastors be accounted Tyrants if they shall dare to encroach upon their high Prerogatives, or presume to share in their Privileges of being able to unfold or know the Explicit Meaning of Scripture-Texts: For, in case they can know this, and this Knowledge be good for the Faithful (as it is, being as you say necessary to Salvation) 'tis without question they may declare them, or make them known to others: nay, and use their Authority too (if you will vouchsafe to allow them any) to edify the Faithful by making this Knowledge sink into them. Nor can it prejudice their Reason, that the Church obliges them to believe them; for this is no more than obliging them to act according to Reason; which tells them that, since they must either trust themselves or their Pastors in such things, and the Pastors must be incomparably better qualified than themselves are, for the discovering of such mysterious Truths, and withal appointed by God to teach them; 'tis far more Rational to submit to their Judgements in such things, than to use their own. But, indeed, you have reason to stand up for your Sober Enquirer; for all Ringleaders of any Heresy, or Faction against the Church, took this very Method in their proceedings. The Spirit of Pride, which possessed them, principled them with these Rational and Peaceable Maxims, that they had Authority to judge their Judges, teach their Teachers, direct their Guides, and that their own Wit excelled that of all the World before them. But, when a Faction was formed into a good lusty Body, the Scripture-Rule was laid aside again; so that 'tis doubtful whether we have had ever a Sober Enquirer since, as was shown in my First Letter Sect. 25. 33. You desire to see this Power of the Church in Scripture in Express Terms; and we tell you we need not let you see it in Scripture at all: for Tradition, & even Common Sense, tells us, that the Church has Power to feed, and instruct her Flock; and enlighten them in what she knows, and they are ignorant of. If you demand how the Roman Church came by this knowledge of making Implicit Points Explicit? I answer, by Tradition, giving her the Sense of Christ's whole Law, and each Entire point of it; and by the Light of Nature purified by supernatural knowledges antecedently; as also by her Application, when occasion required, to reflect upon, and penetrate deeply into that Sense; which enables her to explicate her own thoughts (or the Points of Faith) more clearly now; which she had indeed before, but did not so distinctly look into them, or set herself to explain them. But pray, what express Scripture has your Sober Enquirer for his Power to make the Implicit Points Explicit? You reckon up divers agreeablenesses p. 21. why this should be; but not one word of express Scripture do you pretend to for it. And if himself pretend to any such Power, besides that it will look a little odd that God should take more care of private men than of his Church, let him either show us he has better means Natural or Supernatural to do this, than the Church has, or he discovers his Pride and Folly both to pretend to it. You say p. 21. that the Church of Rome has no where declared in Council it has any such Power; viz. to declare explicitly Points employed in Scripture. But, First, you may please to know It has made such a declaration Sect. 4. where it defines that it belongs to the Church, judicare de vero sensu et interpretatione Scripturarum, to judge of the true sense, and Interpretation of Scripture; Next, It, accordingly, proceeds upon this Power, as I shall manifest by three several Instances. One Sess. 13. cap. 4. where it explains those Texts, Luc. 22. Io. 6. and 2 Cor. 11. to be meant of being truly Christ's Body; and declares thence that the Church was ever persuaded of the Doctrine of Transubstantiation. Another, Sess. 14. cap. 7. Where it declares the Text, 1 Cor. 1. Let a man examine himself, etc. to be understood by the Custom (or Practice) of the Church, of, Sacramental Confession, necessary to be used before receiving the Sacrament by all those who are conscious to themselves of mortal sin. The Third, Sess. 14. cap. 1. where it interprets that Text of S. james cap. 5. to be by Apostolical Tradition understood of the Sacrament of Extreme Unction. Which places you do not judge so much as implicitly to contain that Sense, but hold that they contain another thing. How the Churches declaring explicitly Points descending by Tradition, makes no new Articles of Faith, is discoursed above, Sect. 4, 5, 6, 7. By which, you may see that Mr. G. and Mr. M. whom (pag. 22.) you will needs set at variance, are, notwithstanding, very good Friends. For, if the Church knew the the sense which is contained in that place, before; the Doctrine is Old, tho' the declaring it to be signified by that particular Text, be perhaps New. I say perhaps; for, in some signal passages, much in use in the Churches Preaching, Catechisms and Practice; I doubt not but that, not only the particular Doctrine, but also that 'tis signified by such a Text, comes down by Tradition in the Ecclesia docens. Notwithstanding the agreeableness of these two Positions, you triumph mightily here p. 23. that, Thus Mr. M. has answered Mr. G is Demonstration. As much as to say, I know not for my life what to say to it myself, and therefore, would gladly shift it off upon any Body, so I could handsomely rid my Hands of it. Thus, you make (for you can make any thing by your Method of mistaking every thing) the Council of Trent clash with the Church of Rome (a hard Task one would think!) by pretending to interpret Scripture according to the unanimous sense of the Fathers; which you judge contradicts the making known, and obliging Men to believe that explicitly now, which they were not obliged to by any precedent Sense or Explication. What mean the words [Men] and [They] If they signify all men, and intent to signify that no man knew those employed Points before, but all might hap to contradict them, you mistake our Tenet: for, we judge it absolutely impossible that none of the Fathers should reflect more attentively on the full sense of the Points delivered, or look into their own thoughts as Faithful; and, therefore, it was much more impossible they should unanimously contradict those Points. And, unless they did so, the Council of Trent, and the Church of Rome may, by the Grace of God, very well correspond in their Doctrine for all your mistake. For the Intention of the Fathers in that Decree (Sess. 4.) was to repress the insolency of Heretics wresting the Scripture to their own private sentiments [contrary to the Sense of the Church, or the unanimous Consent of the Fathers.] And how this is directly contrary to this power of obliging to believe something, as in Scripture, explicitly now, which was not so known before, is unconceivable; unless you will prove that that Explicit Sense is directly contrary to the unanimous Consent of the Fathers or the Church, which you will never do. But, 'tis a trivial Exploit to make Mr. M. clash with Mr. G. or the Church of Rome with the Council of Trent; you can make that very Church clash with herself— Suis et ipsa Roma— and that openly and professedly too: Nay, which is most wonderful, fall out with herself about her own Prerogatives. For, you tell us p. 23. that though it has assumed this Power now spoken of, yet it still disowned it. Now to assume a Power, is to challenge it; and to disown it, is to renounce it; which hang together much alter the rate of all your Discourse hitherto. This Church of Rome is a most monstrous kind of Creature: It goes backwards, and forwards, blows and sups, declares for and against, and all at once: but we must imagine her to be such only as she stands portrayed in Dr. St's Fancy. 34. Your main Stratagem to elude all this discourse, remains yet to be more fully detected, tho' it has been occasionally touched at divers times formerly. 'tis this, that you are now upon the General Ground of Faith, p. 20. and not the particular Acts of it, or the particular Certainty as to this or that Doctrine. And you seem to have reason for it too, because the main point in Dispute was, whether Protestants could show any Ground of Absolute Certainty for their Faith. p. 24. And this you think justifies you for hover in the air, and only talking of your Scripture-Rule in common, without lighting on or applying it to any one particular point contained in that Rule. But this will avail you nothing. For, first; Neither does our Discourse pinch upon any one particular Point, but upon the Uncertainty of your Faith in general, or on all your Points of Faith at once as built on your Ground. So that, 'tis the pretended Ground of your Faith we are disputing against all the while, and not any one particular Tenet. We bring, indeed, Instances now and then of some particular Articles; but, 'tis to show that, if your Ground has not power to ascertain absolutely those most Fundamental Points, it has power to ascertain none; and, so, is no Ground of Faith at all. Secondly, A pretended Ground cannot be known or acknowledged to be a real and firm Ground, till we see it grounds something, It's Notion plainly imports a Relation to the Superstructure; and you may as well prove a man a Father without proving he has a Child, as prove any thing to be a Ground without proving such and such Points to be grounded on it; and this (in our case) with Absolute Certainty. Pray, take that along with you still, otherwise you turn your back to the Question, and run away from it in the open Field. 'tis tedious and mortifying beyond measure to hear you still talking, and pretending you have an Absolutely Certain Ground for Faith, and yet never see you, so much as once, endeavouring to show how it's Ascertaining Virtue affects the Articles you build upon it; and that this particular Sense of Scripture in each respective Point has such a close, and necessary Connexion with the Letter on which 'tis built, as to give Absolute Certainty of it to all that are competent Judges of the Sense of Words. Which the Experience of all Ages since Christ confutes, and our own Eyes Witness to be false in the Socinians and others. Thirdly, Yourself confessed once upon a time that you are absolutely Certain you now hold all the same Doctrine that was taught by Christ and his Apostles. Now, P. 14. this candid expression would make any honest well-meaning man verily believe that you meant you had been absolutely Certain of every particular Christian Doctrine, by virtue of your Ground or Rule. But your incomparable dexterity quite and clean over-reach't us. For, when you came to explain yourself there, it amounted to no more but that your Faith was resolved into Scripture (that is, that you pretended to Scripture) which contains all, or as you told us p. 17. that you were absolutely certain you hold all, because you hold all, not in your Soul or Mind (where Points of Faith are to be held) but in a kind of Purse as it were; as one is said, when he holds a Book in his hand, to hold all that is in it: being possessed of which, tho' you cannot come at its sense (which is little better than if it were locked up in a Trunk) you are in possession of all Christian Faith notwithstanding, and hold very firmly (in that Sense) all that was taught by Christ and his Apostles. Fourthly, Hence you have not performed what you undertook, viz. to show that Protestants had any Absolutely Certain Ground of their Faith. For, 'tis not enough to point out a Book, and cry out aloud 'tis your Ground, but you must show, that 'tis indeed such a Ground. Now a Ground or Rule bears in its notion Evidence to those who are to use it, and to know other things by its Direction; Nay more, Clear Evidence: For, as all Certainty must have some kind of Evidence to create it in us, so this Effect of Absolute Certainty can have no less than Clear Evidence for its Cause. But, you may as easily prove Mankind has no Eyes to see with, as go about to show that the Letter of Scripture is thus clear in order to the discovery of right Faith, even in the highest and most concerning Points of our Christian Belief. Fifthly, 'tis pleasant to observe what a rare Resolution of your Faith you give us p. 24. Our Faith (say you) is resolved into the Scripture as the Word of God, and whatever is built on the Word of God, is absolutely Certain. You must, indeed, having deserted the Tradition of the Church, either pretend to Scripture, or nothing; unless you will confess yourselves to be pure fanatics or Pagans: and it looks mighty plausibly to say, that whatever is built on the Word of God is absolutely Certain; for 'tis a great Truth. But the only Point is still, Are you absolutely-certain by your Grounds, that your Faith is indeed built on the Word of God? You say, indeed, Scripture is your Ground, you pretend to it as your Ground, perhaps you think it so too; and, 'tis not about your saying, pretending or thinking it to be such, that we dispute with you; for we should not scruple to grant you all this without any Dispute at all: But does your saying, pretending or thinking Prove it to be so really, and indeed? All Heresies in the world do as much as this comes to, and yet are no less Heresies than if they did none of this. 'tis your Proving it to be your Ground (and that an Absolutely Certain one too) which we would be at; but, we justly complain you flinch from the only thing in Dispute and perpetually balk us. We tell you once more, (and we cannot repeat it too often) there is a necessary Connexion between the Ground and the Building; for, 'tis not a Building if it have no Ground, nor the Ground of a Building if nothing be built on it. You are then to show us Absolute Certainty of this necessary Connexion between the Scripture and your Faith, or you do nothing but talk at random. But, alas! You have not the Confidence to make out this, or produce your Reasons to conelude this Ground and this Building have such a necessary Relation; and I must tell you plainly, you can never do it. For, pray, tell me, May not the Socinians, and indeed all Heretics that ever arose in the Church, say, pretend, and (perhaps) think the same that you do? Nay, do not they all allege the same? Do not they all profess to resolve their Faith (I mean their abominable Errors) into the written Word? Do not they pretend it for their Ground, and, that they build their profane Tenets on it; & lastly, avow as stoutly as you do for your heart, that whatever is built on God's Word, is absolutely Certain? Will you allow these Pleas Argumentative for them, or, that their wicked Errors are therefore true Faith and Absolutely Certain, because they allege all this! And can you be so unreasonable as to expect we should pass that for a good Argument, or a conclusive Reason to prove you have Absolute Certainty for your Faith, which yourself disallows, when 'tis alleged for them; nay, which you must disallow and declare against, unless you will patronise all their Heresies? Pray, lay your hand on your Heart, and consider (I am sure, 'tis more your own Good, than mine, you should) into what a Lamentable, or rather Chimerical Condition God's Church is reduced by your Resolution of your Faith here, and the Account you give of it. The Pillar and Ground of Truth, is reduced by you into a confused Chaos of incoherent Errors; Christ's immaculate Spouse is associated with all the Adulterate Synagogues of Satan; lastly, Faith as to its Certainty is in no better a Condition than Heresy, and Heresy is upon even Ground with Faith. I have a better opinion of the Church of England, than to believe Her most learned and genuine Members, will own such a Resolution of her Faith, as will make the Socinians, and all other Heretics in the World their fellow-Christians and Brothers; as they must be forced to do, if they own no other Resolution of it than all those pestilent Sects unanimously profess. I see Mr. G had good reason to ask you in his 5 th'. Question, What Churches you accounted Christian Churches? For, I much fear, by your Discourse and Principles, you exclude None: Nor ought you, so they heartily hold the same Gound of Faith with you; for then all their unchristian Tenets are to pass for Material Errors, not Formal Heresies: They hold all true Faith in the Purse still, tho' they mistake the coin and metal; and that's enough, in all conscience, for such a Church as that you are about rearing or daubing up. You pass a compliment indeed upon the four first General Councils, and that you reject all such Doctrines as were condemned by them; which use to be words of course in your Controversies; as [your humble servant] and such like, are in our common Conversation: but, when you are once got out of the circumstance of pretending to hold to some Antiquity, that so you may set a better face on it, when you oppose the Papists; when that job is over, they are but Fallible Congregations, and so perhaps were deceived in all they defined against the Arians, Eutychians, etc. Especially, if one of your sober Enquirers comes to fancy otherwise; and, no doubt, there were many such even in those days. And, then comes the 21 st. Article of Q. Elizabeth's Symbol, and knocks them down all at once with a Declaration that their Decrees have neither Strength nor Authority, unless it may be declared, that they be taken out of Holy Scripture; and so all is with a turn of ones hand brought back to the same Point again, and, farewell Councils: Yourself, and any one of your sober Enquirers, are at full liberty still to judge of them by your Scripture-Rule; and the Resolution of your Faith is established by that Article (at least as you make use of it) to be the same with that which is made, and professed by all the vile Heretics in the world. For, as Dr. Burnet says very candidly in his Answer to the Method of oonverting Protestants, p. 83. and, no doubt upon your Principles, If any man, after his strictest Inquiries, is still persuaded that a Council, has decreed against the true meaning of the Scriptures, in a point necessary to Salvation, than he must prefer God to Man, and follow the Sounder tho' it should prove to be the lesser party: And, if any Company or Synod of Protestants have decreed any thing contrary to this, in so far they have departed from the Protestant Principles.] Where we see he gives every sober Enquirer leave to judge of Councils, even tho' General ones, for he excepts None; and himself shows them the way, by Judging & Censuring the Councils of his own Church. 35. Another scruple yet remains incumbent on you to clear; which is, that, by your putting it upon Mr. G. to prove you have not Absolute Certainty as to the Rule of your Faith, and by your innate Antipathy against Infallibility, 'tis very dubious whether yourself do indeed hold the Tradition of all Christian Churches Absolutely Certain, even for the Scripture; however to save your Credit, you then pretended it, fearing your denying it might disedify Mr. T. Since then you lie under a shrewd suspicion, that you do not deal really with him, and the rest of your Readers, in this forced Profession; it would become you, in your Reply, both to show why you allow that Testimony to be Absolutely Certain, and yet are such an Enemy to Infallibility; since common sense tells us, no man can judge himself Absolutely Certain of a thing, if he judges he may at the same time be deceived in it; and, withal, that you may give more satisfaction to your Readers herein, than an empty and scarce credible acknowledgement of it, when you were in untoward Circumstances; pray, go to work like a Scholar, and demonstrate to us by way of solid Reason, working upon the Nature of the Thing (for no Argument merely probable will suffice to prove a Testimony Absolutely Certain) how, and by what virtue this Tradition of all Christian Churches comes to be thus Absolutely Certain for the Letter of the Scripture; as you see we endeavour to demonstrate the Absolute Cettainty of our Tradition for Doctrine, There cannot be a worthier Point to exert yourself in, nor a greater service done to your Rule; nor a better way to clear yourself to the incredulous part of the World, than to perform this: for one knows not whence mere Words, and outward Professions may proceed; but, solid and convincing Reasons can come only from a Heart possessed with the Truth of what is Professed. Go to work then, and bless us with the sight of this truly Learned and judicious Performance, And, while your hand is in, please to show us too, that, the Absolute Certainty of this Universal Testimony reaches to prove your Rule Entire; that is, reaches to prove no part of the Written Word was lost: nay, that it reaches to the particular Verses, and the most substantial Words in those Verses, as well as to the main Books; and lastly, to Translations also and Transcriptions; as you ought to do in case they be (as indeed they are) of equal Concern, in our circumstances, as the Books themselves. Or, if you deny they are equally important; and, maintain that this Absolute Certainty may be had of your Rule, without the same Certainty for these; then please to give us your Reasons for it, and show how Faith can be Absolutely Certain, tho' the Letter on which it depends, may perhaps have been maimed or corrupted by any of these miscarriages. Or, if you think fit to say you have Absolute Certainty of your Faith, tho' you have not Absolute Certainty for its Rule; then, confess candidly and ingenuously your Faith is Absolutely-speaking Uncertain; and, to make good that rare Christian Tenet, fall to work and confute utterly that Positive Book [Faith Vindicated] which undertakes to produce a multitude of Demonstrations to prove that Faith cannot possibly be false; and, withal, please to inform us to what end you maintain your Rule of Faith to be Absolutely Certain, if it do not make your Faith thus Certain too, or what that Certainty serves for. Any thing would content us, so you would once leave fluttering, and hover in common Words: Either tell us plainly all Faith is Uncertain, or come at length to some firm bottom, on which we may with Absolute Certainty ground the Truth of it, and raise it above some plausible Likelihood. But, we remonstrate against your putting us off with the Old Shame [Sufficient Certainty] unless you particularise to us what kind of Certainty you hold, and make out 'tis sufficient for the Nature, the Ends and Uses of Faith, and the Obligations issuing from it, and incumbent on the Prosessours of it. If you refuse to condescend to these fair Proposals, all the World must think you only temporised with Mr. T. and the occasion; and that you have not that Zeal for your Rule of Faith (whose grand Interest 'tis these things should be made out) as you pretend. Once more I tell you, that, if all this will not move you to this every way necessary undertaking, I must then plainly challenge you, that it is your necessary and precise Duty, in this very circumstance, as you are a Controvertist; and, as I am concerned with you under that notion, I must demand it of you. 36. I know not well whether it be worth the while to justify Mr. M. for calling your Answer to Mr. G's 5 th'. Question Trifling; or whether it be necessary, after so ample a Discovery, that all the rest of them, taking them in the sense you explicated them, deserved no better Character. You were asked only the meaning of your Words, [Christian Church] but you had a mind to be liberal, and give more than was asked, the meaning of [Universal Testimony] too: and to tell us, that, by Universal Testimony, you mean Universal Consent. That is to say, by Universal Testimony, you mean Universal Testimony: For, all agree or consent in the Testimony, if it be Universal. Then, to the precise Question, you Answer, that, by the Christian Church, you mean all Christian Churches; which is to say, that, by the Christian Church, you mean the Christian Church; for All the Parts make the Whole; so that, instead of an Explication, you give us the same thing over again, and almost in the same Words. And, pray, who's the wiser for such an Answer? Yet, tho' it be impertinent, and nothing to the purpose, 'tis at lest True, and Evident by its self, without needing to make it a Question: If you would please to afford us such Evidences, when 'tis to purpose, you would highly oblige us. Certainly, a Considering Reader cannot but think you are very unhappy in explicating yourself; for, either your Explications run quite away from your Answer, which you are to explicate, and are a mile wide of them; or they come too close to them, and are the selfsame said over again, and almost in the same Words. But, can any one think so excellent a Wit, as Yours, is justly reputed, should expose himself so manifestly, without some latent Design? 'tis incredible: Let us take a view then of Mr. G's 5 th'. Question; Being the Words Christian Church may be taken in several Latitudes by Persons of different Religions, I desire to know what that Christian Church is, etc. Here we see plainly, that the main of the Question was, what Churches were accounted by You Christian, or how that Word [Christian] was to be explicated; and, You give him for explication the selfsame word again, and in effect tell him, that by Christian is meant Christian; and that's all he can get from You. And, You did prudently; for, had You come to distinguish which Congregation was Christian, which not, You must have secluded all Heretics, which your Principles could not do; for your Ground of Faith here is most manifestly Common to all of them; and so You would have lain open to the Disrepute of having and professing a Brotherhead with all those Excrementitious Outcasts; and your pretended Rule (notwithstanding it's other many Divine Excellencies) had appeared to be utterly unqualified with Clearness and Firmness enough to be called a Rule or Ground. To avoid this, and in Consonancy to your Principles, You take all their Testimonies in for Scripture, and pretend it strengthens it. So it may perhaps as to the Books: But, You know how the Church complained of the Heretics for corrupting the Letter of Scripture, to make it Favourable for them; and, therefore, for any thing You know, they cried up the Books, because they had fitted them for their own purpose. Whence, tho' the Testimony for the Books should be stronger by their concurrence, yet the Credit of the Letter, in the respective places that oppose those Heretics, is weaker for their allowing them, because they admitted them as consistent with their Tenets; otherwise, they would have rejected them, as they did others upon that score. And, what advantage can you gain by the former towards the proving your Ground of Faith Absolutely Certain, if you be not equally Certain of the later? Surely none at all: For, 'tis not the whole Book in the lump that can be produced to prove Faith, or confute Heresy, but particular Texts; and, if These and the mainly significant Words in them, be not Absolutely Certain, what becomes of the Absolute Certainty of your Rule, or your Faith? Nay, I am not fully satisfied that their concurrent Testimony does strengthen the Certainty of even so much as the Books. For, I observe that our Judges suspect the Testimony of honest men, and misdoubt the justness of the Cause, if known Knights of the Post are called in to corroborate their Evidence. But, you have prudent Maxims of your own which are beyond the reach of Lawyers. 37. You endeavour to come a little closer to the Point p. 29. and set yourself to prove that Scripture is your Rule of Faith; ay, that it is: In order to which, You advance this Proposition, that Certainly all that believe it to be the Word of GOD, must take it for a Rule of Faith. These two confident Words, [Certainly] and [Must] are very efficacious to persuade those who will take it upon your Word; nay they are so magisterial, that they impose a kind of necessity upon them of believing all is as you say, or else of denying your Authority, which would break Friendship. But, if they will not, but happen to be so uncivil as to require Proofs for it, they quite lose their force; and, which is worse, such positive Assertions make People expect very strong Arguments to Answer and make good such confident Affirmations; else it hazards Credit, to pretend Great Things and bring little or no Proof. How you will justify those big Words, we shall see shortly. In the mean time let us ask you, how you come to be thus Certain of it? Is there no more requisite to a Rule, but to be the Word of God? Or, did you never read in Error nonplussed, long ago, p. 73, 74, 75. the Answer now given You to this Pretence, in the Confutation of your 12 th'. Principle; in which You endeavour to establish Scripture to be a Rule? Or, can You so much forget yourself, and your duty to reply to it, as to discourse still thus crudely, with the same confidence as if You had never read or heard of such a Book, or any thing alleged there to the contrary? If we must needs mind You of it so often, take these few words along with you now at least; and till you have replied to them, and others such which are there alleged, I beseech you let us be tired no more with such Talk, as serves only to amuse, but can never edify or convince. [To be writ by men divinely inspired, to be Divine, Infallible, and the Word of God, Error Nonplussed, P. 74. signifies no more but that they (the Scriptures) are perfectly Holy and True in themselves, and beneficial to Mankind in some way or other; and, this is the farthest these Words will carry: But, that they are of themselves of sufficient Clearness to give sincerely endeavouring Persons such security of their Faith while they rely on them as cannot consist with Error (which is requisite to the Rule of Faith) these Words signif●y not. They may be most Holy, they may be most True in themselves, they may be exceedingly Useful, or Beneficial to Mankind, and yet not endowed with this Property; which yet the Rule of Faith must have.] And, pag. 75. [What then Dr. St. is to do, is to produce conclusive Reasons to evince that the Letter of Scripture has such a Perspicuity, and other Perfections belonging to such a Rule, as must Ground that most Firm, and Unalterable, and (if rightly Grounded) Inerrable Assent called Christian Faith.] We see here the Question rightly stated, and the Point that sticks; now let's see whether your Proof does so much as touch it, or in the least mention it. 38. The Argument you make choice of, (I suppose it is your best, the matter in hand being of highest consequence) to prove that all who believe Scripture to be the Word of God must take it for a Rule of Faith, is this. [For, since the reason of our believing is because God has revealed, whatever God has revealed must be believed, and a Book containing in it such Divine Revelations must be the Rule of our Faith. i. e. by it we are to judge what we are bound to believe as Divine Revelations.] What a wild medley is here, instead of a Reason! Here are four Propositions involved. The First, is this; the reason of our believing is because God has revealed; and this is granted: only you may note that we are equally bound to believe what God has revealed by the Church's Testimony as by Writing, if it be equally clear it was thus revealed; nay, more by the former than by the later, in case that way of ascertaining the Divine Revelation be more clear than this: nor does your First Proposition deny this, but rather asserts it. The Second, This, [whatever God has revealed must be believed.] And this is pretended for an Inference, but alas, 'tis nothing less. For, how does it follow that because the reason of our believing is God's Revealing, therefore we are bound to believe what God has revealed, whether we know it or no? All then that can be said of it is, that 'tis pious Nonsense, unless you add to it that we have also Certain Grounds God has indeed revealed it: For, otherwise, besides the danger of erring ourselves in matters of the highest moment (and this unalterably too, in regard we entertain that Error as recommended by the Divine Revelation) we shall moreover hazard to entitle God's Infinite veracity to a Falsehood, and make Truth itself the Author of Lie. The Third, that [a Book, containing in it such Revelations must be the Rule of our Faith] is absolutely denied. For a Book may contain in it Divine Revelations, and I may not know certainly it does contain them: Or, I may know certainly by very good Testimony it does contain them, yet not know certainly it does contain them all: Or, I may know it does contain them all, yet perhaps not be able to know any one of those Divine Revelations in particular, which are contained there; for example, if it be in a language I understand not: Or, tho' I do understand the language, yet by reason of its mysterious Sublimity, and deep Sense, and thence Obscurity and Ambiguity in many passages relating to spiritual matters, and the Chief Articles of our Christian Profession, I cannot be assured with Absolute Certainty which is the right Sense of it; and therefore (considering me as in the way to Faith, & that my Assent depends necessarily on the Truth of some Preliminary which is the object of pure Reason) I might not, nay cannot, with any true Reason, firmly assent to what I see may be an Error; nor hazard my salvation upon an Uncertain Ground, and on which I know great multitudes have already Shipwrecked. The Fourth [By it we are to judge what we are bound to believe as Divine Revelations) runs upon the same strain; for you are to show us how by it I am to judge my self bound to believe any thing at all as a Divine Revelation, that is, as taught by Christ, with a Firm and Unalterable Assent, (such as Faith is) till I am Certain it is so, by being ascertained he taught it. This is the True, This is the Main Point; which you slide over still as smoothly as a nonplussed Commentator does over hard Texts, that puzzle him to explicate. I say once more, 'tis the Main if not only Point: for, till you have made out this, you can never prove that Scripture (taken alone) is a Ground of Faith at all, much less an Absolutely Certain Ground; and, least of all, your Ground in particular. And therefore you said very True when you lamented p. 28. you were in a hard case: for tho' (say you) there is an Absolute Certainty, and this Certainty lies in Universal Tradition, and we can show this Universal Tradition, yet we cannot show the Ground of our Certainty. For, you cannot show Universal Tradition for every particular Text that concerns Faith without our Tradition- Rule for Doctrine; nor Absolute Certainty you have the true Sense, tho' you had that Certainty for the Letter, without which 'tis not your Ground at all. A Certainty there is, but not by virtue of your Grounds, and so 'tis none of your Certainty, nor your Ground neither. Whereas then you confess here that, if you cannot show the true Ground of your Certainty you deserve to be either pitied or begged, you say very true: for we do from our hearts pity you, let who will take the t'other part. We pity you to see such excellent Wits, who, had they a good cause, would be honourably victorious, forced by the Patronage of a bad one to employ their Talents in shifting about for by-paths to avoid meeting the Question in the face. We pity you for your being necessitated to impose upon your well-meaning Readers with your specious pretences of God's Word, instead of showing them with Absolute Certainty (on your Grounds) that you have the true Sense of it in any one passage relating to the controverted points; without which you cannot with Honesty pretend it God's Word as to those Points. And, if that kind of begging may do you any good, we shall earnestly and heartily beg of God's Infinite Mercy to give you hearts to seek Truth, and candidly acknowledge it when found. 39 I had almost forgot your Id est, which connects your Third and Last Proposition together [— must be the Rule of our Faith, Id est (say you) by it we are to judge what we are bound to believe as Divine Revelations. These Id est', which should be used to clear things, are still so made use of that they are the main Engines to confound them. Let your Id est then say what it please, I must tell you plainly, you quite mistake the meaning of the Word Rule; It speaks Rectitude, and that such an Evident one as preserves those who regulate themselves by it from obliquity or Deviation, that is, in our case, from Error. You ought then to have said— The Rule of our Faith, Id est, by which, while we follow it, we shall be absolutely secured from erring in Faith, For the Primary Effect of a Rule is to give Faith that prerequisit▪ Quality as elevates it to the Dignity of such a kind of Assent, and raises it above that dwindling, feeble, alterable assent called Opinion. But you will needs, (to avoid coming near so dangerous a Rock) take it for a kind of Quantitative Measure, nor for a Qualifying Principle: Whereas, indeed, 'tis not the What or how much we are to believe, which is now our Question; but, the That we ought to believe any thing at all; or That you can by your Grounds have any Faith at all for want of this Absolute Certainty, which you pretend to; 'Tis this I say, which is the true Subject of our present Debate. For tho' we both held the same Quantity or Number of Points to a tittle, yet it might be Faith in one of us, and but Opinion in the other; nay perhaps Opinion in both, if both of us wanted Certain Grounds to evince they were Christ's Doctrine, which is the Formal Motive of our Faith. It belongs then to a Rule to ascertain both the That we are to believe, and the What; but the former Office of it is Antecedent and Principal, the later Collateral, and Secondary: Common Sense telling us that we ought first to determine whether there is any Faith at all, ere we come to debate what Points are of Faith, what not. These Fast-and-Loose Doings make me, when ever I meet with an Id est, still expect it means [aliud est] and that, like your other Explications of yourself, it is brought in to divert our Eyes to another Object instead of keeping them still fixed upon the same. 40. Enough has been said, I am sure too much ever to be Answered, to prove that Scripture alone as interterpreted by any Private Man's Judgement, wants the Chief Property of a Rule of Faith, viz. such a Clearness as is able to give all sorts of People, or the Generality of Christians (be they never so Sober Enquirers) Absolute Assurance of its Sense, even in the highest Mysteries of our Faith, without needing the Church's Help. Nor, will You ever be able to produce the Consent of all Christian Churches affirming that it has this Property. Wherefore, when it is called a Rule by some of the Ancients, it must be taken (as Mr. M. * Dr. St. second Letter, p. 29. says) with the Interpretation of the Church adjoined; which, having the Living Sense of Christ's Law in her Heart, can animate the Dead Letter, and preserve it from Explications any way prejudicial to the Faith received. And, thus indeed, it may be called a Rule of Faith; because, as 'tis thus understood, it cannot lead any into Error, but, * See Sect. 23▪ is of good use to abett Truth by its Divine Authority. In which sense Councils proceed upon it often, and sometimes call it a Rule. And, I remember the Famous Launoy, when we were Discoursing once about Tradition showed me a little Book of his, in which, he goes about to prove, that Councils had frequently defined against Heretics out of Scripture. On which occasion I asked him, if he judged those Councils framed their Definitions by the sense they had of the Letter by their own human Skill; or by the sense of the Church, which they had by Tradition: he answered, undoubtedly by the later; and that there would be no End of Disputing with Heretics, had they taken the former Way. By which we may discern that still Tradition was in proper speech their Rule, even when they alleged Scripture. Other, call Scripture sometimes a Rule, because it contains Faith; in which sense even some Catholics call it a partial Rule because Part of Christ's Doctrine is contained in it, the other part descending by Tradition: which acceptation of the Word [Rule] is yet less Proper; because (as has been proved) it may be contained there, and yet we be never the nearer knowing our Faith merely by virtue of Scripture's containing it. But no Catholic ever said that every sober Enquirer may find out all necessary Points of Faith in Scripture without the Churches Help. A Doctrine, which You declare p. 21. You are far from being ashamed of. And yet, let me tell You Sir, You will never find this Position of yours as it lies [without the Churches Help:] in the Universal Tradition of all Christian Churches; and, unless You find this, You will never prove they held it a Rule in the genuine and proper signification in which we take that Word; (and tho' they should call it a Rule, in either of the former Senses lately mentioned, they impugn not us at all, who grant the same. 41. You will needs run out of the way, p. 30. to talk of a judge of Controversies; but the best is, You acknowledge you do go thus astray, by acknowledging 'tis another distinct Controversy; and yet, tho' you acknowledge this, You still run on with it, that is, You still wander from the Point. You triumph mightily p. 31. that it is impossible for us to bring such an unanimous Consent of all Christian Churches for our Infallible judge— or our Infallibility, as Protestants bring for their Rule. As for the later, where were your thoughts, Sir, while you thus bad adieu to the plainest Rules of Discourse? Cannot we go about to demonstrate the Infallibility of a Human Testimony by Natural Mediums, but, instead of Answering it, you must object against our Conclusion, and bid us bring the Consent of all Churches to abett that, which neither depends, nor is pretended to depend, on Authority, but on mere Reason? Cannot one say two and three make five, but he must be presently bobbed in the mouth that he cannot show the Consent of all Christian Churches for it; and that, unless he does this, let it be never so evident, 'tis not True? 'tis very pleasant to reflect how brisk you are still with this Consent of all Churches; (I suppose because 'tis a Topick very seldom heard of in your Controversies) tho' as has been shown over and over, 'tis not a jot to your purpose, nor avails any thing to the evincing you have an Absolutely-Certain Ground of your Faith. And, if we have an Infallible Rule, or such a Rule as permits not those to be deceived that follow it, can there be any thing more Rational than to hold by consequence, that there is an Infallible judge, or that our Church can judge unerringly in matters belonging to Faith? the word judge only signifying that that Person or Persons, are in Authority, or are Authoritative Deciders, to preserve the Integrity of Faith, and the Peace of the Church. So that, supposing Church-governors or Bishops, and that those Sacred Concerns are to be provided for, plain Reason demonstrates to us this too as well as the other, without needing the Consent of all Christian Churches; tho' you need not to be told this does not want neither; unless you think that all the General Councils that defined against Heretics, imagined they might perhaps be in an Error all the while; and the Heretic, whom they condemned, in the right. Your * p. 3. Appeal to all the Churches of the Christian World for your Rule, has a plausible appearance, but vanishes into air when one comes to grasp it. How often must it be repeated that you have as yet produced no Rule at all for your Faith? For you have neither proved that Scripture's Letter, as to every substantial word that concerns Faith, is absolutely-Certain; nor that it has in it the nature of a Rule; nor that, 'tis your Rule, more than 'tis to all the Heretics in the world; nor that your Assent to any Point upon that Rule, as made use of by you, (for want of Connexion between the Points to be believed, and the Rule on which they are believed,) can have the nature of true Faith in it. If talking big would do the deed, you would indeed do wonders; but let your Reasons be proportionable; otherwise, strong words and faint blows are but very ill-matcht. Now, I must declare plainly I cannot see the least semblance of so much as one solid Proof in this whole Treatise of yours. If there be, confute me by showing it, and maintaining it to be such. You explain you own Tenet over and over till one is weary of readding it, and half ashamed so often to answer it. You talk much of God's Word; that we are bound to believe it, that it contains God's Will, and all things necessary to Salvation; and, twenty such fine things; which bear a Godly Sound, and would do well in a Sermon where all goes down glib, there being none to contradict you; but, are very dull and flat in Controversy. On the contrary, not one Argument have you even offered at, to prove you have Absolute Certainty of the Rule or Ground of your Faith, but have fallen short in every one of those Considerations; both as to the Notions of Certainty, Ground, Rule, Faith; and that 'tis your Ground, your Rule, and your Faith. 42. A Rule to any thing, if we take that word in a proper sense as we do in our modern Controversies, is the Immediate Light to direct us in order to our knowing that thing. For, in case it be not Immediate, but some other thing intervenes that is needful to direct us, and by whose Rectitude we frame our thoughts as to that affair, and that it renders the other capable to direct us; that other becomes presently the Thing Ruled, and not the Rule: in regard it wanted the Rectitude of another thing to direct it, that so it might be fit to direct us. Wherefore the Interpretation of Scripture being more Immediate to the knowing the Sense of its Words, (that is to the knowing our Faith) than is the Letter, for it is manifest that all who have the Letter have not right Faith unless they make a right Interpretation of it; hence Mr. M. had reason to object, that The Christian Church did not agree that every man is to interpret Scripture for himself, or to build his Faith upon his own private Interpretation of it: Nor ought you to be offended at his position, in regard you told us before p. 7. & 8. a Heretical Sense may lie under these General Words [Christ is the Son of God] and different Senses may be couched under these, Christ is really in the Eucharist; and so, (even according to yourself) 'tis the Interpretation or the assigning the Sense to those words which makes True Faith or Heresy. Wherefore, 'tis plain that your own Interpretation of Scripture is, in true speech, your Rule; for That is a more Immediate Direction to give you the Sense of Scripture than is the Letter; which is Antecedent, and presupposed to the Interpretation, as it's Matter or Object. Nor had you your Faith tho' you had the Letter, till you had interpreted it. And, besides, the proper and Immediate Effect of Interpretation, is to give the Sense of Words, and 'tis the Sense of Scripture which is your Faith, and so your own Private Interpretation is avoidable your Rule. If then you will vouch, as you do all over, that the Universal Consent of all Christian Churches gave you your Rule, it must attest your way of interpreting Scripture too, by private judgements; Nay, it must moreover attest that way to be absolutely Certain; otherwise you can never show how your kind of Protestant Faith, no better grounded, can be absolutely Certain; and this, as to all the Doctrine that was taught by Christ and his Apostles; for both which you very unadvisedly undertook when you were at a pinch; hoping, I suppose, to shift it off again with one of your transferring Expedients, or some squinting [Id est]. To what purpose is it then to tell us here p. 31. how a man (one of your Sober Enquirers I suppose) is to behave himself, where the Texts or places are doubtful. For, unless the Consent of all Christian Churches bring us down by their Universal Testimony that those methods are to be taken, and that they are absolutely Certain Means for all that use them to interpret Scripture right, or come at the true Sense of it, you are still as incapable as ever of showing us absolute Certainty for your Faith, or that you have any Faith at all by those Means. Nay, I much mistake you if your Principles will allow these Means, no not even the Testimony which brings down to us the Sense of the Primitive Church (upon which you here pass a compliment) to be more than Fallible. If you do, you admit our Rule: If you do not, I would advise you to prepare your Reasons to convince the World how a Fallible Authority can prove that what is built on it is absolutely Certain. However, you set the best Colour upon these Fallible Means you can; telling us, your Sober Enquirer is to make use of the best helps, the best and most reasonable means, etc. tho' they are such that in likelihood it will take up his whole life time, ere he can use and peruse them all, so as to compass sincerely this satisfaction; nay 'tis ten to one he will die a Seeker: and then he will have enquired very soberly, to go to the next world to ask the way to heaven. I wonder how many of the Church of England, or even of Geneva, made use of all these Means ere they finally pitched upon their Faith: I much doubt— Velure duo, vel nemo— Few or none. And we would know of you whether any of those means, or all together, are absolutely Certain. If none, you are still where you were. If you say any or all, you will fight against Experience; for many who use all these Means do notwithstanding differ. You would insinuate by the words, [doubtful places] that the Points your Sober Enquirers doubt of, are but unnecessary, sleight, or disputable; but alas! they are the highest Mysteries of our Christian Faith; and if they must take such pains, as to compare Scripture and Expositors, and the Sense of the Primitive Church (which will require perusing attentively a pretty Library) ere they can accept these for Points of Faith, what satisfaction is to be expected in all that Christ and his Apostles taught, by your Rule, which asks such laborious study to understand its Sense in these; or by your method, which is both Endless, & when all is done Uncertain? 43. Of how different a Judgement the Primitive Church was, let a Chief Pillar of it, St. Athanasius inform us (Lib. de Synodis Arimini & Seleuciae) where he blames some Clergymen of his time for going about enquiring what they were to believe, in these words, Si credidissent, nunquam, quasi Fidem non haberent, de Fide quaesivissent.— Seize Infideles esse declaraverunt, cum id quaerant quod non habent. If they had believed, they had never enquired, as if they did want Faith.— They have declared themselves to be unbelievers by their enquiring after what they have not. So, that, it seems all your Sober Enquirers are (according to this Father's Judgement) Infidels, or unbelievers. Observe here the vast distance between your Principles and those of this Holy Father and most learned Controvertist. Nothing but seeking and enquiry (with the Epithet of sober to grace it a little) will serve your turn; but, he tells us, on the quite contrary, that, if We seek, or inquire, we have no Faith at all: Which, in plain English, signifies thus much; you judge that to be the only way to Faith, which, he judges a plain Argument of having none. You are all for seeking for your Faith in Scripture; He, for taking what is already found to our hand some other Way, which must be by Tradition. One thing I should much wonder at, did not I know your private-spirited Principles; 'tis this, why amongst other means you assign for your sober Enquirer to make use of, you do not put the judgement of the Present Church (let it be your own if you please) for one? I should think the Faith of the Church had more weight in it, than all the rest put together, if you do indeed hold it a True Church; and 'tis far more easy to know its sense, where it has thought fit to explicate its self clearly. The finding the sense of Commentatours, and the Places compared, and of Primitive Antiquity, costs infinite trouble; whereas, there is no difficulty to know the sense of the Present Church, speaking to you by Living Voice, and consonant Practice. I should think too, 'tis most agreeable to the Order of the World, the Unity of the Church, and the Maxims of Government (if you will allow any such to a Church) that People should follow the Doctrine of their Teachers, be led by their Pastors, and obey their Superiors; rather than be left to their own private Fancies, in matters of such Concern, that, if they clash with them in their Judgement, it hazards to break all those sacred Orders, by which the World subsists. Let me ask you one thing, ere we leave this Point. Is your sober Enquirer Bound to use these means for his satisfaction in doubtful Points, or not? You say expressly here, that, he is bound to do this; and, so I suppose you will be disatisfied with him, if he falls short of this Duty. I ask next, did Mr. T. use all these means in a doubtful Point, to compass a rational satisfaction? How should he, when he was satisfied, and confirmed, and resolved in so little time. Yet, for all your contrary Doctrine here, you are well satisfied with him, nay, you undertake p. 13. to satisfy the World that Mr. T. had sufficient Grounds for what he then said; which was, that, he was much more confirmed in the Communion of our (the Protestant) Church, and resolved to continue in it, Pray, Sir, was he a sober Enquirer or no? If he was, did he in two hours' time, that Mr. G. and you were Disputing, use the means you say your sober Enquirer is bound to make use of in doubtful cases; as his was, if he dealt sincerely with Mr. G. and did not play booty? Did he in two or three hours' time, pray, meditate, compare Scripture, and Expositors upon it, use the help of spiritual Guides, & the sense of the Primitive Church, which, are but some of the Means you prescribe p. 31. He made prodigious haste, if he did use those means: How comes he then to be so satisfied, nay, so resolved, without using those means; and so worthy of your Patronage, if he did not what you say here, he was bound to do? These are Mysteries, which must be veiled from the eyes of the Vulgar, & Profane. Nor is there any way to reconcile these Contradictions, but to understand you with this Clavis; that, you say any thing that seems to serve your turn, when you are disputing against us, and disclaim it again when the circumstance is altered; and that, as you pretended that for your Rule of Faith, which not one in a thousand follow; so you pretend those methods must be taken, to understand your Rule right to the end we may not be deceived by it, which, neither are taken by any, nay, need not be taken at all, tho' you told us here men were bound to take them; the believing your word that your Answer was competent ( * See the Answer to Dr. St 's First Letter, Sect. 12.18, 30. which was indeed none) acquitted his Obligation, and atoned for his rashness. This, this alone, was so meritorious, that, it was equivalent to Prayer, Meditation, comparing Scripture, and Expositors upon it, the help of spiritual Guides, and the sense of the Primitive Church, which, you declare here, such as he were bound to consult for their satisfaction in Faith. By which I guess your Test to distinguish a Sober from a Rash Enquirer, is, whether he will rely on your Word or Skill for his security of Heaven. If he will, he is of your sober sort without more ado; and, need not trouble himself with those painful Methods: If he will not, he must go through them all, or be Rash. The Truth is, you play sure; and may safely defy any man living ever to inquire himself soberly out of your Communion: For, whoever begins, shall be sure to die before he have enquired half way. 44. At length, to my great Comfort (for 'tis tedious to find no Reasons to speak to, but still to be employed in confuting Mistakes) I am come to the last Task, that, as far as I can discern, will belong to my Province. Towards the end of pag. 31. your Discourse aims to establish your kind of judgement of Discretion; which makes such a noise in your Books, and of late rings out of the Pulpit too. See Mr. Kidder's famous Sermon Preached at St. Paul's Cross, Feb. 23. 1686. You make way to it thus, If we have the Consent of all Christian Churches against the only pretended Infallible judge, we have their Consent likewise that every man is to judge for his own Salvation. Your Argument, such as it is, stands thus, By the Consent of all Christian Churches, there is no Infallible judge, therefore, every man must judge for himself. It seems then nothing will content you now but Infallibility; and, if that be not to be had, every one may set up for himself in the judging Profession. Why, suppose the Governors of Our Church, when you left Her, or of your Own Church either, were Fallible; are you grown so nice on a sudden, and your Conscience so tender in embracing any thing less than Infallibly-Certain, for Faith, that Fallibility will not serve your turn, which hitherto, you so contentedly hugged and adored, and so wittily derided any Certainty above it? Suppose they had but your Sufficient Certainty, or great Likelihoods, fair Probabilities, or such like, for their Interpretations of Scripture; must they therefore lose their Power of judging in that particular, because they are Bishops? Or, forfeit the Dignity of Pastors and Leaders, because they are not Infallible? You have such an a king tooth at the Churches intermeddling in Faith-matters, no not so much as to help her Children in the most necessary Points (p. 21..) so they be doubtful, that neither professed Infallibility nor acknowledged Fallibility will put you in good humour with Church-governors; but out they must, and your sober Enquirer starts up in their stead. For he must judge whether they tell him right or no, when all's done; I suppose by the light Scripture gives him, as he is to judge of the veracity of General Councils; and so we are got into the giddy whirl-pool of a Circle. He must learn the Sense of Scripture by them, and yet trust himself interpreting Scripture, not them, for the Sense of it? 'Tis pity but he had a blue Apron on, and a Tub to hold forth in what heavenly light he had gained, by interpreting Scripture after the Method you have shown him. 'tis true, if there were no Absolute Certainty in the way to Faith (and I believe you hold none in your Church) every man must shift for himself as well as he may; yet still even in that case, he is bound to do that which shall appear best, and come up as near to Certainty as he can. And can he in any reason think his own Enquiry will bring him to more Certainty, than the Pastors of his Church, who had been sober Enquirers too themselves, and understood the Means you assign to make that Enquiry, perhaps a thousand times better than himself? If he thinks them better qualified than himself for interpreting Scripture, he sins against the Light of Reason, not to trust them rather than himself: For they have, in that Supposition, more knowledge than he; 'tis left then, that he is to judge himself to be better qualified than his Church, her Bishops and all his Pastors are for that work: and, upon this brisk self-conceit, the Book of Scripture flies open on a sudden, discloses its Sense, and discovers to him his Faith. Certainly, such a man is likely to have a very Reverend esteem of his Church, her Bishops and Pastors; and yet, your Principles would have all men such. Indeed, you would have your sober Enquirers, pray and meditate. But, it should seem they are to pray, amongst other things, God would give them the Grace not to obey or believe their Pastors so much as themselves in necessary Points; (I hope you hold the Tenet of a Trinity, Christ's Godhead, and such other Points, such) which otherwise their honest Natural Reason, conscious to itself of its own Ignorance, will very much tempt them to do; and to meditate on God's great Mercy, in giving them greater Abilities and better Assistance than he does to his Church; for they are very ungrateful if they forget so signal and extravagant a Favour. But, let us see what is to be meant by an Infallible judge; for you do not particularise your acception of those words; nor let your Reader see what Judge, how, or for what reason we hold him Infallible. 45. If you mean by [judge] an Authoritative Decider of Controversies about Faith (as was said above) and that (which is what we hold) his verdict is Infallible by proceeding upon an Infallible Rule, you must either pretend the Christian Church never permitted Church-governors to exercise their Authority in deciding matters of Faith; or else that it never held they had an Infallible Rule to go by. And I believe your utmost attempts will fall so far short of producing any such Consent of Universal Tradition for either, that it will be directly against you in both; and you must have a strange opinion of the Decrees of General Councils, in such cases, if you apprehend they held either of those self-condemning Tenets. And yet I cannot tell, but I have made myself too large a Promise concerning this Universal Consent of all Christian Churches being for us or not against us in this particular: For I remember now, that, when you were to state the Notion of Tradition, you took in the Consent of all former Heretics to make your Tradition for Scripture larger and firmer than ours is against you, * Dr. St's First Letter, p. 7. * Dr. St. second Letter, p. 25. and to make your Argument stronger by their concurrent Testimony; and I see a glimmering light already, which will grow very clear ere long, you take in the same infamous Gang to bear witness against our Infallibility; And what a case is the Catholic Church in then? We can never expect those obstinate Revolters from that Church or those Churches which were then in Communion with Rome, will ever acknowledge the Governors had a just Authority to declare against them as Heretics (for they were all of them, to a man, true-blew Sober Enquirers) or that those Governors proceeded upon an Infallible Rule; for this were to cut their own throats, and acknowledge themselves Heretics; a mortification not to be submitted to by much contumacious spirits. Now all these by your Principles are to be accounted Christian Churches, and are called so very currently, and very frequently by you (p. 24. 25. 26. and in many other places) without any distinction at all. And so we are reduced to a very pretty condition, according to the admirable mould in which you have new-cast the Church. For, unless all those Heretics of old, any Lutherans, Calvinists, and all the inferior Subdivisions of Faith Reformers, vouchsafe to give their concurrent Testimony to the Infallibility of the Roman Catholic Church (which condemned them all; and, as appears by the Council of Trent throughout, by the same Rule of Tradition) she is to have no Infallibility at all allowed her; her old Rule too is condemned by them for a False Light, because it condemned them, and their New-Light; nor consequently can she be an Infallible judge in Faith-Controversies. This is a very hard Law; Yet your severe Discourses allow us no better quarter. You allege that the Eastern Churches utterly deny the Roman Church's Infalliblely, tho' they be of very different denominations. You mean (I suppose) amongst the rest, the Nestorians, Eutychians, and such kind of good folks. And can you without blushing avail yourself of such concurrent Testimonies against the Body communicating with the Roman, and her Infallible Rule, whose Ancestors were condemned by that very Body to which the present Roman-Catholick Church uninterruptedly succeeds; and were cast out of the Church for receding from the Christian Doctrine, held even then upon that very Rule? 46. But what have we to do with any of your pretended Christian Churches, whether Eastern, or not-Eastern, Modern, or Ancient; many or few? Or, what have you to do with them either, if you would, as becomes a Controvertist, speak home to us. You know already we place the Infallibility of our Church in delivering, defining and judging of Faith-Controversies, in the Absolutely Certain Rule of Tradition. All therefore that have adhered to Tradition as their Rule, must allow to Her this Inerrableness, while she adheres to it, else they must condemn themselves. And those pretended Churches which have deserted Tradition, can never, for many reasons, be of any competent Authority against the Roman-Catholick. For, having no Certain Rule, they can have no sure Ground of what they believe or allege against her: And, besides, being her Enemies, and condemned by her, and that by virtue of this very Rule they carp at, common Equity tells every man 'tis not a pin matter what such men say of that Rule, or that Church either, whether those men live East, West, North, or South. I perceive by your far-stretcht words here p. 31. [All the Churches of the Christian World, All the Eastern Churches tho' of very different denominations, that you imagine the force of an Authority depends merely on the Number of the Witnesses; whereas we make account it depends much more on their Weight; that is, on their Knowledge, and on their Sincerity, or Indifferency of their Wills, as to the Person or Affair concerning which they are to witness: And Fallible Congregations, which are both Outcasts, and Enemies, have for each of those regards, no weight at all. 47. You have another Fetch yet left to prejudice the Reader against our Tenet. For, you often make mention of our Infallibility, the Roman, or the Roman Churches Infallibility, and (as appears p. 15. and 16) of the Infallibility of the Particular Church of Rome; whereas the Question, and our true Tenet, is, of those many particular Churches communicating with the Roman; so that you seem desirous to convince us you are resolved never to speak to any point sincerely or represent it ingenuously. For this sleight, tho' it seems trivial, insinuates into your Readers, that we hold the very Spot of Rome is the precise, and adequate mould in which Infallibility is cast. Please then to remember, and pray let it be the last time we tell you of it, that it is her following the * See First 〈◊〉 p. 18. self-evidently certain Rule of Tradition, in which as a Controvertist I do, in this Dispute, place her Infallibility. That, being thus absolutely Certain of her Faith, we can prove she is qualified to be an Infallible judge of Faith. That every Bishop is a judge of Faith-Controversies in proportion to his Sphere, and the Highest Bishop above them all: but still, the last resort or Test of their final obliging to Belief (for any one may oblige his Diocesans to Silence for Peace's sake) is with reference to the Body of the Church; and the Infallibility of the Church is refunded into the Certainty of her Rule; and there it rests. Hence, conscious to yourselves of the want of such an Infallible Rule, you dare pretend to no Infallible judge, but are forced to leave every particular man to his private judgement of Discretion; tho' you experience it shatters your Church, no better principled, into thousands of Sects. In a word, in the way of our Controversy, all Discourse ought to begin Originally, and end Finally in an absolutely Certain Rule of Faith; that is, in such a Rule as influences our Tenets with the same Certainty. We are sure we have such a Rule, and, so, we are sure we have true Faith; and we are sure you can have no Certainty that You have true Faith, because true Faith requires Absolute Certainty, and, therefore, an Infallible Rule, which you renounce. This is the main Point between us, on which depends all the rest, whether it relates to an Infallible Church or Infallible judge. Look it then in the face; spare it not, but levelly your whole quiver of Reasons at this mark. Unless you do this, you do but trifle; you beat the bush, and scatter leaves, but spring nothing. While this Infallible Rule remains unconfuted, you must confess there may, and aught to be an Infallible judge; and your judgement of Discretion is convinced to be a mere Libertinage, forcibly granted to all, for want of Principles in your selves to Ground them certainly in their Faith, keep them steady in it, and reduce them to it when they deviate. 48. To come closer, and take a more distinct view of this judgement of Discretion, I will acquaint you how far and in what I allow it, how far and in what I reject it. I grant that every man is to judge for his own salvation, and to endeavour by his Reason to find the Way to right Faith. I grant with you that all Mankind agrees in it; and therefore wonder at your self-contradiction to make us disagree to it, who certainly are some part of Mankind. I grant that, otherwise, 'tis to no purpose to go about to make Converts: I add, nor for you, and me, to write Controversies. I grant that every man is to judge of the best way to Salvation, and of all the Controversies between us and you; and especially of the true Grounds of Faith; and to be well satisfied who proceeds on a Certain Rule, who not; and that the contrary Tenet is as ridiculous as what's most, unless your putting upon us, against your daily experience, such a sottishness as to hold it. I add, that, since every man is to judge of his Grounds, therefore the Rule of Faith must be such as needs not much Learning and Reading, * See Faith vind. p. 132, 133, 134, 135. but must lie level to every man's Natural Light of Understanding; as the nature of Testifying Authority, and its Certainty does. I will grant you moreover, that to deprive Mankind of this Privilege of judging thus, is to debarr him of the Light and Use of his Reason, when 'tis most needful for him; that is, when it should direct him how to find out the way to his Eternal Happiness, and, avoid the paths that lead him to Eternal Misery. But, I utterly deny, that therefore, he ought to think it Discretion to hammer out his Faith by the dints of his private and unelevated Reason, from Words that are of so deep, and mysterious a sense; and this, after he has experienced that multitudes of other men, as wise or wiser than himself, and (for aught he can discern) very sincere too, do their best to understand them right; and yet, as appears by their contradicting one another in matters of highest importance, one of those Great, and Learned Parties, does err most dangerously; I deny that his Discretion can lead him to judge that God's Providence has left no absolutely Certain Way to Faith, it being of so vast a Concern, and highest necessity: Or that it can command him to Assent firmly and unalterably to any Tenet as a Truth, nay, profess it to be such, even with the laying down his Life to attest it; and yet that, notwithstanding, it may be a Lie, for any thing can be known by the Grounds he goes upon. And, therefore, I deny that, in case Faith depends on some Authority bringing it from Christ (without Certainty of which none can be Certain 'tis True at all) that Authority should be Fallible in that affair, and perhaps deceive him while he trusts it, or relies on it: Or, in case it depends on some other Means (viz. Scripture's Letter, and his own Interpretation of it) that Means should not certainly bring him to the End, if he makes use of it to the best of his power: I deny it to be Discretion to think himself capable to judge he has Absolute Certainty of the Entire Books of Scripture, even to such particular Words or Verses he builds on, but by our Tradition for Doctrine; as likewise of their Translations and Transcriptions all along; and, of the Copies being taken at first from the true Original; whence I deny he can with true reason judge his Faith True; since a fault in any of these may make it False. I deny that he can with any Discretion judge that the ways you prescribe p. 31. for your Sober Enquirer to understand the Letter of Scripture right, and so come at true Faith, (viz. comparing Scripture and Expositors upon it, help of spiritual Guides (who confess they may all be deceiv d, and so may misled him) and knowing the sense of the Primitive Church, etc.) are the means left by God for Men to arrive at Faith and Salvation; since to do this, he sees so many volumes must be read over, compared, and well-weighed, that in all likelihood, a hundred parts of Mankind for one (I may say a thousand) would Die e'er they could make a certain choice which side to take in dubious points; and to add to his discomfort, those Points which of all other, are of highest concern, as are the Trinity, Christ's Godhead, the Real Presence of Christ's Body in the Sacrament, the Efficacy of God's Grace, and such like, are the most dubious; as being most controverted by the Pretenders to the Scripture-Rule. I deny he can with any Discretion, when he comes to receive satisfaction of the Absolute Certainty of his Faith, suffer himself to be fobbed off with telling him there is Absolute Certainty of such a Book which contains it; when common Sense tells him he is as far as ever from having such a Certainty of his Faith, unless he has the same Certainty he interprets that Book right; and does not err perniciously by misunderstanding the sense of it in those important Articles: Especially, since yourselves, tho' it be against your own Interest, are forced to confess other Great and Learned Bodies had most grievously misunderstood its meaning, who had both the same Letter, and the same Means to look into it that he has, & all that your Grounds afford him. I deny, he can with the least Discretion Judge it possible that all Christian Fathers could forget to day what they held yesterday; or that they should, if they remembered it, knowingly resolve to damn themselves and Posterity, by teaching them a wrong Faith; or, that they could conspire to do so if they would; and consequently, that he ought not, if he acts discreetly, judge, that this Rule of Tradition is an absolutely, or infallibly-Certain Conveyer of Christ's Faith down to Our Days. Whence, I deny that he can with the least grain of Discretion refuse to communicate with those who proceed on such an evidently Certain Rule, and are found in Possession of their Faith upon that secure Tenure; and adhere to those others who declare against any Infallible Rule; that is, who confess the means they have to know any one particular Point of Faith or (which is all one) any Faith at all, is Fallible; that their Guides may perhaps all misled them, and their Rule permit the Followers of it to Err. You see now how we allow them the Use of their Reason, and Judgement of Discretion, till it brings them to find a Certain Authority; and, when they have once found That, the same judgement of Discretion, which showed them that Authority was Absolutely Certain, obliges them to trust it, when it tells them what is Christ's Faith; without using their private Judgement any longer, about the particular Points themselves, thus ascertained to them, but submitting to It. In doing which, yet, they do not at all relinquish their Reason, but, follow and exercise it. For, nothing is more Rational than to submit to an Authority which my Reason has told me is Absolutely Certain, in things which the same Reason assures me can no other ways be known certainly but by that Authority. 49. Now, let us consider the judgement of Discretion, as understood by you, of which your sober Enquirer makes use to find out his Faith. 'Tis only employed about searching out the sense of Scripture's Letter by Fallible means; which he can never hope will preserve him Certainly from Error, let him do his very best; since he is told, even by yourselves, that Great Bodies of very Learned Men, and acute Scripturists do follow the same Rule, and yet err in the highest Articles of our Belief; nay, he sees himself, by daily experience, how many Sects follow that for their Rule, yet vastly differ. Whence, instead of judging discreetly, he commits the most absurd Indiscretion in the world, to hazard his salvation upon his own Interpretation of Scripture; when, at the same time, he is told by those very Men who propose to him this Rule, that there is no Absolute security (neither by his own Industry, nor his Church's veracity) from erring in that Interpretation. And, not only this, but he sees or may see, if he will soberly inquire, what Certain Grounds are proposed by others; and yet suffers his Reason, and the Truth to be run down with the noisy hubbubs against Popery; and, either out of a unblamable Weakness, or, perhaps out of an inexcusable obstinacy, rejects those Grounds, or disregards the looking into them. I say again, Inexcusable: For, the very Nature of Faith tells him, that, 'tis an Unalterable Assent, and, that it cannot possibly be a lie; whence, common sense will tell him, 'tis not to be hoped for amongst those who confess that all the Knowledge they have of each particular Point of Faith, (that is of any Faith) is Fallible; and, only likely to be had amongst those who own and maintain their Grounds cannot deceive them; so that, such a man, if he ever came to a due Reflection upon what most concerns him, sins against the Light of Reason, in many regards; and, what you call judgement of Discretion is convinced to be the most Vnjudicious Indiscretion imaginable: And, your sober Enquirer, who builds all his hopes of salvation upon such a judgement, proves himself (the weight of the Concern being duly considered) to be the most rash and hare-brained Opiniastre, and the most credulously blind, that ever submitted and prostituted his Rational Faculty (with which God has endowed him, and will require a strict account of him, how he has used it) to a most Groundless and Improbable Conjecture. Disregarding all Authority out of his presumption on his own Skill, or that he is more in GOD's Favour than the whole Church; and, I much fear, out of a spiritual Pride, and self-conceit, that he can find out all necessary Faith well enough of himself, without being beholding to any Church at all; or, (as you instruct him here p. 21. and declare openly and avowedly you are not ashamed of it) without the Churches Help. Which, is the very First Principle, nay, the Quintessence of all Heresy; Fanaticism in the Egg, perfect Enthusiasm when hatched, and downright Atheism when fledge. FINIS. THE FOURTH Catholic Letter IN ANSWER TO Dr. Stillingfleet's SERMON, Preached at GUILDHALL, November 27 th'. 1687. Entitled, Scripture & Tradition Compared, Addressed to His AUDITORY. By john Sergeant. Published with Allowance. London Printed, and sold by Matthew Turner at the Lamb in High-Holbourn. 1688. TO THE READER. PErhaps the smart Expressions and plausible Methods that Dr. St. so affects in his late Discourse concerning the Nature and Grounds of the Certainty of Faith, in which he pretends to Answer the Catholic Letters, may have raised Expectation in many indifferent men, and Triumph in some of his Partial Admirers; wherefore, to stay the Appetites of the former, and give some check to the overweening of the later: I thought it fitting to say something here by way of Preface, to give our Readers a short Account of his main Performances in that Discourse, till I come to publish a Complete Answer to the whole. What I affirm of it, and undertake to make good, is; 1. That he so strangely prevaricates from the whole business we are about, that he even forgets we are Writing Controversy; and would turn the Polemical Contest in which we are engaged, into a Dispute of School-Divinity; bearing the Reader in hand, That we are Treating of Faith, as formally Divine, and of all the Intrinsical Requisites to it, as it is such; tho' none of them be Controverted between us, and some of them are perhaps only Knowable by GOD himself. The meanest Reflecter may discern how impossible 'tis for the Dr, Myself, or any man living, to put such Particulars as these into our Proofs, or Arguments; and how unpardonable an Absurdity 'tis to allege them in our Circumstances. The very nature (I say) of Controversy, obliges and restrains us both to speak of Faith precisely according to what is Controverted between the Contending Parties; and the nature of our present Contest, which is about an Absolutely-Certain Rule to know this matter of Fact, that Christ and his Apostles did Teach the Doctrines we Profess, determines us both to speak of Divine Faith precisely as it stands under such a Rule, recommending our Faith to us, as delivered by Christ, and proving it to be his genuine Doctrine. 2. That, whatever the Big Letters in his Title pretend, he neither shows from the Nature of Faith, as it lies under our Consideration, that it does not need the Perfect Certainty we require; nor that the Certainty he assigns to make us adhere to it as True, is not Perfect Uncertainty; since he does not bottom it on the firm Ground of the things themselves without us, in which Creative Wisdom has imprinted all Truths; but, on our own airy Apprehensions, or undoubting Persuasions; which must necessarily be Unsteady, when the Knowledge of those Things does not Fix them. Particularly (which more closely touches our present Controversy) the Certainty he substitutes to that advanced by us, which excludes Deception, is impossible to be manifested by Outward Arguments to others, being only his own Interior Satisfaction or Opinion; which, as it is Invisible, so it may, in Disputes, be, with just reason; Rejected by any man at his pleasure. Lastly, Whereas he pretends to lay Grounds for the Absolute Certainty of Faith, he shall never be able to show he has laid any one Ground thus Certain (which is what he pretended) worthy the Name of a Ground, for the only Point in debate; viz. That Christ and his Apostles taught thus or thus; but instead thereof, such feeble Foundations, as leave Christian Faith, whose Truth depends necessarily upon the Truth of Christ's Teaching It, in the opprobrious and scandalous condition of being possibly (or perhaps) False. In a word, he was to show the Absolute Certainty of his Grounds of Faith, and he so handles the matter, that one would think, instead of showing them, he were showing there was no such Certainty Requisite, and so none needs to be shown. The rest of his Answer consists, generally, of impertinent Excursions, disingenuous Cavils, witty Avoidances of any Rub that should hinder his Discourse from sliding on smoothly. His mistakes (whether Sincere or Affected the Reader is to judge) are numberless, his scornful jests frequent, and either mere Trifles, or built upon Chimaeraes of his own Invention. All which delivered in Poignant and Smart Language, give a pretty tang of Gaiety and Briskness to his Discourses, and counterfeit a kind of liveliness of Reason; when as I dare avouch, and shall make it good, he has not one Single Argument that is Pertinent and Sincere in the whole Course of his Answer. I pass by his Omissions, which are both very many, and most important; as likewise how he does not take his Adversaries Discourse end-ways, as I did His; nor gives the due force to his Arguments; but Skips up and down, here and there, Skimming off the Superficial part of them by Playing upon his Words, without regarding the full Sense; that so he might make a more plausible mock-shew of an Answer. Lastly, his Evasions, as is the natural Progress of Nonplussed Error, are still worse and worse, and are Confuted by being Detected. 'Tis easy to discern by his Expressions he is much Piqued and out of Humour; nor can I blame him; for 'tis too severe a Trial of Patience, for a Man of his great Abilities and Authority, to be so closely pressed to show his Grounds why he Holds it True (or which is the same, Impossible to be False) That the Faith he pretends to, was indeed Christ's Doctrine, and to find himself utterly unfurnished with any means to perform it. But I have reason to hope there will need no more to let the Reader see that all that Glisters in the Drs. Writtings is not Gold, but his carriage in this Sermon of his which I now come to examine; and to make him judge, that, if he hath dealt so delusively with his Auditors when he spoke out of the Pulpit in God's Name, he will scarce behave himself more sincerely towards me, when he speaks in his own. THE FOURTH Catholic Letter. Gentlemen, § 1. WHen Controversies are Preached out of Pulpits, every Well-meaning Hearer is apt to conceit, that what sounds thence is to be received as a Voice from Heaven: Too great a Disadvantage to be admitted by a Person concerned, who judges he is able to show 'tis but a false Echo: especially, when he sees this forestall the World by a Sermon, is a mere preparation to turn the Question quite off the Hinges; and, withal, as the Preface intimates, to bring it from the handling one single Point, which bears all the rest along with it, to the debating of many; none of which can be decided, till That be first cleared. Hence I esteemed it not only a Justice to myself, but a Christian Duty to others, to Address my Defence to You, his Auditory; who (I fear) were led into Errors by many particulars in that Sermon, relating to our Controversy. I have reason to hope this Discourse will keep your Thoughts Impartial; which done, I will desire no other Umpire of our Contest, at present, but yourselves. §. 2. It being the Chief and most Precise Duty of a Controvertist to secure the Truth of Christian Faith, and this not being possible to be done, without proving it True That Christ or his Apostles taught it: hence, it has ever been my Endeavour to establish that Fundamental Verity in the first place, by settling some Method that might secure it with a perfect or Absolute Certainty. Nature tells us, an End cannot be compassed without a a Means enabling us to attain it; whence, the first thing to be examined is, what that Means is, that is to give us this Certainty. Your common Reason assures you, that what's [True] cannot possibly be False; and the common Sentiment of all Christians, and the very Notion of Faith itself, has, I doubt not, imbued you with this apprehension, that your Faith cannot but be True; nor does any thing sound more harsh to a Christian Ear than to affirm that All Christian Faith may perhaps be but a Lying Story; which yet 'tis unavoidable it may be, if it may not be True that 'tis Christ's Doctrine. §. 3. You will wonder perhaps, when I acquaint you this is my greatest quarrel with Dr. St. and others of his Principles, that they make all Christian Faith possible to be False. Dr. Tillotson, with whom he agrees, and whose Rule of Faith he approves, maintains there, that there is no Absolute Security to be had from our being Deceived in judging we have the right Letter, or right Sense of the Holy Scripture, or that they were Writ by those Divinely-inspired Persons; but that, notwithstanding all the certainty we can have of those particulars, * Rule of Faith. p. 118. It is possible all this may be otherwise. This I say, as appears by my Preface to the Second Catholic Letter, and by my Discourses quite through all the Three, is our Grand Contest, under which all our other differences subsume. But this Dr. St. was so prudent as to conceal from you, lest it should shock all his well-meaning Hearers; and I do assure you, and shall show it, that, in those matters which he thought it expedient to let you know, he so misrepresents every thing, that he has both deluded You, injured the Truth, and quite dropped the Question. Whether he is to make satisfaction to Truth and to You, or I to Him, is to be determined by the Evidence I bring to make good my Charge. To State the Question then. §. 4. As to the Holy Scriptures, my very Principles oblige me to declare that what I attribute to them, is, First, That they have All those Excellencies which Dr. St. yields them, and one more which he does not; of which hereafter. Secondly, That they are Profitable to all the Ends St. Paul writing to Timothy ascribes to them; and that in such a high measure, that I do from my heart grant them to be so great an Instrument of our Salvation, that the Church had been at an incredible loss without them; & that not near half the number of Christian Souls would have been saved, had it not pleased God to leave to the Church such a Powerful Means to instruct them in a virtuous life, and raise them up to it. Thirdly, That, when they are animated with the Sense of the Divinely-Inspired Writers by a Certain Interpretation, they are very useful to confute Heretics; and that, Thus Interpreted, they are with much profit made use of, to that end, by Fathers and Councils. Fourthly, That, tho' they were written on several occasions, it was not without the Design of God's good Providence; which order all our Actions to the bringing about his Best Ends, however they be occasional to us; much more an Affair so mainly important to the Church's improvement. Fifthly, That there was also a peculiar Providence in preserving the Letter from any material Corruption; and, that the Second Causes by which this Providence exerted itself, was the most obligatory Care of the Church to whom those Sacred Oracles were committed, and the Knowledge she ever had of Christ's Doctrine. 6thly, That the Sense of Scripture is so sublime in Spiritual Points and high Mysteries of Faith, which are above Nature, and could only be known to the World by Divine Revelation, that no men by their Private Judgements, much less all sorts of men coming to Faith (and therefore unelevated and unenlightened by It) can arrive at the knowledge of its Sense by the Letter in those difficult Texts, with such an unerring Certainty as is requisite for that most Firm, Rational and Unalterable Assent, called Faith; and, therefore, that in These, they need the Help of the Church: Whereas in other passages that are Historical, Moral, etc. where the subject matter is more obvious to ordinary Reason, they are either clear of themselves, or may be cleared, as much as is necessary, by the Learning of the more Knowing Faithful. For the same reason I hold, that Scripture, thus privately interpreted, is not convictive of Heretics, who have imbibed a contrary sentiment to that of the Divine Enditer; because those men admit no Certain Interpreter of those difficult places. And, this want of Clearness in such Texts, I do not take to be a Privative Imperfection; but, on the contrary, to argue a very high Perfection in Scripture; viz. as Vincentius Lirinensis has told us 1200 years ago, Commonitor, cap. 2. It's Deep Sense; Whence 'tis rather to be called properly, a Disproportion of that Sense to the low Conceptions of Private judgements looking after Faith; or an Obscurity, relatively to such Persons, than an Absolute one: since the Faithful, who are instructed in that Sense, are both capable to understand it right, and moreover to discover still more and more Excellent Truths in it. 7thly, That for this reason, I cannot hold the Letter of Scripture privately interpreted the Rule of Faith, or a Means for people of every capacity, looking after Faith, to know the Sense of it in those Dogmatical Articles; with such a Certainty, as was shown §. 2. above to be Necessary for a Ground of Faith; nor can I allow that the Truth of Christian Faith ought to be built upon such a Sandy Foundation as are those Private Interpretations. And, therefore, that there needs some other Rule to Ascertain people of all sorts what is Christ's true Doctrine in those points. Moreover, I make account the Experience of all Ages since Christ's time abets my Position. Every Heretic, and all his Followers, relying on his private Interpretations of Scripture for his wicked Blasphemies; as the Socinians do now, who are (as far as we can discern) sincere and exact Followers of that Rule, or users of that Means; and yet, fall short of Christ's genuine Doctrine, denying his Godhead, and the Mystery of the B. Trinity▪ A plain Argument that That cannot be the way to Truth, which such vast multitudes have followed, and yet have been led into Error, unless we knew them all to be wilfully sincere, or strangely negligent; which we can neither know, nor have reason to think. And, as experience has shown this to every man's eye, so neither is it my sentiment only. The same * Ibid. Lirinensis telling us, That by reason of the Scripture's Depth, as many Opinions as there are Men seem possible to be drawn thence. Where he ascribes the obscurity of the Letter not merely to the fault of the Persons, nor the hardness of the Words, in which the Sense is delivered, but to the Profoundness of the Sense itself; Reason and Experience both informing us, that, where the matter is above the Readers capacity, tho' the Words be never so plain, yet the Doctrine is not easily comprehended without some who is already skilled in that Sense. §. 5. As for Tradition; The very sound of the Word may perhaps give you some prejudice against it, because our Saviour reprehended the Jews for some unwarrantable Traditions of theirs. This obliges me to give you a true Character of our Tenet concerning It, and to make known to you particularly what [Tradition] means, as we understand it in our Controversies; which Dr. St. (tho' he knows it) will never do; but, on the contrary, (as shall be seen) misrepresents it all along very disingenuously in every particular. What we hold of it then, is, First, That the Apostles, by their Preaching during the whole time of their lives, settled the selfsame Christian Doctrine in the minds of the Generality of the Faithful, dispersed in several Countries; and not only at large and particularly explicated it, and fixed it by their heavenly Preaching, but riveted it (as we may say) by Miracles; founded Churches, and constituted Discipline; by means of which, and their own Example, they established them in the Practice of that Doctrine. Lastly, They recommended the continuing it as the means of Salvation; and, consequently, that the swerving from it themselves, or neglecting to educate their Children in it, was the assured way to Eternal misery to them and their Posterity. 2dly, That this vast multitude unanimously settled in the same Faith is that which we make the First Source of Tradition; which had no more to do but to attest to the next Age what the First had received and practised; nor could they forget a Doctrine which was so recommended, and according to which they had led their Christian lives so long: Nor could true Faith (the Parent of all other Virtues) which was in their hearts, no nor even the Natural love to themselves and their Children, permit them all to be so Wicked as to decline from it voluntarily, or neglect to educate the others in it; however, it was to be expected there would be now and then a failure in some Particulars, deserting the former Doctrine, and drawing Proselytes after them. 3dly, That, the same reason holds for the Continuate Delivery of the same Doctrine by the Second Age to the Third, and so still forwards; the most powerful Motives God himself could propose being laid to oblige Christians not to deviate from it in the least, or be careless to recommend it. And those Motives too a thousand times more lively imprinted and apprehended by the heaven-instructed Faithful, than they were by any in the former Ages of the World, before Christ. 4thly, That by [Tradition] then is meant, The Testimony of the whole foregoing Age of Christians to the next Age, of what had been delivered, and explained to them by their Living Voice and Practice. Or, taking Tradition (as it ought to be) for Oral and Practical both, 'Tis, A Continued Education of undergrowing Posterity in the Principles and Practice of their Immediate Predecessors. 5thly, That hence 'tis Evident beyond needing Proof, that this Rule cannot (on its part) deceive us. For, putting that it was still followed, or, that Posterity still believ d and practised as their Immediate Forefathers did, who at first believed and practised as the Apostles had instructed them; 'tis manifest the Last Age of the World must have the same Faith that the First Age of Christianity had. Whence follows evidently that no Error could possibly come in at any time unless this Rule of Tradition had been deserted. 6thly, That Tradition, thus understood, (and we never understood it otherwise) being the Living Voice and Practice of the Church in the immediate Age before, is applicable to all even of the lowest Capacity; as we experience, to some degree, in the instructions by Pastors even now adays. And, since it delivers its Sense (which, in those that have followed that Rule, has been even now shown to be Christ's Doctrine) by Preaching▪ Catechising, Explaining, daily Practising, and all the ways imaginable to make it understood, 'tis also an Absolutely-Clear Conveyer of Christ's Doctrine downwards. Add that, should its sense be at any time misapprehended, the Church and her Pastors can explain their own meaning, pertinently to the Askers, Doubters or Mistaker's Exigencies; which a Letter in a Book cannot. 7thly, That the Chief Care of the Church was to inculcate to the Faithful, and preserve inviolate the Chief Points of the Christian Faith; and, therefore, that Tradition did most particularly exert its self in Teaching and Transmitting Those. 8thly, 'Tis not to be denied but Scriptural Tradition went along with this other we have explained. For the Church having the same sense in her breast which the First Writers had, were, consequently, the best Interpreters of it; which was one Reason why the Fathers and Councils often made use of it to confute Heretics, and comfort the Faithful by its concurrence. But, when they were to convert any to Faith, it was never heard, they took such a Method as to put the Bible in his hand, and bid him look for his Faith there; telling him 'twas Plain even in the highest points, that were dubious or Controverted, to every capacity. 9thly, That, hence, Scripture, * Dr. St's. Second Letter, p. 21. without the Churches help, was never held by them Anciently, nor can with reason be held by us now to be the Rule of Faith, in the sense we use that word; that is, to be a Means or Way for All who are coming to Faith, to arrive unerringly at it. Lastly, we hold that the Sense of Scripture's Letter, in those sublime Points, surpasses the apprehensions of private men coming to Faith; and, so, the Letter alone cannot be an assured Ground to build the Truth of Christian Faith upon: whence follows that Tradition (which is Plain and Easy) and only It, can be in Proper Speech the Rule of Faith. §. 6. This then is the true State of the Question between us. This is our true Tenet, both concerning Scripture and Tradition, and what are the Points to be ascertained by them. Now, let us see how the Sermon represents us, and whether your admired Preacher does so much as touch any one of these particulars. §. 7. In the first place you may please to take notice that he never lets you know, or so much as suspect that the main Contest between him and me is about the Absolute Certainty, or Uncertainty of Christian Faith, His wicked Doctrine, in that Point, obliged me to write a * Faith vindicated from possibility of Falsehood. whole Treatise formerly in Vindication of Christianity from such an Intolerable Scandal; which I applied, in the close of it, against himself and Dr. Tillotson. Had he let you know this, he prudently foresaw your Zeal for Christianity (your best Concern) would have given you a just prejudice against his Sermon, and the Preacher too; and the very Conceit all Christians have of the Truth of their Faith, would have made you abhor a Discourse out of a Pulpit, maintaining it might possibly be a Ly. As for particulars. §. 8. First, he talks of a Steadfastness, and a firm and well-settled resolution to adhere to that Faith which Christ himself delivered. P. 1. But, ought you not to be assured first that he did indeed deliver it? Or are you to adhere to it as his, whether you are certain 'tis his or no? Or is a resolution, to hold steadfastly to what you judge is the Faith of Christ, well-settled, if that Faith of yours, the Basis of your Spiritual Building and Ground of that Resolution, be not well-settled itself, but may sink into Falsehood? This is the true Point you are to look after; and, till you have perfect satisfaction from him in this, wisely to consider, that Pious Talk without Solid Grounds to support their Truth, is but painting the outside of a Sepulchre. The tinkling cymbal of a little Rhetoric, and shows of much Reading, may go far with persons whom such flourishes can prevail upon to forgo their Reason; but he had but a very small respect for you, if he hoped you were so easy to be played upon with the wind of a little articulate air. §. 9 It was very possible, he says, for them to have mistaken or misremembered what was at first delivered: P. 4. Whom does he mean by [Them] What by [First Delivery]? Does he mean the Universality of Christians in the First Age, or any succeeding one? Or that those Great Bodies settled in their Faith, formed into Church-Government, and kept up to their Christian Duties by Discipline, could thus mistake or misremember the former Teaching and Practice, which was a plain matter of Fact? This is the only Tradition we ever spoke of, or went about to defend. None doubts, but that, when some single Apostle was Preaching in some places at first, the Thoughts of the Hearers were as yet raw, and the things that were told them were so strange, that they did not immediately sink deep into the Conceptions of the Generality. But, it was otherwise, when in tract of time that Doctrine was farther spread, more often inculcated, and more clearly explained; and well-instructed Pastors constituted, to Teach it more expressly, and put them forwards to practise it. He mistake● then and misrepresents the whole nature of Our Tradition; and by antedating it, sights against it, before it could have a Being. And, as this Error runs through all his Discourses, and weak Inferences out of Scripture; so the laying it open once for all, is a full confutation of them all at once. Add, that he never considered whether, when those several Churches Erred, or were in hazard to Err, they did so by following even that particular Tradition, or Preaching of such or such an Apostle; or, whether they came to err by deserting it. If the Later, the Tradition was not faulty, but They who Deserted it; Yet, how different soever these two Points are, the one making for that particular Tradition, the other against it, he never thinks of distinguishing them, or letting the Reader know when the Tradition was in fault, and when the Persons; but runs on in common words, as if he had no Design, or determinate prospect whither he was going. I am sure it is not at all towards the true Question, nor against Us. §. 10. But, tho' all his Reflections from the several pieces of Scripture are quite besides the purpose, yet his Candid and Solid way of managing his own Mistakes, and how he wire-draws every thing to make it seem fit, deserves our particular observation. He tells us, speaking of the Church of Corinth, P. 5. that They (which signifies the whole Church) had like to have lost All their Faith; whereas the Text only says [Some among you.] And, is it such a wonder that some among many should hap to be imperfectly instructed, fantastical or refractory to their Teachers. But his Partiality is most remarkable. When he was forced to be beholding to the Church's Testimony of Doctrine (which is our Tradition) to abet the Scripture; he p. 11. could tell us then, This is very different from the Case of particular Persons in some Churches, who might mistake or forget what was taught; but (says he)— the Churches themselves could not agree to approve on Error in the Gospel contrary to the Faith delivered to them. So that there it was a very different Case; but here it seems the Case is not different at all, but the very same. For [Some among You] are enlarged to signify that Church itself; and whereas the only Point those Some denied, was The Resurrection of the Dead, to let you see how utterly insignificant a thing Tradition is that can do no good at all, he extends it to signify [All their Faith] hoping I suppose any thing would pass upon you, so 'twere spoke out of a Pulpit; 'Tis told you there, All's God's Word; and he presumes you will be so Civil to God Almighty, and so Kind to himself as to accept it for Such, and swallow it for Pure Truth. §. 11. I am obliged to him for allowing, That the Testimony of every Christian Church did show the Concurrence of all the Apostles, p. 10, 11. as to the Doctrine contained in the several Gospels. For then, I hope, they may be able to show to the next Age (and so forwards) the concurrent Doctrine of the First, which establishes the Original of our Tradition to be Absolutely Certain. He discourses well (p. 11.) and he ends better; That the Memory of the Apostles Doctrine was so fresh in their Minds, that it was in effect the Consent of all the Apostles who had taught them. And yet better; That the concurrent Testimony of all the Apostolical Churches could not let them agree to approve an Error in the Gospels, contrary to the Faith delivered to them. This is very extraordinary kind and no less solid. For, 1. these Words, [could not agree to approve a contrary Doctrine] makes their Testimony Infallible. 2. This discourse makes the acceptation of the Truth of the Gospels, that is of their Sense, depend on Unwritten Tradition 3. We cannot doubt but that Doctrine was Full as fresh in their Memories, when they were grown Older, and were to transmit it to the next Age after the Apostles decease, as it was before; unless they lost the Memory of it, by discoursing of it more while they taught it to others, & by Practising it longer themselves. 4. As little can it be doubted but the Doctrine and Practice of the First Age, was as Fresh in the minds of the Second Age, since they Led their Christian Lives by it; for it was Equally Intelligible, and of Equal Concern still to them to Learn and Teach it, as it was to the First. Lastly, That this being so, the Testimony of that Body, even now adays, that adheres to Tradition, * P. 11. is in effect, the Consent of all the Apostles that taught it at First. Observe, Gentlemen, that this is the only time Dr. St. has so much as touch't upon Our Tradition; and that he is so far from impugning or confuting it, that he, in some part directly, in others by necessary Consequence, acknowledges its force, and strongly abets it. But, it was not out of good will; he was intent in that place upon making good the Truth of the Gospels; and, assoon as he has made use of it to serve a present turn, he immediately discards it as good for little or nothing, or nothing to the particular purpose he had lately allowed, the Testifying Christ's Doctrine. §. 12. For the very next page, he reckons up three things, for which, The common Tradition of the Apostolical Churches were useful after the Decease of the Apostles. P. 12. But not a word of their usefulness to Testify to others what they had learned from those Masters of Christianity. No sooner were the Apostles dead, and that first Age had, by their concurrent Testimony of the Doctrine they had received from them, given credit to the Truth of the Written Gospels; but immediately the whole Christian World had lost their Memory of that Doctrine on a sudden, and the Grace to preserve and propagate it. One would think by this wild Discourse of his, that both Common Natural parts, and all degrees of Ordinary Honesty had been preserved to them miraculously thitherto, merely to recommend the Truth of the Gospels; and, that assoon as that was done, and the Apostles were dead, the Author of Nature and Grace suspended or rather subtracted for ever all his Influence, & left them a Tabula rasa (without either Memory or Goodness) to learn their Faith a new out of Scripture. P. 13. §. 13. And, hence it is that he rallies upon Universal Testimony or Tradition as if it were some sleight story of a few Tattling Gossips, or of those who heard what some say, that others told them, who had it from such, etc. Whereas had he said as he ought to have said, What the whole First Age of Christians witnessed to the next Age, that They had heard, seen, and practise't; and the whole next Age to the Third, and so forwards, with an Obligation still to transmit it, Equal to that the First Age had to believe it, there had been no place left for his ridiculous Raillery. But his constant Method is this; he endeavours to put you out of conceit with Tradition, by concealing every thing that might give you a true Conceit what Tradition is, and what we mean by it. P. 14. §. 14. The Argument or Instance he brings to prove that the Authority of Tradition was mightily sunk in the Second Century, is, if possible, ten thousand times worse, One would verily think, from those big words, he would prove that All the Christians of the First Age had conspired to tell a lie to the Second, concerning Christ's Doctrine. But, this mountainous Expectation came off with a poor little mouse, the relation of one single man, Papias, of what an Apostle had told him; which he being a good honest Soul, gained credit with divers. Tho', as for his wit, Dr. St's Author, Eusebius, tells us he was a man of a mean capacity, and scarce understood the meaning of what was spoken, I wonder the Dr. blushed not to put such a Slur upon his Auditory, as to compare the Public Authority of the whole Christian World, and the Universal Testimony of God's Church, to the private story of one weak man; or to pretend hence that if he were mistaken, the Authority of Tradition mightily sinks and fails; whereas 'tis only his own Credit that falls into that disaster by making such a senseless Argument. Yet, this is the best, and, as far as I can find, the only one he has brought to prove directly the First Age of Christians had belied Christ's Doctrine to the Second; and that because one man of a mean Capacity mistake, we may stand in doubt of our Assurance whether all the Learneder Faithful, nay all the Pastors and Bishops in the Church, had Capacity enough to know an open matter of Fact, viz. what had been taught and practised publicly every day by a World of Forefathers, or the Integrity not to deceive us. §. 15. Of the same stamp is his alleging that St. Luke's reason why he writ his Gospel, P. 14. was to give Theophilus' Certainty of those things wherein he had been instructed. The Subject of our Enquiry is about the High Points of Christian Belief: Does the Dr. think then that Theophilus was not a Christian, or had no Certain Knowledge of his Faith, ere St. Luke writ? Or, that the Apostles did not instruct people in those Main Articles? Or that St. Luke's Writing those Points in short (for those Points we speak of take up a very inconsiderable part of his Gospel) could make him know it better, and with more Certainty than their Preaching it at large? With what Sense can any of this be pretended? The Apostles did Miracles to attest their Doctrine: Did St. Luke, do any to attest the True Sense of all he writ in those Points? Again, what did his Gospel contain? Only those Dogmatical Points controverted from time to time between the Sons of the Church, and her Deserters; of which, and none but which, we speak? Alas! these are the least part of his Gospel, and make but a small appearance in it. He relates our Saviour's Genealogy, Temptation, Fasting, Miracles, Parables, his sending his Apostles and Disciples, his Exhortations to Repentance and good Life, the Manner of his Entering into jerusalem, his Instituting the Last Supper, the particulars of his being apprehended, accused, condemned, and Crucify'd. Lastly, his Burial, Resurrection, Apparitions and Ascension. These are laid out in that Gospel at large, together with many excellent sayings of our Blessed Saviour related verbatim. And These, as they were never pretended by us to be the Object of Tradition; so, tho' spoken of frequently (and perhaps variously) amongst Christians, were Impossible ever to be perfectly remembered by the Generality, unless put in a Book; and therefore St. Luke gives Theophilus (and others) the Certain and particular knowledge of all these Passages by Writing: And Dr. St. confesses the same (p. 17.) and that his aim and Intention was to give an Account of the Life and Actions of Christ, but not a word that his Writing was to give Theophilus' Certainty or a Clearer Knowledge of those Main Articles, to ascertain which Tradition is pretended by us to be the most proper Means. §. 16. Now let's see how many notorious prevarications and faults he has fallen into in this one Instance. 1. Our whole Controversy is about the Certainty of those sublime Points of Christian Faith; which he conceals, and confounds them with a multitude of particular Passages. 2. He intimates our Tradition is to ascertain all that's contained in St. Luke's Gospel. Whereas, he knows well, we rely upon no Tradition but what's in some degree Practical, which those Particulars are not; unless it be those, of which we keep Anniversary Solemnities. 3. He is so angry at Tradition, pag. 15. that he pretends the very Oral Tradition or Preaching of the Gospel by the Apostles, needed something to strengthen and confirm it. Lastly, he makes our Tradition to begin with the first Preaching of the Apostles; whereas, it dates it's Original from the first Age of Christianity; already perfectly instructed by them, during all their Lives, and settled into Ecclesiastical Order and Discipline at their Decease. §. 17. He seems at length to come nearer the Point, and affirms, That the Writings of the Apostles, when Matters of Doctrine came to be contested, pag. 14. were the Infallible Rule whereby they were to judge which was the true and genuine Doctrine of Christ; and, which is yet better, that They were intended by the Holy Ghost, to be a standing Rule, whereby the Church was to judge which was the true and genuine Doctrine of Christ. I am glad with all my heart, to hear him speak of the Church being a Judge of Controversies; or, that he allows Her any hand in ascertaining and proposing Faith. I ever understood him hitherto, That every sober Enquirer was to judge of the sense of Scripture for himself; That it was plain to him even in the highest Points; and, that if, in any contested or dubious Articles, the Letter of Scripture did not declare it explicitly, his sober Enquirer could * Dr. St's Answer to the Catholic Letters, p. 71 by parity of Reason render any Implicit Point Explicit, * Dr. St's Second Letter, p. 21. without the Church's Help; tho' this was the most difficult Task as to the penetrating the Sense of Scripture that is possible, and far beyond the understanding what's there Explicitly. He told us too in his second Letter, p. 31, 32. that, because there is no Infallible judge— every man is to judge for himself; and this by Scripture, his Rule. But, here the case is altered, and the Church is to judge of Christ's Doctrine by Scripture. I can allow honest Retractions without upbraiding them; and am contented that the Church should judge by Scripture, both when She is to Edify Her Children, and in contests with Heretics, as to all those Points contained there; and, I think the only difficulty in that particular is, By what means She came to be Absolutely-Certain of its Sense. Let him add then but one word more, and say that by the Letter of Scripture She so judged of Faith, that She could not be in an Error, or mistaken all the while, and than Christian Faith is Absolutely-Certain, and my greatest care is over. And, if he does not That, what is the future Church, after the Apostles Deaths, the better for Scripture's being an Infallible Rule, if She and Her Children partake not the Benefit of that Infallibility some way or other, by being perfectly secured from Erring in Faith? Is it not all one as to the intent of knowing assuredly we have the Faith taught by Christ, whether we have an Infallible Rule or no, if, when we have done our best, we may still stray from Her Faith? Or, why is not a Rule that is not Absolutely-Certain, so I have Absolute Certainty I am directed by it, as good for that purpose, as an Absolutely-Certain Rule with no Absolute Certainty that I do indeed go according to it. To speak to his proposition: Whether the Church and the Faithful in Contests with Heretics availed Herself of Scripture's Letter, to gain Absolute-Certainty of its Sense, in those main Tenets; or brought the Sense (which She had another way) along with her, shall be decided if he pleases, by St. Austin, whom he citys here, p. 16. §. 18. He will prove Scripture a Rule from the general Reason of its Writing; See p. 15. and prove this general Reason from a Testimony of Irenaeus, which speaks of the Gospel as abstracted from being Preached and Written; and who doubts but as such it is infallibly true. He seems to build much upon the Words [That it might be a Foundation and Pillar of our Faith.] Be it what it will in itself, the Point is, How does it Build Faith in us? By it's mere Letter, descanted upon by private judgements, or, interpreted by the Church? The Later he denies; the Former, all our most earnest Pressing and Entreating could never bring him, nor his Reflecter to go about to make out; and he ways it totally through this whole Sermon. Let him then but show that he has Absolute-Certainty of Scripture's Sense, in those Tenets of Christian-Faith, by any Method his Principles will allow him, and his Sermon should have passed for me without Control. That's the main Point, whereas all here is quite besides it. As for those Words from S. Irenaeus he could have quoted the very same words (in a manner) from a better Author (even the Holy Scripture) calling the Church, the Pillar and Ground of Truth; but that he liked not the Application of them to the Church. It seems he can neglect his Rule, and make no more reckoning of it than he did of the Oral Tradition, or Preaching of the Apostles, when it stands in his way, of cometh cross to his purpose. §. 19 It has been manifested above, that his Discourses from the writing of the Gospels and Epistles are all guilty of the same Fault, and Antedate our Tradition; p. 16, 17. etc. and his Inferences thence, as levelled against our Tenet, are weaker than Water. He makes Tradition any thing what he pleases, and will have it do every thing, tho' it was never intended for it, nor ever pretended by us it was able to do it. One while it must bring down the * p. 19 Decrees of Councils. Another while it must convey * ibid. long Disputes about divers Points; and the resolution of them; and this Totidem Verbis, otherwise the Apostles Sense might have been lost. It must secure people from being * p. 20. removed from Christ's Gospel to another; whereas no man ever held that the Galatians were removed from Christ's Gospel by following even the particular Tradition or Preaching of that Apostle; nor that any particular Men, nay Churches, might not be removed from it even into Heathenism, or judaism, if they deserted it. He expects too, it should secure men from * p. 21. danger of being Deceived; whereas, supposing them once well-Instructed in Faith (and 'tis supposed to our Tradition the Church was so) 'tis * See above §. 5. Note 5. self-evident they can never be deceived while they hold to that Certain Rule; because that is to hold the same they were instructed in at first. But if all were not well instructed at first, as 'tis impossible they should, than they might be deceived, either by deserting Tradition, or even by holding to such a Tradition; if, for want of perfect Instruction in that raw and unsettled state of Christianity, that which they held at first was not perfectly Christ's Doctrine. Nay, he would have it keep even Heretics from * Ibid. Defection, Hypocrisy, Lying and Deceiving: which were a rare Tradition indeed, to do such Kindnesses, and work such good Effects upon those who had deserted it, and would not make use of it; at least, he would have it keep People from Weakness and Folly; which the Common Assistances of Nature and Grace will do, after the Generality is well settled in that Doctrine. For, when all the Question is, What the Apostles preached, 'tis a Madness and Folly both to believe some few men, before the Universal Testimony of the Christian Church. But he will have Tradition still do all the Mischiefs imaginable, and Writing do all the Good; forgetting, I suppose, that there are some things in St. Paul's Writings, * 2 Pet. 3.16. which the Unlearned and Unstable wrist, as they do also the other Scriptures, to their own destruction. All this while, What is this to the Tradition we assert, which begun afterwards? §. 20. From these impertinent Premises, he infers as impertinent a Conclusion, viz. That, * P. 22. what was delivered in Scripture contains a complete Rule of the true and genuine Faith, as it was at first delivered to the Church. Now, that what's signified by Scripture is the same the Apostles signified by their Preaching, is plain Sense, and never denied; and, so he needed not have made all this clutter to prove it. But plain sense will do him no service, whose best play 'tis to blunder and confound every thing; let us see then what it is that will. His first words [What they have therein delivered] can mean nothing but the Sense of Scripture; for that is the thing signified or delivered by the Letter; and both sides confess, that the Sense of Scripture is Christ's Faith. If then we spell his Words together, they plainly amount to this, That Christ's Faith contains a complete Rule of the true and genuine Faith, as it was delivered at first to the Church, that is, Faith itself contains a complete Rule to its self. Make sense of this who can. The best I can make of it is, That the Conclusion keeps decorum with the Premises; and that he has mighty well employed his Labour to keep such a huge Pother to infer such a worthy Point. §. 21. I have nothing to do with his Objecting some of our Writers, but shall come to his * P. 23. Second Reason, drawn from the notorious Uncertainty of mere Tradition; and that never was any trial made of it but it failed, even when it had the greatest Advantages. Expect Gentlemen, by those high and mighty Words, he will bring most Convincing Arguments, to prove that the Universal Testimony of the Church in delivering down those high Points of Faith is notoriously Uncertain, and failed in every Age, nay, the very First, for than it had the Greatest Advantages; the Christians having then fresh Memories, and being then Infallible, since they could not agree to approve false Doctrine, as himself told us p. 11, 12. For my part I am of his mind, and never knew any other Tradition have Advantages comparable to what Christian Tradition had for transmitting the Doctrine of Faith; and if he lets you know what those Advantages of Christian Tradition were, and shows them unable to oblige the Church to convey Christ's Doctrine down, he will gain his Point: But, if he prevaricates from this necessary Duty, he abuses you with fine Lukewarm Words to no purpose. I do assure you before hand, tho' he talks here of Advantages, he has not in his whole Sermon mentioned, much less ingenuously informed you of any one Advantage Christian Tradition has; but industriously concealed every particular that gives it force. Yet, who sees not that without doing this, 'tis impossible to impugn it, or deal fairly with his Auditory; for how should you judge of the Comparison, without a clear sight of the things Compared? §. 22. He did very prudently, not to insist on the falling of Tradition in the Law of Nature; Ibid. For 1. He must have shown It failed them, and not They failed It by deserting it; which could only be done by proving that had they continued to follow it, they could have strayed into Polytheism; which he can never do, it being evidently Impossible. 2. That, to make good the Parallel, he must have proved it had as Ample an Original (which gives a vast force to Testifying Authority) as Christian Tradition had; which is equally impossible; for it had for its Source but one single man, Adam. 3. That there were not more powerful Motives, nor greater Assistances of Grace to continue the Christian Doctrine under the Law of Grace, than there were under that most imperfect Law of Nature; nor more exact Discipline in the Church of Christ, than there was in that loose State: which had been hard Points, and altogether impossible even to attempt with any show of Reason. ibid. He did very wisely too to Wave the Opinion of the Millenaries, the time of Easter and the Communicating of Infants. For he both knows that every Apostolical Tradition (had this last been supposed such) is not necessarily an Article of Faith; as also that none of these (nor yet their contrary) was a Point of Christian Doctrine Preached and Settled unanimously over the World by the Apostles. He made account he had a better game to play, by showing how * P. 23.24. Tradition failed in delivering down the Apostles Creed. But he might, had he pleased, as well have left out That as the Others; for * See my third Catholic Letter §. 2, & 3. none of the Explainers of Tradition ever held or said it was to bring down Set Form of Words, which required application of Memory and Repetition of them in Order; but only the Sense of the First Age (which was Christ's true Faith) instilled after a connatural way by Education; and apt to be expressed in different Words, according to different Circumces. §. 23. Were it granted him, That * P. 26. things Written (supposing the Letter could be proved to be still continued Absolutely Certain) had the Advantage, as to the Certainty of Conveyance, above things merely committed to Memory and Tradition; yet he is where he was. The Point between us still sticks; that is, Whether mere Words, expressing in short such sublime spiritual Tenets, as are most of the chief Articles of Christian Religion, are so Clear to private Judgements, nay, to All (even the Vulgar) that are looking for Faith, that they can have that perfect Assurance of their true Sense, as to build that Never-to-be-altered Assent, called Faith, upon their understanding them. This is the sum of our difficulty; this is what we most insist upon, and are perpetually pressing him to show the security of the Method he takes to give us this Certainty: I do not mean the Certainty of the Letter (about which he keeps such ado) but of the sense of it in such Points, if he thinks any one of them so necessary, that the Generality cannot be saved without the knowledge of it. This is it, which most imports you to know, if you value the having such Grounds for your Faith, as aught in true reason to persuade you 'tis true that it was Taught by Christ, or that you are not perhaps dociend, and in an Error all this while. But, not one word of this in the whole Sermon. * P. 16. He argues from God's making choice of Writing, when he delivered the Ten Commandments. What means he, or how can he apply this to our Question? Are the Ten Commandments, which are plain honest Nature, of as Deep and Mysterious a Sense, as the high Points we speak of? Are they so hard to be understood, that Writing is not a clear Conveyer of God's Sense in such Matters? Does he hear a great part of the World at variance about the Meaning of the Ten Commandments, as multitudes of Heretics have been Wrangling with the Church ever since Christ's time, about the Sense of Scripture in those Dogmatical Points? Were the Texts which contain those Points as plain to all Mankind as the Ten Commandments are, or as are generally the Historical and Moral parts of Scripture, I should frankly declare, that Scripture might in that Supposition be a Rule of Faith, as to the Points contained in it; and that there would be no need of the Church for our simply believing, but only to confirm our Faith, explain it more throughly, when any part of it, employed in some main Point, is denied; apply it to our Consciences by her Preaching, and keep us up to the Doctrine it delivers by her Government and Discipline. So that our Controversy-Preacher, who has never hit the Point hitherto, doubly misses it here in his representing Tradition, as held by us needful to supply the defect of Clearness in Moral passages, that are plain enough of themselves; and that 'tis to bring down Set-Forms of Words, (which is not its business) whatever it be those Words express. And this shows his Mistake in his * P. 27. Second Proof; viz. the restoring the Knowledge of the Law Written by a Written Book; which was a Way most Proper for that End. Whence, for the same Reason, if there were any deviation from the Christian Doctrine, which, as contradistinguished to that other, was writ in the Living Tables of the Hearts of the Faithful, the best Way of preserving or restoring That, was by the Sense writ in the Heart of the Church at first by the Preaching of the Apostles, and continued ever since, in the manner we have described and proved. §. 24. But, The Dr. is got into a Track of mistaking, and he cannot get out of it. He brings for his Third Argument our B. Saviour's advice to the jews to search the Scriptures. The business was, Ibid. to know whether he was the true Messias; and the Prophecies relating to the Messias were Matters of Fact, or else Moral; and therefore proportioned to the Understanding of the Searchers; and plain enough, so they applied but Industry & Diligence to find them out. Are your Mysteries of Christian Faith such? Or, Must weak unelevated Understandings therefore presume to penetrate the Meaning of the Scripture in Texts of so deep a Sense as those Mysteries are, because the Jews were exhorted to do it, in a matter within the Sphere of their Capacity? Again, The Tradition of the jews was very strong, that a Messias should come; but that This was the Person, there was no Tradition at all. This was therefore either to be made known by his Miracles done to attest it, or to be found out by the applying of divers particulars to Him, and by seeing they all concurred in him. And did ever any of us pretend, that Tradition was to bring down such particulars? If he says we did, he must show where! If he confesses we did not, he must confess withal, his Text and Discourse here is nothing to the purpose. He turns it off from the Admonition of searching the Scriptures to know the true Messias, to the knowing whether he were a Temporal Prince; whereas the Tradition of his Kingdom's being purely Spiritual, was neither universally held, taught, nor delivered at first by the First Founders of that Law, nor settled in the hearts of the Synagogue, or the Universality of the Jews in the beginning, as Christ's Doctrine was by the unanimous Preaching of the Apostles in the hearts of such a numerous Multitude as was the Christian Church of the First Age. Which being evidently so, What reason was there our Saviour should refer them to such a slight, or rather no-Tradition, and not to the Written Prophecies, in which he was foretold? Or, What consequence can be drawn hence to the prejudice of Christian Tradition, which, and which only, we defend; and which (as was fitting) is so strongly supported, that it is impossible to find a Parallel to equal or come nigh it. And unless this be done, all his Arguments against it stand thus, A Lesser Force cannot do an Effect, therefore a Greater cannot. An odd piece of Logic, but suitable to all the rest. §. 25. His Fourth Reason represents Tradition to be merely Verbal, and not Practical. p. 28. That it (alone) is to bring down particular Matters of Fact, or Historical passages; nay, the Speculative Whimsies of the old Heathen Philosophers. None of which was ever pretended; and, so, all his Discourse runs upon his old and oft-repeated Error in the true meaning of Tradition. §. 26. The Reasons he gives for the Certainty of the Books of Scripture, we allow to a Tittle; and we add to them One, over and above, which is better than them all; viz. the Obligation and Care of the Church; which, as She ever held the Scriptures to contain the same Doctrine which was preached to Her at first by Christ's Order, and that it was a most incomparable Instrument for the Edification of her Children, the Abetment of Faith, the Salvation of Mankind, nay, an Instruction to Herself too in thousands of most excellent, most useful, and most enlightening passages; so She could not but look upon Herself as most highly obliged to preserve the Letter from any material Alteration; and yet more particularly, in case any Heretics went about to corrupt it in any Texts (nay, Coma's or Pointings) that concerned the main Articles of Christianity, which they sometimes attempted; the Doctrine of Christ in her Breast, could easily direct them to set the Text right again, and that with Absolute Certainty. Nor does any say, or so much as suppose any Book of Scripture is indeed lost, as he hints, p. 29. only, upon his saying, That * See Third Catholic Letter, p. 36. the Scripture we have now, contains all the Divine Revelations; I used the right of a Disputant, and put him to make good what he says, and to prove he has the Absolute Certainty he pretended to, that no Book was lost, without which he could have no such Certainty those pieces of Scripture we have now, did contain All the Divine Revelations; which, by his Grounds, denying any Certainty but what might admit of Deceit, I was sure he was not able to perform. §. 27. Nor do I at all doubt of the Influence of Divine Grace, P. 30. or of the Internal Satisfaction which good Souls, who are already Faithful, (or as St. Thomas of Aquin cited by him, expresses himself, Have the Habit of Faith, by which they have a right judgement of those things which are agreeable to that virtue) receive concerning Scripture and Christ's Doctrine; or that they confirm men more than Demonstration does. Arguments have the Nature of Preliminaries to Faith, or Searches after it; but the Inward Satisfaction that that Heavenly Doctrine rectifies and purifies the Soul, and levels it directly towards the Attainment of its last Blissful End, has the nature of a kind of Experience, and, as it were, Possession and Enjoyment of what Humane Arguments, previous to Faith, had been looking after, and contending for. I suppose, Gentlemen, the Dr. brought in this Discourse to prepare your Minds, by a show of Piety, to rest apayed with any slight Reason that falls short of concluding, and breed in you a prejudice against the necessity of his producing any such Arguments, as place Christian Faith above Possibility of Falsehood. But, he is as much out of the Way here as he was in all the rest; For, notwithstanding God's Grace, and this Internal Satisfaction, which is Proper to good Souls who are Believers already, the Church and her Pastors must be furnished with solid and unanswerable Reasons, to satisfy perfectly those, both of the lowest and most acute capacity, who are looking after Faith, that the Doctrine She professes was taught by Christ; and, to evince and defend its Truth, in that particular, against the most subtle Adversaries; which cannot be done, unless the Reasons which we, as Controvertists, bring, set it above possibility of Falsehood, that Christ taught it. We cannot put God's Grace and our Internal Satisfaction into Syllogisms when we are disputing. Nor does God intend by His Grace to prejudice the true Nature Himself has given us, which is Reason; but to perfect and elevate it. 'Tis against Reason, that in Preliminaries to Faith, which are the Objects of Natural Reason, those who are capable to penetrate the force of reasons, should assent beyond the Motive; for, as far as it is beyond the Motive, 'tis without any Motive; that is, without any Reason; and, therefore (whatever often happens through the Imperfection of Creatures) such an Irrational Assent could never have been intended by God. Whence, as it belongs to Infinite Goodness to give those who sincerely seek for Truth, the Grace to embrace it; so it belongs to infinite Wisdom to lay such means to arrive at Truth, (that is, in our case, such a Rule of Faith) as both evince it's Truth to those who are capable, according to the most exact Methods of True Reason; and withal, perfectly * See Error Nonplussed, p. 134, 135. secure those from Error who follow that Rule, let them be as Weak as they will. If then we are bound to embrace Christian Faith as a Truth, and profess it to be so, it must be indeed such; and therefore the Grounds left us by God must be of that nature, as to prove or conclude it to be such: and, if Dr. St. have no such Grounds that what he holds is really Christ's Doctrine, he ought not to handle or preach Controversy; since he must necessarily disgrace and weaken Christian Faith, when he is to credit and establish it. Nay, he ought not to pretend he has that most firm, and most strongly-supported Assent, called Faith, which depends necessarily on the Certainty that it was taught by Christ, but candidly yield he has Opinion only in that Point; not an Unalterable Belief it is True, but only a good Conceit or Hope that it is so, or may be so: Too weak a Prop to sustain its Truth, as it leans on Christ or his Apostles, having taught it; or to settle the Basis of all our Spiritual Life. §. 28. And now let's apply this Discourse to his Ground or Rule, by means of which he is to be thus assured, or able to assure You of the Truth of those Controverted Points, which you hear so warmly disputed in the world; and which it so much imports you to be satisfied in. 'Tis Scripture's Letter (in Texts that are thought to relate to those Points) as understood or interpreted by Himself, or any other Private Judgement. What he has then to do, is to make out with Absolute Certainty, that this Method of arriving at the Knowledge of Christ's True Doctrine, as to those Points, cannot be Deceitful and Erroneous. Otherwise, 'tis unavoidable, his Faith, and all Christian Faith, no better grounded, may be False, and, by consequence, is not True. He will tell you Twenty fine Stories, and give you many pretty words of its being Sufficiently Certain, Morally Certain, that it has such Assurance as men accept for other matters, etc. But ask him smartly and closely, if any of these Certainties or Assurances are Impossible to be False, and he must not, nor will deny it: for, should he say it, he must pretend he could not be deceived in his understanding those Texts right, which he could not do without professing Infallibility in that particular. Observe, I beseech you, where the stress of the whole Question lies. 'Tis in this, Whether this Ground or Method of his to be assured of Faith, is able to prove it to have been truly and indeed taught by Christ, so as it was not possible it should be otherwise. By this Test, if you examine the very good-Grounds for the Certainty of his Protestant Faith, which he promises you here in his Preface, you will find evidently he only gives you very good Words instead of very good Grounds; and that, whatever he produces, whether he quotes or argues, he will never vouch them to be so Certain, but Deceit and Error may possibly consist with them. He will complain, that 'tis an unreasonable expectation, because the nature of the things will not bear it. And what's this, but to tell you in other terms, that there neither is any Absolute Certainty of Faith, nor can be any: which bids fair for Atheism, unless Interest satisfies the Will, and by it the Reason. By his speaking there of the main Points in Controversy between us, I perceive he is running from the whole business in hand, and seeking to shelter himself, and hide his Head in a Wilderness. But he shall not shift the Question thus, and fall to ramble into endless Disputes. Himself confessed (Second Letter, p. 20.) our Question was about the General Grounds of our Faith, and not the particular Certainty as to this or that Doctrine, and I joined issue with him upon the same. To run to particular points while That's a settling, is to put the Conclusions before the Premises; and, to go about to ascertain things depending entirely on a Method or Rule, without ascertaining that Method or Rule first, is to begin at the wrong end, and make the Cart draw the Horse. §. 29. I owe him yet an Answer to St. Austin. He alleges that Father (p. 16.) whose Testimony says only, That the Gospels are to be looked upon as Christ's own Handwriting, and that he directed the order and manner of the Evangelist's Writing; which only signifies they were divinely inspired in both: which none denies; nor has This any Influence upon the Point in hand. He could have quoted you other places out of Him, if he had pleased, which come up to it fully; and I shall supply his backwardness with doing it myself. Quaerendi dubitatio, etc. ( * Lib. 1. Gen. ad Lit. Imperfect. cap. 1. says that Learned and Holy Father) The Doubt of Enquiry ought not to exceed the Bounds of Catholic Faith. And, because many Heretics use to draw the Exposition of the Divine Scriptures to their own Opinion, which is against the Faith of the Catholic Discipline; therefore— Ante tractationem hujus Libri Catholica Fides explicanda est. Before the handling this Book, the Catholic Faith is to be explained. Where Dr. St's Sober Enquirer is curbed and restrained in his licentious Search of his Faith in Scripture, by the Catholic Faith, had (it seems) some other way; for, were his Faith to be had merely by searching Scripture for it, with what sense ought he to be restrained, while he was in the Way to Faith: To restrain one who is in the right Way, is to hinder him from going right, or perhaps to put him out of his Way. Again, Tho' those Heretical Opinions were both against the true Sense of Scripture, and against Tradition too; yet, had he held Scripture the Rule, he should rather have said they were against the true signification of Scripture's Letter, than against the Faith of the Catholic Discipline. Besides, if Catholic Faith was to be explained before they came to handle Scripture, how was Scripture the Rule for all to come to Faith, when as Faith was to be had (nay, well understood by the Explanation of it) antecedently, lest they might otherwise fall into Heresy? And, in another place, speaking of a false Pointing of the Letter, made by the Arians, to abet their Heresy, he confutes them thus; * De Doct. Christ. l. 3. c. 1. (Sed hoc— But this is to be refuted by the Rule of Faith, by which we are instructed beforehand in the Equality of the Trinity. Had this Rule of Faith been held by him to be the Letter of Scripture, he would have had recourse to some exacter Copy, correcting their faulty one; and, so have born up still to that Rule: But 'tis evident he does not thus. He makes then the Sense of the Church or Tradition the Rule, both to know our Faith, and also to correct the faultiness of the Letter. Whether this suits better with the Drs. Principles or ours, is left to yourselves or any man of reason to judge and determine. §. 30. Thus comes off this famous Sermon which makes such a noise, for a Confutation of the Traditionary Doctrine. The Sum of it is, 1. The Dr. takes no notice of the main Question betwixt us, which is about the Absolute-Certainty that our Faith is Truly Christian or taught by Christ, nor attempts to show his is thus Certain; but Preaches to you Steadfastness and a well-setled Resolution to continue in it, yet avoids the giving you any Grounds to make you Steadfast and Well-setled in that resolution. 2. He conceals every Advantage Christian Tradition has, or is pretended to have; that is, he would persuade you to Hate it, before you See it, and to compare it to Scripture before you know what kind of thing it is; which is yet worse, he shows you another thing for It, and through all his Discourse pretends 'tis It, which is nothing at all to It, but utterly unlike It; viz. Particular Traditions, both before and after that Universal Tradition (only which we defend) was settled. 3. He fixes a false date upon the beginning of the Tradition we speak of, that the vast source of it, which (with the Circumstances annexed) was able to continue the Current strong, and the Derivation of Christ's Doctrine both Certain and Perpetual, might not be reflected on. To deform it the more, he makes it merely Verbal, as if it were nothing but the telling some dry story, by surpressing its Practicalness, in which consists its chiefest Virtue. 4. He hides from your consideration all the most Incomparable, and most Powerful Motives which enforce its Continuance, and oblige the Church never to forsake the first delivered Doctrine. 5. He never regards, even in those Particular Traditions, whether they failed the Persons, or the Persons failed Them; but supposes still the Tradition was in all the fault, without attempting to show it. 6. He would have you imagine the Church in the first Age (consisting of Pastors and People) lost all their Memory and Grace too, assoon as ever the Apostles were dead, lest it should be held Able and Willing to testify Christ's Doctrine to the Next Age, which by Parity would Establish it a Rule for all succeeding Ages to the End of the World. 7. He mingles known Opinions, and which he holds himself not to have been Universally delivered at first, with Points which we All hold to have been first delivered. Then, as to the Matter of Object of Tradition, which, and only which we pretend it is to bring down with absolute Certainty, and deliver Clearly (viz. the Dogmatical or Controverted Articles of Christian Faith, which are Practical) he never mentions it at all with any distinction, but tumbles and confounds it with all things imaginable for which it was never pretended; and puts upon Tradition a hundred abused tasks as never thought of by us, so improper, & oft times impossible in themselves; As, the deriving down the Ten Commandments, Creeds, Decrees of Councils, set Forms of Words, an Infinity of particular passages not at all Practical, nay, whole Epistles and Gospels, Schemes of Doctrine taught by Heathen Philosophers; Messages which use to be sent by long Letters; Historical Narrations or Actions; and in a word, every thing he could invent but the right one (viz. Those Controverted Points of Faith) tho' it lay just before him: the very nature of Controversy, which we are about, determining our Discourses to those Points, and nothing else: This is his General view of Scripture and Tradition, as to the way of conveying down matters of Faith. He means a General view, which misrepresents and blinds your sight of it in every Particular: In a Word, there is much of Reading, Conduct and Wit in his Sermon; but wholly misemployed to speak as handsomely as he could to no purpose, and to miss the whole Point in Question with a great deal of Plausibility. In which, amongst his other Great Abilities, justly acknowledged to be Excellent, consists his most considerable Talon and Dexterity. §. 31. So he ends his Sermon with good Advice to you to follow Christ's Heavenly Doctrine in your Lives and Conversations. Which, as he worthily presses upon you, so I shall heartily pray that God would vouchsafe you his Grace to follow it. I am far from blaming His or any one's Preaching the wholesome Moral Doctrines of Christianity, and laying it home to men's Consciences: But I ought not, if concerned, to suffer, that, when he pretends to speak to your Understandings, and establish you in Faith, he should bubble his Auditory with forty impertinent pretences, Injurious to his candid Adversaries and to Truth, as well as to yourselves; please and delude your Fancies with a great show of his Reading, and little conjectural Reflections tacked prettily together; and, in the mean time, send you away empty of knowing any Ground which may render you, or any, Absolutely Certain, that what you hold is indeed Christ's Doctrine; that is, any Ground of perfect security; that is, cannot but be indeed his Doctrine; without being which it ought not be held True. Whereas yet, 'tis only this Certainty which can give His or any other Sermon it's full force and Energy. Your Servant in Christ, J. S. Advertisement, The 2 d. & 3 d. Catholic Letters, are to be Sold by M. Turner at the Lamb in High-Holbourn. THE FIFTH Catholic Letter IN REPLY TO Dr. Stillingfleets (Pretended) ANSWER To About the Fortieth Part of I. S's Catholic Letters, Addressed to all Impartial Readers. By john Sergeant. Published with Allowance. London, Printed, and sold by Matthew Turner, at the Lamb in High-Holborn, 1688. THE PREFACE. Addressed to the most Partial of Dr. Stillingfleet's Friends. Gentlemen, WHen a Person is incomparably qualified above all others in any Particular; men use to look upon him as a Pattern in that Kind. I will not say Dr St. has manifested himself to be such an Exemplar in every respect that can be an Ingredient of an Ill Controvertist. This is yet to be shown; and Pretence without Proof signifies nothing: Only I may justly fear that, while you are reading my Reply to his Answer (as he calls it) to my Catholic Letters, you may be apt to judge that I am rather framing an Idea of what Human Weakness maintaining an insupportably-ill Cause may be obnoxious to, than giving a Just Character of his Performances; and that, 'tis Absolutely Impossible that a Man of his Parts should be Guilty of such and so many Incredible Failings. I acknowledge with all due Respect to him, his Great Endowments; and am heartily glad, in Truth's behalf, I am engaged with an Adversary to whom no Personal Insufficiency can be objected. Nothing could make the Victory come more Clear to the Cause I am defending; and the more Dr St. is raised above the Common Level of Writers, the more Evidently it will appear that nothing but the pure force of Truth could drive a man of his Abilities to such unparallelled Shifts and Subterfuges, to palliate that Error the Patronage of which he had so unfortunately espoused. Nor is it to be wondered at, that even the best Wit in the World should be baffled while it maintains such a Cause: For, were it some Error of an ordinary size that he defended, or were the Truth which he opposes of a trivial Importance, Rhetoric and misused Wit might perhaps bear it down, and gain a seeming Victory over it: but when the sole Point is, whether even what we all hold to have been the Faith taught by Christ, may for aught any man living knows, be perhaps none of his; and so, a Falsehood and a Lying Story; 'tis not to be imagined that any Tricks of Human Skill can prevail against a Point of that Sacred Concern. It belongs to the Wisdom of our Good God, to settle those things most firmly, which are of the greatest Weight; and therefore the Certainty we are to have that Christ was indeed the Author of the Faith we profess, being such an Incomparable Good, and the Basis of all our Spiritual Building, must be by far more unremovably established, and more surely placed above a tottering Contingency, than the strongest Pillars of this Material World; whence, all Attempts to undermine, and weaken this Certainty (which as shall be seen is the Chief Endeavour of Dr St.) must be proportionably Weak and Ruinous. To give you a Map of his main Performances taken from his Book in short, and proved upon him in this Reply. First, Whereas 'tis the Principal Duty of a Controvertist (especially, writing about the Grounds of Faith) to justify, that is to prove Faith to be True; the Dr is so far from doing, or allowing this good Office to be done to Faith, that he maintains the direct contrary. Nay, he will not grant so much honour to any Particular Point of Faith (and our Whole Faith is made up of such Particulars) as to let it enjoy even his own kind of Absolute Certainty, tho' that falls short of proving any thing to be above possibility of Falsehood or (which is the same) True; but says over and over in perfectly equivalent terms that the Sense which himself, or any man (or Church either) has of Scripture in particular Points, may not be the True Sense of it; that is, may not be Christ's Doctrine; which if it be not, it may not be True; And is it possible that what may not be True, can at the same time be True; that is, Is it possible that Truth may not be its self. Secondly, We are writing Controversy, and consequently treating of Faith precisely according to a particular consideration belonging to it, which is, by what way 'tis with Absolute Certainty derivable from Christ. This has been repeated and Echoed to him over and over even to Surfeit. This was the Scope and Occasion of the Conference. This is expressed in my Short Discourse against his way of having Certainty of Christ's Doctrine; and clearly aimed at in Mr G's Demonstration. Nay, this has been told him fifteen years ago in Error Nonplussed, p. 44. Where I in these plainest words thus Stated the Question. [It being then agreed amongst us all that what Christ and his Apostles taught is God's Word, or his Will, and the Means to Salvation; all that is to be done by us as to matters of Faith, is to know with Absolute Certainty what was the first-taught Doctrine, or Christ's Sense; and whatever can thus assure us of That, is deservedly called, The Rule of Faith.] Yet, tho' we should trumpet this into his Ears every moment, he is still Deaf, and never takes notice of it, or regards it in his whole Reply; Nay, he diverts from it with all the hast he can make, when our express words force him to it. To do this with the greater Formality and Solemnity, he Entitles his Book, [A Discourse concerning the Nature and Grounds of the Certainty of Faith.] Which Expression is so Large, that it leaves it Indifferent for him, under that Head, either to treat of Faith as 'tis in its self, viz. as 'tis Divine; or of Faith as 'tis Controverted between us; that is of our Faith as 'tis Ascertainable to us to be Christ's true Doctrine. And, that we may see this was done by Design, when he comes to determine the Sense of those Equivocal Words, he pitches upon that Meaning of them which is quite beside our purpose, and nothing at all to our Question: viz. upon Christ's Faith as 'tis Divine; which is not disputed but agreed to be such; and this, whether the Faith comes to our knowledge by Tradition attesting it; or by an Absolutely Certain Interpretation of Scripture; and the sole Question is, whether the Tradition of the Church or the Letter of Scripture interpreted by any Way his Principles afford us, be the more Certain and more Clear Way to give us Christ's Sense, or (which is the same) our Faith. How untoward a Procedure is it then, to stand quoting our School-Divines against me, whenas the Objects of Controversy and of School-Divinity are so vastly different: the one treating of Faith as made known to the World at first by Divinerevelation; the other, of the Way to know now what was at first Divinely revealed, by Human Motives inducing men to the Acceptation of it of for the same Doctrine. Hence, also, when he was to bring Arguments which should evince, by his Principles, that the Faith held now is the same that was revealed at first, to avoid that impossible task, he falls unseasonably to allege God's Grace and Invisible Moral Qualifications: Which, tho' absolutely requisite in many regards to Faith as 'tis formally Divine; yet are they most improper to be alleged in Controversy against an Adversary, for a Proof that what he holds is the first-taught Doctrine; since only God himself can know whether the Alledger or any man else has those Supernatural Means or no. To put a stop once for all to this impertinent Topick, and to show how he trifles while he quotes our School-Divines, I allege First, that the plain state of the Question lately given, which runs through our whole Controversy, has forestalled all he can object from them; unless he can show that they stated the Question, and treated of Faith under the same Consideration, as we do in our Controversy; which I am Certain he cannot instance in so much as any one of them: And in case they do not state it after the same manner we do in our Controversy, with what sense can it be pretended that I contradict Them, or They Me, whenas we do not speak of the same Point, and a Contradiction must be ad idem? Secondly, Our Divines bring Motives of Credibility to prove Christian Faith to be Divine and True; such as are Miracles, the Conversion of the World, the Sufferings of the Martyrs, etc. Very good▪ would Dr St. reply, these might prove the Faith professed in those times to be True: but you have altered that Faith since, and therefore you are to prove that the Faith you profess now is the same which was of old. So that, out of the very nature of our circumstances, This is the Only Point between us, and the main business of our Controversy about the Rule of Faith, or the Ground that can justify its Invariable Conveyance downwards; for, this being made out by us, all the rest is admitted. Thirdly, Hence both the Protestants and We agree, that That is to be called the Rule of Faith * Dr Tillotson's Rule of Faith. p. 6.7. by which the knowledge of Christ's Doctrine is conveyed certainly down to us at the distance of so many Ages from the time of its first Delivery. Does any of our School-Divines take the Words [Rule of Faith] in this Sense? Not one. They content themselves with what serves for their purpose, and call that a Rule of Faith which barely contains Faith. Fourthly, Our only Point being to know assuredly the former Faith by a Certain Conveyer, how must this be made out to those who are enquiring what is Christ's True Doctrine? Must we bid them rely on their Private Interpretations of Scripture? No surely; for this is the way Proper to all Heretics. Must we bring them the Public Interpretation of it by the Church? This might do the deed so we could manifest this by some Knowledges those Candidates are already possessed of, and did admit. Must we then, at the first dash, allege the Public Interpretation of the Church Divinely assisted? What effect can this have upon those who do not yet hold that Tenet; and, consequently, how can this be a Proper Argument to convince them? It remains then that we can only begin with their unelevated Reason, by alleging the Church's Human-Authority or Tradition (the most vast and best-qualifyed Testimony to convey down a notorious matter of Fact, of Infinite. Concern, that ever was since the World was Created) for a Certain Conveyer of Faith from the time that those Motives of Credibility, proving the then▪ Faith to be Divine, were on foot. And, if so, why not with the same labour, and for the same Reasons, to bring it down from the very Beginning of the Church? And if we must allege it, are we not obliged, as Disputants, to bring such Arguments, to prove that Authority Certain, as do conclude that Point? If they do not, what are they good for in a Controversy, or what signifies a Proof that Concludes nothing? This is the Sum of my Procedure and my Reasons for it in short; which are abundantly sufficient to show to any man of Sense, that, while the Doctor objects our School-Divines to one in my Circumstances, his hand is all the while in the wrong Box, as will more at large be shown hereafter. He might have seen cited by me in my P. 212. Clypeus Septemplex, two Writers of great Eminency, viz. Father Fisher, the most Learned Controvertist of his Age here in England; and a Modern Author, Dominicus de Sancta Trinitate, whose Book was Printed at Rome itself, and appproved by the Magister Sacri Palatii, who (to omit divers others) do abet each particular Branch of my Doctrine; which renders insignificant all his pretence of my Singularity, and my Opposition to the Catholic Controvertists. But to leave off this necessary Digression and proceed. As our Doctor has shuffled off the whole Question by taking the word [Faith] as treated of by us, in a wrong Sense, so he behaves himself as ill in every particular of the rest of his Title; viz. in his discoursing of his pretended [Certainty] of Faith, and of the [Nature] and the [Grounds] of it. He cannot be won to give us any Account how his Grounds Influence the Points of Faith with the Absolute Certainty he pretended. And as for the Certainty itself, (the only word of his Title that is left) he never shows how any one Article (even though it be most Fundamental) is absolutely secured from being False or Heretical, by any Rule, Ground or Way he assigns us. Nor can I imagine any thing could tempt him to so strange Extravagances, but the straight he was in, being put to show his Faith Absolutely Certain; and his Despondency ever to perform an Undertaking, which he foresaw was, by his shallow Principles, impossible to be achieved. And hence he was necessitated to all these crafty Shifts, and Wiles, and all those Unsound Methods which, like so many complicated Diseases, affect his languishing Discourse and dying Cause; as shall be laid open in the Progress of this Discourse, and, particularly, in the Concluding Section. I shall only instance at present in two or three Material ones, which, like the Grain in wood, run through his whole Work. For Example: When any Question is propounded which grows too troublesome, he never pursues that Game but flushes up another, and flies at that, till the true Point be out of sight. Tell him our Point is whether the High Mysteries and other Spiritual Articles of Faith be Clear in Scripture; he will never answer directly, but runs to Points necessary to Salvation. Ask him if the Tenet of Christ's Godhead be necessary to Salvation; no direct Answer can we get to that neither, tho' it be the very Point we instanced in. Press him that there are no Unnecessary Points; and, therefore, that All are Necessary for the Generality of the Church, he cries Alas for me! but answers nothing. Ask him what Points he accounts Necessary? He is perfectly mute: Till at length he shuffles about so, that the true Question which is about a Rule of Faith, comes to be changed into a Rule of Manners; and those High Spiritual Points which are most properly Christian, and could only be known to the World by Divine Revelation, are thrown aside; and Moral ones put in their place, which were known to many even of the Heathen Writers. And this is the best Sense I can pick out of a man who affects to wrap up those Tenets of his, and their Consequences, which he thinks would not be for his Credit to discover, in Mysterious Reserves. The like Shuffling he uses in the Notion of Certainty, or any other that is of Concern in our present Dispute; for he is a very Impartial man, and treats them All alike. Ask him then, If Faith be Absolutely Certain by his Grounds? He will not say it, but more than once hints the contrary. Are the Grounds of it at least Absolutely Certain, tho' he makes them such ill-natured things that (contrary to all other Grounds in the world) they keep their Absolute Certainty to themselves, and will let Faith have none of it? Yes; he'll tell you they are; provided that by Absolute Certainty you will mean such a Certainty as will permit those Grounds may be False, and Faith built upon them much more: for we are to know 'tis a Maxim with him that the Absolute Certainty he allows his Grounds is possible to be False, and he allows a less degree of Certainty to Particular Points than to his Grounds, so that Faith may much more easily be False than his Grounds may, though they may be False too. And all this out of an Antipathy I suppose, to Infallibility, because the abominable Papists own it; as if Mankind did not use to say they are Infallibly Certain of some things before the Papists were born. What then is this Absolute Certainty? Is it merely built on his Apprehension or Thinking it so? No, but upon such an Evidence as the Thing is capable of. Very good. Is any thing in the world capable to be known? 'Tis a strange Paradox to deny it; and yet if he grants it he cannot escape meeting with this bugbear Infallibility: For, if the Knowledge (as it is) be as the Thing is, and the Thing be Infallibly as itself is, the Knowledge is Infallibly as the Thing is. Here Gentlemen you may expect he will turn it off with some scornful Irony, for he never in his life answered any such pressing Reason any other way. But the Argument will not be laughed out of Countenance; and therefore if Infallibility must be allowed, he is to show us what harm would come to Faith if the Previous Grounds of it, as to our Knowledge, were thus Certain? None at all. But then, alas! his Credit and his Cause will go to wrack; for no show or shadow of any such Argument can his superficial Principles allow us: and therefore no Absolute Certainty will he yield to the Grounds to know Christ's Faith, but such a one as permits all Mankind may be deceived in them, and much more in knowing what is his Doctrine itself after we have those Grounds: For Absolute Certainty shall not mean Infallibility, let us say and prove what we will. However I'll venture to ask him once more; Since (as he says) the Thing, notwithstanding the Absolute Certainty we have of its being True, may yet be False, let us suppose (as 'tis not impossible, there being some degree of Contingency in it) that it happens to be False; Can he in that Case have Absolute Certainty that a Falsehood is True? Here it goes hard with him, nor can all his old Heathen Philosophers, he so oft recurrs to, in the least help him out. He has but one Refuge that I know of to sly to; and that is to use some trick to shuffle away from Absolute Certainty, and say that he meant by it Sufficient Certainty, and That he'll stick to when all his new notions fail him. For Absolute Certainty he was unluckily forced upon by Mr G. tho' he had no acquaintance with it, or friendship for it; but his Inclination and Heart was for Sufficient Certainty. And good reason, for in the Sanctuary of that Common Word he's as safe as in an Enchanted Castle. Those scurvy Particularising Expressions are Tell-tales, and by their Lavishness are apt to discover Sense or Nonsense; but This keeps aloof, and by signifying nothing at all determinately, is past the reach of any Confute. But if you tell him 'tis a Relative word, and put him upon proving that his possibly-False Certainty is Sufficient to conclude it to be True, that any Point of his Faith is the same that our Divine Master taught the World, he'll no more hear or mind you than he did me when I alleged that a Rule and Ground were Relative words too; and, therefore, must communicate their Certainty to all the Particular Points they relate to. And, if you continue to press him hard with such Cramp-questions, he'll tell you he's not at leisure, having his foot in the stirrup to take a long journey as far as Trent: So being Bankrupt of Reason, he withdraws his Effects thence to Trade more fortunately (as he hopes) in Citations; and finding himself beaten at Tradition he gets Letters of Reprisal from his new Logic to revenge himself on us in combating the Tridentin Council; To which he will receive an Answer when he first shows us that he stood firm in his own Principles at home, ere he took such a leap beyond Sea; and Satisfies the World how it is possible that a man who confesses he has no Absolute Certainty of Christian Faith, can be sufficiently qualified either to prove any Tenet of his own, or disprove any Tenet of others to be truly Christian. In a word, his chief Art is to Cloak his Arts, and he is a great Master at it. His Aim is to make his Discourses run plausibly, whatever it costs his Credit: which he hopes is so great now with the Inferior Clergy, that, let him be as Prodigal of it as he will, it can never be exhausted. The telling of his tale smoothly will take much with those Readers who dwell in the middle story: But strip his Discourse of all those needful Ornaments and Assistances, and 'tis plain impertinent Nonsense in cuerpo. For, not any thing like a solid Ground is found in his whole Book: The Manufacture and Contrivance of it is all in all. It may perhaps be thought by some that I am too downright with him in divers of my Expressions; but I desire them to consider that I do not use him half so rudely as some of the Church of England have done; and besides, that in doing that little I did, I do but write after his own Copy; and fall very short too of imitating him, as appears by his Angry Viper, venomous froth, Gall, Spleen, Folly, Malice, etc. His Faults are Great, and Many; and must I not Name them when I am obliged to lay them open? If I must, the very Names we give to Great Faults will be Harsh words, let me do what I can. Yet I have moderated them as much as the sense of what I owed to Christian Faith would give me leave. Besides as my Genius leads me to carry it friendly with unpretended Honesty tho' Erring; so it inclines me to show less respect to a man, who as I see plainly by a constant Experience, has none at all for Truth, but practices and pursues all over Studied Insincerity. I have one Request, or rather a fair Offer to make the Dr. which is, that, since it is so mortifying to a man who, (as appears by all his former Writings) aims to reduce Truth to Evidence and Principles, to be still tasked in laying open such multitudes of his Shifts and Prevarications▪ (For I do think in my Conscience I have not either in this Preface, or my following Book even hinted a quarter of them) he would condescend that we may each of us choose two worthy Gentlemen; who, leaving out the Question of Right, may examine only matter of Fact, viz. which of us uses Indirect Tricks and Stratagems to avoid the force of Truth, and which of us candidly pursues it; and let them after a mutual protestation upon their Honours, that they will pass an Impartial Verdict, give under their Hands the particulars in which each of us have notoriously failed or faltered: I mean that such Faults, whether of Commission or Omission, should be noted as may appear to be wilfully disingenuous or affectedly Insincere, and not merely Humane Oversights. This fair and Equal Offer, Gentlemen, will exceedingly conduce to your and all our Readers Satisfaction; and Dr St's accepting it is the only way to do right to his Credit, which stands impeached of using such unworthy Methods: And your pressing him to it, will be both a justification of your Friendship and Esteem for him, and be also received as a very great favour by Your Friend and Servant in Christ, J. S. ERRATA. PAge 8. r. unconsonantly. P. 23. l. 15. nor did. p. 28. l. 2. of the Approvers. p. 36. l. 34. can be competent. p. 64. l. 22. thence embrace. p. 68 l. 21. C●rinthians. p. 70. l. 27. disparate. p. 101. l. 33. may as much. p. 102. l. 1. them not to. p. 106. l. 29.30. is got. p. 108. l. 1. not at all. p. 112. l. 1. so plain and easy. p. 115. l. 13. recur to. Ibid l. ult. Censures. p. 127. l. 3●. any Decree. p. 12●. l. 13.14. may seem. p. 140. l. 2. following it, then. p. 150. l. 18. Argument good. p. 152. l. 23. stand yet in. p. 156. l. 19 showing it. p. 166. l. 7. of my words. p. 169. (in the Margin) See above. p. 126. Introduction. 1. IN his Preamble Dr. St. according to his usual way of confuting, quarrels every word he meets with, and gives every circumstance an invidious turn. This looks brisk; but how weak and flat he is in his Arguments shall be seen hereafter. In the mean time the dimmest Eye may discern how Impertinent this is to our Dispute, and to the Certainty of his Grounds of Faith, nay to his own Title-page. I am sorry to see him so much out of humour, as to run against, and strike at every thing near him, tho' it lay not in his way. But sinking men, when their case is desperate, must catch at straws having no firmer support at hand to keep them from drowning. First, P. 1. He wonders why Mr. G. did not defend his own cause himself. He was at that very time called upon to attend his Majesty's Service; and it was a Duty owing to Truth and our Sovereign, as well as Charity and Friendship to him, that some body should step in to supply for him. 2 lie, Why must J. S. be the man? Because it was desired of him; and, he was besides pressed to it by many Judicious Persons; as one who had, in their Opinion, and by the Dr's own tacit Confession by his silence for 15 years, unanswerably overthrown his Principles in Error Nonplussed; and, besides, he was injured, provoked, and in a manner Challenged by him in his Second Letter, by his quoting and abetting Haeresis Blacloana, which was writ designedly against Him; and by pretending the way of Controversy he followed, was Pelagainism. Now it belonged properly to I. S. to clear this by his own Pen; and (whatever the Dr's Intention was) I am to thank him he has put a force upon me to Vindicate myself in English, which I have done in * Clypeus Septemplex & Vindiciae. two Latin Treatises above ten years ago, to the Satisfaction of my Judges and Superiors, and the farther Illustration and Abetment of what I had written in my former Books. 3 lie, P. 2. He quarrels the Titles of my Catholic Letters, and that no one Church of the Christian World ever owned it. And does he in his great Learning think the Church is to Own, or prescribe every one their particular Methods of handling Controversy? All she is to do is to deliver to us Christ's Doctrine; and then leave it to the Learning of her Controvertists to take such Methods to defend it as best suits with their Circumstances, and the Exigencies of the Persons they are to treat with. Are all the * See Error Nonplussed. Principles Dr. St. laid? Is all his Discourse at the Conference with Mr. G? Is his avowed Position, that every Sober Enquirer may without the Churches help find out all necessary Points of Faith, owned by any one Catholic Church? I know not what that Great Conventicle of Geneva may do, or what the new one that is now erecting here by the * Dr. Burnet, Dr. Tillotson. and Dr. Stillingfleet. Triumvirate of the Church of England's Reformers, mentioned in the scurrilous Reply to the Bishop of Oxford, may do in time, when they have brought about their Projects; but I am confident he shall never find any one Catholic Church that ever owned divers of his Principles and that Position. 4 lie, But why did I not call those Letters [Roman-Catholick] but [Catholic.] He tells the Reader with much assuredness I durst not do so, because I had not forgotten how hardly I had lately escaped Censure at Rome. Now, another man whose Reason was free and undisturbed, would think I should rather have done this, in Gratitude to their allowing and accepting my Defence upon such honourable terms as a kind Admonition, that mindful of the Apostles words, Rom. 2.14 [I am a Debtor both to the Greeks and to the Barbarians, both to the Wise and to the Unwise,] I would explain myself as to some passages, which were * Aliquantulum obscura. somewhat obscure from the * Ob ●quivationem utriufque Evidentiae. ambiguity of a word. My true reason, if he will needs have it, was, because Dr. St's private-spirited Rule was Common to all Heretics; and the Rule I defended was quite opposite to it, and therefore Catholic; and this, even in the sense of many Eminent Protestants, who pretend to Universal Tradition as the Rule, to ascertain their Interpretations of Scripture; to whom the name of [Roman] is not so agreeable. 2. The Dr. will still be leaving the roadway of the Question, tho' (which I am sorry to see) he runs himself into the Briars most woefully. So he tells the Reader I ought to have let him alone, and not have writ against him, P. 3. because I have done next to nothing for myself, and seem to have forgotten the Answer to my Sure-footing, meaning Dr. Tillotson's Rule of Faith. Yes, quite forgotten it without doubt! About two Months after that Answer came out, I published my Letter of Thanks. In which I laid open how he had mistaken still the main point in Controversy; how he had wilfully perverted my Sense all along, and falsified my Words in many places; nay, inserted some of his own, and then impugned what himself had disingenuously added; I defended my Testimonies, and replied to the most concerning passages. Then, observing that his whole Answer proceeded on a False Ground, viz. That there was no Rule of Faith but what left it under the Scandalous ignominy of being perhaps False, that is, indeed no Rule at all; therefore to stubb-up his shallow-rooted work from its Foundations, I writ another Treatise [Faith Uindicated] in which I demonstrated from many Heads that * Introduction to Faith Vindication. the Motives as laid in Second Causes by God's Providence to light Mankind in their way to Faith, or the (Rule of Faith, (and consequently Faith itself, in what it depends on that Rule, that is, as to us,) must be Impossible to be false; and * Faith Vindicated. P. 167 to the End. applied it home against Dr St. and Dr. Tillotson at the End of that Treatise; and thence showed that his Book could have no just claim to any farther Answer, and that the branches must necessarily be held Withered and Sapless when the Root was once shown to be rotten. Nor content with this, I followed on my blow and penned a short discourse, entitled The Method to arrive at Satisfaction in Religion; comprising, in short, the strength of Sure footing; and reduced each branch of it to Self-Evident Propositions, which force Humane Nature to assent to their Verity. Farther it was not possible to go. Yet all this, my candid Adversaries, who must not acknowledge it for fear of giving under their hands they owe a Debt they can never pay, slubber over with assuring their Readers, I have done next to nothing in my own Defence. It seems that to talk triflingly is with them to do All; and Principles and clearest Evidences, are either Nothing at all, or next to it. 3. What Reply made Dr. Tillotson? Why, he had a mind to print his Sermons; and, knowing his Auditory were his best-inclined Friends, in a Preface (forsooth) to them, he gives a slight touch at each of those Treatises. He endeavours to clear himself of Two of his many Insincerities, and (oh wonderful!) with about a dozen jests quite confutes Three Books. I would not let him rest so, nor enjoy even this empty vapour; but gave a full and distinct Reply to his Preface in Reason against Raillery. I instructed his shallow Logic, utterly unacquainted with the First Principles of our Understanding, with which Nature imbues even the rudest. I proved against him evidently those few of his many faults of which he had laboured to purge himself. I laid open the Folly and Weakness of his First Principle; and accused him severely of making both Christian Faith and the Tenet of a Deity uncertain; and this by virtue of that very First Principle of his: And, out of my zeal for such dear concerns, I charged home upon him those two shameful Tenets by many Arguments. Since which time he has not replied a word, but has sat very contentedly under that heaviest Scandal full fifteen Years; and now he stands indebted to me for an Answer to all those Treatises. And I have been so civil a Creditor as not once to call upon him severely for such considerable Arrears, till Dr. St. would needs have me to be his Debtor, and so obliged me to make up the Accounts between us. Now, to have done all this, is, if a man of Dr. St's Sincerity may be trusted, to do next to nothing, and not to have defended myself. 4. But since he will have it so, let's see what Dr. St. himself, who objects this, has done to defend Himself. He undertook to write Principles for his Protestant Religion. I showed in * From pa. 212. to the End. Error Nonplussed he had not laid one for that particular end. I manifested that he was guilty of the most weak piece of Illogical procedure that ever mortal man stumbled upon; by making almost all his Conclusions to be Self-Evident and beyond needing any Proof; and his Principles which should prove them, and so ought to be clearer than they, Obscure or False. * Error Nonplussed. p. 236. I showed the Grounds of his Discourse to be plain Contradictions and some of his pretended Principles to lead directly to * Ibid. p. 123.124. Phanaticism. And yet he has quietly endured his Doctrine, concerning the Grounds of his Faith to be stigmatised for Erroneous, and himself declared Nonplussed; nay he has had the phlegm to see himself exposed in Capital Letters in the Title-Page of that Book for a Man of No Principles; and yet has born it with Invincible and Heroical Patience full fifteen Years: Which yet I had not so particularly insisted on at this time, had he not so utterly forgot himself, as to charge me to have done next to nothing in my own defence, when I had so manifestly baffled and put to silence, (those who have most reason to pardon my glorying) Dr. Tillotson and Himself. He'll pretend I owe him an Answer to an Appendix of his: the main of which is answered in Faith Vindicated, where its Grounds are subverted; and, if any thing, besides the Raillery, remains unspoken to in Error Nonplussed, when he pays me my Hundred Pound, I will reckon with him for his Brass Shilling. So much difference in just value Principles ought to have above a loose Discourse made up of mere misrepresentations and Drollery. In the mean time, it were not amiss to give the Reader an Instance how he quite misses the business we are about, in that Appendix; which, I conceive, is the most solid way of confuting the whole. * App. to the Rule of Faith. p. 82. [If Mr. S. (says he) would have undertaken to have told us who they were that first peopled America, and from what place they came, by the Tradition of the present Inhabitants; and what famous actions had been done there in former Ages; we might have thought indeed, that sole Tradition had been a very safe way to convey matters of Fact from one Age to another.] By which we see he both forgets that the Tradition we speak of is Practical, and waves all the Obligations and Motives to continue the memory of Christ's Doctrine; which are the greatest God himself could impose, or Man's nature is capable of. He should have shown us that those Inhabitants of America, had some Constant and Obligatory Practices and Solemnities, Commemorating their coming from another Nation, or their former Great Actions (of the same kind the Children of Israel had of their deliverance out of Egypt) and then he might draw thence some show of an Objection. And yet, even then, it would fall short of a Parallel to the force of Christian Tradition; unless the Matters to be conveyed were of Equal Concern, and the Obligations to propagate them, Equally forcible and binding. I shall propose to him an Instance of the force of Our Tradition, and than ask his judgement of it. Suppose the Anniversary of the Powder-Plot should be kept on foot, by Ringing of Bells, Bonfires, Squibbs, and spiteful Preaching against All Catholics indifferently, and their very Religion itself, as guilty of that Villainous Treason; I would know of him whether the Memory of it, tho' kept alive by this Practical Solemnity but once a year, would not be perpetuated for thousands of Generations, or how it should ever be forgot? If (as I am sure he must) he grants it; he must grant withal that the Tradition of Christ's Doctrine, which had a source incomparably larger, and was of the highest Concern to every particular Person not to desert it, but to hold to it, practice & live according to it Daily, & propagate it to others, must be in a manner infinitely stronger. For, sure, he will not say that the Hatred against the Papists, which, I fear, is the main Motive to continue the other, is a more powerful Cause to effect this, than all the Motives laid by God, and the Care of the Salvation of themselves and their Posterity was for the Body of the Church to perpetuate a Doctrine that came from Heaven. In a word, this one Instance is enough to show evidently that he either grossly mistakes, or wilfully perverts in that Appendix the whole Subject about which we are there discoursing. And is such a slight piece, or such a man worth answering, were it not for the Repute he has got, not for writing for the Church of England, but for his Hatred and Scribbling against the Papists? Since this one Error is so Fundamental that it must needs influence all that Discourse of his as far as 'tis Serious, or pretends to Solidity; and, so, leaves nothing to be replied to but wilily Shuffles and airy Trifles, which are Frivolous in themselves, and (in his Writings) Endless. SECT. I. The Author of the Catholic Letters cleared from Dr. St.'s borrowed Calumnies. 5. HAving behaved himself thus unfortunately to himself and his Friends ever since he came upon the Stage, Dr. St. comes to settle his Method, which he says, he thinks is most Natural and Effectual to proceed in, in handling the main Subject of our Debate about the Nature and Grounds of the Certainty of Faith. It consists of Four Heads: and I shall follow my Leader, he being such a Master of Method, and take them as they lie. The First is, To show how unfit J. S. is of all men to undertake this Cause, who contradicts himself as occasion serves. Certainly, this man has a Method as well as a Logic peculiar to himself. Does it follow so Naturally that Faith needs no Higher Grounds of Certainty, because J. S. writes unconstantly? Or, does he prove so Effectually he has shown his Grounds do allow Faith, as 'tis controverted between us, the Certainty due to its Nature, because I write weakly. But, the truth is, his Method is to avoid all Method; and to wriggle in twenty Impertinent and Invidious things, to make a show of having said a great deal, tho' to no purpose: and to raise as much Dust as he can, that he may run away from the business we are about, and hide himself in the Mist. But is he sure that I. S. contradicts himself? Impartial men will doubt it, when they shall know, that both those few pretended contradictions he has borrowed out of Lominus and many more were objected and earnestly pressed against me in a far-distant Tribunal; where myself was unknown, and had few or rather no Friends, but what my Cause & Defences gave me: That they were discussed by those strictest Judges and compared with my Answers, and yet not so much as the least check given me, or any Correction of my Books, even in the least tittle, was ordered; though this be a thing not unusual in such cases: That the business already transiit in rem judicatam; and that the Satisfaction I gave then to Superiors, who could have no imaginable reason to be favourable to me, to the prejudice of Catholic Doctrine, is an abundant clearing of the Soundness of my Writings, and the Sincerity of my Defences. It would, I say, be enough to do this, and then leave the Doctor's malice to the Censure of all Ingenuous Persons, for objecting anew things of which I was about Eleven years ago, so authentiquely acquitted. But alas! his Method, which obliged him to speak to the true Point as little as he could for shame, and to fill up an empty figure of an Answer with as many Impertinencies as he could well hook in, led him so directly to it, that he could not for his heart avoid it. Should he object Murder or any other heinous Crime to a pretended Malefactor, already cleared of it by his Proper Judges and the Court, every honest man would admire at his folly; but all's meritorious with his Party against the Papists. Tho', I say, this be sufficient for my Vindication; yet because those * Clypeus Septemplex & Vindiciae. Defences of mine were in Latin, and the clearing this Point conduces very much to the shortening and illustrating my future Answer, I shall repeat here some few particulars of many which are found there at large. And First, I shall put some notes to give a clear Light of this business. Next I shall show his Shallowness and Insincerity in what he objects. Thirdly, I will put down the most Authentic Approbations of my Books by the Testimony of Learned Men of all sorts, and beyond all Exception; and then reflect on his Imprudence in making such an objection. 6. For the First, I lay these Notes. 1. That School-Divines discourse of Faith under another Notion or Consideration than Controvertists do. The former treat of it as 'tis a Theological Virtue, and the Material Objects of it, as revealed by a Testimony formally Divine: And they prove it to be such by alleging the Miracles done to attest it; the wonderful Conversion of the World by it, and the admirable Effects issuing from it; as the Sanctity of its Professors that live up to it, the Heroic Sufferings of Martyrs, etc. And, because 'tis a Supernatural Virtue, and, so, depends on God's Supernatural Influence as much as Natural Effects do on His Power as Author of Nature; hence, they consider it as introduced by Supernatural Dispositions inclining men to it, and God's Heavenly Grace making them embrace it and adhere to it constantly. On the other side, Controvertists, particularly We in our Modern Controversies, being to argue against those who admit whatever was taught by Christ to be Divine, cannot possibly have the least occasion to treat of it as 'tis such, or use any of the former Arguments that are apt to prove it such; but accommodate our Discourses precisely to make out what those men deny; that is, the Grounds by which we come to know assuredly that these or those Points were taught by Christ. Much less do we consider Faith as it depends on the Workings of God's Holy Spirit, illuminating Interiorly the Souls of the Faithful, and fixing them in their Faith; these being Invisible and so Impossible to be brought into Arguments, or produced against an Adversary in our Controversial Disputes. 2. That 'tis evident that in all my Books I am writing Controversies; and, consequently, writing of Faith precisely as 'tis controverted between me and my Opposers: Which manifestly evinces that I treat of it under none of those Considerations School-Divines do; in regard none of my Adversaries, (at least professedly) deny it to be Divine, or that God's Grace is requisite to it. Nor can any man show so much as One Argument in all my Books that looks that way. 3. That, since 'tis manifest beyond all Cavil that we are writing Controversy, and consequently treating of Faith precisely as 'tis Controverted; and there are but Two Points that can be controverted in relation to the Evincing or Defending the Truth of Christian Faith: The one, that what Christ taught was Divine; the other, that Christ taught what we now believe; the Former of which being granted by all the Deserters of the Church, and therefore cannot possibly need to be Proved by Me, or any in my Circumstances; it follows evidently that the later Point is only that which can be debated between me and my Adversaries; that is, we are only to treat of Faith as it stands under that Abstraction or Consideration; that is, as it stands under some certain Rule, securing us that it was taught by Christ; It being agreed on all hands, that, if he taught it, it Is Divine. 4. That tho' this and no other can with any sense be our Task, yet 'tis tedious to stand repeating at every turn this Abstracted Acception of Faith, as 'tis found or treated in our Controversies, or reiterating still this reduplication [as taught by Christ;] but 'tis enough to have expressed it at first in Prefaces, and the State of the Question, and afterwards upon occasion in many signal passages, which I did very punctually, as appears by my * See Clypeus Septemplex from. p. 151. to 194. Defences, where I instanced in Sixty three several places: I might say, I did it in whole Books, where I spoke in short, as is seen in my * Declaration p. 43. Method; in which very small Treatise 'tis inculcated above twenty times. Whence, wherever I use the single word [Faith] it must necessarily mean Faith as Controverted, or, according to what is Controverted between us. Such a solicitous Repetition would argue a distrust in me, that my Readers wanted Common Sense; who could not reflect on what was in hand, or keep a heedful eye upon what was at first, and once for all declared and signally expressed in those remarkable places. Lastly, That my treating of what Motives or Rule Christian Faith must have in itself, or in its own nature to make good its Truth, (which is Essential to it) as I did particularly in Faith Vindicated, does not exceed the bounds of Controversy, or treat of Faith as 'tis a Theological Virtue, or in any Consideration relating to it as such: for I still express myself over and over in the Introduction to speak of its Rule, or of Faith, as provable by its Rule; and tho' I do not there apply it against any Adversary, yet in the Inferences at the End I do this against Dr. Tillotson and Himself, without any Reply for these Fifteen years: Nor, have they any Possible way to come off, but either, by answering Faith Vindicated, and showing there needs no Absolutely Certain Rule to secure us of our having Christian Faith; or, by showing that they have some Rule Absolutely securing those from Error who rely on it. The same Introduction, and the same Answer serves to show how Moral Certainty of the Infallibility of this Rule is, and how it is not sufficient. For I declare myself * Faith Vindicated Introduction. p. 18. there to speak of the Nature of those Motives (or Rule) in themselves and as laid in Second Causes by God's Providence to light Mankind in their way to Faith; to which the dimness of Eyesight, neglect to look at all, or looking the wrong way, even in many particular men, is Extrinsical and Contingent. Moral Evidence then of the Rule of Faith's Certainty, nay, even less, may serve many particular men; for they are still secured from Error, by adhering to what such a Rule delivers, tho' they penetrate not the Grounds of its Certainty; with which it well consists that that Rule as laid by God to light or satisfy all Mankind, who are in their way to Faith, must be in itself more than Morally Certain, or must be impossible to be False; otherwise it could not perfectly satisfy acute Scholars that what it abets is True; nor enable Pastors and Learned men to defend the Truth of Faith as far as it depends on that Rule; nor Secure any man, Learned or Unlearned, from Erring in Faith; whereas, by being thus Absolutely Certain, it secures every man, tho' never so weak, from Error while he follows it, and preserves inviolable the Truth of Faith itself. 7. This last Note fully answers his first pretended Contradiction, P. 7. that my Chief End in that Treatise (viz. Faith Vindicated) was to settle Christian Faith, and yet that I speak not of Faith in itself, but as it it controverted. For I no where meddle with Faith in itself, or as it is a Theological Virtue as School-Divines do, but merely in order to my Opposers. With which may well consist, that I may write a Book to settle Christian Faith by showing it must have a Certain Rule, before I apply it against my Adversaries, by showing they have no such Rule, and so no Certainty of their Faith; as I did against Himself and Dr. T. at the End of that Book, and do peremptorily Challenge them to clear themselves of those Inferences, and prove themselves to be Holder's of Christ's Doctrine or Christians. An Instance will show how weak this Cavil is. A Scrivener makes a Pen; and his Primary Intention, considering him, as he is doing that Action, is that the Pen should be a good one; and his writing taking him precisely as a Pen-maker was Secondary and Occasional. And yet writing was for all that his Primary Intention as he was a Scrivener. Thus it past with me. My Main, Primary, and (if he will) precise End in that Treatise was to settle Christian Faith, by demonstrating it was to have a sure Foundation: and in this was terminated the particular design of that Book. Now, the doing this was apt to exclude all pretenders to Christianity, who had no such Grounds; but I did not this, till I had ended the Treatise, nor stood applying my Discourses, or striking my Opposer just then with the Weapon I was but a making. Which yet hinders not but the Primary End of writing that whole Treatise was in Order to my Opposers, tho' a little more remotely; and this is so Evident by my Inferences at the End, that none but a Caviller, enraged that he could not answer them, would have made such an Objection. P. 8. 8. Hence his Second, which Equivocates in the word [Objects] is frivolous. For I no where treat of the Objects or Mysteries of Faith in themselves, or say the Connexion of their Terms must be Evident; but only that the Certainty of the Humane Authority of the Church, which I make our Rule, to know they were taught by Christ, must be proved from the Objects or things without us, viz. the Nature of Mankind, and the Nature of the Motives laid to perpetuate Christ's Doctrine. And I wonder at his Insincerity to allege this: when I had particularly forestalled it in my Introduction (p. 18.) and declared there once for all, that in the following Treatise I only spoke of the Motives to light Mankind in their way to Faith; Does he think the Mysteries of Faith are the Way to Faith? Or can he pretend that the State of the Question, expressed so carefully beforehand in a Preface to signify my meaning throughout the whole Treatise following, is totally to be set aside and neglected; and that only single words picked out, where for brevity's sake I did not constantly repeat it, are to give my true Sense? What impertinent Brabbling is this? Again, p. 16.17. I no less punctually declare that I * Introduction to Faith Vindicated. p. 16.17. only treat of the Objects or Points of Faith, as their Truth depends on those Motives or Rule of Faith. Yet all will not do to a man bend upon Cavil. 9 My last Note, towards the End, let's him see clearly when, to whom, and how, P. 9 Infallible Assent is requisite and not requisite. And I had forestalled this too before in an Elaborate Discourse from p. 131. to p. 158. in Error Nonplussed; where I showed that since Faith must be True, and not possible to be a Lie, therefore all who have true Faith must be out of capacity of being in an Error, or must be in some manner Infallible. That it was enough simply to have Faith, that they be Materially Infallible, or not capable of being in an Error, by relying on a Ground that cannot deceive them (such as is the Testimony of God's Church) tho' they see not how it must be so. Nay, that this is absolutely sufficient for * Error Nonplussed. p. 148. All who are coming to Faith; provided they do not happen to doubt that their Reasons for the Church's Infallibility are Inconclusive; and, so, be apt to remain unsatisfied; or, are not bound to maintain the Truth of Faith against Opposers; in which case they are to be able to see and prove the Conclusiveness of their Grounds from some Certain Principle; which I call there to be Formally Infallible. This and much more is laid out there at large; which prevents most of his Objections here. But no notice takes the good Dr. of it. It was, it seems, too great a Mortification to him, to peruse a Book, which he was highly Concerned to answer, and knew he could not. 10. His Fourth Contradiction is solved in three lines. P. 10. I treated of the Humane Authority of the Church (the Rule of Faith) which was Extrinsical to Faith as 'tis a Theological Virtue or Divine. Yet it being an Extrinsical Argument as all Testimony is, I therefore went about to prove its force from Intrinsical Mediums, fetched from the Natures of the Things; viz. Man's Nature, and the Nature of the Motives. Nor can the Certainty of Witnessing Authority be proved otherwise. 11. His Fifth is cleared by my first four Notes; which show that I spoke of Faith, P. 11. which was by the Confession of both Parties Divine and Supernatural, and for that reason called so by me; but did not treat of it as thus qualified, or go about to prove it Divine; but proved its Truth merely as it depended on Humane Faith previous to it; and so, did only formally treat of that Humane Faith itself, on which the Knowledge of Divine Faith leans, and by which those coming to Divine Faith are raised up to it. Yet what hideous Outcries the Dr. makes here, that by my Doctrine we are to seek for the Certainty of Faith formally Divine; That I make Divine and Supernatural Faith derive its Certainty from Natural Infallibility, etc. Tho' he knows as well as that he lives that we make Faith as Formally Divine derive its Certainty from the Divine Authority testified to us by Miracles; That this Establishment of Divine Faith by Supernatural means is presupposed to our Question and granted by both sides; and that our only Point is how we may know certainly what was this Divine Faith thus ascertained at first. Whoever reads Third Catholic Letter. p. 23.24. will admire with what face he could object these falsehoods, or counterfeit an Ignorance of what has been so often and so clearly told him; and which he had seen so particularly answered in my Defences: But this is his usual Sincerity. 'Tis pretty to observe into what a monstrous piece of Nonsense our Dr. has fallen here: and how because I argue from Supernatural Faith, he thinks I am arguing for it or proving it. Whereas common sense tells every man who has not laid it aside, that he who argues from another thing, supposes that other thing, and, so cannot possibly, while he does so, go about to prove it, or treat of it. But it seems For and From are the same with his great Reason, and not possible to be distinguished. He might have seen other * Faith Vindicated. Object. 6. p. 149. Arguments drawn from the Supernaturality of Faith, to prove that the Rule which is to light intelligent men, who are Unbelievers, to Faith, must be more then Morally Certain. But he thought best to choose the worst; and, while he objected that too, mistook [From] for [For;] that is, the Premises for the Conclusion, and the Cart for the Horse. 12. His Sixth Exception, if pertinent, P. 12. amounts to this. I.S. did not prove any point Divine and Supernatural, therefore Dr. St. needs prove no point of Faith he holds to be truly derived from Christ: A fair riddance of his whole Task! For the rest; We do not desire him to prove by his Rule one determinate point more than another; only, since he talks of his Grounds, which cannot be such unless they derive their solid Virtue of supporting to what's built on them, we instance now and then in some main and most necessary Articles; of which, if he can give us no account how they come to be absolutely ascertained by his Ground or Rule, he can give it of none. Each Point of Faith is of a determinate sense; We show that Tradition gives and ascertains to us this determinate sense; and we show why it must do so, and how it does so, & this with Absolute Certainty. Let him show his Rule has the power to do this, & then pretend we are on equal Ground. But alas! He must not say this who is all for Moral Certainty, and fancies nothing above it. For he cannot say by such Grounds any Point [is] or [is True] while it may be False that they were taught by Christ; and if he says they [are or were taught by Christ,] while they [may not be so] he in plain terms affirms the same thing may at once be and not be. For thither the Doctrine of Faith's possible falsehood must be reduced at last, and the Greatest of Contradictions will be found to be his First Principle. P. 13. 13. His 7th Exception is answered in my last Note; which shows that the Ground upon which the Truth of Faith depends must be more than Morally Certain; tho' every Believer needs not penetrate the force of those Grounds, or have even so much as Moral Certainty of their Conclusiveness. But, what means he when he Objects my saying, that, True Faith, by reason of its immovable Grounds can bear an asserting the Impossibility of its Falsehood? Can this man do himself a greater prejudice, than by thus confessing, that he holds not Christian Faith, absolutely speaking, True? Or can he lay a greater scandal on Christian Faith itself, than to quarrel at a Position that can give him no displeasure, but by asserting its perfect Truth? If this do not like his new-fashioned Christian Principles, I suppose he will own the contrary Position, and affirm that True Faith, by reason of its Movable (or Uncertain) Grounds, Cannot bear an asserting the Absolute Impossibility of its Falsehood; And this is in plain terms to assert, that absolutely speaking, True Faith may all be False: which is both Unchristian, and strong Nonsense to boot. He should have Preached this to his Auditory at Guildhall; and then he should have seen how every honest Hearer, would have abhorred his Doctrine, have looked upon Him as scarce half a Christian, and on such a Faith as absurd, preternatural, and Irrational, as well as I did. 14. These are the greatest Contradictions the Dr. could pick even out of an Adversaries Book; concerning which he keeps such a mighty noise, blusters and triumphs. P. 14.15. He tells the Reader, I affirm that Moral Certainty destroys the Essence of Faith. And I affirm it does, taking Faith without some absolutely certain Principle, as Demonstration is, to ground it on. For Faith is essentially True; and it cannot be True to those who see that, notwithstanding its Grounds which are to prove it Christ's Doctrine, it may yet be none of his Doctrine. Again, he says I make Moral Certainty Sufficient and Insufficient for Faith. Distinguish, good Doctor; 'Tis not Sufficient for the Ground of Faith as we treat of it; for, if there may be Deceit in that Ground, the Truth of Faith as to us, sinks: * See §. 9 And yet Moral Certainty, and even less, of the force of that Ground is Sufficient to many, nay * See Error Nonplussed. p. 148. All, so they adhere to a Ground that is really Infallible, and Salvation is attainable by those Persons. Oh, but Salvation is to be had by such a Faith no better grounded; and that's the main business. What? If for want of a firm Ground, Faith hap to be False? Who ever said it? or that, in case any Point embraced upon such a Ground happen to be Untrue, it could be a Point of Faith, or that any man could be saved by virtue of a Heretical Tenet, or a pernicious Falsehood? Yet, for want of Dr. St's understanding plain sense, and his applying my words to a wrong subject, I must forfeit my Sincerity and Moral Honesty; whereas himself forfeits both by confounding every thing which I had so * See my Declaration and Vindiciae. carefully distinguished. There is not a tittle objected by himself or Lominus, but I distinctly and clearly answered in my Clypeus Septemplex and Vindiciae, to the satisfaction of all my Superiors and Judges. Yet this man of Moral Honesty, has the Ingenuity to object them afresh, without taking notice of my Answers, or letting the Reader so much as know any such Satisfactory Answers, or any answer at all, had been already given. 14. As for the three Propositions picked out of my Books apart from the Context, and which, as taken in the precise words in which they were exhibited, were censured: I desire the Reader to reflect, that these words [There is no God] though found in the Holy Scripture itself, yet as separated from the words adjoining, and expressed in those precise terms, are perfect Atheism, and deserve the highest Censure; and yet the same words as they lie in the Sacred Book itself with these foregoing words [The Fool hath said in his heart] joined with them, the direct contrary is signified by that place. This was my very case. The words or passages taken alone, without the Prefaces, declaring the sole Intent of the Author, without the State of the Question, and other Paragraphs (or words in the same Paragraph) giving light, by the Tenor of the Discourse, to my true meaning, bore a show as if I had affirmed that it was requisite to Faith to demonstrate the Mysteries of Faith, and among them the Supernatural Infallibility of the Church, which is a Point of Faith. Especially since there was inserted by the Exhibiter a Parenthesis in the middle of the second Proposition, [he speaks of Propositions of Faith] whereas there was not a word of any such thing, but about Vindiciae J. S. p. 23.24. fifteen times the contrary, in the selfsame Paragraph: viz. That I spoke of Motives, Premises, and Grounds of Faith. Now the Censurers knew not that those Propositions were in any Book, or had any Antecedents or Consequents (as they * Querimonia J. S. p. 70. and 75. publicly declared, and I have it under their hands) and, consequently, Censured them; as myself should have done, had I been in their Circumstances, and circumvented as they were. Ibid. p. 67. As soon as I saw the Censure, I offered voluntarily to Subscribe to it; knowing that those Propositions thus singled out, were no more my Doctrine than [There is no God] was the Sense of the Sacred Writer; nay * See Vindiciae J. S. p. 4.5.6.7. quite contrary to it. The Censurers declared they were surprised, and * Querim. p. 74. complained they were by indirect wiles imposed upon. So at the Archbishop of Paris his Command I writ my Vindiciae, to manifest the true Sense of those passages as they lay in my Books; which I showed very clearly and particularly to be, that I only spoke of Faith as standing under a Rule ascertaining its Descent from Christ. My Books being in English, it was ordered that some Persons of great Learning and Repute who understood English should examine and testify, whether, taking those Propositions as they lay in my Books, the Orthodox Sense I assigned to them, were indeed my genuine meaning in those places; My Adversary too * App. seu Quer. p. 76.77. allowed of them to attest it; for indeed their known Probity and Learning was such that it was impossible to except against them; and that Venerable and Pious Personage, Ibid. p. 62. Abbot Montagu, to whom they were known, it being required, gave Testimony to both those Qualifications in them. They all unanimously attested by their Subscriptions, Ibid. p. 57.58 that the Orthodox Sense I assigned was indeed the true meaning of those Places; and that the Sense condemned was not in those Books, but the direct contrary; whence follows that when I Subscribed the Censure, I subscribed only to what had ever been my own Doctrine. Those Reverend and Judicious Persons, were Mr Francis Gage, Dr. of Sorbon; Mr Thomas Godden, Dr. of Divinity; Mr Robert Barclay, Principal of the Scotch College in Paris; Mr Bonaventure Giffard, and Mr john Betham, than Bachelors of Divinity in Sorbon, both of them since, Doctors of the same Faculty, and the former of them now Bishop of Madaura; Mr Edward Cary, Mr Edward Lutton, and Mr G. K. The Archbishop of Paris, being perfectly satisfied, hoping it might end future Disputes, desired me to Subscribe to the Censure: I refused at first, Ibid. p. 65. alleging that such a Subscription might be improved into a pretence that I had retracted. He replied, * App. seu Quer. p. 65. Uteris itaque quâ Subscriptionis formulâ tibi placuerit; Make use therefore of what form of Subscription you please. I replied, Then I will declare that I do Subscribe, not retracting my Doctrine but persisting in it; which he allowed; Ibid. p. 77. and I did it in the selfsame terms; adding, that I persisted in it as being free from Censure, Ibid. and approved by very Eminent Personages. Which done, Ibid. p. 69. the Censurers were ordered nay commanded to make me Satisfaction by an Instrument Signed by them both; P. 76. declaring that no Proposition in any Book of mine was touched by their Censure. Could there be a greater and more Authentic Clearing my Books and Doctrine from being Censured than that was; or, might not Dr St. by parity of reason as well have pretended that the Scripture teaches Atheism, or that King David deserved to be Censured, for saying There is no God, as that any Proposition, as found in my Books, was there Censured or Declared Heretical. 15. And now to lay open some of the Doctor's Falsehoods upon this occasion; They are these. 1. That the main Design of my Catholic Letters are there declared to be no Catholic Doctrine. Well bowled Doctor. Have I a word there pretending to show the Mysteries of Faith, or the Authority of the Church [that is believed by Faith] that is its Supernatural Infallibility by Assistance of the Holy Ghost, to be Demonstrable? Is it not shown you in most express words (Third Cath. Letter. p. 22.23.) and in many other places) that we speak only of the * Third Catho. Letter. p. 23. l. 11.12. Ibid. p. 22. L. 32.33. Humane Authority of the Church, which is to be proved by Natural Mediums, and not of the other which is believed by the Faithful? This then is a mere forged pretence against your own Conscience and perfect Knowledge. 2. That I was Censured and retracted: whereas 'tis manifest not any thing as it lay in my Books (that is indeed nothing of mine) was Censured; nor did I subscribe, otherwise than as not Retracting my Doctrine, but persisting in it as being free from Censure. This the Archbishop of Paris allowed, and the Censurers themselves judged to be Just and True, and upon those terms acquitted me and made me Satisfaction. 3. He says, that if this (the Sense Condemned) be not Catholic Doctrine, P. 5. he is Infallibly Certain my Letters are far from being Catholic in their Sense. Now, not one word is there in those Letters which is the Sense Condemned, as I showed lately; however I am glad he who has still been so high against all Infallibility in his Writings, and denied it to the Catholic, or any Church, owns it at least in Himself. I see now what Grounds he went upon when he would not make a Candid Retractation of his Irenicum. Certainly this man would persuade us to take his word for our Rule of Faith. But the ill luck, is his Infallibility is evidently proved already to be wilful Forgery, against plain and Authentic matter of Fact. He say▪ the A. B. of D. averrs many fine things already answered, and that my Plea was ridiculous. Which is false for any thing he or I know. For, that Illustrious Personage denied that Book of Lominus to be his, or did any man own it; but it came out surreptitiously without the Approbation of any man, under an unknown name, nay, without so much as the Printers name to it; which was punishable by the Laws there. Whence we may judge of our Drs. sincerity: In his Second Letter to Mr. G. p. 8. by putting Heresis Blacloana in the Margin over against his Appeal to F. W. He hinted, that that Venerable Person was Author of that Book. Beat off from that False and Ungrounded pretence, he has found us another Author for it; and I expect in his next piece we shall have a Third or Fourth; according as his fancy, so heated now that it has shaken off all regard to Civility, shall prompt him. Again, he shows us how wonderfully ingenuous he is, by his quoting against me the railing Book of an unknown Adversary, which had besides all the Marks of a Libel in it; and over-flipping the Attestation of Eight Worthy Divines of great repute; who, openly and owning their names, did witness that those places, in my Books, did not bear the Sense in which those words picked out thence were censured. Add that Dr. St. knew all these particulars were cleared satisfactorily, since it appears (by his quoting them) he had read my Defences, in which they are printed at large. Which Common Sense may assure him I durst not have done, in the Life-time of all the Persons mentioned and concerned, without quite losing my Cause; Nay I should have exposed myself to new Accusations as a Falsifier, had I not dealt sincerely to a tittle, and preserved all the Authentic Originals in my own hands, for the Justification of my Defences, which I yet have. I charge the Dr. then, to have published against me Wilful and Notorious Falsehoods, which he had reason to know to be such. Yet we are still to think he did all this out of his pure Love to Moral Honesty, P. 14. of which he makes such a Saintly Profession. I Challenge him moreover to show me any one Catholic Writer of any Eminency (I do profess I do not know so much as one of any degree whatever) whoever Censured this Position, that the Infallibility of the Churches Humane Authority, antecedent to Faith, and deriving down Christ's Doctrine might be demonstrated; which is all I require in my Catholic Letters. Whereas the * See Third Cath. Letter. p. 21.22. Right Reverend F. W. has named him divers, both Ancient and Modern, who follow that Method in general; and I have quoted * Declaratio Sergeantii. p. 40. divers Eminent Controvertists as occasion served, and particularly insisted on * App. p. 209. ad p. 246. two beyond all Exception, F. Fisher here in England, and Dominicus de Sta Trinitate, who writ and printed his Book at Rome, and had it approved by the Magister Sacri Palatii, who take the same way I do, almost to a tittle. I may add, to the Drs. greater confusion, the Authority of the Archbishop of D. himself, and of all those Eminent Persons who have approved my Doctrine, as shall be seen hereafter. 16. Not a man then has Dr St. on his side, but one unknown and altogether unapproved Author Lominus, and a bitter Adversary to me besides; out of whose Falsehoods, interlarded with his own, and by his Concealing my Replies to all he objects (and those such as fully satisfied my Judges and Superiors) he makes a shift to patch up his Calumnies. We will see next, whether (to his further shame) my Books or Doctrine have not had Testimonials of greater weight to approve and authenticate them, than that of Lominus was to Condemn them. 17. In the first place that Blessed and Glorious Martyr, the Illustrious, and Eminently Learned Oliver Plunket, Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of all Ireland, assoon as he heard my Books were opposed, out of his mere Justice, love of Truth and the Esteem he had of my Doctrine, unsought to nay unthought of, sent me out of Ireland, an Approbation of it writ with his own hand, and Sealed with his archiepiscopal Seal, in these words. * Declaratio Sergeantis. p. 55. [Infrascripti testamur, etc. We underwritten do attest that we have read through diligently and accurately, and that with both Profit and Pleasure, three Books writ in the English Dialect, Published by that Learned Person Mr. john Sergeant, whose Titles and Arguments are these; Surefooting in Christianity, Faith vindicated, and Reason against Raillery; In which I have not only found nothing against the Integrity of the True Faith and of good manners; but, moreover, Clear and Solid Principles, which admirably conspire to the Estabishing and confirming the Catholic Doctrine. For, both by Reasons and Authorities they excellently impugn the Protestants affirming the Holy Scripture is the only Rule of Faith; and vigorously maintain that the genuine Doctrine of Christ and his Apostles has descended, by the force of Tradition, from Century to Century, nay from year to year, incorruptedly to our time, and still remains inviolably in the Orthodox Church. In Testimony whereof we have Subscribed, and have caused our portatil Seal to be assixt, this 15 th' of March 1674. at Armagh Oliversus Armachanus, totius Hiberniae Primas. Can any man imagine that this Grave and Learned Personage, who had for twelve years' professed Divinity in the Sacra Congregatio at Rome, and had been advanced by them to this high Dignity, would have hazarded his Credit there, in approving so highly the Writings of one who was a Stranger to him and no ways capable to oblige him, had he not been perfectly assured there was nothing Censurable in them? Yet, this, tho' known to our ingenuous Dr. is nothing with him. He cries still Lominus for my money, let him be what he will; and assures the Reader upon his Moral Honesty, he is Infallibly Certain my Doctrine in my Letters is not Catholic. 18. The next in Dignity is that Illustrious and Right Reverend Personage Mr. Peter Talbot Arch Bishop of Dublin, who died a Confessor of the Catholic Faith in Dublin Castle in the time of that truly Hellish, tho' not Popish Plot. This Eminent Person more than once has approved and highly commended my Doctrine. * A Sovereign Remedy against Heresy and Atheism. p. 28. See my Declara. p 95. [The Author of Surefooting (says he) has with great zeal writ divers Treatises of this matter (viz. the force of Tradition) and has overwhelmed those who defend only Moral Certainty in Faith with so great Confusion that they can no way clear themselves from the blemish of Atheism, to which their Principles and mere Probability of Faith lead; of which crime the foresaid Author proves them Guilty beyond all possibility of Reply. And a little after, Ibid. p. 29.30. he acknowledges that the Rule of Faith (viz. in our Controversies) is the Humane Authority of the Church; and, that it must be an Infallible Directress; otherwise it might lead us out of the way. Unfortunate Dr. St. to quote an Authority against me, which so highly approves my Doctrine and condemns his as leading to Atheism! The Reader may hence discern how likely 'tis the Archbishop of Dublin should be the Author of Lominus his Book, * Haeres. Blacloana. p. where he and Dr. Tillotson are praised for Writing so Catholickly against me; whereas that Right Reverend Prelate so highly extols my Books as writing so unanswerably against Them. Lastly, in his Appendix to that Book of his cited above, he has this solid Discourse. * Declaration p. 99 [Although Tradition does not demonstrate or conclude evidently the Divinity of Christ, nor consequently can demonstrate or conclude evidently that the Revelation of our Faith was Divine; yet 'tis a Conclusive Argument ad hominem, against Protestants and all those who acknowledge the Divinity of Christ, that God revealed all the Articles which the Roman Catholic Church professes, in regard they acknowledge Christ to be God. And thus the Author of Sure-footing, Faith Vindicated, etc. argues invincibly against his Adversaries for the Conclusive Evidence (by the force of Tradition) that God revealed all the Articles of the Roman Catholic Faith, out of the Supposition that Christ is God. Note that this Appendix was write purposely to clear me, after the Conference in Abbot Montague's Chamber: where tho' I would not then answer to propositions taken out of books, when no Books were there to clear them by the Context; Yet, after I had the Objections in writing, I did answer them; and this to the * Querim. p. 81. & Declaratio. p. 70. Satisfaction of the Archbishop himself, and of * Declaratio. p. 69.70. Dr. Gough who was present, and prejudiced formerly against my Writings. 19 I had comprised the Sum of my Doctrine into a short Treatise, Entitled, A Method to arrive at Satisfaction in Religion; which when I was at Paris I translated into Latin, and showed it to that Excellent Prelate the Bishop of Condom; my singular Friend and Patron, desiring his Judgement of it. He read it, and at my request made his Exceptions; which being cleared by me, he asked me why I did not Print it? I replied I would, so his Grandeur would please to give me leave to Dedicate it to himself. Which obtained, it was proposed to the Sorbon for their Approbation of it, the former of them (Monsieur Pirot) testifying it contained nothing against Faith or good manners, & the later of them (Dr Gage) added that the most certain Rule of Faith was in that Treatise exactly settled and invincibly defended. But still obscure Lominus is worth twenty Sorbons in Dr. St's. Learned Judgement. Tho' 'tis here to be observed that the Bishop of Condoms Approbation was antecedent to theirs; not only as allowing and owning the Book, but as inviting me to Print it. 20. I allege in the Fourth place the Testimony of my Superior here in England, Mr. Humphrey Ellice, an Ancient Dr. and Professor of Divinity, and late Dean of our Catholic Chapter; whose Sanctity of Life and solid Judgement gave him a high Esteem with all that knew him. This Grave and Venerable Person, besides the Ordinary and Customary Approbation of my Books, added that They do clearly demonstrate, out of the very nature of Ecclesiastical Tradition, that the Doctrine delivered by Christ and his Apostles, was inviolably eonserved in the Roman-Catholick and Apostolic Church even to this Age in which we now live; and by Irrefragable force of Reason did evidently convince the Grounds of the Heretics (meaning Dr. St. and Dr. Till. against whom I had writ) to be mere Tricks and vain Fallacies. But still Lominus (that is the Lord knows who) is Dr. St's. only Saint and Infallible Oracle. 21. It were not amiss to add next the Testimony or rather Judgement of that deservedly Esteemed, and Learned man, Mr. R. H. Author of The Guide of Controversy. This Excellent Writer, though he inclines rather to the School-opinion of the sufficiency of Moral Certainty, yet, like a truly ingenuous and Charitable man, preferring the Common Good of Christianity before his own private Sentiment, after having discoursed according to his own Grounds, he, in allusion to my way of proceeding, subjoins these words: [But then, if any, after all this, can make good any farther Certainty in such Tradition; I know no Party, if Christian, that has any Interest to oppose him— The stronger any one can make this Faith, they have all reason to like it the better.] By which 'tis apparent that he is so far from condemning and censuring the way I take, that he declares 'tis not the Interest of any Party, if Christian, to oppose it; and that himself and every one ought to like it better than the other way, so it could be made good. And, that it can, my best Reason tells me; since, as appears by my Method, it has born the Test of being reduced even to Self-Evidence; and the miserable shifts and Evasions, to which the most Learned of our Adversaries are driven, to avoid its force, do more and more assure me 'tis not at all hard to compass it. 22. In the last place, to omit many others, I shall put the Testimony of that very Reverend Person F. Martin Harney, Dr. of Divinity of the University of Louvain, and Principal Regent of the General Studies of the Order of St Dominick: Who being asked at Rome (where he was at the time of the Contest) his Judgement of my Doctrine, comprised in my Method, and of the Sense of the three Propositions, as they lie in my Books, gave under his hand this Testimonial of both. I under-written have attentively read the Method writ by Mr John Sergeant, and his Vindication of the three Propositions picked out of his Books; and I have found that the Method is sound Doctrine, and useful to reduce many to the Catholic Faith. And in his Vindiciae 'tis plainly demonstrated that the foresaid Propositions, as written by the Author, do make a Sense altogether Orthodox. This Reverend Person I had never seen, nor heard of; nor could any thing but the love of Truth move him to this Approbation; nay, he must have lost much Credit with the Sacra Congregatio, had my Doctrine been proved Vnorthodox, or the Propositions in my Book, (as Infallible Dr. St. affirms) Heretical. 23. Modesty forbids me to mention the excessive Encomiums of that Eminent Controvertist Mr. Edward Worsley, a Father of the Society; who, though utterly unknown to me, took such a Friendship for me upon the reading my Books, and in all places where he came extolled my poor Endeavours with such immoderate Expressions, that to save my blushes in rehearsing them I entreat those who have the Curiosity to read them in my Declaratio from p. 73. to p. 78. I showed them to the Right Honourable the Earl of Castlemain, who was pleased to do me the right to attest them to be his hand-writing. The same noble Personage & as many as knew F. Worsley, will, I doubt not, do that right to his Memory, as to witness for him that as he was Second to none in ability to distinguish between Sound and Tainted Doctrine; so his sincere Candour and Integrity set him as far above the humour of Flattery, as my Meanness could incline any to it. 24. The Sum of my present Defence is this. Eight Divines of great Repute appointed by the Archbishop of Paris, and admitted by my Adversary himself, do unanimously attest that the Sense condemned is not in my Books, but the contrary. My Judge clears me, the Censurers are commanded to make me Satisfaction. The Highest Tribunal allows my Plea, and acquits me. Primates, Arch-Bishops, Bishops, the Sorbon, Eminent Divines, and even those who take another way in their Writings, approve and commend my Doctrine, and most of them in very high and extraordinary expressions; my own Superior does the same; nay even those, who were formerly highly prejudiced, declared themselves satisfied in it. So that poor Dr. St. is left alone to balance against all this weighty Authority, with one Lominus, a mere Utopian, or Man in the Moon; on whose sole no-Authority he grounds all his senseless Calumnies. Was ever weak man so baffled! Add, that he knew that all these Defences of mine had been made and accepted many years ago, and those Authorities alleged, and my Doctrine thus approved and cleared; yet he had not the Candour to let his Reader have the least hint of any of those particulars; which argues not too great love of Moral Honesty. Nor does he take off any one Answer of those many I had given; but only says over again rawly some few things objected, replied to, and printed fourteen Years ago; and plays upon a double-sensed word or two by applying them still to wrong Subjects. which is in effect to tell the Reader he must either talk insignificantly against evident matter of Fact, or say just nothing, and to confess in plain terms he is at a perfect Nonplus. 25. To close this present business I desire the Reader to reflect that those Judges, Approvers and Commenders of my Books and Doctrine, lived generally in divers and far-distant Nations, were of different Faculties and Universities, of different Education, different Orders, and (to some degree) of different Principles and Interests; some of them of slight acquaintance; divers utterly unknown to me, or I to Them. So that, 'tis impossible to imagine that any thing but the Force of Truth and the Integrity of my way of proving the Certainty of our Faith as to it's being taught by jesus Christ, could make them conspire to allow or abet my Writings so hearty and unanimously. Nor could there be any Human inducements to make them so partial to a private man every way inconsiderable, and of no Esteem at all but what my Writings and Principles gave me. Whence, though no one Church, as Dr. St. weakly objects, has ever owned my Doctrine (to give formal Approbations of Controversial or Theological Writings not being a work proper for Churches) yet, the Dignity of the Persons and all these Circumstances considered, I conceive it may amount to the full weight of the Judgement of any one particular Church whatsoever, that my Doctrine is Sound and Orthodox. Nor will he, I believe, find that any work of a particular Writer hath had more Authentic Testimonials for it, than my poor Endeavours have had; except that of the never-enough-praised, the Bishop of Condom. And 'tis not the least Confirmation of their Integrity that they have been twice brought to the Trial, (at Paris and Rome) and nothing unsound found in them. Though I must do the Doctor the right to acknowledge he has spoke one (and hitherto but one) true word: but he is to be pardoned for prevaricating from his constant method of speaking Falsehoods, for it was at unawares, and he knew not he did so; The Truth he spoke against his will was this, That I hardly escaped Censure at Rome: and therefore, to make his words good, I'll tell him how it was. All my Books were sent thither to Cardinal Barberin; and amongst them one written by the Right Honourable my Lord Chancellor Hyde, in defence of Dr. St. against Mr. Cressy; pretending (the Title of this last being torn out) they were all writ by the same Author, myself; There went with them a desire to His Eminency, that, not to give them the trouble of Perusing them All, he would cause only this last of my Lord Chancellour's to be read; and, by the Character he received of that, to judge whether all the rest writ by that Author ought not to be Condemned. He gave them to an English Divine to keep, who knew nothing of the Contest; ordering him to read only That, and give him a faithful account of it as soon as he could. While he was reading it, God's Providence so ordered it, that an English Gentleman, his acquaintance, came accidentally into his Chamber, and finding all my Books on his Table, asked how they came there? He, hearing me named as their Author, admired, and said he could not believe they were mine; in regard he had heard I was a Writer for Catholic Faith; whereas this Author was of far other Principles. After some perusing it, my Friend found it was my Lord Chancellour's Book foisted in for one of mine. Which understood by my Friend's Testimony and the finding all the other Books to run in a quite different strain, they informed the Protector of the Fourbe that was put upon him, and so my poor Books escaped scot-free. By this or some such Stratagem they might perhaps have been condemned, but that there was any danger of it when my Defences were seen and compared with the Accusations, Infallible Dr. St. is the first man that ever informed us. But, what would we have from a man that can scarce speak a word of liquid Truth! 26. But, tho' Dr. St. has neither managed this invidious Cavil Solidly, nor (he must pardon me) honestly or justly, according to any Moral Honesty but his own, which he has told us he so loves: Has he at least deserved the Commendation given to the unjust Steward; has he done wisely, or, in any degree, prudently? Let's see. In his Irenicum, he * Answer to a Letter against Mr. Lowth, in Defence of Dr. St. p. 8. Ibid. p. 7. had Sacrificed the whole Order of Bishops to the pleasure of the Magistrate or the Mobile, and actually degraded them into the rank of Presbyters; or, to give us a more complete Map of that ill Book, that he had given us there a curtailed kind of Episcopacy coldly and faintly allowed, Presbytery strongly pleaded for, Independency much favoured, and (says my Author) if my Memory fails me not, in the matter of Tithes a spicing of Anabaptistry and Quakerism. One would think by this description the name of that Book should be LEGION, and that such pestilent Principles were needful to be retracted. It seems the Bishops who were most concerned, durst not attack such a numerous Army of private-spirited Enemies, drawn-up into one Body. For himself assures us that * See Answer to M. Lowth's 〈◊〉. p 22. the Bishops and Regular Clergy treated him with more kindness than so much as to mention any such thing as a Recantation. Nay, his Vindicator tell us moreover that * Answer to a Letter against Mr. L. p. 8. the Prudent and Reverend Governors of their Church did admire the Performance. Well! But what provision was made in the mean time against the mischief and Scandal? Could this man have done the Bishops a greater disparagement, than to tell the World they preferred a Personal Civility and a Complementary virtue before the care of Christ's Institution, and their own most particular Interest? But, tho' they were over civil to him, why had not he the Goodness by a voluntary Recantation to give a stop to the spreading that contagious Doctrine, if indeed he did not hold it still? He could not think it pleased them, nor that their shows of Kindness were real and hearty. However his Vindicatour Brags they made choice of him to undertake the Defence of the Conferences with F. Fisher. Ibid p. 8. Yet so, says the other, as Mr Prynn, a man of a restless Spirit and unsettled judgement was put to the Records in the Tower to employ his busy mind. Well, but how came he off with that Task? A fair occasion might have been taken there to set all right again, had the Dr. pleased. But he was so far from that, that Mr. Lowth tells him, It would have discomposed the Archbishop upon the Scaffold, Ibid. p. 34. had he foreseen he should have had such a Vindicatour; and that he finds little amends there for his Irenicum Doctrines, but rather an Evident Confirmation of them, if not doing worse. This is still more and more obstinate; and a kind of huffing those, who had so over-civilly forborn him, by doing still the same or worse. Yet afterwards, I know not how or why, he made some ambidextrous Retractations, which left all understanding men dissatisfied, as well as Mr. Lowth; tho' he, about to publish a book of Church-Government & the Irenicum-Doctrines crossing his way happed to be the sole man that opposed them publicly, tho' multitudes of the most hearty, most Learned, Ibid. p. 27. and most Eminent Protestants utterly disliked them. But, first he writ to him civilly and upon honest Conditions would have waved him. But the Dr. had got too much head by this kind Connivance, Ibid. and so he could get no other Answer, but Scorn and some foul play; The two main Ingredients in the Doctor's Constitution, as myself too frequently experience. Hereupon that honest and plaindealing Gentleman, whom all true lovers of Christ's Institution and particularly all genuine Members of the Church of England ought to respect for his undaunted love of Truth, and firmness to Church-Principles, did animadvert upon him severely; Answer to Mr. Lowth. P. 17. as an incorrigible Wronger of such Sacred Concerns deserved. He demands in behalf of the Church he would make a Recantation as Public as the Error, Scandal and Offence had been. The Doctor sets on a jack Pudding to abuse and scoff at him; one (says my Author) who has * Postscript to an Answer to a Letter against Mr Lowth. hackneyed out himself to write against his Conscience and judgement, as appears by his own Letters. A fit man for Dr. St's purpose. This pleasant Gentleman pretended such a Recantation was already made. To which Mr. Lowth's Vindicator (a person of a solid judgement and moderate temper, and, as is seen, p. 23. a kind Friend to Dr. St.) replied, that all amounted to little better than a say so. He shows that what is cited out of the General Conferences was a scurvy palliation of the matter. P. 14. That his Book [The Unreasonableness of Separation] signified no more than Motives to compliance in the judgement of Interest or Discretion; P. 4. and for the most part might be urged for any settled Constitution, P. 15. even that of Geneva or Amsterdam. That any man might get easily off what He had said; and each Party, as the Tide turned, might apply them to their own advantage. P. 13. That the Doctor though he pretended Mutability of Church Government in his Irenicum, yet he had perpetually fixed the Presbytery by Divine Right Unalterable. That the Recantation was far from hearty; in regard that, altho' his Vindicator freely confesses the Fault, and Mr. Lowth to be in the right, P. 11. yet He with the same breath reviles him. Lastly, to omit many other particulars, That (which I have most reason to reflect on) the Dean, when he speaks of Church Authority, takes away with one hand what he gives with the other; P. 23.24. That the Authority of (merely) proposing matters of Faith and directing men in Religion, is no Authority at all; nay that they rather imply a Power in those to whom they are proposed, at Discretion to reject them; and that it makes the Church's Authority, precarious, and lays her open to all manner of Heretics. This is what I ever judged lay at the bottom of his heart; that in things belonging to Faith, he sets the judgement of every one of his Sober Enquirers above the Church's. Which made me reflect so severely upon it in my Error Nonplussed, P. 123.124. and in divers other places of my Third Catholic Letter. But of late, the juncture (as he hopes) being more favourable, he is gone beyond his former self; P. 21. for in his Second Letter to Mr. G. he confidently affirms that every Sober Enquirer may without the Church's He●p find out all necessary Points of Faith in Scripture. Now, Proposing and Directing are some kind of Help, but here they are both denied it seems; and all Help from the Church, as to the matter of saving Faith is denied. This then seems to be the Antecedent Belief the Dr. sets up, and thence infers, That a man may be in a State of Salvation in his single and private Capacity apart, * See the Answer to a Letter written against Mr. Lowth. p. 23. and out of all Church Society and Ecclesiastical Communion, tho' he live where it is to be had; which (says the Answerer) utterly overthrows all Church Government. This aught to give every honest man who loves Order and Government (of what Judgement soever he be) such grounded Jealousies that he is setting up a Babel of No-Church-men against Christ's Church, that no satisfaction competent, unless the several Propositions be extracted out of his Books, and either formally and expressly retracted, or else that he show that, as they lie in his Books they bear not that wicked Sense they seem to do, neither of which has been done. Nay, lest he should deal slipperily by Common and palliating words, at which he is very expert; it will be farther requisite that he be obliged to write against those ill Tenets himself, and offer convincing reasons to prove them False; that so men may see it comes from his heart. And this done and the Interest of Truth once in demnifyed, he is one of the worst Christians who refuses to honour him far more than if he had never lapsed. Si non errasset, fecerat ille minus. 27. What concerns Me particularly is to note hence the prodigious Imprudence of Dr. St. in objecting against me Self contradictions, which have long ago been cleared; and the Dissatisfaction of two or three roman-catholics (for I know of no more) who became well satisfied when they had read my Books, and compared them with my Explication; and when as He knew myself after a severe Trial was cleared by my Judges (which he will never be;) and during the time of it, when it was most dangerous for any to stand up for me, my Books and Doctrine were most authentically approved nay highly commended by most Eminent Authority: What a madness was it for him to object falsely and against evident matter of Fact that I retracted. Whenas all the while▪ he knew himself had had the misfortune to have writ such unsound Doctrine, that his Vindicator is forced to confess it as his best Plea, that He has retracted it; and yet tho', as 'tis said, he has done it on his fashion, he is still apprehended to be so hollow, that he cannot yet gain the Belief to have done any more than palliate his gross Errors; to be inconsistent with himself, Answer to a Let. against Mr Lowth. p. 13.23.14. and to take away from the Church with one hand what he gives it with the other: Of these things he never yet cleared himself, nor can; but is still accused of harbouring the same Errors in his breast, nay to grow still worse and worse. Which I was so far from desiring to lay open, that I civilly insinuated it afar off in my Third Catholic Letter, p. 20. without so much as naming his Person; that I might keep him from such Impertinent and Extrinsical Topics, which the Reader may observe, do, for want of better, make up three quarters of his Controversial Writings. SECT. II. How Dr. St. settles the true State of the Controversy. 28. I Have been longer about this First Section than seemed needful. But the Influence it has upon our future Dispute will recompense my trouble, and excuse my Prolixity. The Second thing his Method leads him to (for hitherto it has led him quite out of the way) is to state the Controversy. And to this end, he acquaints us with the Occasion of the Conference; P. 15. which was that Mr. G. affirmed in some company that no Protestant could show any Ground of Absolute Certainty for their Faith; and that Mr. T. had promised him that if Dr. St. were not able to manifest the contrary, he would forsake his Communion. Will the Dr hold to these words? 'Tis plain here that Mr G. demanded he should show Grounds to ascertain his Faith absolutely. Mr. T. expected he should manifest they had such Grounds as did ascertain their Faith; and, if he could not, was to leave his Communion: Lastly, that Dr. St. by accepting the Challenge, became engaged to satisfy Mr 't's. expectation, and to manifest the contrary to what Mr G. had asserted; that is to manifest he had Grounds of Absolute Certainty for his Faith; or, (which comes to the same) for Christian Faith upon his Grounds being taught by Christ. And, how did the Dr. acquit himself, and perform this? Why, he assigned Scripture for the Ground or Rule of his Faith, and Universal Tradition for the Proof of the Books of Scripture. All the company knew this before. For, both sides knew, held and granted already that the Book of Scripture was proved by Universal Tradition, and every one knew too that Dr St. would assign It for the Ground or Rule of his Faith. Wherefore, unless all the company were out of their Wits, surely something more was expected; and what could that be, but that he should manifest his Faith was absolutely Certain by relying on that Rule, or that the Rule he assigned, gave him, and his, Absolute Certainty of their Faith, or of those Tenets which they held upon it. For, it being agreed on both sides that the Sense of the Scripture was in itself True Faith, God's Word, and as such to be embraced, the only Question was of the sense of Scripture as to us, or as to our knowledge of it: And of This the Dr was to show and manifest he had Absolute Certainty by any way his Grounds afforded him; otherwise, he might fall short or be wrong in the knowing Scriptures Sense (that is, in his Faith) tho' the Letter were never so Certain. Again, by his counterposing to those words of his [than you can have for the points in difference between us] 'tis manifest the contest was, whether he had Absolute Certainty of those Points he held upon his Rule. What says the Dr now to this plain state of the Controversy? 29. First he changes the Ground of Absolute Certainty for his Faith into proving the Absolute Certainty of the Ground or Rule of his Faith: P. 15. l. 32. ult. & p. 16. l. 1.2. which transposes the Terms of the Question, and altars the whole business. For Absolute Certainty for Faith engages him to show the Doctrine or Tenets of Faith to be thus Certain; whereas [Absolute Certainty of the Rule of our Faith] makes Absolute Certainty affect the Rule, but leaves all Faith Uncertain, unless the pretended Rule proves a good one, and renders the Doctrine of Christian Faith, consisting of many particular Points, thus Absolutely Certain; which himself will tell us afterwards, he will not stand to. Next, he Equivocates in the word [Scripture] which may either mean the Letter, or the Sense of it. Now the Sense of it being Faith, 'tis That only could be meant by Mr. G. and of which it was affirmed he could not show Grounds absolutely ascertaining it; The Sense, I say, of Scripture, could only be questioned since the Letter was agreed to. Wherefore to allege Tradition for his Proof of what his Grounds will not allow to it, viz. to bring down the Sense of Scripture or Faith, and turn it off to the showing Certainty of the Letter, which was out of Question, is a most palpable prevarication. 3. He quite forgets to show that any Point of his Faith or all of it, (speaking of the Controverted or Dogmatical Points as we do) may not be False, notwithstanding his Proof for the Certainty of its Letter: which if it be, 'tis not Faith; unless he will say the Points of his Faith may be so many Untruths. 4. It has been pressed upon him over and over in * First Cath. Letter. p. 22. Third Cath. Letter. p. 66.67.68.69. my Catholic Letters to show how his Rule influences his Assent of Faith with Absolute Certainty. It has been inculcated to him how both [Rule] and [Ground] are Relative words; and, therefore, that he could not pretend they were to him Absolutely Certain Grounds for his Faith, unless he showed how they made him Absolutely Certain of that Faith of his, which was the Correlate. Which tho' the most material Point, and most strongly pressed upon him, he takes no notice of in his whole Reply; and it shall be seen that, when he comes to touch upon that Point (after his fashion) hereafter, he is forced to confess they are no Absolutely Certain Ground or Rule to him at all. Lastly, that, when (Faith being Truth) the Question was whether he had any such Ground as could conclude it True that Christ had taught his Faith, and consequently whether he has any Faith at all; he slips over That, and rambles into a Discourse about more or less Faith in Scripture, instead of showing he had any. Other shifts he has, but these are his masterpieces: So that his whole performance, as to the Conference, amounted to no more, than to take up the Bible in his hand, and cry aloud [Look ye, Gentlemen, here is my Ground or Rule of Faith; and yourselves must confess 'tis Absolutely Certain; and, therefore, you cannot deny but I have shown you the Ground of Absolute Certainty for my Faith.] But if it should be replied: Sir, an Arian or Socinian might do the same, and yet no by-stander be the wiser for it, or more able to discern which of you has Christ's true Faith, which not; in regard that must be decided by showing who has an Absolutely Certain Means to know the true Sense of the Letter; the Drs insignificant Principles carry no farther, but (as we shall see anon) to confess plainly neither of them have any such Means of Absolute Certainty at all. And that he cannot manifest what was expected of him and he stood engaged to manifest. 30. The case then between us being such plain sense, what says the Learned Dr to it? Why, besides his rare evasions lately mentioned, he tells the Reader vapouringly his way of reasoning was too hot for Mr. G. which I have shown to be frigid Nonsense. P. 16. He complains that our obliging him to prove or show clearly what belonged to him (for no body held him to Mood and Figure) is like the Trammelling a Horse. P. 17. That we insinuate Mr. G. is Non suited, which is far from True. Ibid. He is peevishly angry at the Metaphor of Playing at Cards, and persecutes it without Mercy; which is a scurvy sign that, however he pretended to a Purse full of Gold and Silver, he is a Loser; and that he will be put to borrow some Citations out of Authors to combat the Council of Trent, hoping to recover by that means some of the Credit he has lost by the Nonplusage of his Reason. He pretends he gives us good security: Ibid. that is, for the Letter of Scripture, which was not the End of the Conference, nor is our Question; but not the least security for its Sense, or Faith, which was. P. 18. He talks of Declamations and the Schools in the Savoy; and glances at my pretending to Intrinsical Grounds; which is to maintain that Humane Authority (which is the only thing I was to prove) is to be believed blindly, whether a man sees any Reason why he ought to believe it, or no. Ibid. p. 18.19 He talks too of the Cardinals in the Inquisition; who, tho' my Just Judges, were my very good Friends. He says my Grounds had saved the Martyr's Lives, and he makes a rare Plea for them out of my Principles: Forgetting, good man, that we are writing Controversy to satisfy men who are in their way to Faith; whereas those Blessed Martyrs were not only already Faithful, but moreover lived up to Christ's Doctrine; and, so, had Inward Experience in their Consciences of its Sanctity and Truth. He imagines the jews who saw our Saviour's Miracles had no Intrinsic Grounds. P. 19 Whereas True Miracles being evidently above Nature, are known to be such by comparing them with the Course of Natural Causes, known by a kind of Practical Evidence or Experience: And must I be forced to render him so Weak as to instruct his Ignorance that the Knowledge of things in Nature is an Intrinsic Ground, and not Extrinsical as Testimony is? He sticks close to his Friend Lominus, right or wrong, in despite of all the Evident and Authentic Testimonies to the contrary; whom before (for want of others to second him) he split into Two, and now multiplies into the Lord knows how many. P. 20. To gratify his Friend Dr. Tillotson, and excuse his, and his own silence, he says I have retracted the main Principles in Faith Vindicated and Reason against Raillery; which, in plain terms, is an Unexcusable Falsehood. To explicate two or three words, and show by Prefaces, States of the Question and many Signal passages they were Misunderstood and applied to wrong Subjects, (as I did to the satisfaction of my Judges, and even of prejudiced persons) signifies plainly not-to retract them: Nor shall he name any one Learned and Orthodox man of our Church who says my Explication is not genuine and Sincere; whereas I have named him many, Eminent in both those Qualities, who have attested under their hands they are such. He ends with bidding the Reader judge what I. S. has gotten by the Confession of Parties. Ibid. As much as in Modesty he could have wished; as appears by the Approbations of his Books and Success in his Suit. What Dr. St. has got by the Confession of his Party, may be seen by an Eminent man, not writing in hugger-mugger and Disguise, but owning his Name, viz. that he * Answer to Mr. Lowth. P. 17. is accused of having Mountebankt and Quackt for full five and twenty years. And these wretched shifts he has thought fit to use here to avoid the Point, le's us see he has not left it yet. Nor am I to expect he should easily quit such an Inveterate Habit, grown into a kind of Nature by a five and twenty years' Custom and Practice. 31. Now comes the State of the Question, P. 21. as his Second Letter has craftily put it; tho' I conceive it was best Stated by showing the Occasion and sole End of the Conference; to which I will hold, nor will I be beat off from it by any Excursions either then or since. There was a Question then put to Dr. St. in these words, Whether you are absolutely Certain that you hold now the same Tenets in Faith, and all that our Saviour taught his Apostles. I thought I did well in putting him to answer directly that, He was. He says by my favour he used other words. And what were those! Why, instead of the same Tenets in Faith, and all that our Saviour taught to his Apostles, he answered [All the same Doctrine that was taught by Christ and his Apostles▪] There's a Cloud in this carriage of his, it being against the Clear way of honest Nature. Was the Position as it lay in the terms of the Proposer, true; and, so, to be granted? Why did he not grant it then? Was it False? why did he not deny it? Was it Ambiguous? why did he not, the Proposer being present, desire him to explain it? No neither. None of these plain and common Methods would please him. What then? He would needs change the words of the Question in his Answer. And by what Rule? Was his Answer the same in Sense with the Question? If not, his Answer was no Answer to that Question, but the saying another thing on his own head. If it was the same Sense, why did he not speak to it directly in the Proposers words? The reason he gives is, because he's afraid of Oral Tradition lest it should vary the Sense. Whose Sense? P. 21. The Proposer's? His Sense was fixed in determinate words, and if it were not known, the Doctor might have known it if he had pleased. He means then his own Sense. What? must he put what Sense he thinks fit to the Question? This is a acquaint way of Answering. And why should not the Proposer fear, as himself did here, lest by changing his words, as he did enormously, he should change his Sense too? But this Oral Tradition like a Spirit so haunts his Fancy, that all along (as shall be seen) he either starts perpetually into Excursions and counterfeit Mirth, or stumbles into downright Nonsense. And this I believe verily is the General reason of all his failings: But we are now to seek out his particular reason of changing the words here. The last words that differ in the Question and Answer can break no squares, for Christ and his Apostles agreed well enough; and that Heavenly Master of theirs taught them All Faith either by Himself or the Holy Ghost sent in his name. The danger then must be in these words [the same Tenets in Faith] which he changes, for his security, into [the same Doctrine.] Because the word [Doctrine] signifies all in the lump (as * Second Letter to Mr. G. p. 17. he expresses it) to show which he hoped it might be sufficient to show the Book of Scripture; whereas the Plural word [Tenets] might come to oblige him to show how he has Absolute Certainty of each or any Point in particular, to which he has a great Antipathy. And, accordingly, when he came to perform this, he changed again the Absolute Certainty of Faith into Absolute Certainty of Scripture. I answered. They held more to be of Faith than that the Book so called is Scripture. He first trifles that we mean more than is contained in Scripture, P 21. contrary to our express words, where there's not a Syllable of containing or not-containing all Faith. However, if I mean his assent to Points of Faith contained in Scripture, he promises a full Answer afterwards: which we impatiently long to see. Only we entreat him, because 'tis a far off, he would not lose Absolute Certainty by the way; nor fool our expectations when we come at it, by letting the full Answer promised us, vanish away into a flat denial he has any such Certainty of those Points at all. 32. I argued ad hominem that, P. 23. since he confesses Tradition causes Certainty, it makes Faith as Certain as Scripture: He seems to confess it; but denies we have such an Universal Tradition for our Tridentin Faith. As if the Faith come down by Tradition were not the same before and since that Council; or that the Tradition we build on did not consist of such a vast Body of Attesters as were able to evince the truth of a plain matter of Fact, unless those who had renounced Tradition did club to its Certainty. But is it not pretty to observe that he pretends not to hold Faith to be Certain by our Tradition because 'tis not Universal, and yet at the same time disputes against Tradition's being a Certain Deriver of Christ's Faith even tho' it were Universal! For, his Principles allow no more hand in our Faith to Universal Tradition, but only to bring down the Book of Scripture, and then make that Book the only Ascertainer of our Faith. He threatens to show the Tridentin Council had not Universal Tradition for its Decrees; and to give us a taste beforehand of that Treatise, he adds, Let the matter of Tradition itself, as a Rule of Faith, be one of those Points. Well shot Doctor! The Points he speaks of here are expressed to be Points of Faith; and the Tradition we defend in our Controversy at present is the Human Authority of the Church, which we make to be the Rule to those coming to Faith; and so it is Antecedent to Faith and the Object of pure Natural Reason: And does he in his Great Learning think This is a Point of Faith? Or is it not possible to keep this roving Pen of his to any thing? But he designs to prove this mighty Advantage of his Cause, and that no Catholic Tradition can be produced against his Church in any one Point of the Additional Creed of Pius IV. Suppose it could not; has he therefore proved he has Absolute Certainty of the Faith he holds, in case we could not prove some other Points which we hold? Yet he has undertaken at all adventures this Great Design, and will suddenly publish the First Part; and, if God gives him Life and Health (he should have said, Principles too) he hopes to go through the rest. As much as to say, he designs to leave the Certainty of his Faith in the lurch, to tell the World publicly he has done so; and, if God gives him Life and Health, will continue to run away from that troublesome Point as far as ever he can. He should first have answered Error Nonplussed, and cleared himself from being a Man of no Principles, before he can be fit to impugn others; unless he thinks a man may dispute without Principles; as I verily believe he does; for his odd Methods of Reasoning and Answering need none. P. 24. 33. But tho' he has the ill luck to want Principles, he is, for all that, a good man; and desires no more to end our Controversies but to make Salvation our End, and the Scripture our Rule. But, if there be no Means to come at the Sense of Scripture in those most important Articles with Absolute Certainty, many may come (as Millions have done) to Misunderstand such places, and thence to embrace a Grand Heresy instead of the Chief Points of True Faith; and does he think Heretical Tenets in such concerning Points, is saving Faith. Let him show that his Principles lay such Grounds as absolutely secure the Truth of Faith, ere he talks such Pious (or rather Pernicious) Nonsense of a Saving Faith. For, should it hap to be False (as by his Grounds it may) 'tis neither Faith, nor the means to Salvation. He pretends I exclude all from Salvation, who do not penetrate Intrinsical Grounds: But, 'tis a flame of his own coining. Error Nonplussed has long ago told him over and over, P. 143.144. that 'tis enough they adhere to a Rule that is settled on Solid or Intrinsical Grounds, and so cannot deceive them, tho' they do not at all penetrate, or (as he calls it) dig into the Intrinsical Grounds, why that Authority or Rule is Inerrable. Let the Truth of Faith be secured, and they have what's simply requisite to Salvation; unless they be such persons as speculate or doubt, or are to defend the Truth of Faith against Heretics, and thence come to need a deeper Inspection and Knowledge of the Reasons which conclude their Rule does absolutely secure the Reliers on it from Error. Caeteram quippe turbam (as St. Austin says Contra Ep. Fund.) non intelligendi vivacitas sed credendi simplicitas, tutissimam facit. For as for the others which are the vulgar, they are rendered absolutely secure, or out of danger of Erring, not by the Sagacity of Understanding▪ but by the simplicity of Believing. 34. I know not certainly what past at the Conference, about which he still keeps such a do. P. 25. 'Tis high time to leave it off and follow our Point. Things should have been better managed to give us a clearer light; for want of which we are forced to trust the Dr himself, tho' a party, and accept what he represents in his Second Letter to Mr G. Only I see it was confessed on all hands that the sole End of it was that Dr. St. should manifest he had Grounds of Absolute Certainty for his Faith; and to that I will stick, and Levelly my Discourses accordingly. The Dr is at his old shuffle again, of Scripture's Letter being certain and containing all; neither of which are to any purpose, since neither of these reach his Faith, which is an Assent to determinate Points. I alleged that the Certainty of Scripture was not the Point for which the Conference was. He asks how I know it? By the very words that express it, put down here and acknowledged by himself p. 15. But Mr G. knew it not. That's more than I know, or the Dr. either. It appears not what use he would have made of it after he had proposed some Questions to gain light what the Drs. Principles were; for the Dr. himself confesses Mr T. cut off his Discourse by declaring himself satisfied, P. 22. and ask Questions of his own. But Mr. G. lost the Point by ask Questions about the Rule. Not so neither. For he was well acquainted with Common Sense, which told him the word [Rule] is a Relative word; and, so, is to regulate us about the particular Points of Faith, which it relates to; and that, unless it does this, 'tis good for nothing, being merely ordained for that End: which Dr. St. either knows not, or will not seem to know, lest he should come to be engaged to show how his pretended Rule influences any one Point with Absolute Certainty; and yet, if it does not this, 'tis no Ground for the Absolute Certainty of his Tenets or Faith. P. 26. He says that by the Scripture they are to judge what they are to believe, what not. By which we are to understand that he has shuffled away from showing his Rule to be a Qualifying Principle, which is to give his Faith Absolute Certainty, to the making it a Quantitative Measure showing what's Faith what not, or how much is of Faith. It seems Quantity and Quality is all one with him: and he would be Measuring his Faith, before he knows he has Any. As for his Containing Faith so often shown to be an insignificant pretence, let him know that between his having the Letter of Scripture Containing all, and the Doctrinal Points, (which is truly his Faith) there intervenes a Quality in the Rule called Clearness, or Plainness; and such a one as is able to secure the Reliers on it that what they receive upon that Rule is not an Error, or a Heresy, which is against Faith. 'Tis this he is to make out▪ and prove that this Clearness is found in his Rule applied to all sincere seekers after Faith; and, till he does this, 'tis a frenzy to maintain those men can have Absolute Certainty of Faith by means of Scripture's Letter. Yet hold him close to this plain Point, and he'll complain he's trammelled, he should say, graveled. But he says, he must not come near any one Point of his Faith, because being to show he held All the same Doctrine, etc. the word [All] made it necessary to assign a Rule in which All is contained. Now I verily thought that All signified Every one, but his Discourse makes it signify No one: Again, how shall we know he holds the Same Doctrine, as he in his Answer pretended he did, without particularising the Points held? By this Discourse the Arians and most of the Heretics since Christ's time held the Same Doctrine he taught; for they all held the Scripture's Letter to be Certain, and that it contained their Faith; yet tell him this a hundred times over, and demand how this is a particular Rule for his Protestants, which is a Common one to all Heretics, he is still deaf on that ear. Lastly, since Faith is Truth, instead of a Rule containing All, he should have assigned a Rule ascertaining it All to be True, and that none of the Tenets he holds to be in Scripture are Heretical. But he thanks you he'll not burn his fingers with handling such hot Points. He alleges that the Mosaical and Mahometan Laws are resolved into the Book of Moses and the Alcoran. P. 26. But apply this to our Point 'tis as wide from the purpose as what's most. Had there been such High and most Important Mysteries contained in those Laws as there are in the Christian Doctrine, delivered down and professed openly by those Bodies from which multitudes had taken the Liberty to recede by reason of the Obscurity of the Letter of those very Laws; in that case, there ought to have been some other Rule to secure them from mistaking that Letter, and able to give them its true Sense; and, therefore the Certainty of that Sense being their respective Faiths, would necessarily have been resolved into such a Rule, in regard the Letter alone could not give and ascertain it. And 'tis to be remarked, that all Dr St's Instances, Parallels and Similitudes which show prettily and look fine and glossy, when they come to be applied to the true Point, do still miss of being suitable in those very particulars which are only to the purpose. 35. And now we are come to the long expected performance of showing his Faith Absolutely Certain, P. 27. to which he promised a full Answer formerly. He begins with telling us that The case is not the same as to Particular Points of Faith with that of the General Grounds of the Certainty of Faith. And what's this to say, but that since the General Grounds are held by him to be Absolutely Certain and so cannot be False, the Particular Points of Faith, (viz. the Trinity, Christ's Godhead, etc.) are not in the same but a worse case and so may be False. A fair, or rather a very foul Concession! Yet he not only says it, but will prove it too from a Jew's having Absolute Certainty of all contained in the Books of Moses, and yet not having it as to such a particular point, viz. the Resurrection. I would gladly know if that point be contained in those Books? And, if it be, how he can be absolutely Certain of All, (that is of every Point,) contained there, and yet not be thus certain of That Point tho' contained there. I ever thought that Omnis and Aliquis non had been Contradictories; and had all the Logicians in the world on my side in thinking so: and if the Dr. have not invented a new Scheme of Logic of his own, fitted purposely to maintain Nonsense, and can with his great Authority make that Logic good in despite of the whole World, he speaks Flat downright Contradiction. Perhaps he may mean his Jew (or some other man who is not a Jew,) may have Absolute Certainty that those Books containing all his Faith were writ by men divinely inspired. And this he may have by the Testimony for these Books, tho' he can neither read, nor understand, nor ever heard read any one word in them: And has not this Man an incomparable Certainty of his Faith, that knows no Faith at all? Is not this to make a man Absolutely Certain of he knows not what? Yet, this it seems is all the Resolution of Dr. St's Faith. But this is not the worst; for notknowing the Contents of a Book, is a kind of Innocence in comparison of holding many wicked Heresies by Misunderstanding it. Which tho' he should do, (as do it he may, for the Drs. Principles give him no security from doing it) his very Heresies, tho' they be all the whole rabble of them that have pestered the Church since Christ's time are resolved into the Selfsame Grounds, as the Drs Faith is: For, all those Heretics believed the Scripture to be the Word of God, and believed all that the Scripture contained to be of Faith; whence they had all Faith in the lump, (as he expresses it) and so had good Title to be parts of Dr St's motley all Comprehending Church. If he denies it, let him show a soll●● reason by his Principles why they should not; no shadow of which I could ever discern in him yet. 36. He slides from this point, which he had no mind to come near could he have avoided it, P. 27. to divers sorts of particular Points; merely that he might have a show of saying something. For he knows well, and it has been told him above twenty times, we only speak of such Dogmatical Tenets as have been controverted between the Church and her Deserters: and, not to name All, we use to instance in two Chief ones, The Holy Trinity and the Divinity of our Saviour. But, here our rambling disputant is taking another vagary quite out of the road of the Question. Lominus has set him so agog that he has quite forgot the thing we are about, nay even that we are writing Controversy. He is turned School-Divine on a sudden, tho' he is so utterly Ignorant of it, that he cannot distinguish between Controversy and It. He will needs fall to treat of Faith as 'tis a Theological Virtue; and not only so, but moreover (that he may show us how manifoldly he can mistake in one Single Point) of that Virtue as 'tis in the hearts of those who are truly Faithful already, and have besides, well cultivated their Souls by the Practice of Christ's Law. Whenas all this while he knows we in our Controversy are only treating of Faith as 'tis provable to those who are looking after Faith, that 'tis Christ's Doctrine taught at first. Tell him of this five hundred times and make it out never so clearly, he runs counter still and takes no notice of it. He was to write a Book, and without mistaking wilfully all along, he saw he could not do it in any degree plausibly. After many fruitless attempts to hold him to the true State of our Controversy, which is about the Rule or Ground of Faith as to our knowledge, it occurred to me that nothing could fetter him to it more fast, than to mind him how his Friend Dr. Tillotson, whose Book he approves does himself State it. * [When w● inquire (says he) What is the Rule of Christian Faith? * Rule of Faith. p. 6. the meaning of that Enquiry is, By what Way and Means the Knowledge of Christ's Doctrine is conveyed certainly down to us; who live at the distance of so many Ages from the time of its first Delivery. I entreat him then for Dr. T'Tis sake, to remember that our Controversy presupposes Faith as 'tis Divine, and treats of it only as 'tis Derivable down to us at this distance; and, therefore, since the Knowledge of the Certain Means to do this, is, in our Controversy, antecedent to the Knowledge of Christ's Doctrine or Faith, it must be managed by Maxims of pure Reason. 37. This Point then settled, P. 28. let us trace our Prevaricatour in his wander. He tells us very gravely God is not wanting by his Grace to make (necessary) Points known to men of honest and sincere Minds. What we demand of him is some Natural Medium or Argument within our ken, concluding that what's held by him now is Christ's Doctrine. He confesses he has none (for he mocks at Conclusive Evidence) but pretends God's Grace will do it for him. We tell him that, without such Conclusive Reasons to prove our present Faith to have been taught by Christ, we cannot maintain or make out that our Faith is True. And he tells us God is not wanting by his Grace to make necessary Points known to Men of honest and sincere minds. And what man living has the Courage to assault an Adversary that comes Armed with such a Supernatural Logic! Now all this, were it levelled right, as 'tis not, is mere Petitio Principii; and, begging the Question; for it supposes Scripture's Letter Interpretable by Private Judgements is the Rule, which he was here to prove, and to show us how it preserves those who rely on it from Error. For, otherwise, if it be not the Rule, did God ever promise his Grace to those who leave a Clear and Conclusive way to follow an Obscure and Inconclusive one? Did God's Grace ever make a Conclusion follow which did not follow, or make the Terms cohere which were Incoherent? Or keep those from Error who took a Way, that, for any thing he has proved to the contrary, facilitated men to fall into it? Certainly, never was God's Grace so abused to a wrong end, or called in at a dead lift like some Deus ● machind to save his Credit for bringing never an Argument that is worth a Rush. Yet, 'tis pleasant to see what a clutter he keeps about the Donum Intellectûs and Lumen Fidei, P. 28. both which presuppose Faith and the Way to it, whereas all his work was to prove the Certainty of this Later. In this lamentable condition he has left his Rule, recurring to Invisible Gifts (the true blue Fanatic Method) instead of producing open Arguments to prove it has any power to regulate men in their way to Faith. Proceeding upon this gross and wilful shuffle he makes a fine flourish of our School-Divines who have not one single word of the way and Means by which the knowledge of Christ's Doctrine is conveyed down to us, which is our present Point, as his Friend * Rule of Faith. p. 6. Dr. T. has told him: And then he concludes like a Triumphant Hero that I am a Stranger to the Doctrine of our own Church, or an obstinate Opposer of it. Alas for him! He obstinately opposes, while he citys them, the known State of the Question; and is such a Stranger to School-Divinity that he cannot distinguish betwixt That and Controversy; and when he is taken tardy thus miserably, he thinks to salve all with Swaggering and Vapouring. 38. At length he sums up his Performances with impertinent distinctions of all the things he is Certain of. P. 33. As, 1. That he is Absolutely Certain that whatever God reveals is True. Who denies it; or what's the Certainty of God's revealing to the Certainty of his believing right, unless he be absolutely Certain that the particular Points he holds, were indeed revealed by God, or (to speak more pertinently to our purpose) were taught by Christ and his Apostles? 2. He is Absolutely Certain of his Rule, and it's containing all necessary Points. And what's he the better for Certainty of This, if still he remains uncertain of all the particular Articles he is to believe by it? 3. That God's Grace is requisite to Faith formally Divine; which is granted: but what's this to the proving it by a Natural Medium to have come from Christ, as he must do to those who are in the Way to Faith? Conclusive Evidence must be produced for this, or the Proof must fall short of concluding (whether we have Grace or no) and so leave it Unproved and Uncertain. 4. He says, Particular Points of Faith are more or less Certain, according to the Evidence of their Deduction from Scripture as the Rule of Faith. This only seems to touch the Point in hand, and it touches it very gingerly. Let him speak out and tell us whether he is Absolutely Certain of all particulars of his Faith, nay even of a Trinity and Christ's Godhead by his Rule; or whether any man living is absolutely Certain of them by his Principles? If not, than all Faith may be a Lying Story for any thing he or any man else can tell. And that this is his true Tenet is evident by his omitting P. 33. l. 12. & 16. here when he comes to speak of Particular Points, the words [Absolutely Certain] which he put to the two first parts of his Division. Nor do I like his expression of [more or less Certain] for since any Quality is more or less such, by having less or more of the Opposite Quality mixed with it, it follows that this his [more or less Certain] must mean [less or more Uncertain] strange Language for a Christian to use when he is speaking of All the Particular Articles of his Faith, and what Certainty is to be allowed for them! And yet he calls this, the setting this Controversy about the Certainty of Faith in its true light. Ibid. A pleasanter Jest than which was never spoke, were not the thing in itself so pernicious. SECT III. How Dr. St. Answers Our Reasons produced against his Grounds of Certainty for his Faith. 39 HE proceeds next to answer my short Discourse demonstrating that He, and those of His Principles, could not be Sure they had right Faith. I presumed he could not do it; he says he has; Let's see which of us is disappointed. It consists of five plain Propositions. 1. God has left us some Way to know surely what Christ and his Apostles taught. 2. Therefore this Way must be such that they who take it, shall arrive by it at the End it was intended for; that is know surely what Christ and his Apostles taught. 3. Scripture's Letter Interpretable by Private judgements, is not that Way; for we experience Presbyterians and Socinians (for example) both take that Way, yet differ in such high Fundamentals, as the Trinity & Godhead of Christ. 4. Therefore Scripture's Letter Interpretable by Private judgements, is not the Way left by God to know surely what Christ and his Apostles taught, or surely to arrive at right Faith. 5. Therefore they who take only That Way, cannot by it arrive surely at right Faith; since 'tis impossible to arrive at the End, without the Means or Way that leads to it. The Reader may know that this very Discourse, in substance, was proposed to him many years ago by a Worthy Lady, of whose sincerity I believe himself does not doubt. He made a rambling Discourse of his own against it, unappliable to any Proposition in it. The Lady, having a high opinion of Dr. St's parts, judged it impossible a man of his Learning should not be able to give an Answer to a few Lines in so long a time; not reflecting how connected Truth hampers an Adversary, and is perfectly Unanswerable: So she pressed vehemently for a Second & a Distinct Answer. After some tedious expectation he sends another, more insignificant, if possible, than the former. Which seen, and the Lady now satisfied that he (upon whom she most relied) had done his utmost, she altered her Judgement; upon no other inducement than the seeing plainly that his Principles resolved all Certainty of Faith finally into the Private Spirit: The Drs Reflecter was set on, like an unexperienced Perdu Soldier, to combat it with a distinct Answer: but alas! P. 16.17. etc. he was shown to falter or falsify in every particular. This ill success, made the Dr. grow wary in speaking to any particular part of it; but thought it safest here to stand aloof, and throw stones at distance, instead of grappling with it nearer hand. His answer is, that it proceeds upon two False Suppositions, and Overthrows the Possibility of any Rule of Faith. My first False Supposition is, P. 34. that there is no Certainty without Infallibility. No True or Absolute Certainty, good Dr. For, as for your Moral Certainty it may be Fallible enough. I must confess I hate such nonsense as to say [I am perfectly Certain of a thing yet peradventure I am deceived.] The word [Absolute] signifies Perfect; and Certainty, if True, is taken from the Natures of the Objects or Things without us; and if they stand perfectly engaged by a True Knowledge of them, they would not be what they are, if when we truly conceive them as they are, our Conception or judgement of them can be False, that is, if it be not, in that particular, Infallible. This is plain Sense, and told him long ago. It has been demonstrated also in P. 36.37. Faith Vindicated that True Certainty & Infallibility were all one. What answers he? Why, he makes as if he had never known or heard of our Arguments for it; but falls to talk of the P. 35. P. 36. Stoics Mark, Epicurus his fooleries: He learnedly mistakes the Definition, [Man is a Rational Creature] for a Demonstration, and dislikes it at the same time. Lastly, he tells us many other things the Ancients held or said; which are nothing to me, who judge I know what belongs to Certainty and resolving of Truths into their Principles, as well as they did; and do think them very weak to stand disputing with the perfect Sceptics or convincing them by Criteria; because all Discourse supposes something Certain to build upon, otherwise it might go on endlessly; that is, would be to no End; and the Sceptics admitted no Certainty of any thing at all. 40. His Application of those Preparatives is, that we are to expect no Absolute Certainty in proving the present Faith to be Christ's Doctrine. And so he hopes to save his own Credit for producing none, let the Credit of Christian Faith, and the repute of its being an Absolutely Certain Truth go where it will for him. However, to avoid the shame justly due to such a Position, he must cast in some good words to fool his Readers; and, so, he grants that they who use due Care and diligence may attain to a true Certainty and satisfaction of Mind as to the sense of Scripture. But he never attempts to show that possibly they may not do so, P. 36. but may hap to fall into damnable Heresies as the Socinians do; who, for aught he or I know, used as much Care and Diligence, as he and his Party use. Again, what means Satisfaction of Mind? Is Faith ever a jot more Certain or True because some may be Satisfied it is? Are not the Socinians as well satisfied in mind that Christ is not God, as the Dr. is that he is God? Moreover; if the Argument he brings to prove his Faith to be Christ's true Doctrine, does not conclude, 'tis a thousand to one that Acute and Intelligent men will find the flaw in it: And what can those men do in that case, so they be true to their Reason, the only Light they can yet guide themselves by? Must they Assent that his Faith came from Christ, when they see that, notwithstanding all the Proof he brings for it, it may not be Christ's, and hazard to Embrace that Doctrine for his Faith which may, for any thing they know, have the Father of Lies for its Author? They must Suspend then in that case, and justify themselves by alleging that the best Arguments, the most Learned Christians bring to prove it, conclude nothing; Nay 'tis to be feared they will disgrace the Faithful as a company of Fops, for believing upon weak Grounds; and, by showing them such, lay a just Scandal upon the Christian Church for pretending to hold what Christ taught, when as yet none in it are able to prove it was his Doctrine. And how would they laugh Christians out of Countenance, if, proceeding on Dr St's short Grounds, they should only show them a Well-Attested Book containing those Doctrines, without ascertaining absolutely the true Sense of it, when as only that Sense was the Doctrine of Faith; and, which is worse, when they saw multitudes of numerous Sects at perpetual and irreconcilable variance about that Sense! The true Rule of Faith then must be such as sets Faith above any Peradventure of not being Christ's true Doctrine, and so, secure all who rely on it, how weak soever, from being deceived or in an Error; and, withal, it must be such as Intelligent men, seeking for assurance of Christ's Faith, may be satisfied it is able to conclude it to be such, and the more Learned Faithful Evince to Doubters and Convince Opposers, that the Faith held now by themselves and the Church is the Selfsame that Christ and his Apostles taught at First. But Dr St. dares not affirm any of this of his Rule of Faith; therefore his pretended Rule is none. His Instance of True Certainty attainable without Infallibility in that point of Faith, viz. P. 36. That jesus was the True Messias, Fourth Cath. Letter. p. 25.26. is partly answered in my Fourth Catholic Letter; and his alleging it has one strange inadvertence in it, which I wonder he was not aware of, which is, that the Proof of it depended on the Interpretation of Scripture. He had it seems forgot that to manifest himself to be the true Messias, foretold by the Prophets, was the main Point of our Saviour's Doctrine; and that he did Miracles to attest that Doctrine, and make himself known to be that Person; which Miracles were Infallible Marks that that Doctrine of his in that point was True. And, when the Dr. produces Miracles to abet his Private Interpretations of Scripture, than he may have a fair pretence to lay aside the Public Interpretation of the Church. Again, he is quite out as to the Subject of his discourse: For tho' it was a Point of Faith in the Jewish Law that a Messias was to come; yet that this very Person, jesus Christ, was to be that Messias, was no Point of Faith among them; and God's Providence, we see, took a far better way to make it out than Private Interpretations of the Scripture; unless he thinks Miracles, no more Effectual nor more Certain than private Interpretations are. What insignificant nothings this Man brings for his choice Arguments, and what pains he takes in the worst cause in the world, viz. To maintain that Christian Faith needs not to be Absolutely Certain? And this, for no other reason (for 'tis every Christian's Interest it should be so) but because his bad Principles can afford him no Argument to prove it to be such. 41. His Pretence of my Second False Supposition, (viz. that a Rule of Faith, P. 37. according to me must be a Mechanical Rule, and not a Rational) is weak beyond expression. Every Scholar knows (his Friend Dr. T. particularly who took the same way and used the same expressions, Rule of Faith. p. 4.) that Metaphors are translated from Material to Intellectual things, in regard we have no genuine Conceptions of these Later; (and indeed, most of the Language of Christianity is made up of such expressions,) whence we can argue, by Analogy, from the one to the other. The word [Rule] is one of those Metaphorical words: and, hence we say that, as a Material Rule is that by which if we draw our Pen, it directs us to make a Right Line; so, the Rule of Faith, being intended by God to direct us to Truth, will lead those Right who follow it and regulate themselves by it. Does not this Metaphor look a little more Proper, and the Discourse upon it hang better together than his likening Scripture to a Purse? yet he utterly dislikes it, and tells the Reader I falsely suppose the Rule of Faith must be a Mechanical or Carpenter's Rule with all its Dimensions fixed; P. 37. and denies that himself supposes it to be such a Material or Mechanical Rule: Nor any man sure that were not stark Mad. P. 38. Again, do we here meddle with its Dimensions or how much is of Faith, as he did when he spoke of his Rule? The Straightness of the draught, preserving us from the Obliquity of Error, is the only point we aim at. Next, he denies there is any such Intellectual Rule, P. 38. because there may be Mistakes in the Understanding and Applying it, and therefore Care and Diligence and Impartiality are required, else men may miss. How? Miss tho' they follow it? Then itself was not Strait; and, so, no Rule: For the very notion of a Rule is to be a Thing that has a Power to regulate or direct us right, or keep the Understanding that follows it from missing; and to follow it is all the Application it can need to do its Effect. Whence, all the Care and Diligence and Impartiality he speaks of, must be employed in seeing they do indeed follow it: for none of these can help or hinder the Rule in its Power of directing; since it had this of it Self, independently of the Persons. But his Rule, tho' all these (as far as we Mortals can discern) be used by the Socinians in the following it, still suffers those Careful, and Diligent and Impartial followers of it to err in Faith; Therefore 'tis no Rule of Faith. But 'tis mighty pretty to observe that when he is pinched with plain Sense he ever and anon runs to the old Philosophers; P. 37. who he says, would have laughed at me for applying a Material Rule to Intellectual things. Sure he's not well awake. I draw a Metaphor indeed from a Material Rule to an Intellectual one, and then apply that Intellectual Rule to Intellectual things; but I know none so mad as to apply a Material Rule to Intellectual things; unless he thinks I am measuring Faith by a Tailor's Yard, or finding out the right Sense of Scripture by a Ruler and a Ruling pen. P. 38. 42. But, why Presbyterians and Socinians? This insinuation (says he) has as much folly as Malice in it, and makes as tho' We of the Church of England were Socinians in those points, viz. The Trinity and Godhead of Christ. God forbid I should be so injurious to them. I do assure him and them faithfully I intended it as a piece of Justice to them; and put in Presbyterians instead of Protestants because I had reason to hope those private-spirited Principles were none of theirs, and that divers of their Eminent Writers had owned the Universal Tradition and Practice of the Church for their Rule of interpreting Scripture: And I have some Ground to think they might in time have professed it publicly, had not Dr. St's Irenicum-Doctrines * Answer to a Letter against Mr. Lowth. p. 6. filled that Church with men of no steady Principles— and made luke warm Persons flock into it corrupting its Body,— by which means there have been in the Church of England so few Church-of-England Men. But, why so Choleric? Why such wincing and kicking? I do assure him I did not think I had in the least touched him. If he be so over-apprehensive and angry withal, I fear he has done himself more wrong in taking it to himself than I ever intended him. Again, what means he by [We of the Church of England?] I am told by a hearty Member of it, and one who owns his Name too, (how true it is let the Dr's Conscience look to it) that * Answer to Mr. Lowth's Letter to Dr. St. p. 13. he is contented to sit and sing in the bearing Branches of that Church, so long as he fills his Pockets; but, when the gathering time is over, it is to be cut down as that which cumbereth the Ground. By which he sees that he must either clear himself by a candid and full Retractation of his ill Principles, or he will have no Title to the word [We.] But we are come forwards to his farther Defence of his Rule, P. 39 or rather to his overthrowing the Absolute Certainty of Christian Faith; in order to which he asks, How can Reason be Certain in any thing, if men following their Reason can mistake? Very easily. Because Reason is a Faculty or a Power, apt to be actuated by True or False Principles; and, accordingly, 'tis Determinable to Truth or Falsehood. But, if Reason follow any Maxim, taking it to be a Principle to such a thing, and yet errs in that thing, than that pretended Principle is no true Principle. Yet, says he, Ibid. Men following the Rules of Arithmetic may mistake in casting up a Summ. And can he seriously think that a man who casts it up False, does not decline, while he thus mistakes, from Arithmetical Rules? May he not with as good Sense say that Two and Three do not make Five? for all Rules of Computation hang together by the same necessity. In a word, his Instance falters in the Third Proposition, viz. That Two who have made use of the same way differ at least a hundred in casting up the Sum. Which is False; and by altering the Terms irregularly, he hinders any Conclusion from following. False, because, no two men can differ in a Sum, unless they wrong or abuse the Rules of Computation. Irregular; because, instead of the words [who take that Way] found in his Second Proposition and in our Discourse, he cogs in the words [make use of that way] which are not so express in sense as the word [Take] is, which imports following whither it leads, or making a right use of it. And it would have been too palpably absurd to say a man takes a way who leaves it; as an Ill-reckoner must needs leave the true Rules of Arithmetic. But those who both Take and Follow all along the Letter of Scripture interpreted by their private selves, and this to their power, and are skilful in Languages & in comparing places, do yet go wrong▪ therefore his Way is no Way, and his Rule is no Rule. Then follows the Triumph over my Inconsiderateness in not distinguishing between the Rule and its Application; and I tell him the taking it, following it, or holding to it, is the Applying it, and all the Application it can need. Nor shall all his starting holes and tricks ever be able to evade the force of this Argument. P. 40. 43. His Discourse of Moral Qualifications requisite to the Certainty of Faith, as to know the Sense of the New Testament, if applied to our present Question, amounts to this; that no man can see the force of a Natural Medium leading to Faith, without Humility of Mind, Purity of Heart, Prayer to God, sincere Endeavours to do God's Will, etc. So that for want of a good Argument, he has left off Disputing, and falls to Preaching, tho' he has had but ill Success in his Guildhall Sermon. 'Tis granted all these are excellent means to purge the Will from By-affections; and, by doing so, to leave the Understanding free to see the force of the Proof, and thence infer the Truth of what's proved or shown to our Reason. But where's this Proof, where's this Truth all the while? Must we produce such invisible things for open Proofs? If all these Moral Qualifications be requisite (as he says) to make men Certain of Christ's Doctrine, he must prove that Himself and all his Sober Enquirers, which are the Members of his private-Spirited Church, have all these Qualifications, ere we or any man living can be certain they have true Faith. Again, how will he satisfy Doubters, and convince acute Opposers and Adversaries what is the true Doctrine of Christ? Will the alleging Invisible Qualifications do the work? Moreover, he is Certain of his Faith by his Rule; and yet his Rule of Scripture ascertains none by his Doctrine but by virtue of these Moral Qualifications. These than are either his Rule or the best part of it. At least he maintains here they are requisite, and that otherwise Scripture is no Rule. He must then prove He has these Qualifications, or he cannot show he has any Rule, or any Faith. In a word, we are disputing as Controvertists, and demand open & intelligible Proofs; and he sends us to Invisible holes, which only God the searcher of Hearts can find out; and is not this mighty Learned? I wonder how he can pretend to Convert any man to Christ's true Doctrine by these Principles. All he can do is to allege and compare Texts to prove it certainly Christ's Doctrine; I but, Sir, says the other, how shall I be satisfied you have Humility of Mind, Purity of Heart, etc. without which yourself confess you cannot be certain of the true Sense of Scripture at all? What Art the Doctor has to satisfy him in this hard Point I know not. But setting the Doctor's Faith aside, what Provision has he made for the standing Visible Body of the Church to defend and maintain she has Christ's true Faith? None in the world by his Principles, unless she can prove she has all these Moral Qualifications. So that all is left to each private man's breast; and, if he has but this good Conceit of himself, that he is endowed with all those excellent Virtues, and fancies that he prays better than all his Neighbours, let them be Socinians, Quakers or what you will, he is certain of his Faith merely by virtue of this Self-conceit that he is such a Saint; since by Dr. St's Principles without firm assurance that he is thus requisitly qualified, he can never have any assurance at all of his Faith. Might he not as well have told us in one word, that Himself and all his Friends are pure Saints, and know themselves to be so, and therefore they are Certain they have these rare Qualifications, and by them Assurance of the Sense of Scripture, or Christ's Doctrine; but that all who do not think as they do, want those Qualifications, are of the Wicked and Children of Darkness, and so can never have any Light to know whether they have Christ's true Doctrine or not? This then is the rare Resolution of Dr. St's Faith. I expected he should produce clear Arguments as became a Controvertist, and he alleges the most hidden Means in the world as becomes an Enthusiast. P. 14. 44. Yet the force of Truth is so great that it obliges him to confess that The Right Way will certainly bring men to their journeys End if they continue in it. I subsume; But the Letter of Scripture Interpretable by Private Judgements does not bring the Socinians to their End, that is, to know surely what Christ and his Apostles taught, tho' they continue in it; whence I conclude that Scripture's Letter Interpretable by Private Judgements is not the Right Way to know surely what Christ & his Apostles taught. To escape this most evident Conclusion which utterly overthrows his whole Cause, he starts aside with one [If] to the remote End [Salvation] whereas the End I spoke of in my Discourse which he is now answering, was expressly, to know assuredly Christ's Doctrine: Then after a second [If] he tells us Scripture was not designed as an Infallible Way to know the Truth on Falsehood of particular Opinions by. Ibid. l. 20.21. What have we to do with Opinions? We speak of Points of Faith, and instanced expressly in the Blessed Trinity and the Godhead of Christ. Are these with him but Opinions? Indeed, I have reason to doubt that all Points of Faith are but Opinions with him, nay he ought to doubt they are or may be worse than Opinions, viz. Heretical Falsehoods, unless he thinks himself absolutely Certain of his Moral Qualifications; for 'tis those, it seems, must do the deed, when all Arguments fail. As for Infallibility, there was no such word in my Discourse, and he ought to answer my Argument in the words I put it; and not to start into such Evasions and Logomachies. Tho' the allowing of Natural Infallibility has been proved against him by Reason and Authority of those even of his own Church, he never answers it, but barely says over again, there is no such thing as Infallibility in Mankind but by Immediate Divine Assistance. Yet he had the boldness or Forgetfulness to say, p. 5. that If this be not Catholic Doctrine, than I am Infallibly Certain I. S' Letters are far from being Catholic in their Sense. It seems than either some men are Infallible, for seriously I take Dr St. to be a Man; or he fancies himself to be something above the Herd of Mankind; or else sticks not at the Blasphemy to entitle the Blessed Spirit of Peace to have inspired him with such a quarrelsome Falsehood. 45. He discourses against Tradition as 'tis Practical; but has he said any thing against it as 'tis Oral? P. 42. the force of which to clear Christ's Sense delivered down in the Church consists in Catechising, Preaching, dilating upon the Points, and explicating themselves at large; replying to difficulties, and accommodating their Discourse to all the Learners Exigences; All which is found in the Living Voice of the Church and her Pastors, (as * Third Cath. Letter, p. 6.7.8. I showed him at large) and none of it, in the Letter in a Book. What answers he to common Sense and to his own Experience too when he instructs others? why he puts us off still with this frigid Cuckoo Answer, that he is of another Opinion, that writing is as plain as speaking; and that words written have as much (he ought to have said as Clear) Sense in them as words spoken. Which, applied to our case is most palpable Nonsense, and makes all Explications frivolous, and all Catechizers and Commentators upon Scripture ridiculous. The force I put in the Practicalness of Tradition is, that, supervening to the Oral delivery, or being consonant to it, it confirms it, and makes it more Visible. But he Combats the Practicalness of it considered alone; and so impugns his own wilful Mistake. But what says he to my discourse? He alleged that Tradition might come down in Common Equivocal Words, and so deliver no determinate Sense. I * Third Cath. Letter. from p. 6▪ to p. 12. replied that 'tis inconsistent with the Nature of Mankind to mean nothing by the words they use, especially in Tenets they were to be saved by; therefore the Body of the Church had some Meaning or other of those Words, [Christ is the Son of God,] and [Christ's Body is really in the Sacrament:] But this Meaning or Notion could not be a Common or General one, in regard, no Notion can be common to God & a Creature, to the Substance of Christ's Body, & to the Substance of Bread, much less to that Sacred Substance, and some Accidents or Qualities: Therefore there could not come down any such Common Notion, by means of those Words; wherefore, there must have descended some particular Notion of each Point, determining the signification of the Words to one sense or the other. This was the true force of my Discourse. I do still pretend it Demonstrable, and let him answer it when he can; for, did he know the Consequences it will draw after it, he would think it worth his while. He's at his old Logic again, which is to bring an Instance against the Conclusion, P. 46. and is very brisk that it overthrows my Demonstration. And what says his Instance? It says the Corinthians and Artemonites understood by those words, that Christ was only an Adoptive Son, that is a Creature; which is as much as to say, they understood them in a Particular Sense, which is all I there pretended. And, so, his Instance is, as he says truly, Unlucky; but 'tis to himself, not to me; for it makes good my words, and instead of overthrowing, confirms my Discourse that Men must have understood some Particular Sense by those words; and our Learned Dr is so weak as to think, that, when what he brings for an Answer is so evidently for me, it makes against me. As for their pleading Tradition for their Sense; Ibid. surely he means a private Tradition from some former Heretics, and not the Public Tradition of the Christian Church; or that their Heretical Tenets were immediately delivered by that United Body of Christians; for the manifest Falsehood of this would have been confuted by Experience and have shamed the Allegers: Nor could the Church, in that case, have condemned them, since they spoke her sense. But the good Dr mistook the Pretence of two or three quibbling Heretics for the Universal Tradition of the Church (as wicked an Error as it was possibly to stumble upon) & then triumphs how rarely his Instance has answered my Demonstration. And thus ends his Reply to my short Discourse; which having done, P. 47. he assures the Reader he has fully answered my main Argument against his Rule of Faith. Whereas he has not so much as touched any single Proposition in it; & trifled, or done worse, even in the ridiculous odd way he has taken to answer it. Which confirms me more than ever 'tis past his skill to hurt it, and even beyond his Courage to grapple with it. 46. His contradicting himself is still urged upon him unless he can show that true or Absolute Certainty does not secure those who have it in any thing, from being deceived in that thing. Again, P. 48. in his 15th Principle he said there needed no Infallible Society of men either to attest or explain the Scripture. I replied, that if it be Fallible, we cannot by it be more than Fallibly Certain, and we can have no Absolute Certainty from a Fallible Testimony. This seems very plain; for how should a man be absolutely or perfectly Certain of a thing by that very Testimony which not being perfectly Certain may perhaps deceive him in that very Thing? His first Answer is, that [he understands no such thing as Infallibility in Mankind, P. 49. but by immediate Divine Assistance.] He understands? Is that an Answer? Does he understand how to answer our many Arguments to prove it? By his not taking notice of them, we are to understand, and conclude he does Not. Again he declares that in that Principle of his he meant there needed no Infallibility by Divine Assistance; and he utterly denies Natural Infallibility; whence 'tis manifest he allows no Certainty at all but Fallibility. His Faith is in a fine case in the mean time. He must show I say that Fallibility in the Testimony can ground Absolute Certainty of the thing attested, and this, tho' a man sees that the Testimony and himself who relies on it may be in an Error, before he can make either the Letter or the Book of Scripture, Absolutely Certain, by Tradition or Human Testimony, which he maintains here is Fallible. Can a man think or say interiorly, [I am Absolutely (or perfectly) Certain of a thing peradventure. When that very [Peradventure] hinders his Certainty from being Absolute or Perfect? What answers he to this plain Evidence? Or how shows he that a seen Fallibility is able to beget Absolute Certainty? Why, First, he says, Ibid. If by Fallible Certainty I mean this and that, etc. I mean? Why I mean nothing by it but that 'tis a wicked Contradiction. I mean the same by it as I would by a hirco-cervus, a foursquared Triangle, Green Scarlet, or whatever such desperate words one may put together to compound strong Nonsense. How should I mean any thing by a Compound of two such words which the Goodness of Rational Nature, and the aversion which our understanding power has to Contradiction, has forbid any man to use ever since the Creation? Did the Dr. or any man living hear any Mortal man when he is about to express his Certainty of a thing, say [I am Fallibly Certain of it?] Yet, how oft has he heard them say, I am Infallibly Certain of such a thing? whence were the word [Infallibly] a different Notion from Certain, or Difference added to it as to its Genus, it would nay must admit the Opposite Difference [Fallibly] as is done in all such cases: which since it does not, without straining nature, and the Language of Mankind, 'tis not a different Notion, but the same with True Certainty; and therefore in proper Speech True Certainty and Infallibility are both one: Yet, after he has thus abused the Language of all Mankind, he has the Confidence to tell me I make use of those words in an Improper and unusual Sense. This farther appears by this, that our Speculators use to add Moral or some other such Epithet to it, which are of a diminishing signification, when they would express its deficiency from True Certainty. This Logical Demonstration to prove Certainty and Infallibility to be the same was alleged in Faith Vindicated, p. 37. But we must excuse such slight Talkers from even attempting to give an Answer becoming a Scholar to any such close Proofs; tho' it has been pressed upon him in Error Nonplussed, P. 49.50. p. 92. and upon Dr Tillotson in Reason against Raillery from p. 64. to p. 67. He only tells us what he does own, does not own, and such sleeveless sayings; that is, he only says over again his own crude Tenets with the formality of a Distinction or two; and places his main hopes to uphold his Credit, not in the Strength of his Answers, but in the Weakness or Partiality of his Readers. The upshot is, he owns clearly he has only Fallible Grounds for his Faith having been taught by Christ; which is to assert and maintain (for it is not to be supposed he will allow any others to have surer Grounds than his own) that All Christian Faith may be False, and the Grounds themselves, in more Regards than one, most perfect Nonsense. 47. He proceeds next to give us his Notion of Absolute Certainty in these words: [When the Evidence is the highest which in point of Reason the thing is capable of, then there is that which I call Absolute Certainty. These words [Which I call] are very Emphatical, and precisely True; for no man living but himself and Dr. T. that I know of ever called it so. For, suppose the Evidence be but very slight, and the Thing, as proposed to us, or in our Circumstances, can give us no more, will this slight glimmering Evidence make us Absolutely Certain of it? Again, Does he mean in point of True Reason informed by the best Maxims to direct and establish it? This is Conclusive Evidence or Demonstration, and the Conclusion thus deduced is Infallibly True, because the Maxim which legitimates the Consequence, is, as all Logicians know, Infallibly Certain, being a Principle of our Understanding, and Self-evident; Is it this he means? No: He does not like Conclusive Evidence in the Grounds of his Faith by no means. To come closer, I ask him, Does he mean that True Knowledge, conformable to the Thing, or object, fixes him in that Certainty, or (in great part) his own airy Apprehension? If such a Knowledge, then, since none can truly know what is not, that Knowledge is as Impossible to be False, or is as Infallibly True, as 'tis that the thing must be what it is: And, if no such Knowledge grounds his Certainty, how is it an Absolute or Perfect one? Can his apprehending it so make it so? Can a man be Absolutely Certain of a Falsehood, because he apprehends that Falsehood to be a Truth, or that a thing is so when 'tis not so? If not, then 'tis only it's being so which can be the Ground of Absolute Certainty, and justify that Assent, and then that Assent is Infallible, for a thing is Infallibly what it is. He'll say he took it to be so, and that's enough. But, to omit that his taking a thing to be so neither makes nor proves it to be so, I press farther: When he took it to be so, Did he take it right, or did he mistake it? If he took it right, then again his Knowledge, and Certainty grounded on that Knowledge, are both Infallible; for his Knowledge when he took it right could not but be conformable to the Thing, and the Thing is Infallibly as it is. If he took it wrong or mistook it, and yet be Absolutely Certain of it, than again there may be Absolute Certainty of a Falsehood, or that a thing is so which is not so: which is a rare kind of Certainty indeed, especially for the Ground of his Faith; and Posterity no doubt will owe much to his Memory for the Invention. 'Tis left then that he must say he did not know whether he took it right or wrong, but apprehended he took it right. In which case (to omit that this apprehending or thinking the Evidence so strong as to determine assent, is the Second kind of Certainty he assigns here before he comes to Absolute Certainty) I ask how he can possibly think himself Certain a thing is such, when he sees he does not know whether he be mistaken in it or no? And how a Judgement that a thing absolutely is, and a Judgement that it may not be for any thing he knows, can be consistent together in an Intellectual Nature, without destroying the First Principle of our Understanding, viz. That 'tis not Possible the same thing should at once be and not be. 48. I have not done with this new invented Absolute Certainty of his. It must spring he says from the Highest Evidence which in point of Reason the thing is capable of. Where every expression is Indeterminate and Ambiguous. Suppose (as I urged lately) the thing be not capable of any Clear Evidence (as himself supposes there is not for such or such a Doctrine to have been taught by Christ) why must he needs Assent at all? Why does he not Suspend? God has endowed us with a Faculty of doing this, as a bridle to keep us from Precipitation, and to preserve us from running into Error; & why should we not use it, but expose ourselves to run headlong into Mistakes; both prejudicial to our Nature, whose Perfection is Truth; and pernicious, in its Consequences, to the Conduct of our Lives? Again, Certainty, taken from the Thing (as he says this is) signifies a Determination of the Mind by means of the Object, and is the genuine Effect of some kind of Evidence; and, therefore, Absolute or Perfect Certainty ought to be the Effect of Perfect Evidence: nor is any Evidence a Perfect one, unless it Concludes. Now he does not like Conclusive Evidence, and so he ought to renounce Absolute Certainty. 'Tis as difficult to guests what he means here by those words [in point of Reason,] True Reason knows no Methods but this: to Assent if the Thing be Clear, and to Suspend if it be Not; and, to conclude or argue being the proper Act of Reason straining after Truth, what's not concluded is not Clear, and therefore not to be accepted for an Absolute Truth or Assented to as such; The sum then (to come close to our present Question) is, that, Absolute Certainty of such a Doctrine's having been taught by Christ must either be built on True Evidence of the Grounds for it, and then it cannot consist with Deception, and so is Infallible: Or it is not; and, then indeed it may sometimes come to justify a great Propension, Hope or Deeming that 'tis so; Or, if I conceive it to be of small concern, an unexamining letting it pass for such, but it can never justify an Absolute Assent. See more of this Subject, and a perfect Confutation of this wild Assertion in * from p. 64. to p. 165. and fr. p. 173. to p. 180. Errour-Nonplust and * Discourse Fifth. P. 53. Reason against Raillery. After many rambling sayings of his own he falls to speak of putting an End to Controversies, especially, about Certainty and Fatality. What we have to do with Fatality I know not; but I believe he heartily wishes an end of This Fatal Controversy; concerning Certainty; for he is in a miserable ross about it; being driven now to declare whether he will deny First Principles, or renounce his Vnprincipled Doctrine. The best way I can invent to end all Controversies, is this, that, since Controvertists are Disputants, and are to produce their Arguments; which are good for nothing nor can ever End Controversies unless they Conclude, those who renounce Conclusive Evidence and instead of it bring Invisible Motives & Qualifications, may be exposed and turned out of the Lists, as being, even by their own Confession Insignificant Talkers and Endless Brabblers. His wrangle about Light and Darkness, P. 51. P. 73.74. Christ and Belial is spoke to in my Second Catholic Letter. Let him show that his Rule, Scripture interpreted by Private Judgements, does not Patronise Heresy as well as Faith, (which he will never do) and we will be content to acquit him from that horrid Blasphemy of making Light and Darkness very consistent; and Christ the Author of our Holy Faith and Belial the Father of Heresy and Lies, very good Friends; of which wicked Doctrine, till he does this, he stands Indicted. 49. I alleged that Scripture being the Common Rule to him and all Heretics, P. 53. the particular or distinguishing Rule must be their own Private judgements interpreting Scripture. Does he deny this, or show my Discourse faulty by assigning any other that particularizes or distinguishes them? No, neither. What does he then? Why he sends me to the old Philosophers to learn Logic. And I tell him with many thanks, I know none, except Aristotle, a competent Master for Me. Next, he makes Sense to be a Rule of judging, that is an Intellectual Rule: which I deny: For the Rule to any thing is the Immediate Light to judge of any thing, and multitudes of intervening Knowledges are requisite to inform us when the advertisements of our Senses are right; as is evident in the fallaciousness of Sense in a Stick seeming crooked in water, the bigness of things seen at distance, and innumerable other particulars. But I ought to distinguish between the Rule of judgement, P. 53.54. and the judgement made according to that Rule. And so I do, if that be all. For the Rule is the Informer, & my judgement the thing informed: But yet if my Judgement follow the Information and still go wrong, my Informer was no good Informer. The Evidence of this, and the propension of uncorrupted Nature to believe Pastors, Fathers and Teachers, and those who were wiser than themselves in things they were Ignorant of, did (I told him) make the Generality of those out of the Church follow the Way of Tradition of their own Church; and not regulate themselves in the choice of their Tenets by their private Judgement of Discretion working upon Scripture's Letter; as is evident in whole Nations (as Denmark) meeting in one particular Belief, and whole Sects agreeing in the very Judgement of their respective Leaders; whence the Sense they make of Scripture as themselves understand it, is not their Rule. First, he quotes a Decree of the Church of England, that nothing is to be required of any man to be believed as Faith but what's read in Scripture or may be proved by it. But this makes against himself, unless he thinks the Generality, that is, the Laity of that Church esteem themselves more able to judge of the Sense of what's read in Scripture, or to prove all the highest Points of Faith by it, than their Pastors and Church-governors are; for otherwise Nature will and aught to incline them to believe their Judgement rather than their own in that affair, which is to follow the Way of Tradition. Indeed, I must confess that by the Doctor's Principles every one of his Sober Enquirers ought to prefer his own Judgement of Discretion above the Church's; but what He says is one thing, what the Dictates of honest Nature teaches Mankind is another. 'Tis confessed, the Laity of each Congregation judges the Sentiments of their Leaders to be agreeable to Scripture; but I affirm withal that not one in ten thousand, when he comes at age, lays aside Prejudice, and sets himself to consider anew by his scanning the Letter whether his Leaders told him right, or presumes of the competency of his own knowledge to judge or determine whether They understood Scripture in the right Sense or no. He talks to us indeed of Helps, P. 55.56. and how they call in the old Interpreters of the Church, and desire them to use their own Reason, etc. But every man sees that Few or None stand Indifferent till they have used all these Helps; but undoubtingly accept that very Faith in which they were educated: And so they continue; till the discoursing or reading those of a contrary Opinion, unsettles them and put them into Doubts. Besides if those Helps he talks of are not secure from erring themselves as to what they help others in, they may help them to Misunderstand the Sense of Scripture in the Highest Points of Faith, and so help them to be Heretics. And yet these are all the best Helps his Principles can Help them to; For he assures us and maintains stoutly by affirming them all to be Fallible in what they are to help us, that all his Helps may be deceived in that very thing in which they are to help others: They may indeed according to him, give a strong guess at what is Christ's Doctrine, but that's all; for he allows none to be Absolutely Certain of the Sense of Scripture, but only of the Letter. He proceeds after a strange rate and talks of Opinions, doubtful and Obscure places; but avoids still to come up to those High Points of Faith, particularly those of a Trinity and Christ's Godhead, in which he knows I instanced. Then he blames my Logic, for not distinguishing between the Rule of Faith and the Help to understand it. P. 55. And my Logic remembers its respects to his no Logic, and sends him back word, that since an Intellectual Rule to such a thing is an Immediate Light or Means to know that thing as his Friend Dr. T. has told him, Rule of Faith▪ p. 40. and is purposely framed to give us that Knowledge, nay Essentially Ordained to that End, 'tis a Contradiction to say it needs another thing to lend it Clearness, in order to give us Christ's Sense; for then this other thing would be clearer than It as to that particular Effect; and, so, This not the Other would be the true Rule of Faith. Yet he will needs prove this Contradiction True, and that it may be a Rule and yet not have Power to regulate without the help of another; And, by what Argument will he prove it? Oh, he can prove things by better means than Arguments. He has an Instance still at hand, either when he is pressed too close, with another's Arguments or wants one of his own. These Instances are good Serviceable drudges and are ever ready to do all his Jobs; and yet I doubt his Instance brought to prove a Contradiction, must itself be of the same chimerical Family. Let's see 'tis this, that a Nurse teaches Children to Spell and read the New Testament, P. 55.56. & so by degrees to understand Christ's Doctrine; and yet the Faith of those persons is not resolved into this Help, of the Nurse's Teaching but into the New Testament itself as the Ground of their Faith. I must confess I extremely admire at this Drs Confidence, and no less at his Imprudence that he does not rather not write at all then perpetually put such shams as these upon his Reader. Are we speaking of all remote helps whatsoever, or are we speaking only of a Help for the Rule to do its Proper Effect, which is to give us Christ's Sense or our Faith? God and Nature has helped us with a Rational Being, Eyes, and Brains; Conversation or Masters have helped us with skill in the Language in which the Letter of Scripture is delivered, and Tradition has helped us with the Right Books and Copy of Scripture; Do any of these concern our present enquiry? Are not these all presupposed to his Rule? The only Question is what help is necessary to give his Rule (the rest being all presupposed) the Power to regulate us in knowing the Sense of that Book or our Faith, as to those Spiritual and most Important Articles? To do this being the Proper Effect of his Rule, and, a Thing not being what it should be, or is pretended to be, unless it have a power in its self to do its Proper Effect, (since it's Essence was ordained for it) hence I affirm it must need no help to do this, but must have it of itself; and therefore if Scripture's Letters have not of itself Clearness enough to give those who are coming to Faith the requisite Certainty or knowledge of what's its true Sense in those Dogmatic Points, 'tis no Rule of Faith. This is the only Point, and therefore must only be omitted: what's this to a Nurse's Teaching to read? Or what's her Teaching to the Immediate and Certain Light to know Christ's Sense in those Main Articles? His Friend Dr. T. goes (by chance) a little more consonantly, and confesses the substance of this discourse of mine, by allowing that the Letter of Scripture must be Sufficiently Plain, even in those High Points I mention (Rule of Faith, p. 86.87.) But it seems, that upon second thoughts fearing to be pinched hard upon that point, they have since that time, changed their measures. 50. Put case then one of Dr. St's Flock should say to him; Doctor, this very Rule you bid me follow, P. 37. to my best judgement tells me you have erred in holding the true Godhead of Christ; nay, suppose he should say the same to the whole Church of England, what could He or that Church either, say to such a man according to his Principles? They can only propose and direct, and that's the utmost they ought to do; and, if he likes not their Proposal & Direction, they ought to let him alone, nay commend him for sticking so close to his Rule, as he understands it, without fearing the face of Man. For 'tis the greatest Injustice and Tyranny in the world to punish a man Temporally, or (which is worse) by Ecclesiastical Censures for following sincerely this Rule of Faith. Besides, who can tell but this man is better stocked with Dr. St's Moral Qualifications and Inward Light than his Judges and Pastors are? And then to vex such a Saint is to fight against God: And therefore the Scabbed Sheep must be let alone to run astray or infect the Flock; let the Church & her Government go where they will. Now, who sees not that these Principles must shatter the Church in pieces, fill her with a multitude of Bedlam Sects, and utterly overthrow Church-Government? But what would I. S. do with such a man? Why, first I would endeavour to dispossess him of that Luciferian Spirit of Pride, Ibid. which such wicked Principles have tainted him with, and win him to a rational Humility by representing how all Mankind in their several affairs seek out one more skilled than themselves and use their best reason in pitching upon him, and then trusting him in things themselves are Ignorant in. I would show him how the Order of the World, the Commands of God, and his known Duty, do all oblige him to believe the Church in such matters rather than his own Private Interpretations; I would endeavour to show him that the Preservation of these necessary Orders engages God's Providence to assist his Church and keep her from Erring in Faith, rather than private Men. I would show him that, since the only thing he doubts of is to know what Christ taught, & that God has left some Way to make us sure of his true Doctrine, he must first find out such a Way that, if men followed it, would secure them from Error in that particular. Nor would it be hard to demonstrate to him that * see it confessed by the Reflecter, p. 21. Tradition is such a way, and that Scripture's Letter interpretable by private Judgement is not that way. I would show him how impossible 'tis the Body of the Church should have unanimously deserted that Way; And, amongst other things I would inform him how weakly Dr St. had defended his Own Rule and impugned ours; and, lastly, how he and others who followed another way, have been forced to grant that all the Main Points of Christian Doctrine may be false for any thing they know. These and such like Discourses, I hope, would at first startle him, and at length cure him, if he were not too deeply tainted with Enthusiasm, or a high opinion of his own Moral Qualifications and Divine Assistances: For, if he were, he is got beyond the reach of Reason and Humane Discourse; and is not to be helped by any thing under a Miracle, perhaps not by that neither. 51. He seems to deny People the Liberty to interpret Scripture against the Teaching Church. P. 58. But his discourse sounds Hollow when he comes to show he does so. Some sleight thing he says about the Sense of the Teaching Church in the best and purest Ages; but not a word of what they owe to the present Church, which is their Proper and Immediate Instructress and Governess; by which discourse it should seem he holds the Church of England none of the best nor purest. The main point is, whether, if, after having consulted the Primitive Church, and considered what Grounds she brought for her Doctrine and Decrees, the Enquirer still likes his own Interpretation better, he is in that case to submit his private Judgement to the Decrees of That or Any Church; And how the Church is to look upon him in case his private Interpretation leads him into a flat Heresy? These are the true Points, and Tests of Dr. St's Principles and yet undiscovered Consequences; but these are slubbered over, or rather, indeed, never touched. Yet he complains of me, for being Obscure; when as 'tis acknowledged he writes Clearly, but 'tis Clearly from the Point, nor has any packing the Cards, P. 60. etc. He says too, that 'tis awkward reasoning, to say nothing but Infallibility will content him now. Pray, which is more awkward? If the Judges acknowledge themselves Fallible, (in which case nothing can be said to be True that is held upon their Testimony) than he allows them very much Authority, but not upon other terms. But he is high in choler against me for saying he has an aversion against the Churches intermeddling in matters of Faith; and imputes it either to great Ignorance or a malicious Design to expose him to Church Governors. But his comfort is he pities my Ignorance and despises my Malice. This is Stately and Great. I do assure him my only Design is to oppose such Principles as leave all to the Fanatic frenzy of every private Interpreter; and till he satisfies the World better that his Principles are not guilty of this Enormity, I shall still oppose him let him huff never so high. The Point is, how does he clear himself? Why, he says he disputes not against Church-Authority in due proposing matters of Faith; Certainly Church-Authority is mightily obliged to him. A genuine and Learned Son of the Church of England, speaking of this very Doctrine of his, tells him, that * Answer to a Letter against Mr. L. p. 23. Proposals of their own nature are so far from inferring an Authority to Command their reception, that they rather imply a Power in those to whom they are proposed, at Discretion to Reject them; and so, in the Issue gives the Authority to the People. Which words contain the full sense of my Discourse here against the Dr and his beloved Sober Enquirer. Why is he then so high against me for exposing him, when those of the Church of England have already exposed him more than I have done? This is no great sign either of Ignorance or Malice, when persons who are otherwise of different Judgements and Communions, do centre in the same opinion of his Doctrine as destructive of Church-Government. But 'tis yet more pleasant, that he will not promise he will not dispute against Church-Authority even in this due proposing Matters of Faith, but with a Proviso, P. 60. l. 25. that every man is to judge for his own Salvation. As much as to say, If the Church will be so saucy or so wicked as not to let my Sober Enquirers alone to interpret Scripture as they list, or hold what seems to their Wise Worships to be the Sense of it, (which, with him, is judging for their own Salvation) but will be censuring or Excommunicating them for Heretics, if they hap to err in Christ's Godhead for example, or any other such Point, than Church-Authority have at you; for I tell you plainly if you do this I shall and will dispute against you. It would be worth our knowing too what the pretty cautious words [due proposing] means. There seems to lurk some hidden Mystery in that little monasyllable [Due] which may come to help the Sober Enquirers with an Evasion from submitting to Church-Authority, or obeying it, in case it misbehaves itself unduly, or grows so malapert as to restrain them in their licentious Prerogative of interpreting Scripture as their Gifted Fancy inspires them. It looks oddly, and seems to have some ambidextrous meaning in it; but we will hope the best till he comes to unfold it. Now, because Honourable Company is creditable to those who are highly obnoxious, he names St. Chrysostom, St. Austin, St. Thomas of Aquin, P. 61. and Bellarmin as of his opnion, but with the same sincerity as he pretended all Divines of both Churches, and even myself to hold all Necessary Points may be found by every Sober Enquirer without the Churches Help; as may be seen hereafter §. 57 'Tis indeed the General Opinion of the Fathers, that we are not always heard when we pray for Temporal Things, or even Spiritual Goods for others; but that our Request is always granted when we ask Spiritual Goods for ourselves. But then, 'tis ever understood with this restriction, that we must not make our suit to have Knowledge or Virtue by Extraordinary ways, and neglect the Ordinary Methods laid already by God's Providence to attain those good Gifts. Our Question then being of understanding those difficult places of Scripture which contain the main Articles of our Christian Belief, and whether they can better attain to the Sense of Scripture with unerring Certainty by their own Private Judgements, without the Churches Help, or by the Church's Means, and Dr St's Principles asserting the former Method, mine the Later, I do affirm, that none of those Authors hold with him, but would condemn his Tenet for Heresy. He Quotes none of the places except Bellarmin, who speaks not of persons looking for Faith in Scripture's Letter as to those Points, but of the Faithful, Praying for Wisdom to live well; P. 61. and he, as the Dr relates it, denies the Gift of Interpretation (the Dr's way to come to Faith) is to be had by Prayer, which is our main Point. However, our Dr pretends himself wonderfully skilful in our Authors, because he can make a show of Quoting them, tho' it be quite from the purpose. He should have kept an Eye to the State of the Question, and brought his Citations home to it; but this is not his way. His main art through this whole Treatise is to keep that from the Readers sight, talk in Common, name great Authors for his Vouchers, but never show how they savour him by applying them. And then he's safe, by virtue of a great noise & fine Raree shows. P. 62. He ends with railing, at the rate of a man at his Wits End; I desire him to pacify his spleen, for no man that knows me and my circumstances, does or can think I write to raise myself, or to be caressed (as he phrases it) by any man. I will never court any man's favour, or fear his frowns, when I am defending Truth. 53. But the Scene is changed, all of a sudden, & I am almost ashamed to reflect as it deserves on what follows in his two next Paragraphs. 'Tis so purely A-la-Mode of Merry Andrew; Never did Grave Man make such a Fop of himself. But his Reason was Nonplussed, and his Fancy was overheated, and this must plead his excuse: for what could he do better in such ill circumstances? To set right what his Raillery has so ravelled; I declared my Tenet was, that every man is to use his judgement of Discretion or his Reason in finding out a Rule which could ascertain him of all the several Points taught by Christ: Since the Rule of Faith being antecedent to Faith, must consequently be the Object of pure Reason. That by this Rule he was to judge for his Salvation, and of all Controverted Points. For, if this Rule gave him Absolute Assurance that all those determinate Points were indeed taught by Christ, then since he acknowledged Christ's Doctrine to be from God, they were to be held by him to be Divine and True; If it give him no such assurance of this, being in itself Fallible, than they are not to be held Divine, nor True, nor Faith, nor the way to Salvation; since, in that case, they might perhaps be Diabolical, False, Heresy, and the way to Damnation. Now no such Rule does he assign us, but leaves it to the judgement of his sober Enquirers to find out those determinate Points in Scripture's Letter; which, in those Articles of so profound a sense is obscure to them. Our Judgement of Discretion is to find out a Certain Light to walk by in those sublime passages, in which the Light of our own Reason is very dim. His is to do as well as he can in penetrating the Sense of the Scripture in such high passages, tho' he sees he may fall into Error every step. That is, his way is indeed to be a Rule to ourselves, and scorn to be led by the Church, tho' there be all the Reason in the world to think Her wiser than ourselves in that affair. What says the pleasant Dr to this? Or how does he make good his judgement of Discretion, or overthrow ours? why, First; he laughs heartily over and over, that I come closer to take a view of his Judgement of Discretion after 99 pages. P. 62. As if my whole Book had been to treat merely concerning that one point, and I had never handled it till now: whereas his Conscience knows, (but that necessity has forced him to bid it Farewell) and every Reader sees that above forty other Points were to be handled as they lay in my way, and that this concerning the judgement of Discretion, was the very last I was to speak to. What pitiful Trifling is this? Then comes in the Game at Cards, blue apron and Tub over and over: That I yield to his Sober Enquirer what he aimed at; that I make the fanatics Catholics, and his Sober Enquirer a judge of Controversies, and would have him judge without his Rule: Which is a continued Series of wilful and ridiculous Forgeries: For I allow him to judge of never a Point of Faith but by his Rule, and affirm that he is to find out his Rule by his Reason or Judgement of Discretion. But this clear Method he casts a Mist over all the way; and, finding that Seriousness would gravel him, he has recourse to his beloved and still-assisting Friend, Drollery. Next, he asks, what if the matter proposed by this Certain Authority which I have found out by my Reason be very much against Reason? And I ask, whether the Matter under Consideration be the Object of Natural Reason, or no? If it be not, than Reason is to concern itself in judging of the Humane Authority of the Church attesting it to be Christ's Doctrine, which is Subject to Reason; and not with the Other, which is confessedly above Reason. He knows I still speak of the High Mysteries and Articles of our Christian Belief which are Supernaturally revealed or taught by Christ and his Apostles; and will he have the profound Judgement of discretion of his Sober Enquirers scan them by their Reason? This savours too strong of the Socinian. Yet he sticks not to say the same, (that is, Natural) Reason helps men to judge of the Matters proposed by this Certain Authority. It makes yet worse for his Credit, that, P. 64. l. 3 4▪ whereas I instance all along in the Tenets of the Blessed Trinity and the Godhead of Christ, he stills recurrs to Points necessary to Salvation; by counterposing which he seems to think those Mysteries not necessary to Salvation. P. 64. But who set the bounds of Reason? why, God and Nature, by alloting Reason for its Sphere Natural Objects; and by so doing, precluding her from attempting to sound the Profound Depth of Supernatural ones by her Shallow Line. He is angry that as soon as this Certain Authority is discovered, we then cry, Good night Reason, Ibid. I have no more use of you. This savours yet more strongly than the former. Would he have us, after this Certain Authority has assured us 'tis Christ's Doctrine, still to suspend our Belief till we have examined the Mysteries themselves by our natural Reason? I am loath to name what this signifies. I omit to insist on his bad Logic, shall I say, or want of Common Sense; who, tho' a Certain Authority were supposed, yet discourses all along as if the things it proposes may still be false, or need the Examination of Reason whether they be false or no. But this argues he has not once in his thoughts the Notion of True Certainty, but means some Mock-Certainty or Probability by that word; otherwise 'twas impossible such a Fancy should have a seat in his Mind. For the most obvious and Common Light of Reason tells him that what's Truly Certain (as what's built on a Certain Authority is,) cannot be False, nor can need any further Scrutiny whether it be or no. 54. Next he asks, P. 65. Are all People Capable of this Certain Reason? They are, or may be made so according to their pitch, so Tradition be rightly represented, and not Perverted as it was by him throughout his Sermon: For nothing is more suitable to the Capacity of every one than is the Force of a vast Witnessing, Authority. And, tho' they were not, yet being in itself Certain, it preserves even those who are uncapable of seeing the reason for its Certainty, from erring in Faith while they rely on it, which his Rule does not. He puts Questions and gives Answers here very kindly for his own behoof; and from such sleight Grounds concludes he may have True Faith and be saved without finding out this Certain Authority. The later I leave to God's Mercy, which may, I hope, give him the Grace to repent his impugning known Truths, which with him I fear is too frequent: but he makes himself too Liberal a promise of True Faith without it. However he expresses it modestly, and only says he may have it; that is, he may hap to hold right in Some points of Faith by his private Interpretation of Scripture, without Tradition of the Church; and he may hap to hold Twenty Heresies. His fifth Head is ridiculous; for 'tis a pure Folly to talk of believing the Scripture, without knowing certainly what the Scripture says. Let him secure this, and none will refuse to yield a perfect and steadfast belief to what Christ has taught us by it. Our knowing the Sense of it in passages containing dogmatical Tenets of Faith is the only Point between us; In assigning some Certain Means to do this, he is dull and flat, or else perfectly Silent; but mighty brisk in what's nothing to our purpose. His Sixth is frivolous, and answered with a bare denying that we hold that Tradition is only to lead us into the Certain Sense of Scripture. P. 66. And this he knew before, as he did five hundred things he pretends here unknown to him. And this was but fitting. For had he owned he knew them and the reason brought for them, he had stood engaged to Answer them: But by seeming still not to know them, he puts us to say our Tenets and bring our Proofs over and over again; in the mean he reaps the advantage of gaining time, and coming off dextrously at present. His Seventh is the same with the Second, and spoken to already. P. 67. His citing Scripture Texts has the same fault with better half this whole Book; viz. Something is said in common never applied to the point in hand, or brought close to it, but left in that Raw Condition, to make the Reader think there is Something in it, tho' he knows not well what. Our point is, that our Judgement of Discretion is not to be Employed about scanning the Mysteries of Faith by our Natural Reason, after we have found a Certain Authority proving them to be Christ's Doctrine, or interpreting such Texts of Scripture by our Private Judgements to gain Assurance what is to be held of Faith. The first Text [I speak as to Wise Men, judge ye what I say] may, for any thing he has shown relate to Manners, or to the avoiding Idolatry spoken of the verse before, which is known by the Light of Nature; or to something relating to or consequent from a Point of Faith already known, as is intimated in the following verses. Of all these they may judge, but None of these comes near our business, as appears by the State of the Question. The Second Text is Prove all Things. And does he think this can mean, they should consult their natural Reason how it liked the Mysteries, or rather (in case that Text had indeed related to them) does it not signify that they should consider well of the Grounds why they Embraced them? The Third is, Try the Spirits whether they are of God. And this is spoken in order to the Ancient Heretics; whose Spirits they were to Try by examining whether they deviated from the Doctrine preached by the Apostles; or, by looking what Grounds or Motives they produced to prove their new Doctrine to be Christ's. The Judgement of Discretion in this Last case we allow; and the two Former are both of them wide of our business, unless the Second were meant of examining things by the Grounds for them. It were good to dive into the Drs thoughts, and get light what it is he would here be at. The Apostles (says he) allowed them to make use of their Understandings, tho' themselves, the Proposers were Infallible. What mean these dry Common words? Does he mean they were to Understand what it was the Apostles taught? This is the Duty of every Hearer, Catholic and Protestant, and the very End of all Teaching and Preaching; and, so, it does not reach the peculiarity of his judgement of Discretion. Does he mean they were to examine whether the Apostles were Divinely-inspired or not? This was very laudable in them; for this is to use their Reason ere they allow their Authority, and is the very Judgement of Discretion we recommend; but he is here impugning our Judgement of Discretion, and so cannot mean thus. He is then contending for a Judgement of Discretion which shall scan the Verity of the Points of Faith themselves, or the Matters proposed even by a Certain Authority, by his Natural Reason. I am loath to fix a censure upon Common words; but I must tell him that if he means so, and that, tho' we receive the Tenets of a Trinity and Christ's Godhead (for example) upon a Certain Authority, we are still to suspend our Assent, till our Great Judgement of Discretion shall consider well of the Matters proposed, and reject them if such uncouth Articles seem disagreeable to Natural Reason, P. 65. (his useful Servant not yet discarded:) If this be his Tenet, as it seems to be, than I must tell him his Principles are perfectly Socinian. Whether he follows those Principles in his particular Tenets I am not to judge; but such Edging and Leaning towards those Principles do, I conceive, oblige him to satisfy the World he is not that way Affected. P. 65. 55. But what if men differ about this Certain Authority wherein it lies, and how far it extends? I answer the Authority our Question proceeds on is the Humane Authority of the Church deriving down Christ's Faith: Nor do I know any Catholic who ever impugned that, but one unknown Nameless Author Lominus; whom here out of his constant love to sincerity he is pleased to call [Others.] But, in case any should differ about it, it being a thing Previous to Faith, and, therefore, subject to our Natural Reason, all I can say is, the better reason must carry it. He knows well how many most Eminent Catholic Writers have approved and followed in their Writings the same way of Controversy I take. But he is not now in such good circumstances as candidly to acknowledge any thing. He is put to his shifts; and counterfeit Ignorance does him as much service as any of the rest. But how proves he that when we have found a Certain Authority we must not follow it and rely on it? Plain sense tells us we may and aught. Why, he says 'tis putting out our Eyes, Ibid. throwing ourselves headlong from a Precipice, and there's an End of Controversies. Is not this mighty Learned? Another man would think that a Certain Authority were the only way to preserve us from all these Inconveniences, and keep us from erring, especially in matters only Knowable by Authority. But our Dr has a Judgement or Discretion of another mould than Reason has framed for him. In the mean time what Answer gives he to my Reason for the contrary position, and that the relying on a Certain Authority is to keep our Eyes in our Head still? * Third Catho. Letter. p. 102. [In doing this we do not at all relinquish our Reason, but follow and exercise it? For, nothing is more Rational than to submit to an Authority which my Reason has told me is Abso, lutely Certain, in things which the same Reason assures me can no other ways be known Certainly but by that Authority. This seems plain sense, and comprizes the whole Point; and for that very reason he thought it not safe to meddle with it; but, instead of doing so, to amuse the Reader with * From p. 60. to p. 69. Seven impertinent Discourses of his own; and thus it is he Answers my Catholic Letters. 56. Hitherto he contented himself to impugn me with False Suggestions, nimble Avoidances, pretended Ignorance of our known and oft-repeated Tenet, and with merry Conceits; P. 69. but now he thunders out his dreadful Indignation against me, with Angry Viper, Venomous Froth, Spleen, Gall, etc. By which he gives us to understand that the place I pressed upon was very raw and sore. At the end of my Discourse I repeated * Dr St's Second Letter to Mr G. p. 21. his avowed Position, that Every Sober Enquirer may without the Churches Help find out all necessary Points of Faith in Scripture. This being a Paradox, so pestilential in its self, and so Pernicious to Church-Government, and to all the Dearest and most Sacred Concerns of Christianity, I could do no less, out my Zeal for those Best Goods, than brand it with these just Censures, viz. * Third Catho▪ Letter. p. 104. that it was the very First Principle, nay, the Quintessence of all Heresy; Fanaticism in the Egg; perfect Enthusiasm when hatched, and downright Atheism when fledged. This I said, and thus I justify my Charge. To make private men competent Interpreters of Scripture as to all necessary Points of Christian Faith, without the Churches Help, and yet not to furnish them with any Certain Means of not erring or mistaking its Sense, is the very First Principle of all Heresy; For, * Augustin. Tract. 18. in Joan. Non enim natae sunt Haereses nisi dum Scripturae bonae intelliguntur non bene. No Heresy has any other source, but when the Scriptures good in themselves are understood in an ill Sense. Next, let this wild licentious Principle, that they need not the Churches Help to find out all Necessary Points in Scripture, settle in the Heads of the Mobile, 'tis perfectly consequent that they must judge that whatever the Church holds contrary to what they conceive is the sense of Scripture, is either False or Unnecessary; and in case the Church judges that what They hold is a Grand Heresy, and therefore that the contrary Tenet is a Necessary Point, and therefore subjects them to Her Censures, they must hate the Church's Government as the worst of Tyrannies that would oblige them to forgo their Rule, renounce their Faith, and obey Man rather than God. In a word, this Principle naturally leads them to contemn the Church and her Pastors, as neither able to help them in their Way to Faith, nor to Govern them in it; Unless the Dr means by Governing, that the Church-Officers are to see, that each of them follows their own Fancies, and decline not from such Tenets (let them be never so Heretical) as their wise Judgement of Discretion has thought fit to embrace, which is Fanaticism in the height. Again, the Conceit of this selfsufficiency coddling as I may say, in the hot Brains of many of those fanatics, enfranchised thus blessedly from the Church's Government, Dr St. still assuring them they cannot miss of knowing Gods Will in such Points so they but pray for Wisdom; and Common Sense telling them they are no Scholars, nor have this Knowledge by Humane Means; it follows necessarily that they must think their Prayer is heard, and that they have it by Divine Inspiration. Whence they will imagine the Holy Ghost buzzes Truths in their Ears like a Bee in a Box, which is perfect Enthusiasm. And. it will come pat to their purpose, and help forward very well, that Dr St. when he stood engaged to show or produce his Proofs that his Faithful have Absolute Certainty of their Faith, that is of the true Sense of Scripture, confesses plainly no such Proofs are producible and recurrs to Moral Qualifications and many other Invisible Requisites to give men assurance of it; which are impossible to be known by Human Reason, being only Knowable by God Himself. Whence, Nature obliging all men to guide themselves by some sure Light in things of Infinite Concern, and all Motives that should appear outwardly to Reason, being, according to him, Cloudy and Dark, it directs them necessarily to seek for this sure Light within; and so become Enthusiasts. In the mean time not to speak of Atheists who are Bystanders and confirmed in their Atheism by seeing such Bedlam-doing amongst Professors of Christianity, imbued with no better Principles than what he gives them; the more refined & ingenious sort of Mankind, who are too wise to be led in the dark, & strain their best endeavours to search after solid Grounds, by which they may be perfectly assured of Christ's Faith, or the sense of Scripture, in such Points; & find that none such could be brought by the famous Dr St. but that, when he was most highly engaged to produce his Proofs for that most important Point, he recurrs still to holes as dark as the private Spirit; What can they do other (were there no better Grounds than his producible) but conclude that there is No Certainty of Christian Faith at all, and that the Greatest Professors and Writers do by their Carriage confess as much; and thence come to apprehend that Religion is a mere Cheat to keep up the Interest and Ambition of those who look for rich Livings, and affect to have many Followers; which will bring them to a Mepris of Religion itself, and so dwindle into Atheism. This is the Natural Progress of Dr St's Principles. From which ill Consequences he shall never clear himself till he shows us the Light and Method giving him and his No Church men Certainty of the Sense of Scripture; and this such an Absolute one as can in True Reason beget and justify a most Firm and Unalterable Assent that the Tenets they hold are indeed Christ's True Doctrine; and till he restores to the Church and her Government that necessary Authority of which his ill-contrived Principles have robbed her: Let him not think to acquit himself by telling us here of his allowing the Church a Power of Proposing and directing in Faith. A Learned Son of the Church of England has * Answer to a Letter against Mr. L. p. 23.24▪ told him A Private Person may do the Former; and that the Later is such a Liberal Grant as was given to the Statues of Mercury, which of old were set up to direct passengers in their Way, and leaves Men much at like Liberty to regard either. More is justly and prudently required, viz. A Power to make her Declarations Law; and this as to Matters of Faith, Ibid. & not only in things belonging to Order and Decency; otherwise the Later without the Former, makes (as he argues very well) some kind of Fence about the Church against Schismatics, but lays her open to all manner of Heretics. 57 This just Censure of mine, upon the Drs. Principles, was such a Choak-Pear to him, that 'tis no wonder he kecked at it so vehemently. The Great Credit he had got (whether for defending Christian Faith, or no, the Reader is to judge) made him scorn to bring it up again and retract it: But he uses all the Arts imaginable to Palliate and Excuse it, and those such wretched ones that 'tis a shame to mention them; and, certainly, never was so Heavy a Charge so Miserably refuted. He says confidently this Doctrine of his is owned by all Men of Understanding in both Churches. Whereas, P. 70. if he can show me any one Catholic who maintains that he can have any Faith at all or ground such a Firm & sacred Assent upon his own private Interpretation of Scripture without the Churches Help in those most sublime and necessary Articles which have been dubious and contested between the Church and any Heretic, (of which only we speak) he will do more than Miracle. But I am mightily mistaken; he will name one, and who should that be but I. S. himself: What a boldness is this, to make me his Patron to defend him in that very Position which I am in this very place Impugning? Well but what says I. S. Why, he says that every man is to judge for his own Salvation, and of the best way to his Salvation, and of all the Controversies between them and us, and especially of the true Grounds of Faith, and all this without the Churches Help. Now I. S. says indeed that a man coming to Faith does by his Reason find out the True Rule and True Church; that thus he judges for his own Salvation, by using his Reason to find out a Rule Ground or Way to right Faith which is to bring him to Salvation; that, by his Rule thus found out, he Judges of all our Controversies, in judging that to be Christ's true Doctrine which that Rule recommends as such: but is this to judge of Points of Faith without the Churches Help, when that very Rule by which he judges of them is avowed by him to be the Church's Testimony? Above all, does he not all along declare his abhorrence of finding out Faith in Scripture's Letter by private Judgements, which is the Drs Position? And must I. S. still be of the Drs Sentiment, tho' he in all occasions contradicts it, disputes against it, and baffles it? What will not this nonplussed man say, when he is put to his Shifts! Any Common words, tho' when applied to particulars they be directly contrary to him, must be presumed to be for him; in despite of a long and constant Tenor of all circumstances, and whole discourses to the contrary: whoever peruses my Third Catholic Letter from p. 99 to the End, will see that my way of judging for our Salvation is as opposite to his as one Pole is to another, and he has the incredible Confidence to make them the Same. At length he hopes to come off by alleging that he spoke it only by way of Supposition, that If one may without the Churches Help find out the Church's Authority in Scripture, P. 71. then why not all necessary Points of Faith? And, was this All he said? Indeed, he craftily introduced his Position Conditionally; but did he not, after the words [ * Dr St's Second Letter to Mr. G. P. 21. Then every such Person (viz. any sober Enquirer) may without the Church's Help find out all necessary Points of Faith] Espouse the Position itself, which had been thus introduced; and this most Peremptorily; by immediately subjoyning these words [which is a Doctrine I am so far from being ashamed of, that I think it most agreeable to the Goodness of God, the Nature of the Christian Faith, and the unanimous Consent of the Christian Church for many Ages.] And will he now tell us after all this Positive asserting it, that it only proceeds upon a Supposition, a why not, & a Parity of Reason. He objects I answer it not. Why! was it an Argument? or must I stand answering every voluntary saying of his (which are infinite,) every Supposition, and every why not? If I must needs speak to it, the Imparity of Reason consists in this, that the Church being constituted by God to instrust the Faithful in their Faith, it was but fitting Scripture should be Clearer in those Texts that concern the Churches Governing them in Faith and their Obligation to hear her, than in the particular Points, which they were to be assured of by her Teaching. Besides, the Former Point viz. the following the Church's Instructions and being governed by her in their Faith, is a kind of Moral Point, whereas the other Points were, many of them, Sublime Mysteries; and therefore, not so easily Intelligible without a Master. And St. Austin had beforehand confuted his pretended Parity of Reason, by telling him, that * Aug. lib. 1. contra Cres. con. cap. 33. Proinde, quamvis hujus rei, etc. Wherefore, tho' no Example of this thing were produced out of the Canonical Scriptures, yet the Truth of the same Scriptures is held by us even in this Matter, when we do what seems good to the Universal Church, which the Authority of the same Scripture Commends. And, because the Holy Scripture cannot deceive us, whoever fears to be deceived by the Obscurity of this Question, let him consult the same Church concerning it, which (Church) the Holy Scripture demonstrates without any Ambiguity. Where he clearly intimates the infallibility of the Church; that 'tis to be consulted in dubious Points (and all Controverted Points, of which we speak, have been called into Doubt) which makes its Help very Needful; and, (which I chiefly insist on) that its Authority is Clearly and without any Ambiguity demonstrated in Scripture; whereas yet in his Second Book de Doctrinâ Christianâ, he acknowledges the Obscurity of Scripture in divers places, Obscurè quaedam dicta densissimam caliginem obducunt. Some things, spoken obscurely, involve us in thickest Darkness; And if any be Obscure then surely those necessary and High Mysteries of our Faith, which are of such a Deep Sense, must be such, when they come to be scanned by Eyes as yet unenlightened with Faith; as the same Father cited in my Fourth Catholic Letter has also told him. P. 31.32. 58. After this he sums up his Performances, and tells us in short how he has erred at large. P. 73.74. Next he gives us a lame excuse for his Indirect Answer to the Fourth Question proposed at the Conference, and in effect only commits over again the same Faults he was charged with, a little more formally, as his fashion is, and then calls it an easy Answer; and if it be an answer at all, I must confess 'tis an easy one; for any man may with ease answer a thousand Objections in a trice at that rate: nothing is easier than to omit all that is objected. But I dare undertake that whoever reads my Third Catholic Letter. p. 37.38.39.40. where four several prevarications were charged upon him in giving one single Answer to Mr. G's Question, will judge it so far from easy that 'tis Impossible for him to answer even with any degree of plausibility. But with this sleightness he slips over most of my Objections in my Letters, and supplies the defect with confident Talk, or a Scornful jest. But, because his main shuffle is his altering those words of the Question, [All the Divine Revelations of Christ and his Apostles] into [All matters necessary to Salvation▪] and this is his constant evasion, we will examine it more particularly in order to the sole End of the Conference to which all the particular Questions were to be directed, viz. his showing Grounds of Asbolute Certainty for his Faith. 1. I ask, with the good leave of his Jest, Does he think Christ and his Apostles taught any unnecessary Points? If not; why did he use such cautious diminishing expressions, and instead of All their Doctrine, put, All matters necessary to our Salvation? 2. Christians are wrought up to the Love of Heaven, the Immediate Disposition to it, by Motives, and Some may need more than Others; nay the variety of People's Tempers and Circumstances is so Infinite that scarce two persons will precisely need the same. He is to acquaint us then how he knows, or how he can make out, that every man shall, by reading the Scripture, be sure to find his own Quota of Motives adjusted and serving for his particular Exigencies? 3. Is he Sure they cannot err as to what's necessary to their Salvation? If, provided they do their best, they cannot, than every man is so far Infallible; which the Doctor has denied hitherto to all Mankind but to himself. If they can err in matters necessary to Salvation, then doubtless many will err, and how can error Save them? 4. Tho' all cannot err in all Moral Points, yet can he show us any thing securing them from Erring in all those Articles of Faith held by the Church, and renounced by her Heretical Dissenters ever since Christ's time? If he cannot, (and he declines showing us they can, nay he by his Doctrine confesses they may) than they may be Saved tho' holding all the Heresies that ever were; in which case I doubt he will scarce find them competent Assurance of their Salvation. Again, how knows he but the mixture of many of those gross Errors may not as much deprave their Souls as their understanding plainer places will edify them; especially if the Church interposes, and Excommunicates them for Heretics? For his Grounds forbid them to meddle with those high Points, but leave the whole Scripture to their scanning, and his approved Friend Dr. T. says they are Rule of 〈◊〉. p. 86.7. Plain, and so are subject to their profound Judgement of Discretion. 5. He must tell us how must Church-Disciplin be exercised upon such a Miscellany of Heterogeneous Members of which many obstinately deny, what others pertinaciously affirm? 6. Is the holding the Godhead of Christ, and that God died to save and redeem Mankind, a Matter Necessary to Salvation? Or is it enough to hold it was only a Man to whom they owe that highest Obligation to Love him? Let him speak to this at least; For I am not to expect but his airy wordish Divinity makes him look upon the Mystery of the most Blessed Trinity as on a kind of dry Speculation. Tho', were it seasonable to dilate on that Article, I could show him that, besides its exceeding Usefulness to the sublime Contemplatives, the most Sacred and most Influential Points of Christian Faith, and the main Body of Christian Language, and the Truth of it, depend on its Verity. Lastly, Who told him that all sorts of People who are yet Unbelievers and looking after Christ's true Doctrine, shall by reading Scripture come to all-saving Faith? Has he it by Divine Revelation, or by Reason? Or, will he recur to Divine Assistances to keep Particular Persons from Error, and yet deny them to the Church? If so, how proves he This at least? I wish he would speak out fairly and candidly to these Points, and make something cohere: For I profess with all sincerity I cannot for my heart make any Idea or Sense of this Motly Church which his Principles would patch up. The several Members of it hang more loosely together than if they were tied to one another with Points: Nay, they agree worse than Fire and Water, and all the several Contrarieties in in Nature: for they are distanced by direct Contradiction of one to the other. Whence they are utterly incapable of any kind of Coalition; there being no imaginable means left to refract the irreconcileably-opposit Qualities of his Affirmative and Negative Faithful, or reduce so many Independent private-spirited Members into one Compound. He is to show us then how the parts of this Rope of Sand (as it may more fitly be called) must hang together. I much fear it will be Invisibly, by virtue of their being of the Elect, and at the same rate as the Terms cohered in the Invisible Proofs he alleged to show us he and his Followers had Christ's true Doctrine. 59 We shall never have done with this Purse of his. P. ●5. He is so fond of the pretty Similitude that he puts it here over again at large, and spends incomparably more time and pains in defending it, than he does in making out the Absolute Certainty of his Faith; tho' he both stood engaged to do it, and any good Christian too would think it were far more worth his while. Had he done this, the rest might have been more fairly compounded, and his Purse have remained unransacked. However, he thinks it suits well with the Conceit he had of Scripture, but I am sure it suits not at all with our purpose, his showing the Absolute Certainty of his Faith. Hence I * Third Cath. Letter from p. 41. to p. 48. told him that Scripture's containing Faith was impertinent to the whole drift of the Conference; That the only business was how to get the Gold and Silver of Faith out thence with Absolute Certainty; and how to secure those that aimed to enrich themselves by it, that instead of extracting the Pure Gold of Truth by understanding right those high and most Inestimable Articles, the ransackers of it did not draw out thence the Impure Dross of Error and Heresy. Lastly, that he ought to have put two Purses. One, the Heads and Hearts of the Faithful, into which the Apostles put this Heavenly Treasure of Faith by their Preaching; the Other, the Book of Scripture into which they put it by Writing; and that Faith was properly in the Former only, in regard Truth is no where Formally but in the Minds of Intellectual Being's; whereas it was only in Words Written as in a Sign; that is, no more properly than Wine was in a Bush; and that therefore the former had incomparably Better Title to be the Purse (if no Metaphor else would serve his turn but such an odd one) at least it ought not to have been quite set aside. But the Dr. without troubling himself much to mind what any body says but himself (by which Method of Answering, he has left, above forty parts for one, of my several Discourses unanswered) will needs have Scripture to be the only Purse, & Containing Faith shall be enough for His purpose, Ay, that it shall, tho' it be to No purpose. And, so, he tells us, that If all the Doctrine of Christ be there, we must be Certain we have all, P. 76. if we have the Scripture that contains all. And I tell him what common Sense tells all Mankind, that a man may have all Aristotle's works which contain all his Doctrine, and yet not know or have one Tittle of his Doctrine: Nor, by consequence, has the Dr. one jot of Christ's Doctrine by having merely the Book that contains it. Shall we never have done with this ridiculous and palpable Nonsense? How often has it been proved against him in my Catholic Letters that the having a Book which contains All Faith as in a Sign (for words are no more) argues not his having any Faith at all, unless he knows the Signification of that Sign? Let's examine then the meaning of the word [have.] A Trunk has the Book of Scripture when that Book is laid up in it; and that Book contains all Faith; and, so, that Trunk may by his Logic have all Faith. Dr. St has the same Book, and by having it, has according to him, all Faith too. I ask, Has he all Faith by having the Book, any other way then the senseless Trunk has it. If he Has than he has it in his Intellectual Faculty as a Knowing Creature should have it; and, if so, he knows it, that is, he knows the Sense of it as to determinate Points in it, for All Christ's Faith consists of those determinate Points: But he still waves his having Knowledge of determinate Points, and talks still of Faith only as contained in Scripture in the lump; and, 'tis in the lump in the Book too lying in the Trunk; whence, abstracting from his Knowledge of the particulars of Faith, the wooden Trunk has all Faith as much as Herald He'll say, he believes implicitly all that's contained in Scripture whether he knows the Particular Points, or no: But is not this to profess he believes he knows not what? Or is Implicit Belief of all in the Book, Saving Faith; when 'tis the virtue of the Particular Points applied to the Soul's Knowing Power, and thence affecting and moving her, which is the Means of Salvation? He tells us, indeed, (for he must still cast in some good words) that he pretends not 'tis enough for Persons to say their Faith is in such a Book, P. 76. but— Now did I verily think that the Adversative Particular [But] would have been followed with [they must be sure 'tis in it.] But this would have made too good Sense and have been too much to the Point. His [but] only brings in a few of his Customary lukewarm Words which are to no purpose, viz. that they ought to read, and search and actually believe whatever they find in that Book. He means, whatever they fancy they have found in it; for he gives neither his Reader nor them any Security, but that after their Reading and Searching, they may still believe wrong. He skips over that Consideration as not worthy, or else as too hard, to be made out, and runs to talk of things Necessary and not Necessary. I wish he would once in his life speak out and tell us how many Points are Necessary for the Generality of the Faithful, and whether God's dying for their Sins be one; and then satisfy the World that the Socinians, who deny that Point, do not read, search and actually believe what their Judgement of Discretion tells them is the Sense of Scripture; and yet, notwithstanding all this, do actually believe a most damnable Heresy. But still he says if a man reads and considers Scripture as he ought, and pray for Wisdom, he shall not miss of knowing all things necessary for his Salvation. So that unless we know that he and his Party do pray for Wisdom and not pray amiss, and consider Scripture as they ought, none can be Certain by his own Grounds that He and his good Folks have any Faith at all, or that their Rule directs them right. He would make a rare Converter of Unbelievers to Christ's Doctrine; who, instead of bringing any Argument to prove that what his Church believes is truly such, tells them very sadly and soberly, He has right Knowledge of it and is sure of it, because he has considered Scripture as he ought and begged Wisdom of God. But if this sincere Seeker hap to reflect, that these pretences are things he can never come to know, and that Socinians and all other Sects equally profess to consider Scripture as they ought and to pray for Wisdom too, and yet all contradict one another; he must, if he have Wit in him, and light upon no better Controvertists, think Christians a company of Fops; who can show him no assured Ground of Faith, but such a blind one as 'tis impossible for him to see; and would have him believe that That is a Certain Means for him to arrive at Christ's Faith, which every side, as far as he can discern, do equally make use of, and yet are in perpetual variance and Contention with one another about it: So that our Doctor got deep into his old Fanaticism again; and, which is yet something worse, would have pure Nonsense pass for a Principle to secure men of the Truth of the Points of Faith we believe, and be taken for a good Argument in Controversy. Certainly, never was weaker Writer, or else a Weaker Cause. 60. I am glad he confesses that a Rule of Faith must be Plain and Easy, and that, otherwise, P. 77. it could not be a Rule of Faith for all Persons. Let him then apply this to the Dogmatical Points which are only in Question, and show it thus Easy to all Persons in those Texts that contain those Articles, and his Work is at an End. But alas! that Work, tho' 'tis his only Task, is not yet begun; nor, for any thing appears, ever Will. For 'tis a desperate Undertaking to go about to confute daily experience. What new Stratagem must be invented then to avoid it? Why he must slip the true Point again and alter it to an Enquiry, Whether the Scriptures were left only to the Church to interpret it to the People in all Points, or whether it were intended for the General Good of the Church, so as to direct themselves in their Way to Heaven, and consequently, whether it may not be opened and understood by all Persons in Matters that are necessary for their Salvation. What a rambling, what a clutter of Questions is here, when he knows, and it has been repeated near a hundred a times over, that our only Question is, whether the Letter of Scripture be intelligible by all sorts coming to Faith in those Revealed Articles which are properly Christian with such a Certainty as is fit to build Faith upon. But this is one main part of his Confuting Talon, to throw in twenty Questions so none of them be the right one. However, tho' he'll not keep the Way, he'll triumph unless we follow him out of the Way. To his Questions than I answer 1. That none but Madmen ever thought or said that the Church was to interpret it as obscure to the People in All Points. For, ordinary Moral passages, such as the Ten Commandments are plain enough of themselves. Why did he not Instance in the Trinity, the Godhead of Christ and such like, which and only which we say are Obscure? Because, that had been to speak to our purpose, and he thought it safer for him to suggest other matters which were not all to purpose. 2. They were intended for the General Good of the Church, to direct them in their Lives, and, so in their Way to Heaven; and to that end are freely read by all that can understand Latin, and might likely have continued permitted to all even of the most vulgar capacities, had not men of his Principles made them think themselves, when they had got a Bible in their hands, wiser than the whole Church. Whence they came to wrest them to their own Destruction, and, therefore, it being now not for the General Good of such proud Fools, the Church took care they should not be promiscuously allowed to all, tho' indulged to many, even in the Vulgar Tongue, and explained and preached to All by their Pastors. Lastly, None knows distinctly what he means by Matters necessary to Salvation; He should mean such as those sublime Points so often repeated; but then he must make out such passages can be understood by all Persons looking after Faith with unerring Certainty to secure their Faith from being so many Falsehoods or Heresies; But he was not able to do this, tho' he pretended the Rule for all persons must be plain and Easy. As far as I can guests by a man's words whose whole Discourse is made up of Reserves, he mistakes the Rule of Manners for the Rule of Faith; and thus meant 'tis indeed plain and Easy, but as 'tis such 'tis nothing to the Question in debate, which is of Christian Faith, & so 'tis nothing to our purpose. ay, but Bellarmin says, Scripture is a Rule, and that a Certain and Infallible one. But when it comes to the proof he speaks only of the Old Testament, P. 78. and this as to the Law, Testimonies, or Commandments, which are easily intelligible as being either Levitical Ordinances, or Moral Precepts. ay, but Christ proves his Doctrine by the Scripture, and confutes the Sadduces from them. Well, give us such an Interpreter of Scripture as Christ was, and we shall not doubt but they will prove his Doctrine, and confute all the Heretics in the World. His referring the Pharisees to Scripture was ad hominem; for they allowed the Scriptures yet would not believe his Miracles; Tho' sure Dr St. will not say but Christ's Miracles were in their own Nature more convincing Arguments than Interpretations of Scripture made or allowed by the Pharisees. But what's all this to our purposes. I gave three senses of the word [Rule] in my Third Catholic Letter, P. 82.83. and showed him in which of those Senses it was and could only be called a Rule in our circumstances. But I might as well have spoke to a deaf man: He must either counterfeit he never heard of it, or he saw he must be baffled. Common Words are his constant refuge, and to speak distinctly exposes him to be Nonplussed. His Friend * Rule of Faith. p. 40. Dr Tillotson maintains that a Rule of Faith is the next and immediate Means whereby the Knowledge of Christ's Doctrine is conveyed to us. Does he pretend that Learned Cardinal holds Scriptures Letter to be such a Rule for all People coming to Christian Faith to know certainly its sense in these High Mysteries, without the Church's Interpretation? The Dr knows he abhors the Tenet as the source of all Heresy. Yet he quotes him on to say that Nihil est notius, Nihil est Certius, nothing is more known, nothing more Certain than the Scripture; P▪ 78. and immediately applies it against me for saying that the * Third Cath. Letter p. 43.44.45. Sense of it as to the Understanding the Mysteries of our Faith was not easy to be got out of the Letter. But where's his Sincerity? Not a syllable has Bellarmin of Scriptures being so known as to its Sense, nor any thing that looks that way. * Bellarm. de verbo Dei. Lib. 1.2. He speaks only of the Canon or Books being most known by the Consent of all Nations who for so many Ages acknowledged its highest Authority; and that it is most Certain and True (in its self) as not containing Humane Inventions but Divine Oracles. So that our Learned Dr is exceedingly brisk when he gets the Sound of any word on his side, no matter whether the sense be for him or against him. If he can but gull his Reader dextrously his work is done. For a Transition to treat of a Rule, he tells the Reader that I have spent Twenty Years hard Labour about it. I have indeed Employed some years and much pains in writing several Treatises to settle Christian Faith (as to our knowledge of it) on a Sure Basis, which he and his Copartners are still Undermining; and I glory in the Performance. In return, I will not tell the Dr that Mr Lowth says he spent a longer time (that is * Answer to Mr Lowth's Letter. p. 17. full Five and Twenty years) in a worse Employment. I shall only say that I have through God's Blessing, in less than two months' time, writ a little Treatise against his Principles called Error Nonplussed, which he has been fifteen years in answering; and all his Quirks will never enable him to give it even a plausible Reply in fifteen more. 61. And now we are come to scan the Nature of a Rule: Which being a Point to be managed merely by Reason, the Reader must expect that one of us must necessarily speak perfect Nonsense. For, however both sides may talk prettily & plausibly when the business is handled in a Wordish way of Glozing Citations, & such knacks of Superficial knowledge where the waxen ambiguous expressions may be made pliable to the Writers Fancy; yet the Natures of Things will not brook they should be Injured, but will Revenge themselves upon him that wrongs them by exposing him to the shame of speaking perfect Contradictions. I * Third Cath. Letter p. 81. alleged that the word [Rule] speaks Rectitude, and that such an Evident one as preserves those who regulate themselves by it from Oliquity or Deviation; that is, in our case, from Error. After the Dr. had played the Droll a while upon particular words taken asunder from their fellows, P. 79. as is his usual manner, he grants, There wants but one word to make it past Dispute, viz. who effectually regulate themselves by it. Now the word Regulate has clearly an Active Signification; whence, it being impossible an Action should be without an Effect, it follows that Efficiency or Effectuallness is involved in its Notion: So that, to do a thing Effectually does not signify any better degree of doing a Thing, but only to do it really and indeed. He pretends [Regulating] is an Ambiguous word, and therefore he assigns it a double Signification. One of them is, what a Man doth in Conformity to his Rule: And Common sense tells us that as far as a man acts Unconformably to his Rule, he is not Regulated by that Rule, whence, to act conformably to a Rule is the self same as to be Regulated by the Rule to which he is to conform. This then is one Signification of Regulating; and 'tis a right one; for to regulate one's self by a Rule is nothing else but to Act conformably to it. Le's see the other sense of the word Regulating. 'Tis this. To * P 79. l. 25. p. 80. l. 20. Profess * P. 79. l. 27. Declare and * P. 80. l. 22. Own to conform to a Rule, but not conform to it, that is, not follow that Rule or Regulate themselves by it. Now, only to Profess, declare, and own to conform to a Rule and not conform, is not to-follow it or Regulate themselves by it. So that our Learned Dr. has given us here Two sorts of Regulating; One, which is Regulating, the other which is not Regulating. Let us put an Instance. The Rule of Justice is to pay every man his own: Now comes an unconscionable Debtor, and maintains he has followed that Rule or Regulated himself by it in some Sense; because he has professed, declared and owned he has followed that Rule, tho' he has not Effectually and Indeed done so. Is not this a special way of Regulating himself by the Rule of Justice, and a most Cheap way for a Man to pay debts without disbursing a farthing? Yet he may justify himself by Dr. St's Distinction, and maintain that he has paid them Professingly, owningly, and declaringly, tho' not Effectually. Yet the Dr. is mighty fond of this choice Distinction, and says All Mr S' Subtlety vanishes into nothing by plain and so easy a Distinction. P. 80. l. 28. Notwithstanding, as nonsensical as it is, he will bring two Instances to make it good, viz. That there is one sort of Regulating which is Not-Regulating. The one is of a Ciceronian, who Declares he order his Speech by his Manner, and yet for want of Sufficient skill and Care may use Phrases which are not Cicero's. Now, 'tis plain that to Regulate himself by Cicero is to use his Phrases; and can he then regulate himself by Cicero when he does not use his Phrases? Can he be truly said to Regulate himself by him, when he does not use his manner of speaking, merely because he Professes and Declares he does it? Or can he be said to regulate himself by a Rule in that very thing in which he Deserts that Rule and regulates himself by some other Author or his own Fancy? Did ever Common Sense go so to wrack! If he says he intended to follow Cicero but mistake, I understand him; but intending to do a thing is not doing it; intending to get Riches is not to get Riches, otherwise none need be poor. His Second Instance is, that some may Profess that Christ's Commands are their Rule, Ibid. and yet through their own Fault may deviate from them or Sin. But can Sinners with any sense be said to regulate themselves by Christ's Commands, when they Sin merely because they profess to follow his Rule of Life? Or can any man of a settled Brain (Dr St. still excepted) pretend a Sinner can be said to be regulated by that Holy Rule, and deviate from it, or Desert it at the same time? So that his Instances as well as his Distinctions are pure Folly and Contradiction. These Performances, we must think, qualify him to laugh at my Admirable Logic for not allowing his palpable Nonsense; whereas himself is still caught stumbling in the plainest paths of that Common Road to True Learning. I could wish some of Dr St's Friends would advise him soberly to fall to Quoting and Gleaning Notes, & then stitching them handsomely and Methodically together; where he is in his own Element; for in that Wilderness of words he may take his full vagary, and scribble to the World's End, without much danger of meeting with Conclusive Evidence, which he so dreads and hates; but certainly his Talon lies not in this crabbed way of close Reason. The rest of his Discourse here is imposing upon me that I make men incapable of deserting the Rules of Christian Faith and Virtue: tho' he knows in his Conscience I have told him the express contrary above twenty times. All I pretend to in my Discourse from the Nature of a Rule, is, that If followed, it will secure the Followers of it from Error: But I no where ever said but All Free Agents, or all Mankind may desert those Rules, and, by deserting them, fall into Error and Sin too, unless supported by God's Grace. He asks if it be possible for men to misunderstand a Certain Rule; and I tell him, it is, P. 81. in case it be not Clear as well as Certain: And * Third Cath. Letter p. 6.7.8. I have already shown him that the Living Voice and Practice of the Church (our Rule) has so many ways of delivering clearly her own Sense, (or Christ's Doctrine) that the Generality cannot fail of understanding it right; however divers Souls to whom this Rule is not so well applied, remaining less cultivated by their own Carelessness or the Negligence of Pastors, may hap to misunderstand some Points. Nor can they run into Error so as to fix in it, P. 81. while they think to follow the Rule: For, knowing they are to receive their Faith from the Church, they take not upon themselves to judge of Faith, as his Sober Enquirers do, whom he allows to judge of Scriptures Sense without any Certain Teacher to preserve them from Error and Heresy; whence such men became fixed and unretractable, by fancying they have God's Word on their side; while the others continue docil and capable of the Church's Instruction upon any occasion: And, when it comes to be discovered (as in likelihood it will be) by their expressions that they have any Misconceit concerning Faith, it obliges them to seek to be better informed by the Church, their Mistress, whom they are willing to hear and believe; and the Church too becomes obliged to rectify their Mistakes, and instruct their Ignorance. P. 82. 62. I have spoken formerly of his Necessary Points. Only I am to observe here that he avoids very carefully with If's, the telling us whether any of the highest Mysteries of our Faith be necessary for Salvation. But must we still be put off with that frigid Evasion that such sublime Points are as intelligible now at this distance from the time of the Apostles, tho' only couched in a few words in a Book, as they were when spoke by those Living Teachers; who doubtless not only delivered their Sense in a few set words, but (such Points needing it) explained it and dilated upon it, to settle it better, and sink an express conceit of it deeper into the minds of their Auditors? Can it be imagined but that many of the People; and the Pastors especially, put their doubts, and asked them Questions, concerning the Points of Faith they had Preached, and received pertinent Answers; none of which a Book could do. How ridiculous a pretence than is this! Yet this is his best shift: For, unless the Book have This or an Equivalent Virtue to make Clear its Sense, it cannot have the Plainness or Clearness requisite to a Rule of Faith. He contends that, if those Points be necessary to Salvation, they must be so Plain that we may be Certain of our Duty to believe them. Which retorts his Discourse upon himself; for if those two sublime Articles there spoken of be Necessary for the Salvation of the Generality (which cannot be denied without accusing the Primitive Church of Tyranny for casting those out of the Church who denied them) than they must be Certain, one way or other, that 'tis their Duty to believe them; and, since he does not think fit to say this Duty can be Certainly shown them by the Letter of Scripture, it follows that this Duty to believe them, must be made Certain by the Testimony of the Church delivering them. 'Tis easy to be seen the whole force of his Discourse here is built on his begging the Question, that Scriptures Letter as understood by Private Judgements, is the Rule of Faith; and that it is plain in all Necessary Points: Which he ought not to do without showing us first which Points are Necessary, at least those of the Trinity, and Godhead of Christ, if he think them so, and then proving his Rule is Plain in all such Points; and not still to suppose, presume upon, and occur to that which is yet under Dispute, Ungranted, and Unproved. Let me then mind him of one piece of Logic, which tho' it be not Admirable, yet 'tis Solid and never regarded by him. 'Tis this, that no Argument has any force upon another, but either by its being so Evident that he must forfeit his Reason to deny it, or Granted by his Adversary; so that he must either Argue from something Clear of itself or made Clear by Proof, or else argue Ex concessis from the Party's own Concession. By which Rule if all the Reasons he brings here were examined, it will manifestly appear he has not spoken one word of True Reason against me in his whole Answer. I do here Challenge him to show me so much as any One Argument of his that has either of these Qualifications: and to encourage him to such a performance, if he can show me any One such, I promise him to pass all the rest for valid and good. I end with desiring the considering Reader to reflect on the Drs Discourse here p▪ 82. and upon an exact review of it to determine whether Principles are not deeply laid here to make the Socinians and many other known Heretics, Members of his Church, and to free them from Church Censurers. For if they find not in Scripture that the Apostles Preached the Trinity and Godhead of Christ in clear and Express terms, and with this Connotate, [as necessary to Salvation] they cannot be Certain of their Duty to believe them, the Consequences of which I need not dilate on. His own Church is more concerned to look to his Tenets than I am. P. 83. 63. He triumphs much that I grant Some may be saved without the Knowledge of all Christ Taught; He means, those Spiritual Points so often mentioned. But, if he knew how little advantage he gains by it, he would not think it worth his taking notice of. What may be done in an abstracted case is one thing; what, if they live in a Church, and hold Heresies contrary to Christ's and the Church's Doctrine, is Another. Some Catholic Divines treating of Faith do mantain that to hold There is a God, and that He is a Rewarder and Punisher, is Simply enough for Salvation if they live up to those Tenets; whence they conceive hopes that Nabuchadnezzar was saved tho' he was no jew. But what's this to our case? Christ has left us a Body of Doctrine; and since he did nothing Unnecessary for the Salvation of Mankind, this being the End of his Coming and Preaching, each Point conduced to that End either immediately or by Consequence, whence by the way 'tis a Folly to expect the Apostles Taught such Points as necessary to Salvation, others as not necessary, since no Point was Unnecessary for the Salvation of Mankind; except when they said for Distinction, Dico ego, non Christus, or used some Equivalent expression. But to return, God has also settled a Church to conserve that Doctrine of Christ Entire. Whence, if any falls into Heresies contrary to that Doctrine by Misunderstanding Scripture's Letter in such passages, 'tis her Duty to cast them out of the Church and deliver them over to Satan, for their contumacious Pride in preferring their own Private Judgements before the Judgement of their Pastors, and the Church whom God appointed to Teach Them. Whence, I do assure him I do not hold that any one such Privative Unbeliever will ever be saved, tho' he holds some Points which, of their own Nature might suffice for Salvation. For, such a man believes nothing at all but upon his own Self conceit, and the very Ground of his Faith, let him prate of Scripture as much as he will, is Spiritual Pride; which Vice alone is enough to damn him, even tho' he held all those Points of Christ's Faith to a Tittle. Hence follows that either the Primitive Church (as hinted above) was very uncharitable in Excommunicating those who dissented from those High Articles; Or else, the Rule of Faith must be so Plain and Clear that it must preserve those from Heresy who follow it, and render them Inexcusable who by deserting it do fall into the opposite Heresies: And, therefore, that we may bring our Discourse back to the Question, he must either prove his Rule of Faith thus Qualified, or 'Tis no Rule. What follows to p. 85. is mere Drollery; which gives all the seeming Strength to his Weak reasoning. Only he has a fling at Transubstantiation, which is a Topick of course in his Controversy. He thinks 'tis Unnecessary to the Church; but the Church it seems thought it necessary to define it, in her Circumstances; and I humbly conceive the necessary occasion of defining it was, because such as He Equivocated in the Tenet of the Real Presence; and (according to the Drs late Distinction making Not-Regulating to be one sort of Regulating) would needs have the word [Real] to mean [Not-Reall] whence it was judged expedient to put it past quibble by such a rigorously-express Definition. And I much fear this vexes the Drs Sacramentarian Spirit far more than Transubstantiation itself. I omit, that he has forgot here the Common distinction of what Points are necessary Necessitate Medij, and what Necessitate Praecepti. I suppose because this Later did not suit with his Levelling Principles, which set the Church and his Rabble on even Ground as to Matters of Faith. 64. I alleged that those Articles of the Trinity and Christ's Godhead were Fundamental Points; and therefore if his Rule could not Absolutely Ascertain People of all sorts coming to Faith of those Articles, it could assure them of None, and so is no Rule of Faith. He runs quite away from the Points, and thinks he has done enough to say, It is Absolutely Certain that God has revealed the Fundamentals of our Faith. P. 85. But the Question sticks still, Are you Absolutely Certain by your Rule that the Trinity and Christ's Godhead are Christ's Doctrine or signified with Absolute Certainty by Scripture's Letter? To this he says nothing, but shifts it off most Shamelessly to another thing. Let him set himself to do this which is his Task, and we will undertake to examine the Nature of his Medium, and show it Inconclusive. I alleged that there is Experience, by the Socinians taking the same way, that his Medium or way to be Certain of this is not Certain. He again turns off Experience that the way he takes is not Certain, to Experience of his Inward Certainty, or his Inward Persuasion. And asks briskly, whether he or I know best? A pleasant Gentleman! Why does he not confute all my Book by that Method? Does he think 'tis enough to show he is Absolutely Certain of the Sense of Scripture as to those Points, with barely saying, he knows he is thus Certain of it better than I? What wretched Shifts are these? In pursuance of this new Method of Proving and Confuting He asks again, How comes Mr. S. to know we are not Certain when we say we are? Ibid. Because, when you are most highly Concerned, and stood Engaged by promise to show this Absolute Certainty, and are Pressed to it Vehemently, and upon the brink of losing your Credit for not doing it, you still decline the showing you have any such Certainty for the Sense of Scripture as to those Points. Still he asks, Are not we Certain because some (that is, the Socinians) are not Certain? No, Sir, not barely for that reason; but because the Socinians proceeding upon the Same Rule, are so far from being Certain of the Sense of Scripture as to those Points, that they esteem themselves Certain by the same Scripture of Heretical Tenets Point-blank Opposite to those Points. Common Reason assures us no End can be compassed without a Means, and therefore you can never show us You are Certain, till you show us you follow a better Way, rely on a firmer Ground, and Guide yourselves by a Clearer Light to make you Certain of Scriptures Sense in those passages, than They do: which you can never show, and, as appears by your wriggling from that Point by the most untoward Shifts imaginable, dare not Attempt. But some are uncertain of Oral Tradition, nay Censure it: I do not know one man but holds and reuerences it. It lies upon his Credit to name those who Censure it: For Lominus is a Chimaerical name and signifies no body that he knows. But suppose Some did; yet it being an object of Natural Reason, they and I in that case, could not proceed on the Same Grounds or Reasons; as his Protestants and the Socinians do upon the Same Rule of Faith. 65. I alleged that by his Principles, he could be no more Certain of his Rule, than he is of the Truth of the Letter of Scripture, in regard the Truth of the Sense of Scripture depends on the Trueness of the Letter. Does he deny this? Or does he show that without the Care of the Church preserving the Letter Right all along, he can have any Such Certainty of the Letter? He not so much as Attempts either. I alleged farther that he cannot be thus Certain of the Right Letter without having the same Certainty of the Right Translation or the True Copy; nor that any Copy is True, unless it be taken from the First Original. Does he deny this? Or does he show that all these may not fail if the Churches' Care be set aside? No, neither. What Shift has he then? Why he says, 1. That some of us are Concerned to Answer this as well as Herald P. 86. Not at all, for those who say that Part of Faith is Contained in Scripture, do not, for all that, say that their Faith is built on Scripture's Letter interpreted by any but the Church; nor do they say but the Church without Scripture could have ascertained them of their Faith. 2. He says, This strikes at the Authenticness of the Vulgar Translation. Not at all: For we have other Grounds to go upon which they have Not. 3. He skips, after bringing some words of mine for what they were never intended, from the Translation, to the Canon of Scripture, which are a Mile wide from one another, P. 86. l. 26.27.28. that so he may, however he speeds in all the rest, at least talk plausibly of the Concurrent Testimony for the Canon. In order to which, he stands up a Patron for those Christian Churches of his who thus concurred; and will not condemn them as not truly Christian till their Cause be better heard and examined. Yet 'tis Evident from his Second Letter to Mr. G. p. 25. that some of those Churches were Arians, Nestorians, and Eutychians, condemned for Heretics by most Ancient General Councils; which he blames, it seems, for declaring so rashly against them, and reprieves his Friends from their Censures till a fairer Hearing. It had been happy for them, had Dr. St. presided in those Councils, for he would doubtless have dealt with them very kindly, and have clapped them head and tail together with good Catholics, into one Latitudinarian Bill of Comprehension. 5. I alleged that the same Sense in the heart of the Church enabled and obliged Her to correct the Copy when faulty in Texts containing Points of Faith; which, instead of showing it Incompetent or Disagreeable to the Nature of things, he confutes most Learnedly by pretending that Atheists and Unbelievers would be scandalised at it. P. 87 Whereas they would be much more scandalised to see no Certain Means assigned to preserve the Letter right from the beginning (the very first Originals being lost) and all left, (the Churches Care set apart) to so many contingences of Translating and Transcribing. 6. We must prove it first to be impossible for the Sense of the Church to vary in any two Ages. As if this had not been proved already, and never yet answered but by Shuffles and Evasions. 7. He frames a Plea for the Arians against the Nicene Council from my Principles: but very untowardly, for the Arians allowed the Copies, and quoted Scripture as fast as Catholics did, and yet Erred most abominably; which makes against himself. Lastly, P. 88 he tells us that 'tis a pernicious Principle, a miserable Account, etc. At which I wonder not. For, every thing is miserable and pernicious with him that makes the Church good for any thing. Yet he * Dr St's Sermon at Guild-Hall. p. 11.12. could grant the Church's Testimony was needful at first to abett the Truth of the Gospels; and she enjoyed that Privilege in * Aug. in Epist. Fund. St. Augustine's time; and I wonder how she came to lose her Title to God's Gracious Providence and Assistance, or how she came to be disabled in the following ages to preserve the Letter uncorrupted in those Texts that contained known Points of Faith. It seems, Translators, and Transcribers (for the most part Mercenary) are Sacred with him, and admirable Preservers of the Letter; but, alas! the Miserable Church is good for nothing. I have * Third Cath. Letter p. 82.83. ●4▪ already told him why I hold Scriptures Letter no Rule, how 'tis sometimes called a Rule in an improper Sense, and why that Sense is improper, and his Friend Dr. Tillotson has told him what a Rule of Faith means * Rule of Faith. p. 6. & p. 40. in our Controversies; but he never heeds either: but runs on here with frivolous descants upon an ambiguous word, and will needs take [Rule] in a Sense never meant, nor possible to be meant in our circumstances. He's not satisfied with the Care of the Council of Trent in correcting the Copy. But let him remember I spoke there of Texts of Inferior Concern, not of those that concerned Faith. And why is he not satisfied? Did she not do her best in the present Circumstances? P. 88 How will he prove it? Because Clemens the 8 th' recalled and corrected the Bibles put out by Sixtus the 5 th' for an exact Edition. But, if both did their best, according to the Observations were made in their time, and the Light they had then, neither of them were to blame. But all this Humane Diligence amounts not to Absolute Certainty as I. S. requires of us: And is it not more reason I should require it of him than he of me, since he makes it (Scriptures Letter) the Proper Rule of Faith, which he knows I do not, and yet, which is pleasant he calls upon me aloud to declare as much, and then he knows how to answer. And now I know the true Reason why he has answered nothing hitherto, viz. because I had not declared what I had owned in all my Books near a thousand times over. But we have lost our point by answering a multitude of Impertinent Cavils. 'Tis this. The Sense of Scripture cannot be Absolutely Certain, unless there be Absolute Certainty the Letter is right: Nor can there be Absolute Certainty the Letter is right even in Texts relating to Faith by his Principles, which deny this was performed by the Church's Knowledge of the Points of Faith, but by making out with Absolute Certainty how the Letter was by some other Means secured from being wrong. This he never attempts even in this very occasion when it lay upon him to do it; and, therefore, for all his empty flourishes he has said just nothing. Nor has shown or defended that even the Ground of his Faith, Scriptures Letter, is Absolutely Certain. Besides his Discourse still beats upon this mistake that We do not hold the Letter Absolutely Certain in such concerning Texts; whereas we only say He cannot prove it to be such by his Principles; and he makes our words good with not performing it, or so much as attempting it. Only he tells us for our comfort, that as to Books, Copies, P. 91. and Translations, he has as high a Certainty as the thing is capable of; and then 'tis Madness to expect and require more. So that, tho' it happen that the Certainty be but a very sleight one, his kind of Faithful and Converts may take their choice whether they will be Fools if they will believe it, or Madmen if they will not. He tells us indeed faintly the Faith previous to Divine Faith, may have Absolute Certainty; but if it only may have it, it may not have it. In the mean time, what is all this voluntary Saying, to his Proving that he has really and indeed Absolute Certainty of those Books, Copies, and Translations. 'Tis his Proofs we looked for, and not bare Narrations of his own weak Tenets, with which he thus puts us off continually. 66. But how strangely Insincere (if any such carriage could after so frequent use of it be strange in him) is the Dr to pretend we hold it is in any Church's Power to correct Original Texts because they contradict the Sense of the present Church. These words he puts into Italic Letter as if they were mine; but he citys no place, and I do assure the Reader I have neither such Words nor Sense. The first Originals are not extant, & so cannot be corrected; & those called Originals, which are already acknowledged, aught as little to be corrected as the other, in Texts belonging to Faith. All the Power we give the Church is to correct succeeding Copies upon occasion, in Texts relating to the Articles of our Faith, when they deviate from the Faith of the Church, or (which is the same) from former Copies allowed by her universally. 67. I desired the Dr to satisfy us concerning the Number of Books requisite to a Rule of Faith, and how many will just serve the turn; as also whether some Book, for any thing his Principles can assure us, were not lost. This lay upon him to prove, and this with Absolute Certainty, if he would have Scripture an Entire Rule of his Faith; How proves he it? P. 92.93. Why, he makes me mightily concerned to lessen the Authority of the New Testament; and that I charge the Christian Church with a Gross Neglect. For all this Noise, he knows well enough that I agree with him, that 'tis not in the least probable the Churches should suffer any such Book dispersed among them to be last, nor do I so much as suppose they did. What I say is, that he who holds all Humane Authority Fallible, can never prove it True they delivered down All; unless he can convince the World that a Fallible Medium can prove a thing True; which he cannot do without proving that What may be False is True. Nor can he do This, without proving the same thing may be and not be at once. I wish then he would set himself to work, and prove this abominable First Principle to be False; For, otherwise, This alone will confute all the substantial parts of his Book, and convince every man of Common Sense, that his Grounds, confessed by himself to be Fallible, can never make out, that 'tis True that he has either Right Letter, or Right Sense of Scripture, or that no Book is lost, etc. and so there's an End of his Problematical Faith. I must confess that to prove First Principles False is something difficult; but I have reduced the business to as narrow a compass as I can, that he may make short work of it. He recurrs at present for want of some Clear Proof, P. 93. to God's Providence concerned in preserving Books written by Divine Inspiration, Of which none doubts. But, why should not God's Providence be as much concerned in preserving his Church from Erring in Faith that so both all those Books, their Letters and Sense might be kept right as far as was Necessary? Or, why was God's Providence the Less for making the Church's Care and Help the Means to preserve both the Books and Letter of Scripture from suffering detriment? Lastly, why must his Providence be confined to only Translators and Transcribers? 68 Dr St. in his second Letter to Mr. G. p. 32. made the Canon of the New Testament the Rule of his Faith. To show the Inconsistency of his Tenets, and utterly overthrow his Pretence of that Rule, I * First Cath. Letter. p. 58.59. alleged, that If the whole Canon be his Rule, than his Rule was deficient for some hundreds of years till the whole Canon was Collected and Acknowledged. I pressed farther, that, since it must take up some time ere those several Books were Spread and accepted, sometimes the Primitive Church had according to his Principles, but Three quarters of their Faith▪ Half of their Faith, or less, and so were but Three-quarters or Half-Christians, according as the several pieces came by degrees to be universally accepted. For no man of Sense can doubt but that it cost some time ere the Churches, so diffused, heard of all those Books, and much more ere they could be perfectly satisfied of the Universal Testimony of the Church Ascertaining them to have been writ by men Divinely inspired; in regard it was of most Dangerous Consequence to accept that for God's Word, which was not beyond all doubt such. So that we may with reason imagine that some Churches had at first but Two or Three Books of Scripture, others but Four or Five that were well attested or could be relied on in such a High Concern. Add, that there were divers false Gospels and Spacious Books given out under the names of having the Apostles or Apostolical Men for their Authors; which must have redoubled their care, and made them backward to receive any that were not Authentic, which would take up still more time to examine thoroughly. To press my Argument still more home, I urged that perhaps, according to him, they had no Faith at all during that long Interval; because wanting other Books or sufficient warrant to rely on them, they, by consequence wanted a Multitude of other Texts, with which they might Compare those they already had, which is one part of his Method to find true Faith in Scripture. To show more the Inconsonancy of his Doctrine, I noted that, notwithstanding all this, * Second Letter to Mr G. p. 31. he declared that he looked upon the Primitive Church tho' so ill furnished with his Rule, as on the Best Arbitrator between us in all our Controversies about the Sense of the doubtful (that is Controverted) places of Scripture. Now, one would verily think this pressing Discourse, following the Point in Question so Close and pursuing it so Home, were exceedingly worth his while to Answer, if he could; since it touched his Rule and his Cause to the quick. Now le's see what he says in their Defence. The Substance of his Answer (for all the rest is impertinent) is a most doughty and most weighty word [If] If God (says he) hath so Abundantly provided for his Church that there may be a full Revelation of all Points of Faith in the rest, P. 95. than the disputing the Authority of such an Epistle (meaning that to the Hebrews) doth not derogate from the Compleatness of the Rule of Faith. What's become of his Sincerity and Moral Honesty, which he so professed to Love? Did I speak of the Epistle to the Hebrews? Did not I, not only speak of but most Expressly discourse all along of those many or most Books of Scripture, not Universally known and accepted at the very first, but by degrees spreading and gaining in Process of Time the Credit of being Authentic? Does not my Discourse that by his Principles [The Primitive Church had but Three quarters of her Faith, half her Faith, or less] bar this Shamming Pretence that I speak only of that Epistle? Or does he think I meant that that single Epistle was half or three quarters of the Canon of Scripture? And now, Reader, I beg thy leave to insist here upon this Prevarication as an instance of one great Part of his Method in Confuting. He picks out a word or two which may best serve him to slip away from the Point; and turn it to quite another business, but leaves the whole Stress and full import of the Argument Unanswered. It were tedious still to reflect how oft he has done thus in this pretended Reply to my Catholic Letters: But, whoever compares his several Answers to the respective places he pretends to speak to, will see how dull and insignificant they are; tho' if he be read alone, especially with an Implicit Belief of his dealing fairly, they look very jolly and brisk. However to divert the Readers Eye he is even with me in another Point. I said the accepting or not accepting Books whether in the Latin or Greek Churches was an Act of Prudence Antecedent to the judgement or Determination of any Church, Third Cath. Letter. p. 57 and so could not make or mar the Latin Church's Infallibility in her judgement or Decrees. He falls into a gross mistake of the word [Antecedent] and erects a Trophy of Victory upon his own Error. To clear which 'tis to be observed that our Divines admit prudential Considerations in any Church, even tho' held Infallible, Previous to her Decrees, & yet do not hold that Church is Infallible in those Acts of Prudence which are thus Antecedent. Now, tho' the whole Series of my Discourse there shows clearly that I spoke of an Antecedency in the Course of Humane Actions, or of a prudential Deliberation Antecedent to an Absolute Decision; he turns it to an Antecedency in Chronology, or of more Ancient Writers; P. 96. and when he has applied that word to a wrong matter he has the Vanity to insult. But, he says, I say not a Syllable to his proving hence the Roman Church was not then believed Infallible. Surely he never considered what he pretends to Answer; for by saying it was not only an Act of Prudence Antecedent to any Degree, I show there was no occasion to show what was then believed of her Infallibility or not believed. Again, since the Certainty of that Epistles being writ by St. Paul depended on Testimony, other Churches might perhaps know that better for some time than She. But, the worst is, he was preparing for New Questions, to avoid the danger in keeping to the True one. For he knew the Infallibility of the Church we are here defending, is that of Tradition in delivering down the Doctrine of Christ; and he does not, sure, judge it a Point of Christ's Doctrine that the Epistle to the Hebrews was writ by S. Paul Add, that when the Church of Rome did Decree any thing at all in that matter, it was for the Reception of that Epistle; in doing which he will not, I hope, say she Erred. So that our great Dr is out in every particular in which he shows such Confidence, or rather he is to talk very Confidently whenever he is out, that he may not seem not to be out. 69. He puts my Objection against his Universal Consent, P. 97. of the Testimonies of Martion, Ebion, Valentinus and Cerinthus, who (as he makes me say) rejected the Canon of the New Testament; and then asks, Could any man but J. S. make such an Objection as this? And, I may, I hope, ask another Question; Could any Man but Dr St. put such a Gull upon his Adversary and the Reader too? Now, if I used such words as [who rejected the Canon of the New Testament] I spoke Nonsense; for those Heretics were dead long before that Canon was settled: But if I did not, than he has abused me and our Readers too, and done no great right to himself. Let Eyesight decide it. In my Third Catholic Letter. p. 59 (the place he citys) line 11.12. my express words are, The Consent of all your Christian Churches for Scripture; and he instead of [Scripture] puts down as my words [The Canon of the New Testament.] I can compassionate Humane Oversight (for it may hap possibly tho' it can never knowingly to be my own Case) and not too severely impute a mistake in altering my Words, and by them my Sense: Yet I must needs say that to put those wrong words in the Italic Letter to breed a more perfect Conceit they were mine, and quote the very page in the Margin where no such words were found, to make me speak Nonsense, looks a little Scurvily; especially, because when men have their Eyes upon the very Page, as he had, they have an easy and obvious direction to the words too. But, why do I make such a Spiteful Reflection on him as to call them His Christian Churches? Because he would needs allow other Sects, as perfectly Heretical as they were to be [ * Dr St's Second Letter to Mr G. p. 24.25. Christian Churches] tho' he was put upon it to give them a distinct Character; and here again he grants them to be parts of the Christian Church, P. 98. tho' they be cut off by Lawful Authority from the body of Christianity. Next, that I may speak my conscience, because I fear, by many passages in his Books, by his ill-laid Principles, and the very grain of his Doctrine and discourses, he judges all to be good Christians who profess to ground their Faith on Scripture, let them hold as many Heresies as they will. And, lastly, for his fierce anger here against me for calling those Heretics, viz. The Arians, Nestorians, etc. which have been Condemned by General Councils, (for I concern not myself with his Greeks or Abyssins' or any others) Excrementitious Outcasts, P. 102. and that I sling such dirt in the face of so many Christian Churches. And is not this to cry, Hail fellow, well met? But my Cause (he says) is desperate, because I call such men Knights of the Post. Yet he knows the Fathers oft complain of Heretics for corrupting the Scripture; and the Testimony of the Churches Truly Christian was Absolutely Certain, without calling in so needlessly Blasted Witnesses. Moreover I told him that the Universal Testimony he produced did attest the Books, but it must attest the Chapter and Verse too to be Right, nay each Significant Word in the Verse, otherwise the Scripture could not assure him Absolutely of his Faith. Can he deny this? If the Chapter or Verse he citys be not True Scripture, or if any material Word in the Verse be altered can he securely build his Faith on it? What says he to this? Does he deny it, or show that His Grounds reach home to prove these particular Texts or Words to be right, by Universal Testimony or any other Medium? Neither of them is his Concern: What does he then? Why he complains how hardly we are satisfied about the Certainty of Scripture and that we are Incurable Sceptics. P. 99 Sure he dreams. We are Satisfied well enough; but his Vexation is that we are not satisfied of it by his Principles; and how should we; if, when it was his Cue to satisfy us, he will never be brought to go seriously about it? And why must we be Sceptics; when as we both hold the Rectitude of the Letter ourselves in Texts relating to Faith, and Assign a way to secure it Absolutely, which he cannot? Must all Men necessarily be Sceptics who allow not his No-way of doing this, tho' they propose and Maintain a certain way that can do it? This is a strange way of Confuting. He says There are different Copies in all Parts to examine and Compare. 'Tis these very Copies that are in Question, whether they give Absolute Certainty of every Verse or material Word in the Letter of Scripture, and we expected he should have shown how they did so, and not barely name them, and say there are such things. But the main Point is, Must those who are looking for Faith run to all parts of the World, and examine and Compare all the Copies ere they embrace any Faith? This looks like a Jest: Yet 'tis a sad, tho' a mad Truth by his Principles. For without knowing this, Scripture cannot be their Rule; and he'll allow no way to come to Faith but by Scripture; So that, for any Assurance he can give them, (even of his Necessary Points) they must e'en be content to stay at home, and live and die without any Faith at all. He ends. And Thus I have answered all the Objections I have Met with in J. S. against our Rule of Faith. Here are two Emphatical words [Thus] and [Met] of which the word Thus has such a pregnant Signification and teems with so many indirect wiles and Stratagems that it would be an ingrateful task to recount them; and the word [Met] is as Significant as the other. For how should he Meet those that lay in the way, while he perpetually runs out of the Way. SECT. IV. How solidly Dr. St. Answers our Arguments for the Infallibility of Tradition. 70. BUt now he exerts his Reasoning Faculty, which he does seldom, P. 100 & will answer Mr G's Argument for the Infallibility of Oral and Practical Tradition. With what success we shall see anon. But, first he will clear his bad Logic for letting the Argument stand yet in its full force, and falling very manfully to Combat the Conclusion: and tho' Common Sense tells every man this is not to Answer but to Argue, yet he will have Arguing to be Answering for all that. 'Tis his Interest to do it solidly, for he has all the World, who in their Disputes follow the contrary Method, to confute. His main reason to prove that Arguing is a good way to Answer is because the Argument attempts to prove a thing Impossible, and that 'tis contrary to Sense and Experience to say the Latin and Greek Churches do not differ in what they receive upon Tradition; P. 101. and so the same Answer that Diogenes gave to Zeno's Argument against Motion by Walking, will serve the turn. Let's examine this parallel, in which consists the substance of his Defence of his bad Logic. Does all the World see that the Generality of the Greek Church proceed upon Tradition in what they differ from the Latin as certainly and evidently as they see there is Motion? Have not I produced in my First Catholic Letter, p. 35. reasons enough to show him how disputable this point is, none of which he so much as mentions? Did not I there p. 13. quote him out of his own book Peter Lombard, saying, that the Difference between the Greeks and Latins is in Words and not in Sense? Nay, Thomas a jesus, Azorius, etc. who were of the same Judgement? And could not these Learned men see a thing manifest to Sense and Experience? Our point then is nothing like that of denying Motion, nor is it contrary to Sense and Experience, but such as bears a Dispute amongst intelligent Men and Great Scholars, and therefore, even by the Drs own Discourse, an Argument or Instance, brought against the Conclusion was no Answer to the Premises of the Argument brought by Mr. G. and so all the Division he runs upon it here is perfectly frivolous. Nor was Mr G. obliged either to grant or deny the Greek Church had Erred, but was to insist on an Answer to his Argument; because the Dr had played foul play, in attacking his Conclusion when he was to answer his Proof; which if admitted, no Discourse could possibly proceed. For, let us suppose Dr. St. had been to argue, and had brought this Instance of the Greek Church; would he have thought it fair that Mr G. when he was to answer it, should have brought the Argument he made use of in the Conference, and have bid him prove that two Churches following Tradition differed in Faith, notwithstanding his Demonstration that they could not? Or, would it be held a competent Answer to his late Book against the Council of Trent, to bid him prove it had not followed Tradition, notwithstanding all that a multitude of Learned Catholic Authors had writ to the contrary? I took heart then indeed, as he says, seeing the Dr so Nonplussed, P. 102. but 'tis his own fiction that I resolved to grapple with his Instance, it being impertinent to do it in those circumstances, and so he may thank himself if he were disappointed. I was tied to the known Laws of Dispute, and not bound to dance after his Pipe when he strays from all the Clearest Methods of Reasoning. I objected that himself had defended the Greek Church from Erring in his Rational Account; which spoils his own Instance of a Church going upon Tradition and Erring. He calls this Trifling, and says the Dispute was about Mr G 's Argument. Yes; but these words were not brought to abet his Agreement, but expressly to show the Drs Inconsonancy to himself, and his Unconscienciousness in arguing from the Greek Churches Erring; whereas it was his Opinion it did not Err. And tho' Mr G's Answer may be pretended not to be so pat to the particular Demand, yet it was apposite to the main Point that no Church did at once adhere to Tradition and Err at the same time. For which I gave my reason, P. 103. because if each Successive Generation followed their Father's Tradition from the beginning, the last Son must believe as the first did. This was too hot to handle, P. 104. and so 'tis answered with Good Night to the Greek Church; which is Learned beyond expression. Lastly, upon my saying, He might as well have instanced in the Latin Church itself, without running so far as Greece; he takes hence an occasion to accept of the Challenge, tho' it did not look like one, being only spoke occasionally; and threatens us not with a bare instance but a whole Book against us: He may use his pleasure; tho' I must tell him it looks but cowardly to threaten when he's running away from his business, undertaken and not yet performed; and leaving the Absolute Certainty of his poor destitute Faith in the suds. One would think it had been the more Compendious Way to overthrow our Cause, to answer five or six lines if he could have done it. But, he had a mind to be at another Work more suitable to his Quoting Genius, and hoped to draw us after him from a Conclusive and short way of Discoursing to an Endless one, of answering every frivolous misunderstood or misapplyed Citation. P. 104. 71. But now he will show us how 'tis Possible to adhere to Tradition & yet err. A hard Task, if applied to our business! For, since to adhere to Tradition is still to believe what was delivered, to show that those who adhere to Tradition do err, is to show that they who still believed the same Christ taught did not believe the same Christ taught. A Point so Evident that his Reflecter could not but grant it. Yet let the Dr alone; I dare hold a good wager on his side that he can by his confuting Method & his Logic prove direct Contradictions to be True without any difficulty, or, as he calls it here, with an Easy Distinction. He begins with two Senses of Adhering to Tradition. One of adhering to it as the Rule and Means of conveying matters of Faith. The other for adhering to the very Doctrine taught at first and truly conveyed down since by Tradition. That is, there are two sorts of Tradition or Delivery; One is Tradition, the Other is not Tradition or Delivery, but the Points delivered. Parallel to this is his Distinction of Traditionary Christians. To what purpose is it, to talk Sense to a man who is resolved to run still so wildly into Nonsense? Do but see, good Reader, with what care I had forestalled this very Absurd Distinction in my Third Catholic Letter, p. 4.5.9.12. and showed how he had deformed Tradition into all the untoward Senses man's wit could invent, by making it now signify Articles, now Power, now Points delivered; yet to convince the World that he cannot or rather must not speak Sense, he's at the same work again as briskly as ever: And good reason: Contradictions are better Friends to him than Principles: for nothing more confounds the Reader, which is all he looks after; and to confound him with a show of Distinguishing, which Nature intended for a way to clear things, does it with a better grace. The same work he makes with the word [Traditionary] and, tho' he were told what we meant by it First Letter, p. 8. and Second Letter, p. 52. yet 'tis never acknowledged, but he still runs his Division upon it, as if it were some Ambiguous or Mysterious Word, till he has put the whole Tenor of the Discourse into Confusion. Once more I tell him, and desire the Reader to witness it, that he already knows what we distinctly mean by those words: and, if he will not acknowledge it and speak to the Sense we give it upon our assurance that we never took them, nor ever will take them otherwise, he speaks not to me, nor gives a word of Answer; but, as baffled men use, runs for shelter to mere Brabbles and Impertinencies. 72. And Now that is, P. 105. after he had laid Contradictions for his Principles, he comes to give a Clear and distinct Answer to our Demonstration of the Infallibility of Tradition. And no doubt by Virtue of such Grounds he will do wonders. Mr. G's discourse was distinguished by me in my First Letter p. 8.9. into four parts or Propositions; of which, the First is, that All Traditionary Christians believe the same to day which they did Yesterday, and so up to the time of our Blessed Saviour. Now he knows that by Tradition we mean an Immediate Delivery, and this from day to day; for it would not be Immediate if it were at all Interrupted; and by [Traditionary] those who followed this Rule of Immediate Delivery and do Actually believe the say to day which they did yesterday; and that, if they do not this, they desert this Tradition by Interrupting Immediate Delivery, and so cease to be Traditionary Christians. All this he already knows for it has been told him over and over: Whence he cannot but know, tho' he thinks not fit to Acknowledge it, that the Proposition is Self-Evident, and plainly amounts to this, that They who believe still the same do still believe the Same; and the word [Traditionary] was only made use of to express those Persons in one word, because it had been tedious still to use so Many. Could any man but this Gentleman undertake to combat a Proposition so formally, which is in Sense identical and Self-Evident? I took him to be one who would own his Humane Nature which obliges every man to assent to such Clearest Truths, and so vainly hoped he had nothing to say to it. But, as he says very true, I was mistaken: P. 105. for he has many things to say to lay open the Notorious Fallacy of it in every Clause. How? Every Clause? Why, there's but one Clause in the Whole; for the adjoined words [and so up to the time of our Blessed Saviour] are the most Essential part of it, and distinguish Christian Tradition from that of Heretical Traditions begun since Christ's time. So that the Dr makes account that One signifies Many. This is but an ill Beginning; and I do assure the Reader all the rest is not a jot Wiser. But, now come the Notorious Fallacies. Why did I not say that All Christians are Traditionary? Or that All Christians have gone upon this Principle? Because many are called Christians especially by him, P. 106. who have deserted this Principle, and so have no Title to be called Traditionary: But principally, because if we speak of True Christians, that was the thing to be Concluded; for those men are not such, who Disacknowledge a Way of knowing Christ's Doctrine, which is proved to give them Absolute Certainty of it. So that it is a Notorious Fallacy, according to Dr St's new Logic, not to make the Conclusion the very First Proposition of an Argument; and the Fallacy lies in judging that the Last thing should not be the First. Hitherto than this most Learned Logician has not taken one step, without stumbling into a manifest Contradiction. One Single Clause is Many Clauses. Self-Evident Propositions are Notoriously Fallacious. Words, whose meaning have been particularly explained to him over and over, and so can have but one Sense as we speak of them, may have Many Senses: Adhering to and following Tradition is not adhering to it and not following it, and the Conclusion or End of an Argument is to be the Beginning of it, or the Proof is to be the Thing Proved. Nor is this any wonder: for 'tis but fit that Self-Evident Truths should only be opposed by Self-Evident Contradictions. 73. After these Noble Performances, P. 106.107. he falls into his old tract of Dividing and Subdividing, he talks of Evidence from the Word of God, from the Guides of the Church, he runs to Infallibly holding to Tradition, (not spoke of Yet, but following in the Argument) he tells us they may go upon another Rule etc. Anticipating thus all the following discourse, and complaining all is not proved at once, when as we are as yet but at the very first words of the Proof. There is no End of the Faults and Failings of these Sinful self-Evident Truths; Falsehoods and Contradictions are Saints to 'em: P. 107. It supposes falsely (he says) that the Change in Faith must be so sudden and Remarkable, whereas it was Gradual, and so to pitch upon such a Precise and Narrow Compass of time is very Unreasonable. Lastly, to Illustrate and complete his Answer with an Instance, he tells us, that by the same Method one may demonstrate it to be Impossible that any Language should be Changed. By which we may gather that Dr St's Incomparable Skill in Philosophy, and deep Inspection into the Natures of Things, makes account that Truths are of the same Nature with Quantitative Things or Bodies. All Corporeal Motions, amongst the rest Sounds or Speaking, have a Thousand Indeterminate Degrees between any two determinate Points. Does he think 'tis so with Truths and Falsehoods? Or does he imagine the Thoughts of the Christian World could take a Walk of two or three Hundred years between Is and Is not? Did he never hear that Truths consist in an Indivisible, that he thus compares them to Quantitative or Divisible Natures, and judges the Comparison so apposite? Putting then once the true Notion of the Points in the Head and Heart of the Christian Church, (and, if they were never there the Apostles lost their labour) the least Change in it must change the Point. Did he never reflect why a Tenet is Metaphorically called a Point? And that 'tis because a Point is Indivisible? The putting in the Proposition [to day and Yesterday] is to express the Immediateness of Tradition. Others, amongst the rest the Council of Trent, and many of the Fathers, particularly St. Athanasius, call it [Delivering down by Hands] and the hands of the Children must be Immediate to the hands of their Fathers, else the one could not receive what the other Delivers. Nor do I, or any man living, know how, if the whole Church should be in an Error but one day, by deserting the Rule of Faith, they should ever retrieve True Faith again, having forsaken the only way to it. Of such consequence it is that the Means of conveying down Christ's Faith be Immediate, even from day to day. And thus Dr St. has begun to answer Mr G's Demonstration, by keeping such a huge pother about a Proposition Evident by its own Light, and pretending more faults in it than even a wise man could have shown in the Arrantest Falsehood. But he has not done with it yet: the most Essential part of it remains yet behind; [And so up to the time of our Blessed Saviour] Now the Proposition speaks of Believing the same all that while; P. 108. and he confutes it with talking of Claiming and Pretending to follow it. Whence, since to believe the same that was delivered, is Actually following Tradition, his distinguishing Talon has afforded us two sorts of following Tradition: One which is really and indeed following it, the other is only pretending to follow it and not doing so; that is, there is one sort of believing the same or of following Tradition, which is not-following of it, which is still of the same Learned Strain. 74. The Second Proposition is [And if they follow this Rule they can never Err in Faith] what says he to this? If they follow this Rule, that is, believe the same from Christ's time that was taught at first, do not they believe the same Christ Taught! One would verily think that this is as Evident as 'tis that, to believe the same is to believe the same. True, 'tis so, and therefore 'tis with him Self-Evidently a mere Fallacy. P. 108. Certainly never was any Mortal Man such an Enemy to Common Sense. But 'tis his constant humour to talk big when he's at a perfect Nonplus. Well, but how proves he 'tis a mere Fallacy. Why 1. He grants that those who believe Christ's Doctrine cannot Err. P. 109. And is not this a rare Answer? We both grant that Christ's Doctrine is True, and consequently that who hold it cannot Err: All this is Presupposed to our Question, and so is no part of it. But our Point is how we shall know assuredly what is Christ's Doctrine? Or by what Means shall we come at it? 2. He says, They might mistake in this Rule; It has been shown him, Third Cath. Letter, p. 6, 7.8.9▪ and in many other places upon occasion, that they could not mistake in this Rule; & he never takes notice of it in his whole Answer, and yet has the Confidence to object it afresh. 3. He says, P. 109. They might follow another Rule. This too has been proved against him, nay 'tis here proved in the Fourth Proposition of this very Argument; for by proving they could not innovate in Faith, 'tis proved they (that is the Body or Universality) could not desert Tradition. But what a shift is the Dr put to? Do we contend here they could follow no other? All the Proposition pretends to is, that If they follow this Rule they cannot err in Faith. What says he to this? Can they, or can they not? If they cannot, than the Rule is a good Rule, which is all we labour to prove here, the rest is proved in the Fourth Proposition. And if they can err, tho' following it then, since to follow it, is still to believe the same, the Dr must say that the same Faith tho' still conveyed down the same is not the same itself was at first; which is a direct Contradiction. Not one single word of Answer then to the Proposition has he given us, only he affirms stoutly 'tis Fallacious (a very Cheap Answer to any Argument that is too crabbed and difficult) but he cannot for his heart tell where the Fallacy lies. The Conclusion is naught, that he's resolved on, but he has nothing that is pertinent to say to the Premises or Proof. Yet, something he must say for a show; and, so, he will show some other ways that Errors might come in. And perhaps I can show him twenty more; P. 109. but, still, what's this to the Point? Can Errors in Faith come in while men follow this Rule of Tradition, that is while they continue to believe the same that was still taught immediately before, and this ever since Christ's time? This is our only business. 75. Since I must now run out of the way after our Straggling Disputant, I desire first the Reader would remark, that the Proposition he is now answering is this, [If they follow this Rule (viz. Tradition) they can never err in Faith;] as also that by [Tradition] is meant the Public Testimony of the Church of— what was delivered as Christ's Doctrine. His first particular way of introducing Errors, is, by the Authority of False Teachers. But was Tradition followed, Ibid. while they followed their Authority? If it was, than the Christian Church was a False Teacher, and her Public Testimony attested false Doctrine to be Christ's; which if he holds, let him speak out, and see how all Christians will detest him. If Tradition was not followed but deserted when men were led by False Teachers, what's this to us? or whom does it oppose? For 'tis plainly to abet Tradition, to say that none could follow False Teachers, but they must at the same time desert It. 'Tis hard to conjecture then what he meant by alleging the Molinos unless it were to make his Friend Dr Burnet's Book concerning Molinos sell. 'Tis no news that False Teachers may introduce Errors; and that that man pretended the Public Testimony of the Church, or that his whimsies were Christ's Doctrine delivered down from the beginning, is both unheard of and Incredible. His Second way of introducing Errors, P. 110. is by Enthusiasm. Very well. Did the Testimony of the Christian Church tell them that Enthusiasm was Christ's Doctrine? If he says it did, he makes the whole Christian Church in some Age to have been a pack of harebrained Enthusiasts. If it did not, then 'tis an honour to Tradition that they deserted it when they fell into that Spiritual Madness. His Third way is by a pretence to a more secret Tradition. But was this pretence to a Secret Tradition a pretending to follow the Public Tradition of the Church? If it was not, it opposes not our Tradition but credits it. And if he says it was, than he makes what's Secret to be Public, which is a Contradiction; and the very alleging this makes him in some manner Guilty of that old Failing of his. His Fourth is, P. 111. Differences among Church-Guides about the Sense of Scripture and Tradition. I have * Third Cath. Letter p. 6.7.8.15. already shown him that it was impossible the Generality, especially of Pastors, should not know the Sense of Tradition; and, as for some Church Guides differing about the Sense of Scripture, it was equally impossible they should Err in Faith, as long as they interpreted Scripture by the Rule of the Church's Tradition; and, when they once left that Rule, instead of being any longer Church-Guides, they became generally if they were any thing, Eminent Ringleaders of Heretical Sects; which gives a high repute to our Tradition, even by their erring when they deserted it. His Fifth way how Error might come in, is too great a Veneration to some particular Teachers— which made their Disciples despise Tradition in comparison of their Notions. And were those men Followers of Tradition who despised it? His 6th is, By Compliance with some Gentil Superstitions, etc. But did Tradition or the Church's Testimony deliver down to them these Heathenish Superstitions for Christ's Doctrine? Or rather, would it not have preserved men from them, had nothing else been attended to but that Rule? P. 112. His 7th and last is by Implicit Faith, that is, that when a man had found a Faithful Guide to direct him, he should submit himself to be Guided by him in things in which he could not guide himself. A very dangerous case indeed! But the Antidote to this malicious suggestion is, that the same Church that they believed, condemned all New Revelations, and adhered only to what was delivered. He could have added an Eighth way how Errors in Faith come in, had he pleased, and That too such a one, as had done a thousand times greater mischief than all the rest put together; viz. Private Interpretations of Scripture; which every man knows has been the source of all the Heresies since Christ's time. But this being the sole Ground of his Faith, it was not his Interest to let his Readers know it had been the Ground of all Heresy. 76. But what's all this to the Point? Or how is the Demonstration lost if many men erred upon divers other accounts so none erred while they followed Tradition? Unless he proves this, he establishes our Demonstrations by his showing how multitudes erred who were led by other Motives and by his not being able to produce so much as one Instance of any that erred by adhering to It. What Noise and Triumph should we have had, could he have alleged so many Heretics sprung up by grounding their opinions on mistaken Tradition, as 'tis known have arisen by grounding their wicked Tenets on misunderstood Scripture? But alas! tho' that were exceedingly to his purpose, not one such Instance could he bring. P. 11●▪ He talks a little faintly of the Arians, Pelagians, Nestorians, etc. not disowning Tradition. But does he hope to persuade any man of Sense those Upstarts durst ever go about to put out the eyes of the World by pretending their Heresies were delivered down as Christ's Doctrine by the Public Testimony of the Church in their days, or outface the present Church that she herself had taught them what she knew themselves had newly invented? Or would she have condemned them had they spoke her thoughts or followed her Doctrine? With what Sense can any of this be imagined? The Tradition then which they went upon was Citations of some former Authors, which they misunderstood, (the very Method Dr St. and his fellow-Quoters take now a-days) or else the Judgement of a few Foregoers; of whom some might speak ambiguously, others perhaps hankered after their Heresy. 'Tis very hard to guests what Dr St. would be at in alleging so many ways how Error might be introduced. That it might come in, and by Various ways no man doubts. That it came in merely by following Tradition or the Church's Testimony he says not. That particular Multitudes might be seduced by deserting Tradition, is equally granted, and needs no Proof. And that it came in tho' Men Adhered to Tradition (which was the true Point) he goes not about to prove nor seems so much as to think of. Besides most of the Ways he assigns if not all, are so many Desertions of Tradition which highly conduces to Strengthen our Argument; while he impugns it: Yet surely that could not be his Intention neither. I cannot imagine then what all these seven Formal Heads are brought for, but to make a Show of none knows what. Sometimes, I incline to think he is combating the Fourth Proposition, proving the Body of Traditionary Christians could not innovate in Faith but either through forgetfulness or Malice. And yet I cannot fix upon this neither; both because he names not these two defects before he shows us his other ways of Erring; as also because we are not come as yet to the Fourth Proposition where all the Stress lay, but have spent all our time in confuting the First and Second, which were Self-Evident. But, if that be his meaning as he intimates p. 112. to escape replying to the Fourth Proposition, then let him know that, whatever his unsound Principles say, whoever deserts the Testimony of God's Church whether by the Authority, (or rather No-Authority) of False Teachers; or, by Enthusiasm, the root of which is Spiritual Pride; or, by following Secret Traditions against the Public Authority of the Church; or, by adhering to a Sense of Scripture contrary to what Tradition allows; or by too great a Veneration to some particular Teachers; or by Compliance with Heathenish Superstitions; or, by whatever other Motive, is Guilty before God of a Heinous Sin, and it must spring from some degree of Malicious or Bad disposition in his heart. For he cannot but See that himself or his Leader breaks the Order of the World by disobeying, rising against and preferring himself before those whom God had set over him to feed, direct, instruct and Govern him. Of which Order, and of the Goods coming by it, and the Mischiefs which attend the Violating it, none of Common Sense, whom some by-affection has not blinded, can possibly be Ignorant. P. 112. 77. He concludes with these words [If then Errors might come into the Church all these Ways; What a vain thing it is to pretend that Oral Tradition will keep from any possibility of Error!] Ah, Dr. Dr! Where's your Love of Moral Honesty? Where's your Sincerity? Where your Conscience? Did ever any man pretend that Tradition will keep men from any Possibility of Error whether they follow it or no? Were not our most express words put down by yourself, p. 108. l. 27.28. [If they follow this Rule they can never Err in Faith.] And must those most important words be still Omitted, and no notice taken of them but only in an absurd Distinction, making * See above §. 72. & 74. Adhering to Tradition or Following it, to be Not-Following it? Is this Solid Answering or plain Prevaricating? Again, what Nonsense does he make us speak by omitting these words? Is it not a Madness to say, a Rule will direct them Right that do not Follow it? That a Means will bring a man to his End, who does not use it? That a Way will keep a man from Straying in his Journey who does not walk in it? Yet all these Contradictions we must be Guilty of by his leaving out the words [If followed] 'Tis pretty too upon review of his words to reflect on his Craft ['Tis vain to pretend that Oral Tradition will keep—] whom was it pretended to keep from any Possibility of Error? He should have added [the followers of it] but because he had Slipped this all along, he leaves the Sense Imperfect, and the word [keep] must want the Accusative Case after it, due to its Transitive Sense by the Laws of Grammar, merely to avoid his putting the Right one, because it would have been unsuitable to all his foregoing Discourses, which never touched it. But, since he speaks still what Causes of Error he has shown, tho' I have already manifested, that all those Causes were accompanied with Malice in the First Deserters of Tradition, yet to enforce our Demonstration the more, I discourse thus. If Tradition could be deserted or Innovation in Faith made by the Generality of Christians (for none ever said or doubted but Many Particulars might do so) it must either proceed from some Defect in their Understandings or in their Wills. A defect in the Will is called Badness or Malice; whence, if they wilfully Innovated, it must spring from some degree of Malice. If in their Understanding; than it must either be in that Power as Apprehending, or Knowing Christ's Doctrine; or as Retaining it. It could not be in the Former, for none doubts but the body of the Church, particularly the Teachers who were to instruct the Rest, did very well Comprehend Christ's Doctrine in the Beginning, and the many * Third Cath. Letter p. 6.7.8. Clear ways Tradition comprizes to deliver it down, renders Faith Intelligible still to each succeeding Age. Wherefore since the Defect cannot be in their Understanding or their having Christ's Doctrine in their Hearts, it must be (if any where) in that knowing Power as 'tis Retentive, that is in their Memory. But, it was absolutely impossible the Generality of the Church should be so weak as to forget in any little determinate part of Time (by which Immediate steps Tradition proceeds) what was Taught and Practised a little before; or Considering the Motives to keep them firm to it) so Wicked as to conspire to Alter it purposely. Therefore whatever Contingency there must be in some Particulars, it could not be that the Generality of the Church should have altered it, or consequently, Erred in Faith. Wherefore this Conclusion stands yet Firm, the Premises remaining yet Untouched: Since he neither shows nor can show more Faculties in Mankind engaged in the Perpetuating the Former Faith than these Two. Add, that he does not even Attempt to show that the Causes he produces can have the Power to prevail or carry it against the force of Tradition; and, unless he does this, all he alleges signifies nothing. But his Especial Reason why he gives no other Answer (he should have said none at all) to our Fourth Proposition, P. 112.113. is, because he intends to show in a particular Discourse, how the Errors and Corruptions he Charges on the Church of Rome did come into it. That is, we cannot have an Answer to Two lines but by perusing a Large Book. I would desire him to resume the Force of all his little Testimonies, and Conjectural Descants upon them, with which that book abounds, and to be sure they Conclude the Point; which he shall never do. And unless he does this, he only shows he has taken a great deal of pains to no kind of purpose; since he leaves a presumed Demonstration in its full force, without bringing so much as a pretended Conclusive Proof against it. Indeed, it is a great shame for him to pretend it; for 'tis to profess publicly to the world that he can produce Better Arguments against the Papists than he can for his own Faith; and that he cannot Answer the Argument, or say any thing to the Premises, yet he will revenge himself upon the naughty Conclusion, when he catches it alone, and unbacked with any Proof for it. 78. Next, he will prove that our way of resolving Faith into Christ's and his Apostles Teaching, by the Infallibility of the Church's Human Authority or Tradition, is Pelagianism. But never was such a Malicious and Silly Charge so impotently defended. We were told (says he) that Divine Faith must have Infallible Grounds, P. 113. and when we come to examine them we find nothing but what is Natural. Here again our whole Controversy is lost, and a new State of the Question is obtruded. Faith as 'tis formally Divine has for its Grounds the Divine Authority▪ But are we in our Controversy Examining it as 'tis Formally Divine? Do either of us allege Miracles, or any Arguments that Proves it to be such? Is it not Confessed and Supposed by both Parties that the Faith Taught at first was Divine; and are we to Examine what's Confessed and Granted? Or, that Supposition being agreed to, have we any more to do, but to prove what was the Doctrine taught at first, by Assigning a Certain Method of Conveying it down to us? He proceeds; And now to avoid the Charge of Pelagianism, this Divine Faith is declared to be mere Human Faith. Alas for him! Does not Divine Faith stand yet on its own bottom, the Divine Authority, because Human Authority, gives those who yet know it not, Assurance of its Derivation to us? The Immediate effect then of our Tradition is Human Faith; the Remote effect is to give us knowledge of a Doctrine of Faith which is Divine; not proved to be such by Tradition, but acknowledged to be so by our Mutual Concession. But how shamelessly insincere the Dr is to object that I Changed this purposely to avoid the Charge of Pelagianism: whenas he knows I had told himself the same in Error Nonplussed, some years before any Contest arose about my Writings? Does he not cite my words here, that this Human Faith had by Tradition, leads us to what's Divine? Human Faith is the Way or Means to know Divine Faith; And cannot we obtain the favour of him to intermit a while his constant Nonsense, and allow the Means to be distinguished from the End? He goes on: And so Human Faith must have Infallible Grounds, but Divine Faith must shift for itself. Can any thing be more Trifling? What Shifts is Faith put to for Grounds, taken as 'tis formally Divine, in a Controversy which supposes it such; in which case no Proof nor Grounds for it need be produced? Do those that holds the Infallibility of the Churches Humane Authority deriving it down to us, deny but the Verity of the Mysteries thus derived, as in themselves, depend on Divine Revelation as on their Formal Motives? Do not these two consist well together? May not Faith depend on the Divine Authority in itself, and as it was made known at first, and yet not be known to us who live now but by Humane Authority. Can he be Certain of Christian Faith by his own Grounds, but by the Book of Scripture, and yet does not himself say, that the Certainty he has of that Book, depends on Tradition or Humane Authority, and consequently that Humane Faith is the way to know Divine Faith? What Quacking then and Mountebanking is this, to make me a Pelagian for doing the same himself does and publicly avows; omitting in the mean time my Answers which at large * Third Cath. Letter. from p. 18, to p. 28. cleared beforehand, all that he has here so weakly and insincerely objected? Lastly, he tells us, that if Divine Faith fixes not on the Infallibility of Tradition, than we may have Divine Faith without it. Yes, by his Enthusiastic Principles, but not by Connatural ways; since himself must acknowledge that neither the Letter nor Sense of Scripture is Absolutely Certain without it. 79. It would be very pleasant to see how this Gallant Caviller would prove St. Paul a Pelagian Heretic. That Blessed Apostle affirmed that Fides per auditum, Faith comes to our knowledge by Hearing: For the Certainty of the Primitive Faith was resolved into the Certainty of the Senses, as the Means to come to the first knowledge of the Doctrine, and of That Sense more particularly, because Preaching was the Way of instilling Faith then. Now comes Dr St. and (having prayed, I suppose for Wisdom beforehand) tells that Holy Apostle, that Divine Faith must have Infallible Grounds, but that the Certainty of the Senses is merely Natural; That he runs from Divine Motives to Humane ones. He asks him smartly, what Infallible Ground is there for this Divine Faith, and where it fixes? If not on the Certainty of the Senses, than we may have Divine Faith without them. If it does fix on their Certainty, then Divine Faith is to be resolved into Natural Means. And what is this but Pelagianism? Thus the stupendiously Learned, and more than supernaturally Enlightened Dean of St. Paul's, has clearly proved St. Paul himself an arrant Pelagian. But, if St. Paul should answer as I do that he spoke not of Divine Faith, or the Doctrine of it as in it self, or as 'tis formally supernatural, but only of Divine Faith as standing under Natural Means for us to come to know it, than it would follow that it would require higher Grounds to be resolved into as 'tis Divine, & yet, for all that, that he could have no Faith at all, nor certainty of it, unless by Miracle, but by virtue of these Natural Means to give him knowledge of it. But our Verbal Controvertist never reflects that there may be divers Resolutions made of Faith as 'tis controverted, according to the nature or exigency of the Dispute. Against a Deist that holds it not Divine, it is to be resolved into the Divine Authority, and this must be shown to be engaged for it, by those Motives of Credibility which prove it to be such. But this is quite besides our present Dispute, since both parties grant it; and, consequently all his Discourse here is quite besides the purpose. 80. I doubt not but the Dr would have had another fling at St. Paul for Pelagianism, in case he would not allow that a Pious Disposition of the Will did make the verdict of the Sense of Hearing Certain, and piece out the Deafishness of the Auditors, when that Sense had some Imperfection; as he does here, by making me a Pelagian for saying the Will's Assistance cannot make an Argument if it be defective. P. 114. Especially should we both say, that Dr St's Moral Qualifications, Purity of Heart, Humility of Mind, and Prayer for Wisdom, would not make a deaf Ear hear well, or a bad Argument conclude. For both our cases are perfectly Parallel; since we both speak of the Way to come at the Knowledge of Divine Faith. But his Logic, I see, would have his Readers (when an Argument drawn from mere Nature is proposed which is short of Concluding, let it be in Physics, Metaphysics, or what he will, for it altars not our case) shake their heads very piously, and answer [Truly Sir, tho' I see your Reason does not conclude, or satisfy my Understanding, that the thing you would prove is True, yet out of a Pious Inclination to the Cause, I will call in my Wills Assistance, and out of pure Goodness think it does conclude, and that the Thing is for all that, really True. I would wish him by all means to maintain still that 'tis Pelagianism to deny that the Inconclusiveness of an Argument is supplied by the kindheartedness of the Will. Nothing in the World but this can justify all his Insignificant Proofs, & make them pass for valid & good ones. P. 114. 'Tis ridiculous he says, to allege that I resolve all into Christ's and the Apostles Teaching. Why? Is it not agreed on between us, that Christ is God, and his Doctrine Divine? And is not this to bring us to Divine Faith, if we prove it to be His Doctrine? Or is it not enough for our purpose when 'tis confessed on both sides that Christ's Doctrine is Divine? Why is it then ridiculous to profess we do this? Because Caelestius & Pelagius did the very same. Ibid. And so I must be a Pelagian still; that's resolved on. Those Heretics did indeed pretend their Heresies were Christ's Doctrine; But this is no particularity in Them, for every Heretic since Christ's time did the same; else they had not been Heretics, but Pagans, jews, Turks, or Deists: But, we go no further upon this Principle than they did. Why? Did they ever allege, Ibid▪ that the Tradition or Immediate Testimony of the Body of the Church, delivered down their Doctrine for Christ's? Or dared they disgrace themselves by going about to avail themselves of such an open and Notorious Lie? This he should have proved solidly and clearly: But, instead of proving it, he barely says it; and who will at this time of day believe his word? And yet, if he does not this, every sincere Reader must see that he has sacrificed his sincerity to his spite against Catholics, and judges Slander and Calumny no Sin. Observe here by the way his consistency with himself. In his Second Letter to Mr G. p. 9 he affirmed, that we resolved All into mere Humane Faith; and here he confesses we resolve all into Christ's and his Apostles Teaching. Had not I then good reason to ask him if Christ was a mere Man, it falling in so Naturally? Yet he is mighty angry at those words, and says he gave no occasion for them, and imputes it to Malice. I do assure him that I used those words to show that by resolving All into Christ's Teaching, I resolved Faith finally into what is confessedly Divine. Why he should take it so to heart, or apply it to himself when it was not in the least intended, his conscience best knows. However, it puts him to make a Profession of his Faith in that point; which I heartily pray may be sincere. 82. The last point which he thinks fit to take notice of, P. 115. omitting (by his favour) many which were more concerning, is, that the Council of Trent * Dr St's Second Letter to Mr G. p. 23. disowns a power of making Implicit Articles of Faith contained in Scripture to become Explicit by its Explaining the Sense of them. He proves this, Because the Church of Rome doth not pretend to make New Articles of Faith, whereas to make Implicit Doctrines to become Explicit, is really so to do. This a little varies from what he said in his Second Letter; nor can I find a word of making New Articles of Faith pretended there, and I am sure there are none such in that place. Yet still he would put it upon the Council to introduce some Articles by new Explications of Scripture; but he only says it, not proves it; and so, till Proof comes, let it rest upon his bare Word, which signifies little. Other Answers I have given to this Point, (Third Cath. Letter, p. 64.65.) which since he has taken no notice of, I shall presume they stand good in their full force. 83. He concludes with these words, [But, because the Council of Trent doth pretend to Apostolical Tradition for the Points there determined, and the showing that it had not Catholic and Apostolic Tradition, is the most Effectual Confutation of the present Pretence of Oral Tradition, I shall reserve that to another Discourse; part whereof, I hope, will suddenly be published.] Now who sees not that, since a Demonstration for the Infallibility of Tradition is the most Effectual, and most Compendious Proof that is Imaginable; and unless it be answered, most necessarily concludes the Descent of that Faith from Christ which is held upon it; and that the Evidence of such a Proof consisting in the Necessary Connexion of the Terms which are used in it, has the Selfsame force whether the Council of Trent, or any Council, had ever been held, or not; who sees not, I say, that this is a mere plausible Shift to avoid the shock of our Arguments and to run the Field by the still-necessary; and Still Friendly Assistance of his former bad Logic, viz. of Arguing against the Conclusion instead of Answering the Premises? And, therefore, that his proper Conclusion, had he spoken out Candidly, should have been this. [Butler, because I was neither able to show the Absolute Certainty of Christian Faith by my Principles, nor to make out, that the Rule I have Assigned does influence any Point of Faith, so as to prove it to be Absolutely Certain, that 'tis Christ's Doctrine; nor yet able to Answer their close Arguments against the Absolute Certainty of Mine, or for the Absolute Certainty of the Catholic Faith, therefore to come off handsomely before I utterly lose my Credit, I think it the safest and wisest Expedient to let the Premises alone or pass over them with some sleight touches, and to Combat the Conclusion by Quoting of Authors, and tacking the Two desperate Matters together as well as I can, so to make a kind of Transition from the One to the Other, I will set myself to write against the Council of Trent. A business which will take mightily in this juncture; Nor will many Readers much concern themselves in case they should observe it, how I have dropped the Question, or shrunk away from my Adversary.] And so a good Journey to the Drs▪ Rambling Pen, till I meet him next in the Field where we fought Last: Whither, in the behalf of Christian Faith, whose Certainty he has here Undermined I do recall and Challenge him. The Concluding SECTION. 84 HItherto of Doctor St's Sins of Commission; viz. of his Groundless and Impertinent Calumnies, his manifest Falsehoods against his own Knowledge, his constant prevarication from the Question in every respect, and this quite through his whole Answer; his bad Logic laid open in many Instances, his Shifts and Evasions, his Paralogisms, Cavils and Contradictions. Now follow his Sins of Omission. By which I do not mean his Failing to give a good Answer to those Arguments he thought fit to take notice of; for this, as has been shown in every Particular, would spread one Universal Blot over his whole Book; but his not so much as Attempting to give the Reasons I alleged to prove them, or other particular Omissions charged upon him, any Answer at all, or taking the least notice of them. 85. To begin with my First Catholic Letter, or the Answer to Dr. St's First Letter to Mr. G. Why might we not know the particular Reason how Mr. T came to be satisfied; First Catho. Letter. p. 4. this being of such special Concern, and laying so precise an Obligation upon us to clear that Point? but changing his making a Secret of Mr. T'Tis convincing Reason, which was required of him, p. 3.4. into his making a Secret of the Ground of his Certainty, (p. 16.) Why did he turn it off to Mr. G. to show that the Doctor's Protestant's have not Absolute Certainty of their Faith, P. 4.5. when as he had taken it upon himself to show they had? but instead of giving a Reason for that carriage of his, to deny his own express words (First Letter, p. 7.) which put the Proof upon Mr. G. and then, to turn Absolute Certainty of his Protestant Faith, which consists of a determinate Number of Points, P. 6.7. into Certainty of Scripture; which perhaps may not signify so much as one Point of Faith, unless he show Absolute Certainty that the Letter of it is rightly understood in those Texts that contain those Points? which he is so far from showing that he not so much as goes about it. Why no Reply to our Proof that Mr. G. has, by doing his own work, at the same time performed what the Doctor would needs have put him upon; P. 8. viz. proved that Doctor St's Church has no Certainty of its Faith? Why concealed he the true Meaning of the word [Traditionary] given by us, Ibid. but took it purposely in another Sense, and then rallied upon it? P. 8.9. Why no notice taken of our Explication of those words [If they followed this Rule] declared by us to mean the [Believing still the same] which had forestalled his ill-grounded Descant upon them (p. 108.109.) and why no regard to that most Important Conditional Proposition, but starting aside to ways how Errors might come in by not following it; which instead of Answering, asserts and makes good our Tenet? P. 10.11.12.13.14, 15. & p. 33.34.35. Why no Reply to our several Reasons brought against his intolerably bad Logic, showing at large from many heads the absurdity of it, and that the Subject of our Argument, as impugned by his Instance, was not at all like Zeno's denying of Motion; which Reasons had prevented and utterly defeated his pitiful Defence of it here? Why nothing to the unavoidable force of our Argument, P. 18. manifesting it to be Self-evident that Tradition is a Certain Rule? Why does he not justify his palpable Prevarication from the whole Question laid out at large & proved against him, P. 21.22. p. 21.22. Why not a word of Answer to my Discourse showing Absolute Certainty & Infallibility to be the same? P. 23. Why does he no where distinguish himself & his Protestants from all sorts of Heretics owning the same Common Rule; P. 25.26▪ by showing us by what Particular Means he is more Certain of the True Sense of Scripture than they were, and thence differenced from them by his having some particular Rule or Way to arrive at True Faith which they had not; This being a Point of the Highest Importance in our Controversy, and most Earnestly pressed upon him over and over? And yet for all his flourishes about Criteria he has said nothing to those Reasons, only he has made a sleight Discourse of his own, p. 53.54. but never showed any particular Means securing his Party from Erring, more than the vilest Heretics used. Why little or no regard to my Reasons showing that Scripture Interpretable by their private Judgement of Discretion is not the Rule which the Generality of Protestants rely on; P. 26.27.28.29. which, if true, utterly overthrows his whole Pretence to That for his Rule? He blunders indeed about it in clear words, and tells his own Tale very prettily; but he has not answered my Reasons, as the Reader may discern, who is pleased to compare them with his Reply. Lastly, why no Answer to each particular Proposition of my Short Discourse, P. 30.31. or shown it inconnected, demonstrating that none who followed his Rule can have Assurance that what they believe is Christ's Doctrine▪ But instead of this Duty, bringing pretended False Suppositions against the Whole, which supposed nothing but that we could have no more Reason to judge the Socinians Insincere, or Careless, or less Skilful in the Sense of words than we have to think He is? 86. These are his Omissions in Answering my First Catholic Letter. As for my Second; since his Title pretends an Answer to them All in General, and he refers us to another able to speak for himself, meaning his Reflecter, we are to imagine he makes account he has Answered them All, by Himself or by his Proxy, But, good God what an Answer has that weak man given us? His Discourse is a Chain of Sand. 'Tis a mess of Controversy dished up in Sippets; a mere Hash of Repartees, or reason torn into Rags. A Discourse, as every man knows, has its true Force by the Constant Tenor of it; and this Tenor is shattered all to pieces by a new invented Method of short Dialogues; where he makes me, at his pleasure, say as little at a time as he lists, and he plays upon it as much as he pleases: I must break-off just where he thinks fitting, and he Enlarge against an imperfect Discourse, unassisted by its Comparts, as long as he Judges convenient. Now he's at the beginning of my Book, and immediately at the Middle or End of it; gathering thrums-ends of little Sentences, which he patches together so aukwardly that they have no Connexion at all but what his unskilful or Partial hand bestows upon them. If we expect Reason from him, he tells us he never undertook to Prove but to Reflect. A very pretty come off! P. I wonder what Answer is proper to a man who proves nothing, nay not so much as Undertaken it! Thus much for his Method: But the Tricks and Shifts in managing it are Innumerable: 'Tis almost as easy to determine how many words may be made of the four and Twenty Letters, as to trace all the Anagrams he makes of my Sense, by weaving it in his loom to suit his own Fancy or Interest. When our Question is only about a Certain Rule of Faith, he altars it when he lists, to a Certain Rule of Life (p. 33.) as if we pretended Scripture not Clear in Moral Points: by which means he turns the whole Question to a quite different Subject. His Contradictions are frequent, for he never speaks of the Nature of any thing that concerns our Dispute but he constantly falls into that irrecoverable lapse. As he turned the precise Duty of proving into the Needless Impertinency of Reflecting, so tell him of Falsifications he tells you (p. 52.) he meant them for Ironies. And, indeed his whole Reflexionary (if I may call it so) is nothing but a continued Irony; it being very hard to know when he's in Jest, when in Earnest: Only he garnishes his Scorn with demure pretences of Charity and Civility, that so he may affront his Adversary with a more plausible Garb of Affected Gravity and Godliness. 87. As for the strength of his Reasons, since one Instance is held by Dr St. and him a Competent Answer to a pretended Demonstration, I hope one pregnant Instance how he quite misses the whole matter in hand, may be allowed sufficient to render insignificant his hoping and Skipping Dialogues, by showing plainly that his ill-levelled Reflections hit not me, but Squint aside to other Subjects. ere I come to my Instance, I desire the Reader to bear in Remembrance (for I cannot repeat it too often because my Adversary is resolved never to take notice of it) that, Our Controversy Supposes as agreed to by both Parties that Christ's Doctrine is Divine, and that our Whole Question is about the Means to bring down to us those Sublime Spiritual Articles of Christian Faith, with such a Certainty and Clearness as may oblige us to assent firmly and unalterably, that what we hold concerning them now at present is the selfsame that was taught by him and his Apostles; and consequently is Divine and True. Next, we affirm that the Letter of Scripture not being Clear to people of all sorts looking after Christ's True Doctrine, in those Texts which relate to such High Points, the best way to satisfy such men that those Articles came down invariably from Christ is the Humane Authority of the Christian Church. And, Lastly, that the Credibleness of this Authority is proved by Intrinsical Mediums, taken from the Natures of Things lying level to our Reason, which contribute to support it from being liable to be deceived or to deceive us in that affair: viz. from the Nature of Man, who being a Rational Creature cannot possibly act without a Motive or a Reason; and is withal endowed with such and such Faculties belonging to such a Nature; As also from the Practical Nature, & Highest Import of the Doctrine to be delivered, and the Nature of those most powerful Motives obliging the Generality to whom they are applied, to transmit down faithfully a Doctrine held Divine; and, Lastly, from the Nature of divers Circumstances of the Universe. All which are laid out in my Second Cath. Letter, p. 57.58.59.60. To which nothing but a very sleight return (with many Omissions) has been given us by Him, and nothing at all by Dr St. tho' these (as the Reader may see if he pleases to review them) be the most forcible part of that Treatise to prove the uninterrupted Perpetuity of Tradition hitherto, on which the Resolution of our Grand Question mainly depends. 'Tis enough, it seems, for such a trifling Reflecter, at the end of his Pamphlet, to call the passages he has omitted, amongst which are the Natures of those things, Hedges and Puddles; and close Reasons drawn from them frisking Fancies; and that's all can justly be expected from one who seems to be a sworn Scholar to the Great Professor of Learned Jests and Ingenious Prevarications. 88 These particulars concerning our Tenet, known to all that have read our Controversy, being reflected on, let's see how this Gentleman represents it, and how profoundly he discourses against us. In his 12th Page he will needs repeat our Tenet, or (as he with much Formality is pleased to call it) the Lesson I have taught him: which, put into distinct Sentences, he makes to be this. 1. Your Church's Authority is Human Authority. Answ. Our Church's Authority is also Divine, and as such 'tis the Rule of Faith to those who are already Faithful: But in our Controversy, which is about the Way for men to come to Faith, 'tis not proper to allege any other than her Natural or Humane Authority, consisting of a vast Body of Men both able and obliged to testify such open matters of Fact as is the Delivery of a Doctrine so Qualified by those that educated us; And the Reason is because till men come at Christ's Faith they can only guide themselves by their Reason; whence the Credibility of that Authority must be provable by Reason against those who shall deny it. 2. He says, It has force to prove the Truths which depend upon it. Yes; it has force to prove to us this matter of Fact, that those Truths descended from Christ; but not the Intrinsical Truth of any one Article in itself. To do this is the work of Divine Revelation, not of Humane Authority. 3. It has this force and concludes against such as own its Veracity, but it deserves no Assent further than Reason gives it to deserve. Well then, since we bid him guide himself by his Reason ere he admits it, will he at least admit it and yield assent to it, when Reason shows him it deserves it? This is all we desire of him; and 'tis a very reasonable request in us, for it only desires he would not renounce his Reason and forfeit his Manhood. Now come his Conclusions from mistaken Premises: Hence I conclude, Seeing We admit not your Church's Authority, nor own its Veracity it proves nothing to us nor concludes any thing against us. From what Antecedent is this Conclusion drawn? Did we ever press him to admit it blindly; the Point is, will he renounce his Reason when it tells him this Authority ought to be believed? This is our Tenet and should have been taken in e'er he had inferred any thing at all: but than it would have marred his Conclusion and his admirable Method of taking every Discourse of mine to pieces and never putting it together again, and so it was thought expedient to neglect it. His next Conclusion is, Seeing Articles of Faith depend not on Humane Authority, your Church's Authority can have no effect on Humane Nature to oblige to a Belief of them. Where we have near as many Faults as Words. For, First, Articles of Faith in themselves or as to their intrinsical Verity, depend only on the Divine Authority as their Formal Motive; but, as to us, or as to our knowledge of those Articles Now, which were taught by Christ long since (which is our only business) a successive Human Authority, the most strongly supported of any that ever was in the World to convey down a matter of Fact of Infinite Concern, is the properest way to Attest them; whence all those Articles, in that regard do depend on that Human Authority, after the same manner as even himself also holds the Book of Scripture does. Secondly, What an Incredible Folly is it, not to distinguish between those Articles which were Taught at First, (and, so, are Divine) as in Themselves, and the same Articles as Knowable by us Now to have been Taught Long ago? nor to reflect that our Controversy only treats of them under this latter Consideration? Nor to know that, as thus Considered, All Articles of Faith not only May but Must necessarily depend on Human or Natural Means, since without Such they cannot be introduced into our understandings connaturally, nor by any way but by Immediate Inspiration, which is perfect Enthusiasm? Nor Last, not to advert that even the Divinity of Faith depends, in some sort, on Natural Means? St. Paul tells us Faith comes by Hearing; and, if so, then Faith depended on Hearing as to its coming to be Known by us. Nay, as Christian Faith was Formally from God, it depended thus on Miracles, which could not be known to be such but by their being above the Course of Nature; nor could they be known to be above the Course of Nature unless the course of Nature itself had been fore-known, the Knowledge of which is only Natural or Human. Thirdly, His following words in this Ridiculous Conclusion, show him utterly ignorant of our whole Question; otherwise he could not with any degree of sincerity have put it upon us, that we hold the Human Authority of our Church obliges to a Belief of the Articles themselves; whereas what we hold is, that it only obliges us to Assent they came from Christ, or were inerrably delivered down by the Church's Testimony. Fourthly, By leaving out all mention of what's most particularly our Tenet in this Point, he puts it upon us to hold that Human Authority has effect upon Human Nature of itself; whereas we never presumed or affirmed it either had or aught to have any but by Virtue of the Reasons which vouched for its Veracity, nay, I both Affirmed and Proved the direct Contrary. His Third Conclusion is, Seeing all its Credit depends on its intrinsical Reasons produced, till they be produced we are not bound to give any Credit to it. No, nor bound to mind them much it seems, nor Answer them fully when produced; as appears by his omitting the most forcible Reasons for the Certainty of Tradition's Continuance as was Lately shown. But why is this made a distinct Conclusion or disjointed from the rest, whereas it was the most necessary and Essential part of our true Tenet? Because the Method he so Religiously observed throughout his Dialogue-Answer, which is to shatter asunder the entire Sense of every passage, would not allow it. His Fourth Conclusion is, When these Reasons shall be produced, its Testimony has but the Nature of an external Motive, not of an intrinsical Ground. Answ. intrinsical Ground? To what? To Christian Faith as 'tis Divine? 'Twas never pretended, nor can it belong in any regard to our Question, since 'tis not disputed between us, but Acknowledged by us both, that Christ's Doctrine is Such. Means he then 'tis not a Proper Medium to prove Christ's Faith derived to us who live now? How can he even pretend to show that so vast a Testimony is not proper to Attest a Notorious Matter of Fact, viz. what Doctrine was Delivered immediately before, and this throughout every Age, Year, or Day? Again, what means he when he says, Testimony is not an intrinsical Ground? What man in his senses ever said or thought it? We spoke indeed of intrinsical Grounds to prove the Credibleness of that Testimony, but not a word have we even hinting that Testimony itself is an Intrinsical Ground to any thing. If he will needs be talking Nonsense let him take it to himself, and not put it upon me. Lastly, why is not an extrinsical Ground or Testimony proved to be such by intrinsical Reasons sufficient in our case? This should have been shown, but for this very reason 'tis not so much as taken notice of either by him or his Master. In a word, he uses some of our words, taken asunder from the Context of our entire Sense; then blends them confusedly together on any fashion, without any kind of order or respect to the true Question; he gives us Relative words without telling us what they relate to; he puts upon us Tenets we never advanced or held, but the direct Contrary. And the witty Gentleman would still persuade his Reader he is Repeating his Lesson I have Taught him, when as all the while he deserves more than a Ferula for his rehearsing it wrong, or rather saying it Backwards. Then follows his Grand Conclusion as the Flower of all the foregoing ones, which we may be sure hits the Point Exactly; And therefore (says he) either your Position overthrows your Church's Authority, or It your Position. Most Excellent? My Position is about Tradition which is the Selfsame thing with the Church's Authority; and this precious Scribbler will needs have the same thing to destroy itself. A fit Upshot for a Discourse without sense. 89. We see by this one Instance there is scarce one Line, nor many Significant Words in this half-page of his, but runs upon Enormous Mistakes. And, does he think I have nothing else to do but to stand Rectifying still what he all along takes such Care and Pains to put into Disorder? Especially, since those few things that are pertinent, are abundantly spoke to in my Third Catholic Letter, and this present Reply. I must entreat the Dr to excuse me if I have no mind to break his Young Controvertists, and teach them how to Manage. Mr G. did him, I hope, no disparagement in making me his Substitute; but 'tis not so gentile in him to set such a Fresh Man upon my back. I'll have nothing to do with his little journeymen or Apprentices till the World be satisfied that their Master himself is a better Artist. And, if it shall appear that even the Learned Dr St. is able to make nothing of so bad a Cause, 'tis neither Discreditable to me nor any Disadvantage to the Truth I am defending, P. 2. if I neglect such a Sixth-rate Writer who confesses himself unworthy to carry his Books after him. 90. The Omissions in answering my Second Catholic Letter are as many as that Letter itself contains: since his untoward Method renders all his Talk, Twitching and Girding at little sayings of mine, utterly insignificant. Whence, that whole Treatise as 'tis in itself, stands yet Entire, unless the Dr can show by his new Logic that to mince half a Book into Fragments is to Answer the Whole. 91. Thus the Dr has tricked off the answering my Second Cath. Letter. But his Omissions in Answering the Third are both numerous and most highly Important, and he is to render an Account of all this long Roll of his Neglects. Why did he not clear himself of his altering there the Notion of Tradition into Articles and Powers of doing this or that, * Third Cath. Letter▪ from p. 4.5. shown at large, p. 4.5. Why answers he not the several Reasons, P. 5.6.7.8.9. proving against him, that Tradition brings down the Sense of Christ's Doctrine, and not only Common Words; in the Clear Delivery of which Sense consists one of the main Properties of a Rule, viz. its Plainness to People of all sorts who are to be regulated by it? And why, instead of performing this necessary Duty, does he (p. 43.) after having vapoured that 'Tis bravely said if it could be made out, does he not so much as mention the Reasons by which it was made out; but ramble into such Nonsense (p. 43.) that He and his Party (who are Deserters of Tradition) cannot mistake it; that Tradition (or the Church's Human Testimony) being the Rule of Faith is a part of Christ's Doctrine, etc. Why no Excuse for his deforming the meaning of that plain word [Tradition] into many unsuitable Significations, and putting it in all shapes but its own? P. 11.12. Why no Defence of his most ridiculous Drollery, in paralleling Tradition or the Testimony of God's Church to the Relation of two or three partial Witnesses of his own side in favour of their fellows? Or for his Inconsonancy to himself & his Insincerity in thus perverting it still when he was to impugn it; P. 12. whenas he took it very right when it made for himself? Why not a word to my Clearest Demonstration, that 'tis impossible but Tradition must bring down a Determinate Sense of the Tenets it delivers, which he answers not at all, P. 13.14.15. but only brings against Conclusion an Instance of the Corinthians and Arlemonites (p. 45.46.) which as far as it pretends they pleaded Tradition for their Heresy, (taking Tradition as we do for the Immediate Testimony of the Church) is both False and Senseless. P. 16.17.18. Why no Answer at all to that most Concerning Point proved against him, that the Church has Power to declare divers Propositions to be of Faith, not held distinctly before, without any prejudice at all to Tradition? And why no notice taken of my most Evident Proof that we make Christian Faith as 'tis Formally Divine rely on the Divine Authority, notwithstanding our Tenet, that the Church's Humane Authority is the Means to bring us to the knowledge of Christ's Doctrine; and that the asserting this Later is not to overthrow the Church's Authority in matters of Faith, as he objected? As also that the Venerable F. W. was not an Adversary to our way, and that Lominus his Book the Dr relied on was no Argument that my Doctrine was faulty even in the opinion of my Judges; P. 19.20.21. Why gave he no reply to any of these, but still run on with his former Calumnies, as if nothing had been produced to show his manifest and Wilful Mistakes? P. 22.23.24.25 26.27. Why no Answer to my Reasons proving at large the impotency of his malice in charging Pelagianism, more than to repeat a few of words for a show, that this Humane Authority leads us to what's Divine, and there stopping; whereas the very * See Third Cath. Letter p. 24. next words [Yet not by its own force but by virtue of the Supposition agreed upon that Christ's Doctrine is such] had spoiled all his pretence? P. 26. Why no notice taken of my Citation out of Error Nonplussed writ against himself fifteen years ago; which forestalled all his rambling Mistakes, and by consequence, showed him strangely Insincere, in dissembling his knowledge of my Tenet so expressly declared. P. 28. 92. Why no Plea alleged to justify his shuffle from the Grounds of his Protestant Faith in particular to the Grounds of Christian Faith in Common; nor to excuse his next Shuffle, and Nonsense to boot, in making [Faith] by virtue of an id est, to signify the Grounds for his Ground of Faith; and turning [Certainty of Scripture] into a long ramble, viz. into [Certainty of the Grounds on which we believe Scripture to contain the word of God. P. 30.31. ] Why not a word of Reply to my Discourses, there and in many other places, showing that Scripture's Containing Faith is nothing at all to our purpose, but the Getting out from Scripture it's true Meaning or Sense, this only being our Faith; and that his Faith is still Uncertain unless there be Certainty that such and such Articles Are Contained there. Which Point tho' it be of the Highest Consequence, yet he never sets himself to Solve our Arguments against it, in his whole pretended Answer; but he runs on still in the same Error, as if nothing had been alleged to show his Discourses insignificant and frivolous! Why no Answer to my Discourse proving that a Rule or Ground is none, if it carry not thorough to the particular Points, especially to those which are most Fundamental, unless granting it in effect (p. 36.) and allowing no Absolute Certainty to any particular Point of Faith, may be called an Answer? P. 32. Why no Excuse for his Skewing Comment upon his own Answer (which spoke of Absolute Certainty of all Christ's Doctrine, which consists of such and such particular Tenets) to the Writings of the Apostles; whereas there was not a word of Writing in Mr. G's Question or in his own Answer either? Nor any notice taken of my Argument, P. 32.33. manifesting that a Resolution of Faith speaks Connexion of the Motives that are to prove it Christ's Doctrine, to the Points of Faith; laid home to him in a Close Discourse demonstrating the Necessity it should be such. P. 33.34. Why no Account of his distinguishing between Christ's Doctrine and that of the Apostles; that so he might misrepresent Tradition, and alter the Question from a Public to a Private Delivery? Why no Reason given of his not Resolving his Faith into the Apostles Preaching, but only into their Writing; I mean, P. 34.35. no Answer to my Reasons why he ought to have resolved it into the former, at least, Equally? P. 35. Why no Answer to my Reasons, showing from his ill-laid Principles, that Perfect Contradictories, Points of Faith and wicked Heresies, opposite to them, are both Equally Certain? Why no Excuse for his Shuffling from the New Testament's Containing all the Divine Revelations, P. 36.37. to the Church's making men fix by degrees upon the Certain Canon of it, which is there shown (and indeed appears of itself) to be a quite disparate business? Why not the least Excuse for his most abominable fourfold Prevarication in answering to one single Question, exposed there at large; P. 37.38.39.40. and why no Defence or particular Explication of his beloved Sufficient Certainty, nor any Application of it to the Nature, Ends, and Uses of a firm Faith, that any Point is Christ's true Doctrine, showing that his feeble Motives are sufficient for those particular purposes? P. 42.43.44.45. Why, to make his odd Similitude of Scripture's being a Purse, apposite, does he not show us some Certain Way, how the Gold and Silver Points of Faith (as he calls them) may be got out of it, without danger of extracting thence the impure Dross of Error and Heresy instead of True Faith? Again, to make it square, why does he not rather make the Heads and Hearts of the First Faithful the Purses, since (as was shown him) Faith is more properly Contained there than in a Book? P. 45.46.47. Or, if he will needs make use of an Improper Container of Faith too, why does not he put two Purses; viz. the Souls of the Faithful, and the Scripture? And why not a word of Reply to my Plain Reasons why he ought to have done both these? P. 48.49. Why no Answer to my Reasons proving that All the Points of Faith are Necessary for the Salvation of Mankind, and for the Church; otherwise than by rambling to Transubstantiation (p. 84.) and that he sees no Necessity of it: Which makes his often-alledged Distinction of Necessary & Unnecessary Points, brought to avoid the Question, perfectly frivolous; and why runs he still on with the same Distinction in this pretended Answer without taking off the Exceptions against it, by only crying Alas for him! when I asked him, If Christ taught any unnecessary Articles: P. 49. and by saying they are not equally Necessary, p. 33. Why nothing to justify that his Assent of Faith may not be False, and so, no Faith? Why no Reply to my Reasons, that, notwithstanding his pretended Grounds, He has no Absolute Certainty that even the Letter of Scripture is Right; whereas, if it be not, he can have no Certainty but all is Wrong that is grounded upon it; since, in that case he may embrace a Grand Heresy for True Faith? P. 51.52.53. Why no Answer to my plainest Argument, showing how Christ's Doctrine, continued all along in the Breast of the Church, is the best Means to correct the Letter in Texts that contain Faith? Why no Reply to my many Reasons, P. 53.54.55.56. showing that the Ancient Church allowed our way of Tradition, and disallowed his of Scripture privately Interpreted? Why does he not confute my Discourses, P. 56. manifesting that he can have no Absolute Certainty by his Principles of the Number of Books; or of each Chapter, Verse, P. 57 and Material Word in each Verse that concerns any Point of Faith; without doing which, he cannot pretend to have Certainty of the Letter, nor, consequently, of any one of those Points? P. 58.59. Why no Reply to that Important Objection, that if Scripture were the Rule of Faith, the Primitive Church had, for some time, but half or three-quarters of their Faith, or less, (and so, by his Principles, were but three-quarters or half Christians) according as the several pieces came by degrees to be spread, accepted, or universally acknowledged; nay perhaps no Faith at all, as was there shown; and why did, he instead of replying, * See above §. turn it off to the single Epistle to the Hebrews, and to an Insignificant If? Why, when it was objected that divers of his Christian Churches doubted of divers Books of Scripture, and some late Brethren of his of some others, does he again turn it off (as to the former) to the Canon of Scripture made afterwards; P. 59 and to the later says nothing? P. 60. Why not a word to my Clearest Proof that our Tradition or Testimony for Doctrine is incomparably more large in its source, which gives it its chief force, than his is for Scripture's Letter? Why does he not clear himself of his preferring his Sober Enquirer before the Church, P. 61.62.23.64.65. the unreasonableness of which was urged home against him, nor justify his weak discourses in some sleigter passages laid open, p. 64.65. Why not a syllable of Answer to that most highly-concerning Discourse, and which, if it stands in its full force, overthrows all the whole Fabric of his Doctrine, viz. that a Rule or Ground are Relative Words, and therefore Scriptures Letter cannot be an Absolute Certain Rule or Ground, unless its Ascertaining virtue affects the Articles known by it? This Point has been pressed upon him so vigorously, P. 66.67.68.69.70.71. and pursued with so many forcible Arguments that there can be no plainer Confession that his Cause is lost than not to attempt to answer them; especially, since the hinge of the whole Controversy depends upon it. It was his Concern too to avow or disavow his dear Friend Dr. Burnet's Position, making his Sober Enquirer judge of Councils; but he would not be so candid. Why declines he the giving us satisfaction that he does indeed hold the Testimony for Scripture Absolutely Certain, by making out from the Nature of the Things why it must be so? P. 71.72.73.74. See, Reader, how it was there demanded of him and urged upon him to do himself and his Faith that Honour and Credit; Yet he is perfectly deaf to all solicitations of that kind. And the Reason is, because, should should he do this as he ought to do, he must necessarily make the Church Infallible, and rely upon her Infallibility for the Certainty of Scriptures Letter; and should it come to be proved that 'tis easier to transmit down the same Doctrine than an Exact Copy, this would oblige his Sober Enquirer to be led by her in matters of Faith. A condescendence not to be submitted to by his Fanatic Friends; both because their First Principle is to think themselves wiser than the Church; as also, because to prove this would make the Knowledge of Christ's Doctrine too strong by Proofs and Outward Means, which their Gifted and Inspired Genius (impossible ever to be proved but by doing Miracles) cannot away with. To proceed, Why clears he not himself from being obliged by his Principles to own a Brotherhood with all Heretics who profess to follow Scripture as much as he does; P. 75. by showing some Absolutely Certain Means to distinguish his Faith from theirs; Did not the doing this mainly concern his Credit, when it was severely objected, and shown that he had given just occasion for this Suspicion of all comprehending Principles? Why no Account given of the Absolute Certainty of Particular Texts, and the most significant Words in each of them, as well as of the Canon or Number of Books; P. 76. without which, let the Canon be as Certain as it will, 'tis impossible for him to know assuredly whether what he holds be True Faith or Heresy? Why no Answer to my Objection that to be the Word of God is not sufficient to make Scripture a Rule, P. 77. unless it has withal Perspicuity or Clearness, to give those who read it and rely on it, Absolute Certainty of its true Sense, or Faith, in those high Mysteries and Spiritual Points controverted between the Church and her Deserters? P. 78.79.80. Why no Reply to my Confutation of his smartest or rather Only Argument to prove Scripture a Rule, given by me particularly to every Branch of it? Is not a business of such high Consequence worth his Defence, his whole Cause, (as far as 'tis managed by him) standing or falling by his maintaining or deserting that main Proof for it? Why does he give us no Grounds that elevate Faith (as it depends on the Rule ascertaining us it came from Christ) above Opinion; P. 81.82. whenas it was charged upon him that he had no such Grounds, and he was loudly called upon to produce them; but to aggravate the fault, to call here (p. 41.) all the Points of Christian Faith (there spoken of) Particular Opinions? Why takes he no notice of the several Senses of the word [Rule] and in which of those Senses it is taken properly, P. 82.83. and why it must necessarily be taken in such a Sense in our Controversy; but instead of doing this, run on wilfully mistaking it still? Why not a word in Confutation of an Infallible judge, P. 84.85. as that Point is stated by me? P. 85. Why did he not accept my Challenge that he could not show me any one Solid Proof in his whole Treatise that he could maintain; since the doing this had been a great Blurr to me, and a high Credit to himself; nay the very offering at it, might have kept our Readers in some Suspense whether he were perfectly baffled or no, whenas his total declining it is a plain Confession he does not think fit to stand to any one Proof he has produced? P. 86.87.88. Why no Reply to my Discourse demonstrating that a Rule must be the Immediate Light to know the Thing in order to which 'tis to regulate us; and, therefore, that, however he pretends to Scripture, yet his own Interpretation, or the Means he uses to Interpret it, is unavoidably his Rule? As also that the Testimony of all Christian Churches did not recommend to him such a Rule of Faith; and that a Testimony for the Letter confessed by himself to be Fallible, stood in great need of his Logic to make what's built on it to be Absolutely Certain? P. 89.90▪ Why not a word to the Testimony of that Ancient and Holy Father, and most Solid Controvertist, St. Athanasius; which quite overthrows the whole Scheme of his Doctrine, and makes all his Sober Enquirers Unbelievers or Infidels? And why no Excuse for his not putting amongst his Helps the judgement of the present Church, at least of the Church of England; (this being both an easier Help than 'tis to use his other painful Methods to understand Scripture right, & more agreeable to the Order of the world.) especially, since he stands impeached of destroying Church-Government as to any thing belonging to Faith? Why does not he show us how Mr T. could be a Sober Enquirer, whom he defends for so suddenly settling his Enquiry and Resolving, P. 90.91. tho' he did not use those Means which the Dr himself affirmed his Sober Enquirers were bound to use; especially, since this carriage of the Dr's shows him very willing to contradict at pleasure even his own Principles, and to dispense with those Obligations he himself had imposed, when it suits with his Interest? Whence every considering man must necessarily conclude he holds not heartily and steadily to any Principle at all. P. 93.94. Why should not his Sober Enquirers trust the Church rather than themselves; and why no Answer to the Reasons why they should? Why does not he confute my Discourse, P. 95.96.97.98. proving that a Judge proceeding upon an Inerrable Rule is Infallible; and that 'tis no prejudice to the Church, that those whom she has cast out, or are her Enemies, deny her to be such? Why answers he not my Particular Reasons against his kind of Judgement of Discretion, P. 99.100.101.102.103. or the Reasons given for ours, but makes impertinent Discourses of his own at random, without regarding either our Objections, or our Proofs; nay, when he had occasion, without acknowledging their Distinction, P. 70. but most unconscionably pretending them to be the same; whereas their Difference and perfect Opposition to one another, is laid out there very largely and particularly. And now, Gentlemen, I request even those who are the most Partial of his Friends to count over the Pages cited in the Margin; and, if you find by an exact Review that I have neither misreckoned them, nor misrepresented his Answers; be pleased to frame thence an Impartial Judgement of his prodigious Confidence in pretending in his Title that this every-way-Defective Treatise is, In Answer to my Catholic Letters; whereas he has given no Answer at all (to speak with the least) to the Fortieth Part of them; and, as for that small inconsiderable pittance he has attempted to reply to, it has been shown you by detail, with what incredible Weakness or worse, he has performed it. I entreat you also to reflect that the passages he has left unanswered, are not Trivial or Slight ones; but all of them, Pertinent; almost all of them, Substantial; and, by far the greater part, of vast Import; as coming up close to our main Point, the Absolute Certainty of Christian Faith, (that is, as to its having been taught by Christ,) by our respective Principles. So that, in case They, and the Reasons for them, be left standing in their full force, as they yet stand, his whole Cause is utterly lost; and himself convinced not only to be no Good Defender of Christian Faith, but withal no Steady Holder that his Faith is truly Christian, or derived from Christ; Or, if he holds it to be such at all, it must be by Enthusiasm, or Fanatic Inspiration, not upon truly Rational or (which is the same) Conclusive Grounds. He will say perhaps he has touched upon some of those Particulars; nay, now and then, made long Discourses against divers of my Positions. But, all this he might have done tho' he had had never an Adversary. To Answer is to Solve the Arguments of another, not to find fault with his Conclusions and make Discourses on his own head; a Method which any Judicious Reader may observe runs through his whole Book. Whence I am not tied to Reply to such Impertinent and Irregular Prevarications; but only to defend and stand by my Reasons; and 'tis a Courteous Condescendence, not a Right due to his Carriage, that I have replied to them at all; since my Arguments, according to the Laws of Disputation, must be granted to stand firm till they be overthrown. Yet, notwithstanding I was not obliged to humour his Illogical Proceedings, I do not know of any thing that is Pertinent and of Moment that I have overpast; and I could have spoke it with more assuredness, had he quoted the Pages in my Letters all along as I did in him, especially when I cited him; but he would not expose himself to that disadvantage, lest the Reader should by that means be directed still to my Discourses themselves; and comparing them with what he had said to them, see how Frigid, Indirect. or utterly Insignificant his pretended Answers were. Tho' I say I know of no such passage omitted, but what has been already replied to and forestalled in my former Letters, or in Error Nonplussed, yet, in case he still contends I have, let him single out those which he judges the strongest, or any page in this Answer of his own which concerns the Certainty of Faith as we treat of it, that is of Christ's Doctrine as 'tis Knowable by us at this distance from his time, and I do promise him a very punctual Reply to each particular Passage, one by one. He would much oblige our Readers and me too, if instead of Answering he will needs fall to Arguing, he would please to pick out what's most Pertinent and Weighty, and let each single Point be debated apart. This would give a far Clearer Light to our Readers: And for their sakes, if he will not do this himself, I shall (as my leisure serves) do it for him. In the mean time I am to demand of him publicly as my Right, both a punctual Reply to the long Roll of these his important Omissions, and also a Defence of his Trifling Performances: And, in case he denies to give me and the World that Satisfaction, since none who knows him can think he wants Wit and Parts to do it, if feisible, it must necessarily be concluded his Cause wants Truth. Your Well wishing Friend and Servant in Christ, J. S. FINIS. ADVERTISEMENT. The Five Catholic Letters are to be sold at Mr Matthew Turner's, Bookseller at the Lamb in High-Holborn.