A SHORT APPENDIX TO THE LIFE OF edmond STANTON, D. D. WHEREIN Some Passages are further Cleared, which were not so fully held forth by the former Authors. LONDON, Printed Anno Dom. 1673. A Short Appendix to the Life of EDMUND STANTON. SIR, If divers occasions had not intervened, you had sooner seen this short account of your Book: which yet, I think, will be large enough to let you see somewhat more than your Authors did intend: whose design, if it were the same with other Writers of pious Fables, to set out their subject, in whatsoever he saith or doth, as holy and heroic; I deny not but they have done their part: But if they intend it, or you take it for an History, I must first desire to be satisfied in some few scruples, before I can allow it to be such. And first, The time of his Birth, though there seems to be some mistake in it, is not a matter of such moment, as that I should have looked after it, if it had not met me in another search: Your Author places it in 1600. But E. S. when he was admitted page. 1. Scholar of C. C. C. Octob. 4. 1615. affirmed that he was not fourteen years old till the 20. of that Month; and therefore was not sworn till the 10. of November following: At which time he took this usual Oath. That he would inviolably keep all the College Statutes, according to the plain and literal sense and meaning, as far as concerned himself; and as far as in him lay, cause them to be kept by others. That he would not admit, obey, or use any orders, injunctions, changes, or expositions contrary thereunto; but oppose and hinder them by what means he could. That he would not enter into any conspiracy or agreement against the Statutes or the State of the College, or against the President, Vice-President, ☞ or any Fellow or scholar thereof; or permit others to do so, as far as in him lay; or yield any assent, assistance, or advice to any such, either in public or in private. That he would not procure any dispensation of whatsoever kind, or name, or authority, against this Oath, or the Statutes, or any clause in either of them, directly or indirectly; or consent ☞ to, or use any such, though procured without his knowledge or desire. Yet two years after, when he was admitted Probationer, Mar. 22. 1616. 17. he affirmed that he was sixteen the 20. of Octob. before. But when your Author ascribes Pag. 2. this early advancement before 18. of his Seniors, to his plying his Study, and the applause gotten by it, his following Parenthesis confutes himself, acknowledging it due to his Country, not to his deserts: Which therefore J. M. mentions more warily, only page. 67●… as a thing seldom known in that house. But why did not he, or J. B. inform R. M. of page. 61●… his mistake? For both of them must know it to be such, if they be the men whom those Letters suggest to most I meet with. At this time, as also after another two years, when he was admitted actual Fellow, he took the same Oath in each of those particulars: And together with these, he must as oft have taken the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance, which he repeated likewise at his admittance to the several Degrees of Bachelor and Master of Arts, together with Subscription to the Doctrine, Discipline, and Worship established in the Church of England; as also at his several Ordinations( which your Authors silently pass by with the Oath of caconical Obedience at his Institutions:) And lastly, when he took the Degree of Doctor, which your Author introduces with such a Story, as it seems by the Marginal note, he would have especially remarked. In the year 1635. it pleased the Authority page. 14●… of the Nation to permit sports and pastimes unto the people on the Lords day.] Over against these words we find this note[ for three years and a half.] Which if it have any fantastic reference( to say no worse) to the three days and half mentioned, Revel. 11. 9, 11. so as to end his reckoning with the beginning of the Long Parliament; sure your Author will be found little better at interpreting Prophecies, than he is in telling Stories. For that Declaration( besides that it was but a renewing of a former of King James dated May 24. 1618.) was published Octob. 18.( not 1635. but) 1633. being the ninth of King Charles, and so, five whole years before the Long Parliament began, Nov. 3. 1640. And E. S. took the Degree of Doctor( what? on purpose to spoil this pretty parallel?) at the Act in July 1634. which your Author saith was during his suspension. page. 14. Now for his performance there, no ordinary matter will serve the turn; for that might well have been allowed him, when he had such a friend at his back, as the then Professor is known to have been to the men of his Metal. But if he had such wonderful page. 14. applause in both, why did your Author change the course, and make him an Opponent in the Pag. 15. Vespers? was it to make it a little probable, that E. S. might then non plus Doctor somebody? for then it was, Jul. 12. that E. S. held this question negatively. An Deus Author peccati ex Reformatorum placitis statuatur? showing himself such an Herculean Champion page. 64. for Calvin, as made his adversaries fingers Itch, and his good friends hiss, to which your P. 14. 15. Author unluckily subjoins, that one called out for a Candle that the Doctor( somebody) might see his arguments; for what need the Doctor look for arguments, if E. S. were the Opponent? But in Comitiis on monday following, Jul. 14. there was another Question disputed, wherein this new Champion was more concerned in his own behalf to have shewed his skill, if it were so wonderful as your Author would persuade us: An Sanctificationi Diei Dominicae repugnant quae siunt corporis recreandi gratia? This being held Negatively by the Respondent, T. L. who, I think, is yet living, and E. S. being then one of the Opponents, it is a wonder, that when this darling Doctrine lay at stake, he would not venture one of his Herculean arguments to bring it fairly off, and justify his own direct disobedience to the Authority of the Nation, both Civil and Pag. 14. Ecclesiastical, to both which, beside other Bonds, he was obliged by solemn Oath. For, is not obedience to Superiors simply necessary, unless in this one case, when they command something that is simply contrary to the Law of God? And is not the transgressing of a Solemn Oath in any other case a solemn Perjury? Now let them instance in any particular of that Declaration, which is as plain a breach of the Fourth Commandment, as his Disobedience was of the Third and Fift. But supposing this observation of the Lords day to be a consequent from the fourth Commandment; yet how cometh it to be Pag. 26. 29, 32. such a special Evidence for Heaven above all the the other Nine? for we find none of them worth mentioning among these Evidences: Or what ground is there for that pretty Observation, that it is one of the first things a converted Pag. 42. person makes Conscience of? In all the New Testament( which I thought had been the Standard for such Marks and Evidences) there is not one word of Command, no nor of Commendation of it; but many reproofs of that Pharisaical hypocrisy, that sets up this pretence of strictness in Sanctifying the Sabbath, against the common offices of charity and humanity. What follows of the Assembly of Divines, Pag. 15. and the part of E. S. amongst them, is but a further instance of his large Conscience in point of Obedience and of Oaths: For this Assembly,( as also their Covenant, and their Directory, both passed over in wary silence by your Author) being expressly forbidden by the King, it lies at the door of E. S. and his friends, to show some Command of Gods expressly contrary to the Kings. In the Year 1648. there were Visitors appointed Pag. 16. for the University of Oxford, who discharged Dr. Newlin from his Headship in C. C. C. and no man was thought so fit to succeed in that place as Dr. Stanton.] Your Pag. 69. Authors handle this business very gently, well considering that it would be never the sweeter for much stirring. Had they thought fit to trust their devout Readers with the whole truth. It would have then appeared a little too plain, by Whom these Visitors were appointed,( that is, by a piece of a Parliament, with a Commission forged in the Kings Name, under a Counterfeit Seal, the making of which was High Treason;) and Why they discharged Dr. Newlin,( for no other misdemeanour, but refusing to betray the Rights of the College, which he was sworn to defend; and in particular, to submit to no other Visitor there but the Bishop of Winchester:) So that even the Inhabitants of the good Town of Kingston might have discerned the true reason, why no man was thought so fit to succeed as Dr. S. If D. N. be so stubborn that he will not break three or four Oaths for the good of the Cause, they must have one that will; and who so fit as he, that had given some public proof of his abilities that way? When E. S. gave the fiddler money to P. 50, 51. forbear his swearing, no Christian but would have thought it a commendation for him, in any mans mouth besides his own: V. p. 12, 15, 23, 24, 29. But when the same E. S. could be hired by an headship wrongfully taken from the honest owner, to a deliberate and continued breach of so many solemn Oaths; which was the better Christian, the fiddler or the Puritan? Pag. 15. ( as you know who may call E. S.) Some particulars of those Oaths you may see before; against which, and the whole current of the Statutes, it was for him to accept the headship, or even to assent to any of those proceedings against the true President, Fellows, and Scholars. Such being his entrance, it is no great matter what his Government, and Conversation, and the success of both was: yet be it left to the suffrage of his Contemporaries there, both Citizens and gownsmen, whether E. S. and his Disciples were held any P. 18. 78. thing wiser or honester than their neighbors. And so I meddle not with the truth, but only note the prettiness of one remark, wherewith Pag. 69. Pag. 18. J. M. begins the blessed regiment of E. S. there, that though the House, before his time, had been much troubled with divisions; he, by his moderation, and Christian prudence, kept them all of a piece.] This calls to mind the Roman way of making Peace, which the old Britain observes in Tacitus, Tacit. in Vit. Agr. Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant; so that it seems, the invention is not only new, to make a general ruin, and call it a thorough Reformation; to turn out a whole College, that they might not be troubled with divisions; and bring in a new brood, that they might be all of a piece: And then, it requires no great prudence to keep them so, or moderation, for like to take contentment in their like. The only Pag. 78. pity is, that for the completing of their joy, E. S. and J. A. lived not to see the Relation of each others Life published. In the year 1660. being discharged from Pag. 18. the College—] Your Author treads as warily in leading E. S. out of the College, as he did in bringing him in. Had he but added the reason of his removal, that the time was now come, when Providence began to vindicate itself from the blasphemies of those that made their good success in wickedness, an evidence of their Saintship; and consequently, usurpers were forced to let go what they had wrongfully with-held from the right owners; among whom E. S. had a share in the same dispensation that made so many sad hearts: it would the better have Pag. 19. appeared, whether his leaving Oxford were so much-what like Paul's departure from Ephesus, Pag. 19. Act. 19. 9. taking his last leave.—] Had Paul thrust Tyrannus out of his School, and kept possession against him for some years, till Caesar had recovered strength to restore the right owner? Or could E. S. say at parting, I have coveted no mans silver, or gold, or apparel? Act. 20. 33, 34. Or, did his dear Friends, and Scholars, see his face no more( and that in Oxford) after V. 38. Pag. 19. this sad parting? But your Author hath a special faculty at comparisons, and none so fit as the great Apostle P. 21. p. 7. 27. Rom. 15. 19. P. 20. 21. Rom. 15. 19. Ver. 20. Pag. 20. to match with E. S. at least in point of preaching, and the power of the Spirit.] But does he think, that twenty Parishes about Rickmersworth, may be set against as many Provinces, from Jerusalem and round about unto Illyricum? Or, was not Christ name in those parts before, till E. S. preached the Gospel of the Kingdom in so many new Pulpits? After Paul and Apollos, nay, and Christ P. 38. 22. Pag. 55. himself, it must be no disparagement for the famous Doctor John Reynolds, yes, and John Pag. 16. Pag. 64. Calvin too, to be paired with E. S. though Few, I think, beside your Authors, can see any such great likeness between him and them, but that he had the luck to leap into the place of the one, and the opinion of the other. If now a man should take as large a liberty in satire, as these Romantick Writers have done in panegyric, what variety of matter might be met with almost in every page.? But because that way of proceeding might be more likely to please the profane, than to humble the hypocrite; I shall only ask these two questions: Whether it be consistent with Saintship, to live in open and notorious Perjury and Robbery,( for twelve years together; and, for ought appears by these Authors, for eleven more;) without any public testimony of Repentance for such public scandals? Whether restitution of goods wrongfully gotten, be not a necessary ingredient in repentance? If your Author were in earnest in his Pag. 57. Prayer, that God would use his Narrative for the doing some good in the World; he, knowing so well, that many are infected with the vices Ibid. of good men, should have taken care to prevent these questions; which will not now be solved by their one general answer, that all this is but railing. Let them first show, in what particular it is false. If this be maculas Pag. 61. Pag. 62. conspergere nigras, I. B. may do well to lay aside his Anagrams and acrostics, till he hath washed off these little spots; which had they been found in one of the wicked, all the water that runs under Kingston-Bridge, would not have done. But great is the privilege of the Saints. Had they thus painted the sepulchre of a Mat. 23. V. 27, 28. Luke 11. 44. Pag. 23. false Prophet, only in kindness to the dead, without design to entrap the living, E. S. might have slept, for me, in as much silence as little Bovingden hath stood, till these Poets must needs make them both famous. But since we cannot now be rid of a pelting Non-conformist, but presently we must have a brazen Legend to out-face the World, Epis. Ded. Pag. 11. Pag. 56. that he is one of the fairest Copies that this age hath produced;( as if Non-conformity were of such virtue, as presently to transform every Goose into a Swan:) they must give us leave to take notice, what a fair age we live in; and what good works we are like to Pag. 56. have, when such are set before us for patterns of them, whose grace and godliness is distinct Pag. 57. from Moral virtue and righteousness: When both the Champions and the Chaplanes of the Good Old Cause, must be represented to the World for Saints, men that have Life of Sir H. Vane Tit. resisted unto blood, who Speeches and Prayers of some of the late Kings Judges, 1660. Tit. being dead, yet speak; such as H. Vane, Harison, and the Tribe of Regicides( as many as have yet had their wages paid) not forgetting Ibid. p. 58 Hugh Peters among the rest:( A man, by the way, not unknown to E. S. by the good token of a dinner, and a Speech in the College-Hall. Your Author may reply, that these are no fit Yoke-fellows for E. S. who was no Actor in those bloodier parts of the Tragedy. Be it so,( though some will say, he was a Complier with those Actors, and fitter company for Peters, than for Paul,) I urge it no further, than to let you see, that every one is not a Saint, that leaves some or other of the Gang behind him, impudent enough to out-face Law and Justice, and by some patched memoirs, to dress up a Malefactor in the disguise of a Martyr. This may serve the turn with their own party, prepared to believe, that all is gold which they say glisters: But surely, the rest of the World, and Epis. Ded. Pag. 11. Pag. 52. all Posterity, will hardly be persuaded, that these demure Christian Conferences, Occasional Discourses, Legacies and Letters, Speeches v. ut supra and Prayers, can make amends for Perjury and Rebellion, Robbery and murder: Nay, change their nature, and make them virtues in the Saints, which in the wicked were the worst of villainies. The mention of these things may sound a little harsh to you, that know these men but by their own relation, for herein lies their only strength and policy,( borrowed from their elder Brethren of the Romish Conventicle) to possess their proselytes with some prejudice against whatever Book, Discourse, or Person, that may discover their hypocrisy. If the truth be so plain, that it cannot be denied, or evaded, it is enough to say, it savours of a profane spirit, to ripp up the failings of the Godly: But is it not more profane, to set up those for Saints, and patterns of Godliness, that have lived in such open sins, without any testimony or token of repentance? With private matters I meddle not, much less with hearsays, or surmises, which are easily raised, or amplified, and hardly disproved: These few things I insist on, are so public, that by an easy inquiry you may satisfy yourself of the truth, or convince me of the falsehood. The only favour I desire in the trial, is, that you do not presuppose your Authors to be infallible. FINIS.