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A67842 A New-Years-gift for the Antinomians particularly Mr. Malebranch Crisp, or, as he foolishly, and yet often (but truly stiles himself the unworthy branch of Dr. Crisp who hath wickedly attempted to underprop a rotten cause of his father, by notorious forgeries, concerning Mr. Baxter, Mr. How, and Dr. Bates, as justifiers of Dr. Crisp as an orthodox man, and no Antinomian: in a rhapsody, intituled, Christ exalted, and Dr. Crisp defended; against the reverend Mr. Alsop, with whom he rudely, and ignorantly plays under the name of his dear Kratiste. By Calvin Anti-Crispian. Trepidantium Malleus.; C. A. 1699 (1699) Wing Y83A; ESTC R221087 21,128 48

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Therefore it is not the Ceremonial but Moral Law by which no Man can be justified I know Mr. Baxter was much the Occasion of endangering you to run so far as you did You perhaps know what Mr. Crandon in the Censure of his Aphorisms says in the Epistle of his Book That he had his Agents sent up and down to propagate his Doctrine and to return to their Master to give an Account of the Success Because this is a Story I never heard prov'd I never charged him with it And I think the Licenser Mr. Caryl did not without cause caution the Reader against Mr. Crandon's Bitterness I declare I never so charged him as he doth whether he wanted Sincerity I leave to his Judge His comparing his Doctrine with that of Trent Bellarmine p. 215 in 7 leaves 2. Book deserves Consideration I think Mr. Crandon was a great Man except in his own Eyes as some Men never had so much Learning as they thought said and printed so he had not half so little as he thought I know you grant the Law to be a Rule in a true proper Sence not like those Nomomachists as is said Luther would sometimes call them as well as by the name Antinomians It is safe speaking after the Apostle 3. Acts 19. Repent and be converted that your Sins may be blotted out What work doth Mr. Crisp alter his Father make of the Words of Bal●●am He beheld not iniquity in Jacob nor hath seen perver seness in Israel 23 Numbers 31 Was this spoken of Elect Persons only or not of the Congregation not so Did not many of these fall short of the Land of Promise against whom God swore in his Wrath they should never enter into his Rest A Type of Heaven I grant all of them perished not for ever for Moses and Aarm fell short of the Terrestial Canaan that did not of the Heavenly one but this was the Case but of few They erred in their Hearts and had not known his ways Can any more therefore be meant That God saw not at that time Idolatry or any gross Sins or foul Practices among them for which he should let them fall before Balak Therefore Balaam taught him to draw them to Idolatry and Whoredoms which Josephus wonderfully tells us the manner of if we may believe him I ask did God see Iniquity in Jacob or behold Perverseness in Israel then Sure he did and plagued them severely Two and Twenty Thousand Suppose this were of the Children of God this is but a figurative or proverbial Expression I will not see or take notice God saw no Sin among them in comparison of what he saw among the Heathens round about them who committed the Mutum peccatum Sodomy and Conversing with Familiar Spirits These are my present Thoughts about it What I have read I cannot remember Whatever some among us talk of Terms Conditions they own irresistible Grace in Conversion Perseverance and the Covenant of Grace to be ordered in all things most sure And what Paul says is ever so to the Romans The Election hath obtain'd it If they fall they rise again and we perswade them not to call all in Question Much sorrow ought they to have whether much fear or no. Any hope that may encourage them to return to God we are not against but that which encourageth to lie in the Dirt is a hope that will make ashamed It is dangerous Doctrine that many of our Tradesmen who are not only indocti but indociles talk of Renew your Assurance Go not to Humiliations nor Prayers but to Christ. I pray when did Christ give those Duties a Bill of Divorce that you may not go to Christ and them too It hath been a Trouble to me I confess many a time to hear some Famous Divines talk of Terrors and that David had them and such fears about his State and Relation to God that were almost on the brink of Despair And they urge he oft says Why art thou cast down O my Soul Why art thou disquieted within me Trust in God for I shall yet praise him who is the health of my Countenance and my God When I declare nothing with me proves the contrary more than this Text That David doubted not If I should be sent for to a Man said to be in Despair and he should say God is my God I shall yet praise him They are the words of Assurance more than Despair Therefore Dr. Sibbs bottom'd his Excellent Book on an unfit Text to name no more David was then driven from the Place of God's Publick Worship and remembred with whom he once went there that kept Holy Days Whether he then fled from Saul or Absolom I know not I find not David calling his State God-ward in question Once Heman indeed seems to do it Thus we run on one after another without Consideration of Scripture as some that tell us that to tell a Truth on a malicious Design is a Lye and urge that of David against Doeg thou false Tongue Now they say Doeg told right to Saul that David came to Abimelech But I say he added Lyes to that Truth and Abimelech denies his Charge to Saul and that truly Did I enquire of God for him Thy Servant knew nothing more or less of this matter So how many Preachers from the Press and Pulpit Tell us thus far Men may go in the Duties of Religion and Christianity and yet fall short of Heaven from Ahab 's humbling himself before God So the Great Sanderson who was an Idolater before and after And so about Agrippa who never entred on the Profession of Christianity What are these Instances to Men making a great and credible Profession of Religion and Christianity some Twenty Years and more and not be saved What Religion did Ahab own or What Christianity Agrippa Pardon this Digression These are the result not of readding nor hearing any Man but free Thoughts Let no hatred of Mr. Baxter's Followers or their Doctrine encline you to the other Extream That our London ones are more Sober much less Popish about Justification than in some Counties where I have been I do averr Speak Honourably of the means of Grace not with Contempt as God and Scripture doth If others place too much in them that is their fault slight them not They are such in which God often meets with the worst of Men and doth that for them Means cannot nor they for themselves I know your Corrupt Notions have not corrupted your Conversation but that you yet shine in all Good Works of Piety and Charity Ad Reverendos fandi dulcissimos D. Singleton Dom. Mead Dom. Gouge Dom. R. Taylor quosdam alios vulgo vocatos Independentes QUID nunc temporis prius dicam quid posterius ego nescius Ventorum vesania procellarum impetus pulsus intemperatus sic jactant Ecclesias vestras quod cum Poeta repetendum est O Navis referent in Mare te novi Fluctus c.
would give so much for it rather than go without it Evang. Yes I do in another Book Christ made Sin he tells us the same Story but as I remember without the name for that might have spoil'd all when Mr. Cole was alive 1. I have heard him preach against Crispianism tho' I never heard him above Three times 2. I have enquired of the chief of his People who profess they believe not the Story That they heard him often declare against Dr. Crisp The like Story may be told of that Man of a sound Head and Heart Dr. Singleton when dead tho' so zealous a Preacher against Crispianism continually to his immortal honour because in the Face of great Difficulties I meddle not with Mr. Malebranch his honesty but much question his veracity Antin But why call you him Mr. Malebranch was not Malebranch a Wise man of France Evang. Judas the Traitor was not the better for bearing the Name of Judas who wrote an Epistle a part of the Canon of Scripture Evang. Malebranch is more admir'd now than perhaps he will be tho' so great a Man Acontius Stratagemmata Satanae said much his way and brought his Business to Lay-Mens preaching Mr. Lock hath since and brought his Business to Antin But you charged him but now for not proving Commutation of Persons In my mind he hath done it well and I wonder Mr. Alsop could not see it 17 John 21. That they may be One in us Evang. Why Man or rather Child doth that prove any more a change of Persons between Christ and Believers than between the Father and Believers Is the Cause come to this Antin I profess your are right You have caught him but I will desire you to hear his other Arguments and Places of Scripture Evang. I will stop my Ears at any more I thought it high time to lay down the Book when I read such stuff I own a change of Persons tho' not Crisp's wild and awkward way of managing that and every thing else Antin But doth he not gravely and wisely reprove Mr. Alsop for sharp dealing with Mr. L●●● from 2 Tim. 2.24 That the Servant of the Lord must not strive but be gentle towards all Men and when he adviseth him to learn of Christ who was meek and lowly 11 Mat. 29 Evang. They who thus talk and yet are Advocates for the Rascally Buskin-maker do but play with Scripture and make Atheists What is to Prevaricate to be Partial to be Inconsistent a Learned Man in a jeer c. That Mr. Malebranch mentions tho too bad causeless and provoking I confess what is this to Madman Dunce Devoid of Grace c. Ant. But no doubt Sam. Crisp is Serviteur de Dieu as he wrote himself in his Christ made Sin and says he was not Zealous for his Father but for Christ and that the Zeal of God's House had eaten him up And he tells the Gentlemen of Pinners-Hall in that Book That they were fed with the finest of the Wheat by Dr. Owen Mr. Collins Dr. Manton and others Evang. Poor Giddy-brains the Serviteur de Dieu was perhaps all the French he had Was it not fine to see almost all the Hebrew words in our common Letters Was not Dr. Owen a Calvinist Dr. Manton a Baxterian Sure I think the Man is almost galled out of his Senses if ever he had any Did any of them Preach Justification before and without Faith Antin If Mr. Malebranch as you call him in Vindicating Dr. Crisp's Works cannot please you I hope a Reverend Draper may Can you charge him with Lying in his Pulpit or Folly there I assure you Sir He is the most Gospel-Preacher I ever heard He Preacheth of late most Moving Sermons Evang. So I hear For his Hearers begin to leave him apace and not only they but he too must move from the Lecture-place And for those Congregational Divines to whom I was long since a true Prophet I may now say to them as Paul to the Mariners after the Shipwrack You should have hearkened to me 27 Acts 21. and not had this harm and loss Antin Oh! but he hath preached up imputed Sanctification at a most wonderful rate If you please I will read his Arguments Evang. I have heard them and read them in Coffee Houses and every where He might as well have proved all from 1 Gen. 1 2 3. I am sorry to find a Man make himself like a Baboon But did you never hear of a Woman that said She could find in her heart to Prostitute her Body to any Man to testifie against that Idol called Sanctification Antin Sure he sets up as an Advocate for Dr. Crisp and Dr. Crisp taught People better Evang. I have been informed by a worthy Person That that good Man that succeeded Dr. Crisp at Brinksworth complain'd that he could not a long time after the Doctor 's Death bring the Parish into any tolerable Order the Women would hang out their Cloaths Lord's-days c. Antin Do you think the Doctor ever read the Book of Sports for Pastimes on Sabbath-days I believe he would rather lose his Place I know he liv'd at that time when King Charles and Bishop Laud contrary to the Law of God and Man did that Villany Evang. I am not of your Mind I sent lately to Brinksworth to know And the Answer I had was Hardly any are now alive can remember the Book of Sports but they are sure the Doctor never turn'd out at that time Antin Well well if he did read it that was no great matter that was only against the Law not a word against the Gospel Had there been any thing in the Book of Sports against Free Grace Dr. Crisp had never read it Evang. Did not the Draper say The Anabaptist in the Water might see the Womens fair Skins and know their way at another time Are not many once angry with the Apologist now borrowing the Book Antin I cannot deny it Evang. Did he not describe Mr. Baxter and say He said on his Death-bed he had done as much for God as others tho' he had no assurance No but the quite contrary For when one told him of his Good Works he said Talk not of Works God taketh as very a Dung hil-worm to Heaven in taking me as ever he took This had been such an Hypocritical Cant no more need be said The words in deed were odd enough but not so bad I had not those Transports some Men talk of yet I think I know as much as they and have as much rational satisfaction See his Life 1. If he thought he knew so much some think he did not 2. If he did was it Modesty to say so 3. Do Transports follow this Knowledge or this Rational Satisfaction Oh! Doth not God give or deny these as pleaseth him Let us do no Man wrong nor make a thing a Thousand times worse than it is Antin But do you think Mr. Baxter was a Man that made any
put in practice his own Doctrine against Repentance sorrowing for Sin Compunction Blind Charity What! That made it his Work from the Pulpit the Press and in common Conversation to Ridicule these and make all Legal Yet I see no necessity for any to judge of Mens final woful State when dead the Scripture give us no Precedent but modestly says of Judas He is gone to his Place Go on Antinomista I doubt not if Sin be never a burden to thee here and to thy Followers it shall be a burden to you all in a woful Eternity All that ever I heard or read against the Doctor made me not so to loath him as the reading the Two Hundred Ninety Eight Two Hundred Ninety Ninth and Three Hundreth pages of that worst of Books next to the Alcoran and the Mass-Book of which I have given an Account in other Books and therefore shall not do it now I have brought the Book before wise serious Men who could not believe till their Eyes saw Never never believe Christ ever was ever is ever can be made sweet where Sin is not made bitter I shall never forget that of Austin in his Confessions I read when young Confiteor Peccata mea in amaritudine cordis mei ut tu dulcescas mihi Antin Now I will deal plainly with you and tell you Mr. Antinomista what they say of you Evang. Pray do and spare not for I have lately bought the best Cordial in the World against fainting Fits under any Calumnies or Slanders Antin What did your Cordial cost you I pray and what is it Evang. It cost Two Shillings and it is Socks and Buskins So that I can now wade through thick and thin wherein Mr. Alsop is made a Dunce Madman Graceless Person c. tho' known by his Adversaries as well as Friends to be an excellent Scholar and Preacher a Great Man and Good-One that hath a Library in his Head Antin Did not J. F. one of the greatest Quakers in the City charge you for coming home Drunk from a Tavern at Eleven of the Clock at Night and abusing a Soldier you met with who knock'd you down in Moor-fields then flung a Stone at your Head when at last all was laid on him for his Threat Ten Days before That a Church Friend of theirs vow'd your Head should be broken Did he not to your Face averr when you demanded Proof That you Confest this to him Evang. 1. Had all been true as I can call God Angels and Men to record all is false can any Man be so sensless or take me to be so that I should so confess to him when I at that time charged him with his Threat 2. Mr. George Keith the Reformed Quaker is my Witness I came from his House that Lord's Day Night about Nine of the Clock 3. I challenge all the World to charge me with this Sin Drunkenness once in my Life-time in the University or out of it Can Friend F. or others say it 4. I call'd Witness when he thus said I so Confest to him and profest I would prosecute him if he stood to it But he eat his Words Ioffer again Five Pounds to any Man that shall to my Face prove this Charge Antin But you are highly censur'd for belying Dr. Hicks in your Friendly Epistle to Mr. Keith c. To say he was maintain'd by his Brother John and some Devonshire Presbyterians when a Poor Scholar in Oxford Evang. All is true I was bred up in the same School he was was his Fellow Collegiate for a time and could say more were it convenient Whether when a Poor Scholar he was of St. John's College or Magdalen is not material This Gentleman is not like Dr. Prideaux who all his Days would shew his Leathern Breeches in which he went to the University to all great Persons that visited him Some in this City can testifie they heard his Brother John say it Tho' they train'd up a Bird to pick out their Eyes I would upon many common Considerations and one peculiar one have conceal'd this could I have done it without prejudicing the Cause I then espous'd I say to my Comfort No Lie is found in my Mouth and all that know me know I hated that Sin from a Child and I hope shall to Old Age. This Character Dr. Hicks himself as well as others was once forced to give me Antin Oh! But one thing you can never never get of Mr. Non vos latet The great K. bid all his Pupils report every where from him that you wrote false Latin in a late Printed Latin Epistle to Mr. Lobb Mr. Alsop It should be saith that great Man the Dative Case Vobis He is such a Critick that Grevius the great Grammarian in Holland made a Speech and Dr. K. said there was false Latin in it Evang. It is true he so did Charge me and it is as true he since denies it as I knew he would to save his Credit All the Learned in the City stand by me against him and say He can be no great Man that says Non vos latet is false Latin A Boy of mine but in Aesop's Fables out of that Book confuted an ignorant Sophister of his who pointed at me There goes Vos latet when going into the Pulpit Aesop Lib. 2. Fab. 1. Me fur quidem latet Grevius said of him long since Optime commendat sua To do him right I take him to be no mean Man but a great Man and greater would he be had he learned one thing Ne tua jactato ne aliena despicito I and others thought Me latet had been a Phrase known to most Boys pretending any thing to Learning Can no Englishman speak good Latin Antin Answer me to one thing more and if you can Answer me there as you do in other things it is but in vain to tell you of other Stories Evang. What is that Antin Have you not lately said That you taught a Child not Nine Years old with others to learn to read Greek indifferently well according to Spirits and Accents too and also to learn Article and the first second third and fifth Declension without Book 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and also to read construe parse and say Memoriter the two First Verses of the First Chapter of St. John's Gospel in Greek and all in the space of Four Hours The three days story the Year before was indeed at last believed tho' at first denyed because openly proved Evang. This story is as true as that Many Witnesses were present The Father of the Child for one I doubt not but to do the like again before the Faces of my Accusers but for such as censure and revile and when entreated refuse to come to my House where many that come Scoffers go away satisfied they are Beasts in the shape of Men. To take Boys in a Corner and on a covetous Design to deny or affirm as the Company
would have them is a Trick I have a Trick for to discover their Design Antin I crave leave to ask you a little Question not of the Nature of the former ones I and others wonder what makes you of late to Print only Groat Books when you know Socks and Buskins cost two Shillings Christ Exalted and Dr. Crisp defended is of the same Price Dr. Crisp's Works cost 8 s. and you censured that in a Book of such small Price Evang. 1. There is no need of many words where few will serve turn 2. I doubt not many wise Men that read those Books repent their lost Money as well as lost Time and think a Groat enough if not too much for any of them 3. They have laden their Books with the same things over and over so Dr. Crisp I not so in new Books Mr. Crisp tells us Christ made Sin how many Sons and Daughters Dr. Crisp had what were their Names and who eldest He Subscribes himself Serviteur de Dieu It may be that was all the French the poor Man had as before and they that have least Money gingle it most 4. It may be Antinomista you and others that thus talk can badly spare that one Groat perhaps the Good Woman in the Kitchen grudgeth that if of late when Money is so scarce we grow Frugal in other respects why not in this 5. Whatever Money you and the Objecters may have in your Purses you best know but others know you have but little Wit in your Heads Your Understanding will not reach large Discourses well if this though so short Antin But what I pray you makes you think Dr. Crisp would have read the Book of Sports had occasion been Is there any thing in his Book that induceth you thus to think Evang. In the Sermon for the Fast he calls King Charles the First The Physician of the Churches and State What Physician he was in the State is well known he gave the same Physick his Agents did in Ireland And what Physician he was in the Church is well known too when all Protestantism and Piety was almost gone I hope the Doctor was not so Squeamish as to refuse the Physick if offer'd that this Physician gave him What ailed thee Tobie Canst thou see nothing not in Scripture that expoundest that Text of Services coming from a pure Heart Your New Moons and Sabbaths I cannot away with it is an Abomination every one sees it spoken not of the Services of God's Faithful Servants but of Profane or Hypocritical Jews But of these things I have said enough in my Apology and Three Contending Brethren Let others do what they please I care not to write the same things twice My Citations are true only I find what I cite pag. 15. the Doctor said of the Wise Man was a mistake I shall not trouble the Reader with what occasion'd it but now Correct it Did the Sparrows mute in Tobies Eyes when he thus read Scripture If they did Naughty Birds they Then may his Writings stand as Apocryphal ones between the Old Testament and the New in the middle not of Participation indeed but Negation may I so allude Antin Some talk of what betides some Preachers of Free-Grace and they what betides you Opposers You lately were left almost dead Evang. Yes some are thus too conclusive without cause When Whitehall was burnt no doubt but many took it to be a Testimony from Heaven against the King in a time of Peace to fire his Palace who as an Usurper took it from a Lawful King as before he was perplex'd in War For my part I think ray Construction of that Providence was better than theirs when I said God had given us a chast good King and lov'd him too well to let him live in an Old Bawdy-House Lying will be found to be an Omen bad enough of it self of the Divine Displeasure What if the Baxterians had reported and printed Seven Years after Dr. Crisp died that two days before his Death he said Mr. Baxter was an Orthodox Man and turn'd more Souls to Christ than he Would not this have been notorious Villany Not greater than this tho' we are told there 's no grain of doubting Well put it in the Gazette and New sLetters Mr. Baxter died a Crispian But no wonder from Men who mutato nomine tell us Luther lived and died one Calvin and Crisp were agreed What in Justification without Faith That the Church of England in her Homilies about Doctrine is theirs and therefore Mr. Kakiste often cites them Some of them say They own all in the Assembly's Confessions of Faith Any thing Dr. Owen is theirs Dr. Manton so and at last O wonderful Conversion Mr. Baxter himself Good Man there is now some hope left for him If his Tutissimum with Bellarmine's last words be not too late tho' by the way they are Bellarmine's last Thesis in his Dispute of Justification he had certainly gone to the Devil had it not been for this Blessed Change Words I know no Man ever us'd of him but this Tribe Mr. Alsop thinks so contemptible of Mr. Kakiste's Book that when we with other Ministers last Week waited on His Majesty at Kensington to Congratulate his Safe Return he told me he never saw the Book nor knew not what was in it and I suppose the Book hath been out too long to begin now I have one Request Mr. Antinomista to make to you as on my bended Knees Antin What is that I pray Evang. That you and your Brethren would never meddle with the Controversie now on foot Mr. Lobb is a Workman and neither needs your help nor I believe desires it but rather fears it For you spoil all by Ignorance and Falshood and Corrupt Principles If any of ours accept of your help in my Mind they do as foolishly as if any of us writing against the Church of England should call for or accept of the help of the Quakers You make such work as the Ape that imitated the Cobler in mending Shooes c. What woful work Mr. Malebraach hath made he that hath but half an Eye may see and what Work that Ingenious Gentleman now in the Press with his Baxterianism unmask'd will make who can tell He hath written for Dr. Crisp against his Name-sake of Cambridge that excellent sound Book Crispianism unmask'd Who hath not confuted Error by Error but by Truth in the Old Calvinistical Protestant strain Tell Untruths as fast as you will on me as That I should some Months since stand up in one of the greatest Congregational Meetings in the City and say aloud That they were all a Company of Antinomians I care not I am always at VVar with your Opinions I mean those of you that say David sinned in having Sin a Burden to him or charging it on himself but never with your Persons nor the Persons of any others for those called Crispians that understand not the depth of the wickedness of his