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A32204 Copies of two papers written by the late King Charles II together with a copy of a paper written by the late Duchess of York : to which is added an answer to the aforesaid papers all printed together. Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685.; Stillingfleet, Edward, 1635-1699. Answer to some papers lately printed concerning the authority of the Catholick Church.; York, Anne Hyde, Duchess of, 1637-1671. 1686 (1686) Wing C2946; ESTC R29952 29,168 42

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better informed But we are sure this could be no Argument for her to have the Communion of out Church because she was told by these Bishops they did it and continued in the Communion of it 4. Lastly As to the Infallibility of the Church If this as applied to the Roman Church could be any where found in Scripture we should then indeed be to blame not to submit to all the Definitions of it But where is this to be ●ound Yes Christ hath promised to be with ●his Church to the end of the World Not with his Church but with his Apostles And if it be restrained to them then the end of the World is no more than always But suppose it be understood of the Successors of the Apostle● were there none but at Rome How comes this Promise to be limited to the Church of Rome and the Bishops of Antio●h and Alexandria and all the other Eastern Churches where the Bishops as certainly succeeded the Apostles as at Rome it self not to enjoy the equal Benefit of this Promise But they who can find the Infallibility of the Church of Rome in Scripture need not d●spair of finding whatever they have a Mind to there But from this Promise she concludes That our saviour would not permi● the Church togive the Laity the Communion in One kind if it were not lawfull so to do Now in my Opinion the Argument is stronger the other way The Church of Rome forbids the doing of that which Christ enjoyned therefore it cannot be Infallible since the Command of Christ is so much plainer than the Promise of Infallibility to the Church of Rome But from all these things laid together I can see no imaginable Reason of any force to conclude that she could not think it possible to sa●e her Soul otherwise than by embracing the Communion of the Church of Rome And the Publick will receive this Advantage by these Papers that there by it appears how very little is to be said by Persons of the greatest Capacity as well as Place either against the church of England or for the Church of Rome FINIS ERRATA Page 3. line 10. for siking read sinking Books Printed for and Sold by Robert Thornton Bookseller at the Sign of the Leather-Bottle in Skinner-Row COpies of Two Papers written by the Late King Charles the Second of Blessed Memory and Published by Command of his present Majesty Together with an Answer to the said Papers An Abridgment of the English Military Discipline Printed by His present Majesties Especial Command for the use of the Forces throughout His Dominions A Papist Misrepresented and Represented or a twofold Character of Popery The one Containing a Sum of the Superstitions Idolatries Cruelties Treacheries and wicked Principles of that Popery which hath disturb'd this Nation above an hundred and fifty Years fill'd it with Fears and Jealousies and deserves the Hatred of all good Christians The other laying open that Popery which the Papists own and profess with the chief Articles of their Faith and some of the Principal ●rounds and Reasons which hold them in that Religion By I. L. one of the Church of Rome To which is added A Book Entituled The Do●rines and Practices of the Church of Rome truly Represented In Answer to the aforesaid Book By a Protestant of the Church of England An Antidote against Popery Shewing how a devout Soul in the midst of the manifold distractions and divisions about Religion and Pretensions and Claims to the Church may against all Scruples rest satisfied and setled in mind and chearfully go on in Gods Service to Salvation By a Reverend Divine of the Church of England Officium Eu●haristicum or a Preparatory Service to a devout and worthy Reception of the Lords Supper to which is added a Meditation for every day in the Week The Fundamentals of the Protestant Religion asserted by Reason as well as Scripture written in French by the Famous Monsieur de Gombaud and Translated into English by Sidney Lodge c. Directions for Preachers with a Letter to enforce the Observation of them In a Letter from His Sacred Majesty to the Arch-B●shops of Canterbury and York The Countess of Mortons dailyy Exercise or a Book of Prayers and Rules how to spend the Time in the Service of Almighty God Augustus Anglicus a Compendiouss view of the Life and Reign of that Immortal and Glorious Monarch King Charless the second A Copy of the several Articles and Form of the Abjuration of the Protestant Religion and Profession of the Romish imposed upon the French Protestants Faithfully Translated into English Absolom and Achitophel the Second Part. The Medall or a Satyr against Sedition by Mr. Dryden An Essay upon Poetry An Apology The Common Prayer Book in Latin A Table of Tythes for the Province of Ulster Two Conferences one betwixt a Papist and a Jew the other betwixt a Protestant and a Jew The Operator for the Teeth Threnodia Angustalis a Funeral Pindarique Poem Sacred to the Happy Memory of King Charles the Second The Choicest New Songs with Musical Notes either for Voice or In●trument fairly engraven on Copper Plates will be constantly Printed and Sold at Two Pence a Song by the said Robert Thornton Sheldon A.B. of Cant. Blandford B. of Worcest Blandford B. of Worcester Preface to his Treatise P. 5. Letter to her Royal Highness from the Bp. of Winton P. 3 4. Blandford Pag. 14. Sheldon A.B. of Canterb. Blanford Bp. of Worcester Blandford B●shop of Worcester Preface p. 2. p. 4.
to ask some Questions of any ingenuous Man as whether it be not the same thing for the Church of Rome to make the Rule as to assume to it self the sole Power of giving the sense of it For what can a Rule signify without the sense And if this were the intention of Almighty God had it not been as necessary to have told us to whom he had given the Power of Interpreting the Rule as to have given the Rule it self Whether it be reasonable for the Church of Rome to interpret those Texts wherein this Power of Interpreting is to be containes For this is to make it Iudge in its own Cause which was thought an Absurdity before And whether it be not as mischievous to allow a Prosperous Usurp●r the Power of Interpreting Laws according to his own Interest as any private Person according to his own Fancy Wheth●r it be possible to reform Disorders in the Church when the Person principally accused is Supream Judge Whether those can be indifferent Judges in Councils who beforehand take an Oath to defend that Authority which is to be Debated Whether Tradition be not as uncertain a Rule as Fancy when Men judge of Tradition according to their Fancy I would have any Man shew me where the Power of deciding mattees of Faith is given to every particular Man If by deciding Matters of Faith be understood the determining them in such a manner as to oblige others I do not know where it is given to every particular Man nor how it should be For then every particular Man would have a Power over every particular Man and there would want a new D●cision whose should take p●ace But if by deciding Matters of Faith no more be meant but every mans being ●atisfied of th● Reasons why he believes one thing to be true and not another that belongs to every Man as he is bound to take care of his Soul and must give an account bot● to God and Man of the Reason of his Faith And what can be meant in Scripture by Proving all things and holding fast that which is good 1 Thess 5. 21. By trying the Spirits whether they be of God ● John 4. 1. By judging of themselves what is right Luke 12. 57. unless God had given to Mankind a Faculty of discerning truth and falshood in Matters of Faith But if every Man hath not such a Power how comes h● to be satisfied about the Churches Authority Is not that a Matter of Faith And where ever any Person will shew me that every Man hath a Power to determine his Faith in that matter I 'le undertake to shew him the rest Christ left his Power to his Church even to forgive Sins in Heaven and left his Spirit with them which they exercised after his Resurrection But where then was the Roman Catholick Church And how can it be hence inferred That these Powers are now in the Church of Rome exclusive to all others unless it be made appear that it was Heir-General to all the Apostles I suppose it will be granted that the Apostles had some gifts of the Spirit which the Church of Rome will not in Modesty pretend to such as the Gift of Tongues the Spirit of Discerning Prophesie Miraculous Cures and Punishments Now here lies the difficulty to shew what part of the Promise of the Infallible Spirit for the ordinary Power of the Keys relates not to this matter was to expire with the Apostles and what was to be continued to the Church in all Ages A Promise of Divine Assistance is denied by none but Pelagians But how far that extends is the Question In the Souls of good Men it is so as to keep them in the way to Heaven but not to prevent any lapse into sin and it were worth our knowing where God hath ever promised to keep any Men more from Error than from Sin Doth he hate one more than the other Is one more disagreeing to the Christian Doct●ine than the other How came then so much to be said for the keeping Men from Error when at the same time they confess they may not only commit great sins but err very dangerously in the most Solemn manner in what relates to the Doctrine of Manners Would any have believed the Apostles Infallible if they had known them to be Persons of ill Lives or that they had notoriously erred in some Rules of great Consequence to the Welfare of Mankind Now all this is freely yielded as to the Pretence of Infallibility in the Church of Rome It is granted that the Guides of that Church have been very bad Men and that in Councils they have frequently erred about the Dep●sing Power being only a Matter of Practice and not of Faith Whether it be so or not I now dispute not but it is granted that notwithstanding this Infallible Spirit the Roman Church may grosly err in a matter of mighty Consequence to the Peace of Christendom and yet it cannot err in decreeing the least Matters of Faith As for Instance it can by no means err about the seven Sacraments or the Intention of the Priest about them but it may err about Deposing Princes and Absolving Subjects from their Allegiance Which in easier terms is They can never err about their own Interest but they may about any other whatsoever I pass over the next Paragraph the sense being in perfect and what is material about the Creeds hath been spoken to already That which next deserves Consideration is That the Church was the Iudge even of the Scripture it self many years after the Apostles which Books were Canonical and which were not We have a distinction among us of Judges of the Law and Iudges of the Fact The One declares what the Law is the Fact being supposed the Other gives judgment upon the Fact as it appears before them Now in this Case about the Canonical Books the Church is not judge of the Law For they are not to declare whether a Book appearing to be Canonical ought by it to be received for Canonical which is taken for granted among all Christians but all they have to do is to give judgment upon the Matter of Fact i.e. whether it appear upon sufficient Evidence to have been a Book written by Divine Inspiration And the Church of Rome hath no particular Priviledge in this matter but gives its Judgment as other parts of the Christian World do And if it takes upon it to judge contrary to the general sense of the Christian Church we are not to be concluded by it but an Appeal lyes to a greater Tribunal of the Universal Church And if they had this Power then I desire to know how they came to lose it Who are meant by They And what is understood by this Power It is one thing for a Part of the Church to give Testimony to a matter of Fact and another to assume the Power of making Books Canonical which were not so This latter no Church in