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A42287 An apology for M. Antonia Bourignon in four parts ... : to which are added two letters from different hands, containing remarks on the preface to The snake in the grass and Bourignianism detected : as also some of her own letters, whereby her true Christian spirit and sentiments are farther justified and vindicated, particularly as to the doctrine of the merits and satisfaction of Jesus Christ. Garden, George, 1649-1733.; Bourignon, Antoinette, 1616-1680.; De Heyde, Dr. 1699 (1699) Wing G218; ESTC R18554 402,086 456

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of the Gospel of Jesus Christ she would have Men take up the Spirit of the first Christians and let the good Seed of the Doctrine of the Gospel spring up in their Souls and not her Doctrine For she has no particular nor new Doctrine as to the Conduct of Mens Souls* and that when she adds any thing in her Writings that does not concern the Doctrine of the Gospel they ought to lay it aside till God give them a more clear Understanding of it And as to her Friend's Testimonies they were designed in some measure to ballance the bold and impudent Censures and Calumnies of her Enemies and to excite Men to examine and weigh her Writings impartially and not to suffer their Minds to be forestall'd by Prejudices or to judge rashly and inconsi●erately of things before they know them So the Doctor might have spared this Narrative and it may be all that is to follow for his only Business ought to have been to let the World see that what she calls the Doctrine of the Gospel and necessary to Salvation really i● not so or that her other Sentiments do destroy it for provided that Men be perswaded of the Truth of this that none can be saved without the Love of God and will follow the only way to come at this the mortifying corrupt Nature and following the Life and Doctrine of Jesus Christ she is content to undergo all reproach her self and that all her other Sentiments and Doctrines pass for Dreams and Romances If the Doctor say as he does in his Letter Artticle XV. that he finds nothing good in her Writings but what is common and handled in every Practical Treatise and the Subject of daily Sermons Well might not the Doctor have suffered her Books to pass among Practical Treatises and even to be preferred to most of them by such who see the Doctrine of Christ more clearly and purely represented in them than in others without the Glosses of corrupt Nature and feel a Divine Force Power and Spirit accompanying them who see in them the horrid Corruption of our Nature and of our Wills clearly laid before them the Christian Vertues most lively represented and most excellent Directions how to copy them out according to the great Original Jesus Christ XXII The other Part of the Doctor 's Narrative is spent in disproving the Reasons why A. B. is so much admired and said to be divinely inspired c. and I am sorry that his Passions or Prejudices do as much darken his Reason and with-hold him from candour and fair dealing here as in the former The Reasons which they bring are to be had more truly from her and their Writings and are set down in the Thrid Part of the Apology and some of those mentioned by the Doctor were never brought by them as Reasons why they thought her divinely inspir'd but upon other Grounds of which afterwards The first he considers is her Sanctity which he says is nor always attended with extraordinary Illuminations and then inferrs that suppose her to be truly and extraordinarily Holy she is not therefore to be reckon'd to know the Mind of God in all things by immediate Revelation all which is readily granted But make once the Doctor 's Supposition and then add that the Person so truly Holy declares that God is pleas'd to communicate his Light immediately unto her and that without all humane Helps and that upon trial it be found that what she declares is the same with the Gospel of Jesus Christ and what God has already revealed by his Spirit this I think may be reckoned a weighty Evidence of Divine Inspiraration for a Person so truly Holy would not lye nor would God suffer such a one to be so deluded The Doctor singles out every Reason by it self and would prove that suppose it were true the Consequence is not just and so rejects the Consequence drawn from them altogether which is just as if one should reason that 2 and 4 and 6 do not make 12 because 2 makes not 12 and 4 makes it not nor yet 6 Ergo c. In the rest of this Article he has a long Discourse to shew How far Saints should keep their Distance and be cloathed with Humility and how others should beware of running into excess when they honour them not to exalt them to an equality with God nor near it we ought to honour those whom God hath honoured yet only so as to make them the subject Matter of honouring God A. B. and her Friends do perfectly join with the Dostor what goes beyond this they abhor it Where there is no Humility there is no Sanctity for that is the Foundation of this but we may be greatly mistaken to call that Humility which is the greatest Pride to speak meanly of our selves when it appears by all our Actions that we are not so in our Hearts the Saints may declare the Grace of God to themselves with the greatest Humility ascribing all to God and seeing the more their own Nothingness As David Paul c. and what A. B. says of her self may proceed from the same Spirit notwithstanding of all the Doctor 's Reasons That her Friends publish blasphemous Encomiums of her and are guilty of Idolatry as to her is a bold unjust and malicious Calumny which they utterly deny In the XV. Article he justifies his Zeal against her and them for exalting her above the present State and Capacity of humane Nature only that all her metaphysical Whimsies which M. Poiret is passionately fond of might be received for Divine Truths I have already replied to this that neither A. B. nor M. Poiret do bid any believe what he calls Whimsies to be Divine Truths but only entreat Men to be True Christians and if they please they may look upon all her other Thoughts that have no immediate relation to this to be really metaphysical Whimsies It is a wrong Imagination of his that that make her impeccable or at least never to have actually sinned She asserts the contrary her self and they believed no such thing as I have already shewn M. de Cort's Expression As if Adam had never sinned in her implies no such thing as the Doctor inferrs from it but that during the time he conversed with her he observed in her such a compleat and solid Vertue that he thinks she could not have been in a purer State tho' she had not been born of the corrupt mass of Adam as indeed she was So this is the Subject of another Consideration whether by the Grace of God a Person may be advanced to such a State of Vertue as not actually to commit any Sin neither in Heart nor Life tho' they be born of the corrupt mass of Adam are not impeccable and have been guilty of many Sins In the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Article he proceeds to shew That the things they instance in her are not certain Proofs of Sanctity and first
with his Countenance still bow'd down without Curiosity In the Churches he was almost still on his Knees as in a profound Devotion He visited the Poor and Sick giving them all he had and if he had found any without cloathing in the Winter on the Streets he would have gone aside and taken off his own Garment and given them he gave many Appearances of extraordinary Piety so that all judg'd him a Holy Person Many Priests and godly Persons consulted him in spiritual Matters in which he was very Knowing and gave Counsel to every one He told her he was dead to Nature and so disengag'd from all worldly Goods that he could take no Pleasure in them and that by Abstinence he had lost the taste of all Meats so that all were alike to him XXXVI He continued to sollicite her to this Employ for a Year and a half as that whereby she could best promote the Glory of God In November therefore 1653. about the 37th Year of her Age she undertakes the Care of a Hospital of Orphan Maids founded by one John Stappart a Merchant in Lisle some Twelve or Thirteen Years before She found all Filthy and in Disorder She made all Clean and put all in Order and made a Rule by which all were alike as to Diet Bed Cloathing and all other Accommodations She eat with them at the same Table and observ'd the same Rule All went well outwardly but her greatest Compassion was for their Souls She found them as Rude and Ignorant as little Beasts Girls receiv'd into the House of Fourteen or Fifteen Years of Age knew not they had a Soul This gave her such Compassion that she wish'd she could take them all into her House It encreas'd to more than Fifty though the Fond was but for Ten or Twelve And God gave her spiritually and bodily all that she had need of And she employed her own Goods to maintain them and her Time to instruct them They learn'd the Christian Doctrine and some Calling to gain their Living each according to their Capacity And she brought all things into such Order that there was almost no Trouble in governing this great Family All was regulated from Morning till Night without Intermission They rose precisely at Five and after having spent half an Hour in dressing and Prayer they learn'd to read and write till half after Six Then they went to Church At Seven they were set to work with which they recited the common Prayers They breakfast at Eight and read some pious Book At Nine they sung spiritual Songs The next Hour they past in silence at work At Eleven they repeated the Catechism And din'd at Noon After which they took half an Hours Recreation And from One to Eight they past over the same Exercises which they had done in the Forenoon When they had sup'd at Eight they went into the Oratory to pray and after that lay down in silence and all the Lamps were put out at Nine Thus the House was establish'd in good Order and Discipline and the Citizens were desirous to have Servant-Maids out of it when they had spent some time there because they were Honest and Faithful XXXVII A. B. was much afflicted in this Hospital with frequent Sicknesses which would often seize her suddenly and bring her to the Gates of Death they seem'd not to be natural and afterwards the Children confest they had endeavour'd to poyson her by Diabolical Powders Stappart and S. Saulieu came oft to visit her and seem'd greatly pleas'd with the good Government of the House S. Saulieu had had for some Years the Care of another House of Orphan Boys which about this time broke up the Rent being exhausted He solicited A. B. to contribute to the building of another He and Stappart told her one Day of a Project to take Farms of the City where he would gain 2000 Florins a Year in receiving them if she would be Surety for him And this would begin a Fond for such a House She consented so he got the Profit of Three Years which came to 6000 Florins but no more Word of the Poor he said all was his and the Fruit of his Labour XXXVIII One Day he propos'd to A. B. that they might marry together and yet live in Virginity that he might assist her in the Cares of the House She told him Marriage was not needful for that He began from time to time to give little Demonstrations of Friendship which she did not take notice of because of the good Opinion she had of him But by degrees he discover'd entirely his Passion telling her this Love must be from God for he could never affect any Maid to espouse her and now Night and Day he was enclin'd to marry her and could not resist God She shew'd great Displeasure and he beg'd Pardon with Tears offering to do Pennance and said it was only a Tentation had surpriz'd him Out of Natural Goodness she believ'd it was so But whereas he began the same several times she would needs banish him the House Then he told her she must be his Wife or he would kill her She endeavour'd to reason him out of his Madness representing to him the Sanctity of his former Discourses the Zeal of his Charity the Honesty of his Conversation and the Reputation he had acquir'd amongst good Men asking the Reason of such a Change He told her He was not what he had appear'd to be that having from his Youth a haughty Mind he desir'd to distinguish himself from the People which since he could not do by Birth or Wealth he resolv'd to put on the Appearance of Vertue and Piety as being more esteem'd which made him practise outward Works of Mortification and Devotion that he learn'd to speak after so sublime a manner of inward things by reading carefully spiritual Books and observing her Words Sentiments and way of Behaviour That the first time he saw her on the Street he was struck with Love of her and all he had done and said since was to insinuate into her Friendship and to enjoy her by Love or Force which he was resolv'd upon tho' he should hang for it She threatning to send for the Three Pastors the Overseers of the House he said he would then proclaim she was his Wife and that he had lain with her and divers Casuists were in the Opinion one might do so and so with a good Conscience he might follow this probable Opinion XXXIX A. B. resolving rather to be expos'd to the Persecution of evil Tongues than to the Brutality of this Villain she acquaints the Pastors and he continuing notwithstanding to molest her knocking at the Gates and threatning to break up her Doors and Windows she applies to the Magistrates and after the Affair was examin'd he being afraid to be imprison'd or even hang'd for offering to force the House he by the Jesuits among whom he had a Brother employs many Friends to solicite
render thee such and such a Worship and Service but it is much against my Will they constrain me to it and I would not do it were it not to avoid barbarous Usage and to gain some Money Pleasures and Honours This is the Disposition of Heart to which those detestable Murtherers of Conscience and Religion do reduce Men and which they call the Conversion of Hereticks and the Compel them to come in of the Parable Whereas that Constraint of the Gospel is nothing but the Declartion of God's Judgments upon good Men who would needs stay in the World and that these shall partake of its Plagues and Scourges which God will pour out on all the Earth XLII A. B. caused 'em to hire a great Lodging for those Persons in the Town of Susum resolving to leave Sleswick to stay with them to see if they were dispos'd to embrace a truly Christian Life She came thither in July 1672. but instead of finding Persons disposed to embrace a Gospel Life she was astonished to see a Company of People who seem'd to be come as to a Country Fair to eat drink do nothing to observe no Rules nor good Manners nor Discretion t● seek every one their own their Ease and what accommodated them best the best things their Fancy and their own Will each desired to be best treated most spar●d most honoured and which was worst none would unlearn this soft LIfe nor deny themselves to embrace another She soon saw that this would not agree with the Designs and Will of God and after some trial of them she rid her self of them by degrees all of them engaging in the World the Flesh and earthly Things more than ever and the most part of them became her Enemies and Slanderers where ever they went On this Occasion she wrote many Letters where she makes appear the Qualities and Dispositions which one must have to become a True Christian and the Indispositions which render Persons uncapable of this they make up the Book call'd The Stones of the New Jerusalem She wrote also upon the same Occasion The Blindness of Men now-a-days which contains the History of these Frieslanders and refutes the Errors to which the most part of the Mennonists or Anabaptists are subject as these were About this time also she wrote for her Friends the First Part of the Treatise of Solid Vertue where she lays down the Grounds of the Apprenticeship of a Christian Life of the Imitation of Jesus Christ of Vertue and of the Conflict we must undertake against all the Insults of the Devil She design'd to cause her Books to be printed in her own House and therefore brought from Holland compleat Furniture for a Printing-Office But one little Essay gave her Enemies Occasion to persecute her to a high Degree LXIII A Young Man of the Reformed Church of Altena near Hamburg being ill treated by his Pastors and forbid the Lord's Supper for reading and expressing his Esteem of some of her Writings took occasion to search for her and came to Husum which so vext these Gentlemen that under the Name of the Visiter of their Sick they publish'd Two Treatises in High Dutch against her and put them in the Gazettes accusing her both of Heresie and of an evil Life She perceiving that the Devil design'd to pre-occupy Men against the Truth by the Defamation of her Person in a Country where she was not known and in a Tongue which she did not understand writes a Book which she causes to be translated and printed in her own House in High Dutch under the Title of The Testimony of Truth where she makes appear the Injustice of the Calumnies and Accusations and that the true Cause why they persecuted her was that no Body would he●r the Truth which reproves and disturbs them in the ●●joyment of their Pleasures Honours and Ambition wherein the Churchmen and Pastors are as much or more engaged than the rest of Men and shews that she has no Aim but to lead Persons to Jesus Christ not to her self nor to any Sect new or old To this she joins a Collection of authentick Attestations of Persons who knew her in her native Country many of them being upon Oath before Judges and of those who were with her that she might stop all the Ways by which they would defame her and render in her Person the Truth of God hateful and contemptible LXIV This made a terrible Alarm It was not written against the Lutheran Pastours yet those of Holstein took it to them M. Ouve of Flesburg and Burchardus of Sleswick animate the rest by their Writings Preachings and Discourses they Stir up the People against her who would have massacred her if they had found her in the Streets they stir up the Judges and Magistrates impute to her a thousand horrible Crimes worthy of Death as Blasphemy the Overturning of Christianity and of all States both Civil and Ecclesiastick they charge her with a thousand Heresies tell that such and such Hereticks were burnt alive and such after their Death and she was worse than them all Some among them would not dip their Hands i● innocent Blood particularly M. Reinboth Superintendant and Pastour of Duc a Man of Honesty and Conscience who would let none of the Pastours under his Care vent their Spleen against her while he liv'd but Dr. Nemo who succeeded him was not so moderate LXV The Pastours of Susum and Sleswick obtain'd of the Court and Magistrates a Sentence to forbid her Printing-Office and then an Order to take Informations concerning her and hers at Husum but they could find nothing but that they were good People and lived a good just chast and exemplary Life Yet they continued their Pursuits She retired out of the Jurisdiction of the Duke of Holstein to Flensbourg till the Cloud were over She was but few Days there tho' in the greatest Privacy when the Pastours were advertised and it being at Christmas when the People shew more Zeal and Devotion than ordinary and the Pastours preach oftner all their Sermons tended to inspire the People with a Spirit of Rage and Horrour against this Woman so that the Mob in their Fit of Zeal would have thought it great Service to God to have ●orn in Pieces such a Person if they could have found her So she returned to Sleswick the 5th of January 1674. The next Day the Pastours came to have found her and the Magistrates came and broke up her Coffers examining the Widow that came with her at their Town-House and removing her out of Town with a Rabble Upon which A. B. wrote a Letter to them complaining of their Injustice forbidding her Friend to give it till he was about to go out Town How soon they read it they put him in Irons in a Dungeon to live on Bread and Water for five Weeks making him pay Two Crowns a Week for his Treatment which she behoved to send else he must perish in
speak with the Author of Bourignianism detected who might have allowed one of the Writings of A. B. to be put in English and recommended as useful to advance the Interest of true Christianity without making such a Noise about it yet it no sooner comes to his Hands but he presently raises the Hue and-Cry Delusions and Errours and magnifies it into a new and growing Sect that he might get himself a Name and have the Glory to encounter and as he hop'd to defeat it But the Doctor is not so dreadful an Enemy as he would seem at first On-set they who bluster most are not always the most dangerous They who have read the Writings of A. B. and find that the Marrow and Substance of them are the Essential Truths of Christianity and that her singular Sentiments which she says are not necessary to be believed do not contradict those Essential Truths do justly wonder what has moved the Doctor to raise all this Dust and Clamour I know he once profess'd a great Veneration for Thomas à Kempis his Book de Imitatione Christi but he being a Mystick and one who seems to own his being immediately enlightned by the Spirit of God it may be the Doctor despises him now as in his late Letter he declares he has long since turn'd off such Conversation and a deceas'd Friend of his had not only a great Esteem for that Book but also for others of the same Nature such as the Life of M. de Renti c. The Person I mean was the most pious and learn'd H. Scougall of whom the Reverend Dr. Burnet now Bishop of Sarum gave so deserv'd a Character in his Preface to Bishop Bedal's Life and with whom he prevail'd to let him publish his Devout Treatise of the Life of God in the Soul of Man to which he was pleas'd to prefix a Preface and to subjoin a Discourse of his own of a Spiritual Life which little Book also contains an excellent Idea of the Divine Life in the Soul and particularly a Notion of Faith far above the Common and approaching as near as any I know to that of A. B. viz. that it is a kind of Sense and feeling Perswasion of Spiritual Things and has the same Place in the Divine Life that Sense hath in the Natural Now the Doctor professing a great Esteem for these Writings and acknowledging that they contain the Marrow and Substance of Christianity and the Writings of A. B. being the same in Substance and she requiring no Regard to be had to her accessory Sentiments but in so far as any should find them useful for increasing in them the Love of God some think it unaccountable why the Doctor should fall so foul upon her for her accessory Opinions and does not rather honour her for the sake of the main Truths and more favourably and candidly construct the others XV. There are Variety of Dishes in spiritual as well as in bodily Food and that may be very agreeable and healthful to one Palate which another cannot relish why should the Doctor then set up to be a Taster to all the World and because his nice and learned Palate cannot relish some course and homely tho' very substantial Fare should he therefore cry out There is Death in the Pot and frighten all others from tasting of it as far as his Testimony can have Influence We do not use to drive our Flocks from a good Pasture even tho' all the Herbs in it be not equall● nourishing They who have a true Sense and Relish of Divine Things if they were reading the Writings of A. B. would be so affected with the Divine Truths contained therein as they would quite pass over the accessory Opinions they would run to the Pearls and gather the wholsom Food and apply themselves only to Things which direct them to the Love of God and the mortifying of their corrupt Natures The Doctor should have considered the Woe pronounced against all them by whom Offences do come and not rashly have laid a Stumbling-block before his Brethren and by his abusive and unlovely Characters endeavoured to raise Prejudices against and frighten many from A. B's Writings where they might have reaped so much Good and Profit and been brought to a true and lively Sense of Divine Things XVI The Doctor is unjust in his Title Page where he calls his Narratives The Delusions and Errours of A. B. and her Growing Sect. I know no such Sect in the World A. B. was grieved there were so many Sects already so far was she from designing to make a new one I know none who esteem her Writings that are form'd into any Sect. I know of no separate Meeting nor new Rites nor other Symbols that distinguish this Sect. There be Romanists Calvinists Lutherans there be of the Episcopal and Presbyterian Perswasions who esteem those Writings as they do other good Books yet they form no new Sect or Party there are none farther from the Spirit of a Sect than they unless this be called a new Sect to endeavour after the Spirit of the Primitive Church viz. an entire and brotherly Union in Divine Charity XVII He is neither kind nor just to his Country men in telling the World the Infection has seized many in Scotland and some of the better Sort who have been reputed Men of Sence Learning and Probity They might have read those Writings as they do other good Books without being branded for Hereticks and Sectarians he might have discovered what he thought to be Delusions or Errours without defaming his Country-men or bringing up an evil Report upon them his Books might have instructed and confuted them without pointing them out I am perswaded the Doctor would think it a crying Sin to proclaim those Persons to be Thieves Robbers and Murtherers tho' I think his saying so would do them no great Hurt and if he would consider things calmly he would find it no less and perhaps a greater injustice to tell the World they are become Hereticks Blasphemers Idolaters and new Sectarians and so thereby as far as in him lies to murther their Reputation make some to despise and abhor them and excite others to persecute them as Men unworthy to live But as a Conquerour he was resolv'd upon to a Triumph and to add to the Glory they must be led at his Chariot XVIII The Doctor has taken up two long Narratives in fighting with his own Shadow the first in proving that we ought not to believe the high Characters which M. de Cort M. Poiret and others give of the Person and Sentiments of A. B. upon their bare Word and the second that we are not to believe the Characters she gives of herself and her own Sentiments upon her own Testimony without sufficient Enquiry and Evidence And in both these I know none will contend with him In the First he would make Men believe that the great Business of her Friends is to recommend her
Proposal to the Archbishop of Cambray XXIV Pere du Bois and s●me Ma●●s esteem her XXV The Jesuits distur● her XXVI The Bishop grants her desire XXVII The Clergy incensed against her XXVIII 〈◊〉 Bishop retracts his Permission XXIX She waits on her Mother at her Death keeps her Father's House He marries and she retires XXX Lives in great Solitude at St. Andrew XXXI I disturbed by an insolent Youth XXXII Is forced from thence by the War XXXIII Does the last Offices to her Father and succeeds to her Mother's Goods XXXIV Nothing in this contrary to the Laws of God or Man XXXV St. Saulieu accosts her XXXVI She undertakes the Care of a Hospital of Orphans XXXVII Her frequent Sicknesses there XXXVIII St. Saulieu's Persecution of her XXXIX Her Delivery from him and his end XL. She turns her House into a Cloyster XLI The Discovery of the Childrens Sorceries XLII Their Declarations XLIII No ground to disbelieve this Story or that the World swarms with such XLIV The Parents accuse her to the Magistrates XLV 〈…〉 XLVI Malefices to take a way her Life XLVII She wi●hdraws to Gaunt and Mechlin XLVIII Is esteem'd by Learned and Good Men there XLIX Particularly by M. de Cort L. Goes to Holland LI. ● sick at Amderdam and is visited by Persons of all Perswasions Tomb. de la fausse Theol. Part 2. Letter 1. LII Wrote here some of her Books LIII Mr. de Cort cast into a Dun geon by the Jansenists LIV. Her Concern for him and his Deliverance LV. They Pe●●n him in Holstein LVI Her long Sickness LVII M. de Cort had left her his Rights to Noordstrand LVIII They persecute her therefore LIX She goes to Holstein LX. The Quakers write and she Answers LXI Some Anabaptists of Friesland come to her LXII Their Behaviour LXIII The occasion of a new Persecution LXIV The Pastours of Holstein are alarmed LXV She is persecuted at Flensbourg LXVI At Husum and robb'd of her Printing Press Books and Pap●rs LXVII General-Major Vanderwyck appears for her LXVIII The Pastors write against her LXIX She lives in great Sec●ecy and Hazard at Sleswick the People being inflam'd by the Pastors LXX The scattering the Sheets of her Books discovers the Calumnies of the Pastors LXXI The Court gives her Protection LXXII She gives in a Confession of her Faith LXXIII The Church men prevail LXXIV She goes to Hambourg LXXV Her Exerc●se and Writings there LXXVI She is persec●ted by the Pastors there LXXVII Goes to Lutzburg in Friesland LXXVIII Her Employment and Writings there LXXIX Long Sickness LXXX Persecuted anew by her Servant's Sorcerers LXXXI By those who pretended to protect her LXXXII The Pretence for it and the true Cause LXXXIII Goes to Franeker LXXXIV Her Death LXXXV Her Character Matth. 26. 48. 73. Temoign de Vertie Part 1. p. 146. Tomb. de la fausse Theol. Part 3. Letter 1. nu 17 18. Avis salut lett 133. I. The Occasion of the Letter II. Necessary Qualifications in Writers of Narratives und Characters III. These wanting in the Authours of the Preface to the Snake in the Grass and Bourignanism detected IV. The first Authour's rash and spiteful Charge against A. B. V. A. B. Vindicated from the 1 Of blasphemous Pri●● Parole de Dieu p. 127. Temoig de verite Part 2. p. 47. Ibid. p. 59 60. I●id p. 81 ●● VI. From the 2. That she overturn'd Priesthood c. * S● Is 1. VII From the 3 Of Uncharitableness c. * p. 63 161 c. Gen. 6 12. Ps 14. 3. Mic. 7. 2. b Light of the World Part 1. p. 47. c ●emo ig● de ve●i●e Part 2. p. 71. VIII From the 4 Of 〈…〉 the Design 〈…〉 IX From the 5 Of her denying the Satisfaction of Jesus Christ * p 86 87 c. * See Ap●logy p. 59 c. Light of the World p. 139. Light of the World p. 142. X. From the 6 Of her Contempt of the Holy Scriptures * p. 159 c. XI From the 7 Of her wild and barbarous Notions * See the Apology p. 72. c. * Ibid. p. 180. c. XII The undiscreet Treatment of M. Poiret pag. 127 c. XIII The Fury of his Zeal wrong levell'd XIV The Doctor the Author of the Narratives the Occasion of all this Noise● XV. Great Caution to be used in judging of Spiritual Things XVI The Falseness of the Charge of a Sect. XVII His Uacharitableness to his Country-men XVIII In both the Narratives he fights with his own Shadow XIX His Disin genuity in his Narrations XX. Appears in his unjust Way of forming her Character 1. By p●ecing together half Sentiments from different Places 2. By borrowing pieces of it from her avow'd Enemies * Nar. 1. p. 75. 3. By obtruding false Translations Rev. 4. 14 4. By affirming things as said of her without giving Evidence * P●eface §. 2. * p. 3. §. 3. p. 5. §. 4. 5. By drawing Consequences contrary to their Principles which their Sayings do not infer and they expresly disclaim Nar. 1. p. 18. §. 10. c. La paix de bonnes ames p. 186 c XXI The Dr's great Mistake as to the Regard required to the Testimony of Men. See Apology p. 14. c. XXII The true Reasons why A. B. was highly esteemed not adduced by the Doctor Nor those adduced sufficiently disproved As 1. her Sanctity * See Apology p. 137. The Doctor not faithful in relating the Proofs of her Sanctity * See Apology p. 42 43. XXIII His Reasons against her Sanctity disproved and she vindicated from 1. That of a light and vain Conversation 2. From following her own Humour without any regard to the Principles of Religion 3. From her Disobedience to●her Parents 4. From Covetousness because of her Law Suits a Vie exter ● 49. b 〈…〉 c ibid. n. 57. d Vi● exter n. 52 54. e ib. n. 5 49 51. f ib. p. 180. g ib. and Part de Dien n. 9. p. 163. h Parole de Dieu p. 67. i Vie exter p. 186. k Av●s salut p. 86. l Vie Continuè● cap. 12. p. 128 129. Temoign de Verite Part 2. p 3●2 303 * Avertis contre les Tremb p 213 c. XXIV 〈…〉 c. XXV 2. Her Knowledge of secret Thoughts not disproved XXVI 3. Her foretelling things to co●e not disproved * Apology p. 230. c. XXVII 4. The Supernatural Means of her Knowledge not disprov'd XXVIII 〈…〉 c. 3● n. 5 6 〈…〉 XXIX Just Remarks upon what 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 Narra 1. p. 75. Ibid. p 76. XXX Some Remarks upon the Second Narrative 1. He persists in his false Representations 2. In his Curtailings and Glossings Nar. 2. p 4. Light of the World Part 2. p. 84. Light of the World Part 1. p. 92. Nar. 2. p. 5. Light of the World Part ● p. 39. 3. Makes Questions upon a false Supposition 4. He opposeth the Truth and joins with the Pelagians Light of the World Part 2. Conf. 13. p. 85. e 1 Cor. 6 17. D. C. Nar. p. 36 37. 5. A just Character of M Poiret and the Narrator's unchristian dealing with him considered Tem. des S. Ecrit p. 387 388. Ibid. p. 402 4●3 D. C's Essays part 2. pag. 163 164 165. 6 The Narrator's Mistakes as to the comparison betwixt Jes Christ's First birth and the Renovatio● of his Gospel Spirit 7 His rash Censure of things he does not understand Narr 2. p. 49. 8. His 〈…〉 〈…〉 I. The Occasion and Design of the Letter II. Remarks upon Doctor Cock bourn's Letter to his Friend 1. H. judging others condemns himself * Letter p. 2. 2. Unjust 〈…〉 and 〈◊〉 * Pag. 9. c. ● pag. ●● 3. The Doctor in Danger by becoming h●s own Interpreter * Pag. 30. 4. Not just in making of Characters 5. Makes a Controversie where there is none A. B's Writings valuable for their Plainness Simplicity and Disinterestedness 7. The Doctor 's Prenciples not friendly to St. Paul Etoile du Matin p. 23. 8. His Rudeness to A. b's Friends 9. His Rudeness to the Philadelphian III. Remarks upon the second Narrative 1. A. B's Pretences to Sanctity not so high at he describes them for she does not exalt her self above the Prophets c. She does not pretend to be without Sin or Corruption Solid Vertue Part 2. p. 71. She owns her Failings * 1 Narrat p. 49. In that very passage cited by the Author Vie exter p. 150. * Pag. 6. He most injuriously mistakes and translates some of A. B's words Put malicious glosses upon others * Tomb. dela Faus Theol. part 2. let 14. p. 115. Ibid. Ibid. Pag. 7. Pag. 2. 2. A. B. ●as made no Additions to the Essentials of Christianity * a Nar. p. 11. 3. Her Expression about Moses's Chair no mark of Pride * 2 Nar. p. 11. Pierre d● Touche p. 286. 4 Her Pretences to Knowledge not such as he describes them 2 Nar. p. 15. 5. That she requires the same respect to her Sayings as to the Scripture is false 2 Nar. p. 20 22. * Lum en ten part i. pag. 2. 6. The Doctor draws unjust and invidicus Consiquences 1. Instance * Light of the World Part 2. p. 85. Matt. 5. 14. 1. Tim. 4. 16. * Pag. 32. Second Instance * Light of the World Part 2. Conf. 17. p. 128 129 7. The Doctor 's Ignorance of A. B.'s Princ●ples appears 2. Nar. p. 33. n. 7. IV. A 〈◊〉 Surv●r of the Doctor 's whole Performance with Reflections on his undisercet Zeal 2 Nar. p 55. Lette● p. 21. V. 5. The Writer apologizeth for himself I. God alone Lovely Motives to the Love of God 1. He is the Fountain and Accomplishment of all Good II. 2. The Soul's Likeness to him III. 3. Of the Benefits bestowed by him upon the Soul and Body IV. 4. The Provision he has made both for Soul and Body V. 5. His Mercy to become the Saviour of Man VI. 6. His Inacrnation VII 7. His Annihilation VIII 8. His becoming a Teacher and Prophet IX 9. His becoming a Priest X. 10. That he gave his Life even for his Enemies XI 11. The Advantages of Divine Love XII 12. The Vanity of the earthly Love of Riches Honours Pleasures XIII 13. Nothing Lovely but God 14. Without him all is Folly and Misery