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A65532 The antapology of the melancholy stander-by in answer to the dean of St. Paul's late book, falsly stiled, An apology for writing against the Socinians, &c. Wettenhall, Edward, 1636-1713. 1693 (1693) Wing W1487; ESTC R8064 73,692 117

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Dean thinks fit to deal with me I am not ashamed of any Part of what I said My Argument then stood thus As indeed all Controversies amongst Protestants are most unseasonable in such a Juncture wherein under God nothing but an Union of Counsels and joining Hands and Hearts can preserve the Reformation and scarce any thing more credit and justify it than an Union in Doctrinals so above all other Controversies none can well be thought of worse tim'd than this Of which ill timing it I gave a very particular Proof too warm it seems for him to touch upon and therefore he slipp'd it away between his Fingers as if it had not been But how answers he my Argument First he disjoints it then answers to what Parts of it he pleases and to those Parts in what Order he pleases And finally never considers the Parts as connected and together adding Strength to the main Conclusion Indeed such dealing as this with some Scorn interlaced is his usual way of confuting What he says worth notice I shall reflect upon The first Member of my Argument he thinks fit to ampliate and will say a little more that they i. e. all Controversies amongst Protestants which was the Subject of my Proposition are always unseasonable for there is no Juncture seasonable to broach Heresies and oppose Truth But may there be no Controversies especially amongst Protestants which broach not Heresies The Denial of the Trinity duly stated I allow to be Heresy But we in the first Member of the Argument speak of all Controversies amongst Protestants Now do all Dissensions amongst Protestants arise to Heresy on one side or other God forbid Again in times of publick Peace may there not be very seasonably amicable Conferences and Arguings between those who dissent from one another in order to clearing Difficulties and so to brotherly Accord Even those Treaties are certainly some kind of Controversies though some Men may be very unfit for them and therefore have little Kindness for them and those I stand to it ought to be held in due Season But at present I did not think even these kind of Arguings seasonable but would have them also suspended and was of Opinion that as things stand all Protestants suffering each other to worship God in his own way according to the Conscience of each should join against a common Enemy What I said may be Truth and advisable and as far as I yet see is so What Mr. Dean adds is not true and his Proof of it is very insufficient to say no worse For he would prove all Controversies to be always unseasonable because some are so I will not tell him that even Heresies may be and daily are in University-Disputations and like Theological Exercises strongly argued for and Truth opposed not only for exercising and ripening Scholars but that all the Strength Heresies have may be detected and enervated and the weaker Side of Truth secured so that thus also all Controversies asserting Heresy and opposing Truth are not always unseasonable So great a Disputant as Mr. Dean ought not to have advanced so universal a Proposition without more Caution As to his defending Fundamental Truths I have already spoken However seasonable the defending them may always be I say in a word the changing of them can be never so Next he repeats two other Members of my Argument and begins with carping at the last thus Is the Vnion in Doctrinals ever the greater that Socinians boldly and publickly affront the Faith of the Church and no body appears to defend it I answer that I am not for any Affronts in what Cause soever for I seldom see they do good but most of all am I against Affronts to the publick Faith of the Church The Socinians I am informed were silent some while upon my Paper till others blew the Coals afresh It is utterly against my Mind and grieves my Soul if they do affront the establish'd Church and 't is more than I know God forbid I should excuse them for it I would have them and all Men to be peaceable meek and humble But in case of such Affronts the Church God be blessed has better Ways to vindicate the Faith and her own Honour than the Fancies and new Notions of private Doctors who consult her not but run perfectly upon their own Heads and advance their own Principles being busy and intermeddling in every Controversy that is moved I boldly aver less would be said against the Truth did not such Persons appearing for it by their pretended Defences of it and by the haughty Stile and Manner of penning them give new Matter to the Adversary Those daily fresh Provocations and the Effects of them are what I did in part and must still insist upon as one main Reason for my Suit for Forbearance But will the World think that we are all of one Mind because there is §. 22. disputing but on one side Then they will think us all Socinians c. I answer Let us go on in Conformity to our Church-Doctrine and especially in an holy humble peaceable obliging Conversation and touching our Judgment in Doctrinals the World will sooner credit our Practice and the Articles or Confession the Liturgy Catechism Homilies Constitutions and such publick Acts of our Church than twenty little Vindications of private Doctors And as for the Pamphlets of some obscure and anonymous Persons I still say again 't is Opposition for the main that gives them Celebrity and Life Heresies have from Age to Age still been transmitted to Posterity by sundry Consutations they have received Had we had only the Holy Scripture and our Creed with a few practical and devotional Books delivered down to us we should have been united in a plain Faith in Charity and Holiness built thereupon and the very Names as well as the Errors of the antient Hereticks had been long since buried and unknown Whereas every Age now by what has been writ against Heresies know how to refine and new vamp them What further are in my poor Opinion the meetest Ways to provide against Socinianism as well as all the other isms or dissenting Parties I shall speak perhaps anon In the mean time I must not let pass a very signal Favour of Mr. Dean's to render me if he could obnoxious to the Government in making me privy to a very dangerous Secret or great Truth fit for all Governments to Pag. 23. consider truly their Majesties Chaplain in ordinary ought to admonish the Government of their Oversights a Truth he says which I have unwarily confess'd and he is in the right of it for I thought not of it nay I neither before knew nor do I now believe it to be generally a Truth that every Schism in the Church is a new Party and Faction in the State which are always troublesom to Government when it wants their Help This may be true of every vast or multitudinous Schism when the Number infected come to
THE ANTAPOLOGY OF THE Melancholy Stander-by In Answer To the DEAN of St. Paul's late Book falsly stiled An Apology for Writing against the Socinians c. Disputandi Pruritus est Scabies Ecclesiae Errare possum Haereticus esse nolo Printed in the Year MDCXCIII ADVERTISEMENT THE following Answer was writ for the main Body of it some time ago at the Author's Home in great Disadvantage as will appear by divers Passages in it Since he wrote it he has had Occasion to come abroad and though in his way he has met with divers Books which at home he wanted yet some very needful ones he could not come by or in travelling had not leisure to search If therefore in certain Instances Authorities be wanting and in others not particularly or exactly enough cited he hopes the Reader will pardon what is more his present Infelicity than Fault Had not the Usage he has found with the pretended Apologist been unsufferably bad he had born it in Silence And he hopes he has here vindicated himself without Gall though with much Imperfection CONTENTS of the several Sections § 1. THE Dean of St. Paul ' s calumnious Way of apologizing no Argument of his Skill in School-Divinity 2. The true State of the Matter of Fact between Dr. Sherlock and the melancholy Stander-by 3. A further Explication of the same together with some Account of the Doctrine of the Trinity and where the melancholy Stander-by would have Divines stop both as to Faith and as to Peace Dr. Sherlock stopped not here 4. A Descent to Particulars injuriously charged on me by the Dean of St. Paul ' s and an Account of his Arts in perverting my Sense 5. What I meant by the Latitude wherein I would have Faith left and what by Simplicity 6. A Defence of the Reflection I made on the Master of the Sentences and the School-Doctors as to their Disputes and Decisions in the Doctrine of the Trinity 7. My Apology as to the Idleness and Unskilfulness in the School-Doctors charged upon me by Mr. Dean 8. A Vindication of what I avouched touching the Judgment of the first Reformers as to the School-Divinity and School-terms in our Prayers The Judgment of later Divines as to this second Point 9. An Answer to Mr. Dean's Objection touching my Plea for sticking to Scripture-Language 10. It seems not possible by any Words so to fix the Sense of all controverted Places of Scripture but that Hereticks may have Evasions Yet this is no Prejudice to the Vse of Scripture-Terms and Language 11. A Defence of the Latitude I plead for and by the by of the Negative Belief 12. An Answer to Mr. Dean's Objection of one Faith 13. A Reassertion of my Reasons for forbearing new Discourses on this Subject by some Account of the Advantage Dr. Sherlock ' s Book of the Trinity has given the Socinians and Papists 14. A Reassertion of my other Reason by the late Writings that the Improvements pretended to be made in Explication of this Doctrine have only imbroiled and exposed it Of Geometrical Attempts this way 15. My Defence for settling the usual Doctrine of the Trinity upon the Decrees of the Nicene and Constantinopolitan Councils Of some Niceties in the Athanasian Creed 16. An Answer to the Imputation of Hobbeism and Mr. Dean proved to contradict himself 17. An Answer to a Particular or two forcibly brought in by the Apologist and as would seem merely to inodiate me 18. My Assertion that some present Writings in this Controversy have given Advantages to Atheists vindicated 19. A Vindication of my self from Theism A Profession of my Belief of the Trinity and Incarnation and of the whole revealed Christian Religion My Sense of Scorners 20. A Reassertion of the Danger of disputing Fundamentals The Dean changes them instead of defending them which the Author hopes other present Writers will not 21. A Vindication of my last Argument touching the present Unseasonableness of publick disputing this Controversy 22. An Answer to the Dean's Objection that if we dispute not the World will think us all Socinians and to an Insinuation of his for rendring me obnoxious to the Government 23. An Account of what I meant by fi● Time and Place for taking the Socinian Controversies into Consideration and a Vindication of what I proposed in the mean time 24. An Answer to some Questions which Mr. Dean puts to me and particularly as to admitting Socinians to some kind of Communion Some Points by him unduly stated and imputed to the Socinians 25. A Reassertion of my Sense touching the Acts of Parliament in Favour of Dissenters and an Answer to some Reproaches 26. A Reassertion of what I asserted done as to Reformation in King Edward the VIth's Time without a Convocation 27. An Answer to his good Will for reforming me out of the Church His false Charge on me touching Dr. Wallis noted and his Discession from the Doctrine of the Church r●asserted His Hypothesis justifies Nestorianism 28. An Answer to his conclusory Aspersions and an Animadversion upon his Promise of desending his Vindication of the Trinity The ANTAPOLOGY of the Melancholy Stander-by In Answer to the Dean of St. Paul ' s late Book falsly stiled An Apology for writing against the Socinians SOME Men have such a peculiar Talent at Insolence and ill §. 1. Language that it is difficult for a modest Person or one who would observe the common Rules of good Manners to give them a meet Answer In the Rank of such Writers I am sorry I must place the late Apologist I could have wished upon many Accounts that in the Reflections he has been pleased to make on my Paper he had for his own sake as well as mine used more Temper Reproach and Scorn is an easy way of confuting And 't is not without Difficulty that humane Nature forbears rendring an angry or disdainful Reply to haughty and ill-natur'd Answers In such case Calcare fastum majori fastu seems to too many a Point of Justice but I shall not esteem it so desiring to pardon such Practice in others rather than in my self Composing therefore my Mind and quitting as near as I am able all Passion and Self-love over-looking the Contempt and many of the Indignities and false Imputations yea and some at least seemingly malicious Insinuations to those in Authority which he has thought fit to print against me I shall return nothing but the Words of Truth and Soberness without Cavil or even Contradiction any further than Justice requires Only because an accused Person cannot ordinarily make his Defence unless he be admitted as well to discover and complain of the Wrong done him as to deny and disprove and being that the fairest Laws of Dispute allow as occasion offers to retort upon the Adversary his own Objections these things I must demand to be lawful for me which Liberty being granted me I shall endeavour without warm Water to wipe off the Dirt that Mr. Dean has cast upon me
are but only distinct each Person has a Self-consciousness of his own and knows and feels it self if I may so speak as distinct from the other Divine Persons The Father has a Self-consciousness of his own whereby he knows and feels himself to be the Father and not the Son nor Holy Ghost And the Son in like manner feels himself to be the Son and not the Father nor the Holy Ghost And the Holy Ghost feels himself to be the Holy Ghost and not the Father nor the Son as James feels himself to be James and not Peter nor John I say then if the Father hath a Self-consciousness of his own whereby he knows and feels himself to be the Father and not the Son nor the Holy Ghost as James feels himself to be James and not Peter c. then both is he separate from the Son and Holy Ghost and his Self-consciousness also separate from the Self-consciousness of each the other And again if the Father Son and Spirit feel himself to be himself and not the other as James feels himself to be James and not Peter nor John then must each feel himself separate from the other For 't is manifest to me that in knowing and feeling my self not to be Peter nor James I know and feel my self separate severed or several from them Nay it is by knowing and feeling my self separate that I know and feel my self distinct If therefore the Father knows and feels himself distinct from the Son and from the Holy Ghost as we Men know our selves distinct from one another he then must know and feel himself separate also unavoidably or else he does not know and feel himself distinct as we do He must therefore upon this Hypothesis be separate as well as distinct from the other Besides three infinite Minds as he there and p. 50. and so onwards most frequently and familiarly stiles the three Persons and one infinite Mind that is three sames and not three sames are to me an unavoidable Contradiction But it had been at least no Contradiction to have said one infinite Mind or a Substance may have three manners of Subsisting or three several Relations which was the old way of speaking and which if it had been kept to the melancholy Stander-by had forborn his Suit That ancient Notion of a Divine Person is more consistent and much less obnoxious though how far satisfactory it may be to all Men he disputes not however he does account it to be the common Orthodox Doctrine now many hundred Years received And here he would have our Divines to stop as a common Boundary for Peace and his Reason is because here our Articles which were as is said in the very Title of them agreed upon for the avoiding of Diversities of Opinions and for the establishing Consent touching Religion do stop expressing only or stating to us the Doctrine of three Persons in the Terms wherein from old Times it has been delivered down and therefore in all Likelihood designing only the old Sense This is but more clearly and explicitely what the Suit for Forbearance desired of Dr. Sherlock and other present Writers in this Controversy Wherefore upon the whole how just in this Case the Imputation of a disguised Heretick of a Man spiteful against the Cause and Persons who maintain it a Wolf in Sheeps clothing and like Characters fastned upon the Author of it are God will judg if the World do not Had I either disputed against the old Notion or assigned any new one or ventured at new and dangerous Explications as some have done Mr. Dean had had some Colour for thus treating me But sith I have not I must tax this Language also as downright Calumny But to come off from this querulous Parenthesis Dr. Sherlock would not or did not stop here as is apparent by what I have transcribed actually out of his Book however he tells the World I did not read it In which Imputation I will frankly acknowledg every tittle of Truth there is namely I had not when I writ read his Book all over for it was taken out of my Lodging without my Knowledg or Consent before I had done with it and perhaps the Doctor has no Reason to complain of that Mischance But I had looked over all and carefully read a great part taken Notes out of it as will appear by my Adversaria of that Month yea indeed transcribed much more than I alledged And I alledged not as the Dean to the end he might shuffle off a distinct Answer to me and the Vindication of his Novelties is pleased to stile them broken Passages out of Pag. 30. his Book but intire Definitions and Propositions which contained the Substance of this Hypothesis as he stiles it And I do affirm the Doctor in what I so cited p. 14 15. of my Paper has gone most plainly beyond and contrary to the Doctrine both of the Fathers Schools and Protestant Divines And in his Apology he seems to have gone beyond himself For he at least four times calls our Lord Jesus a God incarnate p. 4 26 27 31. Now if the Son be a God incarnate then the Father is a God not incarnate And the same ought to be said according to this way of speaking of the Holy Ghost Nay it is actually said by him in these Words This Confession proves the Holy Ghost a God Vind. p. 190. lin ult I say then if there be a God and a God and a God unavoidably there must be three Gods And this is the very Absurdity the Socinians would reduce their Adversaries to Therefore the Doctor so defends the Mystery of the Trinity or so confutes Heresy as to run into the very same Absurdity to which his Adversaries would reduce him which I hope we may say without Offence is most unreasonable most dangerous and at present most unseasonable the thing charged by the Melancholy Stander-by This the Doctor might have evaded had he been content to have taken up with the old Acceptation or Definition of a Person in divinis or to have spoken with Scripture Jesus Christ is God manifest in the Flesh or if that must not suffice as is usual God incarnate But the adding an individuating Particle a to the Name of that common Essence God and then predicating that Name so determined touching the three Persons as it reduces the Subjects touching which it is predicated into the Rank of common Individuals so it leaves the Essence when taken without that individuating Particle in the Rank of a common Species And so contrary to the constant Doctrine even of the Schools God shall be predicated of the Father Son and Holy Ghost as a Species of Individuals as Man is of Abraham Isaac and Jacob whom all acknowledg to have been three Men and as much must the Father Son and Holy Ghost be three Gods Which if it be not most grievous Heresy and particularly the Heresy of * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
Act and where I borrowed his Book of the Trinity before I wrote touching either And I must take the Liberty to say that as I read both so it appears not in the least by any thing I have writ that I was ignorant in either But no Dissenters have any Benefit by that Act who do not renounce Socinianism By your good Favour Sir this is too roundly and boldly said Is there no Favour to Dissenters but that of allowing them publick Assemblies What do you think of a tacit Connivance if not at their stay at home yet allowing them quietly to come to our Congregations and joining therewith as far as they are able What of a kind of vetuit inquiri I declare I would not consent that the Socinians should have the Liberty some other N. Cs. have to teach publickly all their Opinions in separate Congregations for I would have most or all of the Controversies betwixt them and us silenced and therefore I said very much if not full enough was done already in their Favour and that the Authority which passed that Act could relax more if necessary And I hope that Authority namely King and Parliament will in time relax what more is necessary for such an Vnion as is possible In the mean while neither did I nor had I the occasion which is now given me to speak what God be blessed was before relaxed by other Acts perhaps not with any great liking of some Men notwithstanding I had those Relaxations even then in mine Eye and I can truly say they came into the Consideration which moved me to say what I did on this Point There was such a thing as a Writ de Haeretico comburendo which I have heard some Persons learned in the Law say did lie even at Common Law and I am sure the Canonists tell us prevailed by Custom throughout Christendom And we know one Michael Servetus in whose Writings Grotius could never find what some charged upon him was burnt even at Geneva by no Papists in the prevailing Virtue of that Custom I will not speak on what Pretences This Writ is now as I have heard taken away and so it may be hoped the Custom here in a fair way to be abolished by express Statute whereby possibly some Men may think a very considerable Benefit no less than Security of Lives and Estates may redound to them in case some such of their Friends as Mr. Dean were in the Place they affect As to those odious Terms with which he hath interlaced his next Paragraph His beloved Socinians We may see what a hearty good Will he has to the Cause This is such a scandalous Representation of the Bishops of England which in due time when the Dean of St. Paul's comes to be one of them they may resent These are more of the Favours for his Liberality wherein I may come to be beholden to him in that Day when the Reproaches and Calumnies which Men have sustained for the sake of Christ or which is much like the same for Peace amongst Christian People with a Design of Holiness shall add to the Weight of their Glory But I must after another sort answer to that heavy Charge which follows §. 26. Pag. 29. of my tempting the Bishops to dispute the Bounds of their Authority and that through my Ignorance both of ancient and later Histories or Practice The thing I had said was this That to the authorizing every Alteration which should be made in our Liturgy or Canons I did not judg the Concurrence of such a lower House of Convocation as is now customary to be necessary And that if this Course had been observed in K. Edward the Sixth's time we had had no reformed Liturgy perhaps no Reformation at all And for Proof that the Synods for such Affairs were of old made up of Bishops and fewer Doctors I had appealed to the Practice of the Primitive and truly Catholick Church This is in Mr. Dean's Language without any Provocation a setting up the Authority of Bishops against the lower House a threatning unruly Presbyters and that through my understanding no better the Practice of the Primitive Church than I do K. Edward the VIth's Reformation To draw my Answer into as short a Compass as I can waving to that Purpose his usual Exaggerations as apparently undue waving also the known Diminutions of Episcopal Power the Source and Original thereof due to Rome and Sectaries and the Mischief which Religion and the Church sustain thereby I will speak only to what I perceive pinches him most the Reformation first made of our Liturgy and publick Worship in King Edward the IVth's Days which though I did not say or suppose to be made by the Body of the Bishops in opposition to the Presbyters as he falsly charges upon me for as I have no such Word so I better understand the History yet I did and I do say it was made without a lower House of Convocation and by whom I shall speak particularly enough before I have done Now the Evidence on which I ground all I say is such publick Remains and Histories of those Days and Affairs as are commonly to be had such are King Edward's Injunctions Order of Communion-Service c. First printed A. D. 1547. collected and with other things reprinted soon upon his late Majesty K. Charles II. his happy Restoration with a Preface of Dr. Sparrow's to the Collection but the Collection not made by Dr. Sparrow himself as he himself when Bishop of Exeter told me for had he had the over-ruling it he said he would have put in more Materials but by such who consulted their own present Profit such are too Fox ' s Acts and Monuments Part 2. Book 9. Sir John Hayward ' s Life and Reign of K. Edward the Sixth Dr. Heylin ' s History of the Reformation and Dr. Burnet ' s now Bishop of Salisbury more lately If Mr. Dean has had any Access to any Archives or more authentick Records than those by which these Historians were guided he would have done well to have published them In the mean while I with others am content in this Matter to admit for Truth what these concurrently have delivered To our Point then That blessed Prince K. Edward VI. began his Reign January 28 1546 7 and if we will take together all that was done towards the Reformation of Religion in the first nine Months of his Reign Sir John Hayward of whose Veracity I find no Reason to doubt has thus drawn up the Sum Soon after the Beginning of the young Life and Reign of Edw. VI. pag. 45 46. King's Reign certain Injunctions were set forth for removing Images out of Churches which had been highly not only esteemed but honoured before and for abolishing or altering some other antient Observations in the Church Hereupon Commissioners were dispatched into all Parts of the Realm to see those Injunctions to be executed with those divers Preachers were sent
to imitate §. 24. my Saviour and answer one captious Question with another 1st He asks Whether I will allow them whom I grant to be in Possession of the Faith of the Trinity and Incarnation to keep Possession of it to teach explain and confirm it to their People And I will ask him Whether he never saw certain Royal Injunctions assigning fit Subjects for Sermons Some in Queen Elizabeth's Time and others since ordinarily transmitted to the Clergy by the Primate of the Kingdom that Preachers shall in their Sermons purely and sincerely declare unto their Hearers the Word of God and in the same exhort them to good Works to Works of Faith as Mercy and Charity that they shall forbear difficult and controversial Points Now although this of the Trinity be not that I remember mentioned yet I am sure there is the same Reason of it as of those that are And by his Favour I will ask him further whether it be not fit to obey such Injunctions or whether the Doctrine of the Trinity be not as difficult and remote from the common Peoples Understanding as is the Doctrine of Predestination and God's Decrees Notwithstanding this I yield In the Name of God let Ministers at due Season as on Trinity-Sunday and the Feast of the Nativity of our Lord preach to their People as they judg it most edifying the Doctrines of the Trinity and Incarnation only let them do it plainly easily purely and sincerely according to Scripture and not with Innovations of their own His 2d Particular I expected would have been a Question also as he promised but he had either forgot his Promise or changed his Mind and so he puts the Case categorically thus I hope says Mr. Dean he that is the melancholy Stander-by does not propose this Negative Belief as he calls it as a Term of Communion that though we know them to deny the Trinity and Incarnation yet if they will agree not publickly to oppose and contradict this Faith we shall receive them to our Communion Now though he has not proposed this in form of a Question yet I will answer it with a very short one Why not At least as far forth as we know that is as they profess they can in Conscience join with us Nay has not Mr. Dean done it or would he not in the Case I shall now put namely Suppose him or me to be in the Pulpit beginning our Prayer before Sermon either as some do with the Collect Prevent us O Lord c. or with some Form or Conceptions of our own in which notwithstanding is nothing of Controversy intermix'd and to subjoin to our own Prayer that of our Lord's Suppose in like manner after Sermon we should use either that Collect Grant we beseech thee c. or some Prayer of our own and then give the Blessing to the whole Congregation promiscuously Admit now that in the Beginning of our very first Prayer we should have seen a Person whom we know to be a good Liver and professing the common Christianity in other Points but so unhappy as that he cannot be convinced of the Doctrine of three Persons in the Godhead as it is ordinarily taught or of the Incarnation of the second Person though he does from his Heart believe and confess Jesus Christ to be the Son of God and hold all other the Articles of the Apostles Creed would or should either Mr. Dean or I in such case stop as soon as we saw that Person in the Congregation and bid him go out refusing he should join with us in those Prayers or receive his Share in that Blessing to both which he heartily says Amen that is Shall I not admit him to Communion as far as I know he does consent and desire to communicate with me and other Orthodox Christian People I know the Story of St. John the Evangelist and Cerinthus but Cerinthus was anotherguise Heretick than such Person as in the Character supposed I might animadvert as I pass that in pag. 27. Mr. Dean imputes sundry Points very iniquitously stated to the Socinians which yet they hold not as he states them I am not concerned to defend the Socinian Errors but as I love Truth and Peace I cannot forbear observing that he here wrongs them First as to what he speaks of the Object of Christian Worship if he as some in the World had had personal dealing with the Generality of his Parishioners as to Matters of Conscience he would say that the Ignorance of many Church-People and so the Errors of their Conceptions both touching God and touching the three Persons in the Godhead much more alter as to them the Object of the Christian Worship than do the Errors of the Socinians Again whereas he says the Socinians deny that the Son of God offered himself a Sacrifice to expiate our Sins I do so far depend upon my Memory as to avow they affirm our Lord Jesus to have been Victimam verè expiatoriam a Sacrifice truly expiatory they are the Words of the Author of the short Exposition of the Apostles Creed whether Slicktingius as I rather think or Crellius I cannot now tell having not seen my Book divers Years Nor do they deny the Love of God to Mankind in giving his only Son to be our Prophet and Saviour and Redeemer too nor his Intercession as their High Priest in virtue of his Blood shed as an Atonement for our Sins They differ from us perhaps in explaining the Nature of Expiation and Satisfaction but both an Expiation and a Satisfaction they allow Some Men write against them without understanding them But I forbear further intermeddling in these kinds of Injuries though to use Mr. Dean's Words it were easy to enlarge on this Argument I am not writing a Defence Pag. 28. of the Socinians only I am vindicating a peaceable Design in a Man that is none but loves Godliness Vertue and good Works where-ever he meets with them and who may chance sooner to perswade many Socinians to be silent by making it apparent he would not wrong them however odious others make them by unjust Charges than will those be able who try their Skill and strain their Veracity in fierce and haughty Disputes against them Men may have Wit enough if they have Justice done them to understand when it is fit to be quiet who will scarce sit down silent under publick Calumnies In the next Place Mr. Dean falls upon me for saying very much is done §. 25. namely for present Union by the late Act in Favour of Dissenters and taxes me here again according to his wonted Civility with pretending to give Account of Acts of Parliament as I do of other Books without seeing them A strange kind of Incredulity touching my Reading has possess'd this Gentleman Must I not be believed to have read Books except I produce Witnesses that heard or saw me read them I can produce Witnesses now in London where I bought this