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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A43632 Reflections on a late libel intituled, Observations on a late famous sermon intituled, Curse ye Meroz in a letter to our old friend, R.L.; Reflections on a late libel, intituled, Observations on a late famous sermon, intituled, Curse ye Meroz Hickeringill, Edmund, 1631-1708. 1680 (1680) Wing H1824; ESTC R3189 26,477 48

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be to authorize the Bible by an Act and furnish People with Bottoms of Faith If the Observator was not very illiterate in the Laws of the Land he might find Acts of Parliament enow before he was born and almost as old as Paul's for England was the first Christian-Kingdom to make the Bible Canonical and to furnish People with bottoms of Faith For though the Holy Bible was and is the Word of God though never a King or Parliament had told us so yet it does not become Canonical that is a Canon or Law to Subjects till it be commanded by Lawful Authority and therefore our Holy Bible is not onely the Word of God and so Sacred but also the Law of the Land and so Canonical and all the Laws of the Land lawfully made and by lawful Authority are also the Laws of God to which we ought to submit not only for wrath but also for conscience-sake And then where would there be place for Mutinies and Rebellions for the Spirit of Popery or spirit of Foppery This makes that Devil rage at Mr. Hickeringill having great wrath because his time is short but to attacque or answer him or his Sermon only with Calumnies Lyes and Slanders Is this Scholar-like Manlike or Christian-like Truth is Truth whoever proclaims it and 't is a base Requital of Ingenuous men onely to load them with false Invectives and Hatred instead of good Will such Returns will make men of more than Vulgar Learning and Attainments say with the Popish Cardinal Si Populus vult decipi decipiatur If the People have a mind to be blockish so let them continue for all me Yet the Observator seems to be in great trouble of mind that the Sermon should p. 38. call the English the most Generous and ingenuous Nation ah Sycophant in the world the blockish English Was it not greatly done of our little Observer to reflect so severely upon that innocent Passage in the Sermon The most loyal Text in all the Bible Whereupon he very gravely observes p. 4. in these words Comparisons are generally odious especially when between things incomparable Why Are they so indeed Beloved Some of the blockish English that are not so concern'd to lessen the Reputation of the Author or his Sermon would have past by so innocent a Passage and never have knit their brows at it nor yet have mark'd it with so sharp-pointed an Asterism Whil'st you live look to your hits and place your words in order when you come within ken of a little Observer Such a Fool was I that I had thought a man might be very innocent though he had said by way of comparison more Spiritual knowledge and comfort is to be had from the New Testament than the Old and from some Texts and Verses therein than from other and from the latter end of the first Chapter of St. Matthew than from the middle or beginning and yet the Holy Bible is Incomparable that is above all other Books but not when compar'd within its self I never till now knew where or how much St. Paul was a Sinner and to be blam'd by the Observator for saying I thought harmlesly 1 Cor. 15.10 I labour'd more abundantly than they all namely All the Apostles Happy St. Paul that never met with such an Observator amongst all the Corinthians that had a Design to lessen the Reputation of him and his Writings if he had how might they have descanted upon him in the words of our Observator Comparisons Paul are generally odious especially when between things incomparable Surely the Corinthians were very blockish Corinthians that could not spy faults at least not so ill-natur'd and malicious as our Observator and willing to spy faults and expose them to lessen mens Reputation or else our Observator is as blockish as envious to make such severe Observations upon so innocent an Expression and more blockish to imagine that any of the Generous and ingenuous English can be such blockish English as not to see that whilst the Observator is so trivially and keenly busie to lessen the Reputation of Mr. Hickeringil He has onely thereby lessen'd his own if ever he had any amongst the generous and ingenuous English at least This Trifler is I say like Mercury in the Planets good with the good and bad with the bad sometimes he cokes's the Clergy sometimes the Fanaticks as p. 7. because Mr. Hickeringill sayes p. 23. If there was not a Papist in England yet they would fright the People with fears of Popery Now for my part such a plain blockish Englishman was I that I could not spy where the Mischief or the Popery lay in that harmless and true Expression But comes me our Observator and very gravely and formally as he never opens but he makes up his Mouth in Mood and Figure nay you ' scape well if he does not gore you with one or other of his dilemma's a keen tool with which just such another W.S. gall'd him that writ concerning the Contempt of the Clergy sagely observing That This Aphorism is but borrowed from another Brother of the Quill Now if the Observator had not a mischievous Design to spoil Mr. Hickeringill's Credit for ever borrowing any more he need not have told every Body how much he was indebted and did borrow of a Brother of the Quill But dear Sir why may not one Brother borrow of another but that the Observator must be concern'd I dare say that neither of the said Brothers of the Quill nor are there any other Brothers of the Quill in England but would make shift with their own Pittance and scanty Store rather than go a borrowing to our little Observator and if they should he would tell all he met and lessen their Credit spoil them for ever borrowing any more But as honest and Loyal Hearts may joyn so good Wits may jump as well as bad ones and if so then though the Observator would seem to tell Tales out of School 't is but a Tale and a Story of his own making like all the rest of the Sham's he would gladly put upon the Author of that Sermon with Design to make them both odious but such a Rayler will but be the black-patch to Curse ye Meroz And most People think that the Author has hired this Zany to set him off with greater Lustre and provoke him or his Friends to a Vindication of himself and his Sermon both which but that Comparisons are odious except when a mans Credit and Reputation lyes at stake may possibly appear in good time as innocent polite unblemisht and unreproveable as any other of his Coat let Lyers and Slanderers vent their utmost Gall and Bitterness our blessed Saviour the holy Apostles pious King Charles the greatest Innocence cannot escape them Nor can the worst of the Authors Adversaries be able to prove in any the worst Instances of his whole Life that any Infirmity Sin or Temptation has befallen him but such