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A33220 Seventeen sermons preach'd upon several occasions never before printed / by William Clagett ... with The summ of a conference on February 21, 1686, between Dr. Clagett and Father Gooden, about the point of transubstantiation. Clagett, William, 1646-1688. 1689 (1689) Wing C4396; ESTC R7092 211,165 600

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that defile a man but to eat with unwashen hands defileth not a man i. e. doth not by any means affect his Soul or his Conscience for in this respect he is neither better for washing nor worse for letting it alone and to think otherwise is a Superstition hurtful to your selves and dishonourable to God and of very bad consequence though it be not so impudent and notorious an abuse as the making void of God's Law by the other leud Tradition that I mentioned before It is to this purpose that we are to understand the method and design of our Saviour's Discourse in this place in answer to the Objection of the Pharises brought against the Disciples From which answer there are some things to be gathered well worth our observation 1. That it is sufficient to overthrow the Authority of a pretended Tradition that it is contrary to the Commandment of God. 2. That if there be one Traditionary Doctrine that notoriously contradicts the Law of God that one instance is sufficient to overturn the credit of that Tradition which pretends to deliver unwritten Doctrines of equal Authority with those that are written 3. That the universal consent of some one Age or more that such and such Doctrines were delivered by word of mouth many Ages before is no argument that they were so delivered 4. That we have a great reason to stick to the word of God delivered to us in the Scriptures and to examine all Doctrines and Rules which are said to be necessary to Salvation by that Rule and to reject the Authority of unwritten Traditions 1. That it is sufficient to overthrow the Authority of a pretended Tradition that it is contrary to the Commandment of God For if when Tradition is pretended for any Doctrine or Practice it be not enough to shew that the same Doctrine or Practice is inconsistent with what is plainly required in the Scriptures which are acknowledged by all to contain the word of God I say if this be not enough then our Saviour used an insufficient Argument against the pretended Tradition of not suffering the Son that was under a Vow of the contrary to relieve his Father or Mother that it made void the Commandment of God. But doubtless our Saviour was so far from using a bad Argument that he used the best and most convincing of all And truly if we did not in this case consider our Saviour's Authority yet it must be a monstrous prejudice that keeps any Man from discerning the strength of this Argument against the Authority of any unwritten Doctrine that it is contrary to what is written for nothing is more certain than that Contradictions cannot be true and yet they must be true if that Doctrine for which unwritten Tradition is pretended can be of God though it contradicts the written Tradition which is by all acknowledged to be Divine But as plain as this argument is yet it is very well for us that we find our blessed Saviour giving such Authority to it because there are Christians in the World bearing up themselves upon the Tradition of the Church that are loth to admit this Argument which we have no cause to be amazed at because it is an utter Confutation of all their pretences We charge them with having brought into the Church new Articles of Faith and new Doctrines of Worship which are not only very different from what was taught at first by Christ and his Apostles but some of them contrary thereunto as we can shew them out of the Scriptures But this way of proceeding doth by no means content them and they insist upon it that the Cause may be tryed otherwise For say they You acknowledge that our Church was once a pure Church and taught the Gospel sincerely but if as you say she departed from the pure Faith and Worship which the Apostles left it is impossible but this must have been very notorious because it could not have been done without opposition and resistance from some that must needs observe it Tell us therefore when were these new and false Doctrines introduced Who were the Men that brought them in Who were the first that made the discovery What Council condemned them after they were discovered For if none of these things can be shewn it is absurd to think that any such alteration should have been as you say Which reasoning amounts to thus much that it is impossible we can be sure that in the compass of a thousand Years there was a great alteration happened in the state of Religion unless withal we can tell how it came about and just when it came about the precise time and the punctual manner and circumstances thereof which is just as if a Man almost desperately sick of a Disease that had been for some Years growing upon him should prove to his Friend that he is as well as ever he was in his Life for says he You know I was well once and if I am now so ill as you say pray shew me the time when this Disease first happened the manner how and what Physitians were called about me which kind of arguing would certainly prove no more than that the Disease had taken his head When the Servants came and told their Lord that the tares came up with the wheat it was excusable in them to say We sowed good seed whence hath it these tares But when their Master told them An enemy hath done this if they had disputed and told him It was impossible there should be any Tares at all because he could not tell punctually that very Night when they were sown and who the Persons were that took the malicious pains to sow them then they had been very inexcusable thus to renounce their own certain knowledge for the sake of a vain Speculation Now we are very sure that the Apostles did at first sow nothing in the Church but good and true Doctrine Our Fathers that lived about fourteen hundred Years after found quite another sort of Doctrine gotten into the Church and some of them contrary to what the Apostles taught as the Scriptures manifestly shew and yet there have been a long time and still there are certain Disputers that go about to stagger others with such like questions as we have been speaking of and teach them to defie all reasoning out of the Scriptures till these questions are satisfied What Age What Year of our Lord were these Errors brought into the Church Who were they that brought them in and who first complained of them Now although a very reasonable account both may be and hath been given of the Persons the Time and the Manner and the Degrees by which such Corruptions got into the Church yet it is very unreasonable to expect that every Christian should be able to answer these Questions punctually because it requires more Labour and Reading than generally they have either leisure or ability to go through with but withal it is very needless because
Catholick Church both before and after her Reformation And thus I have gone through the task I set my self and I hope need to make no Apology for entertaining you with a Controversie of this nature which indeed ought to be no Controversie amongst us But if it were needful I have this to say Whereas the Church of England does not pretend to be an Infallible Guide or Judge and yet requires the People to believe as she believes to profess what she professeth and to do what she injoyneth it is very fit that her Ministers should sometimes make it plain that she requires this because she has reason so to do and is not in these points deceived though she does not pretend that she cannot err in any I know not whether I have made the things I have discoursed plain enough to every understanding but whether that be so or not yet every one may perceive that we appeal to his Reason for the truth and honesty of our Cause and for my own part if I understood nothing else of the Merits of it I had rather be of a Church which pretends to guide me with Reason than of another that would govern me without it and that because the former is likely to take more care not to mislead me than the latter needs to do which when it has gained me to an implicit Faith and a blind Obedience may lead me whether she pleases As for what I have now said I declare in the presence of God that I have offered nothing to you but what I believe my self and farther that I am not conscious to my self of any reason why I am fixed in the Communion of this Church in opposition to the other but a full conviction of the Errours of that Church which if I should profess or practice I could not entertain the least hopes of Salvation And we who are thus convinced are as I take it bound in conscience to take seasonable opportunities of confirming our Brethren in our Communion and enabling them as well as we can to make it appear that the Arguments and the Answers of the other side are unsatisfactory and vain as I have in some part endeavoured to shew at this time We should indeed not be unwilling to take pains to recover those to the knowledge of the Truth that are educated in damnable Errours but there is much more reason to do all we can to retain those in the profession of the Truth that have been educated in it seeing if they revolt we cannot have that hope of their Salvation which we would fain have of theirs who want sufficient means to discover them It were a blessed state of the Church indeed if all being united in true Faith and Worship we had nothing to do but to perswade and exhort men and to take care of them that they live answerably thereto but since we have two Works upon our hands to guard you against Errour as well as to warn you against a wicked Life I do not see how we can discharge our Duty but by doing one as well as the other And that I may not say nothing to the latter I am to tell you in the Conclusion that we do not make the Communion of the best Church in the World to be all in all a man may go to Hell in the Communion of a pure Church and without true Repentance and Reformation the best and purest Church that ever was since the Gospel began could have done him no service And I take it to be as great a Corruption as can be readily thought of for any Church to pretend to save men by a Trick and send them to Heaven any other way than the plain way of keeping the Commandments of God and our Saviour Jesus Christ Keep therefore the pure Profession of the Christian Faith but withal keep a good Conscience void of offence towards God and towards man Hold fast the form of sound words But still remember that if your Works be not answerable your Faith is vain For not the hearers of the law but the doers thereof shall be justified Not he that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdom of heaven but he that doth the will of our Father which is in Heaven The Second Sermon MATTH XVIII 7. Wo unto the World because of Offences for it must needs be that Offences come But wo to that man by whom the Offence cometh THE great end of the Gospel is to bring Mankind to Salvation and in order thereunto to convert them from Sin and from all dangerous Error and to lead them to a right Faith and a Holy Life But it is too evident that this end is not attained Universally And if any one should be tempted to suspect that the Christian Religion is not therefore a Divine Revelation because it has in so great part failed of the end which it pretended to pursue he may be easily brought to assurance again by considering the vast good which Christianity hath done in the World but especially by observing that the Gospel hath foretold that all men would not believe and obey Our Blessed Lord himself testified that many were called but few were chosen and that strait was the Gate and narrow the Way that leadeth to Life and few there be that find it Nay inasmuch as he hath forewarned us of a Day of Judgment and hath told us beforehand That the word which he hath spoken the same should judge us at the last day This was a manifest Declaration that he did not pretend to lead men to Faith and Repentance by such means as could not but be effectual but only by such as were sufficient if we would in any measure comply with his gracious Methods and it was also a plain intimation that a great many would be never the better but the worse for these means that God had provided for their Salvation and that some for not receiving them others for not improving them would fall into greater Condemnation But our Saviour did not foretel these things only but the Causes of them too and what it was that would obstruct the Progress and Design of his Religion For this is the importance of those words of his which I have now chosen for my Subject Wo be to the World because of Offences for it must needs be that Offences come By Offences or Scandals we are here and almost every-where in the New Testament to understand those Temptations to Sin and Inducements to Errour which some men lay in the way of others They are sometimes otherwise exprest Snares Stumbling-blocks and Occasions of Fallings for the thing meant by all these expressions is the same Now concerning Offences our Saviour affirms two things in the words I have read First That they would come nay that it must needs be that they would come i. e. that men would arise who should hinder the prevailing of Christianity as much as in them lay or pervert the Design of it
of our Saviour may be well applied to such a Person If the light that is in him be darkness how great is that darkness Moreover there is little hope to reform that Man's evil Practises whose persuations make him secure and easie all the while So there is no little difficulty to be met with in trying to undeceive him for Men will hold comfortable Errors as long as they can find the least pretence for it And which is not the least mischief of this Offence though such Errors are not laid down without a great trouble yet they are taken up with much readiness they are apt to spread far and wide And to this I believe the experience of the World agrees viz. That although there are mistakes that lead to trouble of Mind and over-much restraint yet for one that is led away by such mistakes an hundred there are that believe comfortable Lies which either wholly take off the restraints of Religion or in such part as to render them ineffectual 3. Perverse Disputes and an obstinate Maintenance of Error by all the Arts of Sophistry has this lamentable evil commonly attending it that it renders many Persons utterly careless to examine on which side the Truth lies Perhaps they are but few in comparison that are framed to an inquisitive Spirit and they who are not so framed by Nature or by Education must force their Tempers to Patience and take pains with themselves which is an Employment that Men soon grow weary of and commonly they break off pretending it is to no purpose to search any farther but that when there is so much to be said on both sides when there is such an appearance of Reason for and against the same thing it is time for them to give over being Judges for themselves And indeed in things that are either really disputable or of less moment this were not much to be blamed But in matters of high Consequence and Questions that touch the very Vitals of Religion it often happens that Men grow weary of searching Truth and give up themselves wholly to be led by the Authority and Judgment of others after the Controversie is stifly maintain'd for some time on both sides And it were well in this case if it were an even lay whether they choose the true Guide or not But when a Guide is to be chosen and followed with an implicite Faith the false Guide hath this Advantage always that he exceeds in Confidence in lofty Pretences in swelling Titles in positive denouncing Damnation to all that are not of his way and though a Modest Man that speaks justly of things and claims not to be Infallible deserves the most Credit yet 't is great odds that the other has most followers amongst those that understand not the merits of the Cause 4. The same Cause has too often a yet worse Effect and that is to run some Persons into Infidelity and an utter neglect of Religion as if no certainty could be had of the Principles of Religion seeing there is so much Controversie about it And some have said that it will be then time enough for them to believe in God and to worship him when they that pretend to oblige them to it are agreed about it The truth is were it not for that secret impression of his own Being which God hath left upon our Nature it is not improbable but the monstrous Errors that have been obtruded upon a great part of Mankind under the name of Faith and the force and the fraud wherewith they have been maintain'd had let in Atheism like a Deluge upon the World especially considering that there are those in the World who are so full of Zeal for their own way that they have no tenderness for the common Principles of Faith but are rather content that all should sink together than that their own Doctrines should not stand We have been born in hand that no assurance can be had of the truth of Christianity but from the Authority of such and such Men and they that believe upon other Grounds had as good have no Faith at all That if it were possible for them to propound any thing that is false we cannot be certain of any one Article that is true That the same exceptions may be made to the Miracles of Christ and his Apostles that are made against the stories of latter Miracles and finally that by the same Reason that any of their Traditions are rejected the Holy Scriptures may be rejected too and indeed we have lived to see the utmost that can be done by Wit and Learning to diminish the Authority of the Bible Now this I say is a most dreadful Offence and has done infinite mischief in the World that Men who are violently engaged in a wrong way of Religion care not for the most part what they venture in the service of their own Cause for whilest they lay the same stress upon false or at least disputable Points that they do upon the most necessary and acknowledged Principles of Religion and bend all their Wit to shew that no difference ought to be made they give occasion to Men that would fain be Atheists to deceive themselves into what they would be For a very little consideration will serve to satisfie them that something is false which is propounded to them as an Object of their Faith. And they know that they have then leave given them to conclude that nothing is true 5. There is another great mischief of Offences that are given by Errors in Doctrine or Practice and a mischief that often happens in the World which is that of running into a contrary extream The Church found this by sad Experience in the fourth and fifth Ages when men of no small note disputing against one Heresie fell into another of an opposite Nature to the no small trouble of Christendom Truth sometimes as well as Vertue lies in the mean and they that transgress on any one side do not only this mischief to give what Authority they can to the wrong side they are of but they do this mischief too of giving occasion to others to offend on the other extream Thus the abuse of Church-Authority on the one side has bred in some men contempt of all such Authority on the other The scandals that have been given by propagating Opinions by Force and Violence have produced in many a fond persuasion that there ought to be no restraints whatsoever in matters of Religion Superiours have required unlawful things in Divine Service and to be revenged upon that abuse it has been said that they are not to be obeyed in matters of Prudence and Expedience Religion has been made to run out into Shews and Ceremonies and this has begotten prejudices against all appearance of Beauty and Reverence in the external Worship of God. And on the other side the excesses of men in departing from one extream are scandalous to those whom they left and do confirm them
maintain the Purity of that Profession against another that hath superadded New and False Doctrines to it and yet the Reformed part may labour under discords that affect their very Communion while the other doth not There may be on the one side disobedience to Authority overvaluing of questions of no great moment a greater stress laid upon Opinions or Practices than the Cause will bear and this shall be sufficient to break Christian Communion and at the same time whilst gross Errors are maintained on the other side with one consent the differences that happen by the bye may be so over-ruled by Authority by Force and Power and by the sensible Interests of this World that how wide so ever they are they shall not yet rend Communion But in such a case it were the fondest thing in the World to chuse a Doctrine by the mark of Unity among those that profess it Therefore in this divided State of Christendom it is easie to see what Christians are to do to preserve the Unity of the Body of Christ as much as in them lies and to be sure that they are within the Unity of the Church in all respects 1. I need not say that they are to stand fast in the Faith which was first delivered to the Saints in the Common Faith of Christians for without this they could not so much as continue in that Body into which they were Baptized only I may add That they are to lay it up in their hearts and to value it as the greatest Treasure and to proclaim their esteem of it and to acknowledg all that profess it to be of the same Body with them This being that Faith which Christ came down from Heaven to establish in the World and which he sent the Holy Ghost to inspire his Apostles withal to reveal it to us and to confirm it for us by the Writings and by the Miracles of inspired Persons 'T is by this Faith and this Profession therefore which includes Baptism that they are Christians who will not allow us to be of the Church 2. Let them keep themselves from entertaining any corrupt or false Doctrines not only any that are contrary to the Scriptures but any as necessary to Salvation which are not to be proved by the Scriptures for thus they will be sure to keep themselves from any dangerous errors and continue not only true but pure believers and they sure are not the less but the more in the Unity of the Church who receive nothing as necessary to be beleived in order to Salvation but what by the undoubted Records of our Christian Faith appears to have been taught by Christ and his Apostles 3. Let every private Christian be most careful to observe the Commands of our Lord Jesus in the Government of all his Affections and all his Actions for Unity in this thing ought to be amongst all Christians since without obedience no man how qualified soever he may be in the Church upon other accounts shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven not every one that saith Lord Lord Without this it is not the being of the one Church it is not the professing of the One Faith no nor the being of a pure Profession and a pure Communion that will unite us really and effectually to our Lord Jesus the Head of the Church but we shall be cut off from him as Branches that bring forth no fruit 4. Let him maintain an Universal Charity to all Christians Good will to those that are misled and seduced in endeavouring to reduce them as he hath opportunity in Praying for them readiness to be beneficial to all his Brethren to forgive injuries and to overcome evil with good compassion to the miserable pleasure in that which is for the particular good of any one of his brethren and much more in what is for the general good of all Thus he shall preserve himself in the other Unity which is the Duty of the Church the Unity of Charity and Good will. 5. Let him live in strict Communion with the particular Church whereof he is a Member in subjection to the Authority of it in observing the Rules of it for the guidance of Religious Assemblies for the ordering of all things that fall under human Authority i.e. the Authority of the Lawful Guides of the Church in order to the Edification and well Governing of it Thus he shall maintain an Unity of Communion with his Brethren and his Guides and so in effect with the whole Christian Church where the Parts of it do as they ought to do and most undoubtedly we are not to be united to any of them in things wherein they do as they ought not The Sum of this Advice is easie to be understood and to a good man as easie to be practised There is no need for him to trouble his own mind with nice and intricate Questions about Unity because he will maintain his part in order to the Unity of the Church by doing his plain Duty by sticking to the Faith which is professed by all Christians the Faith into which we were Baptized by rejecting whatsoever is contrary to the Scriptures and making them the Rule of his Religious Persuasions which all Christians ought to do by observing the Rules of the Gospel for the Government of his Life and Actions in which yet undoubtedly all Churches and every Member of every Church ought to conspire though this part of Unity is hardly remembred when men talk of the Church by bearing Christian Affection towards all that name the name of Christ whereby he performs the duty of Unity towards them which whether they do or not they ought to perform too Finally By frequenting the Service of God in Publick Prayers and Exhortations in the Administration of Sacraments according to the Order of the Church whereof in particular the Grace and Providence of God hath made him a Member and which observes the Institutions of our Lord Jesus in all the Publick Offices of Religion For thus he performs his part of Unity towards the whole Church with respect to Communion nor is he nor can be to blame if others will not be perswaded to it It is a fond thing to think of seeking a True Church that is the only Church in opposition to all others or to be scandalized at the divided State of the Church which we cannot help and under a pretence of seeking for Unity to mind nothing else We are to preserve our selves in the Unity of the Church by professing true Doctrine and by leading good lives by a Charitable Spirit and Behaviour towards all Christians by frequenting Prayers and Sacraments and submitting to the Authority of our Lawful Guides in all things of Indifference and Prudence and then we may be sure that whatever others do we keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace And though after all the Church is not that One Body which it would be if all men did their Duty yet
better Life then I say these things come to mind And if God spares us whilest he smites others it is that we may not need any thing more than such a warning to make us reflect upon these things as we ought to do Thus also God's Corrections dispose men to Charity and Consideration of one another they cure us of that stifness and wantonness which whilst all things go well with us carries on Contention and Hatred And therefore that we may not make it necessary for Providence to teach us Wisdom and Charity by withdrawing those bounties of his which we abuse to the pampering of Pride and Obstinacy we should learn to be Wise by Examples before we are made Examples our selves To conclude this matter Who can be Ignorant that Affliction drives those men to Prayer and other Duties of Piety who were very careless of them before In their distress they will seek God early though in their Prosperity they were so backward to any thing of Religion and for the most part felt very faint and ineffectual dispositions to it rather complying with custom than with Inclination and Conscience and Honouring God with their lips while their hearts are far from him and this is the great danger of a Prosperous State To be full and to forget God. But if nothing else will cure this Sloathfulness in Religion and this indifference and coldness in the Service of God yet at least Affliction doth it which makes us to feel our Dependance upon God and shows us that we have no hope left but in him and then we abound in Prayers and we attend willingly to instruction we apply our selves to God in good earnest and to all the Comforts of Religion we make many Vows and Promises and we set our selves immediately to perform them This is the Natural effect of sufferings when we feel them our selves and if we are wise it should be the effect of all those warnings that God hath given us by the sufferings of others Since therefore we cannot look abroad into the World but we shall see the Judgments of God in the Earth let us learn Righteousness let us not be high-minded but fear let us not judge others but judge our selves and often consider what our Saviour replied to the supposition of their being Sinners above all others who suffered such things as others had not suffered I tell you Nay but except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish The Thirteenth Sermon Luke XVIII 8. Nevertheless when the Son of man cometh shall he find faith on the Earth FOR the understanding of these words of our Saviour two things are to be considered 1. What is here meant by the Coming of the Son of Man. And 2. What is meant by his not finding Faith upon the Earth 1. How we are to understand those words when the Son of Man cometh I answer The meaning is when he cometh to Execute Judgment upon the ungodly and to deliver his Faithful People out of their Hands For after our Saviour had spoken the Parable of the Unjust Judge that was wearied by the Widows importunity to do justice for her against her adversaries he argued thus v. 7. And shall not God avenge his own elect which cry day and night to him though he bear long with them or rather as it might have been translated and will he bear long in their cause I tell you that he will avenge them speedily And then follow these words Nevertheless when the Son of Man cometh i. e. when he cometh to do that which was spoken of before viz. to avenge the cause of his elect or to Punish their Enemies and Oppressors and to deliver them out of their hands Now of the Coming of Christ for this purpose there is also a Twofold Signification in the New Testament whereof one is manifestly the Principal and much more considerable than the other and that is his second coming in Person to Judge the Quick and the Dead which will not be till the end of the World Thus the Coming of the Day of the Lord 2 Pet. 3.10 is called his coming v. 4. and the Coming of the Lord Jesus Christ with all his Saints 1 Thes 3.13 and in many other places And this is all the coming of Christ properly so called that the New Testament mentions after his First because this only is to be his Second Personal Appearance But then 2. There was another notion of the Coming of Christ after his first which is also plainly enough intimated in the New Testament and that was his Coming to destroy the Jews and to deliver the Christians out of their hands which happened 40. Years after his death And of this the 24th Chapter of St. Matthew is an undeniable Testimony where a Description of the Destruction of Jerusalem and a Description of the Day of Judgment are so interwoven one with the other that it is a matter of some difficulty to know punctually and fully what is proper to the one and what to the other But plain it is that the one as well as the other is called the Coming of the Son of Man as appears by Verses 27 and 37. The Destruction of Jerusalem was made as it were a Type or Figure of the Day of Judgment and therefore these words are there Verily I say unto You this Generation shall not pass away till all these things be fulfilled v. 34. i.e. till they are accomplished in that part of the meaning which respects the Destruction of Jerusalem which was destroyed before that Generation passed away Of this it seems plain that St. James speaks C. 5. v. 6 7. where speaking to the Jews says he Ye have condemned and killed the Just and to the Christians Be patient therefore Brethren unto the Coming of the Lord and v. 8. Be ye also Patient stablish your hearts for the Coming of the Lord draweth nigh and some other places there are where the Phrase is to be Interpreted thus Particularly that Let your moderation be known unto all men The Lord is at hand Phil. 4.5 i.e. let all men see by your Meekness and Patience under those Oppressions which you suffer that you believe those Predictions which we have delivered to you from Christ that he is at hand to deliver you And although properly the end of all things will not be till the last day when the Earth shall be burnt up and all the works that are therein yet because this notable revolution of the destruction of the Jews was in some degree like unto it therefore it was also called the end of all things meaning the end of the Jewish State and Religion which was to be accompanied with manifest Tokens of God's Favour to the Christians and of his indignation at their Enemies And thus we are to understand that passage in St. Peter The end of all things is at hand be ye therefore sober and watch unto Prayer 1 Pet. 4.7 Not that this was in a strict and proper
Fear Hatred Favour or Affection But farther one man may be guilty of the violation of another man's Oath he that suborns a false Witness is before God guilty of his Perjury yea if he does so much as tempt a Witness to be false for tho he himself is not actually sworn yet he designs that an Oath should be broken God hath said Thou shalt swear in truth he in effect says Thou shalt not do so and therefore if he prevails he is at once guilty of the false Witness his breaking that Law of God and likewise of his own contradicting it which is every whit as bad and there is this Circumstance rendring the Perjury more displeasing to God That two men are guilty of violating one Oath The case is the same in tampering with Juries to possess them beforehand with favour or disaffection to either of the Parties for what is this but to perswade them to Perjury that is to give their Verdict with respect to persons and not with regard to the Evidence And I do not see but they who are to Impannel Juries are likewise guilty of the Violation of other mens Oaths if in any Case depending they return Jurors whose Interest and Affection they believe will carry them to favour the side befriended by their own wishes for though they may chuse whether they will be forsworn yet he that returns 'em had a mind that they should rather than the Cause should miscarry on that side to which he is partial himself Lastly Whoever in behalf of a Client puts words into the mouth of a slow Country Witness while he is giving his Testimony by which the Witness means one thing and he another by this means perverting the Evidence while the poor man perceives it not he does not only directly offend against the end of swearing which is the discovery of the Truth but before God he is as guilty of the Violation of an Oath as the honest Witness would have been had he knowingly used the same subtilty in giving Testimony which was indeed but practic'd upon him And thus much concerning the usual ways direct or indirect by which an Oath may be violated it being requisite to touch upon them at least that what remains to be said may find us prepared for particular Application As to the Inducements to Perjury which was the Third Subject propounded there is no doubt but every sin which preys upon the Conscience does form the mind more or less into some disposition to this the blackest of them all every thing enclines to it which lessens the Sense of Religion and the Fear of offending God The prevalency of any lust especially of Ambition and Revengefulness animates men to break loose from all the most sacred bonds that should restrain them from gratifying their inordinate appetites Again Partiality grounded upon Prejudice and Interest upon Envy and Covetousness has been the cause of many Perjuries in most questions concerning Rents and Tythes every body is ready to say how the Case is like to go But when all is said there is nothing in this our Age has made such foul work in swearing as Faction has done that combination of Covetousness Pride and Ambition of Envy Hatred and Malice united and made fast together under Hypocrisy Any one of these singly by it self leads to Perjury but when they all conspire they drive on to it without opposition Another inlet to the violation of Oaths is the Practice of Common Swearing he that will call God to witness Trifles by degrees loseth the Reverence of an Oath and is within a little of calling him to witness falshood I mean upon Solemn Oath for 't is not to be doubted that the Customary Oaths of Conversation make the Swearer guilty of frequent Perjuries when he thinks not of it but if he swears in truth before a Court of Judicature against his Interest or Affection we are to thank his Generosity for it and not the respect he has for an Oath Otherwise he that Swears commonly and rashly will upon any considerable Temptation Swear falsly with deliberation In a word such are the Inducements and Occasions of Perjury that perhaps it were to be wished that the manner of administring Oaths were in all places a little more awful and solemn than it is to strike into those men some reverence of an Oath and fear of Perjury who bring nothing of it along with them Indeed the most effectual way to prevent false Swearing would be to consider the heinous Aggravations of the Sin some of which in the last place I shall now represent We know that sincerity in speaking of the Truth and keeping ones Promise is every man's Duty whether he be Sworn or not The natural Obligation we lye under to be true and faithful to our Word is so strong and so sensible that every Man is asham'd to be found in a lye But whoever is known to be a common falsifier of his Word and so given to Deceit that he is not to be trusted let him be endued with never so many considerable and useful Parts besides that shall be sure to ruin his Reputation Insincerity is so foul a Stain that no good quality can wipe it out and this shews that there is a strong Obligation to trust common to all Mankind wherefore this must needs be one heinous Circumstance of Perjury That when the sacred Bond of an Oath is once violated the perjur'd Person is guilty of breaking that Faith and Truth which was a natural Duty before But sincerity is still more a Duty when my Testimony is required in order to publick Peace and Justice All Men have right to be truly dealt with much more the Magistate by whom I am protected most of all when he requires it in order to the doing of Justice or the securing of Government It is then my Duty to the Magistrate 't is my Duty to my Neighbour 't is my Duty to my Countrey to speak the Truth clearly and honestly and if I promise any thing to discharge it faithfully The discharge of thy Office which thou art Sworn to execute is both requisite for the publick Good and requir'd by just Authority if thou hadst not so much as promised it thou hadst been still obliged to the same in obedience to thy Superior in Love to thy Country If thou hadst been barely required to give thy Testimony in Court yet even without Oath or Promise thou wert greatly bound to Truth because the telling of a lye in this Case were impudent undutifulness to the Judge and manifestly injurious to thy Neighbour In like manner a Verdict should be according to the Evidence if it were only for this that a Controversy might be righteously decided instead of establishing some instance of Iniquity by a Law. This therefore is a farther Aggravation of the Sin of Perjury in all these Cases That the Oath which is violated did not only bind to that sincerity which is the Duty of all Men
following Truth and Goodness and this we know will put us upon strugling with our own Judgment and straining points against our clear knowledge of what we ought to do All the while we are gaining his Favour we are sure we do well and when we have done it we shall thank our selves instead of being plagued with a fad and black remembrance of the way we took to get it Acquaint now thy self with God and be at peace with him and so shall good come unto thy Soul. 5. There lies no Flattery nor false Accusation nor outward accident against us to put us out of God's Favour or to make us lose what we have wrought to turn his mind or to blot our services out of his remembrance No change of Fortune shall bring us into disgrace which consideration St. Paul laid great strength upon in pursuance of the Text. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ shall tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword v. 35. I am persuaded says he that neither death norlife nor angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor heigth nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord v. 38. Nay says the Apostle in all these things we are more than Conquerors that is we get by being Condemned by others because by that we are made more dear to God who will consider not only that we served him but under what discouragements from the World we did so Lastly 6. Whom God justifies them he also glorifies For whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate to be conformed to the Image of his Son that he might be the first-born among many brethren v. 29 30. i.e. Those whom he foreknew to be his most faithful servants he did before time decree that by suffering for righteousness they should follow so glorious a Pattern as their Elder Brother the Lord Jesus Moreover whom he did predestinate them he also called i. e. he brought them to the profession of the truth in a hazardous time that they should shew their Integrity and wh●m he called them he also justified and whom he justified them he also glorified Which is so sure that the Apostle mentions it as if it were done already Then he proceeds in the following verses What shall we say to these things If God be for us who can be against us He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him freely give us all things who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's elect It is God that justifies who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us The conclusion is this That whoever Condemns we are not to be discouraged if God justi●ies But it may be said That all this is very true indeed but it serves the turn of all Parties even of those who are most severely Condemned by each other while each of them pretends to have God and Truth on their side And therefore that this Subject might have been more usefully pursued by shewing particularly what that Faith and that Practice is with which they must be qualified whom God justifies and how we are assured of it Now I considered all this at first but then I knew that I was to speak to persons who are neither ignorant of the Doctrine of this Church nor of the evidence whereby it appears to be the very Truth of Christianity by which whoever Governs himself in Worshipping God in behaving himself to others and in all his ways shall be assuredly Justified of God though all the World should Condemn him for it But I considered also that of all things which are apt to shake the constancy of modest Persons nothing is more likely to do it than the mighty confidence wherewith they of the Roman Church Condemn us and Exclaim against us For to those who are acquainted with the History of the World and of the Church it must needs be a surprize that men who are said to be Learned and known to be Zealous do pronounce against us with no less severity than if we were mere Infidels One would think there must be some deep reason for it when they make us nothing at all and themselves all in all For thus they will not allow that we are a Church or that we have any certainty so much as of that True Doctine we profess for they know us better than we do our selves and as for our Salvation they are as sure it belongs not to us till we are converted to them as if they kept the Keys of Heaven Nor do they sink us more than they raise themselves who are not only a Church but the whole Church and not only not deceived but even Infallible They talk as if there were no safety with us and no danger with them which may raise such doubts in weaker minds that I thought it not unseasonable to bring to your remembrance how violently the Apostles and their Christian Brethren were Condemned by men of whom yet these men will grant that they were justified of God. If it shall be said This is a common-place Argument of which all men serve themselves I Answer That the Argument is so much the stronger For if these men themselves will tell you that confidence is not to be trusted you will I hope make this application That neither is their confidence to be trusted and therefore that you ought to consider what they are before you believe them to be what they call themselves and examin what they teach before you think the worse of your selves for what they call you And this is all that we desire of you That you would weigh the reasons of things and not mind swelling words Brethren it is by no means a new Artifice to talk in a very high strain when Argument runs very low Thus Jews and Gentiles exclaimed against our Fathers the Apostles and the Primitive Believers condemning them for going against Antiquity Universality Authority Tradition Philosophers Law-makers Kings and Nations And yet when all was done all this was but empty noise and vain pretence and the Cause of Christianity was the Cause of God. Foul Errors have been drest with glorious appearances of Truth and Truth has been opposed with Confidence and God suffers it to be so to try the Sincerity of men that while they who are willing to be deluded fall by the Temptation men of Probity and lovers of Truth should upon diligent examination hold it faster than otherwise they would have done This is one of the great Advantages to which that opposition tends which Truth has met with in the World. And therefore the more lofty those pretences are by which the other Church would bring us to an intire