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A26073 A seasonable discourse against toleration with a preface wherein the nature of persecution in general and the unjust complaints of the dissenting parties concerning it in particular are distinctly considered. Assheton, William, 1641-1711. 1685 (1685) Wing A4041; ESTC R23636 62,270 115

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the most part odious I think it might easily appear without disparagement be it spoken That there are as Honest Religious Zealous good men that have willingly and chearfully submitted to the Church of England as the best of them all that have oppos'd the same Our Pious-Fore-fathers to whom under God we owe the purity of our Religion and some of which embrac'd a Stake had more moderate apprehensions then the present Generation For when the Tyranny of the Church of Rome had forc'd them to a Separation and that in Obedience to God who commands us neither to believe Lies nor to commit Sin neither of which they could avoid by continuing in Communion with her though they left many of her Ceremonies the number of them being great and burthensome yet they thought fit to retain some others of them and that for Order and Decency in the Service of God If it be replyed as usually it is That the Reformation being carried on by those that were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made of the same Clay and subject to the like passions with others was at best but small and imperfect it being beyond the wit and power of Man either to foresee or remove all Inconveniences on a sudden and therefore that it was the Duty of After-Ages to perfect and complete what they had so happily begun by removing this Rubbish out of the House of God To this I Answer That the Topick of Reformation is too large for a short Preface and beyond my designe onely this by the by I wish that Protestants of whatsoever Perswasion would be more sparing in their Reflections upon our first Reformers for besides the advantage that is hereby given to the Romish Party we ought to consider That abuses are easier complain'd of then redress'd and possibly had the men of this Age been in their stead and under the same Circumstances I do much question if we may take an estimate by their late transactions whether they would have brought the work to so good an Issue as through Gods Blessing they then did But no more of this T is sufficient for my present purpose That since the cause of their Separation from Rome was to avoid her Pollutions 't is evident That these Ceremonies which they thought fit to retaine were in their Judgment no part of them or any other way unlawful the which if my dissenting Brethren will but grant not to talke now off their inexpedience of which neither they nor I must be Judges as it is a fair step to end our Differences so it hence avoidably follows That if some pious men have refus'd the Ceremonies others of as great piety have Conform'd to them if some Learned have disputed others as Learned have defended which may for ever Silence that Branch of the Objection viz. The Learning and Piety of their Parties Nor is there much more weight in that other part of the Objection drawn from their persecutions and sufferings which comes now to be considered A Pretence indeed very plausible and popular for besides its subtle Insinuations upon a natural score we being all obliged by that common bond of Humanity to compassionate those that are in any misery and trouble witness those usual resentments even for a Thief upon the Gallows it hath this farther advantage That wherever in Scripture the word Persecution is mentioned and that either with some Promise annex'd for the support of Gods people who otherwise might despond under such gloomy dispensations or of some Judgment denounced to restrain the fury of their Persecutors I say wheresoever such passages occur as they do frequently in holy Writ they have learned the Art by imposing upon a credulous Vulgar to make the World believe that they are those persecuted Saints for whom those promises are recorded and that all such persons as are any way employed though in Obedience to Authority to suppress them are Persecuting wretches on whom sooner or later all those Judgments threatned shall certainly be inflicted I shall not in the least offend them with any harsh Invectives such Reflections though some ease indeed to a burthen'd mind being very little to the Substance of a Cause but shall only beg their Patience and Charity whilst I endeavour to undeceive them by assuring them in plaine English what without Repentance they will one day find true That they are not Persecuted as Saints but punished as Malefactors And this I shall through Gods assistance undenyably prove in this Method 1. By fixing the Notion in laying down a clear and distinct definition of Persecution 2. By considering how far those present Sufferings to which our Nonconformists are obnoxious do agree with it or differ from it Persecution for Religion for of such onely I now treat may not unfitly be thus described T is an eager violent inflicting of outward temporal Evils for the exercise of true Religion I call it eager violent inflicting so the Lat. c i. e. continue seu continuato motu sequor inimico affectu insequor continuò assidue quaero Mart. Lex Philolog Persequor and the Gr. d i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hesychius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do fully denote they both signifie so to follow as a Hunter doth his Prey who pursues it till he takes it But because these terms eager and violent do only agree to one sort of Persecution viz. That which is furious and rageing it being sometimes more mild and moderate and since definitions do express the nature but not the degree of the thing defined as when we define Calor we take no notice of it in summo I shall therefore omit these words eager and violent and then the definition I suppose unquestionably stands thus Persecution is an inflicting of outward temporal Evils for the exercise of true Religion Outward temporal Evils either upon the Body as Banishment Imprisonment Tortures Death or upon the Estate as Pecuniary Mulcts confiscation of Goods or upon Reputation and good Name as Slanderings Revilings Reproachful Speeches For the exercise of true Religion which is the Ratio formalis the Constitutive difference whereby Persecution is distinguished from all other violences whatsoever For let the greatest Reproaches and Indignities usher in the most exquisite Tortures and those be concluded by a Death as cruel as the utmost Malice on Earth or Fury in H●ll can contrive yet unless these Tortures be eo nomine inflicted for the sake and cause of Religion we may call them merciless inhumane unnatural Cruelties or any such like name as can most fitly express them but not Persecution By Religion that I may yet more fully explaine the Definition I mean the Worship of God by true Religion the worshipping of him according to his Will the which Will though heretofore variously delivered and in different Dispensations yet those extraordinary ways of Conveyance being now ceased it hath pleased the Goodness and Wisdom of God to deliver in Writing by the Ministry of the Prophets and