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A28812 The royal law, or, The golden rule of justice and charity a sermon at the anniversary meeting of the gentlemen, inhabitants of London, and others, born within the county of Worcester, at St. Lawrence Church, Nov. 29. 1683. Boraston, George, b. ca. 1634. 1684 (1684) Wing B3748; ESTC R9969 13,784 26

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and knowledge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 3.19 urging and enforcing our love to one another from the consideration of this excessivelove of his to us Which that we may be in some measure able to perform and exercise he hath given us his Holy Spirit to excite and stir up to shed abroad that Love in our Hearts to multiply and make it perfect in us Which what effect that loving Spirit hath upon us how it is we behave and demean our selves in the performance of this peculiar command He in a signal manner takes special notice of and peculiar inspection awarding to us our final Doom and Sentence either of everlasting happiness or misery according as we have either conscientiously or negligently behaved our selves therein So that if his commands and example if the assistance and aids of his Spirit if the greatest rewards to the observers and severest denuntiations to the disobedient import any thing the Authority is most Sacred and the Sanctions most weighty And though it is so Sacred in its Authority though in its self so necessary to the welfare of mankind yet how miserably it is wrested and perverted will appear in the consideration of Thirdly Some irregularities and deflections from this Golden Rule whereby the right purposes and proper uses of it are perverted Some willingly claim an interest in the first part of the Rule but reject the latter would have all do well to them but themselves not obliged to do good to any Not unlike some narrow Factions in Religion who take all acts of Grace done to them as their due and therefore can never be thankful for any but when power is gotten into their hands can breath forth nothing but ruin Root and Branch to all that dissent from them Such is the Issue of that lewd Doctrine Dominion is founded in Grace Others live and act as if the Rule run All whatsoever ye would that do ye these do not bend their Wills to the Rule but bow the Rule to their Wills as if our Primitive State were indeed what Mr. Hobbs fancied it a State of War in which every one hath right to all things that Power only gives right and is the measure of Just and Honest and that Men were to live on the Land as Fishes do in the Sea the greater to devour the less and more helpless fry Some multilate the Rule or clog it with such a Proviso our great Lawgiver never intended they put out As ye would they should do unto you and read it as ye are done unto though never so unjustly and uncharitably They act not by the measures of just and regular appetites but of other Mens Evil demeanor towards them contrary to the true temper of the Law and Spirit of the Gospel which is so far from allowing the least revenge in case of injury and wrong received that on the contrary it not only commands us to forgive the Offender but also to oblige him to return him love for hatred Blessing for Cursing good Offices for despiteful usage Prayers and Intercessions for Mockery and Persecution St. Matt. 5.44 This is the Noblest the Best the only revenge allowed us best in regard of our Enemy whom by this means if by any we shall either convert and gain or mollify and sweeten best for our selves who by so doing shall become the Sons of God and resemble our Heavenly Father in his excessive goodness in his exuberant Beneficence in his unparallelled Philanthropy Again some leave out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all things whatsoever and put in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some things and to some sort of persons In lesser things they are contented to be exactly just and merciful but then they are not uniform in greater when some considerable damage may be avoided or advantage acquired they must be excused be the means never so indirect the advantages of the end and the great emolument and the goodly purchase they expect and hope for will according to their opinion and Gospel be sufficient to Sanctify the means be they never so unjust and uncharitable And as their Justice and Charity is thus narrowed and crampt to some things so also their huckstering kind of Love is confined to some Men that is Men of their own Party Some Mens Religion infects their minds with such a four leaven that they look upon the rest of Mankind as reprobates and will hardly allow their Christian Friends or Governors if they are not of their way and Faction a room in their Prayers This Partiality hath been the bane of the Churches Peace the chiefest cause of most of those Schisms and Differences under which Christendom hath from time to time and doth still groan this hath thrust the Flock of Christ into a far narrower compass than ever the Donatists did concluding the Communion of Saints only to their Sect or Party And no wonder this uncouth humor hath got into their civil commerce and dealings who if they do not think it their interest to Trade only with such yet think Mercy and Justice owing only to them So that a Pharisaical Corban shall evacuate those Duties towards all other Men and as they are apt to reckon it no Duty to exercise Justice and Mercy to them so they are no less forward to account it no Sin to defraud and over-reach them Among this latter sort of Men if we may judge of them by their practice I fear some reckon the King himself whose customs they dare so frequently steal without any conscience of the greatness of the Sin Though the King hath as undoubted a right to them as any Subject hath to the estate he possesses yea though our Lord himself for whose commands and example they profess so great a reverence was at the charges of a Miracle to pay Caesar his Custom from whence we may safely infer he would never have given his Vote to disenable Caesar to pay his debts But let such Men be assured the Righteousness of Christ though of infinite Vertue and Value to penitents will never serve their turn nor answer for this or any other act of Injustice without restitution according to their ability You have heard what this Law is with some of the principal measures and proportions of it the sacredness of its Authority and the miserable perverting of it to ill purposes from its proper uses What now remains but that as we esteem and look upon the Creed as a short Summary comprehending the Fundamental Articles of our Religion in reference to our Faith in like manner we take this Royal Law as a brief Compendium for the direction of our Practice That we by no means allow our selves in any course or action which this Golden Rule disallows that we be at all times so far from invading other Mens Rights whether in their Lives Liberties Reputation or Estates that we rather account it our happiness as it is our Duty to be sensible of their Distresses and stoop to their Necessities