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A67649 Dr. Stillingfleet's principles of Protestancy cleared, confuted, and retorted And the infallibility of the Roman-Catholick Church asserted; and that the same church alone is the whole Catholick church. In a letter from a Catholick gentleman to a Protestant knight. Warner, John, 1628-1692. 1673 (1673) Wing W911; ESTC R219411 19,248 38

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only Rule of Salvation and by consequence that it is not repugnant to the wisdome and goodness of God not to set down all his will in writing in the Law of grace or not agreeable to the same that God make men insallible in writing so much of his will as is contained in Scripture or even all that is necessary for Salvation though that writing be not clear to every sincere and sober person 't is sufficient it may be explained to every man by the Doctors and Pastors of the Church according to that of Deut. 17.8 Thou shalt go to the Priests to enquire and they shall shew thee Deut. 33.10 They shall teach thy Law Neh. 8.8 They caused the people to understand the Law And Mat. 23.2 They sat in Moses chair all things therefore c. which last Text doth not agree with the Proposition saying that for some ages before Christ there was no body infallible among the Jews to attest or explain to them the Writings of Moses or the Prophets As for the Testimonies of the New Testament see Mat. 7.24 and 13.19 and 24.14.16 and 28.19 and Mark 16.15 and Matth. 18.17 c. But Dr. Stillingfleet will demonstrate by his 16. Proposition That the Roman-Catholick Church is intolerable by its pretending to Gods infallible assistance in proposing matters of faith And why so Because forsooth every Preacher of that Church doth not work as great Miracles as Christ and his Apostles Doth every Protestant Preacher work such Miracles Did you Dr. Stillingfleet Did any of your Church or Reformation ever work a Miracle If not why do you expect or exact that any should beleeve your Reformation or that your Church is assisted by the holy Ghost If all rational persons must grant that Miracles are necessary to plant any new Doctrine pretended to be divine how much more necessary must they be to reverse the old and reject Doctrine held for many ages as Divine and confirmed as such by so many Prodigies against whose supernaturality our adversaries have no other Arguments then their own arbitrary Interpretations of Scripture and those things which the Jews objected against the Doctrine and Miracles of Christ and his Apostles This much we may at least exact and expect from Dr Stillingfleet that he will either confesse the truth of our Doctrine and Miracles or confute them by some better reason then by a bare supposition that they are against Scripture or by rashly averring they are but tricks of covetous Monks and crafty * Dr Field in his Treatise of the Church lib. 3. cap. 48. Jesuites Other Protestant Writers confesse ingeniously that our Massing Priests and Jesuites have wrought many true Miracles in the Indies Japan Congo and China converting those Nations to Popery And Mr. Hartwell ‖ M. Abraham Hartwell in his Report of the Kingdom of Congo edit An. 1597. in his Epistle to the Reader Symon Lythus in Respons altera ad alteram Gretseri Apol. pag. 331. Daneus contra Bellar. pag. 781. speaking of the Conversion of the Kingdom of Congo saith Shall this Action which tendeth to the Glory of God be concealed and not committed to memory because it was performed by Popish Priests and Popish means God forbid If Dr. Stillingfleet thinks that his Church or the Reformation by not pretending to Miracles or Infallibility in proposing matters of Faith be a more certain and safe Guide to Salvation then the Roman-Catholick Church that with undeniable moral evidence pretends to both few considering and consciencious persons will be of his opinion it being a clear principle in Moral Theology That in matters of Eternity we are bound to choose the surest way and no prudent man will deny but that it is a surer way to Heaven to be directed by a Guide that pretends to be certain of that way and produceth moral evidence for that certainty then to follow a guide that plainly confesseth his own uncertainty of the way and hath nothing to say against the moral evidence and assurance of the other but railing Raillery or turning to Ridicule such forged and incredible Miracles as we our selves discover and punish To conclude it is not necessary that every particular Doctor or Preacher of the Faith shew or work a Miracle 't is sufficient that any one of that Faith do it or did it to prove the Faith and Infallibility of the Roman Church If this be credibly reported to the dissenters they are bound to beleeve it and become Roman Catholicks Herod never did see any of Christ or the Apostles Miracles at least many of the Jews did not and yet they who heard them credibly reported were obliged under pain of damnation to beleeve the Christian doctrine because they were credibly informed that it was confirmed by Miracles So that it is a rash mistake to maintain that no Protestant is bound to submit to the Authority and Doctrine of the Roman-Catholick Church unless he be convinct first by seeing a Miracle Such things as are own'd to be Miracles by our Church are so well examined and so authentickly proved that any one may prudently beleeve them for though perhaps none now living did see them yet many credible persons that lived when they were wrought did see them and we may rely upon their sight and search with as much Reason and more Religion then upon our own according to Christs saying to S. Thomas Blessed are they who have not seen and yet believed Proposition XVII Nothing is more absurd then to pretend the necessity of such an infallible Commission and assistance to assure us of the truth of these Writings and to interpret them and at the same time to prove that Commission from those Writings from which we are told nothing can be certainly deduced such an assistance not being supposed or to pretend that Infallibility in a body of men is not as liable to doubts and disputes as in those Books from whence only they derive their Infallibility The 17. Proposition is a gross or wilful mistake of the Roman-Catholick Doctrine We do not ground the Infallibility of the Church upon the words of Scripture which assert it but upon an impossibility or incredibility that God would permit such a Church as the Roman-Catholick qualified with so many seeming supernatural signes of his favour and seals of his Divine Commission as our Miracles Sanctity Conversion of Nations to Christianity c. upon an Impossibility I say that God would permit a Church so apparently qualified with supernatural Marks of Divine * See Father Thomas Bartons Treatise of Religion and Government edit 1670. where he cleareth this point as also the obscurity of Christian faith Authority to leade men into any errour when it pretends to propose and declare Gods Revelation This we say is not compatible with Gods Veracity or with his infinite sincerity or inclination to truth and aversnesse from falshood whether in fundamental or not fundamental points of faith For even amongst men he that
is very sincere or much inclined to truth and averse from falshood will not permit any one if he can help it to abuse his name or authority by counterfeiting his Commissions or Seals much less can it be imagined by any sober person that God who is sincerity and truth it self would permit he being omnipotent the Roman-Catholick Church to abuse his sacred Name and assume his authority by counterfeit Seals or false Miracles and thereby to seduce the world for so many ages as that Church hath been prudently taken to be the sole true Church of God So that you must grant 1. The Roman-Catholick Miracles approved of in the Bulls of Canonization of Saints to be true and by consequence it self to be infallibly assisted by God independently of and antecedently to any words of Scripture and if the Miracles be true there can be no dispute of the Truth of its Doctrine or of the authenticknesse of its Commission 2. You must grant that if its Miracles were false there could be no proof or faith of Gods Veracity this being inconsistent with the permission of a cheat so apparently supernatural We resolve therefore Christian and Catholick Faith into this Assertion or Assent and Assurance Gods Veracity being Infinite I do most firmly and undoubtedly beleeve that God will never permit any falshood to be proposed as his Word or Revelation with such appearance of Miracles and such signs of his approbation as the Roman-Catholick Church proposeth its Doctrine and Infallibility And therefore whatsoever the same Church doth propose as Gods Word or Revelation I do most firmly and undoubtedly beleeve as the real Word and Revelation of God To this universal Assent or Assertion are reduced all the particular Assents or Articles of Catholick Faith without any kinde of that circle which Schoolmen so much dread in the resolution of faith Neither is there any circle in proving the evident credibility of the Roman-Catholick Church by its Miracles and the truth of its Miracles by the approbation of the same Church 1. Because we prove the Credibility of the Church by the sole moral appearance that our Miracles are Divine before they are believed to be Divine by supernatural faith 2. Because both the truth of our Miracles and the Infallibility of our Church are proved by the Infinitenesse of Gods Veracity which is not consistent with a permission of our Miracles being false or of our Church being fallible as hath been hitherto declared As to the Second part of the 17. Proposition it 's manifest to common sense that doubts and disputes are with more ease and clearness resolved by an infallible body of men then by an obscure though infallible Writing Men may hear and answer difficulties and doubts a Book even the Bible cannot because we prove it is obscure even after all conferences of texts and Examinations of the able Scripturists by reason of the differences in opinion concerning the true sence thereof The 18. Proposition is grounded upon the falshood of the 17. and therefore needeth no other confutation but as to what it says God had promi●ed to particular men who endeavour to understand Scripture that either they shall not err or if they shall they shall not be damn'd for it is but a fancy of Dr. Stillingfleet without any proof or colour of truth and contrary to Christs commands of hearing and obeying the Church The 19. Proposition contains only a false supposition confuted in the 17. and an inclination in D. Stillingfleet to the private spirit against the publick Testimony of the Church Proposition XX. No mans faith can therefore be infallible meerly because the Proponent is said to be infallible because the nature of Assent doth not depend upon the objective infallibility of any thing without us but is agreeable to the evidence we have of it in our mindes for Assent is not built on the nature of things but their evidence to us The 20. Proposition wants explanation There are two sorts of Assent one is grounded upon clear evidence of the truth assented unto and is an intellectual sight thereof the other is grounded upon authority that is upon the Author or Speakers Veracity or Inclination to truth The first kinde of assent is agreeable and bears proportion with the evidence we have of it in our mindes and is infallible if the evidence be clear as it is in some undeniable principles and in their immediate Conclusions But the assent built upon authority which is Faith dependeth in its Infallibility upon the infallibility of the Infallible Authour or Proponent apprehended to be so by us and this independently of any Evidence we have of the truth or nature of things without us and therefore this 20. Proposition is absolutely false Proposition XXI It is therefore necessary in order to an Infallible Assent that every particular person be infallibly assisted in judging of the matter proposed to him to be believed so that the ground on which a necessity of some external infallible Proponent is asserted must rather make every particular Person infallible if no divine faith can be without an infallible Assent and so renders any other infallible useless The 21. Proposition is also false it being only a consequence from the former A fallible person may give an infallible assent in matters of faith because the truth and assurance of such an Assent is not to be measured by any inward evidence the Assenter hath of the matter of Mystery believed but supposing the outward appearance of the supernatural signes of the Church by the grace that God gives to assure us that himself is the Authour of the Doctrine so proposed And though the appearance of the signes of the Church exceeds not a moral certainty of God being the Authour of the Churches Doctrine yet our assurance of that same truth is more then moral because we build not the assurance and certainty of our Catholick faith or of the Infallibility of the Church upon those motives of eredibility and the outward appearance of their connexion with the Truth but upon Gods Veracity Goodness and his aversness from any falshood which is so great that we do as firmly beleeve he will no more permit a Church so likely to be his as the Roman-Catholick Church is to erre and leade us into any falshood then he would own himself Authour or Countenancer of that falshood and fraud Proposition XXII If no particular person be infallible in the assent he gives to matters proposed by others to him then no man can be infallibly sure that the Church is infallible and so the Churches Infallibility can signifie nothing to our infallible assurance without an equal Infallibility in our selves in the belief of it The 22. Proposition signifies nothing if you will reflect upon what hath been now said every faithful is infallible inasmuch as he agreeth with the Doctrine of the Church and the Churches Infallibility is one point of that Doctrine The 23. Proposition is composed of absurd
sequels from the former The 24. 25. and 26. Propositions have not any thing worth our taking notice of Proposition XXVII The nature of certainty doth receive several names ei●●●● according to the nature of the proof or the degrees of 〈…〉 Thus moral certainty may be so called either c. 〈◊〉 the 27. Proposition the Authour declares that ●●●●stianity is morally certain that is it implys a firm As●ent upon the highest evidence that moral things can receive This seems to involve a contradiction How can our Assent be sufficiently firm for Faith and exclude all doubts and fears of Falshood as Christian Faith must if its certainty be only moral though in the highest degree of moral certainty For the highest degree of moral certainty doth not include an absolute impossibility of the contrary So that Dr. Stillingfleet must confesse 't is possible his Faith may be false and the Scriptures a Fable though he be morally certain in the highest degree it is not so Hence followeth against the 28. Proposition that a Christian having no more then moral certainty in the Highest degree that the Scriptures are the Word of God his Faith cannot be resolved into the Veracity of God as the ground of his believing because the Veracity of God excludes all Fallacy and possibility of Falshood and includes not only the highest degree of moral but of Metaphysical certainty and by consequence every assent of Faith grounded thereupon and reduced thereunto must be of the same nature The 29. Proposition confines Gods Revelations to Scripture only without proof or pretext for so bold an assertion as we have manifested in confuting the 14. Proposition Proposition XXX There can be no better way to prevent mens mistakes in the sence of Scripture which men being fallible are subject to then the considering the consequence of mistaking in a matter wherein their salvation is concerned and there can be no sufficient reason given why that may not serve in matter of faith which God himself hath made use of as the means to keep men from sin in their lives unless any imagin that Errors in opinion are more dangerous to mens souls then a vicious life is and therefore that God is bound to take more care to prevent the one then the other This 30. and last Proposition doth not agree with the 15. and 18. For in the 15. the Author maintains that no sober Enquirer into the Scriptures can miss of what is necessary for salvation and from thence concludes there can be no necessity supposed of any infallible Society of men or of the Church of England to attest or explain Scripture To what purpose then are Bishops Deans Chapters and Pastors or at least their Revenues and Tythes May not this bring Dr. Stillingfleet under the suspicion and censure of being rather a Prevaricator then Assertor of the Church of England and an Impugner of the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy His 18. Proposition also destroys this 30. as you may see by comparing both in the 18. he says God hath promised to them who use their best endeavours or means to understand the Scriptures that either they shall not erre or they shall not be damn'd for it From whence it follows 1. That Scripture is obscure even in matters necessary for salvation contrary to the 15. Proposition 2. That they need not fear being damn'd and therefore need not be concerned for erring which is contrary to this 30. Proposition and indeed to all Christianity whereof St. Paul says it is one of the first principles that without faith it is impossible to please God and that Faith is the substance and foundation of Religion and hopes of salvation In this sense it 's certain that errours in opinion are for more dangerous then a vicious life is both because here ie is the worst of vices and because it is more difficult to recover true Faith once lost then to repent of any other sins You have seen D. Stillingfleets ●rinc●ples cleared and confuted Now you shall see them retorted against himself in his own Conclusions Conclusion I. There is no necessity at all or use of an infallible society of men to assure men of the truth of those things which they may be certain of without it and cannot have any greater assurance supposing such Infallibility to be in them Conclusion II. The Infallibility of that society of men who call themselves the Catholick Church must be examined by the same faculties an man the same Rules of tryal the same motives by which the Infallibility of any Divine Revelation is Conclusion III. The lesse convincing the Miracles the more doubtful the Marks the more obscure the sence of either what is called the Catholick Church or declared by it the lesse reason hath any Christian to beleeve upon the account of any who call themselves by the name of the Catholick Church Conclusion IV. The more absurd any Opinions are and repugnant to the first Principles of sence and reason which any Church obtrudes upon the faith of men the greater reason men still have to reject the pretence of Infallibility in that Church as a grand Imposture Conclusion V. To disown what is so taught by such a Church is not to question the Veracity of God but so firmly to adhere to it as to what he hath revealed in Scriptures that men dare not out of love to their souls reject what is so taught THe First Conclusion hath been retorted in the 30. Proposition against the Church of England which Dr. Stillingfleet undertakes to maintain because if an infallible Church be superfluous much more superfluous must the Church of England be that is confessedly fallible Nay it must be dangerous because by the Laws of the Land which confirm it and by the Benefices and Revenues that enrich it men may be induced to follow false doctrine whereunto as a fallible Church it may leade them The 2. Conclusion deprives the Church and State of England of all hopes of peace and quiet because if a Church pretending with good grounds to Infallibility must be judged and censured by every private mans 〈◊〉 and discretion much more a Church that acknowledgeth to be fallible and yet both reason and experience demonstrate that no Church or Common-wealth can be peaceable wherein every private person is permitted to be a Judge of its Laws or of its Religion The 3. Conclusion absolutely destroys the Church of England because it doth not as much as pretend to Miracles nor supernatural visible marks nor to the name of the Catholick Church and by D. Stillingfleets consequence no Christian ought to believe upon the account of 〈◊〉 Church The 4. Con●●●sion is also destructive to the Church of England because nothing is more repugnant to the first principles of sence and reason then that a Church confessedly fallible should pretend to direct men to the in●allible certainty of Christian Faith and that men 〈◊〉 be compelled by Laws and penalties to hazard their salvation by
performed by Antichrist or by any other that the devil hath a kindness for without any concurrence or real existence of the Object you fancy to see hear smell touch or taste and of this we have sufficient proofs and examples in visions and apparitions both of good and bad spirits both in sacred and prophane History We ought not therefore to attribute so much to the evidence of sense in its most proper Object it cannot have evidence in any other as to wrest the words of Scripture from their literal and plain sence in the Mystery of Transubstantiation seeing we must confess that Antichrists false Miracles will have no other colour of truth but what will be grounded upon the Evidence of sense in its most proper Object and if this Evidence ought not to prevail in favour of Antichrists Miracles I see no reason why it ought to prevail against Christs words This is my body As for matters of faith that suppose matters of fact the certainty of their belief doth not depend so much upon the sences evidence of the fact as D. Stillingfleet imagines pag. 469. For we do not beleeve that any of the Apostles or others did see Christ in the very act or instant of his Resurrection though they did see him a little after but they did not see the Resurrection it self and though they had seen it the assurance of their faith must have been grounded upon divine Revelation not upon that sight So that not only succeeding ages but the Apostles themselves believed Christs Resurrection with Christian faith not because they did see him revived but because he told them he was the very same Christ that had been dead and this his assertion is confirmed by the same signes and testimonies whereby the other mysteries of Faith are Conclusion SEeing therefore the whole Catholick Church cannot be composed of many or any two dissenting Congregations in any point of Faith whether fundamental or not fundamental and that the same Catholick Church must have supernatural signes and Miracles whereby it may be discerned from all Heretical Congregations and that no other * D. Do● ham in 〈◊〉 Treatise● Antichr● l. 1. c. 7. p● 111. sait● Neither Turks n● Jews no● any other Church of Christian but only th● Pope and Church of Rome do vaunt of Miracles Christian Congregation but the Roman-Catholick doth as much as pretend to supernatural signes and Miracles and that this pretence of Miracles in the Roman-Catholick Church is so well grounded that the wisest and wariest men of the world for many ages and in this also did take it to be good and sufficient evidence to build thereupon their hopes of salvation and that such as deny the sufficiency of this evidence cannot dispute it otherwise then by saying contrary to universal Tradition and to the Testimony of all Histories that they who believed and wrought our Miracles were cheats or mad-men and that there can be no greater madness then so rash an assertion seeing I say all this hath been made out in my Propositions I hope it may be evidently concluded that the Roman-Catholick Church and only the Roman-Catholick Church is the whole Catholick and true Church of God From whence must follow the quite contrary of D. Stillingfleets Principles and Conclusions This Sir is my Opinion of a Book so much applauded by those that understand not its Principles nor the inconveniencies it may draw upon the Religion and Revenues of the Church of England by making that Church as useless for saving souls as its Revenues are thought by Statesmen necessary for supporting the State I am March 17. 1671. Yours J.W. FINIS Errata In the Page on the back-side the Title line 3. for Principles of Christianity reade Principles of Protestancy page 6. line 14. reade confirmed p. 10. l. 10. r. which the Church then and for p. 12. l. 5. r. S. Xavier
Dr. STILLINGFLEETS PRINCIPLES OF PROTESTANCY Cleared Confuted and Retorted AND THE INFALLIBILITY OF THE ROMAN-CATHOLICK CHURCH Asserted And that the same Church alone is the whole CATHOLICK CHURCH IN A Letter from a Catholick Gentleman to a Protestant Knight Printed in the Year 1673. THE PUBLISHER TO THE READER NOtwithstanding the Multiplicity of Learned and solid Answers to Dr. Stillingfleets Principles of Christianity I thought fit also to publish this Short and Substantial Peece though neglected by the Author as more particularly suited for men endowed with strength of Reason and Judgement yet not much versed in Book-Learning SIR ACcording to your desire I have perused Dr. Stillingfleet's Discourse of Idolatry and his Principles of Protestancy To deliver my Opinion of either seemeth to be superfluous it being credible both are answered in England ere now But because you press me to it and the Answer may be as long expected here as the Book hath been I will venture to give my Judgement of Dr. Stillingfleet and do confesse ingeniously that of all Protestant Writers I ever read I take him to be not only the wittiest but the wisest especially where he rallies and endeavours to make the Roman Religion ridiculous For to imagine that rational men can be moved by serious Discourses to believe that God would send Martin Luther John Calvin Martin Bucer Thomas Cranmer c. to reform Christianity their lives having been so scandalous and un-christianlike or that he would oblige the world to credit such vicious men without shewing any Credentials or Miracles to confirm their Testimony and new sense of Scripture is to make God take a new and unreasonable Method Therefore Dr. Stillingfleet had very good Reasons not to insist upon this old and ordinary way of his Protestant Controversers he fixt upon a better for his own purpose which is to rail at the Saints and rally us out of their Religion and Miracles But notwithstanding the judicious choice of his new Method I humbly conceive he hath overshot himself by aiming so high and letting his arrows fly against so ancient a Patriarch as St. Bennet of whose supernatural gifts and Miracles never any one doubted that believed so authentick an Authour and Doctor of Gods Church as * Bishop Godwin in his Catalogue of Bishops c. p. 3. saith That blessed and holy Father S. Gregory was the o●casion of Re-planting the Christian Faith in our Countrey The same saith D. Whitaker contra Durcum lib. 5. p. 394. M. Bell in his Survey of Popery p. 187. termeth him S. Gregory s●rnamed the Great the holy and Learned Bishop of Rome D. Humphrey in his ●esuatism par 2. pag. 624. saith Gregory both in Name and in very Deed Great was ind●ed with many Gifts of divine grace S. Isidore de Scrip● Ecclesiast c. 27. saith Gregory Bishop of the Apostolick See of Rome c. was by the grace of the holy Ghost so greatly indued with light of knowledge as no Doctor of this present Age or in tim●s p●●t was equal to him S. John Damas●en speaking of his Dialogues and the life of S. Bennet which S. Gregory writ saith Let Gregory that wrote the Book of Dialogues Bishop of the elder Rome be brought forth a man as all know that was renowned both for holiness of life and learning c. St. Gregory the Great who writ his Life And truly Dr. Stillingfleet is the first Protestant Doctor I heard of did except against St. Gregories sincerity or sufficiency in relating matters of fact or faith He might think fit to make bold with S. Ignatius because he was Founder of the Jesuites with St. Dominick also because he invented the Inquisition But to think that his Raillery could reach to discredit the Miracles and Sanctity of S. Bennet and the Testimony of S. Gregory the Great is an unpardonable Crime And yet D. Stillingfleets Friends and his Enemies may excuse the heinousness of this Crime by the impossibility of Defending his Cause otherwise then by facing us down that all the Roman-Catholick Prelats and Preachers since the Primitive times were either so witless as to be seduced by foolish Saints and feign'd Miracles or so wicked as to conspire against Gods known Worship and plain Word to damn themselves and posterity And withall were so obstinate in adhering to the Errours of Popery that in whatsoever Age any Preachers began to reform that Doctrine they were suddenly cried down and condemned as notorious Hereticks by the Prelats and Councils of the then visible Church But leaving this to the Answerers of D. Stillingfleets Book I will pass to his Principles Dr. Stillingfleets PRINCIPLES Cleared Confuted and Retorted Of his Six Principles pretended to be agreed upon on both Sides TO his three first Principles I have nothing to say D. Stillingfleets Fourth Principle is That in order to mans obeying the Will of God it is necessary that he Know what it is for which some manifestation of the Will of God is necessary both that man may know what he hath to do and that God may justly punish him if he do it not Principle V. Whatever God reveals to man is infallibly true and being intended for the Rule of mans Obedience may be certainly known to be his Will HIs Fourth Principle must be examined before any Christian can agree with him in it If he means that in order to mans obeying the Will of God it is necessary that he know what it is with clear or undeniable Evidence the Principle is false it is sufficient that he knows what Gods Will is by Credible Testimony or publick authority though the infallible certainty thereof doth not clearly appear So children are bound under pain of damnation to honour their Parents and Subjects to obey their Soveraigns though no infallible certainty appeareth that they are their Parents or Soveraigns In like manner though no undeniable certainty appears to us that God speaketh or declareth his Will by Scripture or by his Church yet we are bound under pain of damnation to beleeve that what is proposed and commanded by them is the Word and Will of God and accordingly we ought to obey The reason of this assertion is that mans understanding being imperfect its assent is more frequently directed by outward signs to the truth than by any immediate sight of the same And therefore even in things of greatest concern we are accustomed and indeed for want of better evidence forc't to rely upon the Tradition Testimony and Information of others and thereupon to ground our judicial decrees and Sentences both in Church and State This Custom being agreeable to reason and the Law of nature it cannot be against either to conform ourselves thereunto in supernatural Mysteries or matters of Faith seeing we understand lesse of these than of any others Therefore not only the Fourth Principle but the Fifth also which Dr. Stillingfleet pretends to be agreed unto on both sides are false inasmuch as they suppose that a clear
these seas of examples overwhelm contrary to the sence and practice of the greatest Doctors and Saints of Gods Church A man that can beleeve this may be credulous enough to think he can perswade the world to look upon all Miracles as mistakes and upon the Saints that wrought them as fools and phanaticks But if Dr. Stillingfleet will secure him elf and all Protestants from impostures let him enquire into the motives and Miracles which induce us to beleeve that the Roman-Catholick Church is infallibly assisted by God in delivering and interpreting his Word and Revelations He will not then presume to make every mans private Judgement according to his 5. and 6. Proposition the only ballance of so weighty an affair neither will he prefer his own particular opinion before the publick Testimony and constant Tradition of Christendom for many Ages especially if he will examine whether Gods Veracity Goodness and Providence be consistent with permitting fraud or falshood in that Doctrine which a Church in all appearance miraculous and supernaturally qualified proposeth as divine Whether the Miracles of the Roman-Catholick Church be true or false we dispute not at present but only averr that seeing so many * See S. Aug. de Civit. Dei lib. 22. c. 8. where amongst other Miracles he telleth how that in the presence of him and others a devout woman called Palladia was suddenly cured by praying to St. Stephen and at his Monument his words are Ad sanctum Martyem crare periexerat quae mox ut cancellos attigit sana surrexit S. Malachias Miracles you may see in his life written by S. Bernard who says in what kinde of old Miracles did not Malachias excel he wanted not Prophecy not Revelation not the gift of healing and to conclude not raising of the dead and relates them particularly as also how himself assisting at Malachias his death got his blessing and after he expired took his hand and laying it on the withered and useless hand of a boy then present he was restored to perfect health because in the dead Saint saith S. Bernard lived the grace of curing diseases All these and other more ancient and modern Miracles as those of S. Bernard himself are by the Century Writers Ostander and most Protestant Authors said to be cheats delusions or inchantments See Ostander for one in Epit. cent 12. pag. 310. Partim permissione Dei praestigiis Satanicis effecta existimo not saith he that I think S. Bernard was a Magician but it is likely Satan wrought such Miracles to confirm Idolatry and the worship of Saints c. See S. Xamir his Miracles wrought to convert the Indians and Japonians to Popery himself being a Jesuite wise and wary men in every Age for at least a 1000. years and after a severe Scrutiny and serious study have judged our most authentick Miracles true if all these men should be mistaken none can be condemned for following their judgement And all prudent and learned men must confesse it is a mystery not intelligible how the infinite Veracity of God can be infinitely averse from fraud and falshood if he permits both the one and the other to be countenanc't and promoted by apparent Miracles so plausibly fathered upon the Divine Omnipotency that such as pretend them to be counterfeit cannot discover the fraud nor disprove the fact nor finde out any natural cause to work such prodigious effects and therefore are forc't im●●●ting the obstinate Jews to attribute them to the power of Beelzebub or to the craft of those very Monks which they would have the world beleeve were mad-men and yet now make them so witty as to contrive the cheat so cunningly and to counterfeit supernatural Miracles so naturally that our Protestant Adversaries have been hitherto as unsuccessful in discovering any fallacy in them I mean still those which moved the Popes to canonize Saints as the first Reformers Luther and Calvin were unfortunate in being convicted of Folly and Forgery in imitating them when the one attempted to cast out the devil in Germany and the other to revive the dead in Geneva Proposition XIV To suppose the Books so written to be imperfect i. e. that any things necessary to be believed or practised are not contained in them is either to charge the first Author of them with fraud and not delivering his whole minde or the Writers with insincerity in not setting down and the whole Christian Church of the first ages with folly in believing the fulness and perfection of the Scriptures in order to salvation Proposition XV. These Writings being owned as containing in them the whole Will of God so plainly revealed that no sober Enquirer can miss of what is necessary for salvation there can be no necessity supposed of any infallible Society of men either to attest or explain these Writings c. Proposition XVI There can be no more intolerable usurpation upon the faith of Christians then for any person or Society of men to pretend to an assistance as infallible in what they propose as was in Christ or his Apostles without giving any equal degree of evidence that they are so assisted as Christ and his Apostles did viz. by Miracles as great publick and convincing as theirs were by which I mean such as are wrought by these very persons who challenge this Infallibility and with a design for the conviction of those who do not beleeve it The 7.8.9.10.11.12 and 13. Propositions and but so many Prefaces to induce us to beleeve the 14. which says that if all things necessary to be believed or practised are not contained in the Holy Scriptures of the New and Old Testament it followeth that God was fraudulent in not delivering his whole minde or that the Writers were insincere in not setting it down and the whole Christian Church of the first ages fools for believing the fulness and perfection of the Scriptures in order to Salvation These consequences suppose but 't is not proved that God promised or decreed to deliver his whole minde so plainly in the Scriptures concerning all things necessary for Salvation that every one may easily understand his meaning and that the Primitive Church believed so But this agreeth not with the Records of Antiquity nor with the words of S. Peter 2 Pet. 3.16 saying that in S. Pauls Epistles there were some things hard to be understood and easily wrefted by men to their damnation And is further demonstrated to be false by the continual contestations of Protestants against the Roman-Catholick sence of Scripture about Image-worship whether it be prohibited in the Second Commandement and many other Controversies as the Real Presence c. For if Scripture or Gods meaning therein were as plain as is pretended in the 15. Proposition consciencious sober and learned men could not differ so irreconcileably in the true sence thereof Wherefore nothing is more clear to men in Scripture then that Scripture is not clear and that God did not intend it for the
following a guide that owns not to be fully assured whether his own Doctrine be the right way to Heaven The 5. Conclusion makes it lawful for every man to reject the authority of the Church of England and to make himself sole Judge of the Scriptures and all this out of love to his soul and out of reverence to Gods Veracity which is in equivalent terms to make Dr. Stilling fleets Religion inseparable from Heresie and Rebellion and inconsistent with the safety of any State or Soveraign Conclusion VI. Though nothing were to be delivered as the Will of God but what is by the Catholick Church declared to be so yet this doth not at all concern the Church of Rome which neither is the Catholick Church nor any sound part or member thereof From all which it follows that it can be nothing but wilful Ignorance weakness of judgment strength of prejudice or some sinful passion which makes any one forsake the Communion of the Church of England to embrace that of the Church of Rome This 6. Conclusion I shall endeavour to confute by proving that the Roman-Catholick Church alone is the whole Catholick Church In order whereunto I will set down these few Propositions 1. That there is and always hath been upon earth a visible Catholick Church otherwise Christ would not have commanded us to repair to it in our differences nor the Apostles have made it an Article of our Creed 2. The Catholick Church must have some visible and supernatural signes far exceeding all others in the appearance of being such whereby it may be discerned from all ●agan and Heretical Congregations pretending to be a part or the whole Catholick Church If this be not granted no man is obliged to be of any Church nay rather all men are obliged to be of no Church because not having any signes to prefer one Church before the other none could know which is the true one and therefore it 's a hundred to one at least they would fall into some Heretical Congregation there being so many and the true Church or Congregation but one 3. That no supernatural signs or Miracles can be visible and wrought for conrfimation of doctrine in any Congregation but in that one which is the true Church because the signes or Miracles which Christ said would follow the Beleevers Mark 16. or the true Church are of the same nature of Christs Miracles and in order to gain credit for the testimony it gives of it self and his doctrine and God being the Author of truth and concord cannot give supernatural signes of his trust or truth to any two or more dissenting Churches for if he did the wisest course as I said learned and pious men could take would be to turn Scepticks and not believe in God Hence also it followeth 4. That the Catholick Church cannot be composed of any two Congregations dissenting in any one point which eith●r holds to be an Article of Faith fundamental or not fundamental the reason is because if they be of equal authority men ought rather to suspend then submit their judgments to either of those Congregations and though both should agree in fundamental Articles yet because God being truth it self is as contrary to small as great un●ru●hs or errors he can no more permit the Testimony of his Church and his Miracles to confirm a little then a great untruth and so it must be infallible as well in not fundamentals as in fundamentals 5. Gods being of infinite Veracity as hath been proved in my confutation of Dr. Stillingfleets 6 16 17. Propositions cannot permit any false Church to have or shew so credible an appearance of true Miracles as hath been alwaies and now is pretended to be in the Roman-Catholick Church They are so convincing that our adversaries can as little prove the fraud as deny the fact They are so frequent that there is scarce a Countrey in Christendom wherein they have not been wrought They are so authentick I speak only of such as are approved by the Bishops of Rome in order to the canonization of Saints that there cannot be a more narrow scrutiny into the nature and cure of the disease nor into the sincerity and sufficiency of the Witnesses and the severity of our judgments against such as we finde to be cheats and Impostors is notorious even in Ireland where our Ecclesiastical discipline is restrained by the Laws we have ventured to silence James Finanghty a simple ignorant Priest because himself and he who caused them to be printed were so weak as to fancy they were true Miracles I know Dr. Stillingfleet may object against this Proposition the Miracles of Antichrist but his Miracles will not be of the same nature with the Miracles of Christ and ours he will not convert Nations to Christianity by imitating the Apostles humility poverty and chastity as the Apostolical men of our Church have done in all former ages and even in this Witnesse both the Indies Brasile Ethiopia Persia Japan and China Besides though Antichrist's Miracles could be in appearance as palpable and as plausible as ours yet besides the precedency and prediction of ours as true the particular circumstances wherewith Scripture hath described that man of sin and the warning it hath given us not to beleeve his Miracles do so discredit him and them that no man who will reflect upon the Scriptures words and recurr to God for help will be deceiv'd by Antichrist's Impostures and lying Prodigies True it is that according to * See D. Stilling fleets Answ pag. 469. D. Stillingfleets Principles making every particular person Judge of Divine Revelation and admitting nothing as such that he thinks doth contradict sense in its proper object Antichrist's Miracles must be judged true Miracles and by consequence his Doctrine must be embraced as Divine Revelation For upon this account alone doth Dr. Stillingfleet deny the Miracle and Mystery of Transubstantiation notwithstanding the clearness of Scripture for it being impossible to express that Truth or any other in more clear terms then by Christs saying This is my body so likewise it must be concluded from Dr. Stillingfleet Principles that though Christ tels you clearly Antichrist's Miracles will not be true Miracles yet if your eyes tels you that is if you see a man lie like dead and afterwards see him stand and move by Antichrist's command you must prefer this evidence of sence in its proper object before Christs clear words and Revelation For the proper object of sense goes no further then to the outward appearance or accidents it doth not penetrate to the substance of bread or wine much less to the life or soul of a seeming dead man and by consequence men may be mistaken in the substance of both though they rely upon senses evidence in its proper object which is only the species or outward appearances or if you will follow the modern opinion certain impressions made upon the Organs of our senses and this may be