Selected quad for the lemma: church_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
church_n bishop_n elder_n ephesus_n 3,861 5 11.6134 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A47939 A whipp a whipp, for the schismaticall animadverter upon the Bishop of Worcester's letter by Roger L'Estrange. L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. 1662 (1662) Wing L1325; ESTC R10187 33,398 64

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Wor'ster and not Mr. Baxter that is the Pastor of Kidderminster as well as of all Other Parochial Churches in that Diocesse and that the Cure of Souls in That or any other Parish of That Diocesse was never either by Himself or any Other Bishop of Wor'ster committed to Mr. Baxter c. So that the word Sole is the Animadverter's Whimsie and foysted in only to irritate the Rabble against Prelacy as tending toward Popery when not a Syllable ever dropp'd from the Bishops Pen in favour of this feigned and frivolous Assertion To discover the Forgery the Reader needs only compare the Quotation with the Text where he shall find first the Notorious Juggle of his misallegation and Then having lugg'd in by Head and Shoulders the Popes Supremacy under That Blind weakly heaven knows he bestowes his Shot upon the Superiority of Bishops where in fine all he does is but to Combat an Idole of his own Making and which is yet more pleasant the Puppet gets the Better of the Rabbi The Bishop does not deny Parochial Ministers to be Pastors of their Particular Flocks it is not at all the Question but still they are Subordinate and Delegated by the Bishop from whom they Receive Institution and Induction Reserving still to himself the Superintendency of them All. But the man 's for Parity I perceive and against Deputation He 's Consequently ●gainst the King for a Leveller in the Church never fails to be one in the State Let him examine himself and keep his own Counsel B I forbear to ●rge how contrary this Practice is to the Doctrine of the Apostl●s both Paul and Peter I hope the Bishop will not take it ill that I do not call them Saints for these Holy men do not need any stile of Honour out of the Popes Kalender B The Animadverter does wondrous well to forbear Paul and Peter for to my Knowledge they are Two of the greatest Enemies he has But what a wipe he gives the Bishop for his Popes Kalender and then he Churrs like a Turky-cock at the Conceit on 't I hope the Bishop will not take it ill quoth he that I do not call them Saints He 's a notable wit I warrant him Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ c. with all the SAINTS which are in all Achaia 2 Cor. 1. 1. Paul c. to the SAINTS which are at Ephesus c. Eph. 1. 1. Salute all the SAINTS Phil. 4. 21. All the SAINTS Salute you Phil. 4. 22. Since we heard of your Faith in Christ Jesus and of your Love toward all SAINTS Col. 1. 4. Was Paul a Papist or what signifies SAINT but Holy Now for a fling at the Bishop by the way of Sole Pastor C When Paul had sent for the Elders of the Church at Ephesus he bids them to feed the Church of God over which not be himself by his sole Authority a● Bishop of the Diocess but the Spirit of God had made them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Overseers or to use the proper stile Bi●hops And Peter commands his Fellow Elders for so doth that Apostle 〈◊〉 to call himself to feed the Flock which was among them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Overseeing or Acting the Bishops not like the Bishop of Worcester as Lording it over Gods Heritage but as Patte●ns of the Flock From which places we learn not only that those two so much controverted Names of Bishop and Pres●yter are without distinction ascribed to the same Persons but likewise that whoever f●d the Flock are under Christ whom the Apostle there stil●s the Chief Shepheard the next and immediate Pastors of the Flock and to extend the Pastoral Power beyond the actual care of Feeding is a notion altogether u●scriptural and likewise leaves us no bounds where to fix till we come to ce●re upon some one Universal Pastor who may claim this Power over the whole world by the same parity of reason that a Bishop doth over one D●ocesse C Very good Paul sends for the Elders of the Church at Ephesus and they come I hope so there 's Authority and Obedience The Apostle gives them their Charge also to Feed the Flock whereof the Holy Ghost had made them Over-seers not the Bishop of the Diocesse sayes our Aerius No question of it Does the Bishop of Wor'ster assume any Personal Privilege in Matters Essential to his Function Does he pretend to Act by any other Virtue then That of his Ecclesiastical Mission If not his rude Parenthesis is a double Impertinence Again Peter sayes he Commands his Fellow-Elders c. Par in Parem non habet Imperium A Superiority among Equals is a Contradiction The word in truth is so●ter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which intimates rather Exhortation or Entreaty and for his Fellow-Elders it signifies just as much from the Apostle as Fellow-Souldiours from a General Their Commission is to Feed he sayes and Over-see not like the Bishop of Worcester c. Lording it over Gods Heritage c. His Rayling apart Marque now his Inferences First that the Names of Bishop and Presbyter are without distinction apply'd to the same Persons Go to then but can he shew me where the Powers are exercis'd in Common too We do not argue upon Names but Things Can Presbyters Ordein Inflict a Censure or as Meer Presbyters can they Govern Let 's see a Text for 't If they are Overseers in Respect of their Flocks They are yet part of the Flock Themselves in respect of the Diocesan Bishop They Oversee and they are Overseen according to the Scale of Order and Authority His next Deduction is Haeretical Church-Parity to which he adds that the Pastoral Power extends only to the Actual care of Feeding Is 't not a Shephard's Duty as well to Govern his Flock as to Feed it To Keep in Straglers c. Bishop Andrews will tell you in his Opuscula Posthuma that Pastor in the Latin Church is alwayes taken for a Bishop for one that Governs as well as Feeds and Governs even the Feeders of Particular Flocks In Homer the King himself is call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Shepheard of his People Touching his Universal Pastor by the same reason we are to have an Universal King EXCEPTION III. A IT seems to be a Light and to say no more unseemly trifling with sacred Scripture to affirm that those words of our Saviour concerning such as come not in by the door and therefore are Thieves and Robbers ought to be understood of such Ministers as preach to Congregations without the Bishops License Which thing the Bishop in great heat and Earnestnesse as if he had done very well in it tels us more then once that it was the Principal reason why he silenced Mr. Baxter A SOmebody resolve me whether This Libeller has more Wit or Honesty and take the Naked Truth of the Story Baxter for Brevity sake throwes out one Dancy the Minister of Kidderminster from his Living and
A WHIPP A WHIPP For the Schismaticall Animadverter Upon the BISHOP of WORCESTER's LETTER By ROGER L'ESTRANCE Aetas Parentum pejor Avis tulit Nos Nequiores mox daturos Progeniem vitiosiorem Horat. LONDON Printed for Henry Brome at the Gun in Ivy-lane February the 7 th 1662. The Preface IF the Bishop of Worcester had not Profess'd in his late Vindication that as it was his first it should be his last and intimated a Resolution never to dip in the same Ink again I should not have presum'd to thrust my Pen into the Controversie But finding a Virulent Libel wherein most Irreverent Mention is made of the said Bishop through whose sides the Function it self is invaded and therein the Authority of the King I accompt my self under a Threefold Obligation to Cast my Mite into the Publique as I am a Subject to his Majesty as I am a Son of the Church and upon a long Knowledge of the Bishop as I have a Personal Honour for him however wanting in the Complemental and Waiting part of my Duty to him since his Majesties Return Of the Pamphlet which Occasions me to give the World this Trouble I shall say little in this place but that it is All here though broken into several Insertions for the Ease and Satisfaction of the Bea● Concerning Libels in General let it be consider'd that the Last Warr began with a Paper-Scuffle and touching This in Particular that the Murtherers of the Late King first drew bloud of a Bishop That Thought methinks should call a stricter Eye upon the Presse to which Joyn but the Pulpit in Favour of any Faction and they shall overthrow the best Settlement in Nature Truly where Papers of Publique Scandal are not Punish'd I think 't is fit they should be Answer'd People will think they have Reason on their side else as well as shall I call it Fortune And yet I know the Fate and the Reward of this same Wrangling Scribling kind of Honesty But Patience 'T is not every mans Lot to Live like a Knave and Dye like an Honest man A Whipp c. ANIMADVERSION Honourable and Worthy Sir I Am to thank You for the last piece of Divertisement you gave me in sending the Bishop of Worcester ' s Letter and I wish you would have let me enjoyed the Satisfaction I took in Rea●ing it without Obliging me to give you my Sense upon it For besides my unwillingness to meddle in a Personal Quarrel it will not I think be very Safe for any to Engage against so Angry an Adversary which I shall be thought to do though I resolve to speak nothing but Truth in the Character I intend to give of him And it is briefly this That in fewer leaves I n●ver yet read more Passion which is so very Predominant that his Disorderly and Abrupt Stile doth altogether partake of it so that the Bishop's best way will be to get his Heat mistaken for Zeal for else it may be justly accounted something that hath a worse Name and which in the Dog-dayes will be very dangerous This being Sir my Judgment upon the whole Letter You may well expect that I should make it good by an Induction from particular Instances but before I do this I must deal impartially and assure you that as to the main Controversie I think the Bishop hath much the better of Mr. Baxter For if the Question between them was as Dr. Gunning and Dr. Pearson do attest such a command is so evidently lawful that I shall much wonder if Mr. Baxter did ever dispute it and till he doth clearly disprove that that was not the thing in Question I must needs think that he hath much forgot himself in making an imperfect and parlial Relation Setting aside therefore the business of that particular Contest wherein you see how much I am inclined to Favour the Bishop there are other things in his Letter of general concernment which I think liable to just exception As I Am more puzzled what to Call This whiffling Incognito that Libels the Bishop of Worcester then to prove him any thing almost but what he should be By his Severity upon the Bishops Passion I should take him for a Stoique by That upon his Style for a Critique by the Divertisement he says the Bishops Letter gave him for a Phanatique and by his Dog-Periphrasis of Madness I find the man would gladly be suspected of some Skill in Rhetorique Grammatious Rhetor Geometres Pictor Aliptes Augur Schoenobates Medicus Magus omnia novit The Thing in short is a Well-willer to the Good-Old-Cause and gets now and then a Snap at the Bishop of Worcester under colour of an Accompt from Your most Humble Servant D. E. to the Honourable and Worthy c. concerning That Reverend Prelate's Vindication when Effectually the Entercourse betwixt the Honourable Sir and the Humble Servant is no more then a Dialogue betwixt the Monky and the Glasse Yet I warrant ye 't is all over England already how the Animadverter has paid the Bishop and This Paper-Kite of his with a Candle at 's Tail passes among the Blear-ey'd Brethren for a Starr of the first Magnitude To deal impartially yet I do absolutely agree with the Animadverter that the Bishop hath much the better of Mr. Baxter Till he doth clearly disprove that That was not the Thing in Question This Purity of Stile is not every mans Talent only I remember an Elegancy like This in a certain Irish Author that serv'd Me once in the Quality of a Footman Hoping thereby sayes he that I should not prosecute him for the Breach of the Non-performance of his Promises made unto me May it now please the Illustrious Unknown to accept of This accompt to his Prologue and to permit Me the Liberty of a short Preface before I close with his Exceptions Next to No Adversary at all give Me a Calm Opponent that knows the Terms of Modesty and Honour and yet makes the best of his Cause Not Passionate as our Authour sayes the Bishop is No no nor False nor Treacherous nor Malitious nor indeed Simple if 't were possible How far the Animadverter now complies with the Obligations of a Fair Enemy let any thing that can but Read and Difference Day from Night Determine Marque first how This Correctour of Magnificat Our Christian Stoique handles the Bishop upon the point of Passion Heat which in the Dog-dayes will be very dangerous Pag. 1. The Fatal Example of That one Bishops Usurpations Pag. 3. Impertinent and False Pag. 5. Most False ibid. If any are Cholerick and Teasty enough to be of his minde ibid. As to Christian Charity the whole thing is but a Letter of Defiance against it Pag. 6. There can be nothing more false ibid. This Malitious and ill-grounded fancy ibid. It is bold and Impious Pag. 7. He does very virulently Instance Pag. 8. Were he either Christian or Man enough Pag. 9. The Reverend Fathers deep
Wisdom Pag. 11. an Irony Here 's his Vomit and in the name of Peace what stirr'd this Humour De Iracundiâ Magister Iracundissimus disputat The Bishop of Wor'ster wipes off an Aspersion cast upon him by Mr. Baxter The Animadverter masques himself like a Son of the Church gives it against Baxter and without any Interest in the Dispute or Provocation to it falls upon the Bishop in what Termes we have shew'd already and after a word or two more wee 'll look into his Reasons Thrice Three are his Exceptions so that we have something Sacred and Mysterious in the Number how loose and weak-soever we find the Matter of them Truly I could wish them either Shorter Fewer or Better for the Readers sake but since that Reverend Prelate is concern'd I would not wish them Other for the Bishops In Truth so foul they are that to say What they are might pass for Railing We shall however expose the Libel every Syllable of it take it in Order and in Pieces confronting every Point Material in it with such Answer as the Quality of it requires And now to his Exceptions which begin with This Charge upon the Bishop EXCEPTION I. A FIrst That he supposeth there is so strict an Union and so inseparable a Dependence between Kings and Bishops that they must stand and fall together and all who are enemies to the one must needs be enemies to the other I know very well this Axiom is much talked of and some advantage may be taken to confirm it from the event of our Late Wars A THe Maxime which he Hints at and Abuses came from King James deliver'd upon Experience and since Confirm'd by the Murther of a King and the Dissolution of Monarchy Both which were Effect'd upon the same Grounds and by Those very Persons that Abolish'd Episcopacy But the saying is No BISHOP no KING and not in the Conversion as if it were Impossible in Nature for the One to subsist without the Other 'T is a Rule however that deserves to be Register'd in regard that never any Faction destroy'd Bishops and Sav'd the Monarch I wish it were in Capital Letters in every Chamber of his Majesties Palace No BISHOP no KING But One way or Other what does This concern the Bishop of Wor'ster who neither sayes nor supposes any thing to This Purpose for he does not so much as meddle with the Question but finding himself Traduc'd by some that had frequently and openly defam'd the King And is it any Wonder sayes he that those that are such Enemies to Kings should not be Friends to Bishops This Libeller would have the Face to tell the Sun 't were Midnight His next Fetch is a deep one B You know likewise Sir how much my Judgment is for the Order of Bishops and how Passionate a Lover I am both of the Kings Person and Government but yet being thus called by You to decla●e the Truth though co●trary to my own Humour and Interest I must needs say c. B This Cuts a Hair the Man we see is Willing but Weak Alass You know SIR how much my Judgment c. and how Passionate a Lover c. What is there in This Fawning Clause that the Kings Headsman might not set his Hand to He does not say you know that I Am Thus or So but you know how much I am that is Whether I am or not The most Pestilent Enemy the King has might have said a●●ch Marque ●w what 't is his Judgment is so much for For the Order of Bishops He will not say Degree or Praelation of them That he renounces but the Order of them a Goodly Shift Because every Bishop is a Presbyter therefore every Presbyter is a Bishop The King is a Gentleman is therefore every Gentleman a King An E●rl is a Baron but the Baron is not Therefore an Earl These Differ in Order upon the same proportion of Reason as does a Bishop from a Presbyter But to clear This point we are first to agree what 's meant by Order There is first Ordo Dignitatis An Order or Dignity or Praelation and in This Respect A Bishop differs from a Presbyter as does a Presbyter from a Deacon It is Otherwise taken for Potestas ad Actum Specialem a Power or Enablement for some Special Act and in This sense a Bishop differs Ordine from a Presbyter in the Power of Ordination and Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction as a Presbyter does from a Deacon in the Power of Cons●crating the Sacrament of the Eucharist Now say on C It is clear from Story that Kings were in all parts of the world in their most flourishing Estate before ever Bishops were heard of and no reason can be given why what hath once been may not with the same terms of convenience be again C 'T is right Kings flourish'd before either Bishops or Christians were ever heard of and therefore by his Argument we may be as well without Christianity as without Episcopacy But Here 's the Case Kings have been well without Bishops and never well with Presbyterians which shall they Quit First To conclude There is not at this day extant any Christian Monarchy without Bishops or the Equivalence of them D Bishops as they are by Law established in England are purely the Kings subordinate Ministers in the Management of Ecclesiastical Affairs which his Majesty may conferr upon what Order of men he pleases though they be as much Lay Persons as You and I are It is therefore very injurious to the Kings Authority to averr that He could not otherwise uphold and maintain it than by preserving the Undue and as some think Antichristian Dignity and Prelation of his in●iour Officers D. Infallibly This man is some Lay-Chaplain and is now beating the Bush to start a Benefice without Ordination What does he mean by Purely the Kings subordinate Ministers Does he understand by Purely as if to all purposes Ecclesiastical they Acted only by Regal Deputation The King himself does not pretend to all the Powers they Exercise The Authority of their External Jurisdiction flows from Him but their Internal and Ministerial Power derives from God As Subjects they proceed by the Kings Laws as Ministers they Act by a Divine Commission His Majesty may conferr he sayes c. What may his Majesty Conferr Leave to Elect not Power to Ordein That by a Right of Apostolical Succession descends and Rests upon the Church From This wild and weak Assertion he proceeds to give you a Tast of his Morals as well as of his Intellectuals and to uphold his Argument by Scandal and Sedition By Scandal first in charging the Fictions and Fantastiques of his own brain upon the Bishp of Wor'ster and Then by Sedition in casting his Audacious and Reproachful Epithetes of Undue and Antichristian upon an Order Instituted by Christ himself and Incorporate with the Government of this Nation by the Supreme Authority But still he persues his shadow
E. Bishops are so little usesul to support the Regal Dignity which is founded upon a distinct Basis of its own that upon enquiry it will be found how none have been greater enemies to the True and Undoubted Soveraingty of Princes than some Bishops themselves for by their Officious and fcarce warrantable intermedling in Civil Affairs by their Absurd and Insignificant distinguishing between Civil and Ecclesiastical Causes of which last they have alwayes made themselves sole Judges they mangle the Kings Authority and as to Church-matters which may be extended as far as they please they leave the King nothing of Supremacy but the Name The Pope of Rome therefore who is the great Father of all such Bishops hath improved this Notion and Distinction so far that in ordine ad spiritualia he hath laboured to subject all Civil Empires unto his sole Jurisdiction E That Regall and Episcopal Power have different Foundations who Questions or that some Bishops have opposed some Kings But did they ever do 't as Bishops What fellowship hath Christ with Belial It were no less then Blasphemy to entitle Rebellion to the Function whereof God himself was the Author It concludes little for the Consistorians that some Bishops have been Enemies to Kings if they consider that we are yet to seek for the First Presbyterian Party that ever were Friends to them Concerning his Cavil at the Distinction between Civil and Ecclesiastical Causes 'T is the Law distinguishes and so the good mans Absurdity lashes upon the King not upon the Bishops He blames likewise their Officious and scarce warr antable intermedling in Civil Affaires Do they Challenge or Act by their own Power or by the Kings If only by Derivation either the King himself wants Power or They have it If they extravagate let him shew Where But do the Bishops Mangle the Kings Authority I hope not so much as the Schismatiques did both That and his Revenue nay and his Person too Were they Bishops or Presbyterians that Preach'd and Libell'd against the Late King that Seiz'd his Towns Seduc'd his People Levy'd a Warr against him Plunder'd Sequestred and Murther'd his Friends and never left the Chase till his Royall Bloud was spilt upon a Scaffold Were they Bishops or Presbyterians that in Ordine adspiritualia Contrived Acted and Warranted the Usurpations of the late Warr In fine the Memory is Fresh and bleeding still of a Presbyterian let him produce One Instance of an Episcopal Rebellion since the Reformation He tells us that the Pope of Rome is the great Father of such Bishops If the great Father of Slanderers and False-speakers had not stood at his Elbow he would never have said it But for Brevity sake let him bring me the most Pragmatical Jesuite that ever put Pen to Paper I 'll match him with a Presbyterian I do not mean for Wit and Learning but for the worst of Practices he 'll dare to Charge him with Nay let him strein the Papal Tyranny he so much declaims against to what pitch of Arrogance and Imposition he pleases I 'll bring him Presbyterian Claims and Presidents shall equall it and when That 's done let him shew any One Episcopal Position destructive to Regality and take the Cause for 't Now have a Care of him for sayes He F So that if the Bishop of Worcester's R●le bold good of Crimine ab uno Disce omnes i. e. That all men who are of a party may be judged of by the miscarriages of one then I must leave it to You to judge what all those Bishops ●at are of the Bishop of Worcester's complexion do rea●y drive at by the fatal example of that one Bishops Usurpation For F Soft and Fair I beseech you Sir The Rule holds very Good but not the Scandal The whole Party are to be Judg'd of by a Particular and nothing makes more Against the Animadverter or for the Bishop then the force of that Conclusion and his Retort unless he can prove the Usurpations of the One and clear the Innocence of the Other by which the Rest are to be measured Hear the Bishop in his own words for This Animal makes the Bishop say what he list and yet makes nothing on 't when h 'as done speaking of Mr. Baxter You have before seen the ingenuity and veracity you now see the humility and the modesty of the Man and indeed in proportion of the whole Party for Crimine ab uno Disce omnes But doth Mr. Baxter and the rest of his perswasion think indeed c. First take the Words in their proper Import and Common Acceptation Does the Whole Party necessarily Imply every Individual or rather the Influence of a Ruling Vote which denominates the Result to be the Act of such or such a Party extending virtually to every Particular but not Distinctly If Party had been Number he had said something 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sayes the Text Then answered All the People his Bloud be upon us and upon our Children which General expression evidently intended only the Prevailing Part. Now to his Crimine ab Uno disce Omnes Accipenunc Danaum Insidias says Aeneas et Crimine ab uro Disce Omnes It was not the Poets intention to brand every man that was a Greek for Simon 's sake but to shew the suitable Treachery of the People that made use of so treacherous an Instrument To say that the French are a Vain the Spaniard a Proud Nation does it give to understand that there 's not a Modest or an Humble man in the Country But This is time lost for the Bishop restreins his Application in the very next line to those of Mr. Baxters perswasion so that if Mr. Baxter be blame-worthy his Complicates are scarce Innocent and he that pretends to justifie either becomes an Advocate for no lesse then Schisme and Treason His Seditious Hint of the Bishops Usurpation and warping to the Church of Rome deserves rather a Lash then an Answer Yet if he makes out either I 'll bear it for him EXC●PTION II. A THat Assertion that the Bishop of Worcester and consequently every other Bishop is the sole Pastor of all the Congregations in his Diocess if it be at all defensible I am sure can be defended only by those Arguments which are commonly alledged to maintain the Popes Supremacy over all Churches whatever For since a Bishop can no otherwise discharge his duty berein than by providing Substitutes what hinders but the Bishop of Rome may as well oversee a million of Churches as the Bishop of Worcester five hundred Since if Deputation be lawfull more or lesse compasse and circuit of ground doth not at all alter the case A NEver in my Life did I meet an Easier Book to confute with Reason and a harder to handle with Civility a man must underderstand every thing he sayes the wrong way to make Truth on 't Indeed the Reverend Prelate sayes that it is the Bishop of
seizes it to himself He Preaches Sedition There and his Doctrine was but suitable to his Title for he possess'd and enjoy'd it by an Act of Violence and Rebellion If this be not Robbery what is or if This be to come in at the Dore what is to creep in at the Window He Preach'd without a License and so came not in at the Dore He forcibly took away the Right of another which is the part of a Robber Silenc'd he was for Preaching without a Licence and There 's the Clamour Does not the Law forbid it Are there not divers Canons of the Church against it Nay let him be Ordeyn'd and Beneficed he 's not to Preach even in his own Parish without the Introduction of 〈◊〉 Licence 'T is criminal in the Bishop to suffer it in the Minister to do it But Mr. Baxter's Case needs not This Sifting his fault being not only Contumacy but Usurpation B Truly if this practise be justificable and those who design themselves to preach the Gospel must besides their Ordination procure a License from a Bishop to do that which a Woe is de●ced against if the● offer to o●t then 1. I see not what Ordination signifies ●ce the power that 〈◊〉 is given ●o Authority from Ma● 〈◊〉 away any more then dissolve the contract of a Mariage much lesse empeach and hinder the free use of it except for Moral and notoriously vicious Misdemeanours 2. For one Minister of the Gospel for certainly a Bishop is no more to Silence another and that for no better Reason than because his Fellow-Minister is desirous to preach the Gospel without a new License this is an abuse of Dominion which as our Saviour doth no where countenance so the first Ages of the Church were altogether 〈◊〉 with B Mr. Animadverter have a care of your Fingers If this Practice be not justificable the Constitution is Impious that allows it and the King is a Tyrant in Commanding it These are bloudy Words and Bradshaw is out of hearing Ordinatio● you think sufficient then without a License Well and speak Truth for Once what do yo●hink of a Good Living without Ordination Weak and Spi●l Creature Ordination Entitles you to the Ministry but not to the Benefice It Authori●es you as to the Function it self but not to the Local and Circumstantial application of it The Scripture sayes Preach the Law sayes When and Wher● And it must be the Gospel too not ●t-points betwixt King and Subject Holy Positions of Rebellion Instructing the Well-affected how they may kill the King in the fear of God Such as are Mr. Baxters T●s which the Bishop in his own Defence has published at the End of his Letter But of These the Anima●verter takes not the least notice Doctus spectare Lacunar or else perchance they lay on the blind side of him His bringing up the virtue of Ordination to the Instance of a Contract and in the Case of Mr. Baxter seems to reason as if an obligation to Marry were an Authority for a Rape Again that a Bishop is but one Minister of the Gospel which he urges in Contempt of his Jurisdiction is a Mistake The Law understands a Bishop to be a Corporation and all the Reason in the World it is that his Fellow-Minister as he Phrases Mr. Baxter should not Preach without a New License because he taught Treason by Virtue of his Old one C For the Bishop's Inst● of our Saviour ' s putting to silence the Scrib●s and Pharisees is both Imperti●t and False because our Saviour did only silence them by Argument which the Bishop may do when ever he is a●le but what is that to an Authoritative and im●erious commanding men to be Silent Besides even then when our Saviour was most strict in pronouncing Woes against the Pharisees in that very Chapter he is so far f●om forbidding the Pharisees to preach that he commands his Disciples both to hear and to obey their Doctrine So that since the Bishop wi● needs have the Presbyterians to be Pharisees let him but allow them the same Liberty of Teaching the People as our Saviour did the other and I believe they will not at least were I a Presbyterian I should not envy his Lordship either his Title or M● how 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 soever they both be And though the Bishop is pleased to say That the Presbyterians preach nothing but Sedition and Treason which is most ●alse as being directly 〈◊〉 to their declared Principles yet the Pharise●s taught something worse and that was 〈◊〉 Yet our Saviour who sure had more power and withal more care of his Church ●hen the Bish●p of Worcester did not go about by force to prohibit them C Touching our Saviours Silencing the Scribes and Pharisees having no ordinary Jurisdiction in the Jewish Church which way should it be done without the Interpose of his Divinity but by Argument nor does the Bishop imply other under Correction of his Impertinent and False his Mouth 's as foul as if he were in a Course of Salivation But since the Presbyterians must be Pharisees he desires they may have the same Liberty of Teaching the People and so let them when they sit in Moses Chair I must confess if the Bishop sayes which I do not find That the Presbyterians Preach nothing but Sedition and Treason I think he does them wrong for they Preach Nonsense too and Blasphemy in abundance This does the Animadverter with his usual Modesty affirm to be most False and How 'T is Contrary insooth to their Declared Principles so have been all their Actings wherefore 't is True D I wish therefore that this Bishop and the rest of his Brethren if any are Ch●lerick and Testy enough to be of his mind would consider that as by silencing their Fellow Ministers for such frivolous and slight pretences they usurp a Power which Christ never gave so a● the l●st day he will not thank them for the Exercise of it D How now Cholerick Testy Frivolo●s Usurp Certainly this Fellow has been taught like a Parrot to cry nothing but Walk Knave If the Bishops in Acting according to the Law of the Land Usurp a Power deny'd them by Christ the Law is Antichristian and There the Scandal sticks let the Law and the Libeller dispute it EXCEPTION IV A HOw consistent with the Civil Peace for as to Christian Charity the whole thing is but a Letter of d●fiance against it the Bishops Distinction is about the Act of I●dempnity and ●he so much fo●gotten Act of 〈◊〉 I hope His Majesty and the Parliament will in due ●i ne consider For he is so hardy as to tell us That the King by it only pardoned the corporal punishment but the Church had not nor ought not to forgive the scandal till honourable amends were made her by confession and Recantation Where by speaking of the Church as distinct from the State I mean in point of Co●rcive Jurisdiction the Bishop would make us
believe that after His Majesty and the Parliament have forgiven men their Civil Crimes there is still another Power which he calls the Church unto which they are still accountable eve● so far as to make a Pu●lick 〈◊〉 Here I w●sh the Bishop would have s●oken out of the Clouds and plainly told us what he meant by the Church For if it be a Congrega●ion of the Faithful met together for the worship of God as the D●finition of Scripture and of the Church of England in the 39 Articles this will not at all advantage him since such a Chu●ch hath 〈◊〉 Co●cive or Imposing Power But if he means the Hierarchy or Ecclesiastical State ●y Arch-Bishops Bishops c. there can be nothing mor● false or more dishonourabl● unto o● Civil Government than to affirm that it lies in their power not only ●o pu●sh but lik●wise to exact a Recantation f●r those faults which the King and Parliament have not only pardo●ed but und● sever● penalties command● sh●uld never more be remembred And therefore I doubt not but that they will resent this Malicious and ●ll-grounded Phancy A YOu are Merry Sir be wise too and do not mind the King too much of the Act of Oblivion for when he comes to look upon his abus'd Mercy 't will turn his Patience into Fury To see the same Knots now in Confederacy against himself that Ruin'd his Father The Common Prostitutes of Bradshaw and Cromwell are still the Instruments of the Old Cause Reviv'd The same S●blers Printers and Stationers for the Presse the same Engines for the P●lpit and the same Snares for the People Yes and The same Capps Smiles and Gracious Looks to Encourage Countenance and Protect them In your own Words Sir This I hope his Majesty and the Parliament will in due time consider Mind here the Hardinesse of the Bishop whose Position is This that the King may pardon the Corporal Punishment but it is God that must pardon the Guilt and the Church the Scandal That is upon Repentance and Confession Where 's now the Wonder Can the King Act beyond the Sphear of his Regal Jurisdiction But of all People living Methinks the Presbyterians should the least scruple this Limitation upon Majesty shall They that bring their Sovereign to the Stool of Repentance pretend that he can save others from it that cannot help himself The Animadverter takes it ill that the Church should require a Publique Recantation Let them but stand to their own Rule I 'm satisfi'd Those are to be judg'd Impenitents that have Declar'd their sin and never declar'd their Repentance And again Scandalous offenders are not to be admitted to the Holy Communion till they have openly Declar'd Themselves to have truly Repented and amended their former Naughty Lives And This they Presse the King to see observ'd according to his Royal Declaration of Octob. 25. 1660. But it is a ●od they never meant for themselves The Question now is only whether a Person that teaches and practices Rebellion for a matter of Twenty year together and lives by Oppression be a Scandalous Offender or no. His next Quere is concerning the Church to which the Retractours are to be Accomptable By the Church I suppose the Bishop means the Representative and Jurisdictive Body of it But That he takes for an affront to the Civil Government and gives the Bishop the Ly before-hand if he think otherwise To This point The Kings of England never claym'd the Power of the Keyes and Church-Censures fall under that Consideration without offence to the Prerogative Royal. So Gentle Sir There 's no harm done unlesse the self-same thing done by a Presbyterian must passe for Discipline and Conscience which in a Bishop argues Malice B And since the Bishop is so over-zealous for the very Letter of the Law when it imposes Ceremonies give me leave a little to wonder that one of his Profession and Place in the Church should so 〈◊〉 go against it when it enjoyns Moderation and Forgiveness as to Civil Injuries Such as he who make the Law instead of being a Buckler to protect Converts a Sword only to cut off all such as were once Offenders ●abour what they can to make men desperate and thereby render the peace of the Nation and in that the prosperity and welfare of His Majesty very insecure and hazardous For what can mo● inrage Men to take wild and forbidden courses than to see even Preachers of the Gospel strive to widen their wounds and contrary to their own former Professions to pull off that Plaister which the wisdom of our St●-Physitians had provided to ●eal our distempers B To give the Devil his due the man is struck upon a sodain into a handsomer veyn of Rayling To see a Divine sayes he and a Bishop so strict for the Law in one case and against it in another But how so Does the Act of Oblivion absolve you from the need of Repentance or will any true Convert refuse to own his Offence as publiquely as he Committed it The Recantation I perceive sticks in your Squeamish Conscience which shews that the Guilt does not I beseech ye look a little nearer The Act of Pardon implyes there was a Fault but does not say where save only in the Actual Murtherers of the late King At the beginning of the warr the Presbyterian Party pretended to be as much for the King as who was most and the Schismatical Teachers carryed on the work When by Libelling Pulpiting for Preaching I cannot call it and Dissembling they had made an Interest they Plunder'd Sequestred and Shot at him for his Good Prosecuting Those as his Enemies that fought under his Commission for him and fell Defending him The Fate of the late King we know and the Clemency of This which was intended as a mercy for One Rebellion not a Foundation for another 'T is True the Faction are not to be Punish'd but where the Publique Peace depends upon it are they not to be distinguish'd To think Them Innocent is to suppose the King Guilty and under the Masque of the Act of Oblivion to hide the Difference is to endeavour it should be thought so Are not the Bishops Entrusted with the Care of Souls and accomptable for all under their Charge Charge that they miscarry not through Their Default Returning to the Exercise of their Ecclesiastical Authority after a long and forcible deprivation they find their Flocks misled and in the hands still of the Seducers If the people go on they are damn'd if their misleaders are turn'd off or put to recant 't is against the Act of Oblivion If Either the multitude take Treason for Religion and finding Matters so well with them Now beleeve they were in the Right before Are not the Bishops bound by the Incumbency of their Pastoral Duty to teach them to distinguish Loyalty from Faction Sound Doctrine from Heresie Christian Charity and Obedience from Schism Which way can This be done but by
when he 's Out or he has the worst luck that ever man had to be still on the wrong side Is there no Difference betwixt the same Sinful Act Solitary or Exemplary Between Cursing the King in my Heart or in the Mercat-place Betwixt a Private Invective against a Bishop and a Publique Libel As much as betwixt a Murmur and a Rebellion the Peoples Sinnes are Mine too that sin by My Encouragement or Example We are told that 't is not Scriptural to impose things Needlesse as Necessary and to debar from the Communion for Recusancy A Decency is enjoyn'd and if the Church pro hîc nunc may not determine of That Decency who shall To see Five hundred several Persons worshipping in as many several Postures Is This a Decency Bring them to One There 's Order I 'll Kneel says One Sit says another Stand a Third There 's no Religion pretended either in chusing This or That or in forbearing it Only when the Church commands for Uniformity sake That Posture to be observ'd by All which was before by many Practis'd and without Scandal to the Rest Then such a Coyle there 's kept One can't do This nor T'other That and nothing must be done with Doubting The thing Impos'd they say is Triviall Truth but the Reason of imposing it is Considerable 'T is Publique Order and the Imposing Power within the bounds of Decency and Order is beyond Question Sacred But Rest we upon This Issue The Thing required is in it self confest on all hands to be Trivial Now say whether is more to blame the Church for Barring you the Communion because you will not do what they are perswaded you ought to do or you for Refusing it rather than do that which you confess you may do We shall conclude this Point against him from his own Text Whoever is not Against Me is for Me. Let him Prove us Against Christ if not we are for him which Argument will not serve him because as he is not For him in his Scruple so he is against him in his Disobedience For 't is but dissolving a General into Particulars and whatsoever is virtually conteyn'd in the One is Deductively found in the Other upon which ground I dare be Positive that to kneel at the Communion if Appointed by the Church Apostolique is a Duty within the Intention of That Precept Let every thing be done Decently and in Order B Unto which sacred Canon nothing can be more directly contrary than what the Bishop most incompassionately tels us That the Lawes do well to punish even with non-admission to the Sacramen● such as will not or perhaps dare not kneel And the Reason he gives is equally Apocrypha Because saith he it becomes not the Law-givers to endanger the Churches peace for their sake As if first It did not much more become all Law-givers in the things of God to observe the Law of Christ which is a Law of Love and Liberty Secondly As if the Churches peace would not be much more endangered by the pressing of things doubtful than by the forbearance of them For since by the enforcing of such things as God hath no where commanded our Christian liberty is in●inged from hence it follows that if we ought not yet we lawfully may refuse to sub●t unto such Impositions as our Saviour did in not washing his hands before meat and the Apostle Paul in the case of Circumcision B This is answer'd already but let me add To Tolerate any Inconformity by a Law opens a Gap to all Heresies and Schismes as the Liberty of Venting Private opinions against the Law tends manifestly to Seditions and Rebellion The Animadverter tells us of a Law of Love and Liberty Does he mean a Liberty to do what we list or what we ought Not the former sure for such a Freedome were destructive of Love Not Three men of Three Thousand Naturally Agreeing But Two or Three lines further he opens his Mouth and tells us the meaning of the Liberty he would be at A Liberty that leaves us so Free that if we ought not yet we Lawfully may refuse to submit unto such Impositions To make out This Seditious determination he brings Two Instances The One of our Saviour's Eating with Unwash'd hands which appears to us rather as a Pretermission than an Opposition The Other of St. Paul's Circumcising of Timothy as he would have it in Complyance with the Ceremony but the Text says otherwise and that it was to render him more Acceptable to the Jews Therefore Paul would that he should go forth with him and took and Circumcised him because of the Jews which were in those quarters Acts 16. 3. but however the Imposition was not the Question in either Case EXCEPTION VII A AS for the Chain of Consequences which the Bishop li●ks and ti●s together As that from Diversity in external ●ites ariseth Dislike from Dislike Enmity from Enmity Opposition thence Sehism in the Church and Sedition in the State For 〈◊〉 of which he doth very virulently instance in our unhappy times To prevent which he tels us That the State cannot be safe without the Church nor the Church without Unity nor Unity without Uniformity nor uniformity without a strict and rigorous Imposition To all this I answer that it is a 〈◊〉 Rope of sand and the parts of his Chain do 〈◊〉 little hang together as Sampsons Foxes did before they were tied by the Tails which course the Bishop hath imitated not forgetting to put in even the Firebrand it self to make up the Comparison A LAying his Gall and Vanity aside his Virulences Ropes of Sand and Firebrands wee 'll come to the Intermission of his Fury for it takes him by Fits his Sober Folly B Nothing is more clear than that there hath been nay ought to be Diversity in external Forms without any Dislike at all as to the Person of another For the Apostles that preached to the circumcision gave the right hand of Fellowship unto the Apostles of the Gentiles although their Outward Rites in publick Worship were far more different than those which by any of the most distant perswasions are now practised i● England 2. The State may be prefer●ed without the least reference to the Church unlesse it turns Pe●secuter of it as is evident i● those 300 years before Constantine's time in which there was no Church at all legally countenanced and for some scores of years after both the Christians and Ge●tiles were equally advanced and favoured 3. Vnity I mean such as Christ came to establish which is an Unity in heart and spirit doth not in the least depend upon Uniformity but upon Charity i. e. a Christian and a Cand●d forbea●ance of one another i● things circumstantial when we agree in the Essentials of Worship which is a thing that meer Civility would teach though Religion were silent in it B Because Diversity of External Formes in several Churches does well enough Is Uniformity in the
same Church therefore the less Laudable or what Proportion is there betwixt the Apostles Case and Our's Their business was to Preach the Gospel to all Nations and lay the Foundation of Christianity but our Dispute is only Whether or no we shall Obey their Delegates in Matters Indifferent Again the Bishop speaks of the English Church and State whose Interests are Commixt and Enterwoven to a degree of Inseverable complication His slight esteem of Uniformity swayes not at all with me when I consider That Notable and Divine saying of Sir Francis Bacon The outward Peace of the Church distilleth into Peace of Conscience And it turneth the Labours of Writing and Reading of Controversies into Treatises of Mortification and Devotion Concerning Circumstantials I think it much more suitable for the People to Obey than for the Church to Forbear and let them say what they please of Agreeing in Essentials when I see a perverse Posture I think it no breach of Charity to suspect a Froward Mind C And whereas the Bishop thinks he hath got some advantage by reviving the memory of our late Civil ●ars which were he either Christian or Man enough he would wish were eternally buried in silence I must to use his own Phrase tell him in his ear that our Wars did not arise from the separation of Conscie●tious dissenters but from the violence and fury of unconscio●able Imposers who would not allow their Brethren who desired nothing more than to live peacea●ly by them that sob● 〈◊〉 which the Law of God commanded and no Law of Man could justly deprive them of C See now he Raves again were he either Christian or man enough c. still at the Memory of our late Warrs he Starts and Methinks looks as if that quarter of the House were Haunted But here he tells the Bishop a tale in his Ear and as arrant a Tale as ever he told in his Life The Violence and Fury of Unconscionable Imposers was the Cause of the Warr. He sayes In a Strict sense 't is Truth A Pack of Contriving Knaves drew in a Rabble of Believing Fools and against Conscience Law Honour and Gratitude Levy'd a War against the King because he would not give away his Crown and Betray his People This is the Short of All. See the Exact Collections and you shall find who Rais'd the Warr and upon what Pretense Alas the Brethren only desired to live Peaceably he tells us and to enjoy that Sober Liberty which the Law of God Commanded and no Law of Man could justly deprive them of The Scotch Rebellion was a Sober Liberty was it not So was the Plunder of Sir John now Lord Lucas and the Lady Rivers The Tumults Flocking to Whitehal and Westminster The Posting up of Those that would not Murther the Earl of Strafford The Cries of Crucifie him against That Learned and Reverend Prelate the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury The Defacing of Church-Windows and Monuments The Defaming Sequestring and Murthring of the King All Th●se were in our Animadverters opinion Sober Liberties Where ●oes the Law of God Command These Liberties so that no Law of Man as he pretends can justly hinder them His Sacred Majesty whom these Libertines Murther'd was of another Judgement Those with Me had I think cleerly and ●ndoubtedly for their Justification the Word of God and the Lawes of the Land together with their own Oathes Those on the other side are forc'd to flie to the shifts of some Pretended Fears and wild Fundamentals of State as they call them which Actually overthew the Present Fabrick both of Church and State c. These are the Words of that Blessed Martyr and in the same Meditation again I am Guilty in This Warr of nothing but This that I gave such Advantages to some Men by confirming their Power which they knew not how to use with That Modesty and Gratitude which became their Loyalty and my Confidence Here we see the Authority of a Nameless Libeller against Records Living Witnesses and the averment of a Dying Prince Put stay whether his accompt be True or False is but one part of the Question The Danger Scope and malice of it deserves another Look H●re's first the Bloud of the Last Warr cast upon the Late King and Consequently the Regal Rights of the King Regnant expos'd to a Dispute for 't is express'd that the 〈◊〉 Di●enters were deny'd That Liberty which no Law of man could deprive them of which manifestly implies both the Oppression of the Late King and the Insufficiency of Monarchy it self as to the Ends of Government If That Warr was fair on the Peoples side Then so would another upon the same score be Now in which regard the very Hint is Seditious Further it casts a Dangerous reflexion upon the present Government These execrable Papers 't is odds his Majesty neither sees nor hears of and what a Scandal is it then under the Reign of the Son to see such Libelling Against the Ashes of the Father Hee 'll say perhaps he only tells what Caus'd the Warr without pretending to Defend it That shift may serve him to some purpose provided he was never formerly engag'd with the Faction if he was never Ambitious of testifying to the World his Real Esteem of the singular Worth and Eminence of the greatest Villein in Nature he 's the more capable of Mercy But does not what he is appear from the whole drift of his Discourse What does he but Defame the King under the Visor of his Animadversions upon the Bishop For what has the Bishop done without the Kings Authority Again under the Cloke of an Exception to One Bishop what does he but inveigh against the Church the Episcop● Dignity and Function and in fine why against the Bishops but only as the likelyest way to enflame the People by Degrees against the King Does not his Majesty enjoyn the Practice of Those Ceremonies which he condemns the Bishops for But what he drives at will more fully appear from that which follows D And whether the publick maintaining of the very same Positions and Practises may not in time beget the same Feuds and Animosities although this Bishop cares not yet I doubt not but His Majesty as he now doth so will alwayes graciously consider D These Four Lines well apply'd would settle the Nation in perfect happiness but in another sense then he intends them 'T is very true the Publique Mainteining of the very same Positions and Practices that rais'd the last War will most infallibly produce Another unless the Sticklers be a little better look'd to They Preach'd and Libell'd up an Army against our Late Sovereign are they not at it now again for Another Ceremonies and Lord Bishops were mighty Grievances They are so still And then the Kings Prerogative came in Play They are fairly offring at it Now to And what was the Event of All The Holy men Divided the Spoyle Overthrew the Government Murther'd the King Begger'd and
Enslav'd the Nation and Setled Nothing Marque now the Menace of his last Period What does it say but This Let the King take up his Bishops or look to himself And to Embitter the People against Bishops Feuds and Animosities he presages though this Bishop cares not EXCEPTION VIII A WHether as to the matter of Fact the French Protestants do enjoyn standing at the Sacrament and the Dutch kneeling I will labour to enform my self of some more Unbyassed witness than this Bish●p for in the Ecclesiastical Laws of those Churches which I have carefully perused I can find no such matter But if they did so this would not at all justifie the Imposition of Kneeling because 1. The Question is de Jure whether it be lawful to prescribe any one such certain Posture without submiting to which it shall not be lawful to admit any to the Sacrament and till the Affirmative of this be proved by Scriptures Examples and Instances from the Practice of men will not satisfie a doubting conscience 2. Neither of those fore-mentioned Postures are so much to exception as Kneeling because this last is manifestly more superstitious for 1. It varies most of any from the First Pattern 2. It hath been monstrously abused by the Papists to Idolatry which alone renders it most unsafe to be practised and most Unwarrantable to be imposed Especially till it be again explained as in the very first Liturgy of all it was which I particularly mention to shew how little our Reformation since Edw. 6th time hath been improved A HE cannot passe the Bishop without a Reverence Some more Unbyass'd Witnesse then This Bishop c. This is the handsomest Ly he has given the Bishop yet But to our Businesse leaving the French and Dutch to their Pleasure we have already argu'd that whatsoever is Deductively in the Scripture is sufficiently There to warrant the Practice of it and we have prov'd Kneeling to be rationally and evidently compriz'd in the General Precept of Decency Now to his Particular Exceptions It varyes sayes he from the First Pattern Was it a Pattern for a Posture or the Institution of a Sacrament Mind the Text. The Lord Jesus in the night when he was betray'd took Bread and when he had given Thanks he brake it and said Take Eat This is my body which is broken for you THIS DO ye in Remembrance of Me. After the same manner also he took the Cup when he had supped saying This Cup is the New Testament in my Bloud THIS DO as oft as ye drink it in remembrance of me We have here the Complement of the Institution Now see the Extent of the Command DO THIS What 's That Take Bread Give Thanks Break it and say Take Eat c. So likewise of the Cup in such manner as is Prescrib'd Here 's the whole Precept without any Mention or the least Hint of other Circumstance either for Time Posture Habit or the like All which being left equally Indifferent why not at Night in the same Habit Language and Syllables as well as the same Posture But Kneeling he says has been abus'd to Idolatry and therefore not warrantably Impos'd Have not Churches been Abus'd has not the Holy Scripture it self been misapply'd and made the ground of Heresie Are they not therefore Warrantably Used Finally the main stumble they make of Kneeling is the Command now if a Posture of Body may not be Commanded what may So that ex professo their Enmity is not so much Levell'd at the Evil as at the Government EXCEPTION IX A AS it was needlesly so was it likewise Uncharitably done to revile the whole body of Presbyterians for the Faults of Mr. Baxter upon supposition that either he is a Presbyterian or so culpable as the Bishop would make him For since every man is to bear his own Burden what Bible did the Bishop find it in that he might without scruple asperse a whole order of Men for the pretended miscarriage of one who by the Bishop's own Confession was not of so Amicable and complyant a Temper as the rest And therefore certainly they ought not to be brought in as Parties in that crime of Unpeaceableness from which the Bishop just before had●absolved them but choler spoyls the Memory and sure his Brethren the Bishops would not take it well of a Presbyterian should he cry out Crimine ab uno disce omnes See what manner of Spirit these Bishops are of and judge them all by the Bishop of Wercester ' s example Truly Sir I am a little angry when I consider how much this one mans Indiscretion hath exposed all of the same Order to Censure For were they all like him which I do not nor dare not think I should not scruple to pray heartily what the Bishop doth in scorn concerning the Preachers Lord deliver us from such Bishops And let all the People say Amen A OF This Cavil we have both had enough and said enough in and to his first Exception and the Animadverter discovers that somewhat has spoyl'd his Memory too as well as he sayes Choler has done the Bishops which is a Pitty considering how little Pretense the Libeller has for a Bad one and how much use for a Good one I would Gladly know in what Bible the Animadverter learned to despise Government and speak evil of Dignities to bear false Witnesse against his Neighbour c. He sayes the Bishop judges Uncharitably in measuring All by One and that he now condemns whom just before he absolv'd Answer Neither the One nor the Other First his words are only in Proportion of the whole Party which does not Imply either All or in the same Degree And for the Bishop's Contradicting himself with what Ingenuity can any man extend his Meaning to All which in Terminis is limited to Those of Mr. Baxter's Judgement and in distinction from others of a more complying and Peaceable Temper To go on with him D. E. tells the Honourable Sir that he is a little Angry to consider how This one mans Indiscretion exposes all of the same Order to Censure Grosse Impostour Does he not streyn his little Wit and huge Confidence to the utmost only to start a Scandal and fix a Blot upon the Bishop with what Temper of Spirit with what weight or in truth Colour of Reason with what Ingenuity and Affection he has menaged This Discourse let the Indifferent determine He concludes his Exceptions with a Prayer Lord deliver us says he from such Bishops Good God say I Preserve his Majesty from Treason and Deliver the Church from Schism POSTSCRIPT A THus Sir you see how willing I am to serve you in proposing my Exceptions the fuller prosecution of which I must leave to some other Pen more able both in Divinity and Policy who may convince both the Bishop and the World that it is not yet time to sow such Tares This Age is a liitle too knowing to be gulled