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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A61870 A censure upon certaine passages contained in the history of the Royal Society as being destructive to the established religion and Church of England Stubbe, Henry, 1632-1676. 1670 (1670) Wing S6033; ESTC R32736 43,471 70

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that considers the pretences upon which the Dominion of the Pope and his Supremacy is founded by the Roman Courtiers For though neither did the French Church nor other Bishops ever intend to submit unto several superstitious and destructive tenets that the Papacy and Canonists urge yet into what dangers some are fallen and ensnared and others are threatned to be involved is manifest and all this from too great tendernesse in point of Ecclesiastical Communion It is manifest from the mutability and frailty of humane nature and the usual effect thereof upon temptations that where such a power or Sovereignty is lodged it may be applied to the introducing of Superstitious and Idolatrous practices Thus Ieroboam the son of Nebat made Israel to sin they perhaps innocently complied with that Sovereignty when Orthodox and he misimploying it diverted them from the true worship of God So Nebuchadnezar one day erects an Idol and appoints all upon pain of death to worship it by and by commands all to worship the God of the three children Thus Darius makes a Decree that none shall put up any prayer or petition to God but onely to the King for thirty dayes the transgressor being to be cast into the Lyon's denne How many think we by holding Communion with a Prince owning such a power were by those Caprichio's ingaged not into the peril of but actual Superstition and Idolatry Nor are the Papal pretenses lesse the Canonists and Decretals ascribing unto him a power even to alter the Christian faith and not onely to enlarge it that He and Christ have but one Tribunal that He is God that if He vary from the Scripture and Christianity t is to be presumed that God Almighty hath changed his mind with such expression heretofore the Papal Letters and Canonists were stuffed and what danger there is from our Historian's communion of Superstition and Idolatry appears from the Determinations that have been made about Transubstantiation and the consequent worship and superstitions about that Breaden God In fine for I will not insist upon so notorious a point since the Councill of Constance could determine and involve others in a superstitious and impious compliance that non obstante notwithstanding any thing in the Scripture to the contrary the Communion in one kind should be celebrated T is strange for any man to say that there is no danger in communicating with one pretending to such a power though not yet abusing it there being so evident instances of fact to the contrary If there were no other argument for the continuance and advancing of the study of Philology and all ancient Learning and Church History the horror of this Assertion of our Virtuoso is such that no Protestant of the Church of England can otherwise but assent thereunto now Any man that understands the controversies betwixt the Papists and Protestants and contests about Image worship and several other Papal Superstitions and Idolatries which have hapned in Greece Germany France Spain and England of old and later dayes betwixt those of the Roman Catholick Communion will never assent to our Author's opinion or free him from the imputation of grosse and intolerable ignorance The second Question Whether it be possible for any Protestant of the Church of England to communitate with the present Church of Rome in her tenets and Ecclesiastical offices without danger of Superstition is easily determin'd by considering the nature of Ecclesiastical communion which I explained in the beginning and the nature and grounds of our separation from Rome and Reforming our selves No man can hold such an assertion but he must desert the Thirty nine Articles wherein the invocation of Saints and Image worship prayers in an unknown Tongue the five additional Sacraments Communion under one k●nd Transubstantiation worshipping of the Hoste are all condemned Nay the last additional Rubrique declares it to be express Idolatry to worship the Bread Now the actual acknowledging of all these superstitions and errours the actual complying with such as relate to practice is so required of all such as hold communion with the Church of Rome that none can remain therein without being sensible thereof so that either our Virtuoso understood not what it was to communicate with the Romanists or was ignorant what Superstition and Idolatry are when he writ this passage But so much hath been said by me in the foregoing passages in vindication of our Church for departing from the Romish Communion and our Laws together with other Ecclesiastical constitutions are so positive and severe against all such Communion that I need not insist hereon further but leave it to the Consideration of my Superiours and of those that are skilled in the Laws of the Land How consonant this passage of our Historian is thereunto how pernicious towards the subversion of the established Religion and how far punishable it being a notorious endeavour to withdraw the King's Majesties subjects from the Religion established to the Romish Religion Histor. R. S. pag. 349. He the Natural and Experimental Philosopher will be led to admire the wonderful contrivance of the Creation and so to apply and direct his praises aright which no doubt when they are offer'd up to Heaven from the mouth of one that hath well studied what he commends will be more suitable to the Divine Nature than the blind Applauses of the Ignorant This was the first service that Adam perform'd to his Creator when he obeyed him in mustering and naming and looking into the nature of all Creatures This had been the onely Religion if men had continued innocent in Paradise and had not wanted a Redemption THe former part of this passage is contrary to the Analogy of Faith and Scripture in that it makes the acceptablenes of mens prayers to depend more or less on the study of Natural Philosophy Whereas the Apostle suspends the acceptablenes of all Prayers unto God in being made unto him in the name and for the mediation of Christ Iesus applied by faith Hebr. 10.19 20 21 22. Having therefore Brethren boldnesse to enter into the holiest by the bloud of Iesus By a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the vaile that is to say his flesh and having an High priest over the house of God let us draw neer with a true heart in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evill conscience and our bodies washed with pure water Here is not any mention how that Experimental Philosophie doth render any prayers more suitable to God than those of the lesse curious this knowledg is no where in the new or old Testament so far recommended unto us as that without this qualification the Saints should be said to offer up the blind applauses of ignorant persons Particularly I do not find this circumstance endeared unto us by that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 13.2 Though I have the gift of Prophesy and understand all Mysteries and all knowledg and though I have