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doctrine_n age_n church_n tradition_n 3,033 5 9.4226 5 false
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A30455 Six papers by Gilbert Burnet. Burnet, Gilbert, 1643-1715. 1687 (1687) Wing B5912; ESTC R26572 63,527 69

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〈◊〉 less apt to fail than a Tradition of Points of Speculation and yet we see very ne●r the Age of the Apostles contrary Traditions touching the Observation of Easter from which we must conclude that either the Matter of Fact of one side or the other as it was handed down was not true or at least that it was not rightly understood A Tradition concerning the Use of the Sacraments being a visible thing is more likely to be exact than a Speculation concerning their nature and yet we find a Tradition of giving Infants the Communion grounded on the indispensible necessity of the Sacrament continued 1000. years in the Church A Tradition on which the Christians founded their Joy and Hope is less like to be changed than a more remote Speculation and yet the first Writers of the Christian Religion had a Tradition handed down to them by those who saw the Apostles of the Reign of Christ for a Thousand Years upon Earth and if those who had Matters at second hand from the Apostles could be thus mistaken it is more reasonable to apprehend greater Errors at such a distance A Tradition concerning the Book of the Scriptures is more like to be exact than the Exposition of some passages in it and yet we find the Church did unaimously bel●eve the Translation of the 70. Interpreters to have been the effect of a miraculous Inspiration till S. Ierome examined this matter better and made a New Translation from the Hebrew Copies But which is more 〈◊〉 all the rest It seems plain that the Fathers before the Council of Nice believed the Divinity of the Son of God to be in some sort Inferiour to that of the Father and for some Ages after the Council of Nice they believed them indeed both equal but they considered these as two different Beings and only one in Essence as three men have the same humane Nature in common among them and that as one Candle lights another so the one flowed from another and after the Fifth Century the Doctrine of one Invidual Essence was received If you will be farther informed concerning this Father Peta● will satisfie you as to the first Period before the Council of Nice and the learned Dr. Cudworth as to the second In all which particulars it appears how variable a Thing Tradition is And upon the whole Matter the examining Tradition thus is still a searching among Books and here is no living Judge XII If then ●he Authority that must decide Controversies lies in the Body of the Pastors scattered over the World which is the last retrenchment here as many and as great Scruples will arise as we fo●nd in any of the former Heads Two difficulties appear at first view the one is How can we be assured that the present Pastors of the Church are derived in a just Succession from the Apostles there are no Registers extant that prove this So that we have nothing for it but some Histories that are so carelesly writ that we find many mistakes in them in other Matter and they are so differen● in the very first links of that Chain that immediately succeeded the Apost●es that the utmost can be made of this is that here is an Historical Religion somewhat doubtful but here is nothing to found our Faith on so that if a Succession from the Apostles tim●s is necessary to the Constitution of that Church to which we must submit our selves we know not where to find it besides that the D●ctrine of the necessary of the Intention of the Minister to the Validity of a Sacrament throws us into inextricable difficulties I know they generally say that by the Intention they do not mean the inward Acts of the Minister of the Sacrament but only that it must appear by his outward deportment that he is in earnest going about a Sacrament aud not doing a thing in j●st and this appeared so reasonable to me that I was ●orry to find our Divines urge it too much till turning over the Rubricks that are at the beginning of the M●ssal I found upon the head of the Intention of the Minister that if a Priest has a Number of Hosti●● before him to be consecrated and intends to consecrate them all except one in that case that Vagrant exception falls upon them all it not being affixed to any one and it is defined that he consecrates none at all Here it is plain that the secret Acts of a Priest can defeat the Sacrament so this overthrows all certainty concerning a Succession But besides all this we are sure that the Greek Churches have a much more uncontested Succession than the Latines So that a Succession cannot direct us And if it is necessary to seek out the Doctrines that are universally received this is not possible for a private Man to know So that in ignorant Countries where there is little Study the people have no other certainty concerning their Religion but what they take from their Curate and Confessor since they cannot examine what is generally recei●ed So that it must be confessed that all the Arguments that are brought for the necessity of a constant Infallible Iudge turn against all those of the Church of Rome that do not acknowledge the Infallibility of the Pope for if he is not infallible they have no other Iudge that can pretend to it It were also easie to shew that some Doctrins have been ●s Un●versally received in some Ages as they have been rejected in others which shews that the Doctrine of the present Church is not always a sure measure For five Ages together the Doctrine of the Popes Power to depose Heretical Princes was received without the least Opposition and this cannot be doubted by any that knows what has been the State of the Church since the End of the eleventh Century and yet I believe few Princes would allow this notwithstanding all the concurring authority of so many Ages to fortifie it I could carry this into a great many other Instances but I single out this because it is a point in which princes are naturally extream sensible Upon the whole Matter it can never enter into my mind that God who has made Man a Creature that naturally enquires and reasons and that feels as sensible a pleasure when he can give himself a good account of his actions as one that sees does perceive in comparison to a blind man that is led about and that this God that has also made Religion on design to perfect this Humane Nature and to raise it to the utmost height to which it can arrive has contrived it to be dark and to be so much beyond the penetration of our Faculties that we cannot find out his mind in those things that are necessary for our Salvation and that the Scriptures that were writ by plain men in a very familiar stile and addrest without any discrimination to the Vulgar should become such an unintelligible Book in these Ages that we must have an