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A40082 Libertas evangelica, or, A discourse of Christian liberty being a farther pursuance of the argument of the design of Christianity / by Edward Fowler ... Fowler, Edward, 1632-1714. 1680 (1680) Wing F1709; ESTC R15452 145,080 382

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offend any I shall be sorry for it but must withal take leave to tell the offended that it is an Evidence of exceeding great Weakness not to say worse to be Angry with those who endeavour in the Spirit of Meekness to convince us of our Dangerous Mistakes But such is the Fate of Conscientious opposing Popular and Prevailing Errors that it seldom meeteth with better success than kindling the Passions and sharpening the Tongues and Pens too of those who are most obliged to be thankful for it But Wisdom is justified of her Children But however it be taken it was never more seasonable nor ever scarcely so Necessary to do our utmost towards the rectifying of Peoples Apprehensions about matters of this nature when our Contentions and Animosities about little things mostly things very little in themselves and so great a Defection from our Church merely upon the account of such things as are no where condemned by the Law of God nor are opposed by any express or plain Text but by exceedingly laboured and far fetch'd Consequences have given our Adversaries such Advantage against us and do them far greater service than all their open Attempts or secret wicked Plots and Conspiracies through the infinite Goodness of God to us have hitherto done God Almighty grant that that saying be not to be applied to us ere long which was used of our Predecessors the Britains when their intestine Quarrels had occasioned their being Vanquish'd by the Romans viz. Dum singuli pugnant Vniversi vincuntur While they severally contend and quarrel with one another they are all overcome by a Common Enemy I must confess when I consider what Excellent Treatises have of late been published fraught with Unanswerable and the most convincing and affecting Arguments to perswade our Brethren of the Separation to ease us in a great measure of our Fears of Popery or Confusion by Returning to the Communion of that Church wherein most of them were Baptized and when withal I observe what little Success those Treatises have had I have as faint hopes as can be that so small an endeavour as this should do any Service But however it is some satisfaction to my Mind to express my Good Will But we are told by some that we may thank the Church of England if ever the Pope be again our Master and particularly that Principle of Hers we have been now defending viz. that Imposing of Indifferent things in the Worship of God is no Violation of Christian Liberty And that this Principle will open a door to Popish Conformity if we should be once more so unhappy as to be brought into Subjection to the Roman Yoke To these I Reply in the First place That 't is unconceiveable how any thing but Malice or the thickest Ignorance can charge the Church of England with serving the Interest of the Popish Religion For is any thing more Notorious than that almost all the opposition that hath either heretofore or of late been made against Popery hath been by the Bishops and the other Clergy of this Church To say nothing of what the Separating Party have done though not upon that Design to promote Popery which would be as large as unpleasant a Theme to insist on what have they done in defence of the Reformed Religion against Popery Have they all of them put together done the half quarter part of that Service in this kind that One Excellent Dean of our Church hath done Truly I much doubt it And I think I may adventure to say that all the Reformed Churches together can hardly shew of their own so many Learned and Judicious Treatises against the Body and the several Parts of Popery as our single Church can shew of Hers. Again Is any thing better known than that the Priests and Jesuits and Popish Faction do at this time spit all their Venome and bend all their Force against the Church of England and indeed always have done This sheweth that they are well aware though so many among our selves will not acknowledge it but would have the World think the directly contrary that our Church is the most Formidable of all their Adversaries In short Who needs Arguments to convince him that the Church of England is at present our onely Bulwark against Popery As ever since the Reformation she hath been acknowledged by our Brethren beyond Sea to be the strongest and most impregnable upon several accounts But Secondly as to this Principle of our Church that Imposing of Indifferent things in the Worship of God is no Violation of Christian Liberty it is a most weak and ignorant furmise that it should in the least befriend Popery Those little understand what Popery means that think thus For First There is nothing more plainly demonstrable than that many of those things which are imposed by the Roman Church are far from being Indifferent in their own nature but the grossest Corruptions as contrary to the Doctrine and Practice of the first Ages of the Church and which is far more as contrary to the Laws of God and our Saviour Christ as is Darkness to Light I have given a Catalogue in the Design of Christianity of the chief of these with Remarks upon them and thither I refer the Reader that needs satisfaction Secondly Other of Her Impositions which are Indifferent in themselves are made to change their Nature by the Notion under which they are enjoyned by her That Church enjoyns no Indifferent things as such as ours doth all she imposeth as appears by her 34 th Article but as made necessary by Divine Authority She pretending to the Infallible Guidance of the Holy Ghost in all Her Decrees and Constitutions And therefore expects your Receiving them as you do the Holy Scriptures with a Divine Faith and the self-same awful Regard and Reverence I might add too that several of her Rites and Ceremonies are imposed under a most Superstitious notion either as Sacraments conveying Grace or as having some special Virtue in them to atone the Divine Majesty or to scare away the Devil c. Thirdly It is my opinion too that though their Ceremonies were never so innocent in themselves yet the Multitude of them doth make them in the lump to cease to be Indifferent My reason is because it is unconceiveable to me but that so great a Number must needs so employ the Mind in the Worship of God as that it is not possible to be intent thereupon and consequently must frustrate at least in a great measure the Design of Worship But this is no Reason to a Papist who cannot be thoroughly so and acknowledge the necessity of exercising the Mind in Divine Worship For his Holy Mother hath taught him this mad and impious Doctrine That the Sacraments confer Grace ex opere operato from the work Done and so are differenced from those of the Old Testament they conferring Grace ex opere operantis from the work of the Doer as also that a mere general
satisfie himself to separate from the Communion of the Church of England while he hath the true notion of Christian Liberty The present Separation of so great a number of our Protestant Brethren I meddle not here with the mere Non-conformity of Ministers is chiefly occasioned the more is the shame by things that are very little in their own nature By matters acknowledged by them generally to be Indifferent in themselves and which they can never shew are forbidden by any express Law of God nor can make them look in the least like Sinful things otherwise than by using a deal of Artifice and Force in Interpreting and Applying of certain Scriptures And the great Obstacle to our Peace and Unity I mean next to Pride Self-conceit and the want of the true Christian Spirit is a gross Mistake concerning the nature of Christian Liberty It being conceived that as Little things as are the Cause of the Breach there is a Great thing parted with by Complying with them no less a thing than that which their Saviour judged to be worth the Expence of his Precious Bloud to purchase it for them which is this Liberty And could the Brethren of the Separation be once perswaded out of their darling Notion thereof as if they will they easily may and be satisfied that it is no way betrayed by obeying their Governours while nothing worse is imposed by them than what is Indifferent the Well-meaning People amongst them would soon think it of far worse consequence to break the Peace of the Church about such things than to Conform to them Especially since these Divisions are no less dangerous to both the Church and State than Unchristian and Scandalous For who doth not see what Advantage our Common Enemy doth make of them and what farther Advantage not to be thought of without horrour he may be too like to make I have one humble Request to make to the Reader viz. that he will be I don't say so kind but so just to me as not hastily to Censure me if he happens now and then to light upon a passage which at first sight may seem somewhat odd to him but have the Patience to suspend his displeasure till he hath read farther when he may possibly perceive that he misunderstood me in those Passages For it is impossible I at least find it so to deliver the intire sense of ones Mind all at once concerning any thing that requireth some considerable exercise of thoughts I desire especially that this Right may be done me in the Fifteenth Chapter which treats of that most ticklish Argument Liberty of Conscience whereon I have endeavoured to give my most Sedate thoughts with all sincerity and impartiality I will Conclude with this Advertisement that whereas I have touched upon several things which I have since found in the Learned Dean of S. Paul's his most Excellent Discourse Intituled the Mischief of Separation I had perfectly completed all that Part where I have done so and sent much of it to the Press too before I read that Discourse nor did it occasion the addition of any one thing And it would have been I am sensible a weak thing of me had I industriously repeated things published to the World so immediately before by that Great Man with so much greater Advantage THE CONTENTS SECT I. That the most excellent and most highly to be valued Liberty doth consist in an intire Compliance with the Laws of Righteousness and Goodness Or in Freedom from the dominion of corrupt and sinful Affections CHAP. I. THis shewed in the General from Texts of Scripture and further confirmed by those who were strangers to Divine Revelation Page 1. CHAP. II. That the most excellent Freedom and Liberty consists in the Observance of the Laws of Righteousness and Goodness more distinctly and particularly demonstrated by three Arguments Of which the First is that this is Freedom from the worst and vilest of Slaveries Where it is shewed in three particulars that the Transgressors of those Laws are the most Slavish Creatures pag. 7. CHAP. III. That the Liberty which resulteth from the Observance of the Laws of Righteousness is Secondly The Liberty of the Soul and how it is so is shewed in four Particulars pag. 15. CHAP. IV. That this is Thirdly the Liberty of God himself and his most Excellent Liberty pag. 32. SECT II. That this Freedom to holy Obedience and true Goodness or which consisteth in an intire compliance with the Laws of Righteousness is our Christian Liberty CHAP. V. The foresaid Proposition Demonstrated by f●●r Arguments viz. First That this hath b●en proved to be the most Glorious Liberty Secondly This was that Liberty the instating us wherein was the whole business of our Saviour and his Apostles Thirdly Our 〈◊〉 Abolishing the Ceremonial Law was chiefly d●signed in 〈◊〉 to the thorough effecting this Liberty Where it is shewed that this Law accidentally became very prejudicial to the great Design of setting men free from the power of their Lusts in several particulars Fourthly That none but the Jews were obliged to the Observance of this Law pag. 40. CHAP. VI. What course our Lord hath taken to instate us in this Liberty shewed in several particulars viz. that 1. He hath most fully informed us concerning all the Parts and Particulars of our Liberty 2. He hath furnished us with the most potent Means for the gaining of it 3. He hath purchased a rich supply of Grace and Strength to enable us to use these Means successfully 4. He hath laid before us the most powerful Motives and Arguments to prevail on our Wills to make use of this Strength and comply with this Grace pag. 60. CHAP. VII Wherein is discoursed the First of those Motives and Arguments which are offered in the Gospel to perswade us to use the Means prescribed for our deliverance from the Power of Sin Namely The love of God in sending his Son upon the errand of our Redemption And two most powerful Motives implied in this pag. 78. CHAP. VIII A Seasonable Digression concerning the Doctrine of Vniversal Redemption The Antiquity and Catholicalness of this Doctrine Large Citations out of Bishop Latimer and Bishop Hooper expressing their sense of it And full proof thereof presented out of the H. Scriptures pag. 82. CHAP. IX Wherein are contained Five more Evangelical Motives which are of wonderful Power to excite us to diligence in using the Means of our Deliverance from the Dominion of Sin viz. Our Saviours excellent Example The assurance he hath given us that he will not take such advantage of our Frailties and Weaknesses as to cast us off for them Our Saviours Mediation and Intercession The Glorious Reward he hath purchased for and promised to those who by the Assistance of his Grace overcome their Lusts. And the most dismal Threatnings he hath pronounced against those who receive that Grace in vain and will not be delivered from the Dominion of Sin pag. 105. SECT III. Containing the
Inferences from each of the Arguments of the foregoing Sections CHAP. X. Which treats of the First Inference from the First Proposition That the most Excellent Liberty doth consist in an Intire Compliance with the Laws of Righteousness and Goodness Or in Freedom from the Dominion of Sinful Affections Namely That those are most Vnreasonable and Depraved People who complain of the Divine Laws as intolerable Intrenchments upon their Liberty Where it is shewed First That upon supposition our Liberty were restrained by the Laws of God it would nevertheless be most unreasonable to complain upon that account Secondly That the Laws which oblige Christians do not restrain their Liberty pag. 127. CHAP. XI The Second Inference viz. That such a Freedom of Will as consists in an Indifferency to good or evil is no Perfection but the Contrary pag. 135. CHAP. XII Which Treats of one Branch of the First Inference from the Argument of the Second Section That in Freedom from the Dominion of Corrupt Affections doth that Liberty Principally or rather Wholly Consist which Christ hath purchased for us Namely that several Notions of Christian Liberty which have too much prevailed are false and of dangerous Consequence The First of which is That which makes it to consist wholly or in part in Freedom from the Obligation of the Moral Law Certain Texts urged by the Antinomians in favour of it vindicated from the sence they put upon them And the extreme wildness and wickedness of it exposed in Five Particulars pag. 143. CHAP. XIII A Second False Notion of Christian Liberty viz. That which makes it to consist in Freedom from the Obligation of those Laws of Men which enjoyn or forbid indifferent things This Notion differently managed by the Defenders of it First Some extend it so far as to make it to reach to all Humane Laws the matter of which are things indifferent Secondly Others limit it to those which relate to Religion and the Worship of God The 23. Vers. of the 7. Chap. of the 1 Epist. to the Corinthians cleared from giving any Countenance to either of these Opinions The Former of them Confuted by three Arguments And the Latter by four Vnder the Second of which several Texts of Scripture which are much insisted upon in the defence thereof are taken into Consideration An unjust Reflection upon the Church of England briefly replied to And this Principle that the imposing of things indifferent in Divine Worship is no Violation of Christian Liberty proved to be no ways Serviceable to Popery by considering what the Popish Impositions are in Three Particulars pag. 164. CHAP. XIV An Answer to this Question Whether the Prescribing of Forms of Prayer for the Publick Worship of God be not an Encroachment upon Christian Liberty Wherein it is shewed that this is not a Stifling of the Spirit or Restraining the exercise of his Gift And what in Prayer is not as also what is the Gift of the Spirit Whereby is occasioned an Answer to another Question viz. Whether an Ability for Preaching be properly a Gift of the Spirit pag. 198. CHAP. XV. A Third False Notion of Christian Liberty viz. that which makes Liberty of Conscience a Branch of it Two things premised 1. That Conscience is not so sacred a thing as to be uncapable of being obliged by Humane Laws 2. That no man can properly be deprived of the true Liberty of his Conscience by any Power on Earth That what is contended for is more properly Liberty of Practice than of Conscience The Author's Opinion in reference to this Liberty delivered in Ten Propositions That whatsoever Liberty of this Nature may be insisted on as our Right it is not Christian Liberty but Natural Liberty pag. 219. CHAP. XVI The Third Inference from our Notion of Christian Liberty viz. That Popery is the greatest Enemy in the World thereunto Where it is shewed First That the Church of Rome Robs those who are subject to her of that Natural Liberty which necessarily belongs to them as they are Men viz. That which consists in the free use of their Vnderstandings in matters of Religion That She will not permit men to Examine either her Doctrines or Practices by the Holy Scriptures nor yet to receive the Holy Scriptures themselves otherwise than upon her Authority The Wickedness of this exposed in two Particulars The alledging of Scripture for it shewed to be the grossest Absurdity Their great Text 1 Tim. 3. 15. spoken to Her Tyranny over mens Minds further shewed pag. 254. CHAP. XVII Where it is shewed Secondly That Popery is as great an Enemy as can be to Christian Liberty And First To that Liberty which our Saviour hath purchased for the World in general As 1. That it tendeth as much as is possible to the Corrupting of mens Souls by subjecting them to vile Affections This shewed in the general viz. in that it is apt to beget false Notions of God and more particularly in that it brings men under the Power of the Lusts of Malice Revenge Cruelty Pride and Ambition Covetousness Uncleanness Intemperance and the greatest Injustice and Unrighteousness 2. That it no less tendeth to Disquiet mens Minds with certain troublesome Passions pag. 272. CHAP. XVIII The Third Particular discoursed on viz. That the Admirable Method our Lord hath taken to Instate us in our Christian Liberty is made lamentably Ineffectual by Popery This shewed as to each of those four Particulars that Method consists of The Second Head briefly spoken to viz. That Popery is also the greatest Enemy to that Liberty Christ purchased for the Jews in Particular A Pathetical Exhortation to a higher valuing of the Priviledges we enjoy in the Church of England concludes the Chapter pag. 299. CHAP. XIX The Fourth Inference That he onely is a true Christian that looks upon himself as obliged to be no less Watchful over his Heart and the frame and temper of his Mind than over his Life and Conversation pag. 318. CHAP. XX. The Last Inference Viz. That the most Proper and Genuine Christian Obedience is that which hath most of Liberty in it namely that which proceeds from the Principle of Love to God and Goodness pag. 322 ERRATA PAge 247. line 15. for Six read Thirty Six Page 259. line 6. after Controversie add this Parenthesis if they could be ingenuous Page 287. line 17. after opportunities for add or in order to A DISCOURSE OF Christian Liberty The Introduction THERE is nothing toward which Mankind is more naturally or vehemently affected than Freedom and Liberty there is so great a value and price set upon it that Life it self is not thought too precious to be hazarded or laid down for it And many have rather chosen to die by their Enemies hands than to be inslaved by them It was the saying of Cato Malui mori quàm uni parere I had rather die than that one man meaning Iulius Caesar should Lord it over me And he was as good as his word he laid