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A31121 The conformists charity to dissenters and concurrence with the favour granted them in the Act for Toleration proved from the works of the most eminent divines of the Church of England. R. C. 1689 (1689) Wing C101; ESTC R23877 58,283 88

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THE CONFORMISTS CHARITY TO DISSENTERS And Concurrence with the Favour Granted them in the ACT for Toleration PROVED From the Works of the Most Eminent Divines of the Church of England By this shall all men know that ye are my Disciples if ye have love one to another John 13.35 Neither our Religion nor our Church is of a Persecuting Spirit I know not how it may be in particular persons but I say again it is not the Genius of our Church she hath no Doctrine that Teacheth Persecution Bish of St. Asaphs Serm. on Nov. 5th 1680. Before the House of Lords LONDON Printed by J. R. for Iohn Salusbury at the Rising Sun near the Royal Exchange in Cornhil 1689. To the Christian READER THE World is so well acquainted with Collections in Learning Morality and Divinity Exemplifying Vertue and Vice c. that there needs no Apology for Works of this sort which may have their use as well as others I chose this way as most Authorative and convincing And as to the Matter and Subject of the Book it cannot but be highly necessary and seasonable to plead in the behalf of Love and Peace when the Church is so miserably divided Worthy men have complained Glanv Cath. Char. That our Divisions have brought things to such a pass that men take it ill to hear of Charity And Bishop Gauden That a Treatise of Peace would be thought like Snow in Summer or Rain in Harvest And a Third Bishop Tailor That one had as good Till the Air or plow the Sands as perswade such Doctrines And a Fourth Doctor Fowler That it hath been the common Fate of Reconcilers to suffer from both Parties But however we fare it is our Duty to mind the contentious World of so important a part of Christs Discipleship which it seems to have forgot and to have unlearnt that Lesson their Master taught them to love one another We are indeed to contend earnestly for the Faith once delivered to the Saints and yet to seek the Truth and Peace Zech. 8.19 If we be never so certain the thing we contend for is Truth we must 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 follow the Truth in Love. If ever this Church flourish Moderation must at last be the Temper of her Members saith the Reverend Dean of Canterbury Pref. to Bishop Wilkins Sermons And Though we agree not with our brethren in all their Opinions yet while we hold the same Creed and walk by the same Rule why should we not hope to meet in the same Heaven For sure Heaven is wide enough to hold men of several judgments else few are gone thither already and fewer would follow after in these times of division A man may almost as soon expect that all the Clocks in the City should strike One together as that Men of so many several Sects as are to be found in England should agree in any one alone The Church of England the Protestant Dissenters the Quakers and the Romanists are no more like to meet together in one place and joyn in the same Religious Worship than London Geneva Rome c. to move out of their several places and joyn together into one City For my part I do believe that there will be to the end of the World some for Episcopacy some for Presbitery some for Ana-Baptism and perhaps some for Independent Congregations though against the whole current of Antiquity For besides that Scripture is not so very clear and convincing by necessary consequence against their received Opinions as it is in matters of Faith the difference of Educations and variety of apprehensions which men who here know but in part have about the sense of the same Scriptures doth mightily confirm it In every one there is not the same knowledge saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 8.7 What Course is then to be taken Must we use force and violence bloud and wounds fire and faggot fines and imprisonments Curses and Excommunications against Dissenters from our Way and Worship We have not so learned Christ I presume this savours of that other manner of Spirit which Christ rebuked in his Disciples who would have consumed the Samaritans with fire from Heaven telling them they knew not what spirit they were of for Christ came not to destroy mens lives but to save them Vpon which words saith a Learned Prelate of our Church Bishop Andrews's Serm. p. 918. Not to destroy that they which cannot save may yet be sure not to destroy any The World hath used to practise the contrary if men cannot save others and their saving of them is no more than to bring them to be of their Sect and Perswasion and perhaps a putting them farther off from salvation than they were before the next Course is to destroy and root out the Generation of them But it was excellently said by as excellent a Person Bishop of St. Asaph's Serm. Nov. 5. 1680. before the House of Lords pag. 8. That they who are most given to hate and destroy others especially those others who differ from them in Religion they are not the Church of God or at least they are so far corrupt in that particular For Christ saith save and destroy not bless and curse not and love your enemies enemies to our Religion as well as others and that with all the Properties of true Charity set down by St. Paul 1 Cor. 13.4,5,6,7 For want of this we have suffered so much from each other and each side felt it smart and found it grievous when it was their turn to suffer as it hath been too too common with us whatever Party hath got uppermost to carry it with a severe hand towards the rest following the Advice given to King Charles the Second in respect of the Dissenters to crush them when he had got them under the Hatches Whereas common Humanity and Christianity teach us mutual favour bowels of mercies kindness meekness long-suffering forbearing one another and forgiving one another c. Col. 3.12,13 And blessed be God who hath endued our Gracious Prince and the Great Council of the Nation with this Christian Spirit to shew mercy to mens Consciences And surely if men will be but so wise as to know and consider so good as to desire and so humble as to yield to the things which make for Peace they cannot be ignorant how much the present Act for Toleration may contribute to our Peace and Prosperity I am sure it hath put a stop to three very considerable Evils To those Fines and Imprisonments which have been the ruine of some Families by disabling the Master of the Family from carrying on his Trade and bringing in Provision for the ●est which depended on him We should have thought it hard measure if it had been our own case to have been confined to a Prison instead of a Shop and to have the Act of Forty Pounds for each Moneth levied upon us for one or two Moneths upon the account
Men are much offended to see it otherwise but thus it hath been ever from the beginning Sir Francis Bacon in his Advertisements of the Controversies of the Church of England pag. 183. of his works It is excellently alluded by that Father that noted that Christs Garment was without Seams and yet the Churches Garment was of divers colours and sets down as a Rule In veste varietas sit scissura non sit King James the First 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epistle to the Reader That the variety of Mens Minds is such that tot Capita tot Sensus yea and that even the very Faces that God hath by Nature brought forth in the World do every one of them in some of their particular Lineaments differ from any other Bishop Andrew 's Serm. pag. 519. Contentions there were when St. Paul and his fellow Apostles lived in the Churches under them of their times in the very prime of the Primitive Church then were there contentions this I note that we may not think it strange if there be contentions in our times they shall be no strangers with us in ours they were not with them in theirs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the difference in point of Church Government Sect. 21. Nor is it any point of Wisdom or Charity where Christians differ as many do in some points there to widen the differences Item Upon the many Jealousies and Scandals rais'd upon the King 'T is strange that so Wise Men as they would be esteemed should not conceive that difference of perswasion in Matters of Religion may easily fall out c. Mr. Hooker of Justification pag. 68. Ye are not now to learn that as of it self it is not hurtful so neither should it be to any scandalous and offensive in doubtful cases to hear the different Judgments of men be it that Cephas hath one interpretation and Apollos another that Paul is of this mind that Barnabas of that if this offend you the fault is yours Carry peaceable Minds and you may have comfort in this variety Dr. Edward Bulkley In his Apology for the Church of England Article 5. pag. 104. Edit 1608. in Answer to Wright 's Articles You vainly and falsely exaggerate Controversies and irreconcilable Jarrs as you tearm them among us in essential points of Faith. I confess there hath been in our Church some Controversie concerning External Ceremonies and Form of Covernment as there hath been heretofore between good men as between Peter and Paul between Paul and Barnabas between Anicetus Bishop of Rome and Polycarpus between Chrysostom and Epiphanius and many others who all were godly men agreeing in unity of Faith and knowledge of the Son of God. Mr. Hieron 's Sermons in Bargain of Salt. Now among our selves betwixt us and other Churches there are some differences in Opinion as it cannot be holpen so long as we carry with us our natural imperfections Mr. Chillingworth chap. 1. Sect. 13. Because the contrary belief may be in such points in which Scripture may with great probability be alledged on both sides a sure note of a point not necessary that men of honest and upright hearts true lovers of God and of Truth such as desire above all things to know Gods will and to do it without any fault at all some go one way some another and some suspend their judgments Bishop Bramhals Just Vindication of the Church We see that all the famous and principal Churches of the World the Grecian Roman Protestant Armenian Abyssine have their peculiar differences one with another and each of them among themselves Item p. 19. Though I am far from beleiving when Logomachies are taken away their real dissentions are not half so numerous or their errours half so foul as they are pointed out by their Adversaries yet to hold Communion with them in all things is neither lawful nor possible Bishop Tailors Coll. of discourses in Epist Dedic before Liberty of Proph. No part of this discourse teacheth or encourageth variety of Sects and contradictions but supposeth and finds them already in being and therefore since there are and ever were and ever will be variety of opinions because there is variety of human understandings and uncertainty in things Few men consider since men have such variety of principles such several constitutions educations tempers and distempers hopes interests and weaknesses degrees of light and degrees of understanding impossible all should be of one mind Item p. 401. This variety of opinions in several persons an Argument only of diversities of operations while the Spirit is the same Bishops Reynolds Brotherly Reconciler In that the Apostle saith if in any thing ye be otherwise minded we may from hence learn that in the best ages of the Church there have been and therefore we cannot but expect that there ever will be variety and difference of Judgment among the members thereof first while we know but in part Secondly While there is difficulty in the disquisition of Truth Thirdly Weakness of judgment in men to make that enquiry c. p. 17. Item p. 19. Till all the members of the Church have attained unto their full Stature there cannot be expected such an universal consent of Judgments and harmony of Doctrines even amongst good men themselves as shall not admit of some variety and dissonancy Bishop Saundersons Serm. 8. Ad Aulam Sect. 25. Mens understandings are not all of one size and temper even they that have the largest and clearest understanding yet know but in part and are therefore subject to errours and misapprehensions therefore it cannot be hoped there should be such a consonancy and uniformity of Judgment no not among wise and Godly men but that in many things yea and things sometime of great importance they may and will dissent one from another unto the Worlds end Bishop Wilkins Serm. 13. p. 407 408 'T is a thing most reasonable and fitting in it self speaking of Moderation because of the fallibility of human judgment and that not only from the impotency of our faculties and the prejudices we are liable to from the account of interests but likely from the difficulty and obscurity of things the most Learned and inquisitive men many times differing in their judgments all which put together shew how exceeding difficult and next to impossible it is that men should ever agree in the same apprehensions of things Glanvell's Catholick Charity p. 34. The Learned and the prudent Churches and Councels Confessors and Fathers the former and the latter ages the vertuous and the devout the credulous and the inquisitive they have all differed in the lesser matters of belief and every man differs from almost every other in something p. 37. 'T is a frequent wish with some that all men were once of one mind but then it must be theirs no doubt for they would not judge it reasonable upon other terms They may as well wish that we were all of one age complexion humour and degree of