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A29395 Some reasons why Robert Bridgman, and his wife, and some others in Hvntington-shire, have left the society of the people called Quakers, and have join'd in communion with the Church of England and some passages contained in a letter of George Whitehead to R.J., and R. Bridgman's reply to the same / by Robert Bridgman. Bridgman, Robert.; Whitehead, George, 1636?-1723. 1700 (1700) Wing B4494; ESTC R18987 9,724 25

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the Insinuations notwithstanding and Reproaches of our Adversaries An instance of which I think sit here to subjoyn not being likely to obtain any offer of Justice from the Person concerned Upon my Wife and Children's receiving Baptism in the Church of England George Whitehead writes a Letter of Condolence to my Wife's Father wherein he insinuates after this manner Dear Brother I have been often sensible of thy Exercise and Affection occasioned by the miserable Backsliding of such near Relations who have so long professed the blessed Truth among us The blessed Truth which we have received from the Beginning in Life and Power will stand for ever and out-live all its Adversaries and they who are approved and stand faithful therein shall the more be manifest and shine when Shame and Confusion shall cover the Rebellious who reproach God's Heritage and People to excuse their own Revolting and Looseness of Spirit The Letter in which these Passages are falling providentially into my Hand I wrote to Geo. Whitehead as is hereafter exprest But being in London a considerable time and having no prospect of having such a Meeting as I desir'd think fit to expose it as matter of Caution to himself and such others as may be under temptation to practise the like to disparage and discourage with such Blasts of Reviling Hunt the 16th April 1700. George Whitehead In these Passages which I transcribed to him are contained a severe Charge by way of Insinuation against my self and my Wife who are the near Relations mentioned in that Letter And we being such had you proved your Charge the unworthiness of your Disposition notwithstanding hath sufficiently appeared in offering so to aggravate and by consequence to set such near Relations at too great a Distance But whereas your Charge and Insinuations remain unproved by you they ought in Justice to be returned upon you as a Slander If you think you can make Proof of these miserable yea and I may add detestable things upon us we desire you would do it and that you may be the more manifest and shine we care not how publickly you do it Your writing in such a manner to my Father without any Premonition to us had we been really guilty looks not only like a Deed of Darkness but we being innocent too much intitles you to the Character of those mentioned in the 11th Psalm Who bend the Bow and make ready their Arrow upon the String that they may privily shoot at the upright in heart Had not your Name and Pretences been what they are we should have endeavoured to have overlook'd your Reproach as we have done a great deal from others of a meaner Rank among you cast upon us as we verily believe for our open Profession of the Christian Faith and practising the Institutions of our blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ in ways most agreeable to our Judgment upon a serious deliberate and impartial Enquiry and Consideration and this we take to be the Reason of your Displeasure knowing very well how you have slighted opposed and rejected those great and necessary Truths and proper means of Christian Fellowship and Communion appointed we believe for that end by our Lord Jesus Christ and practised by his holy Apostles and Disciples in the first and purest Ages of Christianity And you in particular bearing such a Name and Sway amongst so many deluded though many of them I believe well-meaning People and so generally passing under the Character of an honourable and worthy Minister of Christ 't is therefore highly necessary to take some Notice of your practice And I do hereby acquaint you that my Occasions calling me to London in a little time I shall expect you will give me a Meeting before some sober and judicious Persons either to endeavour the Proof of your Charge or to retract what you have in such manner insinuated against us If you think fit to decline to give me such a Meeting I shall have reason to take it as a sufficient demonstration that Shame and Confusion is over you in that very manner and for the very same Cause suggested against us in your Letter Thus much at present from your abused Friend and Kinsman R. Bridgman To which Letter I may now add what is written in the 26th Chapter of the Book of Proverbs v. 26 27. Whose Hatred is covered by Deceit his Wickedness shall be shewed before the whole Congregation Whoso diggeth a Pit shall fall therein and he that rolleth a Stone it will return upon him FINIS Page 16. l. 3. for the World it read the Word it BOOKS Printed for Brab Aylmer at the Three Pigeons in Cornhil MR. Keith's Last Sermon at Turner's-Hall May 5. 1700. in which he gave an account of his joining in Communion with the Church of England Quarto His Two Sermons Preach'd at the Church of St. George Botolph-lane May 12. 1700. being his first Preaching after Ordination Quarto His Explications and Retractations of divers Passages in his former Books Quanto Price 6d His Thanksgiving Sermon Preached April 16. 1696. Quarto Price 6d His First Narrative at Turner's-Hall Quarto Price 12d His Second Narrative at Turner's-Hall Quar. Price 6 d. His Fourth Narrative at Turner's-Hall detecting the Quakers gross Errours vile Heresies and Antichristian Principles c. by clear and evident Proofs in above two hundred and fifty Quotations faithfully taken out of their Books with an Attestation of Dr. Isham Dr. Bedford and three other Ministers of the Church of England to the Truth of the said Quotations Quarto Price 1 s. 6 d. His large Catechism for the Instruction of Youth Octavo Bound Price 1 s. His small Catechism for the Instruction of Children Octavo Stitch'd Price 3 d. His Deism of William Penn. Octavo Price 1 s. BOOKS Printed for C. Brome at the Gun at the Westend of St. Paul's Church-yard DR Spark's Devotions with all new Cuts The Snake in the Grass and Defence of it Five Discourses by the Author of the Snake in the Grass with a new Preface And all the Pieces of that Author The first and fourth Parts of Virgil's Aeneads in English Burlesque by Charles Cotton Esquire Liturgies vindicated by the Dissenters Price bound 1 s. Advice to the Roman Catholicks of England especially those under Age by the late Act of Parliament Price 1 s. The History of the Bible in Quarto with 264 Cuts besides three Maps Le grand's Philosophy Folio English Cuts Mr. Keith's Farewel Sermon at Turners-Hall Two first Sermons after Ordination A full Account of Presbytery as establish'd in Scotland Sermons on several Occasions By Dr. Sprat Lord Bishop of Rochester Principles and Duties of Natural Religion By Bishop Wilkins The Case of the Dutchess of Mazarine The Conquest of India by the Portuguese In 3 Vol. The City and Republick of Venice Religious Conference about Godfathers and Godmothers Horace Translated by Alex. Brome c. Erasmus Colloquies Translated by Sir R. L'Estrange and Mr. Brown The Compleat Gamester The Guide of a Christian. Price bound 6 d. A Guide to Heaven in two Parts Reform'd Monastery or the Love of Jesus A Manual of Prayers for Winchester College All the Pieces by the same Author A Treatise of Humane Reason Method with the Deists and Jews Arithmetical Recreations By Leybourn The Godly-man's Companion Characters of a Whore a Bawd c. Price 6 6d Plain-dealing Poulterer
SOME REASONS WHY Robert Bridgman and his Wife And some others in HUNTINGTON-SHIRE Have left the Society of the People called QUAKERS AND Have join'd in Communion with the Church of ENGLAND And some Passages contained in a Letter of George Whitehead to R. J. and R. Bridgman's Reply to the same By ROBERT BRIDGMAN LONDON Printed for Brab Aylmer at the Three Pigeons over-against the Royal Exchange in Cornhil and Char. Brome at the Gun at the West-end of St. Paul's Church-yard MDCC ROBERT BRIDGMAN's REASONS For Leaving the QUAKERS SOME REASONS WHY ROBERT BRIDGMAN and others Have left the QUAKERS IT has been matter of Sorrow and Shame unto me and many others that have now left the Quakers Communion that we so long professed the Christian Religion whilst we remained so ignorant of the fundamental Principles of it the Doctrine of the Trinity or three Persons of one Nature and Substance in the Godhead The Incarnation of the second Person or Son of God our Lord Jesus Christ. The Satisfaction and Atonement made unto God the Father by his Obedience and Death upon the Cross. The Resurrection and Ascention of his Body and Person into Heaven His remaining in our Nature at the right hand of God in the Glory of his Father our Head High-Priest and Intercessour The Faith and full persuasion of his second last and outward appearance and coming again to raise the Dead Bodys of the Saints and of all Men in the great Day and solemn Assize of all Nations in which an Infallible and final Sentence will be passed upon all according to the Deeds done in the Body agreeable to the plain and positive sense of divers Texts in Holy Scripture These Doctrines and the Faith of them wrought by the Operation of the Holy Ghost the third Person in the Blessed Trinity are Essential or Fundamental Parts and Principles of the Christian Religion without which in the true Faith of them we cannot be saved in this or in the World to come And therefore 't is of great Weight and Consequence yea of the greatest Importance to every one under a Christian Profession to be duly Instructed and rightly Informed in these great and necessary Truths of the Christian Religion and without which in some good measure no Man can be rightly denominated a Christian Man or Believer The Faith of God as a Great and Mercyful Creator and the Seal of his Power and Providence in and over all his Creatures is indeed a necessary work and our Love and Obedience to the Law and Light with which he instructs and enlightens our Nature is a pretious and necessary condition on our parts to sit and prepare us for the due reception of the Christian Faith and indeed without some experience of this sort 't is in vain to pretend to any Religion much more to the Christian Religion Yet the order and progress of our Faith and Hope ought to be duly distinguished for to reduce all Religion and Faith towards God under a Profession and Experience of Light and Truth without any distinction of common and special Illumination or Grace is dangerous to the Soul and very destructive to the real Foundation of the Christian Religion How far the People call'd Quakers in general and some of their most noted and approved Authors and Ministers in particular have Ignorantly and Blasphemously opposed this work of Faith and Reformation begun and carried on in the Souls of many by hearing the Word and Doctrine of the Gospel declared in the Holy Scriptures from Men qualified to Read and Expound the same is now become so evident to such whose Eyes the Lord in Mercy hath opened that to contradict or deny it must bespeak very great Ignorance or Obstinacy How far they have withstood and rejected the Institutions of our Blessed Lord Jesus Christ in the due administration of them and the sincere and faithful practise of such as are convinced of their Duty and Profit in receiving them is also as evident to such as have had occasion to deal with them or peruse their Writings constantly published from their beginning And how under pretence of higher Attainments and farther Glory a Spirit of Pride and great Uncharitableness hath possessed them is sufficiently manifest by its fruits in Censuring and Reproaching all other denominations of Professed Christians whom they set to a great distance and account as the World which yet lieth in Wickedness And by a shew of Spirituality Simplicity Humility and Patience have deceived themselves and many of the most ignorant and inadvertent Professors who inconsiderately and rashly conclude they are the most holy and reformed People and Church of God because they appear in a more sedate retired and self denying manner as a Society and Body of People than generally is observed of other Societies But whoever arrives to any tolerable understanding of sound Christian Principles and attends an impartial Examination of what the Quakers preach and publish shall not only find them very disagreeable one with another but in general very opposite to true Christianity And that which also very much exposeth them to contempt with all True Intelligent and Religious minds is the liberty they take in their Apologies and Defences to quible and shuffle with dull and apparent Sophistry 'T is now become their repeated Practise to alter the sense of their own as well as their Opponents writings by adding or diminishing of words by Transposing them by playing upon such as are equivocal by connecting Matter that lies disjoynted and disjoynting Matter that lies connected by questioning the autography of their own Prints when they cannot otherwise vindicate or defend them And thus they inherit the Jesuites practice ' tho through want of their Education they fall short in their skill and by this very means ruine their Cause notwithstanding their Zeal and specious Pretences 'T is a mercyful Providence so many are delivered from the snare of their Spirit which with soundings and Echoes works on the Imagination and Fancy of the more Ignorant and Credulous Did they regard Truth and Justice without respecting Persons in Judgment they would have never declined to be brought to the Test before any competent number of Sober and Judicious Persons without making such Pleas and Pretences to excuse and be excused as they have done Being detected they became greatly inraged and breath out their spite in Prophecies and Curses both in private and publick against such as oppose them whilst they are blessing and magnifying themselves and their Faction in such flights of Devotion as allarms and amuzes the Ignorant and Unwary The account given by George Keith in his Books and Narratives of Matter of Fact so well attested is such a Load upon them that they are very uneasie and not daring to appear to justifie themselves are labouring to abuse and misrepresent him They have endeavoured to insinuate that Covetousness Pride and Envy are the motive of his practice An Apostate a Judas a Renegado are the