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A52162 A discourse concerning the love of God Masham, Damaris, Lady, 1658-1708. 1696 (1696) Wing M905; ESTC R3455 44,516 134

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our own making For it is certain That Custom and Education to which we owe most of the Mischiefs we suffer and usually charge upon Nature have procur'd us very many Wants which She intended us not And which therefore accordingly vary in different Countries and Ages of the World And these Wants are very many more especially in the Civiliz'd Nations as we call them than the Wants of Nature viz. Queis humana sibi doleat Natura negatis They are wise who indeavour to contract their Desires to the last But whoever says the Denial of what Nature requires ought not to be esteem'd an Unhappiness talks like a Disciple of Chr●… and not of Jesus Christ W●●●●●●llowers are so often exhorted to do good to all Men Which at least a chief part of it consists in removing the Pains and Miseries they suffer from their Natural Wants and Necessities And This great part of Charity must be perform'd according to that Rule of the Apostle Heb. xiii 16. To do good and to communicate forget not for with such Sacrifice God is well pleased And altho' when the want of those things which Nature requires comes in competition with any good of Eternal Concernment they may well be thought light and be slighted in that Comparison yet in themselves they cannot nor ought to be so And our Master himself thought thus When for the Joy that was set before him he indured the Cross c. But tho' it be a great part of Wisdom to contract our Desire only to what Nature requires Yet as we must not seek the Satisfaction of our Natural Appetites when it cannot be obtain'd without prejudice to some Duty which ought at that time to be preferr'd So the gratification of Appetites which are not properly Natural but which we have receiv'd from Custom and Education is not always Sinful For besides that Custom which it may be was none of our fault is oftentimes as strong as Nature in us Those acquired Appetites are also many times no ways prejudicial to what we owe either to God or our Neighbour And where they are not so their Gratification cannot be Sinful Our Saviour who said This do and thou shalt Live assures us That he who heartily loves God and his Neighbour as himself can make no mistake in his Duty dangerous to his Salvation And those Mistakes which are so only to our happy living whilst here are sufficiently punish'd in the disappointment they carry along with them It is not therefore hard for a Man if he be sincere to know when his Desires are rightly regulated And he will need no Casuist besides himself to tell him what and how far he may lawfully Love or Desire and what or how far he may not do so Loves he any thing in the World to the prejudice of his Love of God or his Neighbour it is Sinful Does he not do so there is no Sin To oppose this would be to contradict those words of our Saviour And indeed these two great Duties of the Love of God and our Neighbour imply or include each other If says the Apostle 1 John iv 20. a man say I love God and hateth his Brother he is a Liar And v. 12. If we love one another God dwelleth in us and the Love of God is perfected in us Again v. 7. Let us love one another every one that loveth is born of God and knoweth God v. 8. He that loves not knoweth not God Chap. iii. 17. But who so has this Worlds Goods and seeth his Brother have need and shutteth up his Bowels of Compassion from him how dwelleth the Love of God in him God is an invisible Being And it is by his Works that we are led both to know and to love him They lead us to their invisible Author And if we lov'd not the Creatures it is not conceiveable how we should love God at least how they shuld have lov'd him who not having the Law yet did by Nature the things contain'd in the Law And this however opposite to what some tell us seems nevertheless the sense of the above-named Apostle who says 1 John iv 20. He that loveth not his Brother whom he has seen how can he love God whom he has not seen And I would demand of any one if they could suppose themselves or any other never to have loved any Creature what they could imagine they should love I suppose it must be reply'd by such a one That as he was not the Author of his own Being and saw clearly that he could not be produced by nothing He was thereby led to the Acknowledgment of a Superiour Being to whom he was indebted for his own and therefore stood obliged to love him But Being or Existence barely consider'd is so far from being a Good that in the state of the Damn'd few are so Paradoxical as not to believe it an intolerable Misery And many even in this World are so unhappy that they would much rather part with their Existence than be eternally continued in the State they are in The Author of our Being therefore merits not our Love unless he has given to us such a Being as we can Love Now if none of the Objects that every way surround us were pleasing to us How could our Beings that have a continual Communication with and necessary Dependance upon these be so But if the Objects that surround us do please us that is if we do love them As it is then evident they must be the first Objects of our Love so from their Gratefulness or Pleasingness to us it is also evident that we have both the Idea of Love and are led to the Discovery of the Author of that Being that produces what is lovely And like as our own Existence and that of other Beings has assur'd us of the Existence of some Cause more Powerful than these Effects so also the Loveliness of his Works as well assures us that that Cause or Author is yet more Lovely than they and consequently the Object the most worthy of our Love But if none of those Beings which surround us did move our Love we should then both be ignorant of the Nature of the Author of all things and of Love it self For what should then exert it that it should not lie for ever Dormant And which way could we in the state we are in receive the Idea of Love or Lovely For God as Powerful which is all we should know of him consider'd barely as a Creator is no more an Object of Love than of Hate or Fear and is truly an Object only of Admiration It seems therefore plain that if any could be without the Love of the Creatures they would be without the Love of God also For as by the Existence of the Creatures we come to know there is a Creator so by their Loveliness it is that we come to know That of their Author and to Love him But it will be said here That we
after Riches c. must not be beyond their Worth So as that we forget they are perishable and uncertain Goods such as Moth and Rust do corrupt and the Violence and Injustice of Men may deprive us of No longer at best of any value than during our short abode in this World For if we do otherwise our Reason is captivated and we become truly Servants The Servants of Mammon And cannot be the Servants of God Because we cannot Serve two so opposite and differing Masters For it is from the contrariety of their Commands and not from the littleness of our Minds or Capacities that we cannot Serve God and Mammon Since neither little nor great can obey two Masters that command Contraries And that is true of the Apostle His Servants ye are to whom you obey But our Minds as little as they are may love God and the Creature when the Love of the Creature is Subordinate And I think Mr. N. nor no one else will deny That there are many who sincerely love God that do yet love something in the Creature And if so whether their Love be Sinful or no it is evident their Capacities are not too little to love both As it is also that our Reason is not captivated and we thereby inslav'd or render'd the Servants of every thing that we love And here is nothing at all said by our Saviour of any other degree of Love but such as makes us the Servants of what we love And therefore it is no more true that we are here forbid by our Saviour to love any thing but God than that our Capacities are too little to love any two different Objects For if Mr. N. means any thing else by to be employ'd than To Love when he says That our Capacities are too narrow and scanty to be employ'd upon two such vastly different Objects it is not to his purpose But if he means by employ'd to Love what he affirms is then neither true in his own sence of Love nor in that of the Text. For it is not true that our Capacities are too narrow to Love any two different Objects either in the smallest degree which he contends for or so as to become the Servants of them which is what the Text says Provided there be no contrariety in their Commands His first Reason therefore why we cannot divide our Love viz. From the scantiness of Our Capacities is utterly false our Capacities being evidently not too narrow to love any two different Objects or even every Object which appears to us to be lovely And there is no reason that if we love the Creatures in some degree as occasions of Pleasure to us we necessarily loving whatever is accompanied with Pleasure that That Love of the Creature should exclude the Love of God any more than that the Love of Cherries should exclude the love of our Friend that gives them us And if we love God yet less does the Love of him exclude our Love of his Creatures For we love them then not only for the Pleasure that they occasion us but for the sake of their Author and the more we Love God the more we shall Love his Creatures But another Reason besides the narrowness of our Capacities Why we cannot divide our Love between God and the Creature is because we cannot love either of them but upon such a Principle as must utterly exclude the love of the other which is thus offer'd to be made out We must not love any thing but what is our true Good There can be but one thing that is so And that must be either God or the Creature What is our True Good he tells us is that which can both Deserve and Reward our Love But certainly whatever is a Good to us is a True Good since whatever pleases us pleases us And our Love which he says is to be deserv'd and rewarded is nothing else but that Disposition of Mind which we find in our selves towards any thing with which we are pleas'd So that to tell us that we must not love any thing but what is our True God Is as much as to say that we must not be pleas'd with any thing but what Pleases us which it is likely we are not in Danger of And what is added of deserving and rewarding our Love being put in as a Synonymous Expression to explain to us what is meant by our True Good Our True Good does consequently tell us what is meant by deserving and rewarding our Love They both signifying one and the same thing There can therefore no more be made of This notable Principle viz. That we must not love any thing but what is our True Good that is which can both deserve and reward our Love then that we must not be pleased with any thing but what Pleases us or reflect upon the Pleasure any thing causes in us which never did cause us any Pleasure This without doubt carries much information with it But the word True otherwise very impertinent here is Subtilty to insinuate that which should be prov'd viz. That the Creatures are not the Essicient Causes of our Pleasing Sensations And in the Lines following he seruples not to beg the Question in more express terms When he says There can be but one thing that is so viz. our True Good And then follows and that must be either God or the Creature But if God be our True Good as most certainly he is let us Love God and God only God and not the Creature For 't is a most inconsistent and impracticable thing to carve out our Love between both Ye cannot serve God and Mammon Here we see having needlesly told us that we must not love any thing but our True Good That is that which pleases us He tells us next that there can be but one thing that is so viz. our True Good Which is yet more evidently false than his first Assertion is impertinent Notwithstanding as if it were as evidently True as it is manifestly the contrary He offers not any thing at all to make it good His Assertion only seeming to him sufficient to oppose to the daily Sense and Experience of all Mankind But indeed if by True Good he did mean our chief Good then it is true that there is but one such Good and that is God alone who is also the Author and Donor of all our other Good But in this sense it is nothing to his purpose To conclude his Demonstration that we cannot Love God or the Creature but upon such a Principle as must utterly exclude the Love of the other Having said we must Love nothing but our True Good and that That can be but one thing He tells us lastly that that one thing must be either God or the Creature Which Conclusion when he has prov'd his foregoing Assertion viz. That there can be but one thing our Good it may be convenient for him to explain a little better But till he has
become the Standard of Devotion no Men of Sense and Reason will ever set themselves about it but leave it to be understood by mad Men and practis'd by Fools Which is a Reflection that it were to be wish'd all would make who may be tempted by Affectation of Novelty Fondness of an Hypothesis or any other better Reason to build their Practical and Devotional Discourses upon Principles which not only will not bear the Test but which oblige them to lay down such Assertions in Morality as sober and well disposed Christians cannot understand to be practicable Than which I think there never was any more evidently so than that Mankind are obliged strictly as their Duty to love with Desire nothing but God only Every Degree of Desire of any Creature whatsoever being Sin This Assertion though not altogether new yet has been but lately brought into our Pulpits and been pretended to be set on Foot upon a Philosophical or Natural Ground viz. That God not the Creature is the immediate efficient Cause of our Sensations For whatever gives us Pleasure say they who hold this Hypothesis has a right to our Love but God only gives us Pleasure therefore he only has a right to our Love Indeed in a Sermon upon this Subject Matt. xxij 37. the Author pretends to establish his Sense of the Words upon a double Basis 1. That God is the only Cause of our Love 2. That he is also the only proper Object of it But in Reference to the first he does no more to this Purpose but prove what plainly express'd cannot be contested viz. That we receive the Power which we have of Desiring from God And then asks himself several Questions as Can God act for a Creature Does not God make all things for himself c. Which amount only to thus much that they signifie it is his Opinion that God who doubtless made all things for himself because his own Glory was his primary End in creating all things had not therefore Secondary and intermediate Ends for which he made the Creatures to operate one upon another Which is but in a tacit Way to beg the Question But he confesses rightly that the Stress of this Business lies in the Proof of the second Proposition Vpon this Hinge says he the whole Weight of the Theory turns viz. That God is the only proper Object of our Love as being the only Cause of all our pleasing Sensations the Creatures having no Efficiency at all to operate upon us they being only occasional Causes of those Sentiments which God produces in us And on this Foundation it then is that he asserts that every Act that carries our Desires towards the Creature is sinful Which Opinion if receiv'd and follow'd must necessarily bring in the like unintelligible Way of Practical Religion which the Bishop of Worcester has justly censured in the Church of Rome But however perswaded either the Author himself or this great Assertor of this Hypothesis are of its Truth or Reasonableness As there was no need at all of interessing Religion and Morality in the Matter so it is also very unserviceable to them Since that which they would inferr from it is manifestly no just Consequence any more than a useful or practicable Doctrine And a Man that had not been mighty fond of an Hypothesis would never have attempted from the Pulpit to fortifie by Scripture an Opinion so opposite to the Tenour of it as well as to that Morality which has been so excellently preach'd to the World by the Divines of his own Church Whose Discourses are generally if not universally founded upon this Supposition or at least imply it that there may be a lawful Love of the Creatures And being herein conform'd to right Reason and consequently adapted to humane Life they have helped to make some Opposition to that Irreligion which by looseness of Manners on the one hand and uncharitable Zeal on the other has spread it self amongst us in this last Age But must doubtless have prevailed further had not more reasonable Principles of Morality been inculcated into Men than can be grounded upon seeing all things in God c. For apparently if the practical Duties of Religion had not been better accounted for and inforc'd than by the so much boasted of spiritual Books of the Roman Church Religion and Vertue had before this time been disputed or ridicul'd out of our World And yet any of these Books of mystical Divinity will be found as well able to support them as some of the late practical Discourses of Mr. N. or as any Man 's else can be upon the Principle of our being obliged to have no Love of Desire for any of the Creatures Which is particularly endeavour'd to be made good in the foremention'd Sermon upon the great Commandment of the Law Matt. xxij 37. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart with all thy Soul and with all thy Mind Wherein the Author pretends to show that all our Love is to be so intirely center'd upon God that not any part of it is to be allow'd to the Creatures But least the inlarging this first Commandment to such a Magnitude should make it seem to swallow up the second He prevents that Objection by shewing that these Two Commandments clash not at all The Love of God and of our Neighbour as he says being different Loves For we love God with Love of Desire and love or should love our Neighbour only with Love of Benevolence Which Distinction in other Discourses of his he is more large upon and seems to believe the latter part of it confirm'd by these Words Thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy self Moses in Levit .xix. repeating to the Children of Israel sundry Laws and amongst others several special Duties towards their Neighbour thus concludes the last ver the 18th Thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy self Which Conclusion is comprehensive of all that preceded it or that had been omitted And in a short Rule better teaches the Extent of what we owe to our Neighbour than it was possible any Enumeration of Particulars could This Duty is indeed so fully express'd herein that we cannot conceive any Addition could be made to the Perfection of this Precept by our Blessed Saviour Who came to teach us the whole Will of the Father and to give us the most perfect Rule of Life that had yet been delivered to Mankind and accordingly Luke the 4th ch v. 25. being asked Master what shall I do to inherit Eternal Life He said How readest thou in the Law It being answer'd Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart and with all thy Soul with all thy Mind and with all thy Strength and thy Neighbour as thy self He replied Thou hast answer'd right This do and thou shalt live He had answer'd right in joining together these two Commandments in the Law on which all the rest of the Law and Prophets did depend Matt. xxij
40. And our Saviour assures him the Rule of the Law was in neither part short or defective For he says This do and thou shalt live We are here taught that the Love of God and of our Neighbour comprises the whole of our Duty And accordingly we are else-where also told That Love is the fullfilling of the Law Its Regulation therefore is certainly of the utmost Consequence to us And the Measures of it are That we love God with all our Heart with all our Souls with all our Mind and with all our Strength and our Neighbour as our selves These Precepts are joined together in the Gospel and there is a very near Affinity between them But they are not so joined in the Law from whence they are cited Neither is there any Appearance that those to whom they were there given understood or could understand by them the Love of God and the Love of their Neighbour to be distinct Affections differing in kind as is affirm'd by Mr. N. Who in Pursuance of at best a useless Notion would take from a great part of Mankind their only sure Retreat when bewildered in the Maze of Opinions endlesly contested by the Men of Skill in Disputation He having done as much to perplex the plain Duties of Morality as others have done the speculative parts of Religion But there appears no Ground from the Text here to affirm that the Command of loving their Neighbour as themselves was as he says it was not only an absolute Measure but a relative Character put in on purpose to distinguish it from their Love of God Page 165. of his Philosophical and Divine Letters Unless that Mr. N. will say that the Words necessarily imply so much which is to beg the thing he contests for and not to prove it Moses speaking as a Law-giver to a Multitude that did not much refine in their Speculations or distinguish things with Philosophical Niceness seems very plainly by this Text as the foregoing ones make it evident to design only to tell them how far the Love of their Neighbour ought to extend As not only to the doing no Injury specified in sundry Instances but even to the bearing no Grudge And Finally says he Thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy self That is do him as little Harm and as much Good as thou desirest should be done to thy self Whether or no he should be the Object of Desire is not determined by this Precept any farther than as Love naturally draws Desire after it But against the Lawfulness of any Creature 's being desired by us it is said by Mr. N. That as we cannot love God with a Love of Benevolence he wanting nothing to be wished to his Perfection and Happiness so we ought not to love the Creature with a Love of Desire they being uncapable to make any part of our Happiness What we cannot do we are certain we shall not And we need little Caution not to desire what is not desirable or which is here equivalent not pleasing to us But though Men may possibly in the Ignorance they are in of their own Being and the Constitution of other things with their mutual Relations mistake that which can make them finally happy yet none can be supposed not to know what at the present pleases them which is the Happiness or Pleasure here intended How little it signifies to this Matter though the Stress of the Assertion lies in it to say That sensible Objects are not the efficient but occasional Causes of our pleasing Sensations will soon be consider'd But if when we use the Word Love we reflected what it is we mean by it we should perhaps be more inlighten'd than by Mr. N's Definition of it and should learn to distinguish better than to call different Passions by the same Name or confound Love with whatever is a Concomitant of it When I say that I love my Child or my Friend I find that my Meaning is that they are things I am delighted in Their Being is a Pleasure to me When I say that I love God above all I find I would express that he is my chiefest Good and I delight in him above all things Again when I say that I love my self I likewise mean by it that my Being is dear and pleasing to me To say one loves a thing and that it is that which one has Complaisency in is just the same Love being only a Name given to that Disposition or Act of the Mind we find in our selves towards any thing we are pleas'd with And so far as it is simply Love consists barely in That and cannot be distinguish'd into different Acts of wishing well and desiring which are other different Acts of the Mind consequential to Love according to the difference of the Object To intelligent Beings that we love our Love is follow'd with acts of Benevolence or wishing well to the Being and Happiness of that thing that helps to make us happy and with desire of injoying that in them that delights us And our Love to Inanimate things is follow'd with Benevolence and Well wishing to their Being if it may be continued with their Injoyment and with desire also of injoying them But because Benevolence appears most in Wishing Happiness to Beings capable of it And the use of most Inanimate things which we love and desire to injoy destroys them in the Injoyment Therefore Learned Men have talk'd as if there were two sorts of Love Whereas Love is but one simple act of the Mind always accompanied with Desire and Benevolence too where the Object is capable of it But as that Definition which Mr. N. has given us viz. That Love is that Original Weight Bent or Indeavour whereby the Soul stands inclin'd to and is mov'd forwards to Good ingeneral or Happiness tells as not so well what Love is as our own Hearts can when we consult them So perhaps an Examination of them will not only better acquaint us with the Nature of our Passions but also direct us better to the Measures of their Regulation than Notions concerning them deduced from the Consequences of an Hypothesis Let us therefore consider more particularly how by the different Objects of our Love our Hearts are affected When we say we love our selves Have we then only a simple Perception of Pleasure and Complaisance in our Being Or is any thing else annex'd to that Pleasure as a necessary Concomitant or Consequence of it Mr. N. says Letters Philosophical and Divine p. 165. that our love of our selves is not love of Desire but love of Benevolence most undoubtedly Most undoubtedly these words of Mr. N. very much clash with what he affirms elsewhere see his Theory and Regulation of Love p. 14. and 15. where having reduced or comprehended Love under Concupiscence and Benevolence he expresly tells us that There is no desire without Benevolence and no Benevolence without define But he does not in this oppose himself only but Truth also since the
desire of the continuation of our Being is truly a Desire of our Selves a Desire of something of our selves which we have not already As he that having Light and Warmth enough of the Sun desiring its Continuation desires more of the Sun than he has already The Continuation of our Being is necessary to our Happiness in the Beatifick Vision And if we desire more of that Happiness by only desiring the Continuation of it we certainly desire more of our selves by desiring the Continuation of our Being Let us farther observe how our Hearts are affected in our love of other things Our Being we evidently find stands in need of other Beings for its Support and Happiness because it is not sufficient alone for either And therefore to the Complaisance or Pleasure we have in it we find necessarily annex'd a wishing to it whatever we conceive may either continue or improve it As to God himself whom Mr. N. makes the sole Object of our Desires I wish Mr. N. had a little more explain'd himself what he means by our Desiring of God For the Perfection and Superlativeness of his Nature makes him the Object of our Love Desire and Benevolence in a quite different way from Created Beings We love God for those Excellencies of his Nature wherein he infinitely surpasses all that is good or desireable in the Creature When we are said to Desire him I think we mean such a Communication of his Goodness whereby he bestows on us any Degree of Happiness And in this sense we shall to Eternity desire more and more of him But he being both Necessary and Perfect we can therefore wish no good to him which he has not already Because we cannot conceive any Addition of Good can be made to him Our Benevolence is limited by his perfect Nature only to Acts of Joy and Complaisance in his Perfections which is all we can do But the doing of That declares That if any thing could be added to his Perfection and Happiness we should wish it And therefore as an Expression of that Benevolence it is made our Duty to give him Praise and as much as we can to Glorifie him Again When we say That we love our Children or Friends It is evident also from the Nature of the Object that we not only wish to them as to our selves whatever we conceive may tend to continue or improve their Being but also that Desire of them is a necessary Concomitant of our Love Because we are not always present with them whereby we should enjoy them more And it is impossible to love the Presence or Kindness of any thing without desiring to possess it Now If any one will say we ought not to be so pleased They then deny that we ought to love For we cannot love but what we are pleased with It is true that every one may apply words as they think fit But then others ought to take care not to be imposed on by them And if any one will either tell us That we love things in which we find no Pleasure Or That being pleased with a thing we do not yet love it Or will call different Passions by the same Name Or imply in the word Love that complication of other Passions inseparable indeed from Love but varying according to the Objects of it It will concern us to examine what they say before we receive their Dictates as Measures for the Regulation of a Passion upon the right Regulation of which depends both our Present and Future Happiness Love is but one simple Act of the Mind But whether our desiring of what we love or only wishing well to it or both follows that act of Love the Nature of the lov'd Object alone Determines For if that be both capable of being a good to us and of receiving good from us or from any thing else it is then certain that we wish both If it be capable of but one and we know it to be so it is certain we can then wish but one The Distinction which is made of love of Benevolence and Concupiscence arising only from the different Natures of the Objects of our Love is only the Mis-application of the word Love to different acts consequent to Love but distinct from it and depending on the different Nature of the Object But it is said That no Creature is capable of being a Good to us Every Man's Experience confutes this every Day and would do so although that were true that these Men contend for which therefore cannot in the least tend to promote Piety It is certain that to believe which is evidently true that we receive all our Good from the Hand of God ought to be and effectively is the proper Ground of our Love of Him above all things But that we do receive all our good from the Hand of God is equally acknowledged whether we believe the creature receives an Efficiency from God to excite pleasing Sensations in us Or that God himself exhibiting part of his Essence to us at the presence of the Creature is himself the immediate Author of those Pleasing Sensations Which is the Hypothesis proposed for the Advancement of the Love of God But as Truth of no kind is ever advantaged by Falshood so also it seems a respect Due to so important and withal so evident a Duty as the Love of God not needlesly to lay the stress of it upon any Doubtful Unintelligible or Precarious Hypothesis whatever Pretences it carries with it of Piety Pompous Rhapsodies of the Soul 's debasing her self when she descends to set the least part of her Affections upon any thing but her Creator however well they may possibly be intended are plainly but a complementing God with the contempt of his Works by which we are the most effectually led to Know Love and Adore him And such kind of Expressions as carry not a Relative but Absolute Abhorrence or Contempt of Injoyments the most Lawful seem only allowable as unpremeditated Raptures of Devout Minds not the Productions of Philosophical Disquisition and will only affect those that are truely Pious whilst they carry a show of some Truth in the Heart of the Speaker which they strictly have not in themselves For 't is not unlikely that a lively Remorse may so turn the Stream of some Men's Affections from all sensible Pleasures and give them so strong a Disgust for them that the very Remembrances and Ideas of those Pleasures even where allowable may become Ungrateful As Men have often Aversion to see or hear of Places or Persons othertimes Dear to them by which or in which they have suffer'd much The Passions where they are strong argue by a Logick of their own not that of Reason which they often and significantly enough invert to serve their own Purpose And when Religion is in the case with which too many are perswaded Reason has little to do they can easily advance this so far as to dress out an intire System
of their own Constitutions will scarce ever be perswaded in Fact that they and this Author being thoroughly Cold seek for Fire upon different Motives Or will think that He being truly Hungry seeks Food only upon a prudential Account and not out of any Desire that he has to the Meat Should he tell them ever so much That the Mind of Man conscious of its own Dignity and Innate Nobleness ought not to debase it self to such mean Affections as the Love of any Creature The Creatures being no more capable to please any Faculty than to Create it And therefore have no Pretence to the least Interest in our Love Prac. D. p. 59. And it will even not be easie for him to perswade them That he does not in this vilifie the Wisdom of his Creator and reproach God for not having made him as he ought to have done For Men are very seldom talk'd out of their Senses And if they should not want the Charity to believe him sincere they will yet also be very ready to conclude him unacquainted with the World and Humane Nature to judge of that of others by his own extraordinary and Metaphysical Constitution But the Words of the Text Matt. xxij 37. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart with all thy Soul and with all thy Mind he says will admit of no other good Interpretation than that God is solely and only to be Loved Since with no tolerable Sense he can be said to Love God with all his Soul and all his Mind that only loves him above other things Allowing other things at the same time a share in his Love p. 10. The highest Sense he thinks that is generally put upon these Words amounts to no more than this That God is to be the Prime and Principal Object of our Love and Delight That we are to Love him in a superlative way above all other things whatsoever so as to lose any Good or suffer any Evil rather than commit the least Sin against him That we are always to preferr him in our Love chusing to obey him rather than Man and to please him rather than satisfie our own Will and to enjoy him rather than any Worldy or Carnal Pleasure p. 5 6. But this Interpretation he thinks exhausts not the Sense of the Commandment since no Logick or Grammar can bear to call the Part though the larger Part the whole p. 10. But it is not the Question whether Logick or Grammar will bear calling the Part the whole but whether every Text in Scripture is to be interpreted by his Logick and Grammar Or whether in some Cases Scripture does not accommodate it self to the fashion and figurative ways of speaking usual amongst Men Which when rightly not literally understood are not contrary to Logick and Grammar This it is plain the Opinion of the Divines and other Learned Men is That the Scripture does so accommodate it self Because they have interpreted this Text and not this alone but others also in such a Sense And therefore if he would put any Stress upon this Argument he must first show that those are mistaken who think that Scripture oftentimes speaks figuratively and popularly which is so receiv'd an Opinion that to oppose it as he does or else says nothing to the Purpose without giving any reason at all in this place for so doing seems to argue more Arrogancy than Impartiality in the search of Truth Now if Scripture does sometimes accommodate it self to the ordinary ways of speaking amongst Men Why should it not be thought to do so in this Text Wherein the common Sense of Mankind opposes any other Meaning as possible than that which is familiar to us For it cannot be deny'd that in every Language nothing is more ordinary than to say we love a Person intirely or with all our Hearts when we love them very much And yet better may this be said if we love them above all others And as we mean no more than one of these two things by these Expressions so we design not to be understood otherwise And this is so well known that we are also never mistaken in them But it is yet more evident that this Text is to be understood in the familiar Sense of the Words If it be remembred that they are the Injunction of a Law-Maker Deut. vi 5. from whence our Saviour cites them to a Rude and Illiterate People Now the Duty that these Words injoins Mr. N. himself confesses cannot be carried higher than the Interpreters have carried it viz. to Love God supremely and above all things without building in the Air Unless his Hypothesis be received Which unless he will say Moses delivered also to the Israelites he makes him an admirable Lawgiver to deliver to his People the most Essential of all his Laws so as it was not or cannot be thought likely that one of a Hundred if at least any one amongst them did understand it For I suppose it will not be deny'd by Mr. N. That though by the Parturiency of his own Mind he very early light upon this Notion and was not as the World imagines he was beholden to Pere Malbranche for it That the Israelites generally were not so speculative and philosophical as he in their Natural Genius And yet less that they either Cultivated any such Speculations in the time of Moses Or had any Tradition or receiv'd Opinion amongst them That the Creatures were not Efficient but Occasional Causes of their Pleasing Sensations by which they might be enabled to understand this Command concerning loving God not in the familiar and conceivable Sense of the Words but in Mr. N's Logical and Grammatical though otherwise Inconceivable Sense of them But besides that Lawgivers always give their Laws in the most familiar manner they can The Inconceivableness also of Mr. N's Sense of the Words as a Moral Rule is a sufficient reason in it self why Moses should not be understood according to his Explanation Which puts a Meaning upon the Command that is apparently and plainly impracticable viz. That God is so wholly to be loved that it is defrauding Him to place the least Degree of our Love upon the Creatures And that therefore though they may be sought and injoyed by us as Goods yet they cannot be desired by us as such without Sin This Inconceivableness of any other Sense that could by his Auditors at least be put upon his Words might I doubt not in any other Case plead Moses's Excuse to Mr. N. himself for having thus transgress'd as he thinks against Logick and Grammar whilst he express'd himself in a way that may well be suppos'd to have been as familiar and usual then as it is now It is to be hoped that to many others he will not need excuse in this wherein with what has a Natural Connexion and is accordingly out of Moses joined to it by our Saviour he has so well comprehended the Duty of Mankind that Christ
says This do and thou shalt live That is Love the Lord thy God with all thy Soul with all thy Heart with all thy Mind and with all thy Strength And thy Neighbour as thy self These Commands have no Obscurity or Difficulty at all to be understood if we have honest Hearts and Heads not possess'd with an Hypothesis which every thing must be made to chime to For to love any thing with all our Hearts is in its known and usual Signification to love it a dently Moses joins to loving God with all our Hearts loving him also with all our Souls and all our Minds That is with all the Faculties of our reasonable Nature And by this we are taught not only to love him very ardently but above all other things As being our Creator and great Benefactor upon whom we depend every Moment and from whom we receive all the Good that we injoy and from whose Bounty we expect all that we hope for As also as being every way in himself infinitely beyond all Degrees of Comparison a Being the most lovely Foolish Men too frequent Experience shows love ardently oftentimes without considering whether the Object of their Love be worthy of it But to love with the Mind and the Soul as well as the Heart is not to love so but to love with the Understanding Rationally as well as Passionately And we cannot Love God with our Souls and with our Mind that is with the Application of our Understandings and with a reasonable Love without loving him above all his Creatures Because he is infinitely more lovely And every ones reason when he consults it must always assent that he is so The Duty then that we are taught is plainly what reason requires viz. That we love the most lovely Being above all others And that all the Powers and Faculties of our Mind consent in this Preference of him That we think of him as well as we are able as he is and pay the highest Tribute of Affection and Adoration to him that our Natures are capable of This is also plainly Practicable and what we may know whether we perform or no by asking our selves whether we are willing to part with any other Good for the Sake of this as Father Mother Husband Wife or Children c. Which our Saviour tells us whoever is not ready to part with for his Sake is not worthy of him But that whosoever parts with any of these for the Gospel's Sake shall receive manifold Reward both in this Life and in the World to come Now if none of these were allow'd to be desirable to us but to be only Objects of our Charity as Mr. N. says they ought to be Why should we deserve so great Reward for forsaking of them for God's Sake And why should our Saviour as he plainly does confirm the Desireableness of these things to us if they were not in some Degree allow'd to be desired But Mr. N. says we are commanded to Love our Neighbour as our selves And that it being plain that we do not love our selves with a Love of Desire therefore it is plain that we ought not to love our Neighbour so Moses in Levit. xix from whence the above cited Text is taken having rehears'd divers other Laws to the People comes to tell them what they owe to their Neighbour which he does from the 13 to the 18th Verse with which he thus concludes Thou shalt not avenge nor bear any grudge against the Children of thy People But thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy self The Sense of these Words could not be mistaken by any one who was not prepossess'd with an Hypothesis which he was willing to support from Scripture Authority For Moses having told the People That they should not defraud their Neighbour That they should not mock at his Infirmities That they should not oppress him But judge in Righteousness not respecting the Person of the Poor or the Rich That they should not only not stand against the Blood of their Neighbour But also not hate him in their Heart And further That they should not only take care of his Temporal Wellfare but also of his Spiritual By rebuking him when he sins And likewise be so far from avenging themselves when injured by him that they should not so much as bear a Grudge against him He concludes all with that which ought to be the Spring from which all these good Offices to our Neighbour should proceed and which in short fully teaches us the Extent of our Duty to him Thou shalt Love thy Neighbour as thy self That is plainly That as we love our selves and from that Principle of Love do good to our selves so we should also love our Neighbour and from that Principle of Love to him should do him all the good that we can Not only barely performing towards him the outward Acts of those Duties here injoined or any other But performing them upon the same Principles of Delight and Complaisance in his well being which we have in our own Without which all our Performances will be defective We must here consider Moses speaking either as a Lawgiver or as a Philosopher If as the First then without doubt he must be thought to have spoke so as the People whom he spoke to could the easiliest apprehend him And the whole Scope of his Discourse makes the above-mentioned Sense of his Words plainly the most obvious meaning of them viz. That as People love themselves and upon that Principle of Love do good to themselves So also it is their Duty to love their Neighbour without which they cannot discharge what they owe to him Neither could any other Sense be put upon the Words of Moses Thou shalt Love thy Neighbour as thy self Without the Learned Distinction of Love of Benevolence and Love of Concupiscence Which it is hard to believe That Mr. N or any one else can think many if any of the Israelites were acquainted with Tho' if he could suppose they had been so and that Moses himself had had Regard to it and had also Philosophiz'd as ill as the People I wonder Mr. N. should not see that it would yet make nothing to his purpose Since Moses is not here telling them all that they lawfully may do but all that they necessarily must do not to fail in their Duty But if Mr. N. had rather Moses should be consider'd here speaking as a Philosopher according to and instructing the People in the true Nature of things as well as laying down Precepts for them to obey It is then more evident That the Words of Moses will not only not comply with the Sense He puts upon them but also that they are opposite to it For Moses says Thou shalt Love thy Neighbour as thy self That is thou shalt take the same Complaisance in the Being and well Being of thy Neighbour as in thy own Now it is manifestly impossible and contradictious that we should rejoice and take Complaisance in
what is no way desireable to us Or that we should not desire that in which we rejoice and take Complaisance The Being therefore and well Being of our Neighbour must necessarily be desireable to us and we could not otherwise love him as our selves For it is certain That our own Being and well Being are desirable to us Who is there that does not desire the Continuation of them And therefore that there is no Love without Desire any more than without Benevolence as is apparent in our Love of God so far as the Objects of our Love admits of both But Love simply as is above said is that Disposition or Act of the Mind which we find in our selves towards any thing we are pleas'd with and consists barely in that Disposition or Act And cannot be distinguish'd into different Acts of wishing well or Benevolence And Desiring Which are other different Acts of the Mind exerted according to the different Objects of our Love We desire to injoy in every thing that in them which delights us And we wish well to the Being of every thing that helps to make us happy If their Being can be continued with our Injoyment of them that Injoyment is also necessarily desired by us It being impossible for any Creature not to Desire whatever appears to them to make a part of their Happiness But now whence is it that arises either those Wars and Violences that are in the World amongst Men one with another or those Tumults and Perturbations that too frequently spring up in their own Breasts when all things without them are Serene Peaceable and Quiet From Desire it is true all these Mischiefs proceed And Desire is the inexhaustible Fountain of Folly Sin and Misery Is it not therefore worthy of our greatest Application and Endeavours to free our selves from so Dangerous Evils Without doubt it is so And this has always been the Care of the Wife Present as well as Future Happiness being concern'd in it Qui Cupit aut metuit juvat illum sic Domus aut res Ut Lippum pictae Tabulae fomenta podagram Auriculas Citharae collecta sorde dolentes But we are to enquire what remedy Religion gives us to this Disease And that we are sure can be no other than Reason prescribes which is to proportion our Desires to the worth of things For where they go beyond that we are certain to be disappointed whether we miss or obtain what we desire But so far as the injoyment of things are in their real worth answerable to our Desires so far we are really Happy And should we always so succeed in a constant train of our Desires we should according to our Capacity be perfectly Happy We cannot conceive any Being to be without Desires but God Nor can we conceive it to be a fault for any Creature to act suitable to its Nature and desire things that can be injoy'd and will contribute to its Happiness This I am sure Holy Writ allows us For the Apostle tells us That God has given us all things richly to injoy And Moses himself whatever Metaphysical Notions Mr. N. puts into him tells the People of Israel Deut. xxvi 11. Thou shalt rejoice in every good thing which the Lord thy God has given to thee Thou and the Levite and the Stranger that is amongst you Which was but suitable to the Land of Promise flowing with Milk and Honey proposed to the Desires of that whole People And I think we may say not one of the Six hundred Thousand would have marched through the Wilderness had not Moses allow'd them to desire the good things of Canaan but told them they must desire nothing of the Creature But our Errour and Unhappiness is that we do not regulate our Desires aright They are not under the Government and Direction of our Reason and Judgment but lead these away Captive with them in their endless Chace after whatever strikes our Imaginations with any Pleasing Idea The best Remedy for which that Reason can prescribe is what Religion has injoyn'd us viz. an Ardent Love of God above all things For our Desires placed upon this Object will not only never be disappointed But also the Love of God above all other things will the most effectually secure us from any immoderate Love of any of his Creatures Because the contrariety between such a Love of God and any sinful or inordinate Love of the Creature makes them inconsistent If therefore the Love of God and the Interests of another life were constantly our Ruling and Predominant Passion If in this sense as low as it seems to Mr. N. we did Love God with all our Heart with all our Soul and with all our Strength We should not only be secure of doing our Duty but also make the best provision that we could for our Happiness even here in this World For then the disappointments we might meet with in the Love of any thing else would never indanger the foundations of our Satisfaction which like a House built upon a Rock could not be mov'd by any Storms or Tempests of Fortune And we might say with Dr. H. More What 's Plague or Prison Loss of Friends War Dearth or Death that all things Ends Mere Bugbears for the Childish Mind Pure Panick Terrors of the Blind Which however it may look to some like a Religious Rant is no more than in other instances we may find Experience to have made good the truth of For even in the Love of the things of this World very often one Affection or Desire has so much the Possession of a Man's Heart that all others how natural a tendency soever he has to them do but very weakly and superficially affect him in their Success or Miscarriage And this no Man that is either very Ambitious very Covetous very much in Love or possess'd strongly with any other Passion can deny to be so The Love of God therefore as we are capable of loving him that is chiefly not solely does effectually secure our Happiness and consequently our Duty For he desires nothing of us but that we should be as Happy as he has made us capable of Being And has laid no Traps or Snares to render us Miserable Nor does he require impossible Performances from us Yet it is true nevertheless that the constant Communication that we have with sensible Objects which are apt too far to ingage our Affections makes the Regulation of our Desires to demand our greatest Care and Watchfulness And too much can never be said of the Necessity of this Duty which in general consists in desiring every thing according to its worth And the Objects of our Desires are either Things of Temporal concern only or of Eternal also between which as there cannot be in themselves so therefore there ought not to be in our Estimation any Comparison Of things Temporal which are the Objects of our Desires They are either such as are so from Wants of Nature or Wants of
have Pleasing Sensations 't is true as soon as Perception But that we have them not from the Beings which surround us but from God I ask can we know this before we know that there is a God Or will they say that we know there is a God as soon as ever we have Perception Let it be true that the Creatures have receiv'd no efficiency from God to excite pleasing Sensations in us and are but the occasional Causes of those we feel Yet does a Child in the Cradle know this Or is this apparent so soon as it is that the Fire pleases us when we are Cold or Meat when we are Hungry No nor is it at any time a self evident Truth We must know many other Truths before we come to know this which is a Proposition containing many complex Ideas in it and which we are not capable of framing till we have been long acquainted with pleasing Sensations In the mean while it is certain that till we can make this Discovery we shall necessarily Love that which appears to us to be the Cause of our Pleasure as much as if it really were so It being unavoidably by us the same thing to us And we are necessitated by God himself to that which Mr. N. says is truly Idolatry For our Passions are not moved by the reality but appearance of things To the prevention of which this Notion were it true and receiv'd amongst Men as such could be of no use at all neither could it teach them not to ascend to the Love of God by the Love of Creatures Since it can be of use to none till they are convinc'd of it and none are capable of being convinc'd of it till sensible Objects by appearing the Causes of their Pleasing Sensations have gotten Possession of their Love and have as soon assur'd them that God is the Object the most worthy of their Love as they have assured them of his Existence It is true when first in our infancy we feel pleasing Sensations we are no more capable of being taught by them that there is a Superiour Invisible Being that made these things to affect us thus who therefore ought supreamly to be lov'd than that this Invisible Being at the Presence of these Objects exhibits to us a part of his own Essence by which these Pleasing Sensations are excited on occasion of those Objects without us and that therefore he is only and solely to be loved But tho' we are uncapable of these both alike when first we cry for the Fire or the Sucking-Bottle Yet it is certain that by the former way we are not only safe all the time of our Ignorance from the Sin of Idolatry and the fatal pre-ingagement of a sinful affection but that our love to God upon that ground is of easier deduction and earlier apprehended than by the latter So soon as we do begin to leave off judging by appearances and are Capable of being convinc'd that the Diameter of the Sun exceeds that of a Bushel We are capable also of understanding that there is a Superiour Invisible Being the Author of those things which afford us pleasing Sensations who therefore is supreamly to be loved But if we are not capable of scaping Idolatry unless we love God alone because he immediately exhibits to us a part of his Essence by which all pleasing Sensations are caus'd in us I fear all Mankind before this present Age lived and died Idolaters and the greatest part for the future will do so Since I guess not One of a Thousand will be found capable of apprehending and being convinced of this new Hypothesis of seeing all things in God And as I think this cannot be denied so is it also more suitable to the Wisdom and Goodness of God that it should be true For one must say that the Happiness and Welfare of Mankind were ill taken care for if it depended upon a Knowledge which not only few are ever likely to have but which comes too late to any for much Use to be made of it For when sensible Ideas have taken Possession of us for Twelve or Twenty Years they must be very ignorant of the constitution of Humane Nature that can think it possible they should presently or probably they should ever be dispossess'd by a Notion altho' a true one And for this Mr. N. is not so kind as to furnish us with any remedy But he whom he is suppos'd to have receiv'd this Hypothesis from indeavours to solve the Goodness and Wisdom of God in this Matter and to help us out of this Difficulty by making this Principle of our being obliged to have no Love for the Creatures to be the very Ground upon which Christianity stands Which he thus in short accounts for We must not Desire or Love the Creatures they being uncapable to be our Good We yet do Love and desire them tho' Reason assures us of This. And our Doing thus is the Original Sin which we bring into the World with us Which makes us Children of Wrath and liable to Damnation Unable to please God but by a Mediator both God and Man who only could atone the Justice of God by the Excellency of his Sacrifice Intercede to God by the Dignity of his Priesthood and send us the Holy Ghost by the quality of his Person But as this Ground of Christianity has a weak Foundation viz. The Creature 's being only occasional Causes of our Pleasing Sensations which is neither proved nor would support the Superstructure that is rais'd upon it if it could be proved So it is to be hoped that if we reject what so few have receiv'd or so much as thought of we may yet be good Christians And those seem more than a little to indanger Christianity if not Deism also who lay the great stress of their proof upon the Hypothesis of seeing all things in God For in that the whole Argument for both by which Atheists or Sceptics are propos'd to be brought over to Deism or Christianity terminates in the Conversations Chrestiennes of Mr. Malebranche lately Translated into English for the introducing amongst us that Unintelligible way of Practical Religion above spoken of And I doubt not but if it were generally receiv'd and Preach'd by our Divines that this Opinion of Seeing all things in God was the Basis upon which Christianity was built Scepticism would be so far from finding thereby a Cure that it would spread it self much farther amongst us than it has yet done And that many who find Christianity a very Reasonable Religion in the Scriptures would think it a very unaccountable one in a System that laying down That for its foundation adds also further That the Desire we have to the Creature is the Punishment of Sin not the Institution of Nature For this Concupiscence is transmitted to us from our first Parent Qui voyoit clairement Dieu en toutes choses Il sçavoit avec evidence que les Corps ne
pouvoient estre son bien ni le rendre par eux mêmes heureux ou Malheureux en aucune maniére Il estoit convaincu de l'opération continuelle de Dieu sur luy Mais sa Conviction n'estoit pas sensible Il le connoissoit sans le sentir Au contraire il sentoit que les Corps agissoient sur lui quoy qu'il ne le connût pas Il est vrai qu'estant raisonnable il devoit suivre sa lumiére et non pas son sentiment qu'il pouvoit facilement suivre sa lumiére contre son sentiment sa connoisance claire contre sa sensation confuse parce qu'il arrestoit sans peine ses sentimens lors-qu'il le vouloit à cause qu'il étoit sans concupiscence Cependant s'arrêtant trop à ses sens se laissant aller peu-à-peu à les écouter plus volontiers que Dieu même à cause que les sens parlent toûjours agréablement et que Dieu ne le portoit pas à l'écouter par des plaisirs prévenans qui auroient diminué sa Liberté vous concevez bien comment il à pû s'éloigner de Dieu jusqu'à le perdre de vûe pour s'unir de volonté à une Creatùre Entr. iv p. 106 107. Who did clearly see God in all things and evidently knew that Bodies could not be his true Good nor properly make him in the least happy or unhappy and was fully convinc'd of God's continual Operation on him But he had no sensible conviction He knew this but without feeling it On the contrary he could feel that Bodies acted on him tho' he could not know it Yet having Reason he should have follow'd his Light not his Sentiment And could have done it since he could stop his Sentiment when he pleas'd being free from Concupiscence However deferring to his senses and suffering himself to hearken to them more willingly than to God by reason the senses always move pleasingly and God did not move him by pre-ingageing Pleasure which might have lessen'd his freedom it is easie to conceive how he came to remove himself so far from God as to lose sight of him and to joyn himself to the Creature The same Author also gives us an account how Adam's Posterity came to be infected which it seems was not from Adam as is commonly taught but from Eve à cause de l'union que les enfans ont avec leur mere p. 110. By reason of the Union that Children have with their Mother Il n'y a point de femme qui n'ait dans le cerveau quelque trace quelque movement d'esprits qui la sasse penser et qui la porte à quelque chose de sensible Or quand l'enfant est dans le sein de sa mere il a les mêmes traces et les mêmes émotions d'esprits que sa mere donc en cet état il connoît et aime les corps p. 111. And there is no Woman that has not some traces in her Brain and motions of her Spirits which carry her to something sensible Now when the Child is in the Womb of its Mother it has the same traces and the same motion of the Spirits Therefore in this estate it knows and loves Bodies and consequently is born a Sinner And this no holiness of the Mother can hinder Since L'amour de Dieu ne se communique pas comme l'amour des Corps Dont la raison est que Dieu n'est pas sensible et qu'il n'y a point de traces dans le Cerveau qui par l'institution de la Nature representent Dieu ni aucune des choses qui sont purement intelligibles Une femme peut bien se representer Dieu sous la forme d'un Venerable Vieillard Mais lors qu'elle pensera à Dieu son enfant pensera à un Vieillard Lors qu'elle aimera Dieu son enfant aura de l'amour pour les Vieillards p. 112 113. The Love of God does not communicate it self like the love of Bodies Of which the reason is that God is not sensible and there are no Vestiges in the Brain which by the institution of Nature represent God or anything that is purely intelligible So that the Children of Women who represent to themselves God in the form of a Reverend old Man will love Old Men And whenever the Mothers think upon God and love God the Children will think upon Old Men and love Old Men. Wherefore from this Original Corruption springs the Necessity of a Mediator who must be both God and Man c. There seems to be some things in this Hypothesis very unintelligible And also that it has Consequences intolerable to be admitted But if neither of these were so 't is yet reason enough not to imbrace it that it is no where either reveal'd or prov'd it being all but a Chain of Consequences such as they are depending upon the Supposition of our seeing all things in God For the Desire we have to the Creatures is asserted to be the Punishment of Sin not the Institution of Nature because which is a strange Reason the Desire of the Creatures is suppos'd Sinful upon the ground of their not being the Efficient Causes of our Pleasing Sensations And the Proof which is brought that they are not the Efficient Causes of our Pleasing Sensations is that we see all things in God But this Proof it self which is the Foundation of all remains yet to be proved For neither Pere Malebranche nor any one else has done it nor I think can do it And that which might alone give just ground for this Suspicion is That this Hypothesis tends to the shaking and unsettling the known Grounds of True Piety tho' He and a late Follower of his would establish it upon this new and formerly unknown Foundation But setting aside those Absurdities that this new Conceit would run us into in Morality which are sufficient Reasons for rejecting it there are I doubt not some who if they would be at the Pains to treat it Philosophically might be able to demonstrate its Weakness and Inconsistency on other Grounds as well as those of Morality But whether or no any one shall believe That a Work worth their while This Hypothesis seems yet at least of moment enough to be so far inquired into as these Papers have Undertaken Since how unserviceable or injurious soever it really is to Piety it has yet been Seriously and Zealously pretended to be of great Use to Religion And that not only by a young Writer whose Judgment may perhaps be thought By assed by the Affectation of Novelty But also it is made the very Ground of Christianity by a Man of an establish'd Character in the World for Philosophical Science But as Christianity whatever some are perswaded is a rational Religion and needs no Inventions of Men to support it so it receives no Advantage by this which it has not in the Orthodox and
commonly receiv'd Doctrine of Original Sin That serves to all the purposes this is brought in for as well and therefore makes this Needless Unless it be pretended that the Opinion of Seeing all things in God c. is needful to give Light to and to make the commonly receiv'd Doctrine of Original Sin intelligible Which is to charge this Doctrine with having wanted such Evidence before this Discovery was made as was necessary for the making it the Foundation of Christian Religion Which surely those cannot agree to who have made it so And those who have not made it so will not be concern'd in the Light pretended to be brought to it The thing it self being no more prov'd by this Explanation of the manner of it than it was before Upon which of these two accounts or whatever other Mr. N. declin'd or approv'd not the declaring this Opinion of the Creatures not being Efficient Causes of our Sensations c. to be the Ground and Basis of Christianity Yet certainly his Subject especially being Preached to a Country Congregation obliged him if not to account for the Goodness of God in this Matter in making us without any fault of ours the Subjects of his Wrath yet at least to have show'd which way we were to be brought out of that State and by what means after we were come to the Knowledge of the Truth we should be made obedient to it For if as it is to be hoped he does he believes God to wink at our Sins in the time of our Ignorance before we are capable of understanding the Creatures to be only Occasional Causes of our Pleasing Sensations Yet we must suppose when Men are convinced of that Truth they are call'd on not only to Repentance but Amendment And if Loving the Creatures so as yet to be willing readily to part with them all for the Love of God or rather than offend in any thing that we know to be our Duty which is the highest Love of him that most People can conceive themselves capable of will not hinder us from being truely Idolaters and Sacrilegious Whilst being Hungry or Cold Food or Fire are desired by us And that we cannot Love our Children or Friends without looking on them as Goods Desireable to us Methinks he should tell us by what means we may get rid of Appetites and Affections so offensive to God and destructive to our Soul's Happiness and should let us know whether he finds this attainable by our own Natural Abilities or whether Christ has Purchas'd the Ability of doing it for those that believe in him Or what we are to do or conceive of our selves in an Estate so deplorable He says indeed That could we but see how God alone acts in us and Causes all our Sensations whilst the Creatures stand mute and silent like so many Ciphers in his Presence having not the least Activity or Operation upon us We should quickly dismiss the whole Creation from our Hearts and be wholly swallow'd up by the Love of God But as the case is he gives us no Remedy at all For his making no question afterwards but that it is thus in Heaven and that this is the Measure of Divine Love There is so far from helping us That it will not so much as infer if he could prove it were so that this ought to be the Measure of Divine Love upon Earth But we have a better Authority than his for it That we know not what we shall be There Therefore cannot tell what may be added to or chang'd in our present Faculties And as for those of Angels and Arch-Angels which he mentions we are yet less acquainted with them And every one will not be convinc'd tho' they did agree in Mr. N 's Supposition concerning them that it were more reasonable to propose or pray to be like them at least whilst upon Earth then it would be for the Fishes if they were capable of it to propose or pray to God that they might fly in the Air like Birds or Ride Post-Horses as Men do For it may be our Earthly Element no more admits of the first than theirs of the last And those must be very little considerate or serious in their Prayers who will venture to ask God for their sakes to change the Order of Nature which he has establish'd It is certain that if we had no Desires but after God the several Societies of Mankind could not long hold together nor the very Species be continued For few would give themselves Care and Sorrow in the pursuit of Possessions not desireable But Mr. N. pretends that there are places of Scripture besides that of his Text which make good his Opinion Scripture-Authority is that to which Reason may safely refer it self But it were to be wished that it were appeal'd to with more Care and Consideration than it often is and that Men would not presently because perhaps they are perswaded their Opinions are Right back them with any Text of Scripture that they can make Chime to them tho' they be very little or not at all to the Purpose as they could not oftentimes but discern if they would but either regard the Scope of the Discourse or read to the end of it The first Text Mr. N. brings for his purpose is Mat. vi 24. No Man can serve two Masters for either he will hate the one and love the other or else he will hold to the one and despise the other ye cannot serve God and Mammon Here Mr. N. says We are plainly told we cannot divide between God and the Creature and the reason is not only because our Capacities are too narrow and scanty to be employ'd upon two such vastly different Objects but also because we cannot love either of them but upon such a Principle as must utterly exclude the Love of the other For we must not love any thing but what is our true Good what can both deserve and reward our Love And there can be but one thing that is so and that must either be God or the Creature If then the Creature be our Good let us Love That and that only That and not God But if God be our True Good as most certainly he is then let us Love God and God only God and not the Creature For 't is a most inconsistent and impracticable thing to talk of Carving out our Love between both Ye cannot serve God and Mammon Practical Discourse p. 64 65. By Mammon I suppose was never understood before any thing but Riches or those things for which Riches are desired And our Saviour here tells us we must not set our Hearts upon these things or make our selves Slaves or Servants to them That is the Desire of them must not command us If we command it and make it Obedient to Reason it is then certain it does not command us and consequently that we are not Servants to it This is then plainly no more but that our Desires
proved that there is but one thing a Good to us this last Assertion serves for nothing unless to make it more evident that he has all along said nothing to the Purpose For his Affirmation that we cannot Love either God or the Creature but upon such a Principle as must utterly exclude the Love of the other Was of as much Authority to us as his Assertion that there can be but one thing a Good to us And there is no more proof offer'd by him for the one than the other This I believe his own Observation and Experience has often offer'd to him for the confutation of what he affirms viz. That it is not true that all Men in the World either Love God and God only Or the Creature only and God not at all Which ought to be according to his Principles But the Admonition of St. John he says is somewhat more express to his Purpose than that of our Saviour was 1 Joh. 11.15 Love not the World nor the things of the World If any Man love the World the Love of the Father is not in him Here again Mr. N. acknowledges that according to the common Interpretation this is meant of the immoderate love of the World But he says they interpreted it so for want of Principles on which to raise a higher sense 'T is plain the words import more viz. That we are not to love the World at all That all Love of it is immoderate And by his former measures before laid down it appears how and why it is so But I believe St. John will be found to explain himself much better than Mr. N. explains him St. John says Love not the World nor the things of the World If any Man love the World the Love of the Father is not in him Now the Question is whether Mr. N. be in the right in understanding as he does by Love every the least degree of Love Or whether other Interpreters are so in thinking that by Love immoderate Love is meant And I think there needs nothing more to satisfie us that the last are in the Right than Mr. N 's own concession viz. That without his Hypothesis this Scripture could not be understood otherwise than those Interpreters understand it So that unless St. John writ not to be understood by those he wrote to or that the Christians to whom he wrote had Mr. N 's Hypothesis it is past doubt that the other Interpreters he mentions are to be thought in the Right But because it is believed by him that St. John who so much presses Love to others had himself so little Love to Mankind as to leave the strongest inforcement of their greatest Duty in obscurity We will see whether or no there is any appearance that he did so And whether Mr. N-'s Hypothesis serve to illustrate this Scripture For that this Hypothesis could not be learnt from it is apparently confess'd Because the Hypothesis must be known as he himself owns before the Scripture Proof of it can be understood And therefore our former Argument against this Hypothesis from the Goodness and Wisdom of God that would not permit a Doctrine of the consequence this is pretended to be to be so obscure as it is stands still good for all this fresh pretence to Scripture Proof But St. John 1 Joh. 11.15 says Love not the World nor the things which are in the World If any Man love the World the Love of the Father is not in him Now that this is meant of the sinful Pleasures of the World or the immoderate and consequently sinful Love of Pleasures in themselves not sinful what words can make Plainer than the immediately following ones wherein the Reasons are given why we should not Love the World nor the things of the World viz. v. 16. Because all that is in the World as the Lust of the Flesh the Lust of the Eye and the Pride of Life is not of the Father but is of the World That is proceeds not from God but from the Passions Vanities and Follies of corrupt and sinful Men And we should not set our Hearts upon the World That is even the allowable Pleasures of it Because v. 17. The World passes away And therefore by no means ought to be consider'd as the ultimate Good of a Being of a more induring Nature But is indeed so far remov'd from it as the little Duration of the one holds of proportion to the endless Duration of the other This is what St. John says And it seems too plain to need any other Explanation than what he himself has given But as if every Text in Scripture were a distinct Aphorism it is frequently enough quoted by some without any regard to what goes before or to what comes after with how much sincerity cannot be said But certainly to the manifest bringing into Contempt those Oracles of Truth But for whatever Cause Mr. N. omitted these Reasons of St. John for our not loving the World and the things of it And substitured one of his own in the Place viz. That the Creatures are not the Efficient but Occasional Cause of our Pleasing Sensations He does say That without the knowledge of this his Hypothesis we cannot know that every degree of Love of the Creature is sinful and consequently that St. John's Reasons for inforcing the Duty he urges were defective But St. John tells us not that every degree of Love of the Creature is sinful On the contrary he says If we love not our Brother whom we have seen how can we love God whom we have not seen Therefore there is no more need of Mr. N's Opinion to inforce what St. John teaches than there is use of what St. John teaches to confirm Mr. N 's Opinion For that St. John meant not by Love every degree of Love is evident Both because he would contradict himself if he did and also from the Reasons he gives why we should not love the World and the things of the World viz. Because all that is in the World is not of the Father and passes away quickly For he would either have given us the true Reason of This or stopping where Mr. N. did in his Citation of him not have misled us by giving us Reasons which not only reach not the matter But which also serve to Determine us to another sense For as short-liv'd Flowers tho' they ought not to imploy the continual care of our whole lives may yet reasonably enough be found in our Gardens and delight us in their Seasons So the fading Good Things of this Life tho' for that reason they are not to be fixed on as the Ultimate Good of Eternal Beings yet there is no reason why we may not rejoice in them as the good Gifts of God and find all that Delight which he has joined with the lawful use of them But St. John says Love not Therefore Mr. N. says we must not Love them at all Our Saviour also in St.
expresly tells us become through their Union with their Mothers Sinners and are in a state of Damnation before they are born into the World But both the Apostle and Reason assure us that where there is no Law there is no Transgression And Pere Malebranche opposes this upon no other ground offer'd by him for so doing but that the conclusion he makes viz. That Children are born Sinners is a necessary consequence of our seeing all things in God For God only causing us Pleasure he only has a right to our Love and all love of the Creature is sinful But a Child by virtue of its union with the Mother does whilst in her Womb know and love Bodies consequently therefore is a Sinner and shall be necessarily Damn'd p. 114. Tho' indeed in a Note upon that Word he mitigates the sense of it to being eternally depriv'd of the Possession of God And that we come into the World utterly uncapable to please God as he expresly says we do is not through any fault at all of our own but for Eve's Concerning whose Transgression any ways influencing her Posterity the Scripture yet makes no mention at all However this Principle is made by Pere Malebranthe p. 94. the Foundation of Christianity But it is certain that the New Testament tells us nothing of it And there it is surely that we ought to look for the Christian Religion What we are there told is That as in Adam all died so in Christ shall all be made alive 1 Cor. xv 22. That he came to abolish Death and to bring Life and Immortality to light 2 Tim. i. 10. That we shall be justified by Faith without the works of the Law Rom. iii. 28. And that for this end God sent his Son into the World that as many as believe in him might have Eternal Life Yet do we then says the Apostle make void the Law through Faith God forbid yea we establish the Law Rom. iii. 31. But the Wisdom of God in Christ Jesus is manifest in this that we are hereby at once the most effectually put upon using our Endeavours to work out our Salvation with fear and trembling And also kept from Despair in the sense of our own weakness to perform that Law which Adam in his more Advantageous Circumstances transgressing against forfeited thereby Bliss and Immortality We having not only a Promise that we shall receive from God whatever asking as we ought we shall ask in his Son's Name And also of his Spirit to help our Infirmities But to compleat all that for the sake of Christ our sincere tho' imperfect Obedience shall be accepted Faith in him supplying its defects This is what the Scripture tells us of the Dispensation of God to Mankind in the Gospel of his Son Which is so visibly suitable to and worthy of the Divine Wisdom and Goodness that no Inventions of Man can add any thing to it to make it appear more so yet were our Views larger than to comprehend only the compass of our little Globe they would probably afford us still further Matter for our Admiration For 't is a thought too limitted and narrow for Women and Children now to be kept in that this Spot of ours is all the Habitable part of the Creation But without understanding the System of the World or considering what Mathematicians and Naturalists offer to convince us that so many Regions fit for Inhabitants are not empty Desarts and such numberless Orbs of Light more insignificant than so many Farthing Candles We read in the Scripture of other Ranks of Intelligent Beings besides our selves Of whom tho' it would be Presumption to affirm any thing beyond what is reveal'd yet we know not what Relation may possibly be between them and us The Scripture plainly intimates great Numbers of them Superiour to us in the Dignity of their Creation to be fallen by Disobedience like Man from a Happier State And also that they are Enemies to us Whether out of Envy for what Jesus Christ had undertaken for our Redemption or for other Reasons we know not But by the small account we have of them they seem to have set up themselves in opposition to their Maker as thinking themselves sufficient to carve out their own Happiness And shall find full reward of their Folly and Rebellion when the Judgment of the great Day shall meet them But on Man who after his Transgression saw his Nakedness and was asham'd the Father of Mercies has had Compassion and has found out a Way for his Restoration Such a Way as may well humble these Proud ones in the Imagination of their hearts And which leaves no room to us for Boasting For it is certain That by the Works of the Law no Flesh shall be Justified Rom. iii. 20. Faith which would have preserved Adam in the state of Innocence shall alone justifie his Posterity And tho' the Wisdom of God has made Faith in his Son that which is required to Salvation in those to whom he is reveal'd We are told that the Just in all Ages have liv'd by Faith Which is necessarily the Immutable Basis of all true Religion For without we believe not only in the Being but also in the Veracity of God That he Is and that he is a Rewarder of them that diligently seek him it is impossible we should love him with all our Hearts with all our Souls c. which contains the whole Moral Law Whose Obligations not being Arbitrary but arising from the Nature of things must necessarily under every Dispensation be always the same And Christ tells us expresly He came not to destroy this Law but to fulfil it He came to give us a clearer and fairer Transcript of it To inforce it by his Authority and Example To assure us of our own Future Existence which Reason could not And of the great Love of God to Mankind in accepting of Faith to supply the Defects of Sincere Obedience By which we are freed from the Terrours of an offended Deity And have hopes of being made Heirs of a glad Immortality Co-heirs with Christ the Author and Finisher of our Salvation Who for the Joy that was set before him indured the Cross and despised the Shame and has obtain'd for himself a Kingdom of which all true Believers are the Subjects We are restored by him to a more assured Felicity than that from which Adam fell by not believing that in the Day he ate of the forbidden Fruit he should surely Die Too little attending to the Light of his Reason Which would have taught him not to question the Divine Veracity and having yet no Experience to oppose to the Solicitations of his Appetite And perhaps God in this Restoration of Mankind by Jesus Christ who took not on him the Nature of Angels having herein put down the Mighty from their feats and exalted those of Low degree does by this Oeconomy of his Providence in our Salvation teach all the Orders of
Intellectual Beings whom he has made free Agents as well as Man That as he cannot make a Being Independent on himself for its Happiness So the most inlightned Reason is only safe and secure whilst it feels its weakness and dependency Which if we be thoroughy as we ought sensible of we shall necessarily love God with all our Hearts with all our Souls c. Mr. N. says these words signifie That we must love nothing but God alone And to confirm that his sense of them he brings yet two other places of Scripture The first is james iv 4. Ye Adulterers and Adulteresses know ye not that the Friendship of the World is Enmity with God Whosoever therefore will be a Friend of the World is the Enemy of God He tells us here That in St. James's account Our Heart is so much God's Property and Peculiar and ought so intirely to be devoted to him that 't is a kind of Spiritual Adultery to admit any Creature into a Partnership with him in our Love It is certain these are not St. James's words and we have only Mr. N-'s Affirmation that this is his sense But tho' Mr. N-'s affirming without any Proof that all love of the Creature is here condemn'd and said to be a kind of Spiritual Adultery needs no other Answer but a bare Negation And the saying without any Proof that it is only the inordinate love of the Creature that is so call'd and condemn'd would be enough Yet the context further plainly shows that that is the meaning of St. James here by what he calls Friendship of the World To which let me add that Adultery does not wholly exclude all other Love of any other Person but a love that comes in competition or invades that which properly belongs to the Husband For a Woman may love her Brother or her Child without being an Adulteress it being not with that Love that is due to her Husband The last place Mr. N. cites to prove that Love of the Creatures is Sinful is from St. Paul Gal. vi 14. The World is Crucified to me and I unto the World Which last words Mr. N. says at once comprize his present conclusion that the Creature is not to be in any degree the Object of our love with the very same ground and bottom upon which he has built it For the Apostle here first of all supposes the World to be Crucified that is to be a Dead Unactive Silent and Quiescent thing in respect of himself as not being able to operate upon him or affect his Soul with any Sentiment as an Efficient Cause And then in consequence of that declares himself to be also Crucified to the World p. 68. which Mr. N. explains very truly tho' not very conformably to his Opinion by being insensible to all its Charms For according to his Explanation St. Paul knew very well that the World had no Charms But whosoever will read this whole Passage in St. Paul will evidently see that it amounts to this That there were some Men so Preach'd Christ as yet to have regard to the favour and good liking of Men That they might avoid Persecution from some and gain Glory from others But St. Paul in his Preaching of the Gospel had so intirely given up himself to it that he minded nothing but the Preaching of the Gospel Going on in that Work without any regard either to Persecution or Vain-Glory And thus the World was Crucified to him and he to the World They were as Dead things and in this respect had no Operation St. Paul's words are As many as desire to make a fair shew in the Flesh they constrain you to be Circumcis'd Only lest they should suffer Persecution for the Cross of Christ For neither They themselves who are Circumcis'd keep the Law But desire to have you Circumcis'd that they may glory in your Flesh But God forbid that I should Glory save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ whereby the World is Crucified to me and I unto the World Very often it happens that a piece of a Discourse or as here even a piece of a Verse serves for a Quotation much better than the whole would do This is so evident in this Place that it requires some Charity to think that a Man is in earnest fearching after Truth or believes himself whilst he is a Writing after such a manner But because the Character Mr. N. bears ought to be a Warrant for his Sincerity we must conclude that he does think St. Paul tells the Galatians that some would have them Circumcis'd only that they might avoid Persecution and might Glory in their Flesh But God forbid that he should Glory in any thing but the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ by which the Creatures are only the Occasional not the Efficient Causes of his Pleasing Sensations and he Dead to them This Mr. N. it seems does think was the Sense of what St. Paul said But that it was not I think common Sense will sufficiently satisfie us without consulting Interpreters about it Theseare the Texts brought by Mr. N. to support an Opinion grounded on an Hypothesis perhaps Demonstrably false That has evidently no proof but the poor one from our Ignorance that yet is not at all help'd by this Hypothesis Which is therefore as well as for the Ends of Morality plainly useless Yet all this might well be Pardon'd to any Effort of advancing our Knowledge if it did not pretend to influence our Religion And not only so but to be the very Basis and Foundation of Christianity as it is made to be by the first Ingenious Inventor of it Mr. N. has not indeed advanced that so directly But with more Confidence a great deal making it the ground of Morality he falls as little short of it as is possible And his Discourses upon this Subject being in a more Popular way are more likely to do hurt For certainly to perswade Men that God requires what they find impossible to perform and opposite to their very Constitution and Being in this World is to make Religion and the Teachers of it ridiculous to some And to drive others weaker but better-minded People into Despair By giving them occasion to think that they do not love God as they ought Such Effects I fear may be the Consequences of Mr. N's Doctrine who teaches that we do not love God as we ought whilst we love any Creature at all And particularly in the above-cited Sermon He positively says That the Creatures are no more our Goods than our Gods and that we may as well worship them as love them Pract. Disc p. 62. These Opinions of Mr. N. seem also to indanger the introducing especially amongst those whose Imaginations are stronger than their Reason a Devout way of talking which having no sober and intelligible sense under it will either inevitably by degrees beget an Insensibility to Religion in those themselves who use it as well as others By thus