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A30905 Truth triumphant through the spiritual warfare, Christian labours, and writings of that able and faithful servant of Jesus Christ, Robert Barclay, who deceased at his own house at Urie in the kingdom of Scotland, the 3 day of the 8 month 1690. Barclay, Robert, 1648-1690. 1692 (1692) Wing B740; ESTC R25857 1,185,716 995

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297 304. there is no necessity of Believing the Scripture to be a filled up Canon 308. many Canonick Books through the Injury of Time lost ibid. whether it can be proved by Scripture that any Book is Canonical 208 209. they were sometimes as a Sealed Book 422. to understand them there is need of the Help and Revelation of the Holy Spirit 271 272. no Man can make himself a Doctor of them but the Holy Spirit 271. Noah and Job were Preachers of Righteousness before the Scriptures were written 703. the Knowledge of the Scriptures to be of great Advantage is owned 7 117 162 700. the Synod of Paris their Opinion concerning the Scripture's certainty viz. to be by the Inward Testimony and Perswasion of the Holy Spirit 72 see 116 162. the Scriptures cannot beguile Men but Men may beguile themselves by a wrong use of them 577. the Scriptures the best Outward Rule in the World ibid. Scriptures are a Clear and Perfect Copy as to all Essentials of Christian Religion 603. that the Scriptures are a sufficient objective Revelation of all things necessary to Salvation is denied 631. the Scriptures are the Words of God 747. a Secondary Rule 754. that Supposition is false which supposes the Will of God can be only known by the Scriptures 759. John Calvin's Testimony concerning the Scriptures and the Spirit 72. to understand the Scriptures we need the Help and Revelation of the Holy Spirit Hierom 271. the Scriptures though they do declare the Mind of God are therefore not his Word which came from God immediately to the Prophets by which the Scriptures came which Word is ceased Professors say 14. the Canon of the Scripture not compleated 735 750. they are not the means of knowing God in Spirit 887 889 903. see Gifts Scriptures explained Gen. 2.17 p. 762. Isai. 8.20 p. 755 756 Prov. 10.11 p. 644. John 1.9 p. 797. 1 Cor. 11.5 p. 839. 2 Tim. 3.16 p. 755. 2 Pet. 1.19 20. p. 743. Jam. 1.25 p. 757. 1 John 4.1 p. 658. Sect The Ignatian Sect loveth Literature 423. they call those that are sent unto India Apostles 430. the Definition of a Sect 696 698. those cannot pretend to Universal Love who confine all Spiritual and Temporal Blessings to their Sect 691. one Mark of a Sect is when People seek to Advance and Propagate their Way in the Strength of their own Spirits c. 698. those whose Unity arises from Notions and Opinions do derive their Names and Designations from the first Authors Inventors and Fomenters of those Opinions 698 699. Security among hypocritical Professors 47. Seed of Righteousness 452. the Seed of Sin see Sin Redemption The Seed a distinct Principle from the Soul 795 579 580. Self-denial 451 Semi-pelagians their Axiom Facienti quod in se est Deus non 〈◊〉 gratiam 328. Sense supernatural 657 897 〈…〉 904 905. Servant Whether it be lawfu● 〈◊〉 I am your humble Servant 538. Servetus 527. Shoemaker he disputes with the Professor 423 424. Silence see Worship Silence and an inward turning of the Mind necessary to the entring upon Worship 845. Simon Magus 431. Sin see Adam Justification It shall not have Dominion over the Saints 298. the Seed of Sin is transmitted from Adam unto all Men but it is Imputed to none no not to Infants except they actually join with it by Sinning 310 311 315 318. Augustin's Testimony concerning Infants 768. and this Seed is often called Death 318. Original Sin of this Phrase the Scripture makes no mention 318. by virtue of the Sacrifice of Christ we have Remission of Sins 335 367. forgiveness of Sin among the Papists 365. a Freedom from actual Sin is obtained both when and how and that many have attained unto it 388 398. every Sin weakens a Man in his Spiritual Condition but doth not destroy him altogether 389. it is one thing not to sin another thing not to have Sin 395. whatsoever is not done through the Power of God is Sin 445. the fear of God remaining upon the Heart Sin is shut out 28. continuance in Sin ecclipses and takes away the Sense of God's Favour ibid. 884. Singing of Psalms and Musick 473. Society see Religion Principles Socinians see Natural Light their rashness is reproved 281. they think Reason is the chief Rule and Guide of their Faith ibid. 289. albeit many have abused Reason yet they do not say that any ought not to use it and how ill they argue against the Inward and Immediate Revelations of the Holy Spirit 288 290. yet they are forced ultimately to recur unto them 394. they exalt too much their Natural Power and what they think of the saving Light 354. their Worship can easily be stopped 337. they exalt Self or Nature 699. their scanty Confession does not reach to Universal Love 693. Son of God see Christ Knowledge Revelation Soul The Soul hath its Senses as well as the Body 272. by what it is strengthened and fed 453 499. Spirit The Holy Spirit see Knowledge Communion Revelation Scriptures Unless the Spirit sit upon the Heart of the Hearer in vain is the Discourse of the Doctor 271 279. the Spirit of God knoweth the things of God 275. without the Spirit none can say that Jesus is the Lord 272 275. he rested upon the seventy Elders and others 277. he abideth with us for ever 280. he teacheth and bringeth all things to remembrance and leads into all Truth 280 281 284 286 296. he differs from the Scriptures 280. He is God 281. he dwelleth in the Saints 281 284. without the Spi●●●●●ristianity is no Christianity 282 297. whatsoever is to be desired in the Christian Faith is ascribed to him 28● 281. by this Spirit we are turned unto God and we Triumph in the midst of persecutions 282. he quickens c. 282.283 an observable Testimony of Calvin concerning the Spirit 282 284 296 297. it is the Fountain and Origin of all Truth and right Reason 292 293. it gives the Belief of the Scriptures which may satisfy our Consciences 296. his Testimony is more excellent than all Reason ibid. he is the chief and principal Guide 301. he reasoneth with and striveth in Men 342. those that are led by the Spirit love the Scriptures 304 405. he is as it were the Soul of the Church and what is done without him is vain and impious 423. he is the Spirit of Order and not of Disorder 427. such as the Spirit sets a part to the Ministry are heard of their Brethren 428. it is the Earnest of our Inheritance 444. to be led by the Spirit of God is a Priviledge common to all Christians and members of the Church if Obedience thereunto be yielded 703. all have the Spirit in a certain Day some to reprove some bringing forth of Fruits 8. the Spir●t calls invites and draws but men resist his Drawings 8. J. Calvin preferreth the Testimony of the Spirit before all other Evidences 15 16. what proceeds not from the Spirit of God
Formalities attending them all which Man has invented in his degenerate State to feed his Pride in the vain Pomp and Glory of this World As also the unprofitable Plays frivolous Recreations Sportings and Gaming 's which are invented to pass away the pretious time and divert the mind from the Witness of God in the Heart and from the living Sense of his Fear and from that Evangelical Spirit wherewith Christians ought to be leavened and which leads into Sobriety Gravity and Godly Fear in which as we abide the Blessing of the Lord is felt to attend us in these Actions which we are necessarily engaged in order to the taking care for the Sustenance of the Outward Man AN APOLOGY FOR THE True Christian Divinity Prop. 1 PROPOSITION I. Seeing the Heighth of all Happiness is placed in the true Knowledge of G0D This is Life Eternal John 17.3 to know the true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent the true and right understanding of this Foundation and Ground of Knowledge is that which is most necessary to be known and believed in the first place HE that desireth to acquire any Art or Science seeketh first those Means by which that Art or Science is obtained If we ought to do so in things Natural and Earthly how much more then in Spiritual In this Affair then should our Inquiry be the more diligent because he that Errs in the Entrance is not so easily reduced again into the right Way he that misseth his Road from the beginning of his Journey and is deceived in his first Marks at his first setting forth the greater his Mistake is the more difficult will be his Entrance into the right Way Thus when a Man first proposeth to himself the Knowledge of God from a sense of his own Vnworthiness The Way to the true Knowledge of God and from the great Weariness of his Mind occasioned by the secret Checks of his Conscience and the tender yet real Glances of God's Light upon his heart the Earnest Desires he has to be Redeemed from his present trouble and the fervent Breathings he has to be eased of his disordered Passions and Lusts and to find quietness and peace in the certain Knowledge of God and in the assurance of his Love and Good-will towards him makes his heart Tender and ready to receive any Impression and so not having then a distinct Discerning through Forwardness embraceth any thing that brings present Ease If either through the Reverence he bears to certain Persons or from the secret Inclination to what doth comply with his natural Disposition he fall upon any Principles or Means by which he apprehends he may come to know God and so doth Center himself it will be hard to remove him thence again how wrong soever they may be For the first Anguish being over he becomes more hardy and the Enemy being near creates a false Peace and a certain Confidence which is strengthened by the mind's Vnwillingness to enter again into new Doubtfulness or the former Anxiety of a Search Jewish Doctors and Pharisees Resist Christ. This is sufficiently verified in the Example of the Pharisees and Jewish Doctors who most of all Resisted Christ disdaining to be esteemed Ignorant for this Vain Opinion they had of their Knowledge hindered them from the true Knowledge and the mean People who were not so much pre-occupied with former Principles nor Conceited of their own Knowledge did easily believe Wherefore the Pharisees upbraid them saying Joh. 7.48 49. Have any of the Rulers or Pharisees believed in him But this People which know not the Law are accursed This is also abundantly proved by the Experience of all such as being secretly touched with the Call of God's Grace unto them do apply themselves unto false Teachers where the Remedy proves worse than the Disease because instead of knowing God or the things relating to their Salvation aright they drink-in wrong Opinions of him from which it 's harder to be disentangled than while the Soul remains a Blank or Tabula Rasa For they that conceit themselves Wise are worse to deal with than they that are Sensible of their Ignorance Nor hath it been less the Device of the Devil the great Enemy of Mankind to perswade men into wrong Notions of God than to keep them altogether from Acknowledging him the latter taking with few because odious but the other having been the constant Ruine of the World For there hath scarce been a Nation found but hath had some Notions or other of Religion so that not from their denying any Deity but from their Mistakes and Misapprehensions of it hath proceeded all the Idolatry and Superstition of the World Yea hence even Atheism it self hath proceeded for these many and various Opinions of God and Religion being so much mixed with the Guessings and uncertain Judgments of Men have begotten in many the Opinion that there is no God at all This and much more that might be said may shew how dangerous it is to miss in this first Step All that come not in by the door are accounted as Thieves and Robbers Again How needful and desirable that Knowledge is which brings Life Eternal Epictetus Epictetus sheweth saying Excellently well Cap. 38. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Know that the main Foundation of Piety is this to have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 right Opinions and Apprehensions of God This therefore I judged necessary as a First Principle in the first place to Affirm and I suppose will not need much further Explanation nor Defence as being generally acknowledged by all and in these things that are without Controversy I love to be brief as that which will easily Commend it self to every Man's Reason and Conscience And therefore I shall proceed to the Next Proposition which though it be nothing less certain yet by the Malice of Satan and Ignorance of many comes far more under Debate PROPOSITION II. Of Immediate Revelation Prop. 2 Seeing no man knoweth the Father but the Son and he to whom the Son Revealeth him Matth. 11.27 And seeing the Revelation of the Son is in and by the Spirit therefore the Testimony of the Spirit is that alone by which the True Knowledge of God hath been is and can be onely Revealed Who as by the Moving of his own Spirit he disposed the Chaos of this World into that Wonderful Order wherein it was in the beginning and Created Man a living Soul to Rule and Govern it so by the Revelation of the same Spirit he hath manifested himself all along unto the Sons of men both Patriarchs Prophets and Apostles which Revelation of God by the Spirit whether by outward Voices and Appearances dreams or inward objective Manifestations in the heart were of old the formal Object of their Faith and remain yet so to be since the Object of the Saints Faith is the same in all Ages though held forth under divers Administrations Moreover these divine inward Revelations which
Pelagians Errors The Pelagians ascribing all to Man's Will and Nature denied man to have any Seed of Sin Conveyed to him from Adam and the Semi-Pelagians making Grace as a Gift following upon Man's Merit or right Improving of his Nature according to their known Principle Facienti quod in se est Deus non denegat gratiam This gave Augustine Prosper and some others occasion labouring in Opposition to these Opinions to magnify the Grace of God and paint out the Corruption of Man's Nature as the Proverb is of those that seek to make straight a Crooked Stick to Incline to the other Extream Extreams fall'n into by some making God the Author of Sin So also the Reformers Luther and others finding among other Errors the strange Expressions used by some of the Popish Scholasticks concerning Free Will and how much the Tendency of their Principles is to Exalt Man's Nature and lessen God's Grace having all those Sayings of Augustine and others for a pattern through the like Mistake ran upon the same Extream Though afterwards the Lutherans seeing how far Calvin and his Followers drove this matter who as a man of subtile and profound Judgment foreseeing where it would land resolved above board to Assert That God had decreed the Means as well as the End and therefore had Ordained men to sin and Excites them thereto Which he labours earnestly to defend and that there was no avoiding the making God the Author of Sin thereby received occasion to discern the falsity of this Doctrine and disclaimed it as appears by the latter Writings of Melanchthon and the Mompelgartensian Conference Epit. Hist. Eccl. Lucae Osiand Cent. 16. l. 4. cap. 32. where Lucas Osiander one of the Collocutors terms it Impious calls it a Making God the Author of Sin and a horrid and horrible Blasphemy Yet because none of those who have Asserted this Vniversal Redemption since the Reformation have given a Clear Distinct and Satisfactory Testimony how it is Communicated to all and so have fall'n short of fully declaring the perfection of the Gospel Dispensation others have been thereby the more strengthened in their Errors Which I shall Illustrate by one singular Example The Arminians and other Assertors of Vniversal Grace use this as a Chief Argument That which every man is bound to believe is True But Every man is bound to believe that Christ died for them Therefore c. Of this Argument the other Party deny the Assumption saying That they who never heard of Christ are not obliged to believe in him and seeing Remonstrants Opinion strengthens the precise Decree of Reprobation the Remonstrants as they are commonly called do generally themselves acknowledge that without the outward knowledge of Christ there is no Salvation that gives the other Party yet a stronger Argument for their Precise Decree of Reprobation For say they seeing we all see really and in Effect that God hath with-held from many Generations and yet from many Nations that Knowledge which is absolutely needful to Salvation and so hath rendered it simply Impossible unto them why may he not as well with-hold the Grace necessary to make a saving Application of that Knowledge where it is preached For there is no ground to say that this were Injustice in God or Partiality more than his leaving those others in utter Ignorance the one being but a with-holding Grace to apprehend the Object of Faith the other a withdrawing the Object it self For Answer to this they are forced to draw a Conclusion from their former Hypothesis of Christ dying for all and God's Mercy and Justice saying That if these Heathens who live in these remote places where the Outward Knowledge of Christ is not did improve that Common Knowledge they have to whom the Outward Creation is for an Object of Faith by which they may gather that there is a God then the Lord would by some Providence either Send an Angel to tell them of Christ or Convey the Scripture to them or bring them some way to an Opportunity to meet with such as might Inform them Which as it gives always too much to the power and strength of Man's Will and Nature and savours a little of Socinianism and Pelagianism or at lest of Semi-pelagianism so since it is only built upon probable Conjectures neither hath it Evidence enough to Convince any strongly tainted with the other Doctrine nor yet doth it make the Equity and wonderful Harmony of God's Mercy and Justice towards all so manifest to the Vnderstanding So that I have often observed that these Assertors of Vniversal Grace did far more pithily and strongly Overturn the false Doctrine of their Adversaries than they did Establish and Confirm the Truth and Certainty of their own And though they have Proof sufficient from the Holy Scriptures to Confirm the Vniversality of Christ's Death and that none are precisely by any Irrevocable Decree Excluded from Salvation None by an Irrevocable Decree Excluded from Salvation yet I find when they are pressed in the respects above-mentioned to shew how God hath so far Equally Extended the Capacity to Partake of the Benefit of Christ's Death unto all as to Communicate unto them a sufficient Way of so doing they are somewhat in a strait and are put more to give us their Conjectures from the Certainty of the former presupposed Truth to wit that because Christ hath certainly died for all and God hath not rendred Salvation Impossible to any therefore there must be some way or other by which they may be saved which must be by improving some Common Grace or by gathering from the Works of Creation and Providence than by really Demonstrating by Convincing and Spiritual Arguments what that Way is § X. It falls out then that as Darkness and the great Apostasy came not upon the Christian World all at once but by several Degrees one thing making way for another until that thick and gross Vail came to be overspread wherewith the Nations were so blindly Covered from the seventh and eighth until the sixteenth Centuries Even as the Darkness of the Night comes not upon the outward Creation all at once but by Degrees according as the Sun declines in each Horizon so neither did that full and clear Light and Knowledge of the Glorious Dispensation of the Gospel of Christ appear all at once the work of the first Witnesses being more to Testify against and Discover the Abuses of the Apostasy than to Establish the Truth in purity He that comes to build a New City must first remove the Old Rubbish before he can see to lay a New Foundation and he that comes to a House greatly polluted and full of dirt will first sweep away and remove the filth before he put up his own good and New Furniture The Dawning of the Day dispells the Darkness and makes us see the things that are most Conspicuous but the distinct Discovering and Discerning of things so as to make a certain and perfect
but this they say is subjective and not objective of which before As to what is subjoined of the Inward Call of the Spirit Answ. in that they make it not Essential to a True Call but a Supererogation as it were it sheweth how little they set by it since those they admit to the Ministry are not so much as questioned in their Trials whether they have this or not Yet in that it hath been often mentioned The Call of the Spirit preferred to any other by Primitive Protestants especially by the primitive Protestants in their Treatises of this Subject it sheweth how much they were secretly Convinced in their minds that this Inward Call of the Spirit was most Excellent and preferrable to any other and therefore in the most noble and heroick Acts of the Reformation they laid claim unto it so that many of the primitive Protestants did not scruple both to despise and disown this Outward * Succession Call when urged by the Papists against them But now Protestants having gone from the Testimony of the Spirit plead for the same Succession and being pressed by those Modern Protestants denying the Call by the Spirit whom God now raiseth up by his Spirit to Reform these many Abuses that are among them with the Example of their Fore-fathers practice against Rome they are not at all ashamed utterly to deny that their Fathers were Called to their Work by the Inward and Immediate Vocation of the Spirit cloathing themselves with that Call which they say their Fore-fathers had as Pastors of the Roman Church For thus not to go further affirmeth * Who gives himself out Doctor and Professor of the Sacred Theology at Franequer Nicolaus Arnoldus in a Pamphlet written against the same Propositions called A Theologick Exercitation Sect. 40. averring That they pretended not to an Immediate Act of the Holy Spirit but Reformed by the virtue of the Ordinary Vocation which they had in the Church as it then was to wit that of Rome c. § IX Many Absurdities do Protestants fall into by deriving their Ministry thus through the Church of Rome As first Absurdities Protestants fall into by deriving their Ministry through the Church of Rome They must acknowledge her to be a True Church of Christ though only Erroneous in some things which Contradicts their Fore-fathers so frequently and yet truly calling her Anti-Christ Secondly They must needs acknowledge that the Priests and Bishops of the Romish Church are True Ministers and Pastors of the Church of Christ as to the Essential part else they could not have been fit Subjects for that Power and Authority to have resided in neither could they have been Vessels capable to receive that power and again Transmit it to their Successors Thirdly It would follow from this that the Priests and Bishops of the Romish Church are yet really true Pastors and Teachers for if Protestant-Ministers have no Authority but what they received from them and since the Church of Rome is the same she was at that time of the Reformation in doctrine and manners and she has the same power now she had then and if the power lie in the Succession then these Priests of the Romish Church now which derive their Ordination from those Bishops that Ordained the First Reformers have the same Authority which the Successors of the Reformed have and consequently are no less Ministers of the Church than they are But how shall this Agree with that Opinion which the primitive Protestants had of the Romish Priests and Clergy to whom Luther did not only deny any Power or Authority Luther affirmed that a Woman might be a Preacher but contrariwise affirmed That it was wickedly done of them to assume to themselves only this Authority to Teach and be Priests and Ministers c. For he himself affirmed That every good Christian not only men but even women also is a Preacher § X. But against this Vain Succession as asserted either by Papists or Protestants The pretended Succession of Papists and Protestants Exploded as a necessary thing to the Call of a Minister I Answer That such as plead for it as a sufficient or necessary thing to the Call of a Minister do thereby sufficiently declare their Ignorance of the Nature of Christianity and how much they are strangers to the Life and Power of a Christian Ministry which is not entail'd to Succession as an outward Inheritance and herein as hath been often before observed they not only make the Gospel not better than the Law but even far short of it For Jesus Christ as he regardeth not any distinct particular Family or Nation in the gathering of his Children but only such as are joined to and leavened with his own pure and righteous Seed so neither regards he a bare outward Succession where his pure immaculate and righteous Life is wanting for that were all one He took not in the Nations within the New Covenant that he might suffer them to fall into the Old Errors of the Jews or to approve them in these Errors but that he might gather unto himself a pure people out of the Earth The Jews Error of Abraham's outward Succession Now this was the great Error of the Jews to think they were the Church and People of God because they could derive their Outward Succession from Abraham whereby they reckoned themselves the Children of God as being the Off-spring of Abraham who was the Father of the Faithful But how severely doth the Scripture rebuke this vain and frivolous pretence Telling them That God is able of the stones to raise Children unto Abraham and that not the outward Seed but those that were found in the Faith of Abraham are the true Children of faithful Abraham Far less then can this Pretence hold among Christians seeing Christ rejects all outward Affinity of that kind Matth. 12.48 c. Mark 3 33. c. These saith he are my Mother Brethren and Sisters who do the Will of my Father which is in heaven And again He looked round about him and said who shall do the Will of God these said he are my Brethren So then such as do not the Commands of Christ as are not found Cloathed with his Righteousness are not his Disciples and That which a man hath not he cannot give to another and its clear that no Man nor Church though truly Called of God and as such having the Authority of a Church and Minister can any longer retain that Authority than they retain the power The Form of Godliness is entailed to the Power and Substance and not the Substance to the Form life and righteousness of Christianiy for the Form is entailed to the Power and Substance and not the Substance to the Form So that when a Man ceaseth inwardly in his heart to be a Christian where his Christianity must lie by turning to Satan and becoming a Reprobate he is no more a Christian though he
and disobey him And if this be not the Honour that comes from God but the Honour of this World which the Children of this World give and receive one from another How can the Children of God such as are Christians indeed give or receive that Honour among themselves Hieron in his Epistle to Celant admonisheth her That she was to be preferred to none for her Nobibity for the Christian Religion admits not of respect of Persons neither are Men to be esteemed because of their outward condition but according to the Disposition of the Mind to be esteemed either Noble or ●ase he that obeyeth not sin is free who is strong in Vertue is Noble Let the Epistle of James be read without coming under the Reproof of Christ who saith That such as do so cannot believe But further if we respect the Cause that most frequently procures to Men these Titles of Honour there is not one of a thousand that shall be found to be because of any Christian Vertue but rather for things to be discommended among Christians As by the Favour of Princes procured by Flattering and often by worse Means Yea the most frequent and accounted among Men most-Honourable is Fighting or some great Martial Exploit which can add nothing to a Christian's Worth Since sure it is it were desirable there were no Fightings among Christians at all and in so far as there are it shews they are not right Christians And James tells us That All fighting proceeds from the lusts so that it were fitter for Christians by the Sword of God's Spirit to fight against their Lusts than by the Prevalency of their Lusts to destroy one another Whatever Honour any might have attained of old under the Law this way we find under the Gospel Christians commended for Suffering not for Fighting neither did any of Christ's Disciples save one offer outward Violence by the Sword in cutting off Malchus's Ear for which he received no Title of Honour but a just Reproof Finally if we look either to the Nature of this Honour the Cause of it the Way it 's conveyed the Terms in which it is delivered it cannot be used by such as mind to be Christians in good earnest § IV. Now besides these general Titles of Honour what gross Abuses are crept in among such as are called Christians in the use of Complements wherein not Servants to Masters or others with respect to any such kind of Relations do say and write to one another at every turn Your humble Servant Your most obedient Servant Lying accounted Civility c. Such wicked Customes have to the great Prejudice of Souls accustomed Christians to Lie and to use Lying is now come to be accounted Civility O horrid Apostasy For it is notoriously known that the Use of these Complements imports not any Design of Service neither are any such Fools as to think so for if we should put them to it that say so they would not doubt to think we abused them and would let us know they gave us Word● in Course and no more It is strange that such as pretend to Scripture as their Rule should not be ashamed to use such things since Elihu that had not the Scriptures would by the Light within him which these Men think insufficient say Job 32.21 22. Let me not accept any mans person neither let me give flattering Titles unto man For I know not to give flattering Titles In so doing my Maker would soon take me away * This History is reported by Casaubonus in his Book of Manners and Customs pag. 169. In this last Age he is esteemed an uncivil Man who will not either to his Inferior or Equal subscribe himself Servant But Sulpitius Severus was heretofore sharply reproved by Paulinus Bishop of Nola because in his Epistle he had subscribed himself his Servant saying Beware thou subscribe not thy self his Servant who is thy Brother for Flattery is sinful not a Testimony of Humility to give their Honours to Men which are only due to the One Lord Master and GOD. A certain antient devout Man in the Primitive Time subscribed himself to a Bishop Your humble Servant wherein I doubt not but he was more real than our usual Complementers and yet he was sharply reproved for it But they usually Object to defend themselves That Luke saith Most excellent Theophilus and Paul Most noble Festus I Answer Since Luke wrote that by the Dictates of the infallible Spirit of God I think it will not be doubted but Theophilus did deserve it as being really endued with that Vertue Concerning the Title Paul gave to Festus In which Case we shall not condemn those that do it by the same Rule But it is not proved that Luke gave Theophilus this Title as that which was inherent to him either by his Father or by any Patent Theophilus had obtained from any of the Princes of the Earth or that he would have given it him in case he had not been truly Excellent And without this be proved which never can there can nothing hence be deduced against us The like may be said of that of Paul to Festus whom he would not have called such if he had not been truly Noble as indeed he was in that he suffered him to be heard in his own Cause and would not give way to the Fury of the Jews against him it was not because of any outward Title bestowed upon Festus that he so called him else he would have given the same Compellation to his Predecessor Felix who had the same Office but being a covetous Man we find he gives him no such Style § V. It will not be unfit in this Place The Singular Number to one Person used in the Latin to say something concerning the using of the singular Number to one Person of this there is no Controversy in the Latin For when we speak to one we always use the Pronoun TU and he that would do otherwise would break the Rules of Grammar For what Boy learning his Rudiments is ignorant that it is incongruous to say vos amas vos legis that is you lovest you readest speaking to one But the Pride of Man that hath corrupted many things refuses also to use this simplicity of speaking in the Vulgar Languages For being puffed up with a vain Opinion of themselves as if the Singular Number were not sufficient to them they will have others to speak to them in the Plural Hence Luther in his Plays reproves and mocks this manner of speaking saying Magister vos es iratus Which Corruption Erasmus sufficiently refutes in his Colloquies Concerning which likewise James Howel in his Epistle to the Nobility of England before the French and English Dictionary takes notice That both in France and in other Nations the Word THOU was used in speaking to one but by success of Time when the Roman Commonwealth grew into an Empire the Courtiers began to magnify the Emperour as being