Selected quad for the lemma: religion_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
religion_n church_n england_n reform_a 4,212 5 9.5265 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A45493 A sermon preached before the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor, and the Court of Aldermen, at Guildhall-Chappel, Septemb. 19, 1680 by Robert Hancocke ... Hancock, Robert, fl. 1680-1686. 1680 (1680) Wing H645; ESTC R10880 15,293 37

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

destructive to Peace and Government That Catholicks hold it an Article of Faith I speak their own words that the Pope can depose Kings and absolve Subjects from their Allegiance I stand amazed at the ignorance or dishonesty of some of them that profess to the World they never found any such Principles asserted in any of their General Councils As if we had out-done them in their old trade of Forgery As if the General Councils of Lyons and Trent the third and fourth Councils of Lateran were meer fictions of the Protestants I am sure either these are the Doctrines of the Church of Rome or Transubstantiation itself is none of them either these are her Doctrines or she hath none at all 2. I might from hence take occasion to vindicate the peaceableness and loyalty of the Reformed Religion that excellent Religion which is the best Friend in the World to Kings and Princes And yet it suffers in the esteem of some men for the Crimes of those that with as much reason arrogate the Name of Protestants as the Papists do that of Catholicks to their own party I know no Protestant Church in the World that hath by any publick act maintained any treasonable Principles 'T is certain we have been educated in a Faith of Loyalty and Obedience and I hope we shall never be tempted by any though never so specious pretences to desert it Whether there be amongst us a sort of men that under the disguise of zeal against Popery labour to undermine the Government I know not but if there be they are either Papists in Masquerade or at least such as serve the interest of Rome though against their wills as truly as the Pope's own Creatures I am sure neither the Church of England nor the best Reformed Churches in Christendom will own them God deliver us from the sad effects of a fiery seditious Religion whether of an Enthusiastick or Roman Catholick Spirit 2. I should now come to shew what we are to contribute towards the peace of the Church the composing or suppressing our religious quarrels which have almost eaten out the life and soul of Christianity among us But having already spent most of the time allotted for this Exercise I shall only recommend to you these two things wherein every one that hears me is concerned 1. I doubt not but a right understanding of the nature of Christianity would go a great way towards the abating our contentions about it It must needs put an end to some of our controversies and secure us from the sad consequences of the rest of them if we had a true notion of the difference between such things as are essential to Religion and such as are at a great distance from it Now true Religion consists in the imitation of the Divine perfections Be ye perfect even as your Father which is in Heaven is perfect (k) St. Matth. 5.48 As he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of Conversation (l) 1. Pet. 1.15 that is so far as we are capable of being like to the most excellent Being in this faln and imperfect State And this consists in the mortifying of our Lusts and Passions in living a Life of Spiritual Purity and Devotion Self-denial and Meekness Justice and Charity Patience Peaceableness Sobriety Chastity and because in many things we offend all (m) St. James 3.2 through ignorance or inadvertency or weakness when we have done our best we are to trust in the Merits of Christ for the pardon of our sins and the acceptance of our imperfect Righteousness These are the substantials of our Religion about which all wise and good men are agreed however we differ about other matters Did we make conscience of these as we ought to do we should soon find by happy experience that they are infinitely more for the honour of God the peace of the Church and the good of one another then an hot and fiery contention about speculative indeterminable and unprofitable Questions Could men be perswaded to a greater care and study of this Catholick Christianity the minding of it would take up so much of our time and pains that we should hardly be at leisure to raise or foment differences Yet if any Disputes should arise about lesser matters yet we should all agree in obeying our Superiours where we are not sure of the unlawfulness of their commands in loving praying for doing good to one another Now since these things are so let us bring our Opinions and Practices to this trial 1. As to matters of Doctrine or Opinion it is too evident that the Articles of Faith are monstruously swelled of late in the Roman Church I mean by the addition of 12 new Articles of Pius the fourth not one of which is to be found in the Scriptures or the Creeds of the Primitive Church I cannot mention without horror the dreadful Anathema's they denounce against all that presume to deny any of them but to the honour of the Church of England let it be said whatsoever is imposed on us as necessary to the Salvation of all men is contained in the Apostles Creed This is the Faith of the first and best times of Christianity the Faith into which we are baptized and the belief of this Creed hath a direct influence on our Christian practice which is the great business of Religion Let us therefore contend earnestly for this Faith which was once delivered to the Saints (n) Jude v. 3. Let us not entertain any other Opinions which invalidate the necessity of an holy life let us not propagate our private conceptions with the breach of the publick peace order then we shall have no reason to quarrel with one another for simple invincible Errors 2. Let us judge of matters of practice by the same rule and then we shall lay the greatest stress upon such things as bring us to the nearest conformity to God we shall not build our hopes of Salvation on any outward observances or abstinences about the mode of our Worship but on the great indispensable Duties of Christianity We shall comply with the Injunctions of Authority in all things about which Christ hath not left us any standing Law For since many things done by Christ and his Apostles were occasional and temporary fitted to the circumstances of those times but not of ours since they were not founded on any moral reason nor have we any command for the continuance of them since there is no Law in Scripture about these things there can be no transgression in the practice or disuse of them otherwise then as they tend to the dividing the Church the contempt of Authority or the scandalizing our Brethren But this brings me to the second thing 2. Let us remember that we are under Christian Laws and Government and from hence we shall learn these three things 1. That we ought not to provide for our own safety or the
security of our Religion by Tumults Insurrections or any other unlawful means For 't is impossible that true Religion should be promoted by sin wickedness by such ways as are contrary to the nature and ends of Religion The Christian Religion neither commands nor allows us to fight for the Lord of Hosts by breaking his Laws and it was establisht by doing good by patient and constant suffering for it Let it therefore be the peculiar glory of Turks Papists to propagate their Religion with sword and bloodshed but let us regulate our zeal with prudence obedience and charity which make up the truly Christian temper of English Protestants and let no private passion or interest transport us beyond the bounds of our Duty to God and our Allegiance to the King For if they do we shall convince all impartial men that we have as little sense of true Religion as our Adversaries 2. We are also to obey the commands of our Superiors as far as we can without sin For either all the Gospel Precepts of obedience signifie nothing at all or they signifie thus much that we ought to come up to Authority as far as we can without disobeying the Law of God Let us therefore lay aside all prejudice and groundless disaffection let us come with modest and humble dispositions ready to obey in all lawful things and resolved to make the breach no wider then we are bound in conscience to do Could men be perswaded thus far and there is no reason why they should not we might yet hope to see though not a perfect union yet a lasting peace in our days For men would proportion their zeal to the nature of things they would seek out for information they would not take up objections upon trust nor revile the legal Constitutions the number of Dissenters would be much lessened and they would joyn with us in a joynt opposition of the common Enemy They would bear with such inconveniences as are not sinful for what Church under Heaven is perfect in all matters of worship and discipline they would yield to a restraint of their liberty in the exercise of it for the peace of the Church For must not every Member of any Society part with something that he desires might he choose for himself in order to the publick Good 3. Where any thing is of a doubtful signification we must put the most favourable construction of it that it is fairly capable of Were this favour shall I say or common equity allowed to the Constitutions of our Church which is to all other things of Human composure we should hear no more of those vehement charges of Antichristianism and Popery that are drawn up against them I am sure 't is neither conscience nor prudence to expose the Church of England to the hatred of forreign Protestants and who can believe that they way to keep out Popery and strengthen the interest of the Reformation is by inflaming the popular fury against that Church which is the strongest Bulwark in Christendom against the Papal Usurpations And now I shall draw to a conclusion Oh that we would know in this our day c. If the Judgments of God which we have already groaned under cannot sure the dangers that threaten us our Religion might help to abate our heats and suppress our differences We know the wonderful zeal of the Jews for the interest of every private party and their inapprehensiveness of the common danger made them become a prey to the Romans Did not Christianity decay in the Church of Corinth as their Schisms Factions encreased Did not the divisions in the Eastern Churches end either in a total subversion or a dismal corruption of Christianity among them How were the glorious beginings of the Reformation obstructed by the differences of some of the chief Reformers And if our Adversaries of Rome have of late made many Proselytes in these Kingdoms their success is not owing to the goodness of their cause but to the force of those Arguments which we have put into their hands Were not the former conquests of these Nations the effects of our own divisions God grant that saying may never be applied to us which was used of our Forefathers that whilst they severally quarrelled among themselves they were all overcome by the common Enemy We are told by one of their own Authors That the most effectual way to destroy the Protestants is by dividing them from and against one another (o) Windeck de Haeres extirp p. 415. The advice of Campanella (p) Cap. 25. p. 207. hath been pursued by the Romish Emissaries that have been industrious in heightning our Animosities and blowing up every spark into a flame in working on the passions of discontented men making harangues against the Church and Government in subdividing us into lesser parties and promoting a general Toleration They know well enough that the reformed Religion in England must needs fall with our Church they have seen how hard it is to set up a better or any establisht Church in the room of it they are convinced that a number of petty Sects and divided Interests cannot long maintain their ground against the Roman Forces If then we be concerned in good earnest as I hope we are to preserve the Reformed Religion let us all endeavour to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace (q) Ephes 4.3 And that you may understand what kind of Religion they are labouring to introduce I will conclude with a short account of Popery 'T is a Religion that teaches you to put off humanity that you may be Catholicks and to deny your senses in a plain sensible matter to know the will of God without a Bible to pray to him by a Proxy and to worship him just as the old Heathens did to believe twice as much as Christ and his Apostles require and to leave out one Commandment which God himself enjoyned to promote Christian Charity by killing one another and convert men with fire and faggot to deny a known truth without telling a lye and to swear to a known falsity without perjury to obtain pardon of your sins without repentance and to go to Heaven without holiness to worship a Deity of your Priests making and then to sacrifice him to God And now let all wise and good men offer up their prayers to God that he would make up those breaches which our sins and the subtilty of our enemies have made in the Church that he who is the Prince of Pesace would inspire us with that wisdom that is pure and peaceable and all our Governours with wisdom and courage to suppress the growth of Atheism and Prophaneness of Superstition and Idolatry of Schism and Sedition FINIS
CLAYTON Mayor Jovis xxiii o die Septemb. 1680. Annoque Regni Regis CAROLI Secundi Angl ' c. xxxiio. THis Court doth desire Mr. Hancocke to print his Sermon Preached at the Guildhall-Chappel on Sunday last before the Lord Mayor and Aldermen Wagstaffe A SERMON Preached before the RIGHT HONOURABLE THE Lord Mayor AND THE COURT of ALDERMEN AT Guildhall-Chappel Septemb. 19. 1680. By ROBERT HANCOCKE Fellow of Clare-hall in Cambridge and Rector of Northill in Bedfordshire LONDON Printed by S. Roycroft for Tho. Flesher at the Angel and Crown in St. Paul's Church-yard and W. Leech at the Crown in Cornhill 1680. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE Sir Robert Clayton Kr. Lord Mayor of the City of London And to the Court of Aldermen Right Honourable THE present Juncture of our Affairs is such that nothing but the most active Zeal for our Religion the most constant Loyalty to the King and the firmest Vnion among our selves can without a Miracle secure this Church and Kingdom The design of the following Discourse is to recommend these great indispensable Duties and to root out all those Lusts and Passions which are destructive of true Religion or Human Society and apt to foment Intestine Divisions or Forreign Vsurpations God grant that in this our Day we may yet know the things that belong to our Peace the preservation of his Majesties Person and Government and the continuance of the true Reformed Religion among us I am Right Honourable Your most humble and most obedient Servant Robert Hancocke St. Luke XIX 42. If thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things which belong to thy peace but now they are hidden from thine eyes IN these Words we have a great Instance both of the stupidity and incorrigibleness of the Jews and of our Saviour's love and tenderness towards his implacable Enemies For he was no sooner come within view of Jerusalem but he laments those Desolations which by the just Judgment of God were breaking in upon them When he was come near he beheld the City and wept over it (a) Verse 41. And as he could not behold their destruction without tears so neither would he express his apprehensions of it without some kind of abruptness Whether there was an irreversible Decree already past in Heaven against the Jewish Nation as it cannot be determined from this Text so it is besides my present purpose to enquire But it is more certain that a flaming Sword was now hanging over their heads there were too many Symptoms of their approaching ruin and our Saviour in the next Verse tells them plainly That the Romans should be the Executioners of the Divine Vengeance upon them Yet some of the Jews were secure and inapprehensive of the common Danger and the rest did neither resolve the Judgments of God into their proper Principles nor comply with the end and design of them by considering the time of their Visitation (b) Verse 44. These profound Politicians invented a new State-engine the putting Christ to death to secure themselves not only from the Romans but from their own Sins too They frustrated all the designs of God's Mercies and Judgments they filled up the measure of their Fathers and at last they forced the Almighty to find out unheard of methods of punishment as might be shewed from the fatal circumstances of that dreadful Story I know we have not yet had as loud Alarms from Heaven as they but yet we have just reason to believe that God in the way of his Providence speaks to us in the language of the Text If you had known c. Or Oh that ye would yet know and lay to heart the things that belong to your peace c. For are not our Divisions and Animosities as high Are not our sins aggravated with as signal mercies and deliverances as theirs We are crumbled into as many Sects and Parties as they and most of them are so much more intent upon their private Interests then upon the common Interest of Protestants that it seems no very hard matter for the Modern Romans to enter in at those Breaches which are made amongst us There were two things which were both the Causes and Symptoms of the Jewish Calamities 1. Ageneral corruption and licentiousness in the lives of men 2. Those unnatural dissentions and feuds among themselves If ever our Adversaries of Rome prevail against us they must make use of these two mighty Advantages which we have put into their hands and so long as our Sins and our Divisions are battering our Walls and pecking at our Foundations I know nothing but a Miracle of Mercy that can preserve our Religion and Government These were the Causes of our former Sufferings as they are of our present fears and the doing what in us lies in our respective Capacities towards the removal of them is the only effectual way of minding the things which belong to the peace of our Church and Kingdom I crave leave therefore to represent and enforce this seasonable Duty with respect to the present juncture of Affairs so far as the peculiar care of some and the prayers and endeavours of all of you are concerned in it 1. We must begin with a sincere Reformation and cleansing our selves from all manner of Debauchery and Prophaneness The Wisdom which is from above is first pure then peaceable (c) St. James 3.17 and till the Lusts that war in our Members be subdued 't is in vain to look for a lasting Settlement for there is no peace to the wicked (d) Isai 57.21 If ye shall still do wickedly ye shall be consumed both ye and your King (e) Sam. 12.25 But to descend to particulars our continuance in Licentiousness and Irreligion is the way to subvert the Civil Peace to let in Popery or else a meer empty Formal Religion among us 1. It is the way to subvert the Civil Peace If the sinful Lusts and Passions of men do naturally tend to the dissolution of a Government if the Divine Protection be that wherein the Safety of a Kingdom doth consist if the practice of Christian Righteousness be that alone which can entitle us to the favour of God If downright Atheism or the contempt of all revealed Religion if the most monstruous Ingratitude or the most obstinate Incorrigibleness if the mocking of God by Hypocritical Wickedness or the proclaiming War against him by notorious Prophaneness can provoke him to Wrath and Vengeance then I am sure that nothing but a timely Reformation can provide for the Peace and Settlement of this Kingdom 2. This is the way to let in Popery among us For that 's a Religion such a one as it is that all loose and licentious People are already prepared for 't is the most pleasant and easie the most gay and pompous Religion in the World 't is such a one as they would devise were they to make a Religion for themselves For the truth of this Charge I
the Author of Sin (k) Lev. c. 21. Lib. and Nec in divers places That the Law of the Civil Magistrate is the only obliging Rule of Just and Vnjust and that the New Testament is not a Law of any place where the Commonwealth hath not made it so (l) Lev. c. 42. That the Obligation of Subjects to their Sovereign lasteth no longer then the power lasteth by which he is able to protect them (m) Lev. c. 21. 2. What is the consequence of the Practical Divinity of the Romish Divines and Casuists about Repentance Purgatory and the efficacy of the Sacraments in conferring Grace but the subverting the necessity of an Holy Life 3. There are some malignant Doctrines that have a more immediate influence on Kingdoms and Governments and they are such as these That Dominion is founded in Grace That the Obligation of Oaths and Promises may be taken away by some Authority on Earth That it is lawful to make use of Equivocations and mental Reservations That Church-men are exempted from the Jurisdiction of the Civil Power That a Sovereign Prince is either the Pope's Subject or the Peoples Trustee That he is accountable for Heresie or evil Government to his Holiness at Rome or to some Assembly of Church-men or Inferiour Magistrates within his own Dominions 4. I wish the Libertines Antinomians and other Carnal Gospellers of this Age had not furnisht us with another Catalogue of Licentious Doctrines The chief of them are these that follow That the Moral Law is abrogated by Jesus Christ That the Covenant of Grace is absolute and unconditional and that no man ought to work for Salvation much less for the fear of Hell That the Torments of Hell are not properly Eternal That a good Moral Man is further from the Kingdom of God then a loose Liver That justifying Faith consisteth in believing that a man is perdestinated to Eternal Life That Sins are pardoned before they are committed and that God sees no Sin in his People To this Head I might reduce all such Notions of Christian Liberty as destroy the necessity of Obedience in all lawful things All such Notions of God and his Decrees as make him the Author of our Sin or Misery or set up the Decrees of God in opposition to his Laws or one of his Attributes in opposition to another All such Notions of Jesus Christ as set up his Person in opposition to his Gospel or make us righteous with Christ's Righteousness whilst we continue in any Course of Sin But thus much may suffice to have spoken of the first thing 2. We have reason to be apprehensive of the effects of our unnatural Contentions and Animosities as well as of our open and notorious Vices Certainly never any People enjoyed more excellent means of Peace and Unity never any People laboured more under the Calamities of Rebellions and Factions never was any People assaulted with more bloody implacable more subtle and industrious Enemies then we are It is therefore the Duty and Interest of all Loyal Subjects and good Christians to endeavour to correct that Spirit of Sedition and Division that is working among us and to promote the Security and Establishment both of our Government and Religion 1. I begin with the Civil Government You have blessed be God the Scriptures in your own Language and if you read them without partiality and prejudice you will soon learn those indispensable Duties of Peace Humility and Obedience They will teach you to pray for the King and all in Authority under him (n) 1 Tim. 2.1 To be subject not only for Wrath but for Conscience sake (o) Rom. 13.5 They will plant in you all those dispositions which are essential to the support of Government and Society they will subdue all those Passions and mortifie all those Lusts which are the Parents of Strifes and Quarrels of Confusions and Treasons besides you are Members of a Church whose just glory it is to assert the Rights of Princes with so much plainness and sincerity that no man can be true to the Church of England whilst he is false to his Sovereign This holy and peaceable Religion will teach you to beware of and suppress all others of what Communion soever that vent any seditious Doctrines or allow of such practices as are consonant to them I know the most horrid things have been taught and acted among us under the disguise of Religion but of all men living the Romanists have the least reason to charge any of our Sects with Treason and Sedition For the most barbarous Villanies that were committed in these Kingdoms may be justified by the principles of that Faction and the most Antimonarchical Doctrines that ever came from the Pulpit or the Press either were or might be derived from the Canon Law the Popes and Councils the most approved Casuists and Guides of Souls Let Pope Sixtus the Fifth have the honour of being either the first inventer or polisher of the Fanatick Art of Canting and perverting the Scriptures admiring the providence of God in the murder of a lawful King and the truth is the first Thanksgiving Sermon that I find on such an Occasion was preacht by his Holiness in the Roman Consistory (p) See his Panegyrick Oration on the murder of H. 3 of France It was printed at Paris An. 1589 with the approbation of three Doctors Nor do I envy the Roman Church the glory of sanctifying Rebellions and Murders Perfidiousness and Cruelty by the Authority of some of her General Councils 'T is no wonder if the same power which transforms bread and wine into the substance of Christs natural body and blood do also transform Christians into Wolves and Tygers Did some of our Sectaries abuse Curse ye Meroz and other parts of Scripture to the carrying on the blackest Designs So did Alexander the third (q) Ep. Alex. 3. Conc. Bin. tom 7 par 2. pag. 656. so did Pius the fifth those (r) Bullar Cherub tom 2. pag. 305. printed at Rome 1617. words of God I have set thee over Nations and Kingdoms c. Did not Innocent the Fourth prove his power of deposing Princes from that Text Whatsoever ye shall bind on Earth c. (s) See Pope Innocent the Fourth's Sentence of Deprivation against the Emperour Ferdinando in the Council of Vienna Have you never heard of the incomparable Interpretations of Rise Peter kill and eat Feed my Sheep Vpon this Rock will I build my Church It were no hard matter to give you a Specimen of the Divinity of Popes and Cardinals men of greater Learning and Authority but of as little Conscience and Loyalty as the Authors of our most pestilent Sermons and Pamphlets Are any of these under unlawful Oaths and Engagements So are all the Bishops Jesuits Monks and Friars of that Church under Oaths of absolute Allegiance to the Pope or of blind Obedience to their Superiors that are his Creatures and Vassals (t)
See Pontif. Rom. p. 59. where you have the Oath it self which is taken by every Bishop at his Consecration and it is the strictest Oath of Allegience that ever was invented See the Bulls of Paul 3. 1549. Bullar tom 1. p. 687. of Julius 3. 1650. of Pins 4. 1564. Was there an infamous High Court of Justice set up in England There have been many such erected at Rome and as well deserving that name wherein Sovereign Princes have been condemned for not submitting to the Jurisdiction of the Court. From whom did the Rigicides learn That the Original of all Civil Power is from the People That it is deriv'd to the Sovereign by way of mutual Contract That he is no more but an Officer in Trust That the Duty of Subjects is only Conditional That the Commonwealth hath Authority to curb or restrain him to bring him to trial for Male-administration or Tyranny (a) Reynolds under the counterfeit Name of Rossaeus hath written De just a Christianae Reipublicae in Feges Impios Haeresicos Authoritare His Book was written at the request of the Leaguers in France and approved by the Papal See See Mariana L. 1. c. 8. Parsons under the name of Doleman and Bellarmine in many places Sober Reckoning pag. 424. Em. Sa. Aph. V. princeps with the whole Herd of the Jesuits Didsome wild Sectaries attempt to dethrone the Lord 's Anointed for the advancement of Christ's Kingdom These have done as much for his Vicar as they did for the Master Who was it that taught them That Religion is to be propagated with the Sword (b) This is the express Doctrine of the third and fourth Council of Lateran That Princes may be put to death for Tyranny or Heresie and in what method they are to be brought to the Block (c) Fr. Verone wrote an Apology for a Traytor one of the most desperate Villains in the World That infamous Book of Boucher a French Jesuit De justa Hen. 3. abdications is well known Bellarmine was a principal Actor in the French League Pope Sixtus the Fifth applauded the murder of Hen. 3. The General Council of Constance supposes it to be lawful in some cases to put a Prince to death See more of this Subject in Verone Rossaeus Mariana c. Let any man produce greater Enemies to the Rights of Princes then the Lawful Representatives of the Roman Church in their Holy Synods Let any man shew me a mo●e pernicious Account of the rise of Civil Government then is to be found in the Epistles of Pope Gregory the Seventh Indeed I can hardly meet with any Treasonable Positions any Texts of Scripture or Arguments to maintain them in the Pamphlets of this last Age which are not expresly contain'd in the Writings of Popes and Jesuits or at least to be parallel'd in the most approved Authors of the Roman Church Who taught the English Rebels the distinction between the Authority and the Person of a King Who taught them to fight for the King whilst they shot against his Person and to kill the Tyrant without killing the King (d) This distinction was invented by the Jesuits and 't is their common Doctrine that after a King is deposed declared a publick Enemy by the Pope or the States of the Kingdom he ceases to be a King Were some of them Sainted by their own party and were not some of the Gunpowder Traytors preferr'd at Rome Is not Becket that lived and died a Traytor to his King honoured as a Saint and Martyr in the publick Offices of that Church (e) Breviar Rom. Hic est verè Martyr qui pro Christi nomine c. I know there are some that profess themselves to be Catholicks of the Church but not of the Court of Rome and I do verily believe that some of that Communion do as they pretend abominate the Usurpations of the Roman Court Interest in some and good nature in others have made them better Subjects then the principles of their Religion allow them to be Some of them have too much honesty others have too little zeal for the Catholick Cause to be entrusted with such a Mystery of Iniquity and many do not understand how much Pride and Covetousness lies at the bottom of the Church as well as of the Court of Rome But yet all the loyalty or peaceableness of these men depends either on their natural Dispositions or their private interests or their lukewarmness in Religion or their ignorance of the Doctrine of their own Church As to the Distinction it self that dare not shew its face at Rome though it be more talked of then understood in England I have two things to say 1. That such Doctrines as strike at the very root of our Religion and Government have been determined by the Roman Church in some of her General Councils I mean the Doctrines of Deposing Princes and absolving Subjects from their Allegiance to them (f) Besides the third fourth General Councils of Lat. see the General Council of Lyons in the Decree for the recovery of the Holy Land That the Sentence of Deposition against Frederick the Emperour was the act of the Council as well as of the Pope is proved by the Author of the Supplement to Parson's Discussion c. See also M. Paris p 666 667 668. The Council of Trent though it was then no time to speak plain passed such a Decree Sess 25. as was sufficient to keep up the claim to this power of breaking Faith with Hereticks (g) Conc. Const Sess 19. of rooting them out with Fire and Sword (h) Conc. Lat. 3. c. 27. Conc. Lat. 4. c. de Haereticis And this Doctrine was put in practice by the General Council of Constance and of the exemption of the Clergy from the Jurisdiction of Secular Princes (i) Conc. Lat. 3. c. 14. Conc. Lat. 4. c. 43. And the Council of Trent confirmed the same Doctrine of which see more in the excellent History of that Council These are the Orthodox Doctrines of the most Loyal and Charitable Church of Rome 2. Though there might be some plausible pretence for this distinction before the Reformation yet the Council of Trent the great Oracle of the present Roman Church hath utterly destroyed it as to those purposes for which it is produced For the Reformers having asserted the Rights of the Church against the Usurpations of the Papal See and appealed to a lawful General Council the Fathers at Trent gave up the Cause espoused the Interest of the Court of Rome and made its Judgment absolute and unappealable But I will conclude this Part of my Discourse with two Inferences 1. It may serve for an Antidote against some late Books and Pamphlets of the Romish Emissaries They complain of the uncharitableness of Protestants they inveigh against us meerly for believing our own Senses I mean That the Catholick Religion the Roman Catholick they should say allows of Trayterous Principles
appeal to any man that understands the virtue of their Indulgencies and Masses Reliques and Pennances the omnipotent power of Absolutions and other ways of reconciling a sinner to God in the Roman Church Are not some of those practices which make up a great part of their Religion but the Mint Anise and Cummin of Christianity Are not divers others of them inconsistent with the life and power of Godliness I mean their Crossings and Unctions their voluntary Whippings and Severities their superficial Confessions and Abstinencies their mumbling over their Prayers without devotion or attention Were not those dark and superstitious Ages wherein Popery first stole into the World times of the greatest Licentiousness and Irreligion I confess the Monasteries were Seminaries of Vertue and Piety for some Ages but as the Monks encreased in Wealth and Revenues so they degenerated into Idleness and Luxury This is so plain a Truth that even some of their own Authors that are most devoted to the Papal See cannot deny or conceal it I know 't is usually imputed to the Jesuits that they allow men to lye and forswear themselves to swallow a thousand Venial Sins without danger of Damnation and to repent of as many Mortal Sins without forsaking them It is commonly said Than they undertake to pardon or dispense with some of the most monstrous Crimes and that some of the blackest ones are with them lawful or meritorious and these are the Guides of Souls in the Church of Rome But I will be so just to that Order as to acknowledge they not only affirm but prove it too that this is the Practical Divinity of the Church it self Is not the very Canon Law stuff't with Forgeries and Wickedness Are not such extravagant Maxims to be found in the Divines and Casuists of other Orders as the more sober Heathens abhorred Are not the Books publisht with the Authority and Approbation of the Church Are not the Authors of them entrusted by her with the Consciences of men Why don't they acquaint the World what expurgatory Index hath condemned the Writings of the three Cardinal Jesuits what Anathema's their Church hath bestowed upon them (f) Bellarmine Baronius and Tolet. Were not their Persons had in admiration and are not their Writings applauded by the teaching governing part of the Church The truth is the Interest and Grandeur of Rome are supported by them and they must be maintain'd whatever becomes of the Souls and Consciences of Men. I do not think that Popery is able to root out all good Nature and if any of that Communion be so eminent for Vertue and Charity as I hope they be we must not thank the Doctrines of their Church or the Integrity of the ruling party for it but either their natural Dispositions or the over-ruling Grace of God which have preserved them from the Contagion of their Religion 3. This is the way to propagate a meer empty formal Religion amongst us A Religion that teaches men to build their hopes of Salvation upon such Conditions as may be observed without offering Violence to their sensual Lusts and dearest Interests And so long as they desire to go to Heaven with as little trouble as they can I do not wonder that they will not endure sound Doctrine but after their own lusts heap to themselves Teachers having itching ears (g) 2 Tim. 4.3 They will be content to offer God the Calves of their lips rather then to give him their hearts to censure or commend many Sermons rather then to put one in practice to put on a sowre or demure countenance rather then a broken and contrite heart to present God Almighty with variety of Phrases or the most pathetical Expressions rather then to pray with Faith and Devotion Humility and Heavenly-mindedness in which the Spirit of Prayer consists For such things as these serve for ostentation and vain-glory they are very obvious and sensible they are no great Enemies to the Passions and Interests of men Whereas Purity and Devotion Self-denial and Meekness Obedience and Charity Mortification of the Will and Affections have less of the Pomp and Form though infinitely more of the Life and Power of Godliness in them Thus I have given you a short Account of the most natural and pernicious effects of Vice and Wickedness upon a Church and Kingdom And since these things are so I would make an humble Address to all in Authority That as you value the Honour and Security of our most holy Religion or the Peace and Happiness of your King and Country you would endeavour to suppress the growth of Vice and Immorality For what Peace so long as there is so much Riot and Luxury Leudness and Debauchery Injustice and Oppression customary Swearing prophane Drollery and contempt of Religion among us What Peace so long as such a Deluge of Sin and Wickedness overflows the Nation For these the Lord hath a Controversie with the Inhabitants of the Land therefore shall the Land mourn (h) Hosea 4.1 3. These are the Nurseries of Plots and Treasons of Schism and Sedition But if you cannot compel men to be truly Pious and Holy you may at least force them to sin with more modesty and civility If you cannot quite banish Sin out of the Nation yet 't is in your power to stigmatize it with disgrace and make it sneak into Corners you may restrain it from being bare-faced and impudent from infecting the Land and involving us in the guilt of it If you cannot root out all secret Wickedness you may stop the growth of horrid Impieties of publick and crying Sins If wicked men will have the exercise of their Irreligion in private yet I beseech you let them not sin in the face of the Sun and openly make Proselytes in defiance of the Laws of God and Man And would you have men make conscience of all their Oaths Contracts and Promises Would you have them be Loyal to the King Obedient to Magistrates and Serviceable to one another Do what you can in your several Spheres to encourage and promote the practice of solid and substantial Religion But if we desire the suppressing of Atheism and Immorality we must take heed of those licentious Doctrines and Principles which are most apt to lead us into such practices For what wonder is it to see men act in conformity to their Principles What reason is there to hope that the generality of the World will be better then the Doctrines of their Religion incline them to be I will mention the principal of them and leave you to judge whether the natural result of them be not the banishing true Religion and Holiness out of the Nation 1. I begin with the Principles of the Leviathan That there is nothing but Body in the World and that the very notion of an Incorporeal Being implies a Contradiction (i) Leviathan c. 4. c. 5. c. 12. c. 34. That men are good or evil fatally and unavoidably And that God may be