Selected quad for the lemma: scripture_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
scripture_n believe_v church_n interpretation_n 3,657 5 10.5181 5 true
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
A56609 A brief account of the new sect of latitude-men together with some reflections upon the nevv philosophy / by S.P. of Cambridge, in answer to a letter from his friend at Oxford. Patrick, Simon, 1626-1707. 1662 (1662) Wing P754; ESTC R18217 17,337 26

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

reprobation be one which they do not think themselves bound to believe 5. Nor is it credible they should hold any other Doctrine than the Church since they derive it from the same fountains not from the Spinose school-men or Dutch systematicks neither from Rome nor Geneva the Council of Trent nor Synod of Dort but from the Sacred writings of the Apostles and Evangelists in interpreting whereof they carefully attend to the sense of the ancient Church by which they conceive the modern ought to be guided and therefore they are very conversant in all the genuine Monuments of the ancient Fathers those especially of the first and purest ages not to gather out fine phrases and quaint sentences but that they may discern between the modern corruptions and ancient simplicity of the Church to distinguish between the Doctrines received in these latter ages and those which the primitive Christians received from Christ and his Apostles for those opinions in Religion how specious soever are justly to be suspected whereof there are no footsteps to be discerned in that golden age of Christianity that was tryed and purifyed in the fire of persecution we are not so secure of the succeeding silver age of peace and prosperity but that there might be some drossy mixture inferior to the golden but better than the brazen that trode upon its heels Saevior ingeniis ad horrida promptior arma when the Christians had taken up the swords formerly of their persecutors and drew them one upon another but de duro est ultima ferro Protinus erupit venae pejoris in aevum Omne nefas fugere pudor verumque fidesque In quorum subiere locum fraudesque dolique Insidiaeque vis amor sceleratus habendi And by this time sure there was need of Reformation to bring al things to the primitive pattern to purge out the dross and Tinn and all baser mettals which the Church of England hath most happily atchieved And now let no man accuse them of hearkning too much to their own reason since their reason steers by so excellent a compass the ancient Fathers and Councils of the Church For Reason is that faculty whereby a man must judge of every thing nor can a man beleve any thing except he have some reason for it whether that reason be a deduction from the light of nature and those principles which are the candle of the Lord set up in the soul of every man that hath not wilfully extinguished it or a branch of Divine revelation in the oracles of holy Scripture or the general interpretation of genuine antiquity or the proposal of our own Church consentaneous thereto or lastly the result of some or all of these for he that will rightly make use of his Reason must take all that is reasonable into consideration And it is admirable to consider how the same conclusions do naturally flow from all these several principles and what in the faithful use of the faculties that God hath given men have believed for true doth excellently agree with that Revelation that God hath exhibited in the Scripture and the doctrine of the ancient Church with them both Thus the freedom of our wills the universal intent of Christ's death and sufficiency of Gods Grace the conditions of justification and many other points of the like nature which have been almost exploded in these latter degenerate ages of the world do again begin to obtain though with different persons upon different accounts some embrace them for their evidence in Scripture others for the concurrent testimony of the primitive Church for above four hundred years others for the reasonableness of the things themselves and their agreement both with the Divine Attributes and the easy suggestions of their own minds Nor is there any point in Divinity where that which is most ancient doth not prove the most rational and the most rational the ancientest for there is an eternal consanguinity between all verity and nothing is true in Divinity which is false in Philosophy or on the contrary and therefore what God hath joyned together let no man put asunder But these men are generally suspected to be for liberty of Conscience and that 's a principle of dangerous consequence that will undermine the very foundations of any Church what soever a Church cannot be without Unity and Uniformity an unlimited discord of opinions and practises will as much obstruct the edification of Gods Temple as the confusion of Languages did the building of the Tower of Babel Verily this is true and the most part of them who while they are under the hatches deny it do by their practises confirm it when ever they get power into their hands but how far the men charged with it are concerned therein remains to be inquired Though in the first place I cannot but take notice that this very objection confutes the vulgar calumny cast upon them as if they were men of no conscience for I dare say by how much the less of conscience any man hath by so much the less will he care what impositions are laid on it though for my own part I shall always think him most consciencious who leads the most unblameable life though he be not greatly scrupulous about the externals of Religion and for their lives I think the Latitude-men were never taxed by their greatest enemyes And now let us soberly consider what was before said they sincerely embrace all the Articles of Doctrine held forth by the Church they cheerfully use and approve her Liturgy and Ceremonies they cordially love and obey her government how then can they pursue any Liberty that can be dangerous to her for in all other things the Church her selfe leaves them to their liberty and who shall blame them for using it but there are some men it may be are offended that the Church is so indulgent a Mother that will not unnecessarily impose upon the judgement or practise of her Children they would have all things bound up and nothing free they would fain be adding some ciphers to their significant Articles she now prodounds and instead of 39 would make 39000. t is well if they would content themselves with ciphers and not add falsityes to make up the tale they have it may be an ambition to out-do the Assemblies Confession they would be content that Aquina's Summs were put into the Creed and all the janglings of the Schools into the Prayers of the Church that so by their Longitude they might be even with their neighbors of the Latitude Others it may be think we have not ceremonies enough and if they can find any antiquated Rite in some moth-eaten Author they have an itch presently of bringing it into the Church without considering whether there be the same reason or use of it now that may have been in other times and places and then if their Neighbors will not follow their example but think it enough to do what the Rubrick and Canons require