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A56274 The moderation of the Church of England considered as useful for allaying the present distempers which the indisposition of the time hath contracted by Timothy Puller ... Puller, Timothy, 1638?-1693. 1679 (1679) Wing P4197; ESTC R10670 256,737 603

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disposition to swallow all Poysons and are liable to the guilt not only of their first solitary error but all which are consequent thereon whereas those who use a sober examination after they are convinced of one error will be more cautious of others and the truth they come to of choice and judgment is also more praise-worthy and more tenible I should swell this head into too great a bulk if I should enumerate the sundry places wherein our Blessed Lord and his Holy Apostles did stir up and provoke the industry of the Christian Disciples to search discern prove try examine what they received lest at any time they were seduced by false Prophets The same admonitions and method have the ancient Fathers of the Church persued Both which would be endless here to recite Indeed all sorts of perswasions of men seem to confess the necessity of first convincing the reason and judgment of what is to be received as truth And therefore the Romanists use so many motives of credibility to induce belief of their Church in which if once the Proselyte is caught they serve him as the Chaldees did King Zedekiah after they had taken him Captive they put out his Eyes c Caeco judicio imperata facere quantumvis ea blasphema sint atque impia Apol. Eccl. Anglic. §. 138. 2 Kings 25. 7. Where indeed the mystery we are sure is certainly declared and delivered by God there we ought to captivate not only our imaginations but our reasons to the obedience of Faith not staying for a connexion of the parts of the Proposition to be believed by Scientific evidence which Mr Sergeant makes his Sure-footing But where we are not assured of the matter of fact of the Divine Revelation nor otherwise understand the reasons for such an assent No one can put off humane nature so far as to believe what they please d Nullus credit aliquid verum esse quia vult credere id esse verum nam non est in potestate hominis sacere aliquid apparer● intellectui suo verum quando voluerit Picus Mirandula Indeed it is the great honour of our Church that it doth not testify nor require attestation unto any thing but where some good reason why we do so is sufficiently manifest which right as she maintains toward others so she vindicates the same to her self namely of examining what is offered to her under the venerable name of the Catholick Church and if need be of reforming any abuses or errors within the bounds of its own Discipline and so separating the pretious from the vile which power of examining Doctrines being forbid by the Church of Rome to her Sons seems to prevent the first occasion and means of Reformation e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 De Eutychianis inter Athanasii opera Consulatur integer Tractatus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and renders her even incorrigible in her errors and corruptions and remaining so irreconcilable But some do Object That if we allow a right of private judgment it will be a direct means to establish among us an enthusiastic private Spirit which will rely upon its own judgment to the despising all others and if all may use a private judgment why may they not follow it and profess it Then you open a Window to all Divisions and Heresies and render the Church useless and all her Guides We Answer It is one thing to use our Faculties of discerning in a discreet manner which includes all due Reverence to all those instruments which God and the Church have given us for our direction and conduct and another thing to rely on our own prudence to wrest the Scripture to our own sense as the Council of Trent f Nemo prudentiae suae innixus S. Scripturam ad suos sensus contorqueat Conc. Trid. Sess 4. Decr. 2. speaks which the Church of England first of all detests Article 20. Every private person being here required to hear and obey the publick reason of our Church Which being also clear and true can allow the being searcht into and for that purpose she desires but her Sons to open their own Eyes Wherefore the sober use of our own faculties ought not to be called a private Spirit which judgeth according to the general notices of Truth and Good and the common sense of Mankind and the judgment also of the Church such a Spirit is the Candle of the Lord. Not an evil Spirit nor a Spirit of Innovation nor Dissention nor a Spirit of Pride nor Temptation as many of the Church of Rome blazon it As for the growth of Schisms and Heresies from the use of such a private judgment as the Church allows Which Objection was anciently made against the Christian Religion as of old by Celsus to Origen l. 3. Unto which was answered That where any thing was received which was very excellent such differences were common as among the Philosophers and Jews so among Christians but These now who make the Objection generally those of the Romish Communion yet know that though they carry as well as they can an outward shew of unity to their people they have as great divisions as any are And though indeed the corruption of good things is greatest by the abuse of ill men This ill consequence through the Vice of some ought not to take away the common right of all no more than the contentions which arise from the Laws should be thought to render them dangerous to be proclaimed The Christian Religion of it self is sufficient to keep all from error or vice if all men would comply with its wholsome and pacific Decrees as Arnobius g Quòd si omnes omnino salutaribus ejus pacificisque decretis aurem vellent accommodare paulisper non fastu supercilio Luminis suis potius sensibus quàm illius Comminationibus crederent universus jamdudum orbis mitiora in opera conversis usibus ferri tranquillitate mollissimâ degeret in Concordiam salutarem incorruptis foederum sanctionibus conveniret Arnobius l. 1. long since hath delivered And the Church in observance hereof doth procure her own Peace as much as may be in that all are bound not to publish their private sense to the detriment of publick Peace and by her Censures hath a power of repressing publick Dissenters and in case of doubt arising our Church wisely sends the parties so doubting to their Superiours h Preface concerning the Service of the Church And whereas Gods true Religion is but one the profession of which Article 19. and no other Article 18. is absolutely necessary to the being of Gods Church and therein to our Salvation Blessed be God in our Church there is abundant care taken of Gods Holy Religion both by the Laws of the Kingdom and Church for the instruction and government of its members unto edification and peace and every one may be satisfied in his Conscience and Judgment of the Religion he professeth Yet This
Her Moderation in what is asserted of the number of Sacraments § 3. In that her Orders for the Administration of the Sacraments are most suitable to the ends of their appointments § 4. In that our Church doth not make the benefit of the Sacraments to depend upon unrequired conditions In reference to Holy Baptism § 1. Our Church doth make nothing of the essence of Baptism but the use of the invariable Form § 2. The Moderation of our Church toward Infants unbaptized Her sound and charitable judgment of such as die after Baptism § 3. In some necessary cautions referring to the administration of Baptism § 4. Referring also to the susceptors § 5. In what is required of them who administer that Sacrament In reference to the Holy Supper of our Lord § 1. The same is with us celebrated in both kinds § 2. The Doctrine of Transubstantiation is rejected by our Church not running to the other extreme of denying a real presence of Christ in the Sacrament § 3. The Moderation of our Church in complying with the necessity of the Age but not with the Church of Rome and others who require their people to communicate not so much as thrice a year § 4. Participation of the Holy Supper required after Confirmation but not after the rigid Examinations of some or the auricular Confessions of others Neither is it made a private banquet § 5. In our Church there is not to be a Communication of the Eucharist without Communicants The Moderation of the Church in other Rubricks referring to the Holy Communion § 1. OUR Church according to that Moderation in which she excels raiseth no needless strife or controversy about words or names a Saepe a. Eccl. Angl. professa est de verbo nullam litem se moturam modo pristina sides sit restituta Rex Jac. ad C. Perr particularly relating to the Holy Sacraments The name of Sacraments saith the Homily b Homily of Com. Pr. and Sacram. may in general acception be attributed to any thing whereby a holy thing is signified thus as Chilingworth c Chilingw Pref. §. 24. noteth we use the names of Priest and Altar and yet believe neither the corporal presence nor any proper propitiatory Sacrifice Yea so exceeding moderate and prudent was the Church that in the 7. Canon 1640. it abundantly cautions lest those words be used otherwise than in a metaphorical and improper attribution d In Liturgiâ Anglicanâ habemus quidem Sacrificii nomen offerendi verbum etiam hostiae mentionem sed nihil magis adversatur Missatico sacrificio quàm tota haec oratio Rivet Gro. discuss 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 220. Notwithstanding all these just and careful explications why should our Church for the use of those words be traduced as relishing of Popery any more than for favouring the Sabbatarian Doctrine because in the 70. Canon in English the word Sabboth Day is used for the Lords day and dies dominicus it is in the Latin Canons in the Homily also of the time and place of Prayer 't is called Sabboth day that is the Sunday the Holy day of rest and in King Henr. 8. Act of abrogation of certain days it is said since the Sabboth day was ordained for mans rest and in Qu. Eliz. Injunctions the same word is as in the rest used in a general accommodation to the improper use of the vulgar which clauses mentioned are known to have been before this word among some others hath been set apart as one of the Shiboleths of a party Whereas rather the Moderation of the Church should be taken notice of which insists not so much on the nicety of the word as on the integrity of its sense § 2. Our Church receives none as proper Sacraments generally necessary to salvation but such as are so Which said expression contains a great deal of Moderation notwithstanding it hath been much cavill'd at by some of rigid principles for our Church doth no where assert the receiving so much as the true Sacraments to be always to every one particularly and absolutely necessary to Salvation Our Church saith Bishop Branthal e To M. Militier receives not the Septenary number of Sacraments being never so much as mentioned in any Scripture or Council or Creed or Father or ancient Author first devised by Peter Lombard 1439. First Decreed by Eugenius the 4th 1528. First confirmed in the Provincial Council of Senes 1547. and after in the Council of Trent The word Sacrament is taken largely and then washing the Disciples feet is called a Sacrament then the sprinkling of ashes on a Christians head is called a Sacrament then there are God knows how many Sacraments more than 7. Or else it is taken for a visible sign instituted by Christ to convey and confirm invisible grace to all such partakers thereof as do not set a bar against themselves according to the analogy between the sign or the thing signified and in this sense the proper and the certain Sacraments of the Christian Church common to all or in the words of the Church generally necessary to Salvation are but two Baptism and the Supper of the Lord more than these S. Ambrose writes not of in his Book de Sacramentis because he did not know them And here it may not be improper to add those memorable words of S. Austin f S. Aug. Ep. ad Januar 118. which were recited in the Articles of Religion 1552. published by King Edw. 6. and are cited also in our Homily of Sacraments Our Lord Jesus Christ hath knit together a Company of new people that is Christians with Sacraments most few in number most easy to be kept most excellent in signification as are Baptism and the Lords Supper beside which two Sacraments of the New Testament our Church appointeth no other way of solemn engagement to Christianity § 3. The Holy Sacraments among us are administred in such order prescribed as is suitable to the end of their appointment Our Church most strictly holding to what is of Divine Institution and adding nothing which is humane to the Sacraments themselves nevertheless the Prayers and Blessings and Exhortations and what is enjoin'd promote the true design of the administration In which the Moderation of our Church holds a just mean between those who deny the Church any use of its Christian Liberty and between the intolerable excesses of the Church of Rome yet so very moderate is our Church in this particular that the Lutheran Churches cannot compare themselves with her for Moderation for they retain Exorcism and other Ceremonies in use with their Sacraments beside their peculiar doctrines and usages referring to the Holy Supper § 4. Our Church doth not make the efficacy of the Sacraments to depend upon the bare administration whether the mind be well prepared or no I dare not say that most Romanists generally mean so by the Opus Operatum in the Council of Trent g Concil
measures namely leave to determine their particular actions according to the general Rule of Holy Scriptures and sometimes of Prudence where other Laws are not given to determine their Liberty And indeed this Article of the sufficiency of the Scriptures and the use of them as a Rule is the very dividing point at which those of the Separation on either hand leave our Church and her Moderation at once For those who are ready on one hand to receive all Traditions which the Church of Rome can offer with affection and reverence equal to the written word of God so that as it is in our Homily c Homily of good works 3 d. Part. The Laws of Rome as they said were to be received of all men as the four Evangelists No Moderation can contain the extravagancies such belief leads them to On the other hand to accept of no appointment for outward order and government in the Church or Kingdom but what is set out in the express word of God for the direction of every particular action under pretence of defending Christian Liberty is verily so gross and unreasonable a Pharisaical confining it that this principle is the first Sanctuary of ignorance and disobedience in most of our Separatists who under an immoderate pretence to Religion and the honour of Scriptures really offer great abuse and disservice to both as it is a real abuse to a person though of honour to give him Titles which do not belong to him so it is an occasion to Atheists and prophane persons captiously to detract from the true perfection of Holy Writings when they find attributed to them such Titles as are false and imaginary We must take heed saith the judicious Hooker d Eccles Pol. l. 3. §. 8. lest in attributing to Scripture more than it can have the incredibility of that do cause even those things which it hath most abundantly to be less reverently esteemed On this foundation of our Churches Moderation in what she judgeth concerning the perfection of Holy Scripture both the Protestant and the Christian Religion is established For as Bishop Sanderson saith e Pref. to his Sermons The main Article of the Protestant Religion is The Holy Scriptures are a perfect Rule of Faith and manners so the very mystery of Puritanism is That no man may with a safe Conscience do any thing for which there may not be produced either command or example in Scripture § 3. We are to note the Moderation of the Church in her judgment of the letter and sense of Holy Scripture and in the use of such consequences as are duly drawn from thence Whereas the Romanists 1. look on the letter of Holy Scripture but as so many dead and unsensed Characters f Richworth's Dialogues J. S. Sure-footing of variable and uncertain signification g Ni● Cus●nus Card. Ep. 7. ad ●●hem 2. They make the sense of Scripture entirely depend on the Authority of their Church h V. Concil Trid. Sess 4. Decret de usu S. Scr. 3. They presume the Church of Rome only can make authentick all the Books of Holy Scripture i Nullum Capitulum nullusque liber Canonicus habetur absque illius authoritate Greg. 7. Dict. 16. in Concil Rom. and by her sole Authority is to determine which are to be Canonical 4. They will not allow the clear consequences of Scripture to prove any matter of doctrine k V. Discourse upon a Conference Apr. 3. 1676. In these as in many other instances our Sectaries generally agree with the Romanists 1. They also make the Holy Scripture a dead Letter without their interpretation 2. In making the sense which they vouch to be the Word of God 3. Such Scriptures as seem to serve their turn they allow others they reject 4. The clear consequences from Holy Scriptures against them they cast by as only the results of carnal reason Between these two opposers of Holy Scripture at present there appears this difference instead of an external infallible Interpreter on one side the other sets up the witness of their own private spirit for an infallible interpreter also When time serves They that make the difference can compromise it Amidst these extremes observe we the Wisdom and Moderation of the Church of England 1. It gives all due honour to the Letter of Holy Writ referring her self and her Sons chiefly to the Originals l V. B. of Homilies passim Caeterùm in lectione D. Scripturarum si quae occurrerint ambigua vel obscura in V. Test earum interpretatio ex fonte Hebraicae veritatis petatur in N. autem Graeci codices consulantur Reform Leg. Eccles de fide Cathol c. 12. using all care in keeping the Letter of Holy Scripture and preserving the Originals and setting them forth correctly and translating them as faithfully as may be 2. The sense of Scripture our Church accounteth chiefly as Scripture viz. The Word of God therein The mind of God being thought by our Church to consist not in words but in sense For is the Kingdom of God words and syllables m Translators of the Bible Pres 3. The clear consequences in Scripture are in our Church accounted a good proof in matters of doubtful Doctrine Whatsoever is not read therein nor proved thereby is not to be required saith our sixth Article Wherefore Mr Chillingworth n Chillingworth 's Pref. § 28. did not without reason thus declare I profess sincerely I believe all those Books of Scripture which the Church of England accounts Canonical to be the infallible word of God I believe all things evidently contained in them or even probably deducible from them o Simpliciter necessaria Rex appellat quae vel expressè Verbum Dei praecipit vel ex verbo Dei necessaria Consequentiâ vetus Ecclesia elicuit Rex Jacobus ad Card. Perr § 4. In our Church no one Version nor more are made equal much less superiour to the original Nothing is declared authentick but what is judged truly and originally so Although the Church of Rome hath declared the vulgar Translation to be only the authentick Scripture p Conc. Trid. Sess 4. Decr. 2. according to which all points in Question are to be decided and though the same in our Church hath been convinced by sundry learned men of some imperfections yet wherein it is most faithfully performed the innovations of Popery even from thence may be sufficiently manifested Other ancient Versions and Translations which have been of Holy Scripture our Church is so far from rejecting or undervaluing that it hath made great use of them and doth constantly acknowledge their usefulness and doth esteem them according to their antiquity and the approbation they have had in the Church of God Yea in the worst of our late times when the true Church of England was most of all accused of Popery and opposition to the Scriptures then were sundry learned and religious Sons of the Church diligently
never were so appointed And on the other from the wild inordinacy of them who make their own private principle whatsoever it be the rule of Scripture interpretation Among all wisely making use of and asserting and recommending such means as are given for the conveyance or interpretation or both for the conveying and interpreting of Divine Writ Something further of which will more distinctly appear in the next Chapter CHAP. V. Of the Moderation of the Church in applying the Rule of Faith to it self § 1. Avoiding extremes on either hand in relation to the authority of the Vniversal Church § 2. The Decrees of Councils § 3. The Testimony of the Fathers § 4. Other Traditions § 5. Our Churches own Testimony § 6. The use of Reason § 7. The Testimony of the Spirit § 8. Of the testimony and operation of the Holy Spirit the judgment of our Church according to great Moderation more largely declared § 1. THE Moderation of the Church of England appears very great in her due applying this Rule of Faith to her self wisely and fitly making use of all those Instruments which are most proper and useful in conveying to us that Rule or which are most subservient to the right understanding our Rule avoiding either extreme of those who attribute too much or too little to those instruments of conveyance and interpretation Such as the Authority of the Universal Church The Decrees of Councils The Testimony of the Fathers Other Traditions The Witness of our own particular Church Right Reason alone The Testimony of the Spirit To all and every of these enumerated instruments either of certain conveyance or interpretation of Scripture our Church gives their due place and esteem according to their influence and use and no more which must needs demonstrate a great deal of Wisdom and Moderation in the judgment of the Church 1. The Universal Church it self is no where by the Church of England made the Rule of her Faith but a Witness and Keeper of Holy Writ Art 20. Yet the judgment of the Catholick Church of Christ was always by the Church of England held in greatest veneration next unto the testimony of the Spirit of God himself because of those famous Promises made by Christ himself to the Church which we read of in the New Testament Yea in the Old Testament The Prophecies concerning the Messias and concerning the Church and the Ministers of the Church always are join'd together as I have sometime heard a great Prelate of our Church teach us And because whatever Arguments we have for the truth of Holy Scriptures as thanks be to God we have many beside yet also from the witness and keeping of the Church a Ecclesia non discernit sed ni●a traditioni legitimae testatur quae sint Canonicae Scripturae Spalatens l. 7. ch 1. we receive the Holy Scriptures themselves and in the sixth Article In the name of Holy Scriptures the Church doth understand those Canonical Books of the Old and New Testament of whose Authority there was never any doubt in the Church So that as the Archbishop of Spalato hath it we have recourse to the Church not as to an Authoritative Judge but as to a Treasure and Repository b Haec sunt quae Patres intra Canonem concluserunt Haec nobis à Patribus tradita S. Hieron Ruffinus in which the Canonical Books and all things necessary to Salvation are preserved by faithful Tradition Wherefore the Catholick Church it self is called not a Judge nor a Rule c Credo Ecclisiam credo Ecclesiae per E●clesiam Non di●imus credo in Ecclesiam ●●t credo in Ecclesi● Ep-Es●en● but more truly a Witness and Keeper of Holy Writ and for interpretation of Scripture and for our help in judging of Doctrines according to our Rule the Church of England values above all others the Judgment of the Catholick Church so far forth as we can attain the testimony of the Catholick Church by such instruments as are approved and undoubted For though d Second Di●●native against Popery l. 1. ● 1. If by Catholick you mean all particular Churches in the World then though truth doth infallibly dwell amongst them yet you can never go to School to them all to learn it in such questions as are curious and unnecessary and by which the Salvation of Souls is not promoted Yet we know that in the Primitive Time the Christian Church was in a less compass and more undivided Wherefore if such matters which are most essential to the being and well-being of the Church are both delivered from that time and with their conveyance have been approved by the Church in common ever since If the Church may be a sure instrument of conveyance of the Books of Holy Scripture why not also of such matters wherein all so well agree from the first and do in no sort thwart the Tradition of the Holy Scripture it self Wherefore in the Canon set forth in our Church with the Articles of Religion 1571. it is caution'd That nothing be at any time taught either to be held or believed upon the account of Religion but what is agreeable to the Doctrine of the Old and New Testament which the Catholick Fathers and antient Bishops have gathered from thence Which Golden Rule of our Church I find twice extoll'd by the Illustrious Grotius once e De imp sum potesta c. 6. §. 9. p. 181. in these words I cannot but commend that famous Canon of the Church of England That c. And again in one of his Epistles f Apologi● Eccl. Anglicanae Accessimus verò ad illam Ecclesiam in quâ omnia castè reverenter quantum nos assequ● pot●imus proximè ad priscorum temporum rationem §. 118. Inde enim putavimus restaurationem petend●m esse unde prima Religionis initia ducta essent §. 150. He takes occasion from this Canon of the Church to say He wonders any should deny In England they attribute more to the ancient Church than they do in France The form also of profession in the admission of Professors in Divinity in the University because it doth very fully express the sense of the Church of England I repeat the tenour thereof I from my heart do embrace and receive all the Holy Canonical Scripture in the Old and New Testament comprehended and all those things which the true Church of Christ Holy and Apostolick subject to the word of God and governed by the same doth reject I reject whatsoever it holds I hold Concerning the Church of England in this matter hear we what the Learned Casaubon hath declared in an Epistle to Heinsius g Ep. Ecclesiasticae p. 345. This saith he is my judgment Whereas there will and can be but one true Church we are not hastily to recede from those Doctrines of Faith which the consent of all the ancient Catholick Church hath approved and whereas I own no other Foundation of true
fitly moderate in these disputes which not long since very much exercised Christendome as for instance when the Homilies declare Justification is not the office of man but of God only which we receive of him by his free mercy and by the only merits of his most dearly beloved Son Yet our Faith in Christ as it were saith unto us It is not I that take away your sins but it is Christ only nevertheless by Faith we embrace the promise of Gods mercy Such a Faith whereof doth follow a loving heart to obey his Commandments Justification by Faith only freely and without works is spoken to take away clearly all merit of works as being unable to deserve our justification at Gods hand and thereby doth express the weakness of man and the goodness of God Yet the true lively and Christian Faith is no dead vain or unfruitful thing but a thing of perfect vertue and of wonderful operation and working and strength bringing forth all good motions and good works therefore let us by such vertues as spring out of Faith shew our Election to be sure and stable In such and many like passages are known the excellent Wisdom and Moderation of our Church particularly as we have seen attributing unto good works no more nor no less than what is consistent with the grace of the Gospel declaring most earnestly against the Roman opinion of merit by them and yet according as K. Edward's and Q. Elizabeth's Injunctions have it doth recommend Charity and Hospitality as a true worshipping of God And albeit the Romanists have much vaunted in this particular it hath not been doubted but the Church of England since the Reformation hath as great Monuments of Charity as ever were before under Papacy in the same compass of time and place so truly doth the publick Exhortation to the Contribution of St Paul's building conclude Our adversaries of Rome may be convinced that our Piety is as generous and charitable as theirs but would not be so arrogant and presumptuous and whilst we disclaim the merit yet we most stedfastly believe the obligation and necessity of good works How far our Sectaries are deficient in this matter it shall not be our business here to enquire nor to repeat how slightly and reprochfully they have spoken against the truth in this matter It may suffice to observe from what hath been said Nothing hath more vindicated the Doctrine of the Gospel the Grace of God and merits of our Saviour and established the necessity of a good life and prepared us for a comfortable death than the doctrine of our Church rightly understood wherein she hath delivered her self from all those fond opinions on which the Church of Rome and other have founded their peculiar Doctrines which have disquieted and confounded so many Christians and disturbed the Church Insomuch that some who have been otherwise much addicted to their own suppositions yet in many matters of controversy have readily acknowledged the Moderation of our Church The Presbyterian Brethren in their first Paper of Proposals to his Majesty say We take it for granted that there is a firm agreement between our Brethren and us in doctrinal truths of the Reformed Religion and in the substantials of divine worship Very famous saith Dr Tully through the whole World is the most prudent Moderation of the Church of England in her definitions of Faith in which surely to all she offers her self in so equal a poise that she can afford no offence to sober minds and lovers of truth nor doth she give any occasion of cavilling to slight and petulant dispositions of which in our Age there is such a swarm And Sancta Clara saith The English Confession goes on safely within this Latitude neither binding its followers to one side or other but freely leaves these matters of Controversy to Scholastic disputation § 7. As of Doctrines some are plain others mysterious and as our Church requires consent in nothing contrary to sense and reason so also she hath always contained her self from immoderate curiosity even in treating of mysteries using good caution and yet not so much as to become sceptical making good search for her own and others satisfaction as is fit and yet not too much so as to run into extreme or nice curiosity Of such mysteries as are revealed our Church hath faithfully declared those which God hath made requisite for us to know so far forth as is necessary yet such Moderation is used in the manner of declaring them that she hath prudently kept to the form of sound words in holy Scripture and the Declarations of the ancient Church not disclaiming the use of such expressions which the authority of the first Councils and the great consent of the learned have received while the words follow the thing it self delivered in Holy Scripture though in so many syllables perhaps there not set down which are not introduced into our Church to corrupt primitive simplicity but to prevent the double meaning which others have invented for other Scripture expressions and as our Church doth not intermeddle with what is above humane enquiry n First Part of the Sermon for Rogation Week It shall better suffice us in low humility to reverence the Divine Majesty which we cannot comprize than by overmuch curious searching to be over-charged with the glory so it doth not determine in those things which are as I may say below its enquiry namely in things unnecessary to be known o Quod legit Ecclesia Angl. piè credit quod non legit pari pietate non inquirit Rex Jac. ad C. Perr § 8. In giving a reason of our hope and in convincing our selves or others of the truth of matters of Faith and Christian Doctrine our Church doth not insist upon such kind of certainties as others without reason do exact The point of certainty is a nice step which is taken in the first consideration of Religion and of great consequence wherefore we cannot but observe the great Moderation and care of our Church 1. Resolving the first motive and reason of believing into the Testimony of God only submitting all rational enquiries unto the Divine Testimony when once there is assurance that the same testimony is Divine our Church doth not make nor suppose that there can be made by any humane Judgment a measure of what is incomprehensible 2. Our Church doth accept and use such rational evidences as God hath given us as the means of being assured of the certainty that the Revelations which we receive as Divine are such Because the Divine Testimony is not immediate to us nor necessary it should be so but is conveyed to the assent of the understanding by some proper and just evidence The ordinary way of knowledge allow'd us is the conviction of our judgments and reasons concerning the truth of the Proposition we assent to which conviction is made by such proper arguments as may sufficiently induce our belief now though there
compare it with other extreams The Church of Rome calls her self the Mother and Mistress of all other Churches ſ Credo agnosco Ro. Eccl. omnium Ecclesiarum Matrem Magistram Bulla Pii IV. Vid. Concil Trid. Sess 7. Can. 3. Con●il Rom. sub Greg. 7. Concil Lugd. Concil Flor. Concil Lat. sub Lion X. S●ss 2. holds her self and her Bishop the Universal Monarch Supreme over the whole Catholick Church diffusive and over all particular Churches and Bishops Infallible also in determining all Controversies in interpreting all Scriptures in whatsoever Articles he or they please to add to our Faith Hereupon he requires an absolute obedience from all without allowing any judgment of discerning instead thereof commanding an implicite Faith and which is more insolent not from private Christians only within its own district but over all other Christian Churches in the World Which our Church in the 5th Homily against wilful Rebellion calls an intolerable usurpation I shall not stay the Reader to compare t Ita in Talmude quando due Rabbini in contrarias sententias diversi abeunt neminem ob●●qui debere utru●● enim Doctrinam suam accepisse per Traditionem oral●● à monte Sinai Amborum verba etsi contradictoria verba sunt Dei viventis Buxtorf Synag Jud. c. 1. the Church of Rome with the model of Mr Hobs his City but to set out the show we may cast an eye upon the other extreme of those who because some under the name of the Church Catholick assume so unmeasurably to themselves therefore affrighted thereat have seem'd to run out of their wits into another excess and in the place of the Church and its true authority have set up their own private Images diversly by them called whereby they have only chang'd the Idol u Idolum fori in Idolum specus Verulamius like some that pull'd down the Crosses and then set up other inventions of their own every jot as unreasonable The Romanists saith Bishop Sanderson x De oblig Consc Prael 4. §. 25. while they use all endeavour that nothing be lost of the authority of their Church they allow little to reason On the other hand the Socinians rejecting all authority of the Church they measure Faith only by reason there is one error to both though it deceives under various shapes either Rock will be avoided if authority with reason and reason with authority be discreetly join'd Among the intemperate Assertors of humane reason some have supposed There are no mysteries in Religion but such as their humane reason adaequately comprehends and have declared That submitting our judgment to authority or any thing else whatsoever gives universality and perpetuity to every error in a late Tract of Humane Reason p. 4. That they are most guilty of Schism who will not allow difference of opinions p. 37. These Diseases of the Soul errors are not so deadly as the Physicians of the Soul make them for the exalting of their own reputation That under various errors all may retain the same entire Conscience and Obedience toward God p. 19. p. 39. That all opinions may be lawfully held and maintained How well in our Church all these Rocks and Gulss on either hand are avoided by that accurate Moderation by which she governs us in this Chapter and divers other places of this Treatise will appear As for the Romanists that we may with one Shovel cast away that heap of Controversy let me here only repeat what from the Church of England they have often heard Let the Romanists bring their Books and shew us one lawful proof where there is appointed any such Infallible Judge or Interpreter and that from some stronger Authority than that of Pasce Oves y Mirabile est quot officia quot dignitates quot potestates unic● illo Pasce contineantur Spalatensis l. 7. otherwise we shall presume that our Blessed Saviour knew better than they how to procure the Peace of his Church and the Salvation of Mankind Wherefore the Church of England owns no such living Oracles upon Earth as the Church of Rome pretends to our Church hath no publick Conscience nor publick Faith nor publick Merits of her own which she makes shew of to invite to her Communion much lefs to set to sale for Worldly lucre sake She saith with the Apostle z 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 6. 4 5. Qui noll●t cúm debet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do●ec 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inv●●t●● it id à D●o justè impetret ut eum tradat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. In s●n●●m m●●temque quae nec probet Deum neque approbetur à D●o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Rom. 1. 28. Let every one prove his own work and then he shall have rejoicing in himself alone and not in another for every man shall bear his own burden According to this Apostolical Equity and Moderation our Church doth no where go about to take from those of her Communion that fundamental right of Christianity as well as of humane nature to discern and examine what they must know and what they must assent to in a matter of such great and intimate concern as is our Religion especially since the sober use of our reasons and judgments is most agreeable to the nature of Mankind and the very frame of our Religion doth admit and invite such a search which the more it is made the more reasons are discovered to convince our minds of its truth a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Origen l. 1. Yea the very Laws of our Religion do require such a voluntary and reasonable service as is the effect of right judgment as well as of conformable wills and affections And the more we improve our powers by their use and exercise and our inward senses to discern and compare the Truths of God one with another and the clear consequences which may be drawn from them the more we may advance our Faith and Knowledge and spiritual Comfort b Oportet in e● re maximè in quâ vitae ratio ver●atur sibi quemque considere suoque judicio propriis sensibus uti ad investigan●um veritatem quàm credentem aliis erroribus decipi tanquam rationis expertem Quare cùm sapere id est veritatem quaerere omnibus sit i●natum sapientiam sibi adimunt qui sine ullo judicio inventa probant majorum pecudum more ducuntur Lactantius l. 4. c. 8. For indeed nothing hath more obstructed a great and laudable progress of all sorts of knowledge in the Christian World than some mean and servile abdications which some men of great understandings have made of their own judgments For as in the Church there are grievous inconveniencies by renouncing the due government of the Church so on the other extream no where have errors grown more thick and tough than where men have suffered themselves in all things to understand by Proxy such are in ready
enough to the Majesty and Prerogative of any King Suitable also to the moderate Elevation of our Clime * Nulli violabilis astro Servat temperiem regio non uritur aestu Non reditura timet glaciali Sidera brumae foelicior omni Terra solo non altera credam Arva Beatorum H. Gro. ad Reg. Brit. Silv. l. 2. upon which account many have reckoned England amongst the most fortunate Islands a true Garden of delight Our lot is fallen in a fair ground yea we have a goodly heritage The Zone here for Ecclesiastical affairs being very temperate as Sir William Boswell's expression was to the Learned Mede We saith Bishop Bramhall live in the most temperate part of the temperate Zone and enjoy a Government as temperate as the Climate it self we cannot complain of too much or too little Sun where the beams of Soveraignty are neither too perpendicular to scorch us nor yet too oblique but that they may warm us * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In Evagrio l. 3. c. 14. de Alexandriâ The Moderation of this Church is fitted also to promote that Good nature which is noted to have such a peculiar sense in the English which other Languages do as incompletely express as many of their models do her frame And which is above all this temper is most suitable to our Christianity which is not only the best but the Dean of Canterbury Nov. 5. 78. best natured institution in the World which the Moderation of our Church doth properly cherish and appears to be a most noble effect of the mild Oeconomy of the Gospel in the quiet and peace of whose general reformation of the World Blessed be God the particular reformation of the Church among us was very much alike when a singular spirit of Moderation descended upon our Church like the gentle dew upon the Fleece of Gideon or as the bountiful gifts came down from Heaven accompanied with the sensible appearances of cloven tongues in an innocent and lambent flame on the heads of the Apostles and did them no harm with such harmless Peace and Moderation was the Reformation and Restauration of our Church brought about But alas since the very mildness and gentleness of our Lord Christ by which S. Paul so affectionately entreats the Corinthians 2 Cor. 10. 1. too ineffectually prevails on the Christian World Notwithstanding no kind of temper hath such proper charms for the very nature of mankind no wonder if that Moderation which is the proper glory of the Church of England cannot perswade either the Romanists or Enthusiasts to be sensible of that wisdom and law of kindness which attempers all the Commands and Constitutions of our Church wherefore I know no method which can more usefully and compendiously demonstrate the true merit of our Churches praise than by her Moderation in which all vertues as it were by one act of comprehension are already contained And if none hitherto have on set purpose undertaken to display the same at large the true reason might be there are so many Vertues in our Churches Constitution no wonder if none have applied their labours unto every one of them in particular It is this Moderation of our Church which renders her so like the Primitive and Apostolical pattern and makes her have so much sympathy with the true Catholick Church of Christ Unto the judgment of which Church Universal as our Church of England submits her self and would at any time as King James used to declare refer her self to a free and general Council if it could be had Which is a worthy instance of her real Moderation So and for the same reason do I here most readily and heartily submit whatsoever I have said or writ to the Judgment of the Church of England and if in the variety of matter before me any thing contrary to or diverse from the truth she asserts hath escaped me I solemnly retract the same T. P. VErùm apud Sapientes atque in famosâ nobilique Ecclesiâ cujus specialitèr filius sum Quae dixi absque praejudicio sanè dicta sunt saniùs sapientis Hujus praesertim Ecclesiae authoritari atque examini totum hoc sicut caetera quae ejusmodi sunt universa reservo Ipsius si quid alitèr sapio paratus judicio emendare S. Bernard Ep. 174. Ad Canon Lugdun Imprimatur Ex Aedib Lambeth Apr. 28. 1679. Geo. Thorp Rmo in Christo Patri D no D no Gulielmo Archiep. Cant. à Sacris Domesticis THE CONTENTS Chap. I. OF Moderation in general § 1. The loud demands of late among us for Moderation taken notice of § 2. The specious pretences of several Factions thereunto exposed § 3. The general meaning of Moderation noted § 4. The use of the Greek word for Moderation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is borrowed from the Law explained § 5. The forensick notion of Moderation applied to Moderation in Religion § 6. What is justly expected of those who causlesly blame our Church with want of Moderation § 7. Moderation considered not only as a vertue of publick but of private persons both toward their Governours first and also toward one another § 8. Some general rules or measures according to natural Justice and Christianity whereby we may judge of the Moderation of the Church with the design of this Treatise declared p. 1 Chap. II. Of the false notions of Moderation which many have taken up § 1. How it comes to pass that the name of Moderation is so seldom apply'd to what it ought to be § 2. The sense of that Text inquired into Phil. 4. 5. Let your Moderation be known unto all § 3. Those words of the Apostle purposely are directed to the suffering sort of Christians § 4. Some false notions and evil meaning of the word Moderation briefly animadverted on and overthrown p. 22 Chap. III. Of Moderation with respect to the Church of England § 1. What is to be understood by the Church of England § 2. The Moderation of our Church frequently confessed by her Adversaries sometime truly sometime upon design but most often our Church is reproached and opposed for her Moderation by each sort of Adversaries § 3. From the joint opposition made against our Church by her Adversaries on either hand is taken the chief inartificial proof of her Moderation p. 33 Chap. IV. Of the Moderation of our Church in respect to her Rule of Faith § 1. In holding to her true and just measure as is proved from her Articles and Canons and other Monuments of the Church § 2. In her avoiding the extremes of those who take away from the due perfection of Holy Scripture and of others who seem officiously to add thereunto § 3. In her judgment of the letter and sense of Scripture and in the use of such consequences as are duly drawn from thence § 4. In reference to the Versions and Translations of Holy Scripture several instances of Moderation in our Church §
5. In her Orders also for dispensing the Holy Scripture to all within her Communion § 6. In governing the reading of the Scripture and communing on the same § 7. In her judgment of the Canonical and Apocryphal Books § 8. The Divine Authority of the Holy Scripture our Church rather doth take for granted than prove too laboriously or uncertainly § 9. All immoderate extravagancies concerning interpretation of Holy Scripture avoided by our Church p. 48 Chap. V. Of the Moderation of the Church in applying the Rule of Faith to it self § 1. Avoiding extremes on either hand in relation to the authority of the Vniversal Church § 2. The Decrees of Councils § 3. The Testimony of the Fathers § 4. Other Traditions § 5. Our Churches own Testimony § 6. The use of Reason § 7. The Testimony of the Spirit § 8. Of the testimony and operation of the Holy Spirit the judgment of our Church according to great Moderation more largely declared p. 77 Chap. VI. The Moderation of the Church in its judgment of Doctrines § 1. Our Church doth wisely distinguish between what is necessary for Salvation and what is not § 2. Her Articles are few § 3. Which are generally exhibited not as Articles of Faith but consent Concerning subscription § 4. Our Articles are propounded so as to avoid unnecessary controversy § 5. The wise Moderation of the Kings of England in their Injunctions to Preachers and Orders taken to preserve Truth Vnity and Charity § 6. The Controversies of the late Age are well moderated by the determinations of our Church § 7. As our Church requires our consent in nothing contrary to sense or reason so it hath also contain'd it self from immoderate curiosity in treating of venerable mysteries § 8. Our Church doth not insist upon such kinds of certainty as others without just cause do exact § 9. Doctrines are so propounded to those in our Churches Communion as not to render useless their own reasons and judgments The reasonableness of which is proved and the Objections answered § 10. The use which we are all allowed of our private judgments is requir'd to be menag'd with a due submission to the Church The duty of which submission is laid down in sundry Propositions p. 114 Chap. VII Of the Moderation of our Church in what relates to the worship of God § 1. Our Prayers are not mingled with controversy § 2. They are framed according to a most grave and serious manner with moderate variety and proper length § 3. In the zeal of Reformation our Church did not cast off what was good in it self § 4. In all our Churches there are the same Rules § 5. Common Prayers for the vulgar required in English To Ministers and Scholars a just and moderate liberty allowed § 6. The obligation of the Church leaves the method of private Devotions to a general liberty § 7. Of the Moderation of the Church in appointing her hours and times of Prayer § 8. In her use and judgment of Sermons § 9. In what is required of people with reference to their Parish Church § 10. The excellent Moderation of the Church in her Orders for the reverent reading of Divine Service and Consecrating the Sacraments in such a voice as may be heard § 11. In her Form and use of Catechizing § 12. The interest of inward and outward worship are both secured according to an excellent Moderation in our Church § 13. The Moderation of the Church in what relates to Oaths p. 166 Chap. VIII Of the Moderation of the Church in relation to Ceremonies § 1. In the Ceremonies of our Church which are very few and those of great antiquity simplicity clear signification and use our Church avoids either sort of superstition § 2. They have constantly been declared to be in themselves indifferent and alterable but in that our Church avoids variableness is a further proof of its Moderation § 3. They are professed by the Church to be no part of Religion much less the chief nor to have any supernatural effect belonging to them § 4. Abundant care is taken to give plain and frequent reasons and interpretations of what in this nature is enjoined to prevent mistakes § 5. The Moderation of our Church even in point of Ceremonies compar'd with those who have raised so great a dust in this Controversy § 6. Many innocent Rites and usages our Church never went about to introduce and why § 7. The Obligation of our Church in this matter is very mild § 8. The Moderation of our Church in her appointment of Vestments § 9. The Benedictions of our Church are according to great Piety and Wisdom ordered § 10. The Moderation of our Church in her appointments of Gestures § 11. Of the respect which is held due to places and things distinguished to Gods Service our Church judgeth and practiseth according to an excellent Moderation p. 201 Chap. IX Of the Moderation of our Church with respect to Holy-Days namely both the Feasts and Fasts of the Church § 1. The Feasts of the Church are few and those for great reason chose with care to avoid the excesses of the Romanists § 2. The further behaviour of the Church in her Feasts most useful and prudent § 3. We celebrate the memory of Saints but of none whose existence or sanctity is uncertain § 4. The excellent ends of our Churches honour to Saints are set down § 5. That they are Festivally Commemorated not out of opinion of worship or merit or absolute necessity thereof to Religion § 6. Our Church runs not into any excess in any Prayer to Saints § 7. Nor with reference to Images § 8. Whether our Church in any of these practices be justly charged of Popery by those who Canonize among themselves those who are of uncertain sanctity § 9. The Moderation of our Church in its honour given to Angels § 10. And to the Blessed Virgin § 11. Our Church hath taken great care that a special honour be had to the Lords Day and that the Lords Day nor any other Festival be abused to Luxury and Impiety § 12. The Moderation of the Church with reference to its Musick and Psalmody § 13. The Moderation of our appointed Fast The Lenten or Paschal Fast how far Religious by the Precept of the Church p. 234 Chap. X. Of the Moderation of the Church in reference to the Holy Sacraments § 1. The Moderation of our Church raiseth no strife about words relating thereunto § 2. Her Moderation in what is asserted of the number of Sacraments § 3. In that her Orders for the Administration of the Sacraments are most suitable to the ends of their appointments § 4. In that our Church doth not make the benefit of the Sacraments to depend upon unrequired conditions In reference to Holy Baptism § 1. Our Church doth make nothing of the essence of Baptism but the use of the invariable Form § 2. The Moderation of our Church toward Infants unbaptized
against unsufferable Abuses well consisting with her Moderation and Charity § 3. Our Church leaveth other Churches to the use of their liberty and vindicateth that use mutually § 4. Her especial Moderation and Charity toward the Greek Church § 5. Our Church's Modesty and well-becoming Behaviour toward other Churches and their mutual affection unto Ours p. 411 Chap. XVI Of the Moderation of the Church of England in her Reformation § 1. The Reformation of our Church as it had just grounds and was by just Authority so it was managed with due Moderation the Idea of our Reformation having been impartial § 2. The whole manner of it so far as concerned our Church was with great temper § 3. She separated from the Romish Errors not from their Persons any more than needs must § 4. Our Charity exceeds that of the Church of Rome which denies Salvation to all who are not of her Communion § 5. The Preparation of our Church to submit to the Church Vniversal saves us from Schism § 6. The Reformation of our Church was the more Christian because not fierce but well governed § 7. Albeit the Moderation of our Church seems to have enraged her Adversaries yet because of this Moderation our Church is the better prepared to survive Persecution § 8. The Moderation of our Church in her Reformation was founded on Rules of absolute Justice as in sundry great Instances is made to appear p. 423 Chap. XVII Of the Moderation of our Church in avoiding all undue Compliances with Popery and other sorts of Fanaticism among us § 1. Notwithstanding our Reformation is the most of any opposite to Popery how it hath been the craft of the Roman Agents to raise of it such a suspicion of Popery as hath been artificially made a very unhappy Instrument of the Divisions which are from our Church § 2. How the great Labours of our Bishops and our Clergy remaining the most impregnable defence of the Reformation hath stir'd up the more earnest opposition of the Church of Rome to our Church § 3. The vain and ungrateful jealousies of our Separatists and Enthusiasts are the more unjust because they have appeared really acted by that Interest not in intention but in event § 4. Therefore it is a most seasonable work at this time to cast open those M●squcrades § 5. Some Moderate Cautions here inserted to prevent any unkind Mistakes § 6. Some Objections to such an undertaking here answered § 7. That our Separatists and Enthusiasts generally more or less do conspire in fact albeit not in intent with the Romanists instanced as a Specimen in twenty Particulars § 8. Particularly how the Quakers are one with the Papists how ignorantly soever in sundry Instances § 9. By what steps and degrees these Progresses commonly are made toward Popery by such as separ●te from Communion with our Church § 10. What hath been said confirmed by other rational Proofs § 11. Some further Reasons why the Clergy and faithful Sons of our Church cannot be thought thus concerned in so much as an Eventual Conspiracy § 12. An easy Divination of the Consequences of these things if a due sense of these Matters be rejected when so fairly and often recommended to the common notice of all with a sincere and affectionate close to such as this Address most doth concern p. 455 Chap. XVIII Of the Moderation of our Church as it may influence Christian Practice and especially our Union § 1. Some proper Inferences from what hath been insisted on at large § 2. Sundry general Rules agreeable to Reason and Christianity by which the Moderation of private Persons may be measured and directed particularly of our Dissenting Brethren § 3. Some proper means to reduce Dissenters into Vnion with the Church with all Moderation proposed § 4. The hearty Profession of the moderate and sincere purposes of the Writer § 5. One or two Caveats entred to prevent mistake and for the Caution of such as will attempt to disprove the main Proposition here designed to be evinced § 6. Some good Wishes to the Adversaries of our Church on both sides such as a fit to conclude a Treatise of the Moderation of our Church p. 507 ERRATA Vitiis nemo sine nascitur optimus ille Qui minimis urgetur Horat. PAge 5. marg r. importabile p. 55. l. 10. for r. p. 128. marg r. Fur p. 294. marg r. quam p. 306. r. carybdin p. 311. r. sacerdotali p. 315. r. apud p. 324. marg r. exprimo p. 325. marg r. Milev and exeq p. 328. l. 22. dele those l. 24. dele were p. 346. l. 8. r. Counsels p. 378. l. 27. r. oppress p. 385. l. 20. r. refuting p. 387. l. 26. r. rightly p. 485. l. 8. r. austerity p. 495. l. 1. r. Pucklington p. 533. l. 16. r. laught THE MODERATION OF THE Church of England CHAP. I Of Moderation in general § 1. The loud demands of late among us for Moderation taken notice of § 2. The specious pretences of several Factions thereunto exposed § 3. The general meaning of Moderation noted § 4. The use of the Greek word for Moderation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is borrowed from the Law explained § 5. The forensic notion of Moderation applied to Moderation in Religion § 6. What is justly expected of those who causlesly blame our Church with want of Moderation § 7. Moderation considered not only as a vertue of publick but of private persons both toward their Governours first and also toward one another § 8. Some general rules or measures according to natural Justice and Christianity whereby we may judge of the Moderation of the Church with the design of this Treatise declared § 1. WE have of late with both Ears heard the loud demands made for Moderation among us even since the Restitution of our Church to its own admirable and equal temper even since the unspeakable Clemency of our most Gracious King and the extraordinary indulgence of the Laws have really anticipated so much Moderation as reasonably might have dampt some of those vehement out-cries which seem still to offer violence to our senses as well as to the peace of the Kingdom and the Church But that the sound might come more awful to religious Ears on both sides the cry hath been set up in the words of Holy Scripture Let your Moderation be known unto all the Lord is at hand Phil. 4. 5. Moderation therefore being the word in fashion by which all divided parties among us use to sanctify their appeals and make their pretences seem virtuous It is first to be wisht that real Truth and Goodness which are the genuine effects of true Moderation were as common as the noise of either § 2. All agree that Moderation is an excellent vertue as they said of Hercules Who ever dispraised him hence the several Factions make such specious pretences thereunto The sanctimonious Pharisees affected the appearance of mighty moderate Men they could in the very
copulata S. Cypr l. 4. Ep. 9. Hierom and others of the Fathers fitly call the Church a Company united to their Pastor For the Administration of the power of the Church cannot belong to the body of this Society considered complexly but to those Officers in it whose care and charge is to have a peculiar over-sight and inspection over the Church and to redress the disorders in it Wherefore the Church is not improperly exprest by the Clergy which may be justly counted the Church representative that as S. Cyprian saith Every act of the Church may be governed by its Rulers g Vt omnis actus Ecclesie per praepositos suos gubern●tur S. Cypr. Ep. 27. For when we speak of the Church making Laws we must mean the governing part of the Church * Du● dub l. 3. ch 4. p. 589. In the form of Church Policy presented to the Parliament in Scotland 1578. by Andrew Melvill h V. Spots Hist l. 6. p. 289. it was agreed That sometime the Church was taken for them that exercise the spiritual Function in particular Congregations More certain it is that the Form of Christs Church is that outward disposition and order of superiour and inferiour communicating mutually to the conservation of the whole body and the edification and encrease of every member thereof Eph. 4. 15 16. Col. 2. 19. And in those things which concern the outward form and manner of Government in a National Church where the King is supreme in all Causes and over all Persons many matters necessarily and properly belong to the disposition of the supreme Power the people exhibiting their consent by the King upon these and the like good Foundations The third Canon declares the Church of England a true and Apostolical Church and the ninth Canon declares the same the Communion of Saints as it is approved by the Apostles Rules in the Church of England upon which account the Authors of Schisms in the same Canon are censured and the 139th Canon of the Church concerning the Authority of National Synods doth thus declare Whosoever shall affirm that the sacred Synod of this Nation in the name of Christ and by the Kings Authority assembled is not the true Church of England by Representation Let him be Excommunicated and not restored till he repent and publickly revoke that wicked Error § 2. Having now explained what is meant by Moderation and what by the Church of England we may more intelligibly proceed in justifying the Moderation of the Church of England of which some inartificial proofs may be premised The first of which may be the Confession and acknowledgments of our Adversaries on both sides Yea if the scattered Concessions which have been made by our Adversaries at sundry times and upon divers occasions should be gathered together in a bundle there is scarce any judgment or practice or constitution of our Church but hath been acknowledged sometime by some or others of them as reasonable and moderate Yea there is scarce any extravagance among themselves but hath been also confest and decryed by several of their own Communion so great is the force of truth upon the minds of men at some times when they are in a free humour to disclose themselves and it might make a very pleasant and useful Collection to have these well gathered and set together particularly they have in their lucid intervals acknowledged the Moderation of our Church sometime as really convinced thereof Notwithstanding saith one who left our Communion De Cressy 's Exomolog c. 9. the English Church hath been more moderate and wary than publickly to pretend to such a private spirit and by consequence hath left a latitude and liberty for them in her Communion to renounce it as many of the most Learned among them have done Another of them speaks thus of the Church of England k Conference between a Prot. and a Papist 1673. p. 6 7 8. I believe her Moderation hath preserved what may one day yet much help to close the breach betwixt us We observe that she and peradventure she alone has preserved the face of a continued mission and uninterrupted Ordination Then in Doctrines her Moderation is great In those of greatest concern hath exprest her self very warily In Discipline she preserves the Government by Bishops but above all we prize her aversion from Fanaticism and that wild error of the private spirit with which it is impossible to deal from this obsurdity the Church of England desires to keep her self free She holds indeed that Scripture is the Rule of controversy but she holds withal That it is not of private interpretation for she is for Vincentius his method But I see that moderate counsels have been discountenanced on both sides Others of the same denomination have appeared to acknowledge the Moderation of our Church but it is manifest they have done it upon design using that acknowledgment only as an Art either to Proselyte some uncertain ones of our Communion or else to divide us thinking by their publick owning our Moderation thereby to render us more odious to those of another immoderate extreme Yet the generality of both extreme adversaries join together in reproaching us for this Moderation and by their immoderateness in so doing do also justify the Moderation of our Church Thus do the great Bigots of the Church of Rome and the rigid Disciplinarians and other Novellists in their zeal count all merciful Moderation lukewarmness l 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Med. 12. Wherefore these apply to us what the Spirit said to the Angel of the Church of Laodicea m Vid. Mr. Henderson 's 1. 2d. Paper Collegium Laodicensium est senatus Moderatorum hominum Brightman in Apocal. c. 3. p. 105. Antitypum est nostra nimirum Anglicana ibid. p. 101. Rev. 3. 16. Because thou art lukewarm and neither hot nor cold I will spue thee out of my mouth reproaching commonly our Moderation by the name of neutrality and want of zeal n Cesset igitur Anglia Medietatem suam quae mera neutralitas est sub titulo prudentiae moderationis palliare poti●● serve resipi●ce Parker de Eccl. Pol. l. 1. c. 25. and when some temperate interpretations have been offered the Romanists o Scio enim ejusmodi Modificationes ubi aliquid temperatum offerebatur nihil aliud esse quàm Satanae dolos c. Ep. c. Bellarm ad Archipresb Anglic. they have received them with invidious reflexions lest any of their Company should be won over to us by the Moderation of our Church In the mean while none persue the Church of England upon this account so much as the rigid and severe of either extreme the hot heads among the Romanists with their Anathema's and the other Zelots with their Curse ye Meroz Whereas the learned men of other reformed Churches have not only observed frequently and admired the Moderation of our Constitution as Dr Durel in his View of the Reformed
Churches hath plentifully instanced but so far forth as they judge the same Moderation found among themselves they seem to mention it with a great joy p Retinemus ex singulis regiminibus exquisitam temperaturam J. A. Comenius de Ord. Eccl. apud Bohem. and count the same worthy of imitation q Atque hîc Commemorare libet ad Exemplum quantâ sapientiâ quantoque temperamento compositae fuerint precationum formulae quibus Gall. Genev. utuntur Amyrald de secess ab Eccl. Rom. p. 225. § 3. Wherefore the most general and inartificial but most plain proof of the Moderation of our Church such a proof as is sufficient to evince the whole enquiry is the consideration of the condition of our Church among her Adversaries that is as the 7. Canon 1640. hath it between the groundless suspicions of the weak and the aspersions of the malicious r Pref. to the Liturgy conc Cerem between those addicted to their old Customs and the new-fangled who would innovate all things the Church of England hath been a patient sufferer And as the true Religion hath always been tryed by real persecution of its extreme Adversaries and thereby hath become more approved and more glorious so by the wonderful Providence of God this temper and Constitution of the Church of England hath had its Essayes in two very refining Tryals 1. Immediately after the Reformation in its persecution from those of the Romish Communion and lately in its second Tryal from other Domestick Adversaries from both which sufficient proofs the Moderation of our Church may be known unto all 'T is a hard condition The Church of England professeth the ancient Catholick Faith and yet the Romanist condemns her of Novelty in her Doctrine She practiseth Church Government as it hath been in use in all Ages and places where the Church of Christ hath taken any rooting both in and ever since the Apostles times and yet the Separatist condemns her for Anti-Christianism in her Discipline The plain truth is she is betwixt these two Factions as between two Milstones And it is very remarkable that while both these press hard upon the Church of England both of them cry out upon Persecution t Arch-Bishop Laud against Fisher Pref. among whom she is placed as an humble representation of her Blessed Saviour for as he was Crucified amidst Criminals so the Church of England hath most constantly suffered betwixt such Factions and Sects of Men as have run into the utmost extremes from the judgment and practices of the Universal Church of Christ such are the Romanists and other Sectaries and Schismaticks amongst us Thus Manasseh vexed Ephraim and Ephraim Manasseh and both against Judah Is 9. 21. Thus Herod and Pontius Pilate otherwise at variance became Friends to be but the worse Enemies to our Saviour thus both the Jews and Gentiles opposed the Christian Religion and afterward the later Jews and the Circumcellions joined against the Catholick Christians and since Judaism and Gentilism have been overcome by the light of the Gospel the corruption of the Christian Religion hath arisen from its own Professors which is the corruption of Christianity into Popery and other Sects amongst us for what is best in it self is worst when corrupted and as the Christian Religion is the perfection of other Philosophies so these corruptions of Christianity have in them much of the very dregs of Judaism and the worst imitation of Gentilism And now how earnestly do the several Factions from Rome and the whole gang of Sects among us oppose our Church whose wise Moderation and excellent Constitution do place her amidst such extremes Between the Ignes fatui pretenders to new lights on one hand and the Boutfeaus the male-contented Incendiaries on the other hand Between both these we must be served as the Guests of Procrustes t 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plutarch in Theseo were in his famous Bed the Romanists think us too short and deficient in most of our measures and therefore they would needs have us stretcht if not upon the rack the Sectaries count us redundant in many superfluities and would fain have us cut precisely according to their Models so their mutual testimony rightly applyed may thus far be accepted that indeed we are guilty of neither extreme but really do bear the Test to be in the golden Mean To this purpose the Excellent Hammond begins his Preface to his View of the Directory There is no surer evidence and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by which to discern the great excellency of Moderation in that Book of the Liturgy of the Church of England and so the apportionateness of it to the end to which it was designed than the experience of these so contrary fates which it hath constantly undergone betwixt the Persecutors on both extreme parts the Assertors of the Papacy on the one side and the Consistory on the other The one accusing it of Schism the other of compliance The one of departure from the Church of Rome the other of remaining with it Like the poor Greek Church our Fellow Martyr devoured by the Turk for too much Christian Profession and damn'd by the Pope for too little It being the dictate of natural reason in Aristotle That the middle vertue is most infallibly known by this that it is accused by either extreme as guilty of the other For as S. Greg. Nazianzen in his third Oration of Peace u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Whatsoever is peaceable and moderate doth suffer much of both the extremes and either is despised or resisted of which sort while we are now who blame what is amiss we therefore are placed as in a seat of strife and envy and no wonder if we are bruised in pieces between both Neither is there any more certain Argument of the equal and just Constitution of the Church of England than that the Factions among us are so ready to join with the Romanists in the very same accusations It follows now that we give more particular instances of the real Moderation of the Church CHAP. IV. Of the Moderation of our Church in respect to her Rule of Faith § 1. In holding to her true and just measure as is proved from her Articles and Canons and other Monuments of the Church § 2. In her avoiding the extremes of those who take away from the due perfection of Holy Scripture and of others who seem officiously to add thereunto § 3. In her judgment of the letter and sense of Scripture and in the use of such consequences as are duly drawn from thence § 4. In reference to the Versions and Translations of Holy Scripture several instances of Moderation in our Church § 5. In her Orders also for dispensing the Holy Scripture to all within her Communion § 6. In governing the reading of the Scripture and communing on the same § 7. In her judgment of the Canonical and Apocryphal Books § 8. The Divine Authority
of the Holy Scripture our Church rather doth take for granted than prove too laboriously or uncertainly § 9. All immoderate extravagancies concerning interpretation of Holy Scripture avoided by our Church § 1. WHereas Moderation hath its name and being from the equal measures observed by it the first instance of the Moderation of our Church is most properly to be taken from the right rule and measure in Religion which this Church of ours constantly receives and holds close to by which she is safely preserved from all undue extremes having to her self the same rule and measure of her Moderation which the universal Church of Christ in all Ages hath had such a rule as is beyond all exception and is of undeniable Authority namely the Holy Scriptures which are the same right and just measure by which she measures out to others and desires to be measured by her self in whatever she receives and delivers out as matter of Faith and required practice in the necessary parts of Religion and the worship of God Whereas next to the extreme of them who have no Religion nor no Rule the vanity and extravagance of those is very notorious who set up themselves to be their own Rule which is done in the pretences of infallibility on one hand and enthusiasm on the other between that Rock and this Gulf the Moderation of our Church doth safely conduct its own judgment and practice and all that follow her In the Sixth Article of Religion see how our Church doth own the perfection of Holy Scripture as a Rule Holy Scripture containeth all things necessary to Salvation so that whatsoever is not read therein nor may be proved thereby is not required of any man that it should be believed as an Article of Faith or be thought requisite or necessary to salvation and the reason why the Church of England doth require her self to be acknowledged of her own a Canon 3. 1603. as a true and Apostolical Church is because she teacheth and maintains the Doctrine of the Apostles and in the fourth Canon the Church censures all Impugners of the worship of God and whosoever shall affirm her Form containeth any thing in it repugnant to the Scriptures In the 36. Canon Article 2. All who are to subscribe are willingly and ex animo to affirm That the Book of Common-Prayer and of ordering Bishops Priests and Deacons containeth in it nothing contrary to the word of God and Article 3. That he acknowledgeth all and every of the 39. Articles to be agreeable to the word of God In the 19th Article of Religion The visible Church of Christ is defined a Congregation of faithful men in the which the pure word of God is Preached and the Sacraments be duly administred according to Christs Ordinance And in the ordering of Bishops and Priests it is asked Be you perswaded that the Holy Scriptures contain sufficiently all Doctrine required of necessity for eternal Salvation through Faith in Jesu Christ And are you determined with the said Scriptures to instruct the people committed to your Charge and to teach nothing as required of necessity to eternal Salvation but that you shall be perswaded may be concluded and proved by the Scriptures The Answer is I am so perswaded and have so determined by Gods grace In the 20th Article of Religion it is declared It is not lawful for the Church to ordain any thing contrary to Gods word written neither to expound one place that it be repugnant to another From all which passages and many more which might be repeated out of the Monuments of our Church it is evident that as our Church is formed in her whole Constitution with an uniform respect to this Rule and hath framed her Articles Liturgy Homilies and Orders thereby so it doth require her self to be acknowledged in those but in subordination to this Rule and measure as before and superiour to it self which doth manifest the exceptions of many of the Separation to be very unreasonable who seem to give such deference to the Holy Scriptures and at the same time renounce Communion with the Church of England which doth so religiously hold to the Sacred Scriptures of which our Church in union with the whole Church of God is a sure Keeper a faithful Witness a zealous Defender and a most sober Interpreter § 2. The Moderation of the Church of England further appears in avoiding the extremes of those who take away from the true perfection of Scripture and of others who seem officiously to add thereunto Of the first sort of those who detract from the true perfection of Scripture are they who frame an additional Canon of their own as the Church of Rome doth who declares that the Apocryphal Writings and Traditions of men are nothing inferiour nor less Canonical than the Sovereign dictates of God as well for the Confirmation of doctrinal points pertaining to Faith as for ordering of Life and Manners and that both the one and the other ought to be embraced with the same affection of Piety and received with the like religious Reverence b Concil Trid. Sess 4. Decr. 1. not making any difference between them Thus as it is in the second part of the Homily of good works Christ reproved the Laws and Traditions of the Scribes and Pharisees because they were set up so high as though they had been equal with Gods Laws and above them They worship Me in vain that teach for Doctrines the Commandments of men For you leave the Commandments of God to keep your own Traditions Yet He meant not thereby to overthrow Mens Commandments for He Himself was obedient to the Princes and their Laws made for good order On the other extreme They of the Separation among us are busy to attribute to the Holy Scriptures such a perfection as God never intended them namely particularly to determine of all actions of Mankind and every matter of order and decency in Religion Between these two see by how even a thred our Church divides the controversy first asserting the real perfection of Scriptures as a Rule to be as much as need to be to be as great a perfection as God hath given it in order to its end namely to guide our belief and practice in things needful to Salvation Article 20. Besides the same namely Gods word written ought not the Church to enforce any thing to be believed for necessity of salvation and in the same Article It is not lawful for the Church to ordain any thing contrary to Gods word written Yet the Article begins thus The Church hath power to Decree Rites and Ceremonies and hath Authority in controversies of Faith Wherein according to an accurate Moderation the Church doth behave itself in attributing to the Holy Scriptures their just and full perfection On the other hand our Church doth thankfully accept of that Christian Liberty which God hath left her and indeed which he hath given all particular Christians according to their
employed in defending and illustrating the Holy Scriptures in the admirable Edition of their Originals and their most famous and approved Versions Although our Sacred Polyglot Bible hath no more escaped its Prohibition at Rome q Indice librorum probibitorum Alexandri 7. Pontif. Max. jussu edito Biblia Briani Waltoni Angli cui Titulus c. than it did the feeble assaults of some others here at home 2. Whereas the Church of Rome will not allow Translations ordinarily to be made into the vulgar tongue r Prohibentur Biblia linguà vulgari c. Monition general Reg. 5. cum Indic● libr. prohib Alex. 7. P. V. Concil Trid. Sess 22. Can. 9. unless in a particular policy to serve some extraordinary occasion as when the Doway Translation was admitted as they tell us because of the importunity of Hereticks And when such Translations are unwillingly made they are not suffer'd without particular Licence ſ Non sine jac●ltate in scriptis habita Reg. In l. Concil T●id obtained under the hand of the Bishop or Inquisitor by the advice of the Confessor which some call a Prudential dispensing of Scripture t V. Pref. to the Doway Bible Yea such Faculties of licensing sometimes in shew of Moderation are granted to the Bishops as was done by Pope Pius IV. but soon after they are recalled again very strictly which was performed by P. Clement VIII and also by P. Paul V. in a very smart Breve dated 1612. u The Translators of the Engl. Bibl. to the Reader So much are they afraid of the light of the Scripture that they will not trust the people with it no not as it is set forth by their own sworn men no not with the licence of their own Bishops and Inquisitors The Church of England from time to time hath taken a just care to have the holy Originals rendred into the common Language that all Gods people may be enriched more and more in the knowledg of God as Epiphanius tells us the ancient Church had its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Interpreters of the Divine Books and therefore the Translation of the Holy Bible in English hath by the Command of Authority had its several reviews and its Translation also into the Welch or British Language hath been ordered in the fifth year of Queen Elizabeth 3. Whereas in the Translation of the Holy Bible many have attemper'd their Versions to their own private and particular sentiments as is notoriously done in the English Translations at Doway and Rhemes and as Grotius x Inter multa quae fidei nocent hoc non est minimum quod versionem quisque attemperat ad suas sententias sua cuique Deus fit dira cupido hoc vero non est Idola sacere imò semet collocare in templo Dei Gro. Animadv ad Artic. 32. hath charged Beza and Piscator and others for inclining their Translations somewhat to their particular suppositions and opinions and as King James at the Conference at Hampton-Court noted the same of the Geneva Version The Moderation of the Church of England hath been such even beyond the care of all kind of Elective Philosophers that she appears sincerely to have espoused the Truth it self without any Dowry y Veritas sine Dote Herbert de Verit. of interest and affection to opinions The more gross was the calumny of Gregory Martin to our Translators of the Bible It is evident you regard neither Hebrew nor Greek but only your Heresy Whereas our Church hath followed no particular Versions but wisely consulted the others then extant which could come to the Translators hands as they themselves testify and enumerate in the Preface to the Bishops Bible the better to enable them to attain the true sense of the Original Not making a second hand Translation such as the Rhemish which was but a Translation of the vulgar yet avoiding also as the Translators of our Bible themselves profess On one side the scrupulosity of the Puritans who leave the old Ecclesiastical words and be take themselves to other as when they put washing for baptism and Congregation instead of Church as also on the other side we have shunned the obscurity of the Papists in their azymes tunike holocausts prepuce and a number of such like yet such is the further modesty and Moderation of our Church it doth not assume to her self to have perfected or made absolute her labour herein but owns it such as may be made more consummate upon further light and experience § 5. Between the extremes of those who on one hand keep the Holy Scriptures from the vulgar as doth the Church of Rome and on the other hand those who account the Scriptures fit only for the vulgar as many of our Sectaries who think themselves already so perfect as to be above consulting the word of God as they call it without them The Church of England according to an excellent Moderation commends unto all of her Communion even to the vulgar a diligent hearing and reading the Holy Scriptures z K. Edw. 6. Inj. 1547. Q. Eliz. Inj. 1559. as appears in sundry places of the Homilies more particularly in the first Homily which is a fruitful exhortation to the reading and knowing of Holy Scripture That man saith the Homily a Homily 1. is ashamed to be called a Lawyer Astronomer Physician Philosopher that is ignorant in the Books of Law Astronomy Physick Philosophy and how can any man then say that he professeth Christ and his Religion if he will not apply himself to read hear and know the Books of Christian Doctrine b The Collect for the second Sunday in Advent Inter Libros prohibitos non habet Ecclesia Anglicana Libros sacros à Deo profectos Rex Jacobus c Severi Homines centum circiter Bibliorum editiones prohibent proscribunt Bened. Turretinus 1619. And though the people by daily hearing of Holy Scripture read in the Church should continually more and more encrease in Christian Knowledge yet it is intended and required that especially the Clergy and Gods Ministers in the Congregation should by often reading and meditating on Gods word be stirred up to Godliness themselves and be more able to exhort others and confute the Adversaries of the Truth as we observe from the Preface concerning the service of the Church and at the beginning of the second part of the Homilies there is a particular Admonition to all Ministers Ecclesiastical That they above all others do aptly plainly and distinctly read the Holy Scriptures § 6. For the governing our reading of Holy Scriptures whereas before the Reformation the Godly and decent order of the ancient Fathers was broken d Pres of the service of the Church and neglected by planting in uncertain stories and legends so that many Books of the Bible were but begun and never read through Now the order e Preface concerning the Service of the Church for Prayer and
for reading the holy Scripture is made agreeable to the mind and purpose of the old Fathers and a great deal more profitable and commodious It is more profitable because there are left out many things whereof some are untrue some uncertain some vain and superstitious and nothing is ordained to be read but the very pure word of God the holy Scriptures or that which is agreeable to the same and that in such a language and order as is most easy and plain for the understanding both of the Readers and the hearers It is also more commodious both for the shortness thereof and for the plainness of the order and that the rules be few and easy Since the Reformation those who love not to be contain'd in any good bounds when they read the Bible chuse to do it out of all Canonical Order or generally snap upon the Chapters fortuitously or affect for their most common reading the most difficult Books and Chapters The wisdom of our Church hath provided that the Old Testament may be read out every Year once f Tale aliquid audio esse nunc in Ecclesiâ Anglicanâ in quâ Psalterium singulis mensibus al solvitur totum utrumque Testamentum unico anno continuatâ lectione percurritur Vtinam reliquae Ecclesiae reformatae c. Spala●ensis l. 7. c. 12. All the Psalms once every Month and the New Testament thrice every Year g V. The Order how the Holy Scripture is appointed to be read Yet with this Moderation some difficult and very mysterious places are excepted Yet so that the Church declares Though the rehearsal of the Genealogies and Pedigrees of the Fathers be not so much to the edification of the plain ignorant people Yet there is nothing so impertinently uttered in all the whole Book of the Bible but may serve to spiritual purpose in some respect to all such as will bestow their labours to search out the meaning h Homily of certain places of Scripture 2d Part. Thus manifest is it that our Church doth really intend edification in her Institutions and can the wit of man i B. Jer. Taylor Pref. to his Collection of Offices conceive a better temper and expedient than this of the Church of England that such Scriptures only and principally should be laid before them in daily Offices which contain in them all the mysteries of our Redemption and all the Rules of good Life That the people of the Church may not complain that the Fountains of our Salvation are stopt from them nor the Rulers of the Church that the mysteriousness of Scripture is abused And further to prevent the inconvenience of the vulgars use of Scripture there was a wholsome Injunction of Queen Elizabeth k 1559 §. 37. fit here to be mentioned That no man should talk or reason of Holy Scripture rashly or contentiously nor maintain any false doctrine or errour but shall commune on the same when occasion is given reverently humbly and in the fear of God for his comfort and better understanding For as it is in the Homily against contention Too many there be which upon Ale-benches and other places delight to set forth certain Questions not so much pertaining to edification as to Vain-glory whence they fall to chiding and contention With reference to which Injunction it was that some Bishops in their Articles of enquiry had this for a Question Whether any were known in their Diocese who profaned the Holy Scripture in Table-talk which was captiously misunderstood by many in their intemperate heats against the Bishops as if they thereby did forbid all sober Conference on any places of Holy Scripture whereas the Injunction of the Queen which ought still to have effect should reasonably interpret their enquiry which certainly was the ground thereof Besides many of those Bishops themselves when Masters of Colledges in the Universities observed and caused to be observed those Statutes which in most Colledges require reading of Scripture at Meals Ordering that Communication which is thereon to be such as in the Queens Injunction was before-mentioned § 7. Our Church according to great wisdom hath received such Books as Canonical of whose authority there was never any doubt in the Church l 39. Article 6. Scio tamen Vualdensem tenere quod declarandi approbandi Libros sacros sit in serie Patrum omnium fidelium ab Apostolis succedentium Fr. S. Clara. ad Artic. Confess Angl. 6. rejecting what truly are not of the Canon which the Church of Rome thrusts in of its own head and doth not leave out any which are as many have done in other times and places In relation to those Books whose Title is the Apocrypha the Moderation of our Church expresseth an excellent temper 1. In that in their Title as of uncertain Writings they are distinguisht from Canonical 2. All the Apocryphal Books are not recommended to be read in the Church 3. Nor on all days particularly not on the Lords Day as such 4. Those our Church doth use together with other Canonical Scripture as it plainly and publickly declares in her sixth Article of Religion and as St Hierom saith m S. Hier. Pres ad ●ild V. E●●phan c. 〈◊〉 for example of life and instruction of manners as Clemens Romanus to the Corinthians and other such Writings were read in the ancient Church n Sunt alii libri qui leguntur quidem sed nonscribuntur in Canone H. de S. Vic. Cap. 6. de scripturis c. but doth not apply them to establish any Doctrine as if they had such authority alone by themselves Our Church indeed doth prefer them before any other Ecclesiastical or private Writings because of the many excellent and sacred instructions in them for which good and religious use which may be made of them by all we do them the honour to bind them up with our Bibles though we make them not of equal authority thereby or of divine inspiration as we do not also either the English Meeter of the Psalms or the Epistle of the Translators of the Bible § 8. The Divine Authority of the Holy Scriptures our Church according to great wisdom doth rather take for granted than labour much to prove such an undoubted principle of Religion justly supposing there is no reason either to question that the Church hath surely received those Divine Oracles or surely delivered them and therefore our sixth Article speaks of them as of whose authority there was never any doubt in the Church Our Church justly thus supposing immediately therefore applies her self in an Exhortation to a diligent reading the Holy Scriptures Homily 1. and so long as those of her Communion are by any just means convinced of their authority our Church according to a great Moderation leaves it to the Providence of God by what particular arguments of the many which lie before us we may come to this satisfaction Not causing the satisfaction of any to depend upon one sort
of means to the neglect of another Because there are so many Arguments which may sufficiently satisfy any of their Authority because some are convinced by some others by others We are encouraged in our Church to receive the Holy Scriptures as the word of God both from inward and outward motives both of divine and moral consideration But for our greater certainty and safety in a matter of so great concern our Church doth not lay the weight of so great a cause on slight or uncertain Foundations as the infallibility of the Church much less demonstration from the evidence of oral tradition or the testimony only of the Divine Spirit held by some so absolutely necessary to convince every one of the Divine Authority of Scriptures that without such an inward testimony there can be no kind of certainty whatsoever The Moderation of our Church excellently governs her judgment herein neither refusing the just Authority of Gods true Church nor denying any necessary influence of the Holy Spirit of God according to which Moderation guiding our selves we shall have occasion elsewhere to justify the real certainty of our Faith ch 6. § 8. In convincing also those of the Authority of Holy Scripture who do deny the same the wisdom and temper of our Church prudently hath omitted a twofold medium as improper to confute obstinate Adversaries The one is of proving the Divine Authority of the Scriptures by Scriptures themselves which though it be a sufficient proof among them who have received them as divine yet to others it can never stop the objection from returning infinitely if the objector please to be dissatisfied The other method is alledging the Testimony of the Spirit for though the Church of God hath the Holy Spirit yet those that dispute this point may not have the Spirit neither can any ones saying so be a proper Argument to convince another Thirdly Our Church avoids the Circle of proving the Scripture by the Church and the Church by the Scriptures again because our Church doth first acknowledge the Holy Scriptures as superiour to it self o Article 6. 20. as one of the first principles of its Doctrine and against those who deny that principle of the Holy Scriptures veracity it doth dispute no otherwise than by reasons convincing the certainty of Tradition But as Archbishop Laud in his Preface against Fisher takes notice While one Faction cries up the Church above the Scripture and the other the Scripture to the neglect of the Church According to Christs Institution the Scripture where it is plain should guide the Church and the Church where there is doubt should expound the Scripture § 9. Whereas many run into very immoderate extravagancies concerning the interpretation of Holy Scripture our Church contains it self within very wise and just proportions in its judgment and practice concerning this matter 1. Concerning Holy Scripture it doth own what the Ancient Fathers p S. Chrys Hom. 3. in ● Thess S. Aug. in Ps 8. V. Second Part of the Homily of the knowledge of H. Scrip. have testified That what is absolutely necessary unto Salvation of all either for knowledge or practice is so fair and intelligible and plain to be understood of any that there needs no interpreter of the meaning of the sense to them who understand the words 2. For the understanding other places in Holy Scripture which are more obscure our Church doth suppose and acknowledge plentiful means allowed of God both to the Church and by and in the Church to all particular persons as much as is necessary that such places be understood For those which are mysterious and intricate are for the curious and wise to enquire into They are not the repositories of Salvation but instances of labour and occasions of humility and arguments of mutual forbearance and an endearment of reverence and adoration as the Archbishop of Spalato and our Bishop Taylor use to speak Such means for the interpretation of Scripture are the ordinary assistances of the Holy Spirit of God The instructions of the Church the use of our Reason especially in comparing one Scripture with another which excellent means of finding out the sense of Holy Writ our Church her self doth often use and recommends the same to those of her Communion according to the ancient practice of the Church Yet if we speak properly we do not call the Scripture the interpreter of it self nor properly a Judge of matter of Faith q S. Scripturam Judicem qui sentiunt rectè sentiunt sed siguratè ●oquuntur Gro. de Imp●rio sum pot Though it be the Rule according to which the judgment which is of Doctrines is made and in Analogy with which Interpretations of Scripture also are to be govern'd But because of the danger of the vulgars being misled our Church doth send them frequently to their Pastors and Ministers for publick instruction and private advice and counsel and inferiour Ministers it refers to their Bishop r Exhortation to the Holy Communion Canon 53. The same method our Church directs for resolution of doubts which may arise referring to the Liturgy Preface concerning the Service of the Church Forasmuch as nothing can be so plainly set forth but doubts may arise in the use and practice of the same to appease all such diversity if any arise and for the resolution of all doubts concerning the manner how to understand do and execute the things contained in this Book the parties that so doubt shall alway resort to the Bishop of the Diocess who by his discretion shall take order for the quieting and appeasing of the same And if the Bishop be in doubt he may send for the resolution thereof to the Archbishop 3. Our Church doth not attribute more or less authority to the means of interpreting Scripture or any part thereof than God hath given it for that purpose and here the Moderation of the Church might be illustrated from the manifold extravagancies others have run into in this matter on all sides 1. Some make the Holy Spirit of God the only immediate interpreter of Scripture unto all persons whatsoever that at any time understand any thing thereof Others run into another extreme of slighting the illumination and assistance of the Holy Spirit 2. Some assert the Church of Rome only to have an infallible and absolute Authority herein others deny both the Church Universal and all parts thereof all authority to teach those under her Discipline or interpret any Scripture to them 3. Some have maintained that the publick Magistrate is the only interpreter of Scripture others deny him any kind of authority over or about the Church 4. There are those who make humane reason the only interpreter of Scripture Others reject all use of reason in divine matters Among these and many more extravagancies of men The Moderation of our Church keeps on one hand from the Tyranny of those who make such Authorities the Rule of interpreting Scripture which
Religion than the Holy and Divine inspired Scriptures with Melancthon and the Church of England I wish all Doctrines of Faith were brought to us derived from the Fountain of Scripture by the Channels of Antiquity otherwise what end will there be of innovation And thus our King James of Happy Memory did declare in the words of St Austin That what could be proved the Church held and observed from its first beginning to those Times That to reject He did not doubt to pronounce to be an insolent piece of madness So that the counsel and judgment of the Church of England seems to be moderated according to the Sentence of St Hierom in his Epistle to Minerva My purpose is to read the Ancients to prove all to hold fast what is good and never to depart from the Faith of the Catholick Church and conformably King Charles I. h His Majesties fifth Paper to Mr. Henders My Conclusion is That albeit I never esteemed any Authority equal to the Scriptures yet I do think the unanimous consent of the Fathers and the universal practice of the Primitive Church to be the best and most authentical Interpreters of Gods word For who can be presumed to understand the Doctrine and practice of the Christian Religion better than those who lived in the first and purest times Wherefore i Of Heresy §. 14. Dr Hammond reckons it among the piè Credibilia that a truly general Council cannot erre § 3. And because the Catholick Church is and hath been so much divided and the Monuments of the ancient Church Universally accepted do contain but a few determinations Therefore the Church of England moderately remits her Sons to the first four general Councils as in the 28th year of K. Henry 8. k Fullers Eccl. Hist ad An. 1536. it was Decreed That all ought and must utterly refuse and condemn all those opinions contrary to the said Articles contained in the three Creeds contained in the four Holy Councils that is to say in the Council of Nice Constantinople Ephesus and Chalcedon and all other since that time in any point consonant to the same So in the Institution of a Christian Man set forth 1537. and approved by the Convocation 1543. 't is there said A true Christian man ought and must condemn all those opinions contrary to the twelve Articles of the Creed which were of a long time past condemned in the four Holy Councils that is to say c. Isaac Casaubon also in the name of King James to Cardinal Perron saith l Primo R. Eliz. c. 1 The King and the Church of England do admit the four first Oecumenical Councils and following the judgment of the Church the Law of the Kingdom doth declare m Dicimus Ecclesiam Britannicam adeò venerari Concilia generalia ut speciali statuto caverit nè quisquam spirituali jurisdictione praeditus praesumat censuras suas Ecclesiasticas aliter distringere vel administrare aut quicquam Haereticum pronunciare quod non à scripturis Canonicis quatuor Conciliis generalibus aut alio quocunque Concilio pro tali judicatum fuerit J. B. de antiq libertate Eccl. Brit. Thes 4. That none however Commission'd shall in any wise have authority or power to order or determine or adjudge any matter or cause to be Heresy but only such as heretofore have been determin'd ordered or adjudged to be Heresy by the authority of the Canonical Scriptures or by the first four general Councils or any of them or by any other general Council wherein the same was declared Heresy by the express and plain words of the said Canonical Scriptures or such as hereafter shall be ordered judged or determined to be Heresy by the Court of Parliament of this Realm with the Clergy in their Convocation Thus the authority of the four first general Councils are placed by our Church in the superiour order of Tradition forasmuch as Spalatensis according to St Austin n A plenariis Conciliis tradita Quarum est in Ecclesiâ salubr●●ima authoritas S. Aug. Ep. 118. speaks of such Councils they have obtained a wholsom authority because from the Apostolick Declarations faithfully received they have explained the Holy Scriptures and beside because they have been approved by the Universal Church which with great reason contradicts what Curcellaeus p Curcell Rel. Christianae Instit l. 1. c. 15. hath delivered to depreciate the honour even of the first four Oecumenical Councils So that Mr Cressy in Answer to Dr Pierce might very well cite the Protestant acknowledgments of the Authority of Councils as that of Ridley Acts and Mon. p. 1288. Councils indeed represent the Vniversal Church and being so gathered together in the name of Christ they have the promise of the gift and guiding of the Spirit into all truth To the same purpose are named Bishop Bilson Hooker Potter c. Instead of all these he might have owned if he had pleased the judgment of our Church it self giving all due honour to general and Provincial Councils whose wholsome Decrees she hath accepted and imitated Yea our Church maintains the right of Provincial Synods taken away by the See of Rome q Tertullianus veneratur Provinciale Concilium quasi esset Oecumenicam assentiente sc universali vel iis decernentibus secundùm universale quomodo fit repraesentatio totius nominis Christiani virtualiter tota Ecclesia Neither is this honour diminisht by the further Moderation which our Church hath shown in not taking those for Councils or general Councils which are not such as neither the Council of Florence nor Lateran nor of Trent and we know that our Articles though they are very moderately framed are many of them directly oppos'd to those of Trent being in those points of Doctrine wherein the Church of Rome hath departed from the Catholick Church and made her Doctrines of design more than truth the unjust conditions of Communion A truly free and general Council we look upon as the best expedient on Earth for composing the differences of the Christian World if it might be had but we cannot endure to be abused by meer names of Titular Patriarchs but real Servants and Pensioners of the Popes with Combinations of interested parties instead of general Councils r Dr. Stillingfleet's first Part of an Answer c. 284. When Pope Paul III. call'd a Council then to be held at Mantua and King Henry VIII refusing thither to send He defended his Protestation in a Letter to the Emperour and other Christian Princes 1538. In which the King declares t Acts and Monuments p. 11●2 Truly as our Forefathers invented nothing more holy than general Councils used as they ought to be so there is almost nothing that may do more hurt to the Christian Faith and Religion than general Councils if they be abused to lucre to gains to the establishment of errors And verily we suppose that it ought not to be called a General
Council where alone those men are heard which are determined for ever in all points to defend the Popish party and to arm themselves to fight in the Bishop of Romes quarrel though it were against God and the Holy Scriptures It is no general Council neither ought it to be called general where the same men be only Advocates and Adversaries defending his Primacy born by the ignorance of the World nourished by the ambition of the Bishops of Rome defended by places of Scripture falsly understood Neither secondly is our Churches honour to general Councils lessened because she declares they are not infallible as in our 21. Article of Religion When they be gathered together Forasmuch as they be an Assembly of Men whereof all be not governed with the spirit and word of God they may erre and sometime have erred even in things pertaining to God wherefore things ordained by them as necessary to Salvation have neither strength nor authority unless it be declared that they be taken out of Holy Scripture t Itaque legantur Concilia quidem Cum honore sed interim ad scripturam piam certam rectamque regulam examinentur Reform leg Eccl. c. 14. Notwithstanding they are not infallible yet for the establishing consent King James may be presumed to declare the sense of our Church of the use of such Councils lawfully assembled Come saith He u Rex Jacobus ad Card. Perr put it to the Issue allow a free general Council which may not depend upon the arbitrary will of one man and the Church of England is prepared to give a Reason of its Faith For even anciently it was a great complaint in the Church as the Fond of all their mischiefs x Nilus Archiep Thes●al l. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That Controversies were not determined after the Primitive Rite and manner § 3. Concerning the Testimony of the Fathers the Church of England hath observed the same wise Moderation in her judgment and use of them also no where judging of them as unliable to error according to the arguing of the 21. Article Because they are but men and sometimes have erred in things pertaining to God neither hath our Church any where swallowed their errors through the Veneration of their Piety and Antiquity Yet because of their Proximity to the Apostolick times and the just authority in the Church which for their Learning and Piety they have obtained and all along hath been given them Our Church in her Monuments gives a great deference to their judgment testimony and practice In the 31. Canon Forasmuch as the ancient Fathers of the Church led by the example of the Apostles appointed c. We following their Holy and Religious Example do Constitute and Decree Canon 32. According to the judgment of the ancient Fathers and the practice of the Primitive Church We do Ordain Canon 33. It hath been long since provided by many Decrees of ancient Fathers That c. According to which Examples we do Ordain Canon 60. Forasmnch as it hath been a solemn ancient and laudable Custom in the Church of God continued from the Apostles time That c. We will and appoint So in the 30. Canon The lawful use of the Cross in Baptism is explained from the practice of the Primitive Times And in King Edw. VI. Proclamation before the Common Prayer Book the reason for our Forms and Rites is justified from the practice of the Primitive Church and in the Preface concerning the Service of the Church Here you have an Order for Prayer and reading the Holy Scripture much agreeable to the mind and purpose of the old Fathers and in many other places where they are named and where they are not named The footsteps of their ancient Piety have very discernable impressions throughout the whole Constitution of our Church Wherefore as it is in the Reformation of the Ecclesiastical Laws of England as was intended y Reform leg Eccles Angl. c. 15. Let the Authority and Reverence be continued to the Ancient and Orthodox Fathers but such as may be subject to the determination truth and authority of the Holy Scriptures For always the ancient Fathers z Neque enim quorumlibet disputationes quamvis Catholicorum laudatorum hominum velut seripturas Canonicas habere debemus ut nobis non liceat salvâ Honorificentiâ quae illis debetur hominibus aliquid in eorum seriptis improbare Talis ego sum in scriptis aliorum Tales volo esse intellectores meorum S. Aug. Ep. 3. V. Ep. 19. ad S. Hier. Chilingw Pref. §. 25. themselves refused any other kind of honour or respect frequently admonishing the Reader that he admit their opinions or interpretations but so far as he sees them agree with the Holy Writings So that since Protestants are bound by Canon to follow the ancient Fathers whosoever doth so with sincerity it is utterly impossible he should be a Papist And indeed the Reverence of the Church of England to the ancient Fathers as it is most regular and well govern'd so it is most uniform and constant whereas nothing is more ordinary with the Romanists than when they are prest and urg'd by the authority of the ancient Fathers against them to depreciate their testimonies and add some scurvy false insinuations concerning them as hath been often observed of C. Baronius Bellarmine Stapleton and others Whereas the constant Reverence of the Church of England to the ancient Fathers is such that the Romanists cannot but acknowledge it very often as De Cressy a Exomolog p. 102. 135. saith Indeed the Protestants in England make honourable mention of the Fathers They profess greater Reverence to Antiquity than any other Sect whatsoever § 4. There are many things of excellent use in themselves which come to be suspected and reproached because of the abuse they have had in the Roman Church Of which Tradition may be a great instance Because the Church of Rome hath made Tradition equal if not superiour to Holy Scripture therefore others run to the other extreme of undervaluing all kind of good and lawful Tradition not considering that Holy Scripture is Tradition Recorded And forgeting that in the Church of God one great proof of the integrity of the Canon of Holy Scripture it self hath been always Tradition which these men so confidently despise There are also some Traditions not contrary to the Holy Scripture which if they be rightly qualify'd have and ought to have great authority with us Wherefore upon all occasions is celebrated among us that famous passage of Vincentius Lirinensis b Vinc. Lir. adv Haer. c. 3. Whatsoever is universally delivered which every where which always which of all is believed that is accounted as indubitable and certain We receive not saith Bishop Bramhall to M. Militiere your upstart Traditions nor unwritten Fundamentals but we admit genuine universal Apostolical Traditions And we are so far from believing Tradition without allowing the Papacy That one of the
principal motives why we rejected the Papacy was the constant Tradition of the Vniversal Church § 5. Concerning our Churches own Testimony Her Modesty and Moderation hath been always exemplary so far from assuming the Title of Catholick to her self only as St Austin tells us the Arians did and since them the Romanists c S. Aug. Ep. 48. ad Vincen. That she hath counted it a sufficient honour to be an humble and nevertheless for that eminent Member of the Universal Church and with her a Witness and Keeper of Holy Writ and though she vindicates to her self an authority to interpret the Holy Scripture within the bounds of her own Discipline for the edification of her own Family in Truth and Love and also asserts to her self an Authority in Controversies of Faith Article 20. namely for the avoiding diversities of opinions and for the establishing consent touching true Religion yet I cannot well omit to observe the wise modesty of our Church in her asserting her own authority in Controversies of Faith which expression I may have leave to illustrate from such another instance of Wisdom and Moderation in the recognition required to be made of the Kings Supremacy in our subscription according to the 36. Canon and in our Prayers wherein we acknowledge Him Supreme Governour of this Realm in all Causes and over all Persons It is not said over all Causes as over all persons forasmuch as in some Causes Christian Kings do not deny some spiritual power of Gods Church distinct from its temporal Authority which yet refers to the King as their Supreme Keeper Moderator and Governour Even so the Church declares her Authority in Controversies of Faith not that the Church of England or any other Church no not the Universal Church hath power to make any thing which is in controversy matter of Faith which God hath not so made The Church owns that she hath no power against the truth but for the truth Neither may it expound one place of Scripture that it be repugnant to another Article 20. But she hath power to declare her own sense in the Controversy and that I may express my own meaning in better words than my own d Pref. of Bishop Sparrow's Collection of Eccl. Records c. To determine which part shall be received and profest for truth by her own Members and that too under Ecclesiastical penalty and censure which they accordingly are bound to submit to not as an infallible verity but as a probable truth and rest in her determination till it be made plain by as great authority that this her determination is an error or if they shall think it so by the weight of such reasons as are privately suggested to them yet are they still obliged to silence and peace where the decision of a particular Church is not against the Doctrine of the Vniversal Not to profess in this case against the Churches determination because the professing of such a controverted truth is not necessary but the preservation of the peace and unity of the Church is is not to assert infallibility in the Church but authority Wherefore Mr Chilingworth e Chilingw Pres §. 28. had very just reason to declare Whatsoever hath been held necessary to salvation either by the Catholick Church of all Ages or by the consent of Fathers measured by Vincentius Lirinensis his Rule or is held necessary either by the Catholick Church of this Age or by the consent of Protestants or even by the Church of England That against the Socinians and all others whatsoever I do verily believe and embrace Whereas the Pope and Church of Rome do challenge to themselves an authority supreme over all Causes and Persons by their Infallibility by which they exclude all others from their peace and themselves from emendation Neither are their followers much in the way thereunto by what Card. Bellarmine doth assert of this supreme Authority If the Pope saith he f C. Bellarm de Pontif. Ro. l. 4. c. 5. should err in commanding any Vices or forbidding any Vertues The Church is bound to believe those Vices are good and those Vertues are evil unless it would sin against Conscience g In bono sensu dedit Christus Petro potestatem saciendi de peccato non peccatum de non peccato peccatum c. Bell. c. 31. in Barklaium However in his Recognitions h Locuti sumus de actibus dubiis vi●t●tum aut vitiorum Recogn operum c. B. p. 19. he minceth the matter in a distinction of doubtful and manifest Vices and Vertues O Blessed Guides of Souls How did the Illustrious Cardinal miss being Canoniz'd for that glorious Sentence and to help him for a Miracle to qualify him for an Apotheosis why did not some cry out of it So many words so many Miracles Thus many of the Romanists make the Pope such a Monarch in the Church as Mr Hobbs doth his Prince in the State i Hobbesius de Cive c. 7. art 26. c. 12. art 1. The interpretation of Holy Scripture the right of determining all Controversies to fix the rules of good and evil just and unjust honest and dishonest doth depend on his authority in the power of whom is the chief Government But this Doctrine is as bad Philosophy as that of the Cardinals is Divinity Among these excesses let us not forget the Moderation of our Church which holds she may revise what hath slipt from her wherefore in her 19. Article she declares As the Church of Jerusalem Alexandria and Antioch have erred so also the Church of Rome hath erred a charge agreeable to the Moderation of our Church considering what might have been further said which by the same proportions of reason she supposeth true of her self and of all others viz. That they are fallible and may erre § 6. Of the use of Reason with Reference to divine matters there may be elsewhere occasions in this Treatise to discourse * Ch. 6. §. 9 10. Yet here it is to be observed our Church doth not make its own reason a rule of Faith nor the sole Interpreter of Scripture much less the reason of private men yet because mankind hath no reasonable expectation of Miracles especially when ordinary means are sufficient and abounding and because the Holy Spirit of God in the testimony of his Church hath all along certainly conveyed to us the sense of many places beside That what is most needful to be heeded is very plain our Church doth allow and suppose rational mens perceiveing the sense of Scripture by the due use of their understanding which practice must also necessarily engage such to a high regard of what was anciently received in the Catholick Church For as nothing is held among us more agreeable to reason than our Religion so in expounding our Religion and in interpreting Scripture our Church makes use of the best and the truest reasons as is manifest in what she declares and enjoins and
encourageth also those other helps which are any ways useful to the better understanding the sense of Holy Scripture as namely the knowledge of Tongues Arts and Sciences and whatever else may improve the industry and sincerity of the enquirer Because as our Homily saith k Hom. of Com. Pr. and Sacraments No man cometh to the knowledge of Tongues otherwise than by diligent and earnest study and elsewhere l Hom. of the peril of Idolatry 2. Part. The Church taking notice how the worshipping of Images came in times of ignorance negligence and barbarity laments the wasts made on learning by the Goths and Vandals and Hunns They burning Libraries so that learning and true Religion went to wrack and decayed incredibly Wherefore the Church of England hath been always a bountiful and careful cherisher and Patron of our Famous Vniversities as They have been and are most dutiful and zealous observers of the Church And because our Church governs it self according to such just measures in the Interpretation and Exposition of Scripture we see she doth neither practise nor encourage the turning of Holy Scripture into Cabala's and Allegory as too many have precariously and groundlesly done according to the humour of their own imaginations our Church observing that Moderation which St Austin commends m De Civ Dei l. 17. c. 3. when he blames some for one extreme that will allow no type or signification in things done and recorded and others who contend all things in Scripture recorded have their Allegorical Interpretation n Mihi multùm errare videntur qui nullas res gestas aliquid aliud praeter id quod eo modo gesta sunt significare arbitrantur it a multùm audere qui prorsus ibi omnia significationibus allegoricis involuta esse contendunt Erasin Eccles l. 3. Nunquam dubia aenigmatum intelligentia ad autoritatem dogmatum proficere S. Hieron in Mat. 13. even the Doctrines of Catholick Faith which in his Epistle to Vincentius he calls a grievous piece of impudence to hold yet as Erasmus in his Ecclesiastes adds It is not fit to doubt of such Types and Allegories which Canonical Scripture have revealed to us § 7. Though the Moderation of the Church shews it self in that it doth not vain-gloriously boast of the Spirit yet it may well consist with her excellent modesty to believe of her self That in the interpretation of Holy Scripture she hath such an assistance of the Spirit of God as is promised to the Church in general The Church of England being a true part thereof subject to and governed by the word of God upon which account in 139. Canon it requires That the sacred Synod of this Nation in the name of Christ and by the Kings Authority assembled be acknowledged the true Church of England by Representation and it may be presumed That where the lawful representative of the Church is gathered together rightly the assistance of Gods Spirit is not wanting wherefore it argues immoderate presumption in them who receive with impious scorn our Confession of our undoubted hope that the Church of England hath the testimony of the Spirit of God in her interpretation of Scripture and yet these depravers of the Scripture o Qui ingenium suum faciunt Ecclesiae sacramenta S. Hier. Ep. 9. shall with glorious assurance affirm to themselves and their Complices the wonderful illapses and impulses of the divine Spirit when at the same time they contradict the Holy Catholick Church p Neque id defendere velim contra consensum antiquitatis spiritum qui Ecclesiae corpus Quod si mecum in rebus aliis caveant ilii jam spiritus ille privatus Ecclesiae Divisor perdet fascini sui efficaciam Grotius ad Riv. art 1. and themselves and when also many pretenders to a double portion of the Spirit have acted as the eldest Sons of Belial Whereas indeed the testimony of the Spirit in the hearts of the faithful themselves for the interpreting Holy Scripture and determining doubtful matters hath been more often urged than understood yea if we could suppose it was not a precarious assertion to be sure it is an improper method to convince Gainsayers yet to those who are out of Communion with the Church it must needs be a most uncertain and insufficient testimony § 8. Many we know there have been and are who pretend to such extraordinary gifts of the Holy Spirit as were peculiar to the first Ages of the Church thus doth the Church of Rome as did the Donatists of old make such miraculous testimonies the necessary sign of a true Church and somewhat like both these are the Enthusiasts of our late age who would make the priviledges of the Holy Spirit special and singular to their enclosures affirming a particular inspiration of the Spirit absolutely necessary To convey into our minds the sense and interpretation of Holy Scripture To assure all Christians of the certainty of their Salvation To furnish them with words and petitions in Prayer To convince any of the authority of Holy Scriptures and the certainty of Faith Our Church declares q Homily for Whit-sunday 2d Part. It is not the part of a Christian under pretence of the Holy Ghost to bring in his own dreams and phantasies into the Church for such blaspheme and bely the Holy Ghost whereas the proper office of the Holy Ghost is not to institute and bring in new Ordinances contrary to the doctrine before taught the doing of which the Homily declares is the sign of a false Church and of such as are deceivers It is to be acknowledged that the discourses concerning the operation and testimony of the Spirit are liable to many difficulties but The principal conclusions which are rightly made in this matter I suppose may be truly made out to be the sense of our Church declared in her own words 1. For interpretation of Holy Scripture the reason why our Church holds such extraordinary illumination not necessary is because r 2d Homily of Scripture All things necessary for our Salvation are plain to understand that is as the Homilies deliver to such as use the means and so far as their explicite knowledge is required For our Church doth speak of the illumination of the Spirit and interpretation of Scripture as generally joined with the use of means When any apply their minds to the study of the Scripture to hear read and search thus God openeth the dark things of Scripture unto faithful people It cannot be saith St Chrysostom that such should be left without help When our Homily mentions the Holy Ghost inspiring the true meaning of the Scripture it adds to them that with humility and diligence do search therefore which clause is not to be left out as it is by the Author of the Scriptures genuine interpreter p. 5. Those that thus thankfully chearfully and diligently hear read meditate and ruminate on Holy Scripture such have the sweet juice
spiritual effect tast comfort and consolation of them which Doctrine of our Church is most intelligible and sober and different from what some others mystically have discoursed of concerning spiritual gusts which they attribute to unaccountable Communications The ordinary means to which the interpretation of Scripture is generally annexed our Church judgeth the same which Dr Hammond mentions in his Postscript concerning Divine Illuminations Study search Meditation the Collation of places of Scripture or bringing one place together with another ſ Homily 1. the use of reason and learning and skill in original Languages the help of our spiritual guides the Declarations of Gods Church the analogy of received doctrines constant Prayer for Gods blessing the necessary assistance and gracious aids of Gods Spirit Our Church indeed teacheth us that Carnal reason is an enemy to God and to perceiving the things of the Spirit which carnal reason some do expound the Article 9 wisdom some the sensuality some the affection some the desire of the flesh But our Church esteems it a great reproach to humane nature and the Creation of God to call that carnal reason which is our rational perception and use of what is delivered us to understand or a comparing and as we said out of the Homily a bringing together one place with another and drawing easy and plain consequences from Scriptures which we are to search whereas the Scriptures are propounded to the reasons of Men and the belief of them is an act of the greatest reason that can be Indeed in the things revealed when any thing exceeds the comprehension of our reason our Church adviseth us to sequester our reason In such cases saith the Homily t Hom. of Places of Script 2. Part. Reason must give place to Gods holy Spirit From the Doctrine of our Church it is also very plain That no more supernatural and immediate operation of the Holy Spirit is necessary to the interpretation of the Scriptures than what is necessary to make us faithful and good Christians Wherefore our Church lays down the same means for improvement in divine knowledge as it doth for obtaining the Holy Spirit namely u 1 2d. Homily of Scripture The love of God and Godliness the having a care of being drown'd in worldly vanities leaving sin and the world Our forsaking the corrupt judgment of fleshly men x 3d Part of the Homily for Rogation Week Let us endeavour our selves saith our Church diligently to keep the presence of the Holy Spirit Let us renounce all uncleanness for he is the Spirit of purity Let us avoid all hypocrisy for this Holy Spirit will flee from that which is feigned Cast off all malice and evil will for this Spirit will never enter into an evil willing Soul Let us cast away all the whole lump of sin that standeth about us for he will never dwell in that body which is subdued to sin If we do our endeavour we shall never need to fear And the Holy Spirit will suggest to us what is wholsome and confirm us in all things To attain also the spiritual Wisdom of the Scriptures Our way saith the Church is to attend the time and win the time with diligence and apply our selves to the light and grace which is offered us Lastly Let us meekly call upon that bountiful Spirit the Holy Ghost which proceedeth from our Father of mercy and from our Mediator Christ That he would assist us and inspire us with his presence That in him we may be able to hear the goodness of God declared unto us to our Salvation for this cannot be obtained but by the direction of the Spirit of God and therefore it is called spiritual wisdom 2. Our Church doth not judge that the particular immediate Testimony of Gods Spirit is necessary to every Christian for his comfortable assurance of Salvation but supposeth that the best assurance of Salvation is from the sure trust and belief of Gods promises and a certain consciousness of our own sincerity according to what is required of us * Homily of Salvation V. Homily of Almes-deeds 2. Part. V. Homily of falling from God 1. Part. If you would be sure of your Faith try it by your living the true Christian Faith is no dead vain or unfruitful thing Therefore let us by such Vertues as spring out of Faith shew our Election to be sure and stable 3. Our Church doth not judge an immediate gift of the Spirit necessary to every Christian to furnish them with words in Prayer but doth rightly suppose that the Holy Spirit doth effectually assist every sincere devout person using a good form of Prayer because he by whom the Spirit is given to the Church did teach his Disciples and in them all Christians a form of Prayer requiring them to use the same Our Church also hath furnished those of her Communion with general Prayers according to their occasions judging also that such common Prayers Homily of Prayer are most available before God And the means of obtaining the Holy Spirit to be most assisting us in our Prayers our Church declares is for us to humble our selves in his sight and in all our Prayers both publick and private to have our minds fully fixed on him so that our Church supposeth those that are thus humble to pray by the Spirit How far the testimony of the Holy Spirit is necessary to convince us of the certainty of our Faith and of the authority of Holy Scriptures See Chap. 6. § 8. From which few passages already cited in comparison of those very many to the same purpose which abound in the Homilies for Whit-sunday the Homily of good works of Salvation of falling from God of Alms-deeds It is most evident that our Church judgeth rightly concerning the Holy Spirit of God and lays down the best Rules for discerning who have the Holy Spirit for according to the Doctrine of our Church believing and obeying the Gospel and having the Spirit are all one y Homily of Salvation 3. Part. For how can a man have true faith when he liveth ungodly and denieth Christ with his deeds contrariwise he is most inspired with the Holy Ghost who is most changed in his life So then this is to be taken for a most true lesson taught by Christs own mouth z Homily of good works 2. Part. That the works of the moral Commandments of God be the very true works of Faith which lead to the blessed life to come Our Church also doth suppose that those who receive most of the Spirit are such as are most truly vertuous and good such have most of the divine grace to confirm and strengthen them in all goodness as it is in the Office for the Holy Communion If with a true penitent heart and lively faith we receive the Holy Sacrament then we dwell in Christ and Christ in us c. a 1. Part of the Sermon for Whitsunday Wherefore if any
say O but how shall I know that the Holy Ghost is within me Some man perchance will say forsooth as the tree is known by the fruit so is also the Holy Ghost The fruits of the Holy Ghost according to the mind of St Paul are these Gal. 5. Love Joy Peace Long-suffering Gentleness Goodness Faithfulness Meekness Temperance c. Contrariwise the deeds of the flesh are these Adultery Fornication Vncleanness Wantonness Idolatry Witchcraft Hatred Debate Emulation Wrath Contention Sedition Heresy Envy Murder Drunkenness Gluttony and such like Here now is the Glass wherein thou must behold thy self and discern whether thou hast the Holy Ghost within thee or the spirit of the flesh If thou see thy works be vertuous and good consonant to the prescript rule of Gods word savoury and tasting not of the flesh but the Spirit then assure thy self thou art endued with the Holy Ghost otherwise in thinking well of thy self thou dost but deceive thy self The Holy Ghost doth always declare himself by his fruitful and gracious gifts b 2d Part of the Hom. for Whit-sunday But to conclude ye shall briefly take this short lesson Wherever ye find the spirit of arrogance and pride the spirit of envy hatred contention cruelty c. Assure your selves that there is the spirit of the Devil and not of God albeit they pretend to the world outwardly ever so much Holiness for as the Gospel teacheth us The Spirit of Jesus is a good holy sweet lowly merciful Spirit full of charity and love full of forgiveness and pity not rendring evil for evil extremity for extremity According to which rule If any man live uprightly of him it may be safely pronounced That he hath the Holy Ghost within him if not there is a plain token he doth usurp the name of the Holy Ghost in vain As for the manner and measure of the operations of the Holy Spirit The modesty and Moderation of our Church doth not decree any thing lest as St Austin saith Humane infirmity proceed beyond what is safe Yet our Church gives a right account in sundry places of its Homilies c Second Part of the Homily of Falling from God How the Holy Spirit comes to be withdrawn from men By all these Examples of Holy Scripture we know that as we forsake God so shall he even forsake us When he withdraweth from us his word the right doctrine of Christ his gracious assistance and aid which is ever joined with his Word and leaveth us to our own wit and will and strength He declareth then he beginneth to forsake us d First Part of the Homily of falling from God which is as it follows after any do neglect the same if they be unthankful to him if they order not their lives according to his Example and Doctrine c. From whence we see also that our Church judgeth the promise of the spirit is as the blessings of the Gospel are generally conditional For as God for his part delivered his Son to suffer death for us so again we for our parts should walk in a godly life as becometh his Children so to do e 2. Part of the Homily of Alms-deeds He that is first made good by the Spirit and Grace of God afterward bringeth forth good fruits As for those who affirm a supernatural and immediate illumination necessary without which other ordinary means are insufficient either to give us certainty of the authority or interpretation of Divine Writ 1. They affirm that which no where is declared 2. That which we have little reason to credit from them that affirm so We having neither experience of their extraordinary knowledge or goodness but have found them most mistaken of any in their interpretations of Scripture and also by the notes of having the Spirit delivered in Scripture what is quite different hath appear'd 3. The holding such an opinion tends to lessen the authority of the written word of God and to make the dictates of the humane spirit if not sometime the Diabolical equal with the Holy Canon And those others who lay the stress of the proof of the authority of Scripture and the certainty of Faith and the interpretation of Scripture upon such uncertainties as only the internal testimony of the Spirit as is yet neither proved necessary or real however of which there is no proof unto others verily such labour unprofitably to overthrow Christianity and render all our Faith uncertain 4. Their Doctrine leads to such Enthusiasm as is not consistent with the peace of Kingdoms much less the peace of Gods Church But such is the constant Moderation of our Church though it doth reject and oppose all fanatical and ungrounded pretences to the Spirit Yet our Church most frequently and with all humble reverence owns the necessity of the gracious aids and assistance of the Spirit as the phrase is in our Homilies several times used as without which we can do nothing pleasing to God For in the power and vertue of the Holy Ghost resteth all wisdom and all ability to know God and to please him f 3d Part of the Homily for Rogation Week Therefore we pray that in all things he will mercifully direct and rule our hearts we pray to God to grant us his Spirit that those things which we do may please him g In the Absolution Collect after the H. C. Hom. of falling from God To prevent us in all our doings c. because of the ill condition of those who are not governed by the Spirit of God CHAP. VI. The Moderation of the Church in its judgment of Doctrines § 1. Our Church doth wisely distinguish between what is necessary for Salvation and what is not § 2. Her Articles are few § 3. Which are generally exhibited not as Articles of Faith but consent Concerning subscription § 4. Our Articles are propounded so as to avoid unnecessary controversy § 5. The wise Moderation of the Kings of England in their Injunctions to Preachers and Orders taken to preserve Truth Vnity and Charity § 6. The Controversies of the late Age are well moderated by the determinations of our Church § 7. As our Church requires our consent in nothing contrary to sense or reason so it hath also contain'd it self from immoderate curiosity in treating of venerable mysteries § 8. Our Church doth not insist upon such kinds of certainty as others without just cause do exact § 9. Doctrines are so propounded to those in our Churches Communion as not to render useless their own reasons and judgments The reasonableness of which is proved and the Objections answered § 10. The use which we are all allowed of our private judgments is requir'd to be menag'd with a due submission to the Church The duty of which submission is laid down in sundry Propositions § 1. BEcause all things in Divine Revelation are alike true but not alike necessary for furtherance of Faith and Piety and establishing Union among Christians
and Peace in the Church Our Church hath wisely distinguished between what is necessary absolutely and what only in some circumstances is necessary to Salvation Those things saith the Homily a 2d Part of the Homily of Scriptures that be plain to understand and necessary for Salvation every mans duty is to learn them and as for dark mysteries to be contented to be ignorant in them till such time as it shall please God to open those things unto them b Hom. 1. If it shall require to teach any truth or to do any thing requisite for our Salvation All those things saith St Chrysostom we may learn plentifully of the Scripture And in the 19. Article of the Church The Preaching of the pure word of God and the Administration of the Sacraments are made indispensable notes of the visible Church namely in all things that of necessity are requisite to the same and the 8th Article declares The three Creeds ought throughly to be believed and received for that they may be proved by most certain warrant of Holy Scripture where our Church gives the reason of her Faith and sheweth her earnestness in contending for it But the Moderation of our Church contains her self within the bounds of what is before made necessary The principal and essential points of the Doctrine of Salvation such as are fit to make up the unity of the Faith and constitute a Church are no other among us than what Christ and his Apostles at first made necessary which also the ancient Church received as necessary unto Baptism and for distinction of Heresy which fundamental Maxims of Christian Science are frequently and plainly repeated in Scripture and by our Church were first of all insisted on at the reformation of our Church as we see in the Institution of a Christian Man 1537. in the first Injunctions of our Kings and our Form of Catechism Whereas the Catechisms and Systems which have been set up in opposition to the Catechism and Articles of the Church of England have abounded with many doubtful and unnecessary definitions yet so insisted upon by some as if the Hinges of the Gate of Heaven turn'd upon those Propositions whereby many have agreed with Pope Pius the Fourth who by his Bull set out the Apostles Creed in a larger Edition of about as many more Articles without belief of which is declared no Salvation c Extra quam Nemo salvus esse potest Bulla Pii quarti super formâ Juramenti professionis fidei sub finem Concilii Trid. Unto such a strange Circumference is the body of their unnecessary belief extended whereas the Religion of our Church tends to the Center Which distinction of things necessary from what was not so King James according to the sense of our Church declares of great use to lay a foundation for the publick peace of the Church d Vt de necessariis conveniat omnis opera insumatur in non-necessariis libertati Christianae locus Rex Jacobus ad Card. Perr and of particular mens minds and the furtherance of true Faith and Piety § 2. Those Articles which are delivered by our Church for the avoiding of diversities of opinions and establishing consent touching true Religion 1. They are few especially those of positive Doctrine and the other negative positions were necessary to assert our liberty from the abuses and encroachments of the Romanists in their contrary affirmatives few if we consider either the time or the occasion of their being framed it being just about the meeting at Trent made it necessary for our Church to declare her sense of many Doctrines for the better satisfaction and directions of her Sons and to testify her equal conditions of Communion Especially also if we consider the cruel number of Articles which either the Westminster Divines or the Trent Councellors have imposed on their followers e Bishop ●ramball fol. p. 1018. Indeed the Romanists do call our Religion a negative Religion because in all the Controversies between us and them we maintain the negative that is we go as far as we dare or can with warrant from holy Scriptures and the Primitive Church and leave them in their excesses or those inventions which they themselves have added but in the mean while they forget that we maintain all those Articles and truths which are contained in any of the ancient Creeds of the Church which I hope are more than negative The Church of England saith Archbishop Laud f Archbishop Laud against Fisher 5. 14. comes far short of the Church of Romes severity whos 's Anathema's are not for 39. Articles but for very many more above one hundred in matter of Doctrine and that in many points as far remote from the foundation though to the far greater rack of Mens Consciences they must be all Fundamental if that Church have determined them Whereas the Church of England never declared that every one of her Articles are fundamentals in the Faith For it is one thing to say no one of them is superstitious or erroneous and quite another to say every one of them is fundamental Besides the Church of England prescribes only to her own Children and by those Articles provides but for her peaceable consent in those Doctrines of truth but the Church of Rome severely imposeth on all the World her Doctrine and that under pain of damnation § 3. These Articles of Religion are generally exhibited as Articles of Peace and consent not as Articles of Faith and Communion and as such they are propounded to all the Communicants in our Church g Schisin guarded p. 150. Bishop Lanies Sermons p. 48. in general For the avoiding Diversities of Opinions as the Title of the Articles is Not such a consent as Curcellaeus h Curcellaeus Religionis Christianae Institut C. 15. means where he supposeth some in the dregs of the Age of the Reformation obtrude their Confessions and Catechisms as a secondary rule if not of truth yet of consent such as ought to be urged only to an infallible truth 't is likely he might know many who did so But the consent designed to be established by our Articles is such a consent as may keep the Peace of our Church undisturbed according to the sense of the fifth Canon Where the Prohibition is directed against such as should speak against the 39. Articles as superstitious and erroneous such as may not with a good Conscience be subscribed to Whosoever shall hereafter affirm i Quicunque in posterum affirmabit c. Ecclesiae Anglic. Canon 5. not as the Council of Trent k Si quis contrà senserit Anathema sit Concil Trid. de peccato Originis directs its Anathema against those that shall so much as think diversly Wherefore our Church no where delivers our Articles as necessary to be believed neither by vertue of their own necessity or her own Command as several with Bishop Bramhall have noted For which reason subscription unto them is
young Students by reading of late Writers and ungrounded Divines do broach many times unprofitable seditious and dangerous Doctrines to the scandal of the Church He injoin'd That none under a Bishop or Dean do presume to preach in any popular Auditory the deep points of Predestination Election Reprobation or of the Vniversality Resistibility or Irresistibility of Gods Grace But rather confine themselves wholly to those two Heads of Faith and a good Life which are all the subject of the ancient Sermons and Homilies That no Preacher of any denomination whatsoever shall presume to fall into bitter invectives and undecent railings against the Persons of either Papists or Puritans but modestly and gravely when they are occasion'd by their Text free both the Doctrine and Discipline of the Church of England from the Aspersions of the Adversaries King Charles of Blessed Memory set forth with the Articles a Declaration 1630. wherein he required thus In these curious and unhappy differences which have for so many hundred years in different times and places exercised the Church of Christ We will that all further curious search be laid aside and these disputes shut up in Gods promises as they be generally set forth to us in Holy Scriptures and the general meaning of the Articles of the Church of England It is to be wisht that all the Directions concerning Preachers in the several Kings Reigns since the Reformation were Imprinted on the minds of all the Clergy and others especially His present Majesties Directions Dated October 14. 1662. Which among other great reasons inducing were set forth because of the extravagance of sundry young Divines who took upon them in their popular Sermons to handle the deep points of Gods Eternal Counsels and Decrees and other fruitless controversies serving rather to amuse than profit the hearers which is done for the most part and with greatest confidence by such persons as least understand them Therefore they are admonisht not to spend their time in the search of such abstruse and speculative notions However that they presume not positively and doctrinally to determine anything concerning the same And for the edifying the people in Faith and Godliness That they in their ordinary Sermons insist chiefly on Catechetical Doctrines wherein are contained all the necessary and undoubted verities of Religion declaring withal unto their Congregations what Influences such Doctrines ought to have into their Lives and Conversations and stirring them up effectually as well by their Examples as their Doctrines to the practice of such religious and moral duties as are the proper results of the said Doctrines as Self-denial Contempt of the World Humility Patience Meekness Temperance Justice Mercy Obedience and the like and to a detestation c. And because these licentious times have corrupted Religion in the very roots and foundations That where there is an Afternoons Exercise it be especially spent either in explaining some part of the Church Catechism or what may conduce to the Exposition of the Liturgy and Prayers of the Church as occasion shall be offered The only cause they grew into contempt among the people being this that they were not understood The subscription for University Preachers in the University of Cambridge keeps its Subscribers within the same bounds and by the way I may note the Moderation and Excellent temper of our Vniversities at this time Having known for many Years together in Cambridge there have seldom been disputed in our Schools those Controversies which in the Age before did so much divide both Foreign Churches and ours and also our Vniversities themselves of our other Vniversity I am assured the same from my most Reverend Diocesan the Lord Bishop of Lincoln Having mentioned our Vniversities I conceive a very proper proof of the Moderation of our Church of England may be taken from the general practice in our Universities those noble Seminaries of the Church where among the Theses which are disputed in the Divinity Schools commonly one is given to assert our Church against the Romanists the other to defend our Church against other Sectaries The care of very many of our Bishops hath been also the same as may appear from one of their Exemplars of Subscription I have set it down in the Margent m Ego Curatus cui licentia praedicandi verbum Dei concedenda est sacras literas purè sincerè tractabo easque prudenti simplicitate populo exponam nec in sermonibus meis de rebus jam constitutis suscitabo Controversias nec spargam contentiones neque innovationem ullam doctrinâ vel Ceremoniis suadebo V. 1. Vol. Episcopii praes Praevorstii de concionibus because of its excellent use In the Instructions of King James 1618. to the Divines He sent over to the Synod of Dort One was That they should advise the Ministers of those Churches that they do not deliver in the Pulpit to the people those things for ordinary Doctrines which are the highest points of Schools and not fit for vulgar capacity but are disputable on both sides and that they carry themselves with that advice moderation and discretion as became them c. After all these great Testimonies of Moderation in our Church it is proper to mention what we meet with in the Pacific Dr Hammonds Discourse of Gods Grace and Decrees § 24. This I suppose the reason both of our Churches Moderation in framing the Article of Predestination and of our late Kings Declaration in silencing the debate of the Question For if by these methods the Church could but have prevailed to have the Definitions of the several pretenders forgotten All men contenting themselves as our Article prescribes with the Promises of God as they are declared in Scripture the turmoil and heat and impertinence of disputes had been prevented which now goes for engagement in Gods cause And blessed be God the design of the Churches Moderation and of our Gracious King the Churches Moderatour and Governour hath thus far had excellent effect in the Church and our Universities that for a long time there hath been a great silence from that noise and learned squabble which sometimes formerly disturbed the Churches Peace so that now we may be more at leisure without prejudice and passion to review and admire the wise and excellent determinations of our Church § 6. To shew how well the Controversies of the late Age have been moderated by our Church might deserve a just Treatise by it self But our Church seems to observe the same advice which King James gave to the Divines going over to Dort 1618. In case of opposition between any over-much addicted to their own opinions their endeavours should be that certain Positions be moderately laid down which may tend to the mitigation of heat on both sides Our Church throughout hath done the same thing as might be instanced at large in the Controversies between us and the Romanists and between others also Indeed the Articles and especially the Homilies do copiously and
are innumerable arguments which convince us of the certainty of the Divine Testimony in the matters we have received yet such is the Moderation of our Church she doth not require every one in her Communion necessarily to know and receive all the reasons of certainty which are and may be given nor yet to rely on one to the neglect of another but leaves us to be satisfied according to the means and opportunities which we have abundantly offered unto us justly supposing there are so many reasons perswading the truth of what we believe that some are convinced by some others by others as the Providence of God disposeth things 3. Our Church no where makes infallible certainty of assent a necessary condition of Faith it being sufficient to make our Faith certain if our Rule be infallible and that applyed with moral evidence that is such an evidence as we can have of things and actions past as is sufficient to guide and govern our manners and behaviour Some of late have contended with very ill success that an infallible certainty of assent is necessarily wrought by demonstration and what they love to call scientific Evidence in every Believer which doctrine of J. S. is condemned by his Adversaries even of Rome p Animadv P. Talboti Arch. Dubl in Prop. 2. p. 54. as the pith of Manicheism because it lays this burden on the Church or an Oecumenical Council evidently to demonstrate its own infallibility If destroying the first foundation of the Roman infallibility were all we might dispense with that inconvenience as it renders their motives of credibility insufficient which before the doctrine of infallibility is received used to be the only way they had to recommend the Church of Rome to the approbation of Proselytes but to affirm that all certainty of Christian Faith is generally wrought by such demonstration in case that doctrine proves false the consequence is If Christian Faith have no other certainty Christianity it self is left uncertain in its very foundations Others there are who deliver that an infallible certainty of assent wrought only by the immediate extraordinary operation of the Spirit of God is necessarily in every true Believer Now though our Church doth as much as any can do own the necessity of Gods Grace and holy Spirit to prevent assist and follow us especially in what concerns divine matters yet our Church is not so bold with the Holy Spirit of God to affirm that such an inward testimony of the Divine Spirit working together in our Spirits an infallible assent is so necessary to assure us of the certainty of Faith and of the authority of Holy Scriptures and of the truth of other Doctrines in question as without which we could have no such belief as is required to Salvation Which precarious presumption tends to render useless all those sufficient evidences we have of Divine truth by the gracious means which God hath appointed ordinary in his Church and whereas the assertors of this extraordinary spirit exclude all other means of real certainty as insufficient such a Doctrine being false must needs tend also to overthrow all Christian Religion Such is the sad consequence of the Doctrines both of Dr I. O. and Mr I. S. in making though on differing grounds an infallible assent necessary to a true belief They agree together also in the injury they do Christian Religion by traducing our Faith as a probable fallible humane natural Faith which are the very words they q V. Dr I. O. Reason of Faith p. 72. Mr I. S. Faith Vindicated both unite in to expose our belief to contempt which is grounded on such evidences as God hath abundantly afforded us to assure us of the truth of his Divine Testimony Which evidences especially in matters of Faith necessary to Salvation since they are so plain and certain Our Church hath always held needless such an infallible guide as the Romanists would impose upon us And for the same reasons that we do not expect any new Revelations nor any ostentation of new miracles necessary to a true Church or true Faith they being superseded by the ordinary means of Faith which are sufficient for the same reasons we cannot presume to expect much less to make necessary to every true belief such extraordinary illapses of the Divine Spirit which makes those who only think they have it think themselves only infallible And thus we may discern how many are led to Popery by the way of Enthusiasm For it is usual for those into whose head Enthusiasm is flown to reel from one extream to another 4. To preserve us from these uncertainties among the very many reasons which we have from rational and moral evidence whereby the truth of the Divine Testimony is confirmed to us abundantly Our Church owns no one greater since the miraculous gifts than the testimony of Gods Church now and in all Ages since Christ and his Apostles time because of the sundry Evidences also which confirm to us the truth of the Churches testimony All which amount to more than high probability for as r ● Lomini Hi●l Consul haeres Blacklo P. 2. c. 4. §. 5. Lominus tells J. S. Probability on one side doth not exclude probability also on the opposite side but the reason of moral evidence and certainty doth exclude any probability on the contrary part and that so manifestly that only grievous ignorance and pertinacy can incline a man thereunto § 9. As the Moderation of our Church allows us to be reasonably satisfied of the certainty of our Faith much more are other doctrines so propounded to those of our Communion as not to render useless their own reasons and judgments Notwithstanding our Church doth sufficiently vindicate her own just power and the authority of what she testifies and determines Article 20. 34. c. and by her Canons requires a just submission All care being also taken by the Church to prevent error and dissentions and wresting the Scriptures Canon 34. 49. 139. Yet all is performed among us with a most excellent and golden mean And in that nothing in our Church is determin'd contrary to truth nor the judgment of the Catholick Church nor right reason the Church of England can the better allow her Sons their right to search examine and discern what they must approve Which Bishop Davenant and Bishop Bramhall and some others understand by their judgment of discretion though the word sounds not so pleasing to some Religious Ears because it seems by the use of the phrase in English to incline private persons to a power of refusing what the Church rightly determines which is not to be allowed For as the suffrage of our Church hath been constantly unanimous with that of the Apostle We can do nothing against the truth but for the truth much more ought private persons to be bounded thereby if the Apostles and the Church are The Moderation of the Church will appear the more remarkable if we
reserves him not a right of liberty in Religion but only supposeth that he hath a right of trying examining and using his best judgment in order to the satisfaction of his Conscience which right if he duly useth it will certainly fix him in the true Religion whether that Religion be professed by his Prince or Nation or no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prove or try all things Hold fast that which is good saith the Apostle 1 Thess 5. 21. Here is a right to try examine and judge but no right or liberty in Religion This tryal is only in order to the holding fast that which is good i Dr J. Beaumonts Observations upon the Apology 1665. As the Royal Coyn no one can refuse every one may examine and try the same before he receives it So every Christian keeping himself within the bounds of due obedience and submission to his lawful Superiours hath a judgment of Discretion He may apply the rule of Holy Scripture for his own private instruction comfort edification and direction and for the framing of his Life and belief accordingly The Pastors of the Church have more than this a judgment of direction to expound and interpret the Scriptures to others and out of them to instruct the ignorant c. The Chief Pastors have yet a higher judgment of Jurisdiction to prescribe to enjoin to constitute to reform to censure to condemn to bind to loose judicially authoritatively in their respective charges k Bishop Bramhall's Answer to M. Militeira p. 72. Thus the danger of using a private judgment is prevented If it be further Objected 2. That such a permission is vain because of the impossibility in the vulgar to make use of it We Answer That such a meer ineptitude doth not take away ones right l Vt ratus sit actus pauciora requiruntur quàm ut recta sit actio Grotius de Imperio pag. 111. Beside our Gracious God requires of none otherwise than according to that ability which he hath given Wherefore the Moderation of our Church imitates the grace of God herein which requires nothing necessarily but what is so clearly propounded as to leave all inexcusable and therefore those that have skill to look to themselves in the common business of Life may discern as much as is required Those who have not use of their abilities the Idiotae the Moderation of the Church leaves to the mercy of God and the care of their Governours so far as they are capable for as Origen argues when Celsus objected to the Christians that they did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 m Origen c. Celsum l. 1. believe without any reason or examination The contrary thereunto Origen shews at large Yet of the vulgar he saith indeed it is impossible that all people should attain to the reasons of all Doctrines How can he get wisdom who is diligent to give the Kine Fodder c. Eccles 38. 26. Wherefore saith Origen what more compendious way could be contrived to relieve the poor multitude than the plain doctrine of Jesus for this we find by experience that they that before wallowed in Vice thereby now are delivered but why should the Stoicks and Platonists quarrel at Christians for believing when all of them believe those they apply themselves to in the Sect they judge most excellent § 10. So great being the Moderation of our Church because never the less as the temper of men generally now is among us since these licentious times especially have corrupted them the most are very captious of what hath the femblance of priviledge and such also are most apt to neglect their duty It is very great justice and equity that all be convinced of the due submission we also owe to the Church in reference to this matter The sum of which duty I shall lay down in such brief Propositions as are agreeable to an easy reason to infer from the comparing of relations 1. All good Christians who love the Church of God and its Peace will for Truth and Conscience sake hearken to the Church and those set over them on purpose to guide and direct them especially in case of doubt 2. Such will well weigh the moments of reasons which the Church offers and be ready with all due regard to entertain what the Church resolves and readily also approve of those resolutions unless it appear manifestly that such determinations contradict the word of God and the sense of the Universal Church which no good man will unadvisedly conceive much less seek occasions for exception 3. In a doubtful and equal Case such will encline to what is publickly determin'd because of the relation of superiority between the Church and its Members and because of the many great advantages they know the Church hath in its judgment above themselves because also the better any are and the more humble and sincere the more they are prepared to suspect and distrust their own judgments and not to lean unto their own understandings 4. If in any case it should happen that such should differently opine or judge however such will afford a practical submission in many Cases which they may and ought the liberty of their own thoughts remaining which is sufficient if they cannot but dissent Modest and pious persons will upon many occasions have their Faith to themselves and reserve their different apprehensions in a continent silence which is to be wise unto sobriety 5. If before they come to know the judgment of the Church they should go about to divulge their sense in speaking or writing such will do it with submission to the Church and to those to whom is committed the care of censure If there should happen such a lawful and necessary occasion which they cannot avoid to declare their apprehension different from the Church If the dissenter errs and cannot submit with consent he must e'ne bear patiently the inconvenience of his error which if in a less principal matter on this side Heresy and Schism such an infirmity n Aliter sapere quam se res habet humana tentatio est S. Aug. de Bapt. l. 2. and temptation incident to humane nature happen o Qualiter pro hoc ipso falsae opinionis errore in die judicii puniendi sunt nullus potest scire nisi judex Salvianus de gubern Dei c. 11. §. 4. They that would retain their integrity must preserve 1. An entire Charity to others 2. A reverent respect to the Church and as much as is possible an inviolable Communion therewith 3. Such ought to endeavour to comply in other points more diligently 4. Such ought to profess their dissent from the Church with great reluctancy and sorrow 5. They must be very willing to own their error when they are convinced thereof In the mean while they are bound to lay it aside Whereby retaining inviolable Communion with the Church such already being in preparation of mind disposed to renounce their error when they
Christian people Let Archbishop Laud be heard for once by those who have doubted his judgment in this matter l Archbishop Laud §. 16. Num. 31. I ever took Sermons and do still to be the most necessary Expositions and applications of Holy Scripture and a great ordinary means of Salvation To the same purpose Hooker's Eccles Pol. l. 2. § 22. Neither hath the Church of God ever had any where more useful practical and judicious Preachers than those who with the Church of England have thus ingenuously and equally judged of the use and necessity of Preaching on one hand esteeming its real use and benefit on the other hand not judging it the chief exercise of Religion and the worship of God nor allowing that for the hearing of a Sermon which spends its Life in its Birth as Mr Hooker saith the Prayers of the Church should be slighted neglected or mangled m In concione solâ totum fermè Divini cultûs ritum collocant non tales erant antiquae piae Synaxes Ar. Spalat l. 7. c. 12. At the Conference at Hampton-Court the Bishop of London humbly desired his Majesty That there might be a praying Ministry among us it being now come to pass that men think it the only duty of Ministers to spend their time in the Pulpit I confess saith he in a Church newly to be planted Preaching is most necessary not so in one long established that Prayer should be neglected I like saith King James your motion exceeding well and dislike the Hypocrisy of our time who place all Religion in the Ear. At the very dawning also of the Reformation Preaching was also especially useful and few were exercis'd therein and had a right skill therein which made the Institution of a Christian man set out 1537. because of the difficulty thereof say Surely the office of Preaching is the chief and most principal office whereunto Priests or Bishops be called by the authority of the Gospel though by Preaching there might be meant the Annunciation of the Gospel which is done by lively reading of the Scriptures and in sundry other Ministerial Offices Wherefore in the Church of England we have the lively Oracles of the Holy Scriptures declared and read among us n Coimus ad divinam Literarum commemorationem Tert. Apol. We have Catechising and Expositions on the Church Catechism We have also excellent Homilies too much despised for their plainness yet the same which Bucer o Quid illi qui non sustineant audire erectis animis cupidis tam breves easque tam salutares Homilias totas Censura M. Buceri magnify'd as short and wholsome Sermons not only for the help of non-Preaching Ministers but withal a pattern and as it were a boundary for the Preaching Ministers as King James hath it in his Directions 1623. of which how modestly and moderately doth the Church her self speak in its 35. Article That they contain a Godly and wholsome Doctrine necessary for these times We have also the Lives and Counsels of the Church's Ministers which are living Sermons too p Vereor nè pancae extant inregno vivae conciones Calv. Ep. 87. So that among us we have all sorts of Preaching if the commonness of it did not make it despised Great care also is taken for other Sermons too q Canon 45 46. Rubrick after the Nicene Creed Yea our Church hath used all possible means that the Preaching of her Ministers may be useful and as they ought to be as appears from the exhortations which are made at the Ordinations of Bishops Priests and Deacons and the subscriptions which are made before the Bishops which are also incomparably enforced by r V. librum quorundam Canonum 1597. Can. 50. C. 54. Q. Elizabeth's Articles for doctrine and Preaching 1554. their Majesties directions from time to time as hath been instanced Ch. 6. § 5. Notwithstanding many are of the mind with those in Scotland who esteemed the Directions of King James to Preachers to be Limiting of the Spirit of God ſ Spotswood History of Scotland ad an 1622. What would they have thought of the Proclamation of King Edw. VI. which inhibited all Preaching throughout the Kingdom that the Clergy might apply themselves unto Prayer The Copy of which Inhibition is in Fuller's Church History t Fuller 's History Ec. ad an 1548. 2 Ed. 6. In the Preface to the Directory we see the Prelates accused for the crime of making Preaching inferiour to the Common-Prayer which charge contains a fallacy like that of a complex Interrogation For our Liturgy doth not exclude but suppose and require Preaching and doth contain in its daily Offices sundry sorts of real Preaching beside Among professed Christians ought Preaching to contend with Prayer either as to the necessity of it or dignity when Prayer is our duty to God immediately and doth suppose people already instructed In the Notes on the view of the Civil and Ecclesiastical Law u P. 3. Ch. 4. §. 3. it is very well concluded All this while we should not detract any thing from Preaching considering our selves to live under a State so maturely composed and so throughly advised and setled in the Faith it would be expected that we should so far moderate our opinion of Preaching as that our magnifying thereof may no way tend to the discredit or disadvantage of most necessary Prayer Our Church doth not admit to the Office of Preaching any but who are ordained and licensed thereunto Yet our Church doth allow such kind of Sermons as we call in the Colleges Common places for the training up of Candidates in Divinity and for their tryal of skill before competent Judges The Moderation in our Church is further known in that among us its Ministers are not expected nor do they endeavour to take the people in their Preaching by mysterious non-sense or by storm and sensible noises and uncouth tones and grimaces whereby a tumult and confusion is rais'd in the animal passions scaring weak people almost out of their wits and common sense just as the Valentinian Hereticks x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euseb Hist l. 4. used hard words and thundring noises in their Conventicles to cause astonishment in the people y Nihil tam facile quàm vilem plebeculam indoctam concionem linguae volubilitate decipere quae quicquid non intellexit plus miratur S. Hier. ad Nepotian Ep. 3. Our design is otherwise by a rational and sober surrender of their minds to gain our Hearers to truth and goodness Whence it follows that among such as Mr Hooker well notes z Eccles Pol. l. 5. §. 2. The vigour and efficacy of Sermons do grow from certain accidents which are not in them but in their maker his gesture his zeal his motion of body inflexion of voice c. Here it is not improper also to justify the Moderation and good reason our Church hath for the distinction it hath
made between a Preaching and a non-Preaching Minister a Canon 46 67. Preface to the Homilies who though he be not so profoundly learned as others of which learned sort blessed be God we have some good abundance yet if he be blameless in his Life and faithful in his Office and observant of the appointments of the Church by the grace of God there are so many helps ready provided by the wisdom of the Church among us That a not-Preaching Minister may perform a Ministerial Office both for the necessary edification of the people and the just satisfaction of the Church more than many Preaching Ministers of whose discretion and wise order the Church cannot be so well secured Hear we Archbishop Whitgift b Answer to the Admon 1572. I am fully perswaded That he cometh nearer the mind of the Apostle who orderly preacheth once a Month than some who are back-biters at other Mens Tables and run up and down seldom or never studying though they preach twice a day For though no Church doth more promote and encourage the proficiency of her Sons in all useful literature yet the Church thinks it not reason to reject the Ministry of a not-preaching Minister otherwise reasonably qualified Can. 34. where it is necessary especially when as the Church declares the Sacraments are effectually administred by them that have not the gift of Preaching Artic. 26. The care of the Church is also to be taken notice of in requiring those who are beneficed to procure at least a Sermon to the people once a Month c Can. 46 47. And especially there being wholsome Homilies for the other Days the Church hath done her part in providing for the spiritual sustenance of her Children both for their necessity and entertainment and those who can Preach as Blessed be God there are many think it their duty to do the same frequently and constantly § 9. The order of the Church is also That none neglect their own Parish Church and with great reason to avoid unspeakable confusion Yet even in d Stat. 1. R. Eliz. c. 2. 32 Eliz c. 1. Q. Elizabeth's Injunctions 1559. § 33. the Precept is exprest with this indulgence Except it be by the occasion of some extraordinary Sermon in some Parish of the same Town and in the Articles for enquiry in the first Year of her Reign one was Whether you know any that in contempt of their own Parish Church do resort to any other Church So in the Homily e The Homily of the right use of the Church 't is said That to the said House or Temple of God at all times by common order appointed are all people that be Godly indeed bound with all diligence to resort unless by sickness or other most urgent causes they be letted therefrom So willing was always our Church and the Constitution of the Kingdom to allow all reasonable Liberty provided it might not be abused No Man saith the Bishop of London-Derry in his Vindication was ever punisht for instructing his own Family but it may be for holding unlawful Conventicles or for instructing them in Seditious Schismatical or Heretical Principles Nor for going to the next Parish to hear a Sermon thousands did it daily and never suffered for it But it may be for neglecting or deserting his Parish Church f Quisque in suâ Parochiâ sacris coetibus ad●● ibi Christi Ceremoniis vacet Sacramentaque omnia percipiat ut qui haec sacere ●●●ligal Excommunicetur Eucer de Eccs Angl. Censura c. 3. and gadding up and down after Non-Conformists and strange unknown Forms of serving God § 10. Because as Bucer observed too many did not in the reading or reciting the Divine Service use that devout reverent and intelligible manner as was fit The special care of the Church hath always been very great of this as appears from the admonition to all Ministers Ecclesiastical in the beginning of the second Part of the Homilies and in Queen Elizabeth's Injunctions 1559. and in the several Articles for enquiry by all which all care is taken g Vi. Librum quorundam Canonum 1571. That all Ministers and Readers of publick Prayers Chapters and Homilies shall be charged to read leisurely plainly and distinctly h 39 Article 35. and the Rubrick requires the Minister to read the Lessons standing and turning himself so as he may best be heard of all such as are present Which Precepts contain as much as the general Missal i Liquet omnino requiri ut Ministri Ecclesiarum has preces Psalmos conciones recitent summâ gravitate religione disertè quoque perspicué Bucer de Ordin Eccl. Anglic. c. 1. Canatur legatur drticulatim explanatè reverendo gestu ad aedificationem orantis interea laici Wicelii Meth. concor c. 17. Rubricks which require the Priest to read neither too precipitantly fast nor too morosely slow with a voice mean and grave fit to excite Devotion and which is accommodate to the Hearers But whereas in the Mass the Romanists are enjoin'd a secret and private whispering In our Church it is otherwise Ordered for the common benefit which Order our Homily of the Common-Prayer and Sacraments defends from divers testimonies of Scriptures and Doctors and the Constitution of Justinian k Justin Novel Constit 23. who lived 527 Years after Christ which is this We Command that all Bishops and Priests do celebrate the Holy Oblation and the Prayers in Holy Baptism not speaking low but with a clear or loud voice which may be heard of the people that thereby the minds of the hearers may be stirred up with great Devotion in uttering the Prayers of the Lord God for so that Holy Apostle teacheth in his first Epistle to the Corinthians c. 14. Therefore for these causes it is convenient that among other Prayers those things also which are spoken in the holy Oblation be uttered and spoken of the most religious Priests unto our Lord Jesus Christ our God with the Holy Ghost with a loud voice Which is as our Homily takes notice a plain Decree of Justinian for Praying and Administring of Sacraments in a known tongue contrary to the opinion of them that would have ignorance make devotion To this head of right reading the Divine Service belongs the Order of our Church to use the Divine Service in publick as Order hath prescribed l Non transcu●●●ndo 〈◊〉 Syncopando Syn. Ling. 14 4. Can. 14. not chopping and changing adding and plucking away m Second Part of the Homily for Whit-sunday as the Homily speaks of the Romanists intermingling their own Traditions Yet though the Church doth not allow her Clergy to mangle her Offices yet where need is remissions are allow'd as in the Office of private Baptism Communion of the sick and the like And if any Liberties left to the prudence and discretion of the Ministers be a proper instance of the Moderation of the Church many might be
given which are allowed with which such may be contented as in some cases where some present resolution and practice is required in other matters of less concern where an indifferent variety is allowed but more instances there are of what is left to the discretion of the Ordinary n See the Preface concerning the Service of the Church Canon 53. Second Rubrick before the Preface of the Ceremonies Admon to Min. Eccles before the second Part of the Homilies Sundry Rubricks § 11. Having spoken of the Moderation and Wisdom of the Church in what relates to Sermons because Catechising o Canon 59. 1603. Lib. quor Canonum 1571. is an useful sort of Preaching I cannot but note the Moderation of the Church in framing such a Form of Catechism as the ancient Fathers p S. Aug. de Catechizandis rudibus S. Ambros de iis qui S. Mysteriis initiantur commended So full and comprehensive is the Exposition of the foundations of our Religion and yet without those curious questions which are not needful to trouble the green heads of those who are to be Catechised however which are not to be set forth as fundamental This was the excellent judgment of King James q Conference at Hampton-Court who approved of one uniform Catechism in the fewest and plainest affirmative terms that may be all curious and deep questions being avoided not like the ignorant Catechisms in Scotland set out by every one who was the Son of a good Man Thus the judicious r Pax Ecclesiae p. 54. Bishop Sanderson for the Peace of the Church and to preserve Unity and Charity his third direction is That Catechisms should not be farced with School points and private tenets but contain only clear and undoubted Truths Whereas the Church of Rome and many other Sects have stuft their Catechisms with some of their private opinions even so much that sometimes their Catechisms are not only to contain the sums of Christianity but they are the distinctive notes of their party in maintaining which some of them place so great a part of Religion and therefore no wonder if according to their great wisdom in other things they enamel their Catechisms with what is to them so pretious I shall only here add what Dr Hammond saith of this our Church Catechism ſ Vindication of the ancient Liturgy of the Church of England §. 40. If we would all keep our selves within that Moderation and propose no larger Catalogue of Articles to be believed by all than the Apostles Creed as 't is explain'd in our Catechism and lay greater weight upon the Vow of Baptism and all the Commands of God as they are explain'd by Christ and only add the Explication and use of the Sacraments in those commodious and most intelligible expressions and none other which are there set down I should be confident there would be less hating and damning one another more Piety and Charity and so true Christianity among Christians and Protestants than hitherto hath been met with § 12. This Chapter ought not to be dismissed before we take notice how the interest both of the inward and outward worship of God is according to a just Moderation secured in our Church For 1. In all the Instructions and Precepts of the Church Her designs and intent appear very sincere to promote the worship of God according to his Will Wherefore our Church makes none else partakers of the Divine Worship as neither Saints nor Angels nor the Blessed Virgin The Ceremonies as will be further shewed are not held by our Church as any part of the Divine Worship but only outward signs and helps of Devotion Our Church lays also greatest stress upon the inward affection and intention of the mind as the most necessary and principal part of the Divine Worship as that which only can render all outward expressions of our Honour of God acceptable Because in the affection of the Heart is the consummation of all moral goodness t Actus exterior nihil addit bonitatis aut malitiae actui interiori nisi per accidens D. Tho. 1. 2● q. 20. Art 4. especially in the worship of God For the best Being is to be served with the most excellent operations of our best Faculties Therefore God who is the most Excellent most Infinite and most pure Spirit must be worshipped in Spirit and in Truth in due regard to which just consideration all the Offices of our Church are framed so as to promote chiefly a due sense of God and of the Divine Attributes a Heavenly and spiritual disposition of Mind a real and unaffected Piety a sincere and hearty Devotion For as the Homily saith u Of Holy Scripture first Part. Without a single eye pure intent and good mind nothing is allowed for good before God But notwithstanding the inward worship of the Heart is held most necessary and principal in our Church is instantly required the outward worship of God also as in all acts of outward as well as inward obedience in many of which the affection cannot be sincere without the outward exercise of such acts when they can be performed as in consecrating also a just portion of our time and Estates to the honour of God the humble service of our bodies reverend gestures and behaviour which are but proper and fit to encrease in our selves and others the inward honour of God also In respect to both these parts of worship those who duly honour God may be fitly denominated devout persons But the probable reason why many who call themselves Saints do disdain the name of Devout is because the Attribute of Devotion seems to intimate also the outward reverent behaviour of body as the necessary Companion of the inward integrity of the mind which outward reverence such judge too meanly of Lastly In our Church the worship of God is supposed to proceed not so much from a principle of fear and dread as of love and thankfulness Whereas some in a way to overthrow all Religion have given out That the fear of God is only the dread men have of some unknown arbitrary and uncontroulable power Such a fear they suppose the only motive to the worship of God the only foundation and bond of Justice An Experiment taken up to keep men obedient to Laws The Moderation of our Church governs it self very justly in this matter accounting the due fear of the Soveraignty and power of God very useful to the good as well as the bad to make all heedful and careful in their duty Therefore in the Office of Commination as in many other places also the threats of God against impenitent Sinners are by our Church denounced Yet the first and the chief reason of our worship of God is frequently owned in the Offices of our Church and supposed to be a sense of the Infinite Divine Excellencies and his constant bounty and benefits and gracious goodness to mankind especially in our Lord Jesus
Artifice of the Romanists hath had great effect on our Sectaries in their obstinate refusing the said Oath of Supremacy whereby they are become the more prepared for the Papacy And that we may see how the Romanists and the Sectaries are united in their first Principles and how both become more obstinate even the more Moderation is used to either Their refusing together the Oath of Allegiance is too undoubted a testimony Yea Of the Moderation of his Majesties Government and the immoderate obstinacy of the governing part of the Romish Clergy The History of Father Walsh concerning the Loyal Formulary in Ireland 1666. will be an eternal Monument which sheweth at large with what art and industry the desire of the more peaceable Romanists was opposed even from the Roman Cardinals and other their Superiours to give his Majesty but the security of their Allegiance in a brief and very moderate Form 2. The Oath against Simony c Injunct Q. Eliz. §. 26. Canon 40. 1603. Nemo gradum sacerdotii venalitate pretii mercetur quantum quisque meretur non quantum dare sufficit aestimetur Cod. Tir. de Episco Cleric doth justify the integrity of our Church and the Laws in that behalf and that all the endeavour possible is used to prevent all guilt of Simony in the Clergy 3. The Oath of Canonical obedience is offered unto all with that most moderate and just clause In all things lawful and honest which Canonical obedience is no other than is sworn in other Reformed Churches as appears by the Form set down by D. D. Durell f Of Reformed Churches p. 10. 4. In the Oath of continual residence in a Vicaridge half the clause is for the Moderating the Oath unless it shall be otherwise dispensed by the Diocesan Many object earnestly against the Oath which the Church-Wardens are oblig'd to take Whereas such are to consider the nature and end of their Office cannot well be procured but by obliging them in that matter 2. Such may consider their Presentments are of matters governed by their Superiours in which they are but to make Presentment according to enquiries before them in making of which they may be directed by the Minister Of other Oaths thus the Homily against Perjury When Judges require Oaths of the people for declaration or opening of the truth or for execution of Justice Also when men make faithful promises with calling to witness of the name of God to keep Covenants honest Promises Statutes Laws and good Customs as Christian Princes do in their Conclusions of Peace and private persons promise their fidelity in Matrimony c. And all men when they do swear to keep common Laws and local Statutes and good Customs for due order When Subjects do swear to be true and faithful to their King and when Judges Magistrates and Officers swear truly to execute their Offices c. All these manner of swearing for causes necessary and honest be lawful By lawful Oaths common Laws are kept inviolate Justice indifferently ministred harmless persons are defended mutual Society amity good order is kept continually in all Communal●ies c. Lastly Of the Ceremony in taking Oaths with laying hands on the Bible or Testament and Swearing by the Contents of it and kissing the Book we may hear what Tindal g On 5. S. Matth. p. 208. well saith When thou swearest by the Holy Gospel or Bible the meaning is that God if thou ly shall not fulfil unto thee the promise of mercy therein written but contrariwise to bring upon thee all the Curses Plagues and Threatnings therein threatned to the disobedient and evil-doers And by these Ceremonies the Civil Law tells us an Oath is held more inviolable h T●ctis sacr●sanctis Evangeliis L. ●em non novam §. Pat●●●● de judi●iis See our Ancient Statute 51 H●nr 3. CHAP. VIII Of the Moderation of the Church in relation to Ceremonies § 1. In the Ceremonies of our Church which are very few and those of great antiquity simplicity clear signification and use our Church avoids either sort of superstition § 2. They have constantly been declared to be in themselves indifferent and alterable but in that our Church avoids variableness is a further proof of its Moderation § 3. They are professed by the Church to be no part of Religion much less the chief nor to have any supernatural effect belonging to them § 4. Abundant care is taken to give plain and frequent reasons and interpretations of what in this nature is enjoined to prevent mistakes § 5. The Moderation of our Church even in point of Ceremonies compar'd with those who have raised so great a dust in this Controversy § 6. Many innocent Rites and usages our Church never went about to introduce and why § 7. The Obligation of our Church in this matter is very mild § 8. The Moderation of our Church in her appointment of Vestments § 9. The Benedictions of our Church are according to great Piety and Wisdom ordered § 10. The Moderation of our Church in her appointments of Gestures § 11. Of the respect which is held due to places and things distinguished to Gods Service our Church judgeth and practiseth according to an excellent Moderation § 1. AS in the foregoing Chapter I have not thought it necessary to stay the Reader by presenting to his consideration the many proofs of the lawfulness antiquity and advantages of Liturgy in general or by arguing the excellence and usefulness of our publick Forms of Prayer in particular because any such labour hath been sufficiently saved from the copious and unanswerable performances of so many learned and judicious men of our Communion who have largely vindicated and also have given the particular reasons of our Institutions So in this Chapter of the Ceremonies of our Church which are only the Ecclesiastical Institutions for order and decency I hold it for the same reasons mentioned unnecessary by many Arguments to defend the lawful use or establishment of Ecclesiastical Rites since the same have been abundantly proved both from the liberty allowed to the Jewish Church and also from what is warranted by the Apostolical Doctrine and practice and is defended from the practice and judgment of the Primitive Church and other Protestant Churches and cannot without very evil Consequences as are destructive to the interest of Religion be denied any Christian Church All which and much more for the Vindication of our Church hath been fully and judiciously evinced particularly by my Excellent Friend Mr Falkner in his Libertas Ecclesiastica To whose solid defence also of our other Ecclesiastical appointments and becoming gestures in the Service of God and also the Holy-Dayes and Festivals of our Church as agreeable to Holy Scripture and reason I take leave to refer the Reader and I presume it may satisfy my design and sufficiently justify our Church if unto what hath been so amply and irreproveably performed I add the just instances and proof of our
Churches Moderation The Ceremonies of our Church are but very few and those of great antiquity simplicity decency and clear signification hardly to be wrested to the prejudice of inward piety wherefore they are neither unprofitable nor burdensome of which they are charged in the Preface to the Directory Our Church avoiding extreams on one hand of the Church of Rome a Concil Trid. Sess 7. Can. 13. whose Ceremonies are so cumbersome for their number b Quia ad aures ipsorum totius sermè orbis justissimae querelae pervenerint de moderandâ corrigendâ onerosâ multitudine quorundam rituum Chemnit Examen ib. p. 34. that they make no end of commanding and forbidding till they come to the other extremity of moroseness of which humour St Austin c S. Aug. Ep. 118. in express words complains Religion which God in his mercy hath made free with few and clear Sacraments is made more burdensome than ever was the Jewish Wherefore our Church is most careful lest by any excess of Ceremonies Religion should be any wise obscured and by outward and sensible things the minds of people should be diverted to the neglect of what is inward and spiritual Therefore our Church in its Preface of Ceremonies why some be abolished complains That the excessive number of Ceremonies was so great and many of them so dark that they did more confound and darken than declare and set forth Christs benefits unto us On the other hand our Church avoids that other kind of superstition of those that consider not the frame of men nor the use and experience of having some Rites for comeliness and edification d V. Pref. to the Liturgy and for exciting Piety and Devotion in the publick worship of God Let me for the sake of those who rather will accept such a truth from Mr Perkins e Reformed Catholick 7. §. of Traditions repeat his words We hold that the Church of God hath power to prescribe Ordinances Rules or Traditions touching time and place of Gods worship and touching order and comliness to be used in the same and in this regard Paul 1 Cor. 11. 2. commendeth the Church of Corinth for keeping his Traditions and Acts 15. 29. the Council at Jerusalem decreed that the Churches of the Gentiles should abstain from blood and from things strangled this Decree is termed a Tradition and this kind of Traditions whether made by general or particular Synods we have a care to maintain and observe these Caveats being remembred f Ritus pauci numero sine sumptu minimè graves Grot. in Cassand Artic. 15. 1. That they prescribe nothing childish or absurd to be done 2. That they be not imposed as any part of Gods worship 3. That they be severed from superstition or opinion of merit Lastly That the Church of God be not burdened with the multitude of them And indeed a worthy instance of the prudent Moderation of the Church of England is that in her reformation from Rome she hath delivered her self from such an Endless g Europae Speculum p. 3. multitude of Superstitions and Ceremonies enough to take up a great part of a mans life to gaze on and peruse a huge sort of which are so childish and unsavoury that as they argue great silliness and rawness in their inventors so can they naturally bring no other than disgrace and contempt to those exercises of Religion wherein they are stirring Yet after the fashion of a modest and prudent Matron though our Church doth not appear tawdry drest with too great a variety of ill placed cost yet doth she endeavour always to appear discreet and comely in her attire On purpose retaining some Rites in respect to the practice of the antient Church and to vindicate her self from the imputation of moroseness and not to side with the other extreme of those who in the exercise of their Religion affect carelessness and neglect of any good Form The Church of England doth retain some Ceremonies in her Offices thereby also to vindicate real Christian Liberty namely the publick liberty of Gods Church one part of which as Bucer in the beginning of the Reformation well noted is for the Church to chuse its own Rites and also to vindicate the Liberty of private Christians who by the Orders of the Church have their choice directed for their own edification and the better order of Divine things For Diversity of Ceremonies in divers Churches do serve to testify the Christian Liberty and doth greatly conduce to teach the true judgment of Ceremonies namely that all men by this diversity may understand That those things which are not delivered in Holy Scripture are not necessary to Salvation but may be altered as the time and circumstance of edification doth require h Sprint's Necessity of Conformity in case of Deprivation p. 115. It a Forbesius in Irenico l. 1. c. 7. Harmon Confess p 194. Which reason of them though it hath been frequently repeated yet hath not sufficiently been taken notice of by those who pretend to be such Assertors of Christian Liberty who fall foul into another servile and unquiet sort of Superstition Yet when we consider the horrid stiff superstition of such Precisians whom the Moderation of the Church of England in point of Ceremonies doth affright We cannot think them so moped but others appear to have run into a greater excess of madness when we behold the exceeding number of Ceremonies and observances which the Roman Rubricks appoint in their Rituals Missals and Pontifical c. We may bless our selves who within the Communion of our Church are freed from such a bondage more grievous than the Jewish especially since their Rites many of which are so ridiculous and trifling i Vi. Pontificale Rom. de Ecclesiae Dedicatione p. 237. Vi. Rituale Rom. in absolvendo excommunicatum jam mortuum c. k Quando primò Clericis barbae tondentur dici debet Pontifice sedente cum mitrâ Antiphona Sicut Ros Hermon c. Pontificale p. 550. are not only approved but required by the Council of Trent under the pain of Anathema l Conc. Trid. Sess 7. Can. 13. and that for surer notice repeated in the first page of their Ritual Wherefore as Plutarch well saith of Religion it hath its place between contempt of divine things on one hand and superstition on the other So the Moderation of our Church is excellently tempered to keep Christians from Enthusiasm in one extreme and from what some call Rituality on the other m D. H. Mori Ethic. c. 5. p. 105. Of our Churches care in this last particular Bishop Taylor thus endeavours to satisfie some Consciences There is reason saith he to celebrate and honour the wisdom and prudence of the Church of England which hath in all her Offices retained but one Ritual or Ceremony that is not of Divine Ordinance or Apostolical practice and that is the Cross in Baptism which
our Church reformed Scintilla Altaris That to avoid excess of Dedications wherein others are too burthensome she sometimes uniteth two of the Apostles at once in one Festivity as S. Simon and Jude S. Philip and James § 8. The more immoderate is their reproach who brand our reformed Church for being guilty of Popery only because the memory of the just among us is blessed f Co●●mus Martyres cultu dilectionis non servitutis S. Aug. c. Faus l. 22. Notwithstanding those very exceptors are really like the Romanists Canonizing and Sainting one another for being of some particular humour and faction in this for one that they will not keep a Festival or remember an Apostle with honour Indeed in the Church of Rome they have Canonized the worst of men and let any one tell the difference when many of those others Saint each other and affect no other Title but of your Holiness And here let any equal and intelligent Christians judge whether those who hold Communion with the Church of God notwithstanding sundry infirmities and failings ought not and may not more properly according to the stile of Scripture to be called Saints than those who separate from the outward Communion of Gods Church although they usurp the name peculiarly to themselves And here we cannot but observe the Modesty of those in Communion with the Church of England which is true Christian Moderation They never were so forward to rush suddenly as it were into the Holy of Holies in calling themselves and one another absolute Saints but rather while they are in their way and Pilgrimage chuse to be honoured with more modest titles even as Pythagoras in all Ages hath been commended for his Moderation in laying aside the great name of Wife and chose rather to be called a Lover of Wisdom § 9. The same Moderation which our Church useth toward Saints she observeth likewise with respect to the Holy Angels Yea indeed great is the modesty and sober wisdom of our Church in that it is no where excessively curious nor positive in determining of the nature actions knowledge number Orders or special Guardianship of Angels Our Church doth not deny that there is a distinct Order of Angels but no where takes upon her to show how those Orders are disposed But avoiding the extreme of those who are stupidly insensible of the conduct of Holy Angels the Church of England doth glorify God for their Creation for their admirable order and Ministry and affection to us we pray to God we may imitate their readiness and chearfulness in praising and serving him and ministring daily for the good of others yet our Church hath always held the Angels to be in the number of those who worship and not of those who are worshipped and for us to worship those who are themselves worshippers would be such a voluntary humility as is sinful namely to address our selves to such substitutes as God no where hath appointed to receive his peculiar honour g 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Orig. c. Cels l. 8. Neque Invocationibus Angelicis sed 〈◊〉 purè manifestè Orationes dirigens ad Dominum qui omnia s●it Iren. l. 2. c. 57. which the Synod of Laodicea A. D. 364. calls Idolatry § 10. The like Moderation doth our Church excellently well observe in the honour she gives to the Ever Blessed Virgin Mary so highly favoured of God as to be the Mother of our Lord whom our Church celebrates and always humbly calls her Blessed And as it is in the Institution of a Christian man set forth by the Convocation 1537. We may worthily say she is the most blessed of all other Women h Maria Mater Domini principatum inter Mulieres tenuit S. Aug. Scrm. 136. Hanc ego Christi Matrem veneror sed non illi Divae modò sed Deae nomen tribuens R. Jac. Apol. pro Jur. Honor Reginae judicium diligit Virgo Regia falso non eget honore de B. V. Mariâ S. Bernard Ep. 174. and we no where doubt but she is highly graced in Heaven as she received a most special priviledge upon Earth But our Church doth no where believe that she had an immaculate conception which the Romanists celebrate with an Holy-day on purpose Neither doth our Church believe she was ever raised from the dead and assumed into Heaven which they solemnize with another Festival Neither did Erasmus i Erasm Ecclesiastes l. 2. without cause admire how it came to pass they salute the Mother of Christ with more Religion than they invoke Christ himself or the Holy Spirit calling her the Fountain of all Grace and sundry expressions they use of the like affiance in the authority and merit of the Blessed Virgin to succour help and save Sinners as may be seen in the Rosary and Psalter and specially Litanies to the Virgin Mary k V. Consult Cassandr Art 20. p. 140. Jube Filio c. Cùm vix aliud in toto choro sit alienius à scripturis sanctis quod cum Evangelio Christi atque doctrinâ Apostolicâ perditiùs pugnet Wicelius de abusu Eccl. p. 392. In their form of auricular Confession they are taught thus to begin l Manuale Confessionum Cap. 10. p. 128. I Confess to the Omnipotent God to the Blessed Mary always Virgin c. and when they enter into their Monasteries they vow themselves to God and the Blessed Virgin and in all things they are so superdevout m 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Virgin that an Oath by her is accounted most sacred and any of the Festivals may be sooner expunged than that of her Assumption into Heaven and although they prohibite the Bible yet they freely suffer sundry Books of Devotion to the Virgin Mary in the Mother tongue § 11. Our Church hath taken great care that a special honour be had to the Lords Day and that neither the Lords Day nor any other Festival be abused to Luxury or impiety n Haeccine solemnes dies decent quae alios non decent Tertull. Ita Festa moderanda ut neque nimia neque tam flagitiosè profanentur Bucer Censur c. 26. It appears from the Offices in our Liturgy the Rubricks Canons Homilies and Statutes of the Land and Injunctions of our Kings since the Reformation that there hath been a first and special care taken for the Holy Celebration of Sunday or Lords Day wherein we are equal to any Church among the Reformed o Vi. D. Crackenthorp Defens Eccl. Aug. c. 54. The other Festivals being over-ruled that in a Concurrence of Offices they may not disturb its Solemnity the very religious observation of which is earnestly also perswaded in our Homilies and especially in the 13. Canon with which agree the Injunctions of K. Edw. 6. and Q. Eliz. requiring p Coimus in coetum ut Deum quasi manu factâ precationibus ambiamus orantes coimus ad Divinarum literarum commemorationem
familiaritate excitantur S. Aug. Confess 10. c. 33. Voices and our hearing and our affections raised by Psalms and Hymns and Doxologies and mutual incitements to praise God and by musical instruments also where they may be had that we may set forth the praises of God with all our faculties and in the most elevated manner we are capable In our Church is proposed to us great variety in which we may entertain our chearful Devotion for Psalms we have the divinely inspired Psalms of David from whence every one according to their condition may be furnished with most excellent Forms of praise and joy in God according to their several circumstances For Hymns y 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 S. Jo. 17. of Praise we have select Forms taken out of Holy Scripture or in use in the ancient Church in the variety of which with Doxologies also and Hallelujahs we are entertained and delighted We have also in laudable use many excellent spiritual Songs z Carmenque Christo quasi Deo dicere secum invicem Plin. secundus ad Traj Ep. of more artificial composure a Peculiares quaedam magis artificiosae Cantiones Bez. in 5. Eph. 19. Ere Christianâ foret si in Ecclesiâ Cantiones ad populum intellectas ad usum pietatis permitterent Praesules Wicelius p. 21. so that we may praise God according to the utmost of our abilities With these the Moderation of the Church doth not only call off her people from vain obscene and impious Songs which do the Devils work in a sure and insensible manner which is to debauch and vitiate the dispositions and natures of such as use them but hereby we are furnisht also to speak to our selves and to admonish one another as the Apostle exhorts in Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs singing with grace making melody in our hearts to the Lord b Eph. 5. 19. Col. 3. 16. In which our Church with the Apostle doth chiefly endeavour to promote the grace and devotion of the heart which is most worthy to inspire our praise The sincere elevation of the Spirit being the life of all our Psalmody even that half which makes the whole without which the tongues of men and Angels as without Charity are like a sounding brass or tinkling Cymbal Where this grace of the heart is united with the melody of the Voice we may entertain our selves with that joy in God which is the most refined sort of delight we can enjoy We join with the Church Militant on Earth and the Church Triumphant in Heaven We make the best use of that gift of Speech which we have given us to interpret our thoughts by articulate voice and stir up our own and others affections to set forth the high praises of the most Excellent Majesty of God whom it becomes us to serve not only with our nature but our skill If we ought to praise God with melody then a grave and solemn Musick which is useful to govern the melody and also encrease it may be useful to the praise and worship of God and if persons love what is costly as well as useful in their private Houses why should any envy themselves or others some comely magnificence in the holy service of God especially when such an instrument may make our affections as well as our singing more regular and composed Neither is this help to melody ever the worse because David us'd it in the Holy Service of God He praised God in the most excellent manner he could upon Harp and Organ and such Musical Instruments as were in use for the honour of God and called upon others very earnestly and instantly to praise God with the same and it may be noted that praising God by assistance of Instrumental Musick was more ancient than giving the Law in Sinai more ancient c Exod. 15. 20. than the Ceremonies of the Tabernacle or the Temple Wherefore it is rather to be esteemed the effect of natural Religion than any Ceremonial Law of Moses of which the Musick David used was no part and being never appointed was never abolished according to the mistake of the Geneva Notes and of many others from them whereas they might have been taught otherwise from Calvin d Psalmus sit in quo concinendo adhibetur Musicum aliquod Instrumentum p●ater linguam Calvin in Col. 3. 16. in Cap. 6. Amos v. 5. himself in his Comment upon Coloss 3. 16. Where he expoundeth a Psalm to be that in the singing of which some Musical Instrument is used beside the tongue And in that David us'd the help of Instrumental Musick although there was no express Command of God for so doing much more among Christians e Advers●s q●osdam ●anaticos qui cantum Ecclesiasticum ●●o Inti●hristiano 〈…〉 Vorstius in Eph. 5. 19. who are not required to look for particular Commands extraordinary some things may be used as circumstances and helps in the worship of God which are not required by any express Text of Scripture So that from the example of David we are neither bound up to a strict imitation of every thing he did neither doth the Church neglect his Example where the reason remains the same but makes use of its Christian Liberty as it judgeth most for edification and good order in the service of God f Curandum est ut illa quoque Musica sit digna templo Dei. Erasmus de amab Eccl. Concord where may be observed the Moderation of our Church in that Musick is used not as of necessity but of choice And though the Psalmody appointed in our Church is that which recites the divine praises as much as may be in the words of the inspired Psalmists although singing of Psalms in meter is no part of our Liturgy yet great is the Moderation and condescension of our Church in permitting an accommodation in this matter to the most imperfect as indeed the whole use also of Musick is in condescension to the imperfection of our state because our affections are more stir'd up by the same means as our voices and melody are assisted The Moderation of our Church may be further observed herein in that 1. Nothing is ordered to be sung with instrumental Musick but what is taken out of Holy Scripture g Extra Psal nos V. T. aliquid Poeticè compositum in Ecclesia ca●ere vetatur Conc. Bracarens Can. 30. 2. All is sung in the Common language 3. The Musick only governs and moderates the Song and encreaseth the melody 4. Our Musick and Singing is such as S. Austin commended at Alexandria nearer pronouncing than singing designed wholly for edification consistent with gravity h Ad gravitatem att●●r peratus cantus Calv. Instir l. 3. §. 20. and Christian simplicity answering the designs of Religion framed not only for delighting the Ear but affecting the Heart i Vt per ob●ectamenta aurium animus in affectum pietatis ass●●gat S. Aug. Confess 10. and raising
all other matters referring to that Sacrament and all the other five Sacraments also in every thing referring to Faith and Doctrine and Rites agree in heart and confession of mouth with all things received in the Roman Church and all the decrees of that Council made or to be made exhibiting all duty to the Pope as the universal Bishop of the Church c. Such gainful and advantageous bargains will they be sure to make for themselves and the keeping up their usurpations before they will allow any concession or mitigate any extreme rigour in their most unwarrantable practises or they will not fail to annex such conditions as shall render their concessions ineffectual § 2. The Doctrine of Transubstantiation which the Church of Rome receives as an Article of Faith absolutely and simply necessary to Salvation and propounds it to be received by all under a terrible Anathema y Conc. Trid. Sess 13. Can. 2. is by our Church plainly denied as contrary both to Holy Scriptures and all testimonies of venerable antiquity and as a doctrine liable to grievous consequences z V. Hist. Transubst à Jo. Dunelmensi which judgment of our Church may appear to them that peruse our Articles 28 29. Order of Communion Rubricks Homilies several Statutes of the Land particularly the late Statute wherein is provided that all that are in office do declare that they do believe that there is not any Transubstantiation in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper or in the Elements of Bread and Wine at or after the Consecration thereof by any person whatsoever yet such is the accurate Moderation of the Church of England in avoiding one error it runs not into other extremes for in the Office of the Holy Communion in the Church Catechism in the Apology for the Church of England is asserted the real presence a Archbishop Vsher's Serm. 18 Febr. 1620. of Christ in the Sacrament according to Scripture and the judgment b Patres dehortantur à quaestione 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hâc piâ Moderatione si Rex Eccl. Angl. utuntur quae invidia R. Jac. ad C. Per. of the Church of God but the particular mode and manner thereof any otherwise than that it is spiritual mystical and sacramental the Church of England according to the same Rule and practice of the Catholick Church doth not too curiously pry into or search See Ch. 5. § 6. § 3. As the Church of England doth earnestly and passionately invite and expostulates with those of her Communion to frequent the Holy Sacrament as in the exhortations before the Holy Communion in the Conclusion of the Homily of the place and time of Prayer and in Q. Eliz. Articles for Doctrine and Preaching all Ministers are required to excite the people to often and devout receiving the Holy Communion c V. Librum quorundam Canonum 1571. Jam vero singulis mensibus coenam celebrari maximè nobis placeret Calvin Ep. p. 452. and in Colleges and Collegiate Churches the Holy Communion is required to be administred every Sunday unless there be reasonable cause to the contrary d V. Rubr. 4. after H. C. Canon 23. V. Rubr. 8. after H. C. Canon 21. 1003. Rubr. 8. after H. C. and on the first or second Sunday of every month So also the Church of England doth lay its general Command according to great Moderation in requiring every one thrice at least every year to Communicate e Qui in nataii D. Paschate Pentecosle non Communicant Catholici non credantur Conc. Agath Can. 18. well tempering her Injunction in accommodation to the necessity of the Age between the earnest practice of devotion which was in the Primitive Church f Quando Domini nostri adhuc calebat cruor fervebat recens in credentibus fides S. Hieron ad Demetr Ep. 8. when they commonly Communicated at least every Lords Day and Festival and between the remissness of the Church of Rome g Dolemus tantam Christianorum incuriam ut semel tantùm in anno sumant c. Concil Rhem. 1583. which expresly requires all of her Communion to celebrate but once every Year h In Pentecoste rarior est Communio ideo fortasse Concilium Tridentinum hoc tempore nuptias solennes fieri permisit C. Bellarm. de Matrim Sacram. l. 1. c. 31. and the followers of the Directory who for many years together lamentably neglected the administration and participation of the Eucharist i V. Coena q. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V. S. Eccl. Angl. Vindic. c. 3. as beside our own memory Mr Prin often testifies and the History of the Times soon after the Reformation tell us of some who from adoring the Elements fell to contemn them wherefore there issued out a Proclamation k Fuller's Eccl. His P. 387. concerning the irreverent talking of the Sacrament § 4. As our Church offers the Holy Eucharist only to those who have given due testimony of their knowledge and Christian belief in having been confirmed by the Bishop l V. Rubr. after Confirm Injunctions of King Edw. 6. Canon 29. So it requires that none be admitted Godfathers or Godmothers at Christening or Confirmation but such as have received the Holy Communion Yet because S. Paul remits every particular Christian to a Self-examination without any order either to Minister or Lay-Elder to exclude any from the Holy Communion upon their Examination therefore the Moderation of our Church is such it doth not depress adult Christians below the order of persons first to be Catechiz'd requiring them to such rigid Examinations as have been sometime used like the auricular Confessions of the Romanists among which Examiners of the adult Professors the being of a party hath been too often the note of preparation for their Church Communion Neither doth our most moderate Church judge any uncapable of the Sacraments whom she judgeth not unworthy of her Communion m Homily of the Sacrament We must take heed saith the Homily lest of the Memory it be made a Sacrifice lest of a Communion it be made a private eating Wherefore as the redemption of our Lord is offered to all that do not wilfully reject so great grace so is the Holy Communion in our Church to all that are not unfit to receive it And such as are the Church is not wanting to admonish and forewarn n V. Exhorta and Admon before the H. C. and takes all due care to provide against their intrusion as the general corruption of mankind now doth admit according to the Rubrick and Canon o Canon 26. concerning Notorious Offenders On which Bishop Andrews his note was Our Law will not suffer the Minister to judge any man a notorious offender but him who is so convinced by some legal sentence § 5. Our Church of England doth not admit any private Masses p Conc. Trid. Sess 22. Can. 8. 39 Artic. 31. Hom. of Sacr. which in
the Church of Rome are multiply'd without Communicants out of which they suck no small advantage q Minuatur ingens turba quotidiè missantium propter saginandum aqualiculum duntaxat Wicelii Meth. Concord c. 5. whereas our Church in great Moderation appoints the Sacraments to be freely administred without any charge for their ministration and also at every Celebration there is required a convenient number of Communicants r 2d Rubr. after H. C. Rubr. before Com. for sick Last Rubr. after H. Com. for the sick as in the Communion for the sick ſ 2d Rubr. after the H. C. for the sick Canon 71. 1603. there are always to be three or two at the least except in case of contagion And in case that those who sincerely desire to Communicate are lawfully hindred the Moderation and wisdom of our Church hath prescribed a most pious instruction for the sick person such as may at once most exceedingly satisfy and comfort CHAP. XI Of the Moderation of the Church in reference to other Rites and Usages § 1. The Moderation of the Church in its Judgment and use of Confirmation § 2. Concerning Matrimony allowing her Clergy to marry affording opportunity of voluntary celibacy in our Vniversities according to a commendable moderation Vndue degrees of Marriages and some particular Times forbid c. § 3. In reference to Holy Orders 1. The Moderation of the Church in her Consecrating Ministers 2. In taking care to have them be as they ought to be both before and after Ordination with good effect 3. Yet if not so great as is desired why the Church ought not to be accused 4. In retaining such Orders of Ministers in the Church as are Primitive 5. The Moderate Judgment of the Church concerning such as have been ordain'd in the Church of Rome and elsewhere 6. Our Church endeavours to preserve all due regard to what-ever is consecrated to God 7. The Power of the Keys asserted in our Church with due moderation § 4. Of Penance 1. The Moderation of our Church between those who sleight Penance and those who explain it extravagantly 2. The Confession of our Church which is required is suitable to the design of Repentance 3. The Seal of Confession in our Church is as sacred as it ought to be 4. The use of External Penance in our Church according to due Moderation 5. The use of Absolution in our Church maintained according to a just temper § 5. For Visitation of the Sick 1. The worthy care of the Church therein and some Instances of its Moderation referring thereunto 2. Our Churches care for preparing those who are of her Communion for Death without extreme Vnction in use in the Church of Rome 3. Many Instances of the Moderation of the Church referring to the Burial of the Dead § 1. OUr Church in its judgment and use of Confirmation holds a just Moderation between those who reject the use of it and others who make it a proper * Conc. Tri. Sess 7. Can. 1. de Confir Sacrament It being received as a holy and useful Rite perpetually expedient tho not of necessity to * V. Instit of a Christian Man Salvation With which our Church doth not join Chrism or Unction as in Baptism also we use not Oil there being no mention of either in Scripture or in Primitive Antiquity for such purposes Neither is the baptized Person brought Hic mos fuit ut Christianorum puert-coram Episcopo sisterentur Calvin Inst l. 4. c. 19 § 4. Laudo restitutam in purum usum velim ib. V. Bez. in Hebr. c. 6. to Confirmation till every such a one be of competent years of understanding solemnly to take upon him the obligation entred into in Baptism which being duly performed the Bishop doth impose his Hands on every of them with Prayer and Blessing Which is the order of our Church for the honour and dignity of Episcopacy according to primitive and ancient † Qui in Ecclesiis baptizantur praeposito Ecclesiae offeruntur S. Cypr. ad Jovin practice Altho such is the moderation of our Church that its Presbyters are taken into some society with the Bishop generally in those Ministeries Neither is any in our Professio baptizatorum infantium per susceptores facta in puberibus unà congregatis solemni ritis renovetur VVicelii Meth. Concord c. 4. Canon 60. 61. 1603. Church to be admitted to the Holy Communion until such time as they are confirmed or be ready and desirous to be confirmed So wisely moderate is our Church to accept of a true preparation and sincere desire of Confirmation when in some cases it cannot be had either through the lamentable neglect of those who ought to * Si in hoc E●iscoporum negligentia peccatum est hactenus negligentia damnetur n●n id quod per se bonum est VVicelii Meth. Concord c. 8. perform it or those who should desire it be performed It was a discipline of the Helvetians to forbid the Bannes of Marriage to such as could not give a good account of their Catechism which soon made all who had a mind to Marriage to be very diligent in learning their Lessons by heart And by a Canon of a * Conc. Bituricens 1584. Council in France None were to be admitted to the Eucharist or † Nec enim alia adversus foediss ignorantiam via restabat nisi Maritalis tori sit is in subsidium Vocaretur Hammondus de Confirm c. 2. §. 11. Matrimony but such who had been Confirmed The same if well lookt into is indeed a Canon also of our ¶ A Book of certain Canons 1571. English Church Especially they shall warn young Folks not only Men but also Women that it is provided by the Laws That none of them may either receive the Holy Communion or be married or undertake for a Child in Baptism except they before have learned the Principles of Christian Religion and can fitly and aptly answer to all the parts of the Catechism Neither is this Rite among us degenerated into a practice of meer Gain and Covetousness as Spalatensis complain'd of the Church of * De Rep. Eccl. l. 5. c. 12. Rome where Confirmation with Chrism is made such a Sacrament as they think confers a greater Grace than the true Sacrament of † V. Chem. Exam. de Confirm p. 69. Baptism But the Moderation of the Church hath restored the Ancient Primitive Rite of Imposition of Hands which for many hundred years hath been extruded from the Romish Confirmation by other superstitious ¶ Libertas Eccles l. 2. c. 4. §. 3. Ceremonies § 2. The Moderation of the Church of England in what relates to Marriage chiefly appears in that it esteems Matrimony honourable in * Dei Ordinationem nulla lex humana nullum votum potest tollere Conf. Aug. all and particularly also in Priests and Ministers of the Church and to make Vows of perpetual Virginity
the Bishop remits the guilt of Sins the Prince compels the Bishop exhorts he governs by Necessity but we by Counsel So it is in the Injunction of King Edward the 6th 1547. unto those who have the Cure of Souls They ever gently and charitably Exhorting and in his Majesties Name strictly charging and Commanding c. So in the 3 d. Canon 1640. the sacred Synod earnestly intreats and exhorts the Reverend Judges c. § 2. As our Church doth lawfully assert her own Spiritual Power entire and inherent in the Church so she hath always exercised her power in all Subordination to the Right of Princes * V. Institution of a Christian Man p. 49. V. Homily of Obedience And constantly acknowledging that whatsoever Power beside Spiritual the Church or its Church-Men have she receives the same entirely from the favour of our Kings wherefore our Bishops have exercised no Jurisdiction in foro Externo within this Realm but such as hath been granted unto them by the Successive Kings of England Neither have challenged † Non enim dominandi cupidine imperant sed Officio consulendi nec principandi superbiâ sed providendi misericerdia S. Aug. de Civ D. c. 14. any such Jurisdiction belonging to them by any inherent right or title in their Persons or Callings but only by emanation and derivation from the Royal Authority Now the regular exercise of a derived Power is so far from destroying or any way diminishing that Original Power from whence it is derived as that it rather confirmeth and establisheth the same ¶ Bishop Sanderson of Episc not prejudic to Regal Power Wherefore the Institution of a Christian Man calls The Power of Orders a Moderate Power subject determined and restrained § 3. As the Interests of the Kingdom and Church are excellently accommodated in our Constitution of Civil and Ecclesiastical Laws under one Supreme Governour so the Moderation of the Church hath tempered her self very justly between those pretences on one hand who have insisted on their Pleas of Spiritual Right to the real diminution of Soveraign Power And those on the other hand who resolve the exercise of all the inward Power of the Church into the sole will and arbitrary power of the Civil Magistrates according to Erastus and the Leviathan-Author who thus delivers himself The Monarch hath authority not only to Preach Pag. 297. which perhaps no Man will deny but also to Baptize and Administer the Sacraments of the Lord's Supper and to consecrate both Temples and Pastours to God's Service Wherefore our 37 Article declares We give not our Princes V. Canon 1. 2 36. V. Q Eliz. Admonition the Ministring either of God's Word or of the Sacraments which thing the Injunctions set forth by Elizabeth our Queen do most plainly testifie but that only Prerogative which we see to have been given always to all godly Princes in Holy Scriptures by God himself that is that they rule all Estates and Degrees committed to their charge by God whether they be Ecclesiastical or Temporal Which Article of our Church is agreeable also to the judgment of some Bishops concerning the King's Supremacy in the Raign of King Henry the 8th Other places of Scripture declare the highness and excellency of Christian Princes Authority and Power The which of a truth is most high for he hath Power and Charge generally over all as well Bishops as Priests as other The Bishops and Priests have charge over Souls within their own Cures power to minister Sacraments and to teach the Word of God To the which Word of God Christian Princes knowledg themselves subject and in case the Bishops be negligent it is the Christian Princes office to see them do their duty Which sheweth Ex MSS. Dr. Stilling-fleet V. Collect. of Rec. Hist of Reform l. 3. p. 177. that Objection against the Oath of Supremacy is groundless which supposeth that the King is therein made not more a Political than a Spiritual Head of the Church * V. Camdens Eliz. p. 26. 39. Bishop Bramhal to M. Militier p. 37. V. Instit of Chri. Man p. 50. Which the Kings of England have constantly and openly disavowed to the whole World renouncing all claim to such Power and Authority Tho the regulating and ordering that Power in sundry Circumstances concerning the outward exercise thereof in foro externo the godly Kings of England have thought to belong to them as in the right of their Crown and have accordingly made Laws concerning the same even as they have done also concerning other Matters appertaining to the Religion and Worship of God § 4. Which being well considered we have great reason to observe and extol the excellent and pious Moderation of our Kings of England who never challenged to themselves the exercise of the pure Spiritual Power of the Church but left it entirely to the Bishops as the lawful Successors of the Apostles Which more fully appears from the Proclamation in the 13th Year of King Charles the First of blessed Memory according to the Certificate of the Right Reverend Judges under their Hands July 1. 1637. Wherein it was declared That Processes may issue out of the Ecclesiastical Courts in the name of the Bishops c. The Censures also of the Church are confirmed by the Law of the Kingdom * 1 R. Ellz. c. 2. And the behaviour of the Church to the King sheweth the same Exemplary Moderation For the Ecclesiastical Censures are with all due subordination to the Supreme Power secular used Because all external jurisdiction coercive is by Law declared and by the Clergy acknowledged to be wholly and entirely derived from the King as the sole fountain of all Authority of external jurisdiction whether Spiritual or Temporal within this Realm In other Matters tho the substance of the Power it self be immediately from God and not from the King as those of Preaching Ordaining Absolving c. Yet are they so subject to be inhibited limited or otherwise regulated in the outward exercises of that Power by the Laws and Customs of the Land as that the whole execution thereof still depends on the Regal Authority * Bishop Sanderson l. praedict p. 32 33. Altho then the Church knoweth it self to be a Society in its own nature distinct unto which the 19 Article most properly refers yet as very often now it is the unspeakable happiness of the Church to be entertain'd within the Protection of Supreme Powers secular so however the Church of England very justly declares for the Right of Kings to be preserved Inviolable as well as the just Power of the Church and the real Interest of the People Yea all these Interests with that of Religion in the first place our Church with great Moderation and Wisdom preserves entire and distinct All which among the Romanists and other Modellers are miserably confounded or destroyed § 5. Other Sects among us do some way or other deny the King's Supremacy
the late History of the Irish Affairs Which most remarkable Story is a strange proof of the dangerous influence on Kingdoms which is to be expected from the propagation of the Roman Faith and is also a great Instance of the Moderation of our Governments and how ineffectual the same is on such § 8. The Rules and Orders of our Church are mildly and moderately framed Our Church being ever most remov'd from the guilt or humour of Domineering over the Consciences of any She teacheth and enforceth the Divine Commands and useth her Liberty in those things which are left undetermin'd and are within her own just Compass The Precepts of the Church which are very few are justly affirmed to bind by virtue of the Command of God yet their Obligation which is declared not to be Universal only to her Sons and that but so long as she judgeth expedient is intended or remitted as just reason of the Case requires No Councils Evangelical are any where made into Laws in our Church or set up as a Fund for Merit and Supererogation but are left free for our further exercise and endeavour after Christian Perfection Which because it cannot be thorowly attained in this imperfect state therefore the Moderation of our Church no where pretends to this perfection either of Knowledg or of Grace So K. James affirmed to the Cardinal He never should boast of this Church as being perfectly without spot or wrinkle § 9. For Illustration sake if we would compare the moderation of our Laws with the Laws of the Roman Church we cannot better do it than by taking into Consideration a Chapter of Card. Bellarmine's * C. Bellarm l. de Pontif. Ro. cap. de comparatione Legum wherein he useth very neat Sleights to elevate the heaviness and number of the Pontifical Laws and to make them fewer and lighter than were the Ordinances among the Jews For saith he the Laws absolutely impos'd upon all Christians by our Church are scarce found any more than four viz. To observe the Feasts of the Church And the Fasts and to Confess once a Year and to Communicate at Easter Indeed the Men of that generation are so wise that until any be a through Proselyte there is all shew of Moderation that may be to entice them into their Communion But first what Bondage was there ever among the Jews comparable to that one Obligation among the Romanists to believe the Church and Pope of Rome infallible with the Consequences of that in practice which are heavier than all the Jewish Observances set together 2ly On the Supposition that there were only those four general Precepts of the Church we may consider how great Burdens any one of them singly do contain 1. In that their Feasts are so excessive in their number and the observation of them have so many Superstitions V. Ch. 9. The same 2. is to be said of their Fasts 3. In that Auricular Confession of all Mortal Sins with all their Circumstances is enjoyn'd as by Divine Right V. Ch. 11. 4. The slightest Precept of the four is the last of Communicating at Easter But considering therewith the round belief of Transubstantiation which all are required to have we may truly say with our Bishop Hall * Remains p. 30. The Pope's little Finger is heavier than Moses 's Loins But perhaps one reason why the Cardinal saith there are so few Precepts of the Church is because he will say that many of the rest are Divine Commands as Extreme Unction c. The rest saith he of which the Tomes of Councils and Books of Canon Law are so full are not Laws but Admonitions only or pious Institutions without obligation to Fault However there are great store of them of a great Bulk But it is strange that so many Canons of Councils and other Laws enforced with Anathema should have no intended obligation to a Fault in case of Transgression Why were such Laws made or why were such Anathemaes annexed Or saith he They are Conditional Laws as of Celibacy in case any enter into sacred Orders which are not to be accounted burdensome because the Law leaves them to their choice as also in case of Vows How many and how strict observances are contained under such conditional Obligations is too well known to be largely insisted on The Purifications the choice of Meats among the Jews had not all of them comparably so many Rites and Orders and Laws as the Pontifical Oeconomy hath But to make the Precepts of the Church show very light and easie indeed The four Laws of the Church saith Bellarmin are rather a determination of the Divine Law than any new Law for by the Divine Law we are bound to dedicate some time to the Worship of God sometimes to Fast to Confess to Communicate True indeed But then the general Rules of Scripture the edification of Christian People the practice of the Primitive Church the ends of Religious Actions themselves ought to give measure to Laws as in the Church of England is practised and not to let their Commands run out into such lavish extremity where God hath left us at so large and safe freedom Lastly he saith The Commands of the Church have a most moderate Obligation for in their Fasts those who are Sick and Aged are accepted And for Festivals their observation also is dispensed with upon a just Cause So that in conclusion the Church of Rome is the most moderate Governour that ever was for there it is the easiest matter to get off from the strictest Precepts that are if you have Money but the Poor cannot be comforted * Nota diligenter quod hujusmodi gratia dispensationes non conceduntur pauperibus quia non sunt ideo non possunt consolari Taxa Cancel Apostol So great is the moderation of the Church of Rome so large are her Indulgences whether for Commission of Sin or for Omission of Duty § 10. Having mentioned the mildness of the Churche's Power It is meet for the further shewing her Moderation to note That our Church in the Government of her Ecclesiastical Courts in their manner of Process Sentence Appeals doth make use of the Law of Equity moderating even the practice of that also with all due Subordination to other Superiour Laws According to Equity our Church desires all its Laws may be interpreted ¶ Benignius leges interpretandae sunt quo voluntas earum conservetur Capienda est occasio quae praebet benignius responsum She admits of a mitigation of a rigid Sentence She doth sometimes dispense with her General Rules upon the exception of a particular Case Just reason requiring she admits a commutation of her Censures When there is sufficient Cause she is ready to abrogate any such Laws as are found inexpedient and inconvenient The reason of her Laws ceasing they are made to cease also And to take cognizance of their desires who ask a relaxation of strict or rigid Law there
faithfully provided what-ever is necessary or expedient for those who are or ought to be within Her Communion As becomes a good Steward of the Family of Christ there is in her House the Church of the Living God whatsoever is requisite to promote the true Worship of God the Communion of Saints the Kingdom of Christ the Emendation and Edification of all in brotherly Love and Faith and Godliness as appears from the excellent Monuments of the Churches Piety Her Articles Liturgy Canons and whatsoever else belongs to Her Constitution The Church Doors are open we have the Holy Scriptures in our Mother-Tongue frequently read and expounded in Preaching and Chatechism We have the excellent Prayers generally accommodated to all public Occasions and the Holy Sacraments ritely administred and all Spiritual Means necessary to prevent Heresy and Schism Over and above we have Our Prince the professed Defender of our Faith and the assistance of the Ministry of God for all particular occasions public and private which humane fore-sight generally can procure of these things we have a large Confession in the Morning Exercise against * Serm. 9. p. 209. Popery Our dissenting Friends should therefore consider that the Case is quite different from the condition of the Church when it was forced to assemble together in † Homily of Idol 3 part low and poor Conventicles simple Oratories and Caves under-ground called Cryptae for fear of persecution Since these things are so A wild humour possesseth too many who run into dangerous and forbidden Conventicles scandalously insinuating that our Church and Kingdom rather persecute than encourage Christianity But because nothing in this World is so perfect but may have its exceptions framed against it especially when fair Constructions are not allowed therefore for the sake of Peace and in hope by the Church's Condescention and endeavour to remove even all suspicion of what is blame-worthy there have from time to time bin many Concessions made for the utmost satisfaction of all in what hath been thought expedient Our Church being of the mind of Father Nazianzen * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who in his Oration of Peace said Come let us give way that so we may over-come let us grant a little that so we may gain a great deal even Peace Not only in Queen Elizabeth's time some things were changed then being taken into advice many Learned and Moderate Divines * Camdens Hist of Q. Eliz. but even since our Reformation there have bin Concessions made in accommodation to Dissenters Our Church still holding the mean between too much moroseness and too much easiness in admitting Variations † Pref. to the Lit. There are two sorts of Popularity said Calvin to Farellus one when with Ambition and Lust to ingratiate our selves we hawk after the popular Air the other when by Moderation and Equity we endeavour to engage the affection of Men only to render them more docible This latter practice belongs to Our Church which hath wisely accommodated Her self to all to gain * Submittendo nos ad mensuram discentis manum dando gradum nostrum minuendo Quintil. some Our Church being of the temper of those whom Tully calls Courteous and Sweet who gently shew those that err the way which is the true Christian disposition different from what Juvenal * Non monstrare vias eadem nisi Sacra colenti described in the Jews Yea one of the great perfections of the Christian Practice which is an Universal Charity to all even Enemies may be much promoted by our Church's Prayers where we pray for all Men and for Enemies and for Persecutors and Slanderers Yea such is the Charity of Our Church that in it every one is presumed good and orderly and willing to be of Her Communion until it appear lawfully to the contrary § 2. Whereas of the Extreams of the Separation on either hand from Our Church 't is too well known how generally they give out themselves as the only Children of God's Church the only Beloved of God and scarce admit any else to have any portion with their Saints Nevertheless for such matters as they contend Our Church is not busy to send Men presently to Hell * Quod eo consilio invectum ut terrore mortis credulos in obsequium trahant D. An. Sall. Votum pro Pace with an Anathema in their Ear crying out against them Go ye Cursed Yea very moderate she is in her Judgment of the final condition of any without good and sufficient grounds because of the unsearchableness of the Divine Providence in his Government of the World and of particular Men Yet the Moderation of our Church is not of such a Latitude to hold That every Man may be saved by the Law or Sect which he professeth so that he be diligent to frame his life according to the Law and Light of Nature for Holy Scripture doth set out unto us only the Name of Jesus Christ whereby Men must be saved* 39. Articl 18. Wherefore in giving account of the remission of such Punishments as are declared by the Divine Laws Our Church doth not think fit any should be wiser than those Laws themselves and the Divine Revelation The Church of England said Arch-Bishop Laud is not such a shrew to her Children as to deny her Blessing or denounce an Anathema against them if some peaceably dissent in some particulars remoter from the foundation † Dissentio de minimis de opinionibus non repugnat paci imperfectae quae est in viâ D. Tho. 22. q. 29. a. 3. § 3. Neither is our Church so severe as to judg of all * Maximè cum sciat eos fac●re quae nesciunt nostros autem negligere quae credunt Salvian de gub Dei Erroneous Persons according to all the Consequences of their Doctrines Which we presume in many Cases are beyond the comprehension and knowledg of the Party so erring Much less is our Church at any time busy to exulcerate the minds of any by attributing to them such Consequences as their Assertions will not bear § 4. In refuting the Objections of an adverse Party Our Church gives an excellent Example to her Sons to abstain from odious Names Most wholsome to this purpose was the Injunction of Queen Elizabeth That the Knot of all Christian Inj. §. 50. 1559. Society which is Charity be not loosed the Queen's Majesty straightly commandeth all her Subjects to forbear all vain Contentions and Disputations in Matters of Religion and not to use in despite or rebuke of any Persons these convitious words Papist or Heretic Schismatic or Sacramentary So King James said He would not have Pulpits made Pasquils * Confer at Hamp Court and in his † Aug. 4. 1623. Letter to the Arch-Bishop requires That no Preacher of any denomination whatsoever presume to fall into indecent railings against the Persons of Papists or Puritans So in our Subscription
of Men. § 1. In that Vniversal Concord which our Church hath maintained with all so far as lawfully and usefully it may § 2. Her protesting against unsufferable Abuses well consisting with her Moderation and Charity § 3. Our Church leaveth other Churches to the use of their liberty and vindicateth that use mutually § 4. Her especial Moderation and Charity toward the Greek Church § 5. Our Church's Modesty and well-becoming Behaviour toward other Churches and their mutual affection unto Ours § 1. THe excellent temper of our Church is abundantly justified in that Universal Concord and Friendship it desires to maintain with all so far as may be done lawfully Our Church separates indeed as far as is possible from all that is vile and impure making her self as is the Church a Society distinct from Jews and Gentiles and by her Censures doth separate from those that are inordinate and in her own defence keeps her self from complying with sinful and unjust conditions of Communion Yet with the whole Church throughout the World and every part thereof to whom her Communion is not displeasing Our Church in desire and endeavour doth maintain all inward and outward agreement she can * Odia restringi favores convenit ampliari Reg. juris in affections and behaviour also so approving her self that it is manifest she unwillingly differs from any and no more than needs must Thus the 30 Canon of our Church Nay so far was it from the purpose of the Church of England to forsake reject the Church of Italy France Spain Germany or any such-like Churches in all things which they held and practised that as the Apologie of the Church of England confesseth it doth with reverence retain those Ceremonies which do neither endamage the Church of God nor offend the minds of sober Men and only departed from them in those points wherein they were fallen both from themselves in their Ancient Integrity and from the Apostolical Churches which were their first Founders Episcopal Divines saith Bishop Bramhall * Vindication p. 30. do not deny those to be true Churches where Salvation may be had § 2. Neither did our Church of England ever yet oppose it self to any lawful Ecclesiastical Authority which yet is inseparably of the Essence of Schism but on the contrary according to a singular Moderation * Ecclesia Britannica quâ est perpetuò in omnes Christianos singulari moderatione Christianâ dilectiene c. De Antiq. lib. Eccl. Brit. Thes 4. and Charity it doth open its Bosom to every genuine Son of the true Catholic Church of what denomination soever For it is one thing for any to frame to themselves a diverse Congregation and Religion separate from and opposite to the Universal Church as anciently did the Donatists and another thing not to communicate with some particular Persons and Places in some unwarrantable usages and that under express protestation from whence was occasion'd the moderate and innocent Title of Protestants † V. Cluverium Calvisii Chron. ad An. 1529. for protesting against the Edict at Worms which was for restoring all things as they were without Reformation By which Protestation all scandal of Schism is taken away and desire of reconciliation is publicly testify'd not as of absolute necessity but for the sake of Catholic Unity by which Protestation a right is vindicated from the usurpation of the Church of Rome who fondly calls her self not only Catholic but the Mother and Mistress of all other Churches by which she makes her self a public invader of common Ecclesiastical Right § 3. In Matters of Ecclesiastical Freedom The Church of England leaves always other Churches to their liberty and vindicates their right to the same * V. D Durell's View of the Reformed Churches As other Reformed Churches leave us to our liberty and vindicate the same Article 34. It is not necessary that Traditions and Ceremonies be in all places one V. Homily of Fasting or utterly like for at all times they have bin diverse and may be changed according to the diversities of Countries * Distant inter se linguae sed linguarum distantiae non sunt Schismata omnes linguâ ad u●am fidem S. Aug. in Joan. Times and Manners Every particular National Church hath Authority to ordain change and abolish Ceremonies or Rites † Pref. of of the Church the Cerem In these our doings we condemn no other Nations nor prescribe any thing but to our own People only According to the practice of S. Cyprian clearing himself to the African Bishops Judging none nor removing any from the right of Communion if they think somewhat diverse from us For which S. Austin * Cujus charitas non sol●nt illius temporis Christianis sed etiam posteris ad medicinalem notitiam signatur S. Aug. de bapt l. 1. c. 18. commends S. Cyprian And as Tully † Ita dissensi ab illo ut in disjunctione sententiae conjuncti tamen amicitiâ maneremus Orat. pro provinc Consul spake of himself with relation to Caesar I so dissented from him that in the difference of our Opinion however we remained entire in our Friendship Of this mind also was St. Austin in matters of different Observances as to Times of Fasting and Days of Communicating All this saith he is matter of liberty and no practice is more worthy a grave and prudent Christian than to act so as he sees the Church doth unto which it happens he comes and as the Society doth in which he lives * S. Aug. Ep. 118. Ep. 86. And in these Matters of which the Holy Scripture appoints nothing expresly the Custom of the People of God and the Institutes of our Superiors are to be held for a Law Of which if we have a list to dispute and to disprove others for their different Custom there will arise endless Contests M. Amyrald * Galli Anglorum c●tibu● libentissimè intersunt Eucharistiam ex eorum more participant Episcopis sese subjiciunt Angli pariter c. Amyraldi Irenicum p. 351. well observes the friendly moderation of the English and French Protestants when they are in each other Countries they readily join themselves with the Communion of the Churches they are in Yet such is the abundant Moderation of our Church That to Merchants and Strangers of other Churches are permitmitted their several Congregations and Churches And all Aliens of the Reformation have by Act of Uniformity an express provision made for their enjoyment of their own way of worship at the pleasure of his Majesty which is real proof that Conformity doth not prejudice Trade * V. Mod. Pleas for Comprehen answerd p. 210. ¶ Omnibus notum est quàm elementèr patiantur peregrinorum Ecclesias Ceremoniis ritibus uti diversis ab Anglicanâ Ecclesiâ Saravia de div grad Min. c. 24. And this tender care of other Churches Liberty which the Church
and establishing Truth and Peace with all freedom from prejudice and passion hath appeared throughout the whole frame of our Liturgy Articles and Homilies and Constitutions and Versions we have of Holy Scripture any who are sincere themselves may easily acknowledg if they will truly consider the same For as our Homily of Holy Scripture saith Without a single Eye pure Intent and good Mind nothing is allowed before God And in the Homily of Prayer earnest complaint is made of such as would deface the plain and simple Religion of Christ In pursuance of these sincere designs of Piety Truth Peace and Order the Moderation of our Church in her Reformation will the more certainly appear founded in Justice If we consider 1. Our Church hath not made Truth to submit to her Authority but hath chearfully and sincerely submitted her self to Truth She hath not had a weight and a weight to buy the Truth by one and to sell it by another but hath judged of all Truth and the degrees of its necessity by the Standard which God hath given his Church namely the Holy Scriptures the only Rule of her Faith So in rejection of Error our Church hath bin impartial to either extreme 2. Our Church holds no such Doctrines as necessarily or by consequence overthrow a good Life and the practice of Devotion For this we must say for the Constitution of our Church The Vices among us are in no wise the Consequences of our Doctrines Neither have we any such Moderation among us to reconcile the pleasures and profits of Sin with the hope of happiness hereafter subjecting the most divine things to most vile purposes which tends to make the World believe that Christian Religion is a cheat and its Priests the most vile Imposters of any Whatever the scandalous opinions and practices of the Adversaries of our Church have done to the great hindrance of the conversion of many and the injury of Christianity Our Church of England gives no offence to Jew or Greek Mahumetan or Heathen 3. Our Church hath not squared the frame of its Ecclesiastical Policy by the ends of Secular Grandure or external Pomp as if she could put off Christianity to put on worldly Glory and as if we believed in such a Messias as the Jews expected rather than in the crucified Jesus whose Kingdom is not of this World And here rather than stay the Reader too long I commit to his reflection how the peculiar Doctrines of the Roman Church tend to the encrease of their Power or their Patrimony * Non est amplius Ecclesia sed Respublica quaedam humana sub Papa Monarchiâ temporali Spalatensis in profect Consil rather than that Interest of the Christian Religion which the whole constitution of our Church is framed first to regard Here might properly be considered the intolerable Charge which the Moderation of our Church justly saves us in that expence which unjustly follows Popery The one Doctrine of Purgatory will cost any one very dear upon the belief of it How many Indulgences Masses Jubilees c. must be paid for ¶ V. Fullers Eccl. hist ad an H. 8. 27. V. Romish Horse-leach V. Brutum fulmen Tanti videlicet nobis constitit âmicitia urbis Romae Apol. Eccl. Angl. § 160. 4. Our Church by its Moderation hath been far from driving on any corrupt designs Whereas the Moderation of the Romish Church hath been always noted very artificial Whence they have moderate explications for the doubtful Indulgences for the soft Austerities for the soure Legends for the credulous Visions for the Enthusiast fair interpretations for what may seem harsh a mild sence for their turn and a strict sense also to keep up the Authority of their Church fair and goodly Baits to entangle Proselytes but when they are engaged they may find themselves caught with a bearded Hook Even such sometime is the seeming Moderation and Self-denial which is cherished in our Sectaries by those who actuate them that so they may more effectually divide and propagate such Division Whereas those who are truly principled according to the Moderation of our Church are made to be more constant and consistent to themselves and to Truth not to turn to one hand of Popery nor to the other hand of Enthusiasm in any sinful compliance which rather than admit if the case requires they can suffer Martyrdom as did sundry of the first Compilers of our Common-prayer-book and many since even in the late times and all kinds of Sufferings beside 5. The Moderation also of our Church in its Reformation thus founded in Justice hath caused her to avoid such Corruptions as render the Sincerity of others very doubtful We have not by Arts and devised Subtilties gone about to palliate nor by Power and Authority to uphold any Errors whatsoever nor promoted Ecclesiastical Policy by gratifying the corrupt inclinations of Men Neither the Doctrines nor Policy of our Church are kept up by pious or impious Frauds equivocations of Oaths false Miracles pretended Revelations counterfeit Reliques Forgeries and Expurgation of Books devotional Ignorance exquisite Arts of defaming our Adversaries and sometime extream Cruelty This Justice in which the Moderation of our Church is founded makes those of our Church careful to take and heedful to keep our Oaths and Vows whereas among the Romanists easy dispensations dissolve those sacred Bands of Society What think we saith our Homily of good works ¶ ●2 Part. of those that vow Chastity and yet as is very moderately expressed how their Vows are kept it is more honest to pass over in silence They vow Poverty and yet their Possessions and Riches are equal to those of Princes under pretence of Obedience to their Fathers in Religion by their Rules and Canons they are made free from the Obedience of their natural Father and Mother According to the same principle of Justice governing our Church the forms and practices of our Church do not contradict our general Rules of Faith because we believe in the Holy Trinity therefore we do not worship Saints and Angels because we believe the Holy Catholic Church therefore we believe not in the Church of Rome 6. The same Moderation of the Church founded in Justice hath governed her Reformation in using or rejecting things indifferent which have bin abused The Wisdom and Moderation of our Church having bin far from judging that things which have been abused to ill purposes can never be lawfully or profitably used which principle might lay waste all Ecclesiastical or Civil Societies of any good Orders and Appointments for there is nothing so good but either hath bin or is capable to be abused very grosly Wherefore our Church doth well distinguish between what is abused by the fault of ill Men * Si quid vitil access●t vitium tellatur r●s verò restituat●r concordia ●latur Wicelii Meth. Concord c. 5. and what in the nature of the thing it self tends to promote such an abuse
as is evident from the Preface to the Liturgy concerning Ceremonies Wherein our Church gives account why some Ceremonies were put away namely because so far abused by the Superstition of some and Avarice of others others were retained which our Church judged were not like in time to come to be abused as the others have bin † Preface concerning Ceremonies And as our 30 Canon hath it The abuse of a thing doth not take away the lawful use of it Wherefore the design of our Church in its excellent Reformation was sincerely to remove what did in its own nature tend to corruption and to retain what might be useful when corrected and reformed from the abuse Thus Zanchy did lay down The true way of reforming was not to root out every thing that was found in the Church of Rome but to reject what was fit to be rejected and to preserve what was fit to be preserved 7. The same Justice governing our Moderation sheweth it self to the Church of Rome also not denying what is true of Her that she professeth a true Faith in the form of Baptism and the three Creeds which she receiveth and professeth to own the Holy Scriptures and to hold to the four first general Councils and the ancient Fathers Many things in Order and Government she hath very excellent and likewise in some of their Devotions But how much she hath in her superfluous Additionals built upon good Foundations Gold Silver Hay Stubble and the like is no where better distinguished than in what our Church of England hath rejected and in what she hath retained and how far the peculiar Doctrines and Practices of the Roman Church do contradict the other part of what they retain in common with us and tend to destroy the same hath bin frequently also shewed in such Writings as are approved by our Church A signal instance of this Moderation of our Church of England is * V. Canon 30. 1603. it never denied that a true Church might be found in the Romish Communion however corrupted and unsound which Moderation the learned Mede † Mede Ep. 77. hath noted peculiar to the Church of England namely To maintain that the Roman Church much more the Greek Church erreth not in the Articles we account Fundamental because explicitely they profess them however in their Assumenta they implicitely and by consequent subvert them for which as Bishop Bramhal saith ¶ Answer to Bishop of Chalc. p. 364. our Charity frees us from Schism But a Church that holds the Foundation may grosly and dangerously erre in their Exposition which is the condition of the Church of Rome * Arch-B Laud against Fisher p. 320. Yet we do not declare that we have any new Faith or new Religion but the same only necessarily and well reformed from those superfluous Additions and Luxuriances which might have endangered our Religion if they had not bin corrected which was performed wisely in our Reformation without destroying all root and branch namely by reserving such things as are good and only lopping off such excrescencies as might and ought to be spared and in our censures of them our Church doth wisely distinguish between what was appointed of sincere intention at first and what hath bin since of manifest corruption neither are we altogether ignorant when most of those innovations and corruptions were introduced and generally by what degrees and occasions they encreased tho we may very well judg of errors and corruptions albeit we could not fix the time of their creeping into the Church which to speak more particularly of requires a very mature consideration Yet notwithstanding Casaubon had good reason to say The denying the Church of Rome Necessity of Reformation p. 145. the being of a Church which some Protestants rashly and ignorantly rigidly and uncharitably have done hath been a great hinderance of Reformation and I verily believe the opinion most Papists are kept in that the Religion of Protestants is a new Religion is not of little force to make them averse from it to this day CHAP. XVII Of the Moderation of our Church in avoiding all undue Compliances with Popery and other sorts of Phanaticism among us § 1. Notwithstanding our Reformation is the most of any opposite to Popery how it hath bin the craft of the Roman Agents to raise of it such a suspicion of Popery as hath bin artificially made a very unhappy Instrument of the Divisions which are from our Church § 2. How the great Labours of our Bishops and our Clergie remaining the most impregnable defence of the Reformation hath stir'd up the more earnest opposition of the Church of Rome to our Church § 3. The vain and ungrateful jealousies of our Separatists and Enthusiasts are the more unjust because they have appeared really acted by that Interest not in intention but in event § 4. Therefore it is a most seasonable work at this time to cast open those Masquerades § 5. Some Moderate Cautions here inserted to prevent any unkind Mistakes § 6. Some Objection to such an undertaking here answered § 7. That our Separatists and Enthusiasts generally more or less do conspire in fact albeit not in intent with the Romanists instanced as a Specimen in twenty Particulars § 8. Particularly how the Quakers are one with the Papists how ignorantly soever in sundry Instances § 9. By what steps and degrees these Progresses commonly are made toward Popery by such as separate from Communion with our Church § 10. What hath bin said confirmed by other rational Proofs § 11. Some further Reasons why the Clergie and faithful Sons of our Church cannot be thought thus concerned in so much as an Eventual Conspiracy § 12. An easy Divination of the Consequences of these things if a due sense of these Matters be rejected when so fairly and often recommended to the common notice of all with a sincere and affectionate close to such as this Address most doth concern § 1. NOtwithstanding our Church of England hath bin by the most wise and Learned Men Foreign and Domestic acknowledged the very excellent part of the Reformation yet how often hath she bin reproached with most unjust Censures of undue compliance with Popery It being one of the known Policies of the Romish Factors to cause their Agents among our selves whom they use for the overthrow of our Church to cry out Popery at the same time they most of all serve the Papal Interest themselves Wherefore that the Romanists may use the Separatists with the more unperceivable disguise and success to undermine our Constitution these also have bin inspired to blast with the Name of Popery what is rightly established in our Church Hence is it that the Writings and private Insinuations of Dissenters are full of this Charge in a joint design to disgrace our Communion and to exasperate other Protestants against us Some of those Exceptors running to such an excess of Rigour as to count Churches Bells God-fathers Churching
of Women Burial-Service the Gloria Patri to come under the name of Popery Altho by no Instance was it ever made to appear That our Church agrees with the Romanist in any thing contrary to Scripture and the practice of the Primitive Church As she is truly also most remov'd from Fanaticism neither using nor encouraging any Enthusiastic way of Religion nor allowing any resisting of Authority under any Religious Pretences whatsoever Any one may be convinced that no formed Church in the Christian World is more truly Protestant than is the Church of England nor any which all things compared less compromiseth with Rome If they will but consider in our Articles Liturgy Canons Constitutions Practice Oaths of Supremacy c. how firmly our Church preserves and enforceth the Reformation Yea the Canons of 1640 did excellently take care for the suppressing the growth of Popery Canon 3. 6. and also of Socinianism Canon 4. Which Seeds of Socinianism have bin scattered amongst our Sectaries and have of late had great growth amongst them Yet nevertheless if such Friends as they should slip into greater Heresy so long as they are with them in the Schism there is a special respect due to them rather than to the close adherents of the Church of England who because they run not into the madness of their extremes and are not outragious too in that madness they are forward to clamour against our Church it self as Popish and turn their own silly Surmises into powerful Calumnies Neither do those who reproach our Constitution sufficiently call to mind what hath bin done all along since the Reformation by our Kings of England and the great Councils of the Kingdom and the Orders of the Church and the Industry of our Bishops for the suppression of the growth of Popery § 2. But as a sufficient Evidence that our Church according to its establishment doth in no sort favour Popery They must be very disingenuous and wanting to Truth who will not readily acknowledg that the Labours of our Bishops and our Conformable Clergy remain the most impregnable defence of the Reformation For who I pray have more strenuously and constantly opposed the Innovations and immoderate Extravagancies of the Church of Rome than our Bishops and the Learned Men in firm Communion with our Church even since Queen Mary's days when some were Martyrs and Confessors and whose Writings but theirs who have held firm Communion with our Church remain as the constant Bullwark of our Protestant Reformation Wherefore the Romanists keenest displeasure * Immortale odium nunquam sanabile vulnus Ardet adhuc Combos Tentyra Juven Sat. 15. and jealousie hath bin always against the Church of England because from Her they have always received as forcible repulses as any As nothing doth more stir up the anger of a Zealous Enemy than the equal behaviour of those they malign and a moderate carriage doth sometime provoke their sharpest hatred So certainly nothing hath more stir'd up the jealousy of the Romanists than the excellent temper which is observed in our Churche's Constitution 'T is for the sake of this poor Church alone said our most noble Lord Chancellor † that the March 6. 1678. State hath bin so much disturbed It is her Truth and Peace her Decency and Order which they labour to undermine and pursue with so restless a malice And since they do so it will be necessary for us to distinguish between Popish and other Recusants between them that would destroy the whole Flock and them that only wander from it As for those of our Separatists who have sometimes menaged Debates with the Romanists the cunning Adversary commonly lets them alone for how seldom do we see a Romanist write against or oppose a Nonconformist and be in much earnest against him Not merely because he thinks such inconsiderable but because these are doing their Work for them as fast as they can * Hoc Ithacu● velit Magno mercentur Atrida Whereas those Contests which have bin menaged upon the Principles of our Church's Reformation have given the Romanists greatest awe and have always exercised their utmost strength § 3. Wherefore those of the Separation who have bin concerned in these Clamours and Surmises of our Church favouring Popery have acted therein as appears first very falsly and then very imprudently in reproaching so excellent a Reformation and by joining with them in their opposing our Church they strengthen the hands of the Romanists whom they pretend to oppose to the great scandal of the Christian Religion and great mischief to the true Protestant Interest Which caused Bishop Morton in his Epistle to the Nonconformists to tell them Beside their notorious Scandals given to the Church of God it self of their breaking the Hedg of Peace and opening the Gap for the wild Bore out of the Romish Forest to enter in and root out that goodly Vine which many Pauls industrious Bishops many Apollo's faithful Martyrs have planted and watered Even as Josephus * notes the Divisions of the Jews laid † Prol. ad bel Jud. them open to their overthrow And by their several Divisions which they help to propagate among us they join with the Romanists in endeavouring to overthrow and destroy our Constitution While they are crumbling into Factions biting and devouring one another a vigilant Adversary who is intent upon his advantage and opportunities may when he spieth his time over-master them with much more ease and less resistance † Bishop Sanderson's Preface to his Sermons Ad rerum momenta cliens seseque daturus Victori And the more unreasonable and vehement they are in their clamours the more they help the Roman Engineer to confound and overturn Therefore Arch-Bishop Whitgift ¶ Arch-Bp Whitgift Answ to the Admon p. 55. See his Letter to Q. Eliz. Fuller's Hist l. 9. now above a hundred years since said I am persuaded you and they do the Pope great good Service and he would not miss you for any thing For what is his desire but to have this Church of England which he hath cursed utterly defaced and discredited to have it by any means over-thrown if not by Foreign Enemies yet by Domestic Dissention And what apter Instruments could he have for that purpose than you who under pretended Zeal overthrow what others have built under colour of Purity seek to bring in Deformity under clo●e of Equality would usurp as great Tyranny and Lofty lordliness over your Parishes as ever the Pope of Rome over the whole Church Which also was the judgment of the University of Oxford 1603. Verily these Men are like Sampson 's Foxes they have their heads severed indeed the one sort looking toward the Papacy the other to the Presbytery but they are tied together by the Tails with Fire-brands between them to the injury of the Church Who would ever have thought said Bishop Bancroft 1588 in a Sermon at St. Pauls that we should ever have lived
nearer are they coming to them sundry ways as in opposite Errors the Causes may be commonly the same Thus Arch-Bishop Laud * Pref. of the Conference against Fisher observed The Rigid Professors on either side have quite leaped over the Mean and have bin rigid the other way as Extremity it self and is a very natural motion For a Man is apt to think he can never run far enough from that which he once begins to hate Of which sort the several Factions and Interests among us have bin continually like the Friars at the Council of Trent who were always watchful and zealous to maintain their peculiar Doctrines among which extremes our Church if she might be listened to would reduce all to a due temper upon surer and more reasonable Foundations than the Bishops at that Council laboured to do 3. As our Laws by one name call both sorts of Separatists Recusants so our Romanists and Sectaries behave themselves much alike The one have their private Masses the other their Conventicles both contrary to the Laws of our Kingdom and our Church Both the Romanists and the Separatists join in requiring a License for the Exercise of their Religion in private Houses 4. Both our Romanists and Sectaries by encreasing our Divisions help with joint force to make a general Toleration necessary which would give the Romanists the greatest advantage they can desire They both supplicate with equal earnestness to be tolerated whereas the Principles of each lead them not to tolerate others 5. Their pretences to all mildness and gentleness are equally supple and assuring but how mild they are when they are uppermost odious experience testifies so that Instances of their extreme Rigors which are most known need not be enumerated We need not call on the Inquisition to testify to the Rigors of the Romanists nor look into all the Severities of the Disciplinarians who have bin known to inflict Censures for a suspicion of Covetousness a superfluity in Raiment for dancing at a Wedding for using their Liberty in their Recreations and have kept others as well as themselves from the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper upon uncharitable Accounts It hath bin observed where the Discipline in Scotland was established the People had a high Commission in every Parish and groan'd under the Arbitrary Decrees of Ignorant Governors If there arose a private Jar between the Parent and the Child the Husband and the Wife these Domestical Judges must know it Formerly and lately among some they have bin scarce allowed in Conscience to marry without the consent of the Teacher or when they have it hath bin matter of complaint 6. It hath bin already observed at large Chap. 13. § 58. how both the Romanists and the Separatists agree in their groundless and unjust accusing the Government of Persecution like the Donatists of old who cried out Persecution when they most of all had afflicted the Catholics The Romanists have their dire Anathema's and heavy Censures the Separatists their cruel Maranatha's and preach Damnation most of all against them that differ from them especially if they be of the Church's side 7. Nevertheless both sorts can very easily give out Indulgences to their own Parties God sees no sin in his Children say some Sectaries Which is a greater Bribe to be of their Party than any can be found in the Penitentiary Tax for Sins as they are sold at Rome 8. When the Papists and the Separatists have bin at a loss that they cannot justify their Proceedings by the Laws of God or Man then they meet in one common Sanctuary whereby they are bold to sanctify the most extravagant Practices pretending Providence for their Warrant Thus Pope Pius 5. in his Speech in the Consistory of Cardinals at Rome after the murder of King Hen. 3. of France sundry times in one Oration he magnifies the Exploit of that wretched Zealot as brought about by the special Providence of God * Non nisi Dei opt Max. particulari Providentiâ dispositione perpetratum The same impudence or ignorance others have used to defend such Practices as no Laws Divine or Humane could justify sheltring them under the wide pretence of Providence which hath bin well call'd † Answer to Mr. Jenkins p. 16. Regiment politicum fundatur in extraordinarià Dei Providentiâ Ibid. p. 15. A fine pliable Principle it will lap about your finger like Barbary Gold 9. The Romanists enlarge their Creed in sundry Articles without belief of which there is no Salvation and very many Separatists deliver their peculiar Doctrines as absolutely necessary to a state of Salvation tho among the divided Sects many of them are contrary one to another They both often stuff their Prayers and their Chatechisms with Matters of doubtful Controversy and in maintaining the same they are alike too dogmatical 10. We need not here prove what is so well known namely the mean Opinion which the Romanists have of Holy Scriptures supposing they receive their Authority from the Pope yet receiving their own Traditions with equal affection and reverence The Separatists by casting off to another extreme the real Authority and Testimony of God's Church which hath bin all along the Keeper the Witness the Defender the Interpreter of Holy Scriptures by degrees many of our Separatists have come to throw off the Holy Scriptures as a Rule of Faith and Manners The Romanists they add their own Traditions to the Word of God and many Sectaries call their Teaching and their Impulses the Word of God which often is quite contrary thereunto The Romanists set up the Pope for an Infallible Interpreter many of the Separatists account the Private Spirit an Infallible Interpreter V. Ch. 4. § 3. 11. The Romanists pretend that Miracles and extraordinary Gifts have not ceased but are still necessary Signs of a true Church It is also the very height of Enthusiam to hold as many of our Separatists do That Immediate Revelations from God and extraordinary Illapses from the Holy Spirit are necessary and common among all the Faithful Which Pretences lying obvious to an easy Confidence cannot easily be wrested from such as will hold them to their own destruction 12. The Romanists assert an implicit Faith which is determinately resolved into the authority of their Leaders Whether the like is ever required by the Leaders generally of Factions among us I do not now enquire But however that the same is granted by their Followers appears most evident For when many can give no reason for what they hold they keep close to their Ring-leaders and move and change with them generally and how much the Authority of the Persons they have in admiration governs them more than any sway of Argument is daily experienced And whereas a due regard on this side the implicit Faith of the Romanists is due to Governors V. Ch. 6. § 9 10. toward such how scrupulous delicate and wary are they not to say disregardful but in following their Masters of
be lawful to attempt any thing against his Person and Life are so much the same that they cannot be more if we compare Lessius Suarez Bellarmine and many other Jesuits and Mr. White of Obedience and Government with Knox and Buchanan and many other Republicans since wherein both sorts as Rivals seem to deal with the People as some Gallants do by foolish Women flatter them so long into a pride and conceit of themselves so great that at length they become intolerable and ungovernable Of this sort were the Discourses in the Council of Basil related by Aeneas Sylvius afterward Pope who could not contain from highly commending * Quem Sermonem sic doctè sie verificè sic suaviter disputarit Commentar de gestis Concil Bas in Fascic rer expe● fol 4. the Bishop of Burgen for his admirably vilifying the Power of Kings Thus the worst of our Enthusiasts and of the Romanists agree in that Character of the Pharisees They mightily employed their Powers to oppose Kings † Jos Antiq l 17. c. 3. So true is the observation of King Charles the First ¶ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 §. 15. of some Protestants They seem to have learned and to practise the worst Principles of the Papists And of both the Lord Bishop of Salisbury The Bigot and Jesuited Romanist the frighted and transported Reformist have bin Authors of the most horrible Treasons and Rebellions 20. I need not here particularly relate how many Doctrines of the Romanists tend to dissolve the very Bonds of Relative Duty one toward another as in their Monastical Vows absolving People from their Oaths and Allegiance and Faith with Hereticks c. How do many Principles of our Enthusiasts and Separatists tend to destroy the Relation of King and Subject Bishop and People Their very Divisions how do they alienate the minds of Christians one from another Tho they ought to belong to the same moderate Church are Subjects of the same most Gracious King are of the same Protestant and Reformed Interest beside the danger they bring to themselves and their Families by their pernicious and destructive Separation so many and more might be the Instances of their loosing the Bonds of Relative Duty § 8. Among other Sects it would grieve any one to behold so many seduced into the silly Herd of Quakers a Sect into which the very dregs of Heresy and Schism seem to have bin drein'd as it were into one Common Shore In the inventing and propagating which even Satan and the Jesuit seem to have club'd their utmost Art possessing them with an evil Spirit of Delusion which they call the Light within them according to which what is most contrary to Holy Scriptures and Right Reason and the testimony and judgment of the whole Church and the prudent command of Governors and the sence and custom of wise and pious Men must pass for an extraordinary illumination from God merely on the credit of their own saying so This one Enthusiastical Conceit of the Light within and Opinion of such Revelation from God is the most unhappy contrivance and suggestion that can be to lift up silly People above a possibility of being contradicted by any sober Principles of Scripture or Reason or regular Authority fitted to possess such with a lusty pride and bewitched conceit of themselves an incorrigible moroseness and obstinacy an intolerable censoriousness a sordid scorn of whatever is in just place above them and wonderfully disposeth such for Popery for when once they are sufficiently divided from our Church the Work is sufficiently done Then if any arch-Emissary from Rome will come with Visions and Revelations and a shew of extreme Authority and humor this People still in their outragious clamours against our Church especially if they will fall a quaking and groaning intolerably and appear in the Streets as some have done soundly be-dunged with Calumny and Filth such may make some People believe any Romish Tenets as Revelations from God That they have bin wrought and acted unto this by the common Authors of our Divisions is such plain attested matter of Fact that I suppose few considering Persons question it Some long since took notice that in the Northern Parts where there abounded most Popish Priests and Recusants there this upstart Sect of Quakers first sprung up sending thence their Emissaries two by two into other quarters of the Kingdom as the unclean Beasts entred the Ark by Couples beside which many Reasons confirm the same 1. The effect in that Spirit of Division and Delusion which so succesfully obtains among them to break in pieces the Peace and Order of the Church unto which of all Sects these are the most Antipodes to 2. There are none whose Tenets more tend to destroy the Holy Scripture as a perfect Rule of Faith and Manners instead of which and in opposition to the same they set up the Suggestions of their Light within them which they call the Word the only Guide unto Perfection * Perfectos se appellantes semina electionis De Valentinianis Iren. l. 1. which they and the Romanists pretend the one even unto supererogation of Merits the other to be above all need of confession of sin 3. None come so near the Papists in the matter of an infallible Judg of Doctrines 4. The Light within them is very much like the Enthusiasms of the Romanists as Dean Stillingfleet hath set them forth in the Fanaticism of the Church of Rome 5. They join with the severest Romanists in their reproaching the Offices and Orders of our Church and especially villfying her Clergy whom they would have by all means to vow wilful Poverty 6. By refusing all Oaths their Allegiance is left uncertain to the King which is the main thing such Papists would have 7. The King's Supremacy is left unacknowledged which is another principal preparation for the owning of the Pope's Supremacy 8. In that they refuse to assist their Prince in his Wars and pretend they hold it unlawful for any to fight By that Principle they not only take away the Power and Sword of the Magistrate and leave the King and Country undefended that none can live in peace and safety and consequently that Opinion leads to overthrow the very being of the whole Kingdom But the Pope also serves his Design by them being sure that so many as there are of that Sect so many will never oppose him by Arms Whereas they who bind can also loose and the same Agent can be able to stir up their Spirit of Zeal also which the longer it hath bin contained will be the more furious a Specimen and taste of which fury we experience in the keen violence of their Tongues which are as a very sharp Sword upon sundry slight occasions And when once they shall be assured that the Lord hath delivered a People to slaughter then Down Dagon then they will pretend they must be the Sampsons and like Pope Pius 5. in his
As to those among us who are most moderate it may be wisht they will afford their own Example in what they allow in Discourse and that they would labour as effectually to prevail on those who depend on their Judgments and Example § 3. Whereas many of our Dissenting Brethren profess they desire the Interest of Jesus Christ may be promoted and that sanctity of Life and the pure Worship of God and the Communion of Saints and the Edification of the Church and the Reformed Protestant Religion may be maintained and encreased and in all Debates they appeal to the Holy Scriptures and many of them say they are desirous to rectify Mistakes and to lay aside all prejudice and passion and partiality and profess they desire their Judgments and Practices may be guided in the ways of Truth and Peace Supposing all this if we meet with such as will admit what follows into fair consideration I should think it the most proper means by some such degrees as follow to bring them if it be possible to understand the good Constitution of things among us 1. By letting such by clear Instances see how unmoveably we hold the Faith and Doctrine of Christ delivered in Holy Scripture which together with the whole Church of God the Church of England doth keep inviolably witness unto them faithfully and so constantly appeal to as the only perfect Rule of Faith and Manners V. Ch. 4. 2. Since the best and most useful sort of Moderation is that which governs us as we ought in the real Practice of Vertue and Goodness whereunto tend all the Moderation of the Laws and the Doctrine and Discipline of God's Church yet which is a lamentable thing to consider this is most silently past over and scarce known by the Name at that same time that a huge clamour is rais'd among us for Moderation in Religion in which all that are concerned may know and understand that the great Design and Desire of our Church is to promote holiness of Life Among us all may not only be as holy as they will but that they may be so they are assisted and encouraged most earnestly by the Laws and Constitutions and Offices and Councils of our Church which if they were rightly understood would be known uniformly to tend to no less 3. Such may consider that all the appointed means of Grace and Salvation are by our Church publicly and amply taken care of as duly and effectually as may be 4. In a Church where substantial Piety is so truly procured throughout the whole Constitution it might at least mitigate the great offence taken to consider what is more largely shewed Ch. 8. That our Church never did own her very few Ceremonies any other than accidental and mutable Circumstances for Order and Comeliness-sake but never asserted them any essential or necessary part of God's Worship Such may also consider the Rules of reasonable behaviour and submission to the Church as are moderately laid down Chap. 6. § 10. 5. Because our Dissenters by their dividing from us seem to endanger very much the Interest of the Reformed Religion which they appear so zealous to uphold Let them be pleased to consider the real danger of their being acted by Romish Agents and Incendiaries while they take the second direct course to destroy this reformed Establishment among us as is more particularly considered in Chap. 17. 6. Such may do well to consider truly those easy and proper Consequences which follow the Consideration of the Church being a Society with relation to a Christian Kingdom as ours is from whence sundry special Obligations may be inferred to bind every one who calls himself Christian to maintain the Peace and union of such a Society especially if we look on the Church as a Society formed by God himself and therefore common Christians are not to look upon themselves as Spiritual Governors as if they had any power in themselves to constitute new Bounds or new Extents to its Being or Authority but are to think they have an easier and safer task quietly to accept and obey that which is constituted by lawful Authority in all things not repugnant to the revealed Will of God And since every one's being of the Church doth suppose their duty to communicate in those Sacraments and Holy Offices which are appointed as a public Sign before God and Man that we do confess Christ Jesus and is an evidence of our holding communion with God's Church and that we are obedient to the Laws of this Society and the Government thereof in that fixed part of the Church we live in it follows that we are obliged unto the Peace of this Church by the intent of our Baptismal Vow when we were incorporated as Members of Christ's Body the Church And we are bound to maintain the same Peace of this Society of the Church as we live in a Christian Kingdom where the Religion of the Kingdom is so great a part of its Laws Upon which account Schism renders the safety of Kingdoms very hazardous beside that it looseth the Bands of all Friendship Sacred and Civil and breeds enmity among nearest Relations and Neighbours It tends exceedingly to the dishonour of the Public Laws and opens a gap to the most dissolute making void the exercise and effect of the Discipline of the Church upon the scandalous which otherwise to the prophane World would prove terrible as an Army with Banners It is the only way any can take to destroy all being of a Visible Church to corrupt her Doctrine and destroy her Power and is so great a sin as Martyrdom it self cannot expiate it Such do as much as they can make void the Design of our Blessed Saviour Who died that be might gather into one the Children of God that are scattered abroad 11 S. John 52. the night before our Lord was betrayed when he instituted the Sacrament of Unity How fervently did he pray for the Peace of the Church 17 S. John 11. Holy Father keep through thy own Name those whom thou hast given me that they may be one as I am one V. 21. That they also may be one in us that the World may believe that thou hast sent me Whereas these Schisms which we have tend to weaken or take away the greatest outward Witness we have of the truth of Holy Scriptures and of our very Christianity namely the Testimony of God's Church from the beginning and do expose our most excellent Religion to the contempt and entertainment of Atheists The sad account for which let them beware of who make it their idle business to defame the Church in her Holy Offices and alienate all whom they can from her Communion Let them pretend what they will in the mean time to intimate Communion with God they indeed take away the Unity of the Church as much as in them lies but in effect they take it away from themselves and they cut themselves off from Communion with the rest of the