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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A42064 The triall of religions with cautions to the members of the Reformed Church against defection to the Roman / by Fran. Gregory ... Gregory, Francis, 1625?-1707. 1674 (1674) Wing G1907; ESTC R20206 37,229 70

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O what a dangerous person is every mistaken Zealot Sure it is of all Villains in the world the Religious Villain is the worst As for other Villains who are inwardly convinced that what they doe is naught and wicked they cannot chuse but now and then find some remorse regret and such checks within them as must needs damp their spirits and gall their souls and put some little stop to their Iniquity But as for the Devout and Pious Villain what Trouble can possibly invade his spirit what Pangs of Soul can he feel within him what can make him so much as once demurr and pause in the least when his own Conscience being misinformed and sadly deluded doth so far chear him as to bid him expect a reward for that Sin which it doth not onely represent but commend and applaud as a Duty which God requires and will certainly bless We need no other Instance in this case but that great one of Saint Paul Whilest he believed the old Religion of the Jews to be the onely true one whilest he was possessed with Prejudice against Christianity and took the Gospel to be but a meer Juggle a new Imposture and a false way of worship what strange havock did he make of the Church of Christ and that in the defence of a wrong Religion and the Persecution of a right All the excuse which he pleads for himself is onely this I did it through Ignorance Yea had but Saint Paul's knowledge then been as great as his zeal he would rather have laid himself then others in the Gaol had he but examined matters a right and found Christianity to be indeed the Religion of God he would have been so far from shedding other mens bloud that in the defence thereof he would ten thousand times rather have lost his own But O the direful effects of a mistaken Zeal This is the thing to which we must ascribe the most inhumane actions that the world ever saw From hence proceeded that bloudy Massacre of Paris and that unparallel'd and hellish Powder-Treason from hence hath proceeded the Assassination of Princes the Subversion of Empires and the Ruine of Churches And what if I tell you that misapprehensions of Religion have hung the Son of God upon the Cross and laid his Servants in the flames It cannot be imagined that the Jews would ever have crucified the Saviour of the World and their own Messias too had not an ignorant Zeal inclined them to it Nor can we reasonably conceive that the Papists are such Monsters rather then men that they would ever have burnt so many Martyrs had they not thought that Religion did require it And if so if the Consequences of a mistaken Religion be so dreadfull then surely we are highly concerned to make sure of the Truth of ours lest perhaps an Errour in our choice should put us upon the Commission of those horrid Crimes which none but a Religious and Zealous sinner dares attempt 2. That person who is mistaken in his Religion is very like to lose that which is the blessed fruit reward and end of that Religion which is sound true and right 'T is such a Consideration as methinks should mightily quicken us to the duty in the Text Prove all things But why so why alas a mistake here would utterly undoe us That the Consequences of Religion are of the greatest concern imaginable 't is beyond dispute so great that it cannot be a thing indifferent whether our Religion be right or wrong unless it be a thing indifferent too whether we are blessed or cursed whether we shall to Heaven or Hell That Religion which is right is the onely way through Christ that leads to Heaven and that Religion which is wrong is one of the nearest and quickest ways to Hell I remember the Scriptures mention the Doctrine of God the Doctrine of Christ the Doctrine of the Apostles these being embraced and obeyed will surely make us happy but on the other hand the same Scriptures mention other Doctrines strange Doctrines the Doctrines of men yea and the Doctrines of Devils too which being entertained will surely make us miserable But you 'l say how shall we know them how shall we pass a judgement whether such and such a Doctrine be indeed the Doctrine of God Devils or men I answer 1. All matters of Religion must be examined proved and determined by the written Word of God This is the onely sure Balance to weigh and Touchstone to try all matters of Faith and Worship To this the Prophet directs Isa 8.20 To the Law and to the Testimony To this our Saviour sends his hearers Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures and again How readest thou And which is remarkable the Ignorance of Scripture doth he make the onely occasion and ground of Errour in Points of Faith so he tells the Sadducees Ye erre but why not knowing the Scriptures It seems that it is the written Word of God which must be our Guide in matter of Religion 't is this which is the onely infallible Rule and unalterable Standard to measure all the Doctrines and Practices which such or such a Church doth teach recommend or require from us But 2. The Decrees of General Councils those I mean that were convened in the first and purest times before the Superstitions and Idolatries of Rome that crept in by degrees through Carelesness Vice and Ignorance had overspread the Church are of great use in this case too True it is the Scripture is man's onely authentick Rule to walk by and this Rule of ours in the most material and concerning Points of Faith is obvious plain and easie but yet there are some other matters of Religion though not of absolute Necessity yet of considerable Import and moment about which the Scriptures are not so intelligible at least to ordinary Readers but that they want some good Interpreter And who more fit to declare the sense of doubtfull and difficult Texts then the first and best of Councils I reade of the Council of Nicaea called by Constantine the Great against the Heresie of Arrius the Council of Constantinople summoned by Theodosius the first against the Heresie of Macedonius the Council of Ephesus called by Theodosius the second against the Heresy of Nestorius the Council of Chalcedon called by Martian against the Heresy of Eutyches These Councils occasioned by these early Heresies and consisting of some hundred Bishops having the Glory of God in their Hearts the Settlement of the Church in their Eye and the Bible in their Hands did establish several Canons for the extirpation of Errour and the confirmation of the most concerning Truths of our Religion And certainly the Determinations of these Councils whether it be in the great or some less Concerns of our Religion being made up of Persons so exemplary for their Piety and so eminent for their Learning who resolved on nothing but with mature Advice and Deliberation are of as great Authority and afford as much