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A38061 A preservative against Socinianism. The first part shewing the direct and plain opposition between it, and the religion revealed by God in the Holy Scriptures / by Jonath. Edwards. Edwards, Jonathan, 1629-1712. 1693 (1693) Wing E217; ESTC R24310 65,484 89

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to the good nature of his Creatures that they yield any obedience to his commands Perhaps you will say there may be other obligations besides those of punishment which men may be under to practise their duty such as are those of Honour and Gratitude and the strong tye of Reason which will bind a man to comply with his Duty if there were no other motive to it but this that to do otherwise will be to act unsuitably to the dignity of his nature All this may be fine in speculation but will signifie little when reduced to practice the generality of men being governed by sense the motions of which are too headstrong and furious to be curbed by the bare commands of reason when they are not enforced with the fear of punishment the voice of which will be as feeble as that of old Eli to his rebellious Sons far too weak to master their violence and therefore that Frantick Woman that some have talked of who brought fire in one hand to burn up Paradise and water in the other to quench the flames of Hell if she had succeeded in her design instead of promoting would have extinguished all virtue and soon have rooted it out of the world In short to summ up what hath been said upon this subject if there be no Justice naturally in God there might have bin no Providence and if no providence then men might have bin left to the conduct of their own giddy and unruly passions which would soon break through the restraints of reason and when men were thus left to the government of Lust and Sense the unavoidable consequence of this must have bin that the world would have bin filled with Blood and Murders with Impurity and Vncleanness with Theft and Rapine with Injustice and Oppression and the gentle race of men would soon have become worse then the worst of wild Beasts preying upon and devouring one another And to suppose that God could be unconcerned at all this as if there be no Justice in him which enclines him to punish such wickedness he might be is to have such a notion of God as it is reported Lewis the 11 th of France had of his Leaden God which he carried about him and when he had caused any man to be Murder'd or done the like mischief he would take it into his hands and kiss it and beg pardon and then all was well again and he himself became immediately safe if not innocent In short at this rate we should not dishonour God if we so conceived of him as of one who did not necessarily act according to the eternal and unalterable Rules of Wisdom Goodness and Righteousness that he might be a God not of Order but Confusion which is not only an Impious but a Blasphemous assertion 2 dly My second reason why I account this Position of Socinus about Gods justice to be false and dangerous is because it takes away the distinction between Laws Positive and Natural which distinction hath hitherto bin looked upon not only to be true but sacred sorasmuch as the contrary would open a Gap to all manner of impiety and wickedness Now positive Laws are accounted such as owe their original only to Gods free will and pleasure and therefore as they cannot be known so they cannot oblige any but those to whom he hath made such a declaration and discovery of his pleasure Natural Laws are those which are discovered by the light of nature as being the necessary result of our Constitution and that relation which we hear to God as rational Creatures many of which tho revealed in Scripture yet in themselves are obligatory antecedent to any such revelation Now these Laws do necessarily suppose Justice in God without which they would be insignificant for tho natural Laws owe their Original to the holyness of God as being but a transcript of those essential Rules of righteousness which make up his nature yet all their force and obligation without which they are not properly Laws results from his Justice that is from the fear of punishment which the Law threatens and Justice inflicts without which they would be perfectly insignificant From which by a just and necessary consequence it unavoidably follows that if their be natural Laws there must be Justice naturally in God so on the other hand if there be no Justice there can be no Laws of nature forasmuch as without the former they can have neither Force nor Obligation nor consequently have the formal reason of Laws 3 dly And Lastly This Opinion of Socin is both false and Impious because it tends to overthrow all natural Religion by supplanting that which is the chief if not the only support of it in the world and that is the fear of God For take away his Justice as this Socinian hypothesis doth and then you have left nothing in him which a man governed by the light of nature need to fear not his unity nor his eternity nor immensity not his holyness nor his goodness to be sure nor lastly his power which in conjunction with the former as it necessarily is in God is as harmless and innocent as either of the former Attributes when it is not moved nor excited by a just displeasure and indignation Imagine therefore a Socinian were to discourse a Pagan I would fain know how upon this principle he could convince him that it were his Duty to worship God and to live a virtuous life he might tell him indeed and tell him with great truth that the Divine nature and perfections are in themselves a just ground of Esteem and Adoration That virtue hath many and those powerful though invisible charms as being both agreeable to our Reason and at the same time serving to promote our wellfare and happiness in this world yet all this would lay him under no obligation to do that which otherwise would be highly reasonable and fitting to be done suppose it be honest suppose it rational suppose it his Interest yet he is left to his liberty and may and no doubt will do what he pleases for all that he may act indeed like a fool and a Brute yet he is guilty of no sin in the mean time for where there is no Justice there can be no fear of punishment where there is no punishment there is no obligation nor consequently Law and where there is no Law there can be no transgression So that tho his reason may upbraid him with the folly his Conscience in this case would never check him for the guilt of his vices which if the Laws of his Country did not take some care to prevent he might securely practice without any fear of Gods displeasure In short notwithstanding all the fine discourses about the beauty and amiableness of religion and virtue the inclinations of sense would soon bear down the dictates of Reason and the slightest temptations would prove too strong for these very speculations and as to the generality the