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B10269 Anti-Goliah: or An epistle to Mr. Brevint, containing some reflections upon his Saul, and Samuel, at Endor. / Written by E.W. Warner, John, 1628-1692.; E. W. (Edward Worsley), 1605-1676. 1678 (1678) Wing W904B; ESTC R186274 27,206 62

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It is offered up for them You see 3. Alms given in the Church for them Pro illis Eleemosynae in Ecclesia fiunt You see 4. Purgatory Hell and Heaven three distinct states of faithful souls departed Those soo good as not to need help are in Heaven those so bad as not to be capable of ease by suffrages are in Hell Those so bad as to need them and so good as to receive ease by them are in Purgatory Take notice That the Saint here doth not speak as of a doubtful matter or on his private opinion of what may be done but as of an undeniable truth and a common practice of the Church So what you reproach to Rome was the practice of the purest times And as for the substance of Mass you find it also in S. Austin ep 49. q. 3. where he speaks of a sacrifice in Christian Religion which succeeded those of the Synagogue This sacrifice was instituted and commanded by our B. Saviour in his last Supper and no doubt but the Apostles obeyed that command Therefore they said Mass If these clear convincing Proofs of those prime and capital Mysteries of our Religion do not prove that Popery was from the beginning tell us when it began Pag. 333. You say The ninth Century the worst the saddest and the ignorantest Age of the Church drowned the Gospel with Popery and began in good earnest to set up the Abominable desolation in the Roman Church So that there you assure us that till then there was no Popery seeing that then it began to be set up Yet see how incoherent your assertions are P. 105. and 340. you make S. Iohn Damasc a Papist who lived in the Eighth Age. P. 46. you make S. Gregory the Great and S. Gregory of Tours Papists who lived in the beginning of the Seventh Age and later end of the Sixth P. 95 you make S. Chrysostome declaim against papists there were then Papists in the Fifth Age. P. 149. the building of S. Mary Majors in Rome in Liberius his time who lived in the Fourth Age is charged on Papists P. 328. Papists are charged for using Oyle to cure Diseases which was used for that intent in the first Century by the Apostles themselves Mar. 6.13 They anointed with oyl many that were sick and healed them So the Apostles were Papists and Popery was extant even in the First Age and this by your Confession Consider hereafter a little better what you write if not for Truth 's sake which you seem to regard very little at least for your own reputation which cannot but sink very low when such palpable Cōtradictions are discovered in your Writings CHAP. IV. Of Miracles and Visions MIracles alwayes are effects which surpass the force of Nature whether it be for the substance of the work as the raising of Lazarus Iohn 11. who had been four daves buried or for the manner of it as health restored to S. Peteer's Mother-in-Law on a sudden without Physick to such strength as to be able immediately to serve them Mar. 1.31 This was a Miracle because although it may be she might have naturally recovered yet that she should recover in an instant is impossible to Nature or secundary Causes The Magicians had therefore reason to say Digitus Dei est hic This is God's Finger Exod. 8.19 Whether they found that the force of Nature could not reach the production of those flies or that Nature's Activity when applied by the Magicians was suspended by God which are two manners of Working Miracles For it is as miraculous to suspend the Action of Nature when Agents are applied to Subjects duly disposed as to raise it to produce what of it self it cannot Miraculous was the preservation of Three Children in the Furnace Dan. 3. as well as the opening of a Rock with the stroke of a Rod to give Waters Num. 20. yet in a diffe-manner one by breaking the Action of Fire the other by giving grearer strength to that stroke than that of Cannon-Bullets The end of Miracles is not only to declare God's infinite Power and Dominion over all Creatures which by Natural Reason without Miracles is sufficiently known nor always the sole easing of a person in distress although this is sometimes the Motive as when Oyl was multiplied to relieve the poor Widdow and very frequently in the Desert They are moreover Declarations of Gods mind unto us and a kind of Language of God so peculiar to himself that although every body understands it yet no Man no Angel can speak it for want of its only Tongue God's Omnipotency Men speak by words says S. Austin ep 49. q. 6. God by Actions Divina potentia etiam factis loquitur And before him Origen l. 2. cont Celsum Christ our Lord not only tanght with his words but also with his works By these God confirmed the Word or Preaching of the Apostles Mar. ult Heb. 2.4 He is said to have born witness with signs and wonders and divers miracles and gifts of the Holy Ghost Hence it is that Miracles ary by some Fathers called the Seal God which comparison you use p. 41. Page 34. All Christian Miracles are ...... for confirming and authorizing true Christian and Catholick Truth amongst Infidels That many have been made for that end I grant but that none are made but for that end you say it but can never prove it because it is not true For the budding of Aaron's Rod Num. 17. was to confirm to him and his posterity the Priests Office The Dew on Gedeon's Furre Iud. 6.6 was to encourage him against the Madianites Sampson's Force was to humble the Philistins and protect the Israelites That Salt thrown into a Fountain should change the nature of its Waters 4. Reg. 2. was for the comfort of the Neighbours The vertue of the Waters causing a Curse Num 5. was to ease the Husband of his Jealousie which vertue was doubtless miraculous seeing all the Priest did to them could not so much alter their nature as to give them a putrifying quality Or if it could yet such an inanimate Creature could never distinguish betwixt the Guilty and the Innocent so as to do no hurt to the guiltless and rot the guilty Several others occur in Scripture and elsewhere made for other private ends commonly in confirmation of some Vertue sometimes for even Temporal ends The Vestal carrying water in a Sive or leading a Ship with her Girdle against the stream was in confirmation of her Innocency That Vertue in our Kings to cure a Disease either in testimony of the Vertue of S. Edward from whose time they enjoy it or to shew that Regal Power is from God or for other ends unknown to us Out of these Examples it appears that your assertion that All Miracles are wrought for confirmation of Faith amongst Infidels is untrue and undefensible One great fault is observable in your whole writing some particular instances occurring to you you presently frame out of