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A47046 Of the rule of faith a sermon at the visitation of the Right Reverend Father in God, William Lord Bishop of Lincolne, holden at Bedford August 5, 1674 / by William Jackson ... Jackson, William, 1636 or 7-1680. 1675 (1675) Wing J95; ESTC R16801 18,948 43

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OF THE Rule of Faith A SERMON At the Visitation of the Right Reverend Father in God WILLIAM Lord Bishop of Lincolne holden at Bedford August 5. 1674. By William Iackson D. D. CAMBRIDGE Printed by Iohn Hayes for Henry Dickinson in Cambridge And are to be sold by R. Chiswel at the Rose and Crown in S t Pauls Churchyard in London 1675. S t Iude verse 3. Beloved when I gave all diligence to write unto you of the common Salvation it was needfull for me to write unto you and exhort you that ye should earnestly contend for the Faith which was once delivered unto the Saints OF how fatal consequence to the Peace of the Church and the Purity of our Christian Faith the Licentious Preaching of Dissenters hath been we have had a late and a wofull experience Warning enough surely not to trust them again Having seen not onely the Government and Discipline of the Church broken down and all the Articles of our Creed batter'd by whole Legions of Heresies But also the first Article the very foundation of all Religion taken away too That it hath been by wise men of late thought a necessary work to prove that there is a God and to resume the Primitive Employment of writing Apologies and defences for the Truth and Excellency of Christian Religion as if we had been reformed into the Heathenism of our Fore-fathers And though by the mercy of God and the presence of his Anointed we have for some years had the Government of the Church restored and the Solemn Worship of God returned to our Publick Assemblies yet we do not see that the minds of the People generally are resetled upon that firm basis of the Ancient Catholique and Holy Faith from which they were once so tumultuously removed Those contrary winds of Doctrine that raised that heavy storm are not yet laid and so long as men take so much liberty of Indulgence God knows when they will But till then it can never be unnecessary or improper especially in such an Assembly as this to make use of this verse of St Iude with the variation of one word onely Beloved when I gave all diligence to preach unto you of the common Salvation it was needful for me to preach unto you and exhort you that you should earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the Saints The Text is plain enough to the meanest capacity onely some that think they have a peculiar interest in the word Saints may be mistaken for by that word is meant in plain English Christians those that are baptized into the faith of Christ for so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spoken of persons in this life generally signifies in the new Testament and in the Text being used in the plural number seems to denote the Collective body of them the Church And then faith being taken Objectivè for the matters or things to be believed The faith once delivered to the Saints is those Doctrines which it pleased God in one set time to reveal and to deposite as a standing Rule of Faith in the Church for ever There are in the words three things generally observable I. The nature and immutability of the Rule of Faith the Faith once delivered unto the Saints II. The way and means to preserve this as it was first delivered that ye should earnestly contend III. The Importance and necessity of so doing Beloved when I give all diligence to write unto you of the common Salvation it was needfull for me to write unto you and exhort you 1. For the Rule of Faith This must needs be the word of God in what manner soever revealed by what means soever made known to us to be such as might easily be proved to any that do believe there is a God And therefore it is 1. A word that is some Doctrine or Divine truths that we are to believe For it is an Intellectuall Rule or a Rule to the understanding which is to suspend or give assent to the Doctrines of Religion so far as they disagree or accord with this Rule Now seeing there is no belief but of something that is affirmed or denied there can be no Rule of this but onely some Doctrines or propositions presupposed as true and taken for granted before hand And this is the way of all Arts and Sciences which contain such diversity of objects for our belief and understanding Every one of them hath some fundamentall Maxims or Propositions upon which the whole body is afterward raised and in Contradiction to which nothing is to be taken for true in the respective science Now the Doctrine of Christian Religion being the most reasonable Doctrine in the world is questionless also the most regular and Methodicall hath in it as much certainty and evidence of a regular Method as is in any science and more and would so appear to us had we as clear a comprehension of it as we have of other doctrines And therefore agreeably this Phrase The Rule of Faith is not to be taken Causally or Formally as if we sought for a Measure antecedent to the fundamentall points of our Belief to try them by but it is to be taken SubIectivè or Materially that is a Rule consisting of the fundamentall points of Faith and a formall Rule to determine controversies and to condemn Heresies by This was the sense of it both name and thing when it came first into use among the Fathers in the Primitive Church as may be seen by Irenaeus Tertullian S t Austin Epiphanius Nazianzen Leo and the rest of them that treat of the Christian Faith Till of late upon the Popes pretensions to an infallible Iudicature the words have been wrested from their primitive sense to signifie the arguments and motives that perswade us to entertain the Christian Doctrine it self in gross or more especially the chief parts of it for this seems to be the meaning of them in the Controversie at this day But these Arguments or Motives whether from Reason or Authority are antecedent to this Rule the ground and means of coming to it not the Rule it self otherwise we should have as many Rules of Faith as we have arguments from reason or authority why we believe Indeed if we take the word Faith for our Act of believing a Christians Faith hath this in Common with all other belief that the Rule and the object matter of it are the same thing For the immediate limit and measure of all belief is and must be the apparent truth of the thing proposed beyond which our assent cannot go without Error or believing a falshood nor can it fall short of it without infidelity or want of due belief these two properties make a Rule in the most adaequate and exact sense But then nothing can have this apparent truth rightly and Regularly farther then as it is consonant to those propositions on which the truth of it depends and
Print in the frequent Meetings of Dissenters and other ways Opinions so repugnant to the Christian Faith and destructive of true Piety will now have the same malignant influence and effect upon both which heretofore they used to have And will diffuse a venom too strong for any help but that Power which planted the Faith in its first Purity And withall it is to be feared that the great dishonour done to the Majesty of God the injuries done to our meek and most blessed Saviour and to the most holy and sanctifying Spirit by these blasphemous opinions and by that wanton liberty they have of walking abroad with Publick connivence will bring upon us a guilt and wrath from God not to be expiated by another twenty Years suffering VI. The sixth means to defend the Faith is by a dayly and constant confession of it in all times and trials even of death and Martyrdom We are taught to profess our Rule of Faith twice a day in our publick prayers And upon good reason For as all truth desires nothing more then that beauty that is native to it to commend it to our belief and best defends it self against all contradiction when it appears most naked So certainly truths of so illustrious a magnitude as the Articles of our Creed cannot be better preached and maintained then by an open hearty and constant profession of them The most difficult service which they require of us in the greatest opposition is then but to own them with which alone we gain an absolute Conquest over all the World 1 Iohn 5. 4 5. This is the victory that overcometh the world even our Faith Who is he that overcometh the world But he that believeth that Iesus is the Son of God Our Faith is the purchase of His exinanition and therefore the Cross the inseparable badge of it not to be laid aside when God puts it upon us without certain loss of those Heavenly Ioys that attend patient suffering for the truth and Martyrdom which as it is of peculiar benefit to those that faithfully wade through it sanctifying that death which we owe to Nature for sin and raising it as a gift of Faith and Patience offered up acceptably to God So it did of Old and always will give the greatest renown to the Christian Faith and Name being next the Miracles wrought by God himself the most pregnant and visible testimony of the Power of the Holy Ghost going along with the Faith And of this the first ages of the Church are a sufficient proof These are some of the proper and direct ways of contending for the Faith There are others that come in as Auxiliaries and serve onely by consequence The chief of which are these two 1. Holyness of life Purity of mind and conscience This is the proper vehicle of true Faith 1 Tim. 3. 9. Holding the mystery of the Faith in a pure Conscience Cap. 1. 19. Which some having cast away concerning Faith have made shipwrack Long gathered habits of vertue or vice insensibly cast the Soul into a setled state of good or evil respectively In which case from the dictate of self-preservation as all things else it naturally seeks and adheres to such principles as will make good and maintain the condition it is possest of If the condition be good it appeals to Faith as the author and refuge of it in the strength whereof it stands and in the encrease of it doth triumph and glory If the condition be evil then Faith appears as a witness against us and a tormentor and the Soul cannot contemplate it without horror but must turn aside and betake it self to the refuge of lies some doctrines however false yet plausible that may help it at present to silence the fear of a Iudgement to come Which Article and severall others as remission of sins the resurrection and eternall life are absolutely inconsistent with a continuation and security in evil courses It is true Faith is supernaturall Grace infused into our Souls by God himself from above Yet it is liable to be disturbed yea and ejected too by the strength of our own corruptions and the powers of darkness raigning in us These stifle and extinguish those motions and illuminations whereby the holy Spirit doth usually work Faith in us Who though he delight to dwell in Tabernacles of Clay in the hearts of the Sons of Men yet abhorrs and flyes from the tents of the wicked especially the proud and the sensuall And it is notorious in the history of the Church that the great Heresies that troubled it of old had their birth from one of these either the Ambition or Debauchery of their first Broachers 2. The next means Is to preserve the dignity of the Ministers of the Gospel who are the Dispensers of this Faith Did Christians generally found their belief and practice upon those rules and principles by which they are to be measured there would be the less need of this But it is obvious to be observed that men commonly begin with the esteem of a Person or Party and then raise their Faith according to the dictate of that Person or Party This the Hereticks of all ages have seen and therefore made it their first business to worm themselves into vogue and credit being sure they must needs be Masters of their Faith whose understandings their reputation had first blinded And indeed we cannot reasonably expect that our Doctrine should gain much upon the minds of those that despise our Persons or Callings which God be thanked at present is not nor lightly can be done by any but such in whom Atheism or Fanaticism hath smothered if not destroyed the power of Religion All Nations not wholly barbarous have lookt upon it as both the security of their Religion and Glory of their Countrey to have the estate of their Priesthood maintained in honour and plenty And it were much to be wished that the Reformed Churches of Christendom had not been in this point more sordid and sacrilegious then all other Christians not to say Nations in the World We have seen verified in England what was upon this miscarriage in the Reformation foretold by the most learned and Iudicious Writer of his rank among the Protestants That the time of Religion and the Service of God would likely fall as the age of Man within seventy or eighty years and what followed would be small Ioy to them that beheld it And we are yet to pray and hope that the little that remains may escape if possible all fears and Iealousies from the luxury and profaness of the Age The naturall issue of which vices in conjunction is the devouring of holy things and then an open Apostafie from the Faith Unless Gods mercy make them childless as unlawfull embraces often prove I have now sufficiently tired you with a lame account of some things in the right management whereof the continuance of our Faith is greatly concern'd And had we hearts to make use