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A29395 Some reasons why Robert Bridgman, and his wife, and some others in Hvntington-shire, have left the society of the people called Quakers, and have join'd in communion with the Church of England and some passages contained in a letter of George Whitehead to R.J., and R. Bridgman's reply to the same / by Robert Bridgman. Bridgman, Robert.; Whitehead, George, 1636?-1723. 1700 (1700) Wing B4494; ESTC R18987 9,724 25

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the Insinuations notwithstanding and Reproaches of our Adversaries An instance of which I think sit here to subjoyn not being likely to obtain any offer of Justice from the Person concerned Upon my Wife and Children's receiving Baptism in the Church of England George Whitehead writes a Letter of Condolence to my Wife's Father wherein he insinuates after this manner Dear Brother I have been often sensible of thy Exercise and Affection occasioned by the miserable Backsliding of such near Relations who have so long professed the blessed Truth among us The blessed Truth which we have received from the Beginning in Life and Power will stand for ever and out-live all its Adversaries and they who are approved and stand faithful therein shall the more be manifest and shine when Shame and Confusion shall cover the Rebellious who reproach God's Heritage and People to excuse their own Revolting and Looseness of Spirit The Letter in which these Passages are falling providentially into my Hand I wrote to Geo. Whitehead as is hereafter exprest But being in London a considerable time and having no prospect of having such a Meeting as I desir'd think fit to expose it as matter of Caution to himself and such others as may be under temptation to practise the like to disparage and discourage with such Blasts of Reviling Hunt the 16th April 1700. George Whitehead In these Passages which I transcribed to him are contained a severe Charge by way of Insinuation against my self and my Wife who are the near Relations mentioned in that Letter And we being such had you proved your Charge the unworthiness of your Disposition notwithstanding hath sufficiently appeared in offering so to aggravate and by consequence to set such near Relations at too great a Distance But whereas your Charge and Insinuations remain unproved by you they ought in Justice to be returned upon you as a Slander If you think you can make Proof of these miserable yea and I may add detestable things upon us we desire you would do it and that you may be the more manifest and shine we care not how publickly you do it Your writing in such a manner to my Father without any Premonition to us had we been really guilty looks not only like a Deed of Darkness but we being innocent too much intitles you to the Character of those mentioned in the 11th Psalm Who bend the Bow and make ready their Arrow upon the String that they may privily shoot at the upright in heart Had not your Name and Pretences been what they are we should have endeavoured to have overlook'd your Reproach as we have done a great deal from others of a meaner Rank among you cast upon us as we verily believe for our open Profession of the Christian Faith and practising the Institutions of our blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ in ways most agreeable to our Judgment upon a serious deliberate and impartial Enquiry and Consideration and this we take to be the Reason of your Displeasure knowing very well how you have slighted opposed and rejected those great and necessary Truths and proper means of Christian Fellowship and Communion appointed we believe for that end by our Lord Jesus Christ and practised by his holy Apostles and Disciples in the first and purest Ages of Christianity And you in particular bearing such a Name and Sway amongst so many deluded though many of them I believe well-meaning People and so generally passing under the Character of an honourable and worthy Minister of Christ 't is therefore highly necessary to take some Notice of your practice And I do hereby acquaint you that my Occasions calling me to London in a little time I shall expect you will give me a Meeting before some sober and judicious Persons either to endeavour the Proof of your Charge or to retract what you have in such manner insinuated against us If you think fit to decline to give me such a Meeting I shall have reason to take it as a sufficient demonstration that Shame and Confusion is over you in that very manner and for the very same Cause suggested against us in your Letter Thus much at present from your abused Friend and Kinsman R. Bridgman To which Letter I may now add what is written in the 26th Chapter of the Book of Proverbs v. 26 27. Whose Hatred is covered by Deceit his Wickedness shall be shewed before the whole Congregation Whoso diggeth a Pit shall fall therein and he that rolleth a Stone it will return upon him FINIS Page 16. l. 3. for the World it read the Word it BOOKS Printed for Brab Aylmer at the Three Pigeons in Cornhil MR. Keith's Last Sermon at Turner's-Hall May 5. 1700. in which he gave an account of his joining in Communion with the Church of England Quarto His Two Sermons Preach'd at the Church of St. George Botolph-lane May 12. 1700. being his first Preaching after Ordination Quarto His Explications and Retractations of divers Passages in his former Books Quanto Price 6d His Thanksgiving Sermon Preached April 16. 1696. Quarto Price 6d His First Narrative at Turner's-Hall Quarto Price 12d His Second Narrative at Turner's-Hall Quar. Price 6 d. His Fourth Narrative at Turner's-Hall detecting the Quakers gross Errours vile Heresies and Antichristian Principles c. by clear and evident Proofs in above two hundred and fifty Quotations faithfully taken out of their Books with an Attestation of Dr. Isham Dr. Bedford and three other Ministers of the Church of England to the Truth of the said Quotations Quarto Price 1 s. 6 d. His large Catechism for the Instruction of Youth Octavo Bound Price 1 s. His small Catechism for the Instruction of Children Octavo Stitch'd Price 3 d. His Deism of William Penn. Octavo Price 1 s. BOOKS Printed for C. Brome at the Gun at the Westend of St. Paul's Church-yard DR Spark's Devotions with all new Cuts The Snake in the Grass and Defence of it Five Discourses by the Author of the Snake in the Grass with a new Preface And all the Pieces of that Author The first and fourth Parts of Virgil's Aeneads in English Burlesque by Charles Cotton Esquire Liturgies vindicated by the Dissenters Price bound 1 s. Advice to the Roman Catholicks of England especially those under Age by the late Act of Parliament Price 1 s. The History of the Bible in Quarto with 264 Cuts besides three Maps Le grand's Philosophy Folio English Cuts Mr. Keith's Farewel Sermon at Turners-Hall Two first Sermons after Ordination A full Account of Presbytery as establish'd in Scotland Sermons on several Occasions By Dr. Sprat Lord Bishop of Rochester Principles and Duties of Natural Religion By Bishop Wilkins The Case of the Dutchess of Mazarine The Conquest of India by the Portuguese In 3 Vol. The City and Republick of Venice Religious Conference about Godfathers and Godmothers Horace Translated by Alex. Brome c. Erasmus Colloquies Translated by Sir R. L'Estrange and Mr. Brown The Compleat Gamester The Guide of a Christian. Price bound 6 d. A Guide to Heaven in two Parts Reform'd Monastery or the Love of Jesus A Manual of Prayers for Winchester College All the Pieces by the same Author A Treatise of Humane Reason Method with the Deists and Jews Arithmetical Recreations By Leybourn The Godly-man's Companion Characters of a Whore a Bawd c. Price 6 6d Plain-dealing Poulterer
Epithets they bestow upon him And in their Word to the Well-inclin'd represent him the Epitome and very Common-place of all the Malice of their preceding Adversaries And these fine Characters they industriously spread throughout the Nation to defame and reproach him having a method effectually to do it by spreading their Pamphlets according to an agreement of their Yearly Meeting which is their supreme Authority in this and in other Kingdoms and Countries where they have any settled Interest The Agreement and Order of their Yearly Meeting held in London the first second third and fourth Days of June 1691 and directed to the Quarterly and Monthly Meetings in England and Wales and elsewhere was and is That each Monthly Meeting of which they had at that time about 150 in England and Wales and since no doubt the number is greatly increased was to take off two Books of a sort when both do not exceed the price of a Shilling and to be sent by the several Correspondents in London or their Order to the Correspondents of each County who are to send up the Money out of their Meeting Stock which sufficiently encourages both the Author and Printer And this Agreement and Order was expresly made for the spreading their Books as is more at large declared in their Yearly Meeting Paper printed in the Year 1691. And thus they are encouraged to be continually scribling and judge it to be as they say in their Word to the well-inclin'd the fairer more substantial and edifying method But the misery that attends their numerous Proselytes is the impressions they are under in partiality and prejudice what is published by their Party passes for Truth and that not only in Doctrine and Fact but they conceive a peculiar presence of God is a continual Blessing that accompanies them The same conceit they have in all they say and do and are generally so affected with a Relish and Savour of it that puffs them up with intolerable Pride even whilst it appears to themselves under a Disguise of Humility But true Humility is another thing it submits to Truth where-ever whenever and in whomsoever it appears inlarging the Heart with Catholick Love which like the attracting and bountiful Heaven scatters its Dew on every Soyl and maintains its correspondence with an impartial influence The Lord in Mercy increase this Vertue and inable the sincere in all persuasions to let go the shackles of their several singularities looking up unto Jesus the universal Head and Captain of their Salvation who by his blessed and Holy Spirit is sprinkling the Nations through the Faith of his Gospel and that without respect of persons And therefore let me beseech such of my Friends as profess their Faith in a Crucified Jesus and in humility submit to the means he has appointed as the Seals of his Covenant and Symbols of his Presence to be very careful in all manner of Conversation that so the Adversary who seeks many ways to undermine and lay waste the Foundation and Pillars of the Christian Religion may be stop'd every way in which he appears The greatest reproach that at this time attends the Christian Church is a loose Conversation in too many not season'd with Grace and the fear of God and this is the Ground and Plea of all Schismaticks as well as it is the Air that infests the Atheist who secretly concludes because of such Liberty there is not a God of such Purity and Power as the Christians profess in their verbal Confession But this I can say from a good and comfortable experience That there are many pious and heavenly-minded Souls in several places both Ministers and People that are as Lights and as Salt in their several Stations though once I could hardly believe it so much Filth and Dirt having been cast upon them by an ignorant proud and obstinate Generation of Men whose feigned Simplicity and Humility under a pretence of Subjection to a Power above the Magistrate is very delusive in the Appearance of it but when duly examined proves chiefly the Fruit of Education and Humour Being taught and persuaded that Reasoning is dangerous in things of Religion they stop their Ears and close their Eyes until by degrees they grow hardy in Imagination and Fancy in the strength of which they have been suffered to proceed until their own Folly hath corrected them Whoever comes to a sober mind and attentively reads over the History given by George Fox and his Delegates in the Entrance of his Journal may readily find that an ignorant Education and Melancholly Temper impressed and blown up by a Spirit of Enthusiasm gave birth to his Faction in those Hurricane Times whilst the Church lay despoyled of her Power and Privileges and since that inundation of Heresie and Schism the Breach has remaiued too much unobserved And to my Understanding no better Expedient can readily be proposed to heal up this Breach and recover the Wasts than a laborious and diligent instruction of Youth and detecting of Errour by open and free Conferences judiciously managed in divers parts of the Nation T is a lamentable thing that in a Christian Nation the publick Seals and Badges of its Communion should be so slighted neglected opposed and rejected by a sort and number of men that will not be accountable in Matter of Fact for their Mistakes and Abuses 'T is a most lame and scandalous Insinuation against the Institution and Practice of Outward Baptism which George Whitehead advances in his Rector Examined p. 27. saying When this Rector meaning Mr. Merriton can demonstrate a Probatum est of such Virtue in that poor Element as he calls it of Water-baptism as to cure polluted and distemper'd Souls as if the Issue or Effect of a means that is prescribed must determine the right or lawfulness of its Institution and Practice without any Exception he may at the same rate question the Authority of our Lord Jesus Christ and his Apostles in their Teaching and Preaching because many that heard them were not effectually Cleansed And in the Commission that was given Math. 28. 19. there is no more mention made of outward teaching than of outward Baptism and the Quakers may as well reject Teaching with Words as Baptizing with Water But to manifest how liable they are to pervert the True Sense of the Matter see what George Whitehead says concerning the Supper Page 35. of his Rector Examined where he produces some Testimonies out of the Book of Martyrs to favour his Cause which duly considered are directly against it The Bread and Wine in the Supper are Figurative and Symbolical and as the Eating and Drinking by the faithful Receiver Intitles him to the Graces and Blessings of the Spirit of Christ so the breaking the Bread and pouring out the Wine were Instituted as a means to preserve the Faith and Remembrance of his Body and Blood that was Broken and Slied for the Remission of Sin and which is now Exalted and Glorified in the