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A58905 A sermon preached before the King at Chester, on August xxviii, 1687, being the feast of S. Augustin, Doctor of the Holy Catholic Church by ... Lewis Sabran ... Sabran, Lewis, 1652-1732. 1687 (1687) Wing S221; ESTC R1786 28,293 35

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without any Knowledg in me of your Design says he which was that by true Knowledg he might bring me to you I loved and valued him but not as a Teacher of Truth for I despaired of finding any such in your Church Secondly Besides that general Prejudice he nourisht he misrepresented to himself the particular Tenets of the Church and then hated and reviled the ugly Idol of his own carving If ever saith he my Soul lifted up and moved her self towards the Catholic Faith I was soon driven back for alas Catholic Faith was not that which I took it to be Thirdly He was willing to be convinced but not to believe to see but not to submit his Understanding to Faith He sought a clear Evidence and such as should not controul his usual Apprehension or oppose his Senses as if they had been fit Judges of the Objects of Faith revealed Truths My sick Soul says he could not be cured but by Believing Valetudo animae meae quae utique nisi credendo sanari non poterat ne falsa crederet sanari recusabat c. Conf. l. 6. c. 1. and for fear of being surprized and made to believe what might be false I refused to admit of a Cure I was resolved either to see things or if I could not to conceive them as evidently as that Seven and Three make up Ten. It was on these his Three mistaken Methods that he reflected afterwards when sighing he said What am I Quid sum ego mihi sine te nisi dux in praeceps quis homo est quilibet homo cum sit homo Conf. l. 1. c. 4. to my self but a Guide leading into a Precipice What a sad Man is each Man when he is but one Man That is when he is left to his own Private Sense abandoned to his own Judgment Was it possible that Gods Grace had it been less than Omnipotent should prevail against these stubborn Ill-dispositions of his Mind Long was the Combat violent the Strife but Grace conquered at last and by this Method gained the Field First God by a particular Light convinced him That L 7. conf c. 5. Religion was not Opinion but Faith not a calling of things Divine to the Test of our weak Judgment and carnal Senses but a captivating of our Understanding and humbly sacrificing it to the Divine Truth Next he observed how numerable those things were which he believed though he had never seen them How he had ever adored God and owned his Providence though he knew not what a Kind of Substance he was nor what Way led unto or from him I thought on these Things says he and you were present to me I was carried away by restless Waves and you governed and steered my Course I sighed and you heard me Then he resolves to seek more narrowly Let Time be assigned says he let some Hours be allotted Ibidem c. 11. to the Study of that great Science How I shall save my Soul. Let all Vain and Empty Concerns perish and all my Thoughts and Endeavors be spent in the sole Pursuit of Truth this Life at best is but Toylsome and Miserable Death certain and at Hand if it surprizes whither do we go He presently applyed himself seriously to an humble Search after a Guide to Truth when favoured with a new Light from Heaven he cryes out Conceive better Hopes my Soul the Catholic Faith doth not teach what we Believe and fondly accused her of Thus disposed and weighing with a due Attention the Articles of the Catholic Belief he owns his Heart was filled with Joy and his Face covered with Shame to see how profanely he had strove so many Years not against Catholic Faith as he conceived but against his own Dreams how Rash he had been and equally Impious That whereas he should with Submission have learnt from the ●o quippe temerarius impius fueram quod ea quae debebam quaerenda discere accusando dixeram l. 6. Conf. Church that which she held he fastened on her what he pleased and accused her of it He reads next Holy Scripture with the due deference he owed to that Churches Interpretation owning there is no Text of Scripture into which a false Gloss may not Foist an Error that the Letter ever kills when severed from the Spirit Nulla scriptura est quae non apud illos qui cam non intelligunt possit reprehendi l. 1. de gen contra Manich. which ought to quicken that the very misapplying a Text otherwise truly Interpreted is the most dangerous Weapon that a tempting Devil could use to deceive even if possible Truth it self with an It is written that stubbornly to maintain our own Fancy to be the Word of God because we uphold it by a forced Text is to set up the greatest Abomination of Desolation in the House of God an Idol upon his Altar and to adore it by the worst of Idolatries Self-worship proudly challenging as our own what Christ only could bequeath and left to his Church to each Member as united to the whole the Spirit of Truth who alone must Interpret what he Dictated alone On which score Christ left as a Depositum in the same Hands of the Church the Letter and the Spirit the Book and the Sense the Word and the Truth to be delivered to all succeeding Ages by the same Authority because the separating of the one from the other would Neque enim natae sunt haereses nisi dum scripturae bonae intelliguntur non bene quod in ●is non bene Intelligitur etiam temeré audacter asseritur Tract 18. in Jo. turn the most wholsom Food of our Souls to present Poison whence Heresies have had their birth from good Scriptures ill understood and from the bold and rash asserting of such Errors So that this only is the holy Method to be followed that what we find in Scripture conformable with the Faith we have received we feed on it but when any part thereof appears not uniform with that Rule that it create in us no Doubts but only an humble Quod secundum sanam sidei regulam intelligere non poterimus dubitationem a●feramus intelligentiam disseramus Ibid. persuasion that we understand not yet such a Scripture He had scarce receiv'd this Light when behold all his Doubts raised before by the same Lecture disappeared all those seeming Contradictions vanished whence he was perfectly convinced that the Catholic Church was the unerring Guide to be followed by all the Disciples of Christ He expresses the difference of this present Submission from that former Search into Scripture without this Guide under the Comparison of two Travellers whereof Aliud est de silvestri cacumine videre pat●iam pacis iter ad cam non invenire frustra con●ri per invia aliud viam tenere illuc ducentem cura coelestis imperatoris munitam Conf. l. 8. c. 1. of the one climbs up