E libris Carol Ri: Binghan. lon: Det: Anno M MDCCCXCVI 1 William habeat Hay.MA. without the taimed and we i A TABA M ORAL AND RELIGIOUS APHORISMS. Collected from the MANUSCRIPT PAPERS OF The Reverend and Learned Doctor WHICH CO TE enja a N , E 5 Α Ν D Publiſhed in MDCC III, By Dr. J E F F E R Y. Now re-publiſhed, with very large Additions, from the Tranſcripts of the latter, By SAMUEL SALTER, D. D. Prebendary of Norwich, and 'Curate of Great Yarmouth in Norfolk. To which are added, Eight Letters: which paſſed between Dr. WHICHOTE, Provoſt of King's College ; and Dr. TUCKNEY, Maſter of Emmanuel College, in Cam- bridge: on ſeveral very intereſting Subjects. Now firſt publiſhed. L O N D ON: Printed for T. PAYNE, at Pope's-HEAD, in PATER-NOSTER-Rov. MDCCLIII. TO THE MOST REVEREND, HIS GRACE, T Η ο M A s, LORD ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY; PRIMATE OF ALL ENGLAND, AND METROPOLITAN, &c. IN GRATEFUL ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF MANY FAVORS, BESTOWED IN THE MOST GENEROUS AND ENGAGING MANNER; THESE REMAINS OF THE LEARNED JUDICIOUS AND BENEVOLENT Dr. WHICH COTE, ARE MOST HUMBLY AND WITH THE GREATEST PROPRIETY INSCRIBED, HIS GRACE's MOST OBEDIENT AND OBLIGED SERVANT ; S A MU EL SALT ER. ? M ORAL Α Ν D RELIGIOUS APHORISMS. Wherein are Contained, Many Doctrines of TRUTH, and Rules of PRACTICE; : Which are of Univerſal Concernment, and of the greateſt Importance in the LIFE of Man. MDCCLIII. . SI33 WS7 1153 PRE FACE TO THE FIRST EDITION OF THE A PHORISMS IN MDCC III. By Dr. JEFFER Y. I ز A M ſo far from being an Enemy to Syſtems ; that I confeſs, I have an inveterate prejudice in Favour of them: Notwithſtanding which, I muſt acknowledge; that the Doctrine of Morality and Religion may be deli- vered, with ſpecial advantage, in the form of Aphoriſms. For Proof of this, A 22 I ap- iv PREFACE to the I appeal to the Excerpta of Marcus Antoninus, and the Proverbs of Solomon ; wherein the moſt important Truths of theſe kinds are repreſented, without any of that Artificial Dependence, and Method; which ſome Men find hard to comprehend. But if the Synopſis were as eaſily and as perfectly laid, in the mind of him that is to Learn ; as it is, in the mind and tables of him that is to Teach; yet no man can Live, : however he may Talk, Syſtematically. They are commonly fome Few Truths, that are entertained in a man's Judgment, and are become his Temper and Principles ; which Direct and Go- vern him : and the Knowledge of ſuch Truths may be attained with more eaſe, and with as great ſucceſs ; in this way of tendering them to his Under- ſtanding. Of this Every Reader is equally ca- pable : He, that has not the command of FIRST EDITION. V of much Time at once ; and He, that has not Spirits for very long Attention ; as well as He, that hath no other Bu- ſineſs than Study; and can ſpend whole Weeks and Months in that Exerciſe. Any one may, at a ſpare Hour, make a Pleaſing and an Uſeful Entertainment of his Thoughts ; by conſidering theſe Aphoriſms: and for this reaſon they are made public; that Others may have the ſame Inſtrument of Edification, which the Collecter had framed for Himſelf. 1 God and Religion muſt be endeared to the Reaſon of that Man, who is to be effectually Religious ; and if Theſe be truly repreſented, the greateſt Ho- nour is done unto them; and they will appear to be, what a man would defire; moſt Venerable in themſelves, and moſt Beneficial and neceſſary to him. But if Religion be obtruded, as an Impoſition of Power ; and if God be deſcribed, as an Enemy to Men ; this is ز 1 vi PREFACE to the is a blaſphemous Miſrepreſentation of both, and alſo an Alienation of the Mind of Man from his Chiefef Good; which it ought perfectly to be reconci- led to, ſatisfied with, and happy by. God truly is unto Us, what he is in Himſelf ; tbe Perfection of Goodneſs, direčted by the Perfe&tion of Wiſdom, and exerciſed by the Perfeétion of Power: fo that no Man can poſſibly Suffer more, no man can reaſonably Expeet leſs, from God; than what is the Na- tural Iſſue of the greateſt Goodneſs, and Love. a Religion is given us of God, for our good : and there is nothing in Religion; which any Man, who is willing to do himſelf the greateſt good that can be, would be wanting in; if he were not deluded by Error, or hindred by Luft. And although men be Sinners; and ſo as contrary to their Religion, as Re- ligion is contrary to their Degeneracy ; yet FIRST EDITION. vii yet Religion is on that Account recom- mended to them; becauſe it is for their Reſtoration : and therefore muſt begin in Repentance; without which, the Reſtoration of a Sinner, to God and to himſelf, is impoſſible. Such a Repreſentation of things, the Reader will find in the following Apha- riſms; which I therefore recommend unto him, becauſe they are a recom- mendation of Morality and Religion. PRE- (ix) PRE FACE TO THIS NE W EDITION T HE Reader will expect ſome account of what is now offer- ed to him, under the name of Dr. Whichcote; ſeventy years after the death of that excellent perſon : and he has a right to be gratified in that expectation, The collecter and publiſher of Dr. Jef- Fery's ſcattered pieces, reprinted late- ly in two octavo volumes ; had inſerted in his projected collection an anonymous book, printed at Norwich MDCCIIT, with this title; “ Moral and Religious Aphoriſms: wherein are contained, “ Many Doctrines of Truth, and Rules « of Practice; which are of univerſal " Concernment, and of the greateſt Importance in the Life of Man.” But he (6 а. х PRE FACE he was foon informed, by the relations of that learned and judicious Divine ; that theſe Aphoriſms were not compoſed by Him, but only excerpted and tran- fcribed from Dr. WHICHCOTE's papers; that they ought not therefore to appear in his Collection of Dr. JEFFERY's pieces: though being well worthy of a re-pub- lication, and much inquired after, it ſeems; they might very properly follow it, after a careful reviſal ; and might receive great improvements from Dr. Jeffery's tranſcripts, ſtill in being. They are now re-publiſhed ; and I am going to particularize the improvements made in this new cdition. Dr. WHICHCOTE doth not ſeem to have written his fermons, at full length; but ordinarily preached from ſhort Notes or Heads, which he filled-up and en- larged-on in ſpeaking. While he lived, his very great and deſerved reputation engaged divers perſons to attend his Church; and to tranſcribe from his mouth thoſe diſcourſes, which cou'd no otherwiſe be cbteined; and which were then, to this E DI TIO N. X1 then, and are ſtill, univerſally admired; for the great learning and judgement, candor and good temper, that diſtin- guiſhed the preacher and all his com- poſitions. He had not been long dead; before ſeveral pieces were ſent into the world, as His; by perſons, of very dif- ferent characters; acted, as it ſhou'd ſeem, by very different motives. MDCCXXXV, ز In two years after his death, a ſmall octavo of eight ſheets appeared ; with this ſtrange title, thus more ſtrangely printed; « Θεοφορεμένα Aéypata. Or, fome ſelect Notions of that learned and reverend Divine of the Church of England, BENJ. WHITCHCOT D. D. lately deceaſed. Faithfully col- lected from Him by a Pupil and parti- lar Friend of His ; and Publiſhed Pro bono Publico per lo pro Philanthropo. Non magna Loquimur, ſed Vivimus. Seneca. Vir bonus, & PRUDENS extinétus amabitur. Idem. a 2 In A ) xii P R E F A C E : >> In the firſt year of the Reign of our Soveraign Lord King James the Second &c.” The book conſiſts of Notes on ſive texts of Scripture; which take up 100 pages : and of 28 and of 28 pages more of what this editor calls Apoftolical Apo- thegms. Theſe laſt words, thus ſpell’d, ſerve for a running title to the whole book : and as there are ſome particu- lars, in that part of the work, which is given to-the. Tutor; from whence I conclude, they were His earlier thoughts: ſo there are a great many, in the very ſmall ſhare, which is taken by the Pu- pil; from whence any one may ſee, He had left College a conſiderable time . In MDCXCVII, as I am informed; there was printed, with Dr.WHICHCOTE's name to it, “a Treatiſe of Devotion with Morning and Evening Prayer, for. all the Days in the Week.” This I have never ſeen; but I take it to be alluded- to in the Preface to " Select Serinons of Dr. WHICHCOTE, in Two parts. Printed for Churchill, MDCXCVIII. the large preface to theſe Diſcourſes, it >> For, in is to this EDITIO N. xiii is obſerved; that “Some Others hadbeen very far from the Caution of that Edi- tor: fince of late ſome things had been ſet-out, in our Author's name; which his beſt Friends diſowned to be His: and which any one, who ſtudies him in his genuine works, will eaſily know to be unworthy of him.” This was pretty ex- traordinary, in an anonymous publiſher; who gives no account of Himſelf, of the manner how He became pofſeffed of theſe diſcourſes, or of the right he had to print them: but faith only--- " The Sermons, which are here printed ; have been ſelected out of Numbers of others leſs perfect: there being not any of our author's extant, but ſuch as were written after him at Church; He having uſed no other than very ſhort Notes, not very legible : though theſe have been of great uſe to the publiſher; in whoſe hands they have been.” He goes-on--- « The unpoliſhed Style and Phraſe of our author, who drew more from a College than a Court; and who was more uſed to School-Learning and the Language of an Univerſity, than to the Con- ز xiv P R E F A C E Converſation of the Faſhionable World; may poſſibly but ill recommend his Senſe to the Generality of Readers. And ſince none of theſe Diſcourſes were ever de- figned for the world, in any other man- ner; than as He once for all pronoun- ced them from the Pulpit : they muſt of neceſſity appear to have a Rough- neſs in them; which is not found in other Sermons, more accurately pen’d by their authors. For, though the Publiſher has ſometimes ſupplied him out of himſelf; by transferring to a de- fective place, that which he found in ſome other diſcourſe; where the fame ſubject was treated : yet ſo great a re- gard was had, to the very Text and Letter of his Author ; that he wou'd not offer to alter the leaſt word; and whereſoever he has added any thing, to correct the moſt apparent omiſſion or fault of the pen-man; he has taken care to havé it marked in different characters: that nothing might appear, as cur author's own; which was not perfectly His. Though ſome Others in the to this E DI TI O N. XV the world have been very far from this Caution : &c” as above quoted. This Preface is generally ſuppoſed to have been written by the celebrated Earl of SHAFTESBURY, author of the Charac- teriſtics; and the Book to have been ſet- out by Him: though in a copy now be- fore me, which was Dr. Jeffery’s, that Dr. has written in the Title-page; that Mr. WM. STEPHENS, rector of Sutton in Surry, was the Publiſher. The two accounts are eaſily reconciled; this Gentleman did moſt probably reviſe the diſcourſes ; at the requeſt and under the direction of that learned Nobleman. ! . This volume of Sermons being out of print and very ſcarce, as all Dr. WHICHOTE's works have long been; was seprinted at Edinburgh in MDCCXLII, with a Dedication to young Miniſters and Students in Divinity; by Dr. WM. Wishart, Principal of the College there. This new editor tells us, that « Lord Shaftesbury very providentially met-with the MS; and was ſo much taken Xvi PRE FACE taken with it, that he reviſed it, put it to the preſs, and wrote the preface.” All which particulars, I ſuppoſe; and not the laſt of them only, as his words ſeem to imply; he was aſſured-of from very good hands: for the writer of that preface fays no ſuch thing; but on the contrary confeſſes, that he ſearched offi- ciouſly after this author's Sermons. It is not unlikely; but I cannot take upon Me to affirm it for truth: that a knowledge of the many copies, taken in ſhort-hand, of Dr. WHICHCOTE's Sermons; and a reaſonable app.ehenfi- on of the injury which his honor'd me- mory might receive from injudicious publications under his name; engaged the Execu!os of this great and good man, or rather Mr. BENJAMIN WHICH- core merchant in Biſhop/gate ítreet; (who by particular bequeſt was intruſt- ed with his Uncle's papers;) to put them all into the hands of Dr. Jeffery: who had the higheſt vene ation for the deceaſed author; and eve y talent be- ſide, that cou'd qualify him to be a di- ligent to this E DI TIO N. xvii ligent faithful and judicious edito“; and who was utterly incapable of making an improper uſe of any thing, with which he was intruſted. This Dr. doth not ſeem at this time to have known of Lord SHAFTESBURY’s volume; or he wou'd hardly have reprinted, in their imper- fect and inchoate ſtate, though from the original notes of the preacher, thoſe dif- courſes; which compoſe the former part of that volume. However that were, He publiſhed three octavo volumes; in the three firſt years of this century; con- teining reſpectively 16, 20 and 30 ſer- mons: advertiſing with the ſecond of them a requeſt, that " whoever had any MS notes of Dr. WHICHOTE's, written with his own hand, wou'd deliver them to the Executor above-mention- ed; &c. i >> There is no doubt to be made; but that in this collection were many papers, full of excellent matter, in Dr. WHICH- cote's own hand ; befides what were found ready digefted into ſome form and order: Dr. Jeffery had alſo a great b number xviii P R E F A C E 66 He לל number of ſermons; ſaid to have been tranſcribed from the Doctor's mouth, while preaching: particularly, by one SMITH; who was wont to ſay, lived upon Dr. WHICHCOTE: which may be underſtood, and might be true; in more ſenſes than one. But although our Arch-deacon might be well aſſured of their being genuine, and in the main accurate tranſcripts; yet he did not think himſelf authorized to print any of them, as Dr. WHICHCOTE's: and was rather diſpleaſed, I know; when Dr. SAMUEL CLARKE printed a fourth volume from them, in MDCCVII. In which, I humbly conceive, he was too ſcrupulous; for Dr. CLARKE and He were by no means in the ſame ſituation, or under the ſame reſtraints ; with regard to the Family, or to the Public. I have two collections of this fort; one, conteining 24 fermons, on a paſſage in the epiſtle to the Philippians ; the other, 36, on a text in Jeremiah: from an other copy of the former of which, Dr. CLARKE ſelected the firſt 13 in his volume; from a copy of the latter, his 3 follow- ing to this E DI TI O N. xix ing; and his remaining 10 from fome third fett, which I have no copy of; on a verſe or two of the fifth Pfalm. I have mentioned theſe circumſtances thus minutely; partly to ſhew Dr. Jeffery's exceeding caution, in execu- ting his truſt; and to point-out the dif- ference between His three volumes, and what-ever we have elſe under the name of Dr. WHICHCOTE; and partly to fug- geſt a probable conjecture, for what reaſon the firſt edition of the Aphoriſms which follow, came abroad without any name; either of Author or Editor. For, From all theſe papers, whether in the author's own hand, or an other's; whe- ther already publiſhed, or deſtined to publication, or not; whether digeſted, or looſe and imperfect; this his great admirer collected into ſeveral volumes near five thouſand moral and religious Aphoriſms: of which he printed one thouſand at Norwich, in MDCCIII; while his head and heart were ſtrongly impreſ- ſed with the juſt and noble ſentiments b 2 of IX P R E F A C E of his honored Friend, or Maſter rather. To theſe he prefixed a ſhort and ſenſi- ble Preface; and ſubjoined a Prayer, evidently formed on the religious prin- ciples of the preceding book. This lit- tle book has been reviſed with care, by myſelf and other better judges; who not thinking it adviſable very greatly to in- creaſe the number; recominended the changing a few, preferably to the ad- ding very many. In this new edition therefore, the reader will find all the beſt of the former preſerved; and ſcarce any expunged, ſuch was our juſt defer- ence to His judgement, who went be- fore us! but when an other was found to ſupply it's place, ſimilar in ſenſe; and fomewhat more emphatically elegantly cr fully expreſſed. In this In this way how- ever, and by the addition of two intire centuries; we have actually inſerted 500 new Aphoriſms : while yet the whole number now printed is no more than Our great labor was to ſelect, what we ſhou'd not take; out of many very greatly and almoſt equally recom- mended to us, by their ſtrength and energy: I 200. to this E D I TI O N. xxi energy, importance and uſe: which were all along principally conſidered, much above mere novelty ; or a certain ſtrikingneſs, owing mainly to that cir- cumſtance. The ſhort notes and illuſtrations, ad- ded at the bottom of the page here and there; were taken, all but one, from the firſt leaves of a copy; which Dr. Jeffery had given to one of his own family: in which the poſſeſſor had written ſuch explanations of ſome paſ- ſages, not immediately obvious to a com- mon reader; as were dictated by the Dr. himſelf. Much the greater part of theſe it ſeemed unneceſſary to print; if the ſame is thought of what are reteined, I can only ſay; they are very few, and very ſhort. The one, excepted above is Nº. 4778 MS; which, as it ferved to clear- up a queint expreſſion in Nº. 160, I tranſcribed; and have ſet Dr. WHICH- COT’Es name to it: as a note, by the author himſelf, on the printed Aphoriſm in the text. The xxii PR E F A C E The editor hath it in his power to follow this volume with two or three others; of equal bulk, and not inferior beauty: but as he doth not much ex- pect, the public will call upon him to print any more; fo he thinks himſelf, he has now done enough in this way; to ſatisfy the moſt zelous admirer of Aphoriſms, and of this Author : and he felicitates himſelf moſt unaffectedly, that he lives in an age ; (a happineſs, which his reverend Grand-father Jeffery cou'd not boaſt !) in which ſuch a gene- rous freedom of thinking, chaſtened and tempered by the genuine ſpirit of true Piety and a moſt exalted Devotion; and by the moſt ſound and exact Judgement, in Religion and all Learning; “ cleared from Froth and Grounds," as the ever- memorable Mr. John Hales of Eton expreſſeth it; meets-with the eſteem and applauſe, it ſo well deſerves. Such men as WHICHCOTE do indeed recommend Religion ; by their Lives, and by their Writings; proving it's influence on themſelves, and their well-grounded per- to this EDITIO N. xxiii perſwaſion of it's Truth, by the whole tenor of their conduct; and making ſuch, and only fuch, repreſentations of it in their works; as demonſtrate it's in- tire agreableneſs to the beſt-improved Reaſon of Man; as ſhew it to be worthy of God to inſtitute, and of Man to be- leive and to obey; placing it in it's faireſt and trueſt light, as the higheſt perfection of the human nature; and greateſt improvement of the human powers: while the narrow ſyſtematical pretenders to Religion, before and ſince His time; do all they can to expoſe and diſgrace, what they cannot extin- guiſh and deſtroy ; do magno. conatul magnas nugas agere; and, which is worſe, hae nugae ſeria ducunt. In mala deluſum ſemel exceptúmque finiſtre. Theſe men (to anticipate the maſculine fenſe and words of the book we are prefacing) fancy, they " advance Religion; while they-but draw it down to bodily acts, it up into I know not what of myſtical, fymbolical, emblematical, &c: whereas the Chriſtian Religion is not myſtical, fymbolical, ænigmatical; but or carry un- 1 xxiv P R E F A C E uncloathed, unbodied, intellectual, ra- tional, ſpiritual.” Mean time they poor- ly ſeek to confine all worth and excel- lence to their own narrow party: and, like what is charged on a very ancient Faction; damn, without ſcruple or re- morſe, without cerimony or concern, all, who do not ſtand with them, in parte: Donati. But neither this excellent author, nor his way of thinking and writing, can need any ſort of apology; they wou'd even be diſhonored by any ſuch, as I cou'd make for them: be- fides which, Dr. Jeffery's ſhort modeft and ſenſible preface ſtands where it did; and ſays, much better than I can, all that is neceſſary on the ſubject. It remaineth only, in my own juſter defenſe; that I beſpeak the reader's pardon beforehand, for ſuch miſtakes; as may have eſcaped Me. Dr. Which- cote had many favorite notions; which were ſo, becauſe he was firmly perſwa- ded of their truth and of their impor- tance: He was fond of inculcating theſe, on every occaſion; and placing them in to this E DI TI O N. XXV in every poſſible point of view. Dr. Jeffery tranſcribed theſe Aphoriſms, from different papers of his original, into different parts of his own collec- tion; and did not always examine very ſollicitoully, as he wrote for himſelf only at firſt; whether he had put them down before or not: nay, when he printed 1000 of them, he was not ſo ſcrupulouſly attentive to this circum- ſtance; but that ſome 20 or 30 may be found there repeted : ſometimes, in the very fame words; often, in ſuch as are very little different. I pretend not to have imbibed my author with the eager thirſt Dr. JEFFERY had done; and therefore am more likely to have fallen into this inaccuracy: but I truſt, it will not be found to have happened fo often; as to deſerve very ſevere cenſure from any one, who will give himſelf the trouble and time to reflect; how hard it muſt be, to keep in mind ſome thouſands of detach'd unconnected and independent ſentences; with ſuch ex- actneſs and preciſion: as never to hazard the repetition of any, in a collection of fome с xxvi P R E F A C E 1 ſome hundreds. I hope, no two will be found, in this new edition; between which there is not ſome obſervable dif- ference in the turn of the thought, of the expreſſion, or of both: ſome, which may at firſt appear mere repetitions ; will on a review be acknowledged to be uſeful and proper illuſtrations of what might before found harſh and feem crude and ill-founded : and will thereby tend to confirm, what might be thought without them to want con- firmation. But enough of this. What is now become of Dr. WHICH- cote's original papers ; or of many other excerpts, which Dr. Jeffery did unqueſtionably make from them; is now impoſſible, I mean, out of My power, to ſay: the former has been dead lxx years; the latter, almoſt half that time. The ſons of Mr. B. WHICH- who inherited his Uncle's MS treaſure, have been applied-to; as alſo others of the Family: from all whom the Editor has received very great civi- lities; as he has the honour of being well- COTE, to this EDITIO N. xxvii ry. well-known to ſome of thein : but none cou'd give him any light in this inqui- Dr. Jeffery's executor died five years ago, and left Me by Will his Uncle's papers, non auro contra care: among which I find only tranſcripts. But, inſtead of rainly and childiſhly regret- ting this ; I think myſelf happy, and congratulate my contemporaries and myſelf; that it is at all in my power to communicate to an age, it's ſelf truely reſpectable for the reſpect and honor it pays to ſuch truely eminent men; what the excellent Dr. WHICHOTE thought and preached, and the no leſs excellent Dr. Jeffery tranſcribed and preſerved. Of the latter of theſe Worthies I have ſpoken largely, with the aſſiſtence of ſome older relations, in the memoirs prefixed to the late édition of his in- comparable diſcourſes: of his Maſter, the former of his judgement, his Oracle almoſt in Religion ; I can ſay little more, than is already ſaid excellently well; in the ſermon preached at his funeral by the immortal Tillotson, and in the very honorable teſtimonies which I have C 2 xxviii P R E F A C E I have directed to be ſubjoined to this preface : That little will come-in more properly, before the ſecond part of this book; and muſt not be added here, to fwell what I fear is already but too long. I pray God, theſe religious and moral advices admonitions and exhortations may be read and digeſted with a ſpirit of ſeriouſneſs and ſobriety, of candor and ingenuity, of modeſty and humili- ty; like that, by which they were un- deniably dictated : and then I am ſure, they cannot fail of having a due and happy influence ; of fending-away the conſiderate reader much improved in Knowledge, in Virtue, and in real Reli- gion; that Religion; which according-to the amiable deſcription of it given in the 956th Aphoriſm, “doth poſſeſs and affect the whole Man: in the Underſtanding, it is Knowledge; in the Life, it is Obedi- ence; in the Affections, it is Delight in God; in our Carriage and Behaviour, it is Modeſty, Calmneſs, Gentleneſs, Quietneſs, Candor, Ingenuity; in our, Dealings, to this E D I TI O N. xxix Dealings, it is Uprightneſs, Integri- ty, Correſpondence with the Rule of Righteouſneſs : Religion makes men Virtuous, in all Inſtances.” YARMOUTH in Norfolk ; 1753 SAMUEL SALTER. TESTI- } TESTIMONIES. D R. TILLOTSON, in his funeral Sermon upon our Author at St. Laurence, Jewry, May 24. MDCLXXXIII;, after mentioning ſeveral particulars of his Life and Death, procedes in the following manner--- To be able to deſcribe Dr. WHICHCOTE aright, it were neceſſary one ſhould be like him ; for which reaſon I muſt content my ſelf with a very imperfect draught of him. I ſhall not infift-upon his exemplary piety and devotion towards God; of which his whole life was one continued teſtimony : Nor will I praiſe his profound learning; for which he was juſtly had in fo great reputation. The moral improvements of his mind, a God-like temper and diſpoſition (as he was wont to call it he chiefly valued and aſpired after ; that univerſal charity and goodneſs, which he did continually preach and practiſe. His Converſation was exceeding kind and affable, grave and winning, prudent and profitable. He was flow to declare his judg- inent; and modeſt in delivering it. Never paſſionate, never peremptory: ſo far from im- poſing upon others, that he was rather apt to yield: And though he had a moſt profound and well-poiſed judgment; yet was he, of all men I ever knew, the moſt patient to hear others differ from him ; and the moſt eaſy to T E S T I M O N I E S. Xxxi ) to be convinced, when good reaſon was offered; and, which is ſeldom feen, more apt to be favourable to another man's reaſon, than to his own. Studious and inquiſitive men commonly at ſuch an age (at forty, or fifty at the utmoſt ;) have fixed and ſettled their judgments in moſt points; and, as it were, made their laſt under- ſtanding; fuppofing they have thought, or read, or heard, what can be ſaid on all ſides of things; and after that, they grow poſitive and impatient of contradiction; thinking it a diſparagement to them, to alter their judgment: but our deceaſed friend was ſo wiſe, as to be willing to learn to the laſt; knowing, that no man can grow wiſer ; without ſome change of his mind : without gaining ſome knowledge, which he had not ; or correcting ſome error, which he had before. He had attained ſo perfect a maſtery of his pafſions; that; for the latter and greateſt part of his life, he was hardly ever ſeen to be tranſ- ported with anger : and as he was extremely careful, not to provoke any man ; fo not to be provoked by any : uſing to ſay ; “ if I provoke a man, he is the worſe for my Company; as and if I ſuffer myſelf to be provoked by him, " I ſhall be the worſe for his.' He feldom reproved any perſon, in company; otherwiſe than by ſilence, or ſome ſign of uneaſineſs, or ſome very ſoft and gentle Word; which yet, from the reſpect men ge- nerally bore to him, did often prove effectual : for he underſtood humane nature very well; and ز very feldom Xxxii TESTIMONI E S. and how to apply himſelf to it in the moſt eaſy and effectual ways. He was a great encourager and kind director of young divines: and one of the moſt candid hearer of fermons, I think, that ever was: ſo that though all men did mightily reverence his judgment, yet no man had reaſon to fear his cenſure. He never fpake well of himſelf, nor ill of others : making good that ſaying of Panſa. in Tully, Neminem alterius, qui fuæ confideret virtuti, invidere ; “ that no man is apt to envy “ the worth and virtues of another, that hath any of his own to truſt to.” In a word, he had all thoſe virtues, and in a high degree; which an excellent temper, great confideration, long care and watchfulneſs over himſelf, together with the affiſtence of God's grace (which he continually implored, and mightily relied upon) are apt to produce. Particularly he excelled in the virtues of con- verſation, humanity, and gentleneſs, and hu- mility, a prudent and peaceable and reconciling temper. Lord SHAFTESBURY, in his character of the Author and his Writings, ſays ; « This excellent Divine, and truly chriſtian Philoſopher ; for his appearing ſo nobly in de- fence of NATURAL GOODNESS, may be juſtly called The PREACHER OF GOOD-NATURE, This is what he infifts-on, every-where; and to make this evident, is, in a manner, the ſcope of all his diſcourſes. « How great an example he was, of that happy temper and God-like diſpoſition, which he TESTIMONI E S. xxxiii 1 he laboured to inſpire; how much he was, for the excellency of his life and admirable temper, eſteemed and beloved of all; and how many conſtant hearers he had of the beſt rank, and greateſt note, even of the inoſt e- minent divines themſelves, is ſufficiently known: and the teſtimony, which the late Archbiſhop TILLOTSON has given of him in his funeral ſerinon, is in nothing ſuperior to his deſert." Dr. JEFFERY, in his Dedication of his Three Volumes addreſſed to Sir PAUL WHICHCOTE, Bart. ſays, “ I am well aſſured, that no greater ſervice can be done to RELIGION; than to make public, true, wiſe, and honoráble repre- ſentations of it ; ſuch as are contained in the following SERMONS : for the reverend and learned AUTHOR, through the advantage of a juft freedom, a ſtrong judgment, and an un- feigned piety, has eſtabliſhed ſuch a notion of CHRISTIANITY from the Holy Scriptures, ac- cording to the moral perfections of GOD, as cannot poſſibly be falſe ; and has laid his foun- dation of RELIGION fo deep, in the nature, reaſon, and neceſſity of things, that it cannot poſſibly be fubverted? Biſhop BURNET, in the Hiſtory of his own times, Vol. I p. 186, after giving an ac- count of the corrupt ſtate of the Church, ſays; " In all which ſad repreſentation, ſome few exceptions are to be made ; but ſo few, that, if a new ſet of men had not appeared of ano- ther ſtamp, the Church had quite loſt her ef- teem over the nation. Theſe were generally d of XXXIV T E S TIMONIES. of Cambridge ; formed under fome Divines, the chief of whom were Drs. Whichcote, Cud- worth, Wilkins, More, and Worthington. " WHICHCOTE was a man of a rare tem- per ; very mild and obliging. He had great credit with fome, that had been eminent in the late times; but made all the uſe he could of it, to protect good men of all perſuaſions. He was much for liberty of conſcience : and being diſguſted with the dry ſyſtematical way of thoſe times, he ſtudied to raiſe thoſe who converſed with him to a nobler fet of thoughts; and to conſider RELIGION as a ſeed of a DEI- FORM NATURE, (to uſe one of his own phra- ſes.) In order to this, he ſet young ſtudents much on reading the ancient philoſophers ; chiefly Plato, Tully, and Plotin ; and on con- ſidering the CHRISTIAN RELIGION as a doctrine ſent from GOD, both to elevate and ſweeten human nature; in which he was a great ex- ample, as well as a wiſe and kind inſtructor”. Mr. John LOCKE, in a letter to the Rev. Mr. RICHARD KING, ſays; “ If you deſire a lar- ger view of the parts of Morality; I know not where you will find them ſo well and diſtinctly explained, and ſo ſtrongly inforced ; as in the practical Divines of the Church of England. The Sermons of Dr. BARROW, Arch-biſhop TILLOTSON, and Dr. WHICH- COTE, are maſter-pieces in this kind : not to name abundance of others who excel on that ſubject. ERRA- . 1 · ERRATA in the APHORISMS. Preface, p. xi. 1. 1o. f. MDCCXXXV, read MDCLXXV. 13. f. googgawével r. Ococopa.eva. xxiii. 18. f. ducunt. In r. ducunt In xxiv. 21. f. Me. Dr. r. My ſelf. Dr. V APH. No. 13. for Libarum r. Liberum. 115. put a full ſtop after cauſe. 126. put between crotchets (the Human Nature] 174. f. Love for r. Love it for. 272. r. Virtue are. 449. Put a full ſtop after Wiſdom. 518. f. for fakes r. forfake. 607. Dele the comma after though. 696. f. Kexey r. Kun 712. f. but it is r. but is. 8o7. f. herefore r. therefore. 812. dele (the marks of Parentheſis. 1008. f. xéons r. géouis. Ιο58. f. Θεός , ένοικος r, Θεός ένοικος 1059. f. itco mes r. it comes. 1138. f. òd ortop. r. odorta. 1155. f. Taču. r. Tetw. 1163. f, μεμνήμενοι Σ. μεμυώμενοι. ERRATA ERRATA in the LETTERS. Pref. p. xiii. note, 1. 6. after conſtat, read ex ea querimonia. Page 5. Note * dele from the word together. 6.1. 12. f. dealings r. dealing. penult. transfer to next page. 9. l. ult. f. Praefect r. Praelect. 16. running Title, r. Dr. WHICHCOTE's. 19. penult. for cramte, r, crambe. 21-10. f. implicity, r. implicitely 30m-pen. 3 f. colluries r. colluvies. 56-22 3 . . 33-23. f. αποθέλσεμα r. αποέλεσμα 37-19, 20. f. When times r. When the times. 41--antep. f. nullum r, nullam. 43-5. f. cedit r. cadit. 53-14. put a crotchet after life +.] 54-4. f. ree'd r. read: 59-26. f. TW & olup: 2v r. Tuo & oulnpier 61-19. dele the ſtroke after Chriſt 62-12. f. Goliah's r. Goliath's. 77–31. f. Theſe r. There; and add to the end of the note, Gnoſtici vulgo dicebantur, qui prius ab ipfo Joänne Nicolaïta, (Apoc. ii. 6, 15,) ut et poftea ab aliis Borboritae vo- cabantur. A. T. p. 158. 79--26. f. Antefiodorenfis r. Antifiod. 38. f. Eekius r. Eckius. 85–pen. f. 7STAN. Oopku.gvár r. -uérør. 87-antep. f. Jude iii. r. Jude 3: 91-21. f. ad legyáltate r. copyák al. antep. f. this is, r. this, is. 101-Il. put rei within crotchets. 102-8. for fee r. fe. 112-26 f. quote + Job r. quote Job. 113-17. f. auther r. authour, . 125-pen. & ult. dele the 127-I. f. ed r. ced. 113~16. at viz. refer to this note * See p. 66. c and p. 75. 1. 2. 6C MORAL I. MORAL and RELIGIOUS APHORISMS CENTURY I. 1. "S OME are Atheiſts by Neglect; others are ſo by Affectation : they, that think there is no God, at ſome times; do not think fo, at all times. 2. Atheiſts deny God; that all things may be alike in themſelves :- becauſe, if there be a God, then there is a ſupreme Law ; accora ding to the Nature of God, according to the Reaſon of Things; according to the Rule of Right. Wickedneſs produceth Atheiſın ; and Atheiſm ſettles nen in Wickedneſs. 3. Right is the Rule of Law; and Law is declaratory of Right. 4. If there be no Křowledgë, there is no Beginning of Religion ; if there be no Good- neſs, there is no Sincerity of Religion ; but a Contradiction to it; by holding the Truth in Unrighteouſneſs.” 5. Knowledge alone doth: not amount to Virtue; but certainly there is no Virtue, with- out Knowledge. Knowledge is the firſt Step to Virtue and Goodneſs : but Goodneſs is not without Delight and Choice, B Moral and RELIGIOUS Cent. I 6. It is a great deal eafir, to commit a ſecond fin ; than it was, to commit the firſt: and a great deal harder, to repent of a ſecond; than it was, to repent-of the firſt. 7. The ſame that is Virtue in the Subject, is Grace in the Original : [in the Author.]* 8. God made man Intelligent and Voluntary: and the Law of his Nature, and the Reaſon of his Mind, God intended for the great Rule of his Life ; to take place in all particulars, where God did not think good, farther to ex- preſs his Will, and declare his Pleaſure. 9. What is Perfected hereafter, muſt be Begun herc. 10. Religion is not one thing in its Prin- ciples ; and another thing in the Subje&t*. 11. It is baſe, and unworthy, to Live be- low the Dignity of our Nature. 12. It is our grand Defection and Apoſtaſy, to live in contradiction to the end of our Be- ing: which no Creature below man doth .; and none do, but wicked Men, and Devils. 13. Libarum arbitrium, which men ſo brag-of; as it includes Poſje male agere, is an Imperfection: for ſuch liberty or power is not in God. To do amiſs, is not Power; but Deficiency and Deformity : and infinite Power includes not in it a Poflibility of Evil. 14. 7. i.e. That action, which is Obedience to the Mo- ral Law, Some call Grace, and Others call Virtue; but it is the famë :" as it proceeds from God, working in Us, it may he called Grace; as it proceeds from Us, concurring with God, it may be called Virtue. Dr. Jeffery... 10. i. 8. Not one thing in Do&trine ; and another thing in Practice. Dr. J. Cent. I. A PHORISM S. 14, If we conſider, what is becoming reaſo- nable Nature; we ſhall have a Rule to guide us, as to Good and Evil. 15. What is Morall; Good, is ſo ſuitable to the Nature of Man ; that Motion in Religion cannot but be with Pleaſantneſs . 16. It is coena eget, Godleſs Virtue, tho the thing be well done for the matter ; where there is not Intention of God: ſuch Virtue has ſomething of Nature, but nothing of Religion in it. 17. Man is made for better purpoſes; than for the drudgery of the World : much more, than for the ſlavery of Sin. 18. There is no particular of a Religious Life ; in which we cannot give an Account of the Motives, and Grounds, upon which it doth depend; either from the Good of the particular Perſon, or of the Society, in which we live : in purſuance of Reaſon; or Obedio ence to God. 19. That which is not Original to itſelf, cannot be Final to itſelf. But to whom it be longs to be the Firſt Cauſe, to the ſame it beo longs to be the Laſt End; fo God ſhould be to Us, by our own Act : He that is Original to Us by Himſelf, ſhould be Final to us, by cur Choice. 20. Where there is all Perfection in Con- junction, there is no place for any Uncertainty, or Unconſtancy: Reſolution and Performance, in Agents of any perfection, go always with the Reaſon of the thing. B 2 21. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. I. 21. An Intelligent Voluntary Agent in right Conſtitution, doth, in due and Convenient cir- cumſtances, as certainly produce noble and generous effects, in uſe of his Liberty; as any Natural Agent, which is determined to one thing, doth it's proper effects, in matter pre- pared, and diſpoſed : elle the way of Volun- tary Motion, would be inferior to Natural Motion, and more imperfect than it. 22. By theſe two Things Religion is recom- mended to us; above all other things what- ſoever : 1. By the Satisfaction, we thereby en- joy in Life; and 2. By the Expectation, we have thereby at Death. 23. There is That in God, which is Original to all poffible Perfection; and there is That in God, which is exemplary to all good Actions. 24. There is a natural Propenſion in every thing, to return to its true ſtate ; if by vi- olence it has been diſturbed : ſhould it not be ſo in Grace, in the divine life? Virtue is the health, true ſtate, natural complexion of the Soul: he, that is Vicious in his practice, is diſealed in his mind. 25. It is the work and buſineſs of Religion, and of our Lives, to Reconcile the Temper of our Spirits to the Rule of Righteouſneſs; and to incorporate the Principles of our Religion, into the Complexion of our Minds. This is to be done, 1. By ſearching into the Nature of Things, and the Reaſon of our Duty; that our Judgment may be fuch, as to approve the Laws of our Religion: 2. By practiſing ac- cording Cent. I. APHORISM S. cording to our right Apprehenfions of things ; till it becomes eaſy and delightful to us : 3. By perſiſting in this Courſe all our days ; ever deſigning and meaning Righteoufneſs; and ever retracting and correcting what is Unrighteous, 26. The whole world is governed by the Perfection of Truth, Righteouſneſs, and Good- neſs; in conjunction with the Perfections of Wiſdom, and Power : and nothing is done by God, but what theſe Perfections do. 27. Did Chriſtians live according-to their Religion ; They would do nothing, but what Truth, Righteouſneſs, and Goodneſs do; accor- ding to their Underſtanding, and Ability: and then one man would be a God unto another. 28. When the Principles of our Religion become the Temper of our Spirits, then we are truly religious ; and the only way to make them become ſo, is, to reaſon ourſelves into an Approbation of them: for nothing, which is the Reaſon of Things, can be refuſed by the Reaſon of Man ; when underſtood. 29. The Natural Knowledge of Religion is as Spiritual , as any Knowledge that belongs to The Moral part of Religion is the know- ledge of God's Nature: the Poſitive part of Re- ligion is the knowledge of his Will; concern- ing Expiation, and Pardon. 30. Nothing is more credible; than that mens' States ſhall differ, as much as their Spi- rits and Tempers do differ. 31. The Neglect or the Abuſe of ourſelves, is the true Original of all Sin:and to preventor rec- tify ſuch Defects and Pravities of mind in morals, us. B3 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent I. morals, as ariſe from ſuch Neglect or Abuſe ; is to be Religious. 32. He that threatens, may be better than his word; and very well ſave his word; for no man is worſe than his word, becauſe he is Better than his word. 33. The Rule of Right is, the Reaſon of Things; the Judgment of Right is, the Reaſon of our Minds, perceiving the Reaſon of things, 34. Right and Truth are greater than any Power, and all Power is limited by Right. 35. Every one, that is Honeſtly diſpoſed, may find Direction for what he is to do; from Right Reaſon, and Plain Scripture : the only ways, by which Men are taught of God; nor is any other teaching neceffary. 36. Men have an itch; rather to make Re- ligion, than to uſe it: but we are to uſe our Religion ; not to make it, 7:37. We cannot put a greater Abuſe upon God; than to ſay, He is obſcure ; that He ex- preffes himſelf darkly in that, which concerns every man's Drity towards Him, or Happineſs by Him : ſo that the man is at a great Loſs, whether he underſtands God's Meaning, by his written Word; or not. 38. To uſe Power, to controul the Prin- ciples of Human Nature; (the Uſe of Reaſon, the Exercile of Liberty) is as ſtrange a Phenomenon, as to croſs or pervert the common Courſe of Natural Agents; to bring the Sun back again, or to make it fill the world with darkneſs. God does not this: if he did, he would con- teft with himſelf; his Power would riſe-up againſt Cent. I. A P H O RI S M S. 1 againſt his Wiſdom ; and he would diſparage and fruſtrate his own workmanſhip. Why ſhould We think to do that, which God will not do--to over-bear Reaſon with Violence ! 39. Believe Things, rather than Men. 40. A Man has as much Right to uſe his own Underſtanding, in judging of Truth; as he has a Right to uſe his own Eyes, to ſee his way : therefore it is no offence to another, that any man uſes his own Right. 4.1. All ſin is either contrary to the very Nature of God; or elſe contrary to the State of a Creature. 42. Man, as. Man, is Averſe to what is Evil and Wicked; for Evil is unnatural, and Good is connatural, to Man. 43. Only Mad men and Fools are pleaſed with Themſelves : no Wife man is Good enough for his own Satisfaction. 44. The Soul does contemplate and worſhip God; when it is not diſturbed by the Body, or diſaffected through Vice. 45.. In the ſearch after God, and contem- plation of Him, our Wiſdom doth confift; in our worſhip of God, and our obedience to him, our Religion doth conſiſt; in Both of them, our Happineſs doth conſiſt. 46. The 'reritten Word of God, is not the Firſt , or only Diſcovery of the Duty of Man ; (Rom. ii. 15. 29.) It dotli gather together, and repeat, and reinforce, and charge upon us, the ſcattered and neglected Principles of God's Creation; that have ſuffered Prejudice and Di- minution, by the Défection and Apoſtaſy of Man; B 4 6 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. I, ز ز Man ; who has abuſed his Nature, and is pal- ſed into the contrary Spirit. 47. The Superoddition to the Principles of God's Creation is, the Declaration of God by Cbrift ; directing us, how to come to Recon ciliatiori, through the Mediation of him ; and upon Terms of Repentance. 48. There is no folid Satisfaction; but in a mental Reconciliation with the Nature of God, and the Law of righteouſneſs. 49. It is the beſt Uſe of ourſelves, to be Em- ployed about God. 50. We muſt be in our meaſure, degree, and proportion, in reſpect of Moral Perfec- tions ; of Holineſs, Righteouſneſs, Goodneſs and Truth; what God is, in his Highth, Ex- cellency, and Fulneſs : for in all Moral Per- fections, God is imitable by us; We may re- femble God: God is communicable to us; We may partake of Him. 51, That which is the beſt Employment Here, will be the only Employment in Eternity; and with great improvement and Advan- tage: There we ſhall have none but good Company, and They will be better than they now are: We ſhall have neither Guilt with- in us, nor Enemies about us, nor Death beo före us. 52. There is no better way to learn, than to teach. 53. He that never changed any of his opinions, never corrected any of his Miſtakes: and He, who was never wiſe enough, to find out any miſtakes in Himſelf; will not be cha- ritable Cent. I. APHORISM S. ritable enough, to excuſe what he reckons miſtakes in Others. 54. A man muſt cultivate his Mind, by enquiries after the Meaſures and Reaſons of his duty; by Reconciliation of his Temper to thoſe Meaſures, upon thoſe Reaſons : and he muſt cultivate his Life, by acting according to the Improvement of his Mind. 55. We are only fo Free; that Others may be free, as well as We. 56. Examine all Principles of Education : for ſince we are all Fallible; we ſhould ſuppoſe, we may be Miſtaken. Quotidie de- pono aliquem errorem. Γηράσκω, αιεί πολλα διδασκόμενG. 57. None of us was Born knowing or wife : but men Become wiſe, by Confideration, Ob- ſervation, Experience. 58. Thoſe that differ upon Reaſon, may come together by Reaſon. 59. The only way to make a man's No- tion his own, is to communicate and diſcourſe about it, and ſubmit it to Examination : fo that thoſe, that are moſt Profitable, are moſt Profited ; and by communicating themſelves, they are moſt Improved. 60. He that gives Reaſon for what he faith, has done what is fit to be done; and the moſt that can be done: He, that gives not Reaſon, ſpeaks nothing, though he faith never ſo much. 61. It is a great faying, Whoſoever is plea- ſed with God, pleaſeth God; and God is plea- sed with him. It is repugnant, that God Lhould MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. I. ſhould take pleaſure in Us; till we do har- monize with Him : which is by our Regeneration, being made like Him and conformable to Him. If we are not God- like, neither is God pleaſed with Us ; nor are We pleaſed with God. 62. The Government of our Spirits, is the greateſt Freedom. 63. By càndid Conſtruction, you may fruſ- trate an Enemy; but by finiſter Conftruction, you may loſe a Friend. 64. If a man be once out of the Uſe of Reaſon, there are no Bounds to Unreaſonable- neſs, 65. Conſcience, without Judgment, is Su- perſtition ; Judgment without Conſcience, is Self-condemnation. 66. Innocency and Credit are the Safeguard of Virtue: he that is Guilty, defends it, either by a Lye, or by Impudence. 67. No man is wiſe enough, for his own Direction'; Powerful enough, for his own De- fence; or Good enough, for his own Satiſ- faction. 68. It had been better for the Chriſtian Church; if that, which calls itſelf Catholic, had been leſs employed in creating pretended Faith, and more employed in maintaining uni- verſal Charity. 69. Let not any one uſe that Severity, in the caſe of Another; which his otun caſe will ipot bear : For a man may condemn Himſelf in the Perſon of another, 70. Cent. I. APHORISM S. . 70. To believe there is a God; is to bea. lieve the exiſtence of all poſſible Good and Perfection, in the Univerſe : And it is to be reſolved upon this ; that things either are, or finally ſhall be, as they ſhould be. 71. There is nothing proper and peculiar: to Man; but the Uſe of Reaſon and the Exer- ciſe of Virtue. 72. If any man object the Decay of Nature, againſt the Performance of his Duty, He, in particular, has abuſed his Nature: he hath li- ved in the world to no Purpoſe; who hath not ſo far ſtudied the Principles of Reaſon, and the Temper of Man ; as to reconcile himſelf to whatſoever is Agreeable to Human Nature, and to whatſoever is within the Compaſs of Human Reaſon. 73. We may maintain the Unity of Verity, in point of Faith; and Unity of Charity, in point of Communion; notwithſtanding all Dif- ferences in point of Apprehenſion. 74. Every man is Born with the Faculty of Reaſon, and the Faculty of Speech: but why ſhould he be able to Speak, before he has any thing to fiy? 75. It is not to be expected, that another man ſhould Think as I would, to pleaſe me ; ſince I cannot think as I would, to pleaſe niyſelf : it is neither in His nor My power, to think as we will; but as we fee reaſon, and find cauſe. 76. To go againſt Reaſon, is to go againſt God: it is the ſelf ſame thing, to do that which the Reaſon of the Caſe doth require; and MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. I and that which God Himſelf doth appoint : Reaſon is the Divine Governor of Man's Life; it is the very Voice of God. , 77. Mens' Apprehenſions are often nearer than their Expreſions : they may mean the ſame thing, when they ſeem not to ſay the fame thing 78. Let no man condemn another, for ſuch things as he deſires. God would pardon in himſelf. 79. Creatures below Us uſe themſelves, as they find themſelves ; you never find them worſe than themſelves : it is ſtrange, that Man (of all the creatures in this lower world) ſhould alledge againſt God; that he cannot uſe his Faculties ; that he cannot apply them to their proper Objects : that he cannot ob- ſerve Manner and Meaſure. 80. Every Mil-government of ourſelves, is a Puniſhment of ourſelves. 81. Sins of the Mind have leſs Infamy, than thoſe of the Body ; but not leſs Malignity. 82. The Moſt that any of us know, is the leaſt of that which is to be known. 83. Do what is Wiſdom and Reaſon; and refer yourſelves to God as Judge. 84. The Right of the caſe is the Law of heaven ; and should be the law of the World: 85. God impoſeth no Law of Righteouſneſs upon Us; which He doth not obſerve Him- felf 86. When a Man conſents to any thing, that:is: contrary to the Reaſon of his own Mind; he begins a Diſpoſition, contrary to i } Virtus Cent, 1. APHORIS Ms. Virtue and Religion; a Second act increafeth it'; and by-and-by an Habit of Virtue is not only weakened, but wrought out; and a contrary Habit is introduced. Now, to practiſe the neceſſary Duty, contrary to the vicious Incli nation ; till the Habit of Vice be wrought out, and the Habit of Virtue be introduced ; is the neceſſary Repentance of a Sinner. 87. Religion makes us live like Men : To do nothing, that will either ſink us into Beaſts; or transform us into Devils: As Intem- perance and Senſuality make us Beaſts ; fo Pride and Malice make us Devils. 88. Hypocriſy is as eaſily known, to a man himſelf; as he knows, whether he is awake or aſleep; in health or fick : for, What doth a inan know, if he knows not what he means ! 89. Religion conſiſts in Things, that are Good in themſelves; or that are for the Recom very in us of what are Good in themſelves. 90. Every Sin is voluntary; and either hath the Conſent of the Mind, or follows upon the Neglect of the Mind: that, which prevents the reaſon of the mind, is not Sin. 91. A Natural Deficiency is pitiable: a Moral Depravation is abominable. 92. Nothing in Religion is a Burthen; but a Remedy, or a Pleaſure. 93. He, that would entirely do Right to Religion, muſt acknowledge; that Religion does all Right to Men. 94. When the Doctrine of the Goſpel becomes the Reaſon of our Mind, it will be the Prin- ciple of our Life. 95. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. I 95. He that doth provoke, or will be pro- voked ; opens a door to let-in Evil : and knows not, how far he may be tranſported. 96. Where Evil is returned for Evil, the first Offender thinks himſelf excuſed ; becauſe the Other is as faulty as He: on the other ſide, He,that by Courteſy and Forgiveneſs makes an Enemy become a Friend, makes a laſting Friend. 97. Religion is Unity and Love : therefore it is not Religion, that makes Separation and Diſaffection. 98. If Reaſon may not command, it will condemn. 99. Reaſon diſcovers, what is Natural; and Reaſon receives, what is Supernatural. 100. Both Heaven and Hell have their Foun- dation within Is. Heaven primarily lies in a refined Temper; in an internal Reconciliation to the Nature of God, and to the Rule of Righteouſneſs. The Guilt of Conſcience, and Enmity to Righteouſneſs, is the inward ſtate of Hell, The Guilt of Conſcience is the Fewel of Hell. 1 CENTURY Cent. II. A PHORISM S. CENTURY II. IOI E ; as Nmity with Righteouſneſs, is Enmity with God 102 What has not Reaſon in it, or for it ; if held out for Religion, is man's Superſtition : it is not religion of God's making. 103: Thoſe, who are united by Religion Nould be united by Charity. 104. Rational Nature is as ſufficient and proportionable to its effects; as any vital Prin- ciple beſides in the world. 105. An Argument to Intelle£tual Nature hath, or ought to have, the fame Force any Natural Quality or Power hath on an In- ferior Nature. 106. No man ought to have a Right of Puniſhing ; but he who has the Right of Obedience : no man ſhould have, or uſe, the Right of Puniſhment; but he, who has fome Right denied him, viz. Obedience ; and for Recovering that Right of Obedience. 107. God is the Creditor, in reſpect of Pu- niſhment; Man is the Creditor, in reſpect of Reward. 108. To live in Love is ſo great, ſo certain a Duty ; that it is not to veil to Truth of para ticular Apprehenſions: he that lives out of Love, is ever contriving Offence, or Defence. 109. God hath ſet up Two Lights ; to en- lighten us in our Way : the Light of Reafon, which is the Light of his Creation ; and the Light MORAL and ReLIGIOUS Cent. II. Light of Scripture, which is After-Revelation from him. Let us make uſe of theſe two Lights; and ſuffer neither to be put out. 110. Where Religion does take place and is effectual; it makes this World, in meaſure and degree, Repreſentative of Heaven. III. Nothing is worfe done; than what is ill done, for Religion. That muſt not be done, in the Defence of Religionſ which is contrary to Religion. 112. I will not make a Religion for God:. nor ſuffer any to make a Religion for me. 1.13. That which is a Counterfeit of any thing, or a Corruption of any thing, is leaft that, which it makes a ſhow of. 114. Nothing ſpoils human Nature more; than falſe Zeal. The Good nature of an Hea- then is more God-like, than the furious Zeala. of a Chriſtian. 115. Our Apprçhenfons of Religion are not ſubject to our Wills ; nor in our Power : but as we fee reaſon and cauſe, The Devils would not. Believe, if they could help it ; it is their Torment: they Believe and Tremble. 116. Good and Evil are not by poſitive In- ftitution; are not things arbitrary; or during any Pleaſure whatſoever : bụt Juſt Right and Hóly, Wicked Impious and Profane, are ſo by their own nature and quality. If we under- ſtand this, as we ought; we abide in the Truth; if not, we are Self-flatterers; and live in a Lye. - Things are, as they are ; whether we think ſo or not: and we fhall be judged by things Cent. II. A PHO R I S M S. ز Things, as they be ; not by our own preſump- cuous Imaginations. 117. Nothing can give Peace to him, who is at Enmity with his own Reaſon. 118. Certainly They, who do worſt by Re- ligion ; Thall Fare worſt by Irreligion. I 19. All Creatures were raiſed out of 120- thing í and every Creature is next to nothing. 120. It is the greateſt Power; to Tranſact all, within the Meaſure and compaſs of Rea- ſon and Right. 121. In the Uſe of Reaſon, and the exer- ciſe of Virtue, we enjoy God. 122. We are made one for another ; and each is to be a Supply to his Neighbour. 123. Betraying human Converſe, through want of good Behaviour ; Behaviour ; is contrary to Righteouſneſs: Neglecting the mind, and want of ſelf-Improvement, and ſelf-Govern- ment; is contrary to Sobriety : but Few charge their Conſciences, on the Account of either. 124. The Diſſembler does not think within himſelf, what he ſays; The Flatterer does nốt Think of you, what he ſays : The Dilſembler intends not the Truth, the Flatterer means not the Good, he ſpeaks: The One ſpeaks contrary to Veracity; the other, contrary to Charity. 125. Whoſoever doth fail, in general good Carriage and good Behaviour ; in general Love and good-Will ; will fail, in what is more Coſtly ; in paying Debts exactly, in C ز a MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. 11. doing all good Offices, as he has Oppor- tunity. 126. Whoſoever fcornfully uſes any other Man, diſparages himſelf the Human Nature. 127 Our Notions are more our own, than any thing without us ; and I count nothing Mine, that I cannot defend againſt all the world. 128. Foreign oppoſition and Force. can- not do the Miſchief, which Internal Feuds and Treachery may do. is challenged now; and will be condemned, at the great day of Judgment. It is the Reaſon of Things, and of our Minds, not the Power of God only, which condemns. Fear thy- Self; for thou art in more danger of being Condemned by the Reaſon of thy Mind, than of any Power whatſoever, of God or Man. 130. Our Fallibility and the Shortneſs of our Knowledge ſhould make us peaceable and gentle; becauſe I may be Miſtaken, I muſt not be dogmatical and confident, peremptory and' imperious. I will not break the certain Laws of Charity, for a doubtful Doctrine or of uncertain Truth. -1:31. Mind and underſtanding hath Satif- fačtion in no other thing, than in Attendente upon God. 132. The things: of God are not made ours, by a mere Notion and Speculation; but when they become in us a vital Principle, when they eſtabliſh in us a State and Temper, when Cent. II. A PHO R I S M S. when the things of God are Grounds and Principles of ſuitable Opérations. 133. Wickedneſs doth as naturally make us miſerable ; as it makes us unlike to the moſt Happy Being. As God is Holy, and Happy; ſo We muſt be like him in Holineſs, that we inay be Happy. God's infinite Goodneſs makes him completely Happy: the degree of our Happineſs holds proportion to the meaſure of our Goodneſs. 134. What we attribute to God, as bis Excellency and Perfection ; That we ſhould propoſe to our Selves, as matter of Practice and Imitation. 135. Right in ſtrictneſs, is not Right; if there be Equity on the other ſide. 136. It is reaſonably expected, that there Thould be Accord among thoſe on Earth, who are Citizens of Heaveri. 137. They who live not by Law, would be juſtified by Cuſtom : but, as Common Prac- tice is the worſt Teacher, that ever was ; ſo the Truth and Goodneſs of things is not to be Eſtimated by the Entertainment and Accept- ance they find in the World. 138. Certainly our Saviour accepts of :0 other Separation of His Church, from the other part of the world ; than what is made by Truth, Virtue, Innocency, and Holinefs of Life: 139. It is a Buſineſs cf Difficulty and Lei- ſure ; to diſcharge the mind of evil Principles, , and to change Nature. 145 C 2 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. II. i 140. No account can be given of Wick- edneſs, in a way of Reaſon; for Reaſon is againſt it. 141. Whoſoever is bound to Obey, in the firſt Inſtance ; if he fails, is bound to Repent, in the ſecond. :,: 142. If we would be Real and Sincere, in our Devotions towards God; let us have for Religion, that which will do us Good, fanc- tify our Natures, and Reconcile us to God. 143. Religion itſelf is always the fame: but Things about Religion are not always the fame. Theſe have not in them the power or virtue of Religion, they are not of a fanc- tifying nature; they do not purify our Minds, As the things of a Moral nature do; ſo that Religion may ſtand without them. 144. Right fenfe and Judgement of God is a leading principle in Religion : therefore the Heathens profaned themſelves, through their ill notions of God. 145. We are Happy, in the ſame way God is Happy; or we are Miſerable; in the ſame way the Devil is Miſerable. As Evil makes Mi- ferable ; ſo Goodneſs makes Happy. 146. Man, by Reaſon, has Apprehenfions of Moral. Good and Evil ; as Animals, by Senſe, diſtinguiſh Natural Good and Evil. 147 The Laſt Form determines the Spe- cies; and ſettles the Kind: When the Rea- Jonable Soul is ſuper-induced upon the Senf- tive, the Animal becomes a Man; and to; live by this Reaſon, is Natural and Religious. Sec 855.52 148. Cent. II. APHORISM S. 148. To make a man a wicked inan; in the ſenſe of Scripture; there muſt be either 1. groſs Careleſſneſs and Negleet, or 2. a volun- tary Conſent to known Iniquity, or: 3. known Hypocriſy, or 4. great Apoſtaſy from better to worſe in Practice, for ill Ends. 149. Some Chriſtians are denominated from Chrift; as the Jeſuits from Jeſus. 150. Though the Reaſon of the Subject be prejudiced and corrupted, by Apoſtaſy and ill uſe; yet the Reafon of the Thing continues ſacred and unchanged. 151. It is not Religion ; for a man to act, all the days of his life, upon the principles of his Education. 152. It is not neceffury to make-out things farther, than God hath made them out; or to determine them more particularly, than God hath determined themi, 153. God is the greateſt Good; (fummum bonum): Iniquity is the greateſt evil; (fummum malum): and theſe are Inconſiſtent. We could not conceive God to be Good"; if we did not look on Him, as a Derefter of everything that is Unjuſt and Impious. 154. A. Sinner is a Perſon of Violent Prac- tice ; and one who do:h, Unnatural Acts:: And conſequently, the:more, a Sinner knows himſelf, the leſs he is ſatisfied with himſelf. 155. Had not Infinite.. Goodneſs : been the Law of Heaven; there had never been any other Being, but God. .::. 156. The wordt of evil befalling Sinners,is not an Infliction from without ; but ariſes out of the Guilt of Conſcience within, 157 i. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent II. + 157. There is nothing in Perfe&tion, no- thing natural ; but where the Reaſon of Things directs the Reaſon of our Minds'; and that guides and determines the Will : We are Intelligent, by the Firſt; and Voluntary, by the Second. 158. God is certain; becauſe in him there is the Fulneſs of Liberty, and the Fulneſs of Perfection. 159. Of that Power, which none can poſ- ſibly Refift, none can juſtly Complain. 160. To be Intemperate, deſtroys the In- dividual ; To be Unrigbteous, diffolves the Community ; To be Impious, denies God; cuts off from the Original, clips off the Sun beams. Would we neither be ourſelves į nor have ought elſe to be* ? 161. Habits of Virtue are Acquired, by a right Uſe of our felves; and they are ſpoiled, by Unnatural practice. 162. We are Good; by Initation Partici- pation and Reſemblance of God ; and in the fame way, we are Happy. 163. Perſons of naughty minds have no true thoughts, either of God or of Men; they think all abroad, without themſelves, as they find at home, within themſelves. 164. An ill Principle in the Mind, is worfe than the matter of a Diſeaſe in the Body. 165. i i * « To deny God, is to pretend to cut-off ourſelves from our Original ; and yet to preſerve our-ſelves : as if a Sun-beam could be clip'd off from the Sun, and could þe preſerved ſeparate,” Dr. W. No. 4778, Cent. II. A PHORISM S. 1 165. As Sin is the worſt Evil that is Done ; ſo it is meet, it ſhould Fare the worſt. 166. God hath not the Leaſt Care of that part of his Creation, which doth moſt reſem- ble Himſelf. 167. It is Weakneſs and Folly, to do thoſe things; which muſt be undone again, with Shame and Sorrow. 168. If there be any thing monſtrous or prodigious in Nature; it is a Proud Creature, and an inſolent Sinner. 169. Religion begins in Knowledge; Pro- cedes in Practice ; and Ends in Happineſs. 170. Ignorance of that will not Dellroy Another, the Knowledge of which will not Save Me. 171. Two things we may eaſily perceive; 1. Whether we be Hypocrites ; and 2. Whe- ther we be Heretics : not the former, if we mean Religion ;, not the latter, if we deſire Information, and make no Faction. 172. To Know the Difference of Right and Wrong, ſpeaks our Wiſdom ; to Obſerve that Difference, ſpeaks our Goodneſs. 173. Keep Indifferency. of Judgement, till the Verity of the thing does appear ; ſo long as there is any Uncertainty. Have no Bias, but what is received from Truth. 174. Deal ingenuouſly with Truth; and Love for itſelf. 175. So far as it is beyond the 1 ext, it is Man-made Divinity: about which we ſhall always differ ; becauſe there is no Authority to Determine us. 176. . ز C4 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. Ir. 176. God's Superintendency does not Diſz charge Our Subferviency ; but ſhould be an- fwered by it : the Activity of Man ſhould an- ſwer the Influence of God. 177. A Rule in Practice, is a Notion in- carnate; made like to us. 178. Govern thyſelf from within. 179. It is far from beinz True, That Man hath nothing to do ; upon Suppoſition that God doth all. 180. We loſe our-ſelves, and are much leſs than we might be; if we never put our- ſelves upon Thinking: 181. We ſhould,if we were Wife, and Care- ful of our Soul's Health and Safety, Graſp and Comprehend in Thought, ſo far as we can, the ſeveral Dimenſions of Time paſt, preſent, and to come; and Raiſe a Judgment, upon the View.and Reſolution of the whole, what is our Intereſt; what the Eſtabliſhment, whereon Immortal Spirits' may Fix and Settle and thereto, by invincible Courage; Subdile all Things into Obedience, and true Subſerviency. 182. We may Overcome the Devil, by Reſiſtance; and our Selves, by Self-denial. 183. A great deal of Time is contracted in Opportunity; which is the Flower, the Cream of Time. [Oraiges T8 Xz6v8 dydoc.] 3. 184. Man in this State is not as he ſhould be; becauſe of Non-uſe, and Mif-uſe, and Abuſe of Himſelf: of ſome one of which Every one is more or leſs Guilty. 1:85: Argumentum in Caufa is in Conjun- ction with Truth, and Goodneſs.; and pre- väils little : Argumentum ad Hominem is in conjunction ز Cent. II. A PHORISM S. conjunction with Humour, Manner, Fancy, Pleaſure, &c; and prevails much*. 186. Man is ſure of Nothing; he is not fure of Himſelf. Man is a Wonder to himſelf; he can neither govern, nor know himſelf. 187. The Application of Our-felves to God, according to God's Manifeſtation of Himſelf to Us; is the only thing, neceſſary to Salvation. 188. The State Here, and the State Here- after, are Homogeneal: Every Man may Eſti- mate his Future State, by his Prefent ;: viz. the Like, or more of the Same. Death makes not that Change ; which is made only by Moral Principles of Knowledge, and Good- neſs. 189. All worldly Things are ſo much with- out us ; and ſo ſubject to the Power of Vanity and Uncertainty; that they do not Make us, when they come ; nor Mend us, while they Ray; nor Undo us, when they are taken-away. 190. As to the Truth of Things, we'do not what we Pretend, but what we Intend. . 191. The Chriſtian Religion, made a cloak or cover of Licentiouſneſs; is the Beſt Thing in the Worſt Ule. 192. We muſt keep our-ſelves from thoſe Sins ; which we are inclined-to, by Conſti- tution and Temper; which we are in danger of, by 'ſpecial Occaſion ; and which we are lead to, by Uſe and Cuftom. 1936 t } } 185. Argumentum in cauſa, an Argument. taken from the nature of the thing in queſtion: Arg.ad Hominem, one taken from the condition circumſtances or conceptione of the Party argued with. DriJ MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cert: II. 193. The Beginnings of Sin are Modeſt ; the ſtues of it are nowdent. 194. By Uſe, Cuftoms and Practice, Men come to be Any things gough never ſo Irra- tional and Unnatural. 195. We know, where we Begin to Mif- carry; but we know not, where we ſhall Stay. 196. Uſing and Enjoying is the true Having: 197. Man in refpe&t of God, is not his Own; he Owes to God more than to Himſelf. 198. There are two Things of great Im- portance to us ; viz. 1. To Live well; and 2. To Die well : To Live, as we ſhould; and to Die, as we would : To Live, according to God's directions and to Die, according to our own Hearts? Defire. 199. Againſt the Guilt of Conſcience, there is the State of Juſtification : againſt the Ma- lignity of Spirit, there is the Habit of Santti- fication. 200. There is nothing Deſperate, in the Ştate of Good men; where there is a right Principle within them, and God's Superin- tendency over them. CENTURY Cent. III. APHORISM S. CENTURY III. 201. A LL is not done, when' we have ſpoken to God by Prayer : our Petitions are to be purſued with real Endea- vours ; and our Prayers are to be Means and Inſtruments of Piety and Virtue, muſt be ſub- ſervient to a Holy Life. If they are not the former, they are worth nothing; if they are not the latter, we but deceive our-ſelves. 202. Virtue and Vice differ, as Heaven and Hell; for Theſe make Heaven, and Hell; as they are a State : Self- Juſtification, with Con- ſcience of Truth; Self-Condemnation, with Conſcience of Iniquity: 203. We never better Enjoy our felves, than when we mojt Enjoy God. 204. Goodneſs, in caſe of Miſapprehenſion in Judgment, is a Principle of Direction; in caſe of Miſcarriage in Practice, is a Principle of Reſtoration. 205. Obligation to divine Truth, is Reli- gious Liberty; Obligation to the contrary er- ror, is Superſtitious Vaſjalage. 206. Nothing ſhould alienate us from one another ; but that which alienates us from God. 207. There cannot be Receiving Truth in Love'; where there is not receiving it in Judgment, : 208. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Gent. III. 208. It is our very Tenure, as we are Crea- tures, to obſerve God; according-to our Power. 209. The Senſe of Repentance, is better Af- Jurance of Pardon ; than the Teſtimony of an Angel 2:10. Repentance is ſatisfactory to the Red- ſon of our Minds ; and neceſary to the Quiet of our Conſciences. 211. It is as Natural for a Man, in reſpect to the Principles of God's Creation in Him; to do that towards God, his Neighbour, and Himſelf, which Right Reaſon doth demand ; as it is for a Beaft, to be guided by his Senfes and Inſtinct; or as it is for the Sun, to give Light: : : 212. Vice is contrary to the Nature of Man; as: Man ; for it is contrary to the order of Reaſon, the peculiar and higheſt Principle in Man: nor is any thing in itſelf more.un- natural or of greater Deformity, in the whole world, than that an Intelligent Agent ſhould have the Truth of Things in his Mind; and that it ſhould not give Law and Rule to his Temper, Life and Actions. 213: Regeneration is the Salvation of the prefent State ; . Glorification is the Salvation of the future State. .214. in: Intellectual Nature, a Principle of Knowledge is Vital to the Underſtanding; and an habitual Diſpoſition is Vital to the Will. 2150. Sinners muſt Repent; for they cannot be Happy: by. God, in á Way of Oppohtion againſt : Cent. III. A PHO R I S M S. 4 againſt Him: it muſt be by Submiſſion, and Reconciliation to Him. 216. It is impoſſible for a Man to be made Happy, by putting him into a Happy Place; unleſs he be firſt in a Happy State. 217. God is Negle&ted by ſome Sins ; and God is Diſclaimed by others : by Sins of Non- performance and of voluntary Deficiency. Non-improvement is Alienation of our Facul- ties from God, their proper Object; and from Seeking Him, which is their proper Uſe. 218. To receive Inſtruction and Know- ledge, is as Natural; as to receive the Light of the Sun, if a Man opens his Eyes. 219. The firſt act of Religion, is to Knors what is True of God; the ſecond act is to Ex- prefs it in our Lives. 220. Religion is intelligible, rational, and accountable, It is not our Burthen, but our Privilege ; it is not for our Harm, but given us for our Good: There is no one thing, in all that Religion, which is of God's Making ; (whether that of Creation, or Chriſtian ;) of which any ſober Man, in the true Uſe of his Reaſon, would ſay; Pardon me in this : (a's 11 Kings v. 18.) or from which He would be releaſed, though He might have his Pardon or Releaſe under the Seal of Heaven, 225. The Moral part of Religion never alters. Moral Laws are Laws of themſelves, without Sanction by Will; and the Necefſity of them ariſes from the Things themſelves. All other things in Religion are in order to Theſe. The Moral Part of Religion does Janétifs ri MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. IIT, ز fančtify the Soul; and is Final both to what is Inſtrumental and Inſtituted. 222. Inſtitutes were never intended to be in Compenſation for Failure in Morals; but are all for the better Security of Morals; and give place to them ; and are in Subſervience to them. 223. A man is not exceſſively Wicked, on a ſudden; but no Man knows, when he is go- ing, how far he ſhall go. 224. No man is True to Himſelf, that is Falſe to his God: no man, that is Ill-Imployed, is certain he ſhall be True to Himſelf: 225. Hypocrites, and men of carnal Spi- sits, deſire Abatement in Morals ; though they Akow for it in Rituals. 226. If I am Guilty, I have a Wound within; and have nothing within me. Tiue to myſelf. Guilt is the Sting of Puniſh- ment. 227. It is an ill caſe with man; when his Heart will not ſerve him, to look the Fountain of his Being in the Face. 228. A Monſtro non diſputatur contra Na- turam ; is a Rule in Moral Philoſophy. A Vicious Man is a Moral Monſtre. We are to declare the Nature of Man; not from what it is, by Defection and Apoſtaſy; but from what God made it: what it was, and what it Mould be. 229. The Mind is to be Informed with Knowledge and Refined by Virtue. By the ſe- : veral Virtuės the Mind is purified, and made fit Cent. III. A PHORISM S. fit. to converſe with God, and to receive from Him. 230. Whatever is contrary to Peace and Right and good Order, under God's Govern- ment of the World ; is to the Diſhonour of God. 231. There is a Reaſon in man; to which the Difference of good and evil may be made to appear : and thus, we may Work upon the mind of any man. 232. The Unrighteous are condemned by themſelves ; before they are condemned of God. 233. Complain not of Nature : for Nan ture (to them that uſe it well, poſſeſs . it with it's right temper) is Sovereign to Man, Incli- nable to Virtue, and Conſervative thereof. 234. Nature, before it has ſuffered Violence, abhors that which is baſe, and unworthy; (evil, unnatural practices ;) which, after men have long abuſed themſelves, they freely com- mit. All men are born, with a natural Mo- deſty and Ingenuity: no man comes into the world with the Hardneſs and Impiety, which he afterwards brings himſelf to, by unnatural and baſe uſe. 235. If a man will either enjoy God or Himſelf; let a Man fimplify, himſelf; think and do Uniformly; let him have but One governor within himſelf, and always obſerve it's commands : (that is the government of Reaſon and Underſtanding; not Paſſion, In- tereſt, Humour, Faſhion or Cuſtom of the World :) elle a man can have no Peace. 236, MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. III 236. Truth is connatural to a man's Soul; and in Conjunction with it, becomes the mind's Temper, and Complexion, and Conſtitution. 237. God is not wanting in any thing wor- thy of, or that becomes, infinité Goodneſs : God is not wanting in any thing, that anſwers the Relation he ſtands-in to his Creatures : God doth every thing for Our good, that will confift-with the Plot and Deſign of his Creation. 238. He Wrongs himſelf ; that, upon ac- count of Religion, comes under the Obligation of any thing, in point of Corſcience ; which he is not obliged-to by Reaſon and Scripture. 239. Man parts with his Freedom, and en- ſlaves himſelf; when he ſubje&ts himſelf to That, which is not Sovereign in him; as Reaſon is. 240. Submiſſion to the Power, Thankſgi- ving for the Goodneſs, Admiration of the Wif- dom, Imitation of the Holineſs; Confidence in the Faithfulneſs, of God; is the Service we owe to our Creator. 241. Virtue has Reward, and Vice has Pu- niſhment, ariſing out of itſelf. 242. He, that has no Government of him- ſelf, has no Enjoyment of himſelf. 243. Whoſoever is of a Malignant Dif- poſition of mind, he hath brought himſelf into it ;-by groſs ſelf-Neglect, or by voluntary felf-Abuſe. 244. The Uſe of the Body is, to be the In- Atrument of the Soul, in the practice of Vir- tue ; Cent. III. AP HO R I S M S. : proper Uſe. rue ; and when it is not made ſuch, it is Alie- nated from its 245. He that Commands Others, is not ſo much as Free; if he doth not Govern him- ſelf. The greateſt Performance in the Life of Man, is the Government of his Spirit. 2:46. If, through the Help of God, we do not Alienate our ſelves from the Things of the world ; the Things of the world will certainly Alienate us from God. 247. A man hath his Religion to little pur- poſe; if he doth not Mend his Nature, and Refine his Spirit, by it. 248. We Worjhip God beſt; when we Re- ſemble Him inoft. 249. To Believe, and not to Do ; is to Hold the Truth in Unrighteouſneſs . 250. To live after Temper, is below Reaſon, and ſhort of Virtue. A wiſe Man is more than Temper; a good Man inuch more. 251. The Mind's Senſe (inward Sentiments, Pecvhpate] may have Malignity in it; as well as Words and Actions*. What any one means, is rather his Action ; than what he does : for in what he means, he hath abſolute power ; it is wholely his own : in what a Man doth, he may be liable to Engagements and Force. Therefore we ſay, the Mind of a good man is the Beſt part of him ; and the Mind of a bad man is the worſt part of hin : becauſe the one hath more good in his heart, than he can perform ; the other more evil in his heart, than he can execute. górnyede zas odgxds Romviii. 7, is Enmity againſt God. ز D 252. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. III 1 252. No one Reverenceth a wicked nian; no, not a wicked nian himſelf. 253. Whoſoever doth commit Sin, de- parteth from the natural Uſe of Himſelf, his Powers, and Faculties; He finks below his own Nature : for there is no natural Action fo mean ; as every ſinful Action is. Sin is be- low any man ; Sin is every man’s Diſhonour. 254. The things we part-with, are more God's than Ours. . The Power to part-with them, at God's Call, is a greater Privilege ; than the Right to polleſs them, by his Grant. 255. He that hath no Reverence for bin- Jilf, and hisown Nature, (ſo as to Abuſe it, and Diſorder it;) hath no Reverence for God. 256. A Man cannot do himſelf Right; if he Lives from without, and not from within : He, that confines himſelf to This world, lives to make himſelf Lefs. 257. Right and Juſt is determined, not by the Arbitrary pleaſure of him that has Power over uş; but by the Nature and Reaſon of Things. 258. The greater Rights of the World that Govern above and below, are determined, by the Relation things have to each other, and theſe Rights can never yield, or be controuled : For Theſe are a Law with God, and according to his Nature ; and are as unchangeable and unalterable, as God himſelf. 259. Equity is abatement of legal Right ; upon reaſonable Confiderations : Mercifulnefs is Abatement of ſtrict Right, beyond the other; A out Cent. III. A PHORISM S. ز Out of good Nature, and a Senſe of the Gondo neſs of God and Frailty of Man. God always deals thus mercifully with Men ; Men too jeldam deal thus, or even according to Equity, with one another. · 260, The Suitableneſs and Fitneſs, that there is in one thing to Accommodate another, in the Inferior world; is a Reſemblance of what the Superior and Intelle&tualworld does hy Ju- ſtice and Equity: ſo the whole Creation of God is mutually Beneficial. 261. Wiſdom and Power are Perfections, only as they are in conjunction with Juſtice and Goodneſs. 262. Holineſs, in Angels and Men, is their Dei-formity; Likeneſs to God in Goodneſs, Righteouſneſs, and Truth. Such real Holi- neſs fanctifies the Subject by its Preſence : and where That is, the perſon is made Pure; Good, and Righteous. 263. Relative Holineſs, depending upon an Arbitrary act, is of a Mutable nature; and, where it is, alters not the Nature and Quality of the thing; but only the Relation and Ule of it. 264. Things Relatively Holy, have never been Equalized with Real Holineſs, but have always been Subfervient to it. 205. The Reaſonable part of. Man hath a peculiar Reſervation for God; and its Happi- neſs is, in its Employment about God. 266. Man's Fame is his Second Security for Goodneſs; as Conſcience is his firſt: 267: Foy is the Life of man's Life. For and 1 D 2 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. III. and Grief are things of great Hazard and Danger, in the life of man: The one breaks the Heart; the other intoxicates the Head. An Eye to God, in both, doth poiſe and ba- lance 268: Puniſhment has in it the Notion of a Remedy; and has the Place of a Mean, not of an End: Now as no more of a Mean is to be deſigned, than what is neceſſary to the End; and a Mean is conſiderable, only as it has a relation to the End; therefore, if the Sinner repents, there can be no neceſſity of Puniſh- ment; for the End is obtained without it: andi there is nothing in Puniſhment, ſave as a: Mean;; in which Goodneſs can take Content. 269, The Execution of Puniſhment is for the Defence of Righteouſneſs. 270. It is altogether as worthy of God, and as much becoming Him ; to Pardon and fhew Mercy, in caſe of Repentance and Sub- iniflion and Reformation: as to Puniſh, in caſe of Impenitency and Obſtinacy. 271. This is the Sécurity of us Creatures, who live under an irreſiſtible and uncontroul- able Power ; that All the ways and and procedings of that Power are in Loving-kindneſs, Righ- teouſneſs, and Judgment. 272. Reaſon and Virtuear e Things that have Bounds and Limits: but Vice and Paſſion have none. 273. Some things muſt be good in them- ſelves : elſe there could be no Meaſure, where- by to lay-out Good and Evil. 274. God, to whom all Power and Liberty belongs; cent. III. A PHORISM S. belongs; diſclaims all Power and Liberty to do contrary to Right. 275. Nothing is better ſaid or thought of God; than that, which gives place to Repen- tance. Repentance duth certainly alter the caſe of the Sinner, and God is not inexorable, implacable. 276. Let Sinners, by Repentance, make their caſe compaſionable'; ſince they are ſure that God will extend his compaſſion; to the utmoſt bounds of caſes, that are compaſſionable. It is Perfection in God's Prerogative; to be Able fully to commiſerate every compaſſionable caſe. 277. Give me the man, of whom I may fay; This is the perſon, who, in the true uſe of Reaſon, (the Perfection of Humane Nature) who, in the Practice and Exerciſe of Virtue (its Accompliſhment) hath brought himſelf into ſuch a Temper; as is Connatural to thoſe Principles, and Warranted by them: 278. He that gives way to Self-will, hin- ders Self-Enjoyment. 279. The Sufferings from Malignity abroad, are not ſo great; as the Sufferings from Ma- lignity within. 280, Serenity of Mind, and Calmneſs of Thought, are a better Enjoyment; than any thing without us. 281. Contradiétion of Sinners. Hebr. xii. -3] Sinners are made-up of Contradictions: con- tradictions to Truth and Reaſon, to God, to themſelves, and to one another. Virtue is uniform, regular, conſtant and certain, 282 D 3 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. III. 1 282. They, that are Reconciled unto God, in the Frame and Temper of their Minds; that Live according to the Law of Heaven (the everlaſting and immutable Rule of Good- neſs, Righteouſneſs and Truth ;) may truly be ſaid to have begun Heaven, while they are upon the earth : But They, who confound the Difference of good and evil; and who Care not to Approve themſelves to God; but act without Difference or Diſtinction ; Thefe are Partakers of the DeviliſNature, and are in the Helliſh State. 283: No Man is Religious; that voluntarily Conſerts to Known Iniquity. 284. The leaſt, that can be expected from Religion, and Conſcience, is ; That men be kept from Voluntary conſent to known Ini- quity 285. Men of Holy Hearts and Lives beſt underſtard Holy Doctrines and things. Thoſe who have not the Temper of Religion, are not competent Judges of the Things of Re- ligion. 286. True Religion will make thoſe Good- natured, 'whom it finds Bad natured. 287: Miſapprehenſion and Miſtake is the moſt compaſionable Caſe in the world. The Traveller means to go directly ; but hath loft his way, and is bewildered: is any ſo cruel, as not to fhew him the right way? 288. Religion begets in us a Rational Con- fidence, and a tranſcendent Pleaſure. » 289. Will, without Reaſon, is a Blind man's motion ; Will, againſt Reaſon, is a Mad man's anotion, 2904 Cent. III. APHORI S M S. . ز 290. We muſt now Naturalize ourſelves to the Employment of Eternity. 291. Religion doth not deſtroy. Nature ; but is built upon it. 292. He, that is Light of Belief, will be as Light of Unbelief, if he has a mind to it ; by the ſame reaſon: he will as eaſily Believe an Error, as a Truth; and as eaſily Diſbelieve a Truth, as an Error. 293. There is no Pleaſure, Living or Dy- ing; but in a Practice according to right Red- ſon and Conſcience. 294. Good men, under the Power of Reaſon and Religion, are Free ; in the worſt Condi- tion: Bad men, under the Power of Luſt and Vice, are Slaves ; in the beſt Condition. 295. He, that uſeth his Reafon, doth ac- knowledge God. 296. The Perfe&tion of the. Happineſs of Humane Nature, conſiſts in the right Uſe of our Rational Faculties; in the vigorous and intenſe Exerciſe of them, about their proper and proportionable Object; which is God. : 297. Heavenly Things are the greateſt Truths and Realities in the World, and our Life is them. 298. In Morality, we are ſure as in: Mathe- matics. 299. Religion Teaches leſs, than we defire to Know; and Requires more, than we are willing to Practice. 300. Truth in practice, proves Goodneſsa . D4 CEN. is MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. IV, CENTURY IV. WE 301 E are Born under a Law: it is our Wiſdom, to find it out; and our Safety; to Comply with it. 302. Unleſs a man takes himſelf ſometimes out“ of the world, by Retirement and Self- reflection; he will be in danger of Loſing himſelf in the world. 303 We cannot Terminate ourſelves in our felves, but we Loſe our felves : we cannot be Ultimate and Final to our felves; who are not Original to ourſelves. 304. Remiffion of fins 'is Prevention of Pu. niſhment. 305. The Injury done to God by Sin, is Defamation and Rebellion: the Satisfaction for the Injury muſt be Vindication and Sub- miſſion. 306. In the Incarnation of Chriſt, we un- derſtand, God in conjunction with humane Nature : and this ſtrengthens our Faith, that humane Nature may be conjoined to God . eternally, 307. It is not to 10 purpoſe ; to ſpeak things, that are not preſently underſtood. Seed, though it lies in the Ground a-wbile unſeen, is not Loft or Thrown-away, but will bring-forth Fruit: If you confine your Teacher, you hin- der your Learning: if you limit His diſcourſes to your preſent apprehenſions ; how ſhall He raiſe Cent. IV. "'A PHORISM S. raiſe your Underſtanding? if He accommo- dates all things to your preſent weakneſs; you will never be Wifer, than you now are : you will be always in Swadling-cloths. 308, Sincerity of Heart is a great advan- tage towards Orthodoxy of Judgment. 309. The End of Puniſhment, with Re- ſpect to God; is the Vindication of his Up- rightneſs, and Righteouſneſs: with Reſpect to the Sinuier; it is the Reformation and Amendment of his Life: with Reſpect to the Innocent.; it is Warning to Fear, and do no ſuch fin. 310. Even the Worſt of God, his Puniſh- ments, will Recommend God to us. 311. Puniſhment is not an Arbitrary Act, according to Will; but a Reafonable Act, di- rected by Wiſdom, and Limited by Goodneſs, 312. Duty and Happineſs are Vital Acts ; and muſt be put forth from Vital Principles. 313. Nothing can Spiritually Awaken a man, but what Awakens his Vitals ; Şatifies his Underſtanding and Reaſon; and ſo Prevails with his Will and Affections. 314. God is no more to be charged with the Unhappineſs of mens' State, than with the Wickedneſs of their Hearts and Lives. 315. It is not worth the name of Religion ; to charge our Conſciences with that, which we have not reconciled to the Reaſon and Judgement of our Minds, to the Frame and Temper of our Souls. 316. Sin is a Defiance to the Authority of God; a Contradictiori to the Law of Righte- ouſneſs; MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. IV. ouſneſs; a Diſturbance to the Society of Men; and a Diſtraction to the Soul of the finner. 317. Puniſhments and Judgments are, 1. to Remind thoſe who are within the Compaſs of Religion ; that they may not Loſe themſelves : 2. to Awaken thoſe, who are Devoid of Re- ligion; that they may come to Themſelves : 3. to Diſcover thoſe, who are Hypocrites in Religion; that they may not Prejudice their Neighbour.: 4. to bear Teſtimony to thoſe, who Renounce Religion ; that they may not Miſ- repreſent God; as not Maintaining Righteouſ- neſs. 318. An Ast of Duty is Law in Practice. 319. The Judge is nothing but the Law Speaking 320. God is as neceſſarily the Best, as He is the Greateſt. 321. God does all for his own Glory, by communicating good out of himſelf; not by looking for any thing from his Creatures: our duty is not for His fake: our duty is Our Perfection and Happineſs. 322. God doth all to his own Honour : He doth take care to Spread his own Nature, and Communicate his own Qualities and Perfec- tions: and, in his Government of the World, Aims at this; that his Goodneſs, Righteouſ- neſs, and Truth, may prevail every where ; and have an Univerſal Empire and Sovereignty, in the Lives of Angels and Men. 323. There are ſome Things; which have ſuch an intrinſic Malignity, they can never be San&tified: but they do 'Unhallow and pro- phane whatſoever Act they adhere-to. 324. Cent. IV. A PHORISM S. 324. So far as we are Renewed in our minds, and Reconciled unto God; ſo far we do Har- monize with the Rule of Right; have Com- placency in things that are Good and Holy, and do them with Delight. 325. Wicked men Shake off the Govern- ment of Reaſon ; as if it were Tyranny and Uſurpation. 326. We are as fure of Neceſſary Nature; as can be: we fould be as ſure of Rational Nature; as to Virtue, Reaſon, and Right.* 327. We ſhould not have been Voluntary, in the ſecond place ; if we had not been In- telligent, in the firſt place. The right order is; when things, in reſpect of operation, do imitate the conſtitution of Nature: and Na- ture's order is ; that men ſhould firſt under- ftand, and be informed, and find out the Reaſon of things : and after that determine and reſolve accordingly, in the uſe of their Liberty. 328. We ſuffer Difficulty in the Exerciſe of Virtue ; becauſe our Underſtandings are ſhort and Fallible, our Appetites are diverſe and contrary: But we muſt ſtay for Informa- and muſt controul our felves. 329 We have Security from God Himſelf, concerning God; wherefore we may Depend 330. The more Righteous any man is; the more Religious he is. 331. There is no Perfection wanting in God; which tion; upon Him. * Becauſe the former can not do otherwiſe, than it ſhou'd: and the latter will not do otherwiſe. Dr. J. See 397. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. IVIV . which our own hearts could deſire ſhould be in Him. 332. An Intellectual Agent, that hath all Knowledge, and all Power, uſeth neither Fraud, nor Violence. 333. Will cannot be the firſt rule: becauſe Will is changeable; and, if you change Will, Good and Evil wou'd change. If there were no Difference in things, there cou'd be no In- conſiſtencies. There is a Difference in things themſelves; antecedent to all uſe of Power and Will. This is Fundamental to Religion and Conſcience. 334. There is nothing in Religion, which is in conjun&tion with Immorality. 335. He Glorifies God moſt, who Serves Him moſt in the great Delign He has in the world; viz. To maintain Righteouſneſs, Goodneſs, and Truth among his Creatures. 336. Where the Reaſon of the Thing doth not require or determine; where the Neceſ- ſity of the End doth not claim and enforce where there is no poſitive Prohibition, or In- junction to the contrary, from God; there, under God, we have Liberty. 337. The Spirit in us, is the Reaſon of our Minds Illuminated by the Written Word, The Spirit now Teaches, by theſe Writings. 338. Religion in the Subject, is not a No- tion ; but the Frame and Temper of our Minds, and the Rule of our Lives: a man is not well ſettled in his Religion ; until it is become the lelf-fame with the Reaſon of his Mind. . 339 Cent. IV. APHORISM S. 339. If you would be Religious, be Ra- tional in your Religion. 340. Whoſoever deſpiſeth Shame, deſpiſeth Sin. 341. In Morals it is moſt true ; that every Man hath himſelf, as He uſeth Himſelf: for we work out of ourſelves; and no man is born with Wiſdom and Virtue. 342. In Scripture none are called Sinners; but thoſe, that fin againſt Knowledge and Con- fcience, 343. Religion does not Operate, like a Charm or Spell; but ingenuouſly, by way of Mind and Underſtanding. 344. If a Man will be righteous and equal; let him ſee, with his Neighbour's eyes, in his own cafe ; and with his own eyes, in his Neigh- bour's caſe. 345. Natural Deſires are within bounds ; but unnatural Luft is infinite. 346. He that makes no Conſcience of keep- ing his Word, opens his Conſcience to all Un- righteouſnefs. He, that begins with the breach of his Word, may end in the breach of his Oath. 347. It is better to Prevent, than to Re cover It is hard to Undo, what muſt be un- done with Shame. ? 348. He that would have the Perfection of Pleaſure ; muſt be Moderate in the Uſe of its 349. Enthuſiaſm is the Confounder, both of Reaſon and Religion: therefore nothing is more neceſſary to the Intereſt of Religion, than the prevention of Enthuſiaſm . 35 Carbon ; MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent: IV. 350. Men are unrighteous to themſelves ; when they Leave natural Uſe. 351. None Loves himſelf too little. 352. There is no Natural Deſire of what is unnatural. : 353. Men are not to be Taught with Clubs; but with Feſcues, pointing to the Letters. Let- ters are not to be knocked into the Head; but to be offered to the eye. . 354. The Names of Authors are truely con- fiderable ; but the Strength of Reaſon is more fo. 355. Chriſt is not ſo Little, as a Name and Notion : He is a Narure, and Spirit, and Life in us. ز 356. We Owe Happineſs to our Selves; Let us beſtow our ſelves upon it. 357. The Church of Chriſt hath not two more Choice things ; than the Simplicity of her Faith, and the Sincerity of her Love. 358. Let thoſe things alone, without a par- ticular Determination ; about which Men may be ignorant, without Sin; and which Men cannot determine, without Danger. 359. Religion is not ſerved by exafperating, but by compoſing the minds of men. 360. Defamation We ſhou'd be extremely careful, in this particular : becauſe an Injury of this ſort is without after- Recompence. We cannot follow a Lie at the heels, to recover Credit taken away; as we can follow a Thief, to recover Goods taken-away. 361. Ignorance is no Principle of any AC- tion. No Ignorance can excuſe Immorality, Evil Report 112 Cent. IV.: A PHORI SMS: ز in any Inſtance whatſoever : but invincible Ignorance doth excuſe Infidelity, in the chiefeſt Point, 362. Ignorance of mere Inſtitutes may be invincible : becauſe Inſtitutes muſt be declared, by ſome Inſtrument of God; [by Revelation] whereof the party may have no notice : but, in Morals, we are made to know and judge and determine ; and the light of God's Creation is ſufficient thereto: So that bere there is no in- vincible and conſequently inculpable Ignorance. 363. Religion hath its Inwards, as well as its Outwards; which hold proportion to Spirit and Fleſh. 364. Our Own Righteouſneſs is Obedience : the Righteouſneſs of Faith, is Perdon. 365, Power is not a Terror, when in Re- conciliation ; or acting in a way of Righte- ouſneſs. 366. The Mind as a Glaſs; receives all Images ; and the Soul becomes That, with which it is in conjunction. 367. Good men Study to Spiritualize theit: Bodies ; Bad men do Incarnate their Souls. 368. Entrance into Heaven, is not at the hour of death; but at the moment of Con verſion: Luke xix. 9. This Dciy is Salvation come into this Houife. 369. Let all the ſtrife of men be, who fhall Do Beſt ; who ſhall Be Leaft. 370. No Man is greatly Jealous"; who is not in ſome meaſure Guilty. 371. Man had need be univerſally ſkilled ; to have Right done him in the world: for ges nerally, things are done for the Vender's Gain; and ز is . i MORAL and Religious Cent. IV. 1 and not for the Buyer's Service : whereas every Profeſſion does imply a Truft; for the Service of the Public. The Artiſt's Skill ought to be the Buyer's Security. 372. Nothing is more abſurd, than an old child. 373. Moſt commonly, the Weakeſt are moſt Willful; and they, that have the leaſt Reafon, have the moſt Self-conceit. 374. Every man is undoubtedly as much to himſelf, as we are to our-felves. 375. Let not a man's Self be to him all in all. 376. Righteouſneſs and Equity are according to our Principles: we are made to theſe. 377. He that is conceited of his Wiſdom, is readier to Impoſe Error, than to Receive Truth. 378. I may not be an Enemy; I would not bave one. To be an Enemy is a Sini to have one is a Temptation. 379. None are known to be Good, till they have opportunity to be Bad. 380. The Judgment of God is That, con- cerning which, his infallible Underſtanding has paſſed an Act of Judgment and Appro- bation; and then his unerring Will hath Ras tified, Confirmed, and Eſtabliſhed it: ſuch Sanctions are the ways of God, and the ways of Religion. 1:381. Religion is the higheſt Accompliſh- ment of humane Nature, and humane Na- ture is Deformed, and Depraved, without Religion. : 382. Cent. IV. APHORI S M S. :382. The more we look into Religion, the more we ſhall perceive it to be ſuitable to our Nature, and conducive to our Happineſs. 383. True Liberty, as well as Power, is al- ways. in Conjunction with Right and Good. It is Licentiouſneſs and Weakneſs, that are feparated from it. It is not Power ; to be ar- bitary, in the Uſe of Power : nor Liberty; to be irregular, (without Rule and Law) in the Uſe of Liberty. 384. The Improvement of a little Time, may be Gain to all Eternity : and the Loſs of a little Time, may be the greateſt Loſs that can be. 385. Let us ſtudy to be That, which we call Religion; to be it, and to Live it. 386. Conſcience will put a man into a kind of Hell ; if That be not governed by a right Judgment, and He be not Governed by That. 387. Hypocriſy is not being Short in Re- ligion ; but is Practiſing upon it.: It is Hy. pocriſy, for man to make any other. Uſe of his Religion, or the credit of it, than to ſanctify and ſave his Soul, 388. Thoſe, who are Crafty, think ; the Wiſdom of God warrants Him to Deceive:: Thoſe, who are Revengeful, think; the Gooda neſs of God permits Him to be Cruel: Thoſe, who are Arbitrary, think ; the Sovereignty of God is the Account of his Actions. Every one. attributes to God, what he finds in Himſelf :, but that cannot be a Perfection in God, which is: a Dilhonelty in Man. E 389 ز 1 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cout. IV. ز 389. Profaneneſs Excludes Religion ; and Superſtition Adulterates it. 390. It is finful to have Enmity againſt aught but Sin. 391. Innocency is the beſt Security: it is a perpetual Diſquiet, to have done that which we cannot own. No man can be ſatisfied in himſelf; who cannot approve his own ac- tions. 392. A man is divided againſt himſelf; by having an Informed Judgement,and Ungoverned Affections. . 393. I have always found; that ſuch Preach- ing of Others hath moſt commanded iny Heart,' which hath moſt illuminated my Head.. 394. There is no ſuch Condemnation, as Self-Condemnation. 395. There are Promiſes to help our Weak- neſs: but none, to overcome our Wilfulneſs . 396. Chriſt is God cloathed with human Nature: 397: What is Morally Filthy, ſhould be Equivalent to what is Naturally Impoſſible : we ſhould not, is morally we can not. 398. It is a more difficult work, to Reconcile men to God; than to Reconcile God to men. 399. If there be no Diſcountenancing of Sin in the Subjeét; there is Diſcountenaricing of the Rule of Right: 400. We kwow not the Uſe of Chriflianily; unleſs we improve, to Grace in Life; and to Comfort in Death. CEN- Cent. V 4 PHORISM S. - CENTURY V. i . T 401. HE Law of Righteouſneſs, is the Law of God's Nature, and the Law of His Actions. 402. The Fear of the Superſtitious is in- finite; the Fear of the Prophane is confuſed. 403. Each Truth is convictive of ſome Er- ror: and each Truth helps on the Diſcovery of another. 404. The Mind of Man is not. Reformed, by Infuſing any thing into it: but by offering Reaſon, Argument, and Truth, that produces Goodneſs. 405. Our Wills are more to be blamed, than our Natures. Perverſe Wills do more harm in the world, than Weak Heads. 406. When a Man has a Principle in his Mind, that will work him to Repentance ; then he is Purified : ſuch an Argument is the Death of Chriſt. 407. Chriſt, who was Innocent, was dealt withal, as if he were Fauly; that we, who are Faulty, might be dealt withal, as if we were Innocent. 408. Chriſtian Religion is but imaginary ; if it doth not attain-to the Reconciliation oť our Spirits to the rule of Righteouſneſs and the nature of God. 409. Chriſt's Deſign was, to rid the Wold of Idolatry; to diſcharge the Burthen of Ce- remo ies; E 2 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. V remonies ; and to advance the Divine Lif in Men. 410. Nothing can Recommend men to God; but the Mediation of his Son, and the Obfervance of his Laws:- 411. There is a Superintendency of the Good Spirit of God over the Spirits of Good men. 412: Paſon before, or without Reaſon, is as Bad for a Guide, as an Ignis faturs. 413. God only can ſay, He will, becauſ ke will : (He will have mercy, oir whom he will brive mercy :] becauſe bis Will is always in conjunction with Right. 414. Unchangeableneſs in God's Counſils is, becauſe the reſolutions of His Choice are always made by the infallibility of His Under- ſtanding; and that Underſtanding is in certain conjunction with the Reaſon of Things. 415. No Man is as God made him, or as God will take pleaſure in him ; who is not Renewed and Reſtored by the Moral part of Religion : "and the Moral part of Religion is Final to the other, 416. It is the chiefeſt of Good Things, for a Man to be Himſelf. 417 God does not, becauſe of his Omni- potency, deal Arbitrarily with us; but ac- cording to Right, and Reaſon : and whatever he does, is therefore Accountable; becauſe Reaſonable. 418. Underſtanding ſhould go firſt, and find-out the way; then Paſion ſhould be as Wings, to carry us on in it. 419. Cent. V. APHORISM S. 419. What God is in Himſelf, He is to Good men : therefore it is our Perfection, to be in Conjunction with God. 420. The ſin of Adam, and the ſin againſt the Holy Ghoft, are ſpecific fins* 421 He does me the Firſt good Office ; who makes me right in my Notion, where I was Miſtaken : he does me the next good.Of- fice; who Awakens and Reminds me, where I had Forgotten. 422. Scripture, as a Rule of Faith, and Life, is not One Text; but All: the Senſe and Meaning of Scripture, is Scripture ; that is not ſaid, which is not mean'd. 423. The firſt operation of Truth, in any Subject, is upon the Subject itſelf. 424. In private Perſons, Zeal for God's Truth lies in This; that They do not Hold the Truth in Unrighteouſneſs. 425. The truely Zealous ſerve Religion in a Religious Temper: in Zeal there is nothing tending to Provocation or or Exaſperation. Zeal for God and Truth appears to others in fair Perſwafion, and ſtrength of Argument. 426 Private Chriſtians can do nothing with others, but by rational perſwafion and good life : they can do nothing better or farther. 427. We agree in nothing more, than in Matters of Religion: för we agree in All E 3 things, E 3 * i.e. ſuch as were once committed, but cannot agair, or by Others, No Man now can eat of the Tree of Kilow- ledge, forbidden to Adam ; No man now can fee Chriſt do his Miracles, and blafpheme them maliciouſly. Dr.7, MORAL and ReligIOUS Cent. V j things, that tend to eſtabliſh a good Frame of Mind, and put us upon leading good Lives. 428. If Mis-behaviour be an unmanly thing, it is much more unchriſtian. 429. He, that doth not Govern himſelf can neither do Right to Men, nor Honour to Göd. 430. The Creation of God, and the Reo ftoration by Chriſt, Reaſon and Goſpel , agree in Sobriety, Righteouſneſs, and Godlineſs. 431. Truth is Uniform ; and he, that Lives in the Truth, by the Rule of what is Right and Fit, needs no Memory; to prevent con- tiadidling, or varying from himſelf. 432. In eating and drinking, let a man do nothing contrary to the Health of the Body; nothing to indiſpoſe it, as a Manſion and In- ſtrument of the Soul; nothing to the Dif- honour of himſelf, as a Rational Being ; the Image of God 433: None can do a man ſo much Harm; as he doth Kimſelf. 434. Modeſty and Humility are the So- briety of the Mird: Temperance and Chaſtity are the Sobriety of the Body. 435. In caſe of Offence, the Juft man over- looks what is Involuntary, without taking notice of it: and firgets what is Voluntary; upon the Satisfaction of Repentance. 436. A Benefactor is a Repreſentative of God! 437: In Cenfure never ſay the worſt'; por cyer punili to the uttermoft ; Aþate" fome- thing Cent. V. APHORISM S. hing of. Extremity; for thy own Sake. All offend. 438. He that is Puniſhed in Meaſure, con- demns himſelf, and Abſolves his Judge; he that is Puniſhed in Extremity, is exaſperated by his Judge, and Meditates Revenge. 439. God will deſtroy none, but what muſt of neceſſity be deſtroyed: He will Juve every one, that can be ſaved. 440. Religion is a good Mind, and a good Life. 441. Immorality makes a Man as bad as the Devil. 442. A man is made as truely Holy, by Morals; as he is made found, by Health; and ſtrong, by Strength. 443: If you only ſay, you have a Revelation from God; I muſt have a Revelation from God too, before I can believe you : as St. Pe- ter and Cornelius. 444. The Truths of God are Connatural to the Soul of Man ; and the Soul of man makes no more Reſiſtence to them, than the Air does to Light. 445. By the Divine Spirit, we are better than our ſelve; ; by the Evil Spirit, we are worſe than our felves. 446. It is not Fit, God ſhould 1.Neglect the Rule of Right ; 2. Overlook his own Due; 3. Slight the Diſobedience cf his Creatures. 447. An Example ſhews a Rule to be pof- fible, and coaths it in Circumſtances. 443. No man's Perlon can be reconciled to God; unleſ; his Nature de reconciled to God. 4.49. ز E A MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. V 449. Thie Precepts of Religion are Prin- ciples of Wiſdom; 450. Fear arifęth from Apprehenſion of Danger ; and we cannot be delivered from it, but in a way of Reaſon, and Underſtanding. 451. Neither God, nor Man, doth alter any one's Mind; otherwiſe than by Reaſon, Per- ſwafion, and Satisfaction: for Intellettual Na- ture is commanded by nothing, but by Rea- fon, and Confideration. 452. It is our unlikeneſs to God, that hin- ders our Delight and Satiſfaction in him. 453. Wicked men are oppoſite to God, and are offended with God; as much as God is oppoſite to them, and offended with them. 454 We are none of us at all better than We milan. 455 There is a Reaſon for what we do, from the Things themſelves: Truth and Fallhood, Good and Evil, are firſt in Things; and then in Perfons. :456. There is a Difference in Things ; and we muſt comply in all matters with the Reaſon of Things, and the Rule of Right; which is the Law of God's Creation. 457. There is nothing ſo intrinſically Ra- tional, as Religion is ; nothing, that can fo Juf- tify it felf, nothing, that hath fo pure Reaſon to recommend itſelf; as Religion hath. :458. Let the worſt Offenders have the Be- 726fit of Repentance; for the ſafety of them- felves: but not too much of the Credit of it; for the ſecurity of Others. 4:59 Cent. V. APHORISM S. 459. The Reaſon of our Mind is the beſt Inſtrument we have to Work withal. 460. Reaſon is not a ſhallow thing: it is the firſt Participation from God : therefore he, that obferves Reaſon, obſerves God. 401. There is no true Majeſty, without Goodneſs. Seneca. 462. The Religion of the Creation requires the true and full uſe of Reafon ; as firſt, to the diſcerning the differences of things in their own Nature, Good or Evil; then, to the ob- ſerving ſuch difference in Life and Action., It is Wiſdom, to find-out; it is Righteouſneſs, to will and do this. 463. God is as Good, as the perfection of Goodneſs ; God is far Better, than we can conceive Him to be. 464. Heaven is firſt a Temper, and then a Place. 465. God might have pardoned Sin, by his own Right: but He did not think that the beſt way; and what God does not think beſt, We are not to think-of at all. 466. If God had pardoned Sin, without any Amends ; [Satisfaction] God would have been thought to countenance Sin: and Man would have thought Sin no great matter. 467. That which is truely and ftri&ly man's Weal, or Woe, depends upon what paffeth-be- tween God and a man's Soul; the Terms that are between God, and a man's ſelf. :'? 468. Thank God, that he doth 'uphold the Foundations of Nature, and continue us in the uſe of true and ſolid Reaſon. . 1 469. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. V : : 469. A man is twice his own, in thoſe Things he poſſeſſes ; if He has the Power to Uſe and Enjoy them. 470. No Man can be Himſelf, longer than God is with Him; or at leaſt, will ſuffer Him : no Thing is any thing, longer than God will have it. 471. Where there is Malignity, and Guilt upon the Conſcience, unremoved by Re- pentance; there needs no more, than for God to hold ſuch a man to converſe with himſelf. 472. All the-world cannot ſecure that man; who is not in Reconciliation with the Reaſon of his own Mind. 473. To take -up with the world, and to leave God out; is to make Him, that is All in all to us, and Better than all; to be nothing at all to us, and lower than all. 474. In Spiritual Worſhip, there is. Commu- nion with God: for the Mind, when it un- derſtands, does, in a ſenſe, become the thing that it doth underſtand : and in Worſhip, the mind receives the form of the object it worſhippeth. 475. The Characteriſtical Form of the de- generate ſtate, is; that Men do voluntarily con- jent to known Iniquity, 476. They, that have not the Effeet of Re- ligion, have not the Comfort of it. 477. There is Incapacity of God in men, thro' Guilt; and Indiſpoſition to God, thro Malignity. 478. No man's eſtate hath any Settlement ; unleſs he be in Reconciliation with the Rule of Righteouſneſs. 4:79. Cent. V. APHORISMS. are 479. The Government of Man should be the Monarchy of Reaſon ; it is too often a Democracy of Paſſions, or Anarchy of Humours. 480. Better have no Confidence, than Self- Confidence. 481. God is not wanting in Neceſaries; ei- ther as to the Beginning, or Progreſs, or Con- fummation of Goodneſs : to ſave his Creatures from Harm, and to bring them unto Good. 482. Things themſelves ſpeak to us, and of- fer notions to our Minds; and this is the voice of God 483. Things but half-done, will quickly be undone. 484. None more Deceive themſelves, than they ; who think, their Religion is true and genuine ; though it Refines not their Spirits, and Reforms not their Lives. 485. He is not fit to ſpeak in Company; that has not conſidered by himſelf: and he that has done nothing but ſtudied alone is not fit to come into Company. A man is No- body, where he hath not thought and confi- dered: yet often, what was hid from men, while they thought apart by themſelves"; is others. 486. Thoſe things which we call finful, have an intrinſic Malignity in them ; and therefore are forbidden by God, becauſe of their Malignity. 487. I know nothing forbidden by the Goſpel ; which one of true Reaſon would de- fire to have Liberty to do. ز ; ز 498. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. V. is 1 Right: and he doth ſubſtantially fail, upon 488. By Sin, we part-with the Modeſty, and Ingenuity of our Natures ; Spoil our Tem- pers; and Acquire unnatural Principles and Diſpoſitions. 5.89. Great Regard is to be had to the In- nocency and Tenderneſs of our own Mind : therefore treat the Reaſon of tliy Mind handſomely. 490. There is a Juſt, which of Right may be done ; and there is a Juſt, which of Right mujê bedone. The rule or law of Righteouſ- neſs or Juſtice requires that to be done, which juſtly ought to be done ; but it doth not re- quire every thing to be done, which juſtly may be done. In the former Senſe, it is Juſt to pu- niſh Sin committed : [Neh. ix. 33.) in the lat- ter ſenſe, God is not obliged in Juſtice to pu- niſh Sin repented-of. 491. Wickedneſs diſrobes any man of his excellency, and makes him Vile and Con- temptible. cording to the Difference of good and evil': Religion iſſues in Holineſs, Uprightneſs, In- tegrity, and Separation from all Iniquity. 493. Religion is highly concerned in the Judgment of Truth, and the Conſcience of account of Religion ; that is wanting in either of theſe.. 494. He is a Wife man, who is not his own Fool: not befooled by his own fancy and imagination. 495 Cent. V. A PH O R I S M S. 495. There are no Effects, in the Courſe of Nature ; but God hath fécured them by vigorous and effectúal Cauſés : and he hath not takèn leſs care, to ſecure the Intellectual World. When God made á Spirit finite and fallible, He did intend to direct and Go- vern it, by a Spirit Infinite and Infallible. 496. When a Man hath eſtablithed a Throne of Judgment in his own Soul ; and is able to put a difference between Good and Evil, Right and Wrong: then he muſt Reform himſelf, according to ſuch Knowledge ; and always hold himſelf to That, which his Judgment tells him is Good and Right. 497 The Mofaical inſtitutions were in- timations of a fuller Revelation; a rude draught of Our great Revelation : and were fences and ſecurities for Moral duties. They were inchoative; they made a fair Beginning. Theſe were Impoſitions of Pleaſure ; there was no Neceſity of the matter thereof: : the obligation to them is taken off there- fore by the Goſpel; and things are returned to their firſt Indifferency. 498. It is hard to obey ; where we ſee no Reaſon for the Thing in itſelf: where there is a Reaſon for it, in the thing itſelf; if I main- tain a right Temper and Complexion of Soul, I ſhall have a complacency and Har, mony with the things that are good: but where we ſee no Reaſon, only are obliged by a Poſitive Command; we are bent up- on Liberty. When we ſee no Goodneſs in the thing itſelf, there is only Security of Obe- dience MORAL and ReLIGIOUS Cent. Vi dience from the Strength of the Memory ; not from the Rectitude of the Temper. 499. The more Falſe any one is in his Re- ligion, the more Fierce and furious in Main- taining it ; the more Miſtaken, the more Im- poſing: The more any man's religion is his own, the more he is concerned for it; but cool and indifferent enough for that which is God's. 500. The longeſt Sword, the ſtrongeſt Lungs, the moſt Voices, are falſe meaſures of Truth, CENTURY Cent. VI. A PHORISM S. CENTURY VI. 501. Ta 502. There are HE Reſults of the divine Will are not known; unleſs Revealed by the divine Spirit. 1. Cor. ii. 14. : three great Deſigns in Popery; 1. To keep the Civil Magiſtrate in awe : 2. To maintain the Clergy in State, and Honour : 3. To keep the People in Ig- norance; and fo to enſlave them. 503. Zeal for God and Truth has the firſt operation upon Him, in whom this Zeal is: making him walk exactly &c. taking for his Rule, the Right of the Cafe ; and for his Principle, the Love of Truth ; fulfilling all righteouſneſs. It makes him in his Life and Practice ſuch as his Judgement tells him, he ought to be. 504. No man is to make Religion for Him- but to receive it, from God: and the Teachers of the Church are not to make Re- ligion for their Hearers; but to Neze it only, as received from God. 505. Curious Determinations beyond Scrip- ture, are thought to be the Improvement of Faith ; and inconſiderate Dullneſs, to be the denial of our Reaſon ; Fierceneſs in a Sect, to be Zeal for Religion ; and ſpeaking without Jenſe, to be the Simplicity of the Spirit. ſelf ; ز 506. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. VI. 506. Great Evil is introduced, by a little departure from our right Judgement. It is harder to return to Judgement; than to have ſtood-out with it: and every Vicious act weak- ens a right Judgement. 507 In many Caſes, it is very hard to fix the Bounds of Good and Evil ; becauſe Theſe párt, as Day and Night; which are ſeparated by Twilight. 508. Neceſſity may put us upon Inconve- nience ; but Neceſſity muſt never put us upon Iniquity. 509. If Evil be looked into, it will be Alhamed of itſelf, 510. We ſhould all be Wiſe enough one for another ; if we were but equally Honeſt. 511. Only our Higher Faculties of Reaſon can be Governed by Moral conſiderations: as for our lower Faculties, we muſt offer Vio- lence to Them, if they be exorbitant. 512. It is a very great Evil ; to make God a Mean, and the World an End; to name God, and to intend the World. 513. To Alienate our felves from God, is the greateſt, and trueſt-Sacrilege. 514. Moral Evil is the greateſt of all Evils : for it has the worſt Malignity, and the worſt Conſequences. 5.15. He who has once done amiſs, does habitually and occaſionally Repeat it ; if he does not Repent. He that does not Repent, Sins again; he lives in that Sin he does not repent-of; and thereby juſtifies it. 1 516. Cent. VI. A PHORI S M S. 516. When God commands the Sinner to Repent; this fuppoſes; either that he is Able; or that God will make him fo. 517. It does not follow; that, becauſe God doth not Enforce, therefore he doth not Enable : That God ſhould Force, agrees nei- ther with the Nature of God, nor with the Nature of man: but that God ſhould Enable; agrees with both; as He is Creator, and We Creatures. 518. The ſame Goodneſs; which pardons the Penitent, who forſakes Sin ; puniſhes the Impenitent, who are oblinate in Sin. 519. The Body is worn-out by tTſe and Exerciſe : but the Mind is accompliſhed and improved by them. 520. Motion in our particular Calling hin, ders not Religion : for Begin with God, Ac- knowledge God, Refer to God; and thy whole Converſation becomes Religious: That which is worldly, in reſpect of the Matter ;. is made ſpiritual and religious, through the Principles and Intention of the Agent. 521. God hath a mind we mould do, what He calls upon us to do : God knows, That He is the Firſt Cauſe ; and That the Second can do nothing without the firſt; and That the Firſt muſt Begin. 522. In every Nature, there is a principle of Self- preſervation; and a motion of Reftitia tion and Recovery : and there is no Perfec- tion in the Lower Nature, (Senſitive and In- animate,) which is not in the Higher, (Rational and Intellectual.) F 5232 Moral and RELIGIOUS Cent. VI. $23. Nothing is more Unnatural to men, than Wickedneſs; for wickedneſs is contrary to the Reaſon of the Mind, and to the Reaſon of Things : contrary to the Reaſon of the Mind, which is our Governor ; and contrary to the Reaſon of Things, which is our Law. 524. Shall Nature Recover; and not Grace, added to Nature ? 525. The ground of man's Miſery is not the firſt Fall, but the ſecond Fault; a Lapſe upon a Lapſe: for a ſecond Sin, is not only Another of the ſame kind; but a Conſummation of the firſt. 526. Take heed of the Firſt Stumble; for it is Ominous : and at beſt, there is a good ! in Step loft, 527. God fully anſwers the relation, He ſtands in to His Creatures ; effe&tually purſues the ends of His Creation ; and will certainly do, what is perfe&tly agreable to infinite, Goodneſs. 528. To ſay that of God, which doth dif- countenance the application of his Creatures to Him, in any caſe of Miſery and Neceſſity; is “not to glorify God as God.” To glorify God as God, is to own Him as the general and univerſal (Cauſe; as the Firſt and Chiefeſt Good. 529., God, Fias Fitted every thing for its Ule; and ſecures its Effects, which are neceſ- -Jary and proper. 530. We are no inore than Second Cauſes; and our Sufficiency is only in God, who is the Firſt, 202 27 Cent. VI. APHORIS M S . Firſt. A Second Cauſe is no Cauſe, divided from the Firſt. 531. The State of the Creation imports, the Creature's Reference to God the Creator, and the Creator's influence upon Man the Creature; The Communication of God to Men, and the Participation Men have of God. 532.. If Sin were Neceſſary, it could not be Avoided ; if Duty were Impoſſible, it could not be done: This would be an Anſwer to God Himſelf; an Anſwer to the Indictment, that might be brought againſt us at the Laſt day. 533. All Creatures, that are Original to others, take care of them; till they can make their own Defence and Supply. This is true, throughout the whole Creation of God: and I will rather Think, that God did not make the world, than that he will fail to be very good unto the Creatures that He hath made. 534. That Goodneſs cannot be Wanting in God; the want of which God condemns in his Creatures : That cannot be a Perfection above; which is an Imperfection below. 535. Reconciliation looks rather Forward, than Backwards at what may be, in time to come; than what than what has been, in tine paſs’d. 536. God is the Creditor of that. Puniſh- ment, which is due upon Sin: and He has the Right of Abating, as well as the Right of Exutting 537 Minis; F 2 MORAL and RELIGIOUS. Cent. VI.. 1 537. Who will think, a Man does Believe ; that does things contrary to what he ſays he Believeth 538. No Sinner can be otherwiſe than ex- tremely Miſerable; who is not cured of the Rancor and Venom, with which the Practice of Sin hạth Poiſoned his Spirit : for man is Miſerable from his own inward Malignity, and naughty Diſpoſition. 539. That which God requires of us for Religion, is only internal good Diſpoſitions ; and 4ts connatural to them, and following from them of their own accord. 540. All Duties of Chriſtian Religion have an Intrinſic Goodneſs in them; are in their own Nature Sanatory, and deſirable; good in themſelves, good for us ; good for our Na- ture, or for our Recovery: They are Opéra- tive to what is good, Conſervative of men in a good' State, and Prokibitive of the contrary, They are either for our Security in a good State, or for our Recovery out of a bad one; They are ſuch things, as are Good in them- felves.; and do Sanctifv, and Purify our Minds, make us Right and Sound, fiuch as we ſhould be. 54.1. Nothing is the true Improvement of our Rational Faculties ; but the Exerciſe of the ſeveral Virtues of Sobriety, Modefty, Gen- tleneſs, Humility, Obedience to God, and Charity to Men. 542. God's Super-additions to the Law of His Creation are, the Mediation of Chriſt; the Reſurrection of the Dead; and the Sacraments of Baptiſm and the Lord's Supper. 543 Cent. VI. A PHORISM S. ز 543. Where a Man fuffers Dificulty; and Overcomes it by conſideration, reaſon, and argument; and performs his Duty; God looks upon it as more eminently Virtuous. 544. God will not Deſtroy any thing, that partakes of his own Nature ; but will foſter and cheriſh every thing, that is God-like. 545. As it is not Virtue to do well, without Intention; ſo it is not reckoned our Sin, if we fail through miſtake. 546. There is great Congruity between our own Beings, and the Nature of thoſe things which are enjoyned by Religion. 547. Let all Uncertainties lie by themſelves, in the catalogue of Diſputables; matters of farther inquiry: Let the Certains of Religion ſettle into Conſtitution ; and iſſue in Life and Practice. 548. God, who did Begin, will Go-on; and we find in Scripture, God often makes Himſelf an Argument to Himſelf; (Ezek. xxxvii. 35.) God, who did Begin, when he found us in a fate of fin; will not give-over, and Leave us; when he finds us in the motion of Repentance. God, that Begins with leſs, will go-on with more. 549. It is God-like, to take pleaſure in the Good of Others. 550. Sin is the Failure of a Fallible Crea- ture; and Reverſible by Repentance. 551. By Sin, we do our felves Harm ; for Evil is againſt the Nature of man ; is a thing tłřat marrs his Nature, and ſpoils his Prin- ciple. 552 1 F 3 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Ous Cent. VI. > of the Goodneſs of the Thing itſelf; and we 552. Heaven doth require a good Temper of mind, to Qualify us for the Enjoyment of it; And there muſt be the Salvation of Grace, antecedent to the Salvation of Glory, To look for the latter, without the former; is to think of coming at the End, without uſe of the Means. 553. Lazineſs is more painful, thằn In- dulcry; and to be Employed is eaſier, than to be Idle. 554. The ſeveral Virtues of Religion are connatural to the Frame of man ; they are ac- cording to his Nature, and agreable to his Reafon, which is the Superior and Go- verning Principle. 555: That is done, out of Reſpect to God; which is done, becauſe it is Juſt, Fit, and Right"; becauſe it is Good, and ought to be done. We inuſt do our duty, out of a ſenſe muſt forſake our fin, out of a ſenſe and judge- ment ôf the Vileneſs and Badneſs of it. 556. Man, as a Moral Agent, is only con- fiderableáš to his End, and Principle. 557; - As a man differs, that was in a deadly Diſeaſe, and is reſtored to Health; fo doth a man differ from Himſelf, after he Leaves Sin, and returns 'unto his Duty, 5558: "If every body did confine himſelf to that which is Right, Juſt, and Fit; we ſhould all be the Better one for another. 559, * iie. As a man is one, who does nothing ; but with no foine deſign, and for ſome reaſon; ſo it is mainly cons ſiderable in him, what end he deſigns; and what reaſons he is principled with. Dr. 7. 1. ICH Cent. VI. A P Ho R S M S. 1 559. As God doth That, in all caſes; which is Juſt, Fit, Right and Good; ſo doth He require of Us nothing, but what is Juſt, Fit, Right, and Good. 560. We have not Finiſhed our work; till we are well Informed in our Judgements, well Refined in our Spirits, and well Reformed in our Manners. 561. The Law of Nature is that, which is Řeaſon; which is Right, and Fit. Will ſtands for nothing, in disjunction from Reaſon, and Right: and our Apprehenſions of Right are Regulated by the Nature of Things.. To give Will or Power for Reaſon, is contrary to Reaſon. Will is no Rule, no Juſtification of any thing. 562. Truth is firſt in Things, and then the Truth is in our Underſtanding. Things give Law to Notion, and Apprehenſion. 563. He is Weak ; that cannot Judge what is the Right of the Caſe: and he is Wicked; that, for ends and purpoſes, will vary from it. 564. He, that is in a good ſtate, has ſtill work to do; to free his Underſtanding from Ignorance and Error, and to advance his Knowledge of Truth to a juft Height; to work-out perfectly the habits of Sin, and to work-in perfectly the habits of Goodneſs. 565. It is Reaſon and Right only:. which, in One man, is any thing to. Another. 566. God hath given Reaſon for the Rule of Action, and for the Law of Right. . F 567. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. VI, ز 567. God hath given us double Security for our Lives; firſt Innocency, and ſecondly Repentance: the one was the ſtate of God's Creation, the other of Reſtoration. :568. He is not a modeſt man ; who thinks himſelf wiſe enough to find-out Truth by Himſelf: without ſubmitting his Thoughts to Examination and Trial among others. 569. It is better for us, that there ſhou'd be Difference of Judgement; if we keep Cha- Crity : but it is moſt unmanly to Quarrel, be- cauſe we Differ. 570. Let Him, that is aſſured, he Errs in nothing ; take upon him to condemn every man, that Errs in any thing. 571. Sin hardens the Hearts of men'; ſpoils the modeſty of Intellectual Nature ; and Diſpoſes men for evil. 572. God applies to our Faculties; and deals with us. by Reaſon and Argument. Let us learn of God, to deal with one another in Meekneſs, Calmneſs, and Reaſon; and ſo Repreſent God. 573. If we demand not good Security for Truth, we give advantage to Impoſtors and Cheats. 574 There are none in ſo great danger of Deſpairing, at the time of death; as they, who have been moſt Preſumptuous, in the Courſe of their Lives. 575. A Sinner miſerably Wrongs himſelf by Sin. -576. To Enjoy a man's ſelf, is the greateſt Good Cënt. VI. A P H O R I S M S. Good in the world; the Serenity and Com- poſure of his mind is Happineſs within. 577. Things are not to conform to our Ap- prehenſions; but our Thoughts are to Anſwer Things. 578. În Doctrines of ſuper-natural Reve- lation, we ſhall do well to direct our Appre- henfions, and to regulate our Expreſſions, by words of Scripture. 579. Chriſt has done for Us, what God accepted as Satisfactory: and if one, whom we have offended, will accept-of a Mediation; we think him reconcileable. 580. It is not neceſſary, to the Satisfaction of him who is offended; that a perfect Recom- penſe ſhou'd be made by the Offender : but the Offended is maſter of his own Right ;-and may accept-of ingenuous Acknowledgement only from the Offender, as Satisfaction; if He pleaſes: and Expiation is then made, when that which is diſpleafing is taken-away, -by ſomething which is pleaſing. 581. Where there is only a Show of Re- ligion, there is only an Imagination of Hap- pineſs. 582. Apply things contrary and unnatural; and you diſpofſefs a: man of himſelf, and of all Enjoyment. 583. The Life of. Sin, is the death of Hell; eternal death. 584. If we fall-off from God, our Facul- ties are without their proper Obje£t ; and, if without their proper Object, they are without their proper Employment ; and, if without their MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. VI. their proper Employment, they are without their proper Enjoyment. · We loſe God; by Contradiction to Him, or by Neglect of Him. 585. Many Uſe themſelves, ſo as to Leffen themſelves. 586. There are but Two things in Reli- gion; Morals and Inſtitutions : Morals may be known, by the Reaſon of the Thing; Mo- rals are owned, as ſoon as ſpoken'; and they are nineteen parts in twenty, of all. Religion. Inſtitutions. depend upon Scripture ; and no one Inſtitution depends upon one Text of Scripture only: That Inſtitution, which has but one Text for it, has never a one. 1587. Morals are inforced by Scripture; hut were before Scripture: they were according-to the nature of God. 588. All the Differences in Chriſtendom äre about Inſtitutions; not about Morals : He, that produceth the beſt Reaſon in Morals; and He, that produceth the beſt Scripture in In- ſtitutions; is to be cloſed-with. 589. Proteſtants follow the Law of God's Creation; according-to the Law of God's In- Aitution. Their's is reaſonable Service; and that, which is fo, is worthy of Man; and acceptable to God. 590. Morality is, the congruity and pro- portion, that is between the Actions of Ra- tional Beings, and the Objects of thoſe Ac- tions, ز 5912 Cent. VI. A PHORISM S. 591. Religion is, Tis Opośwois ©€8, xata' T8 δυνατόν ανθρώπg the being as much like God as Mañ can be like him. 592. Such an Explication of Grace, as ſets men at liberty in Morals ; “ makes void the Law through Faith." 593. Whoſoever finds not within himſelf a Principle, ſuitable to the moral Law; whence of choice he doth comply with it: he is de- parted from himſelf, and has loſt the natural perfèctions of his Being. 594. We are made-up of two parts, Soul and Body; and are under a twofold Obligation to ourſelves: 1. to improve, refine, and ſettle our Minds, by moral Principles ; 2. to pre- ferve and ſubordinate our Bodies, as the habi- tation and inſtrument of the Mind, through Moderation and Temperance. 595. If a Creature were Sufficient for him- ſelf, he could not be obliged to Deny him . felf. 596. Thoſe, that are Unhappy, know who are their true Friends. 597: The Soul informs the Body; and Knowledge informs the Mind. 598. We ought to be, ſuch as we intend to appear. 599. Tho' the Speaker be a Fool, the Hearer ſhould be a Wiſe Man, -600. A Covetous man equally enjoys, having pothing, and having all things. 1 { Cen. MORAL and RELIGIOUS · Cent. VII. 1 CENTURY VII. T 601. HAT Sorrow, which uſhers-in Repentance, affords Eaſe of heart: becauſe by Repentance the Sinner has done God all the Right he can. But none can be fatisfied with himſelf; that cannot approve his actions to himſelf. 602. A Guilty mind can be eaſed by.no- thing but Repentance; by:which what was ill done, is revoked, and morally voided and un- done. 603. There was a Teſtimony given againſt Sin, and an Acknowledgment of Right made, by the Death of Chriſt; to the. Condemnation of Sin, to, the Vindication of Right, to the Juſtification and Honour of God. 604. Natural Principles are voided, by un- natural Practices. 605. One miſtake, in Principles of Ation, is of worſe conſequence; than ſeveral falſe Opinions, that end in Speculation. 606. If a Man could Believe what he would, a Sinner would never be ſelf-condemned. 607. Lord Verulan. Every one almoſt worſhips Idolum Fori, the Idol of general Imagination : Fools and conceived Perſons worſhip idolum Specủs, the Idol of particular Fancy. It is. Les to worſhip Idolum Fori, than Idolum Spects; though, Beſt to worſhip Neither.. ز : 608. Cent. VII. A P H O R I S M S. 608. Have Religion only to Honour God, to do Good to Men, to Sanctify and ſave thy own Soul; make it not fubfervient to Baſe ends. 609. No true Chriſtian can be an Immoral man. 610. I may have more Aſſurance, for any thing I charge upon my Conſcience for Re- ligion ; than I have for any thing elſe, either for Life or Eſtate : otherwiſe I am ſhallow and perfunctory, and ſhall be drawn-away by every Appearance. 61. Follow not blind-fold: but as having one eye upon the Rule, and the other upon the Example. 612. The effect of Chriſt's Death in us, is Our Death to Sin. 613. We are Perfeet in nothing, but in honelt meaning ſincerity and true intention : in our other attainments we go-on by de- grees. 614. It is neither Perfection nor Liberty, to be Releaſed from any Duty of Religion. 615. Malignity in Morals, is as Répug- nancy in Naturals. 616. The State of Grace, and the Life of Sin, are Incompofſibilities. * 617. It is hard to get rid of an Error therefore take heed of Admitting it. 618. He is not likely to Learn, who is not Willing to be Taught'; for the Learner ha's ſomething to do, as well as the Teacher. 619. * Incompoffibilities] things that cannot poflibly ſtand together. Dr. 7. i MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. VII. 619. It is otherwiſe than God would have it ; where the leaſt of our time is ſpent in Contemplation, for the better Informing the Mind; and for the farther Refining the Spirit .. 620. There is no ſuch Antidote, and Re- medy; againſt any malignity in the world; as the Reaſon of the Thing, and the Confideration of the Mind following in Conjunction: there is an unknown Virtue, and Force in this. ? 6212 When a man knows, what he ſhould be; and this Truth is become the Reaſon of his Mind, and the Temper. of his. Spirit; then his Religion is, as it were, incarnate in him; is that which he Lives by, and governis himſelf by. Knowledge : is entertained, em- braced, conſented-to, wrought-in by confide- ration ; a man's felf-is charged with it ; Know- ledge becomes Goodneſs in the Subject; and -10 Do certainly follows. 622. Nothing can be ſaid to be the reſult of Reafon ;-till all Reaſon be admitted. .; 623. "They miſ-underſtand Religion; who do not take all the principles. of Religion to- gether, 624. The Laws of Chriſtianity are Reſto-- - sative to our Nature ; : Satisfactory to our. Rene fon ; Pacificatory to our Conſcience ; which make-up our great: Concernment. 62...The Spirit of God in us; is: a Living Law, Informing the Soul; not Conſtrained by a Law, without, that enlivens not, but we aét in the Power of an inward Principle of Life, which enables, inclines, facilitates, de- termines, 1 Cent. VII. A PHO'R IS M: 5. termines. Our Nature is reconciled to the Law of Heaven, the Rule of Everlaſting Righteouſneſs, Goodneſs, and Truth. 626. The prophane Swearer fins, for no- thing ; upon no Temptation ; for no Credit'; unleſs it be a Credit, not to be Believed. 627. Crucified to the world, conſiſts in Juſt Judgement, Temperate Uſe. 628. Very Intent, will not hold out long: too great Intention of the Faculties is always hazardous to them, and hath ſometimes ruined 7 them. 629. Man, in reſpect to God, is not his own; he Owes to God, more than to him- ſelf. 630. Some have thought; that, if an Atbeift were kept three or four days in a dark dungeon, he would not come out one. [Spea cus Platonis] Our fouls, left to undiſturbed Reflection on themſelves, muſt determine in the Belief of a God. 631. There are Things, the Knowledge of which is of little Importance ; and the Igno- rance of thoſe things is of little Danger... 632. When men reſolve, that the prio- ciples of Religion are too ftrait to live by in the world, and therefore enlarge their Judge- 'ments, that they may enlarge their Practice and not be ſelf-condemned: this is an Apo- Italy from the Truth.:: For a man to Alter or unduely practiſe upon his Judgement, that he may be more Free in his Life and not diſqui. eted in the gratification of his Lulls, this is to offer C, Moral and RELIGIOUS Cent. VII. offer violence to his Reaſon and Underſtand- ing. 633. Reaſon is the firſt Participation from God; and Virtue is the ſecond. 634. A new Nature is Reconciliation with the things of God, Harmony with the Law of Righteouſneſs. 635. An ingenuous Mind, and a true Pe- nitent, doth with more difficulty Forgive him- ſelf, than God doth forgive him. 636. It is eaſier to Convince One of the beſt Morals and beſt Intellectuals; than one of the worſt Morals and worſt Intellectuals. 637. The nobleft Spirits are moſt ſenſible of the poſſibility of Error: and the weakeſt do moſt hardly lay-down: an Error. 638. The Principle in Intelligent Agents is, Apprehenſion of the Reaſon of Things ; which is-eternal, ſubject to no Power, cannot be practiſed-upon. It is our.Wiſdom to Diſcern this; and it is our Goodneſs to comply with it. tim -639: The Doctrine of the Goſpel muſt be- come the Reaſon of our Minds, and the Prin- ciple of our Lives: 640. Men are not ſo weak, ſave only in Re- ligion.;-to think, any one is in Earneſt; if he do no more than Tólk. 64FThe nearer we approach to the God of Truth, the farther we are from the danger of Error: 642. By Senſuality, a man ſinks into a na- ture. below his own ; and by wickedneſs he paffes into 8. Nature.contrary to his own. > 643. Ctnt. VII. APHORISM S. 643. There is, by the Doctrine of Chrifta ianity, a Reſtoration of true Religion ; 'and, by the Practice of Chriſtianity, a Reſtoration of humane Nature, 644. True Reaſon is ſo far from being an Enemy to any matter of Faith; that a man is diſpoſed and qualified by Reaſon, for the ent- tertaining thoſe matters of Faith that are pre- poſed by God. 645. Things Moral are better underſtood, than things Natural. The moral perfefiors of God, Truth, Righteouſneſs and Goodneſs ; are better underſtood, than His natural per- fections, Eternity, Infinity, &c. The Reaſon and underſtanding of Man holds a proportion to one; but not to the other. 646. The ways and dealings of God with his Creatures, are all Accountable in a way of Reaſon; but Sinnrs vary from the Reaſon of things; and take upon them to Over-rule what is ſettled and eſtabliſhed from Eternity. 647. If the Paſſions be not under the go- verninent of Reaſon, the Man is under the government of his Paſſions; and lives as if he had no Reaſon. Pallion ungoverned by Reaſon is Madnefs. 648. There is n20 SHEKINAH, but by di- vine Affignation. 649. It is a wiſe man's Motto; “ I live, to « be For it is not in the power of Men to make any thing the Habitation of God, from whence God ſhall manifeſt His Will, or communicate his Gifts : but God alone can chooſe that thing, and make it His Habitation. The con- trary is Idolatry. Dr. H. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. VII. i 1 *** «.be wiſer every-day.?. I am not too wife, to be taught of any. 650::Thoſe, who think themſelves Wiſe, áre lealt:Wife. ::: ::,651: A repining Life is a lingering Death, 652. What great Content have they ¿ who Live in Reconciliation with God, and his whole Creation ! 653. Self-Will is the greateſt Idol in the world: it is. an Anti-Chriſt; it is an Anti- God. 654: Virtue, the due Complexion of the Mind, is alſo Salutary to the Body. 655. Principles of Reaſon and Religion are recommended; as things fit to Govern in the Life of man, as Sovereign to Nature, and the Rule of our Actions, · 656. Let a man conjoin with his Natural Powers, a due Acknowledgment of God; in reſpect of whatever Ability, and Suffici- ency. 657. What are Things out of their Uſe, or beyond their Uſe, but Burthen; or Fancy, at moſt? 658. He that knows better, has no Greedi- nefs after that which is worſe. : 659: The beſt Diſcharge of Government, is Government of our ſelves; and there we muſt Begina ? 660. We never do any thing ſo ſecretly, but that it is in the prefence of t180 Witneſſes; God, and our own Confcience. : 661. The true Remedy of Evil is from Within j Cent. VII. A P: H OR I SMS: .... within ; admit Principles of Reaſon; fow feeds of Virtue. :: 6628- It is degenerate for. Man, who is en- dued with Reaſon, to Live at hap-hazard.; and not out of Fore-fight of the Nature of things. 663. Riches are but a. Means, or Inftru- ment; and the Virtue of an Inſtrument lies in it's Uſe. .. im j. 664. It is a Reproche to us; if the Faith of the Goſpel ſhould not attain ſuch effects, as the Principles of Nature have attained. 665. If Self be predominant, the man is Unſociable. 666. Nothing more diſcompoſes the Mind; than it's own taking Offence. 667. The ſenſe of our Minds muſt comply with the State of Things; we are to be in Reconciliation with things that are Good, and to have a Difplicency againſt things that are Evil. 668. Where men have not conſidered, they ſhould rather be patient to Hear, than forward to Speak. He ſpends too faſt, who talks tog much. 669. No man hath Credit enough, to 6012 - troul the Rule of Right; but every one,:whọ values his Credit, muſt avoid all Immorality. 670. If a man fins, and tranſgrefies the Rule of Right; nothing is more Vile to him- ſelf, than himſelf. 67:1. We are of-ſeveral Conſtitutious, C mo plexions; wherein ſeveral Qualities are pre: dominant: and, till em nent. Viatuz bac- quired, we are moſtly Bodily-wife; the Mo.- .. 1 G 2 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. VII. ܟ * : • tions of our Minds will follow the Humors of our Bodies: but, as true Wiſdom is more than Temper ; ſo the Exerciſe of Virtue will over-rule Temper. 672: " Matters of private Apprehenſion ought not to make a public Difference. 673. Rudeneſs, or Lightneſs, levels perſons of the greateſt Diſtinction and Difference. *** 674. The affectation of Singularity is no Pre-eminence : and the more of Faction, the leſs of Piety. 675. He that is full of him-felf, goes out of company as wiſe as he came in. 676. No man can be an Incendiary, by be- ing a Chriſtian; but the more Perfect any one is, the leſs Boiſterous. 677: God may aſſume any Thing, or Per- fon, into a ſpecial Relation to Himſelf; may make it his Inſtrument; and then it is Holy: · God may Deſert it ; and then it becomes Coni- mon: God may Releafe, or Diſpenſe, for a time. 678: Man, as a fociable Creature, is made for Converſe with thoſe that are his Equals ; to Receive from them, and to Communicate to them, to Be the Better for them, and to Make ther the Better for him. ****. 675. Univerſal Charity is a thing Final in Religion. 680. Carefully, avoid the Odium of Com- parisons, either of Perſons, that 'you do not * -Offend ; or of Things, that you be not De- ceived. He, that hạth the Advantage in a Compariſon, thinks he hath but his Right; he Cent. VII. A PHORISM S. he, that has the Diſadyantage, thinks he hath not his Right. 681. Virtue is in our Power, though Praiſe be not: we may Deſerve Honour, though we cannot Command it. 682. Sin is an Attempt to controul the im- mutable and unalterable Laws of everlaſting Righteouſneſs, Goodneſs, and Truth; upon which the Univerſe depends. 683. None can tell, what that man will do ; who durſt vary from Right; for, by the ſame Authority, that he varies from it in one In- ftance, he may in all, 684. Credulity, or an eaſineſs to believe, without Reaſon or Scripture ; is a ſtranger to Wiſdom, and the very Nurſe of Superſtition. 685. Notwithſtanding the Fulneſs of Li- berty, and Fulneſs of Power in God; we are furer of Him, in all Caſes of Righteouſneſs, and Equity ; than of the Effects of any Na- tural Cauſe. 686. Liberty is not a Deformity, but a Per- fection ; and a Higher Agent ſhould be as true to his Principles, as a Natural Agent is.. 687. Humane Nature, if it be Righț, and be not Abuſed, is, beyond all other Natures below it, moſt Tender and compaſſionate ; and cannot, by true Religion be made Fierce and Cruel. 688. What ever Perfection is found in any Creature, it is primarily and Originally, it is perfectly, and in the higheſt degree, in God. 689. Chriſt died, that he might condemn Sin by his Death ; therefore none can be Re- lieved G 3. 1 1 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. VII. 1 . 1 ; lieved by the Death of Chriſt, who Juftify Sin by their Lives. 690. Judgment ought to Rule in practice; and Judgment ought to be conformed to the Reaſon of things, and the Revelation of God. 091.-"The Good mían maintains his Inte- gritý, according to his Judgment; whatever befails him;' 2.692. It is monſtrous and horrid; for a man to be better in the Reaſon of his Mind, than the is in the Choice of his Actions. : 693: A Good man does not love an Error; therefore is not likely to dye in it. 694. Wiſdom and Virtue belong to human Nature; as the Beauty, and Perfection thereof: there is Privation and Deformity, where they are not... 695. When :men - unduely practiſe upon Truth, they are forced into (Opinionum Por- teñta) the Abfurdities of Error. So it befalls Fastions in Religion. 196. Fear is Prophetical of evil . [Me'rtis Karw.F10)1,5;! 697 The Benefits of the Goſpel are, the Renovation of our Natures, and the Recon- ciliation of couri Perſons. * *.698. "The Romániſts - Adulterate what is True in Religion, and Superadd what is Falſe. 1699. The Happineſs of men conſiſts in the enjoyment of God ;-by uſing his excellencies, and Attributes. goó. Hé'that is Diſhoneſt, Truſts no body. 1 CEN. Cent. VIII. APHORISM S. 1 CENTURY VIII. 1 201. TE F God puniſh: Sin committed, it is no more than Juft: Juſtice in God doth not require, that Sin repented-of be puniſhed; Goodneſs doth require, that Contumacy in Sin [Impenitency] be controuled. Sin committed may be puniſhed, Sin repented-of may be par- doned; may be not-puniſhed; without In- juſtice. It cannot be found any-where in Scripture ; that there is any ſuch Attribute. in God, as neceſſitates Him to puniſh Sin re- pented-of and forſaken; in reſpect of any Per- fection inherent in Him. 702. In all Supremacy of Power, there is inherent a Prerogative to Pardon. * 703. We have a great Government, that of our ſelves; we muſt Jubordinate all the Mo- tions of Senſe, to the Dictates of Reaſon: 704. Reaſon and Argument are-Transfor- ming Principles, in Intellectual Natures. 705. Whatſoever there is good Reafon for the Doing of; is Warranted of God 706. It is a great Privilege ; not to be Ob- liged, without Neceſſity :: not to be under Reſtraint; from the neceſſity of the Precept; where there is no neceflity in the Matters not to be Engaged; ſave where the nature of the thing doth engage . 29:00h : 707. It is hard torbe Subject to, Will; it is natural co be Subject to Reaſon. 708. tu i G4 ? MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cënt. VIII. 708. Religion, which is in Subſtance our Imitation of God, in his Moral Perfections of Goodneſs, Righteouſneſs, and Truth; is that, wherein our Happineſs.doth conſiſt. 709. When we make neaſer Approaches to God, we have more Uſe of our felves. 710. Nothing is more Reaſonable; than that We ſhould be that to one another, which God is to us All, 711. Zoal for Truth, and Conſcience of Dutys are high Titles ; things of great Name: but the greateſt Miſchief follows, where Paf- Jion and Intereſt are ſo cloathed. 712. Religion, which is a Bond of Union, ought not to be a Ground of Diviſion : but it is in an unnatural uſe, when it doth diſunite. Men cannot differ, by true Religion: becauſe It is true Religion to agree. The Spirit of Re- ligion is a Reconciling Spirit. ... 271.3. Sublime Knowledge cannot dwell in an unquiet Spirit. 714. Whoſoever Suſpects, thinks himſelf , Suſpected. 15. We do not think them Our Friends, to whom We are not Friends, 716. We think not better of Others, than ve do.of.;gur ſelyeș..... *** 717, Letany man chooſe to Abate of his Rigliti rather i han Lofę his Charity. 2:29. Fair conſtructien, and courteous Be- haviour, are the greateſt Charity. xoi7 7.! Men, that are often Angry; and for every Trifle ; in a liitle time will be little Re- garded; and they, that reprove with Paſion; will Cent. VIII. APHORIS M'S. ,, will be leſs regarded, when they reprove with Reafon. 720. Religion makes us Live as thoſe, who Repreſent God in the world. 721. It is not Religion, but Superſtition ; that makes us Dread God: Religion makes us reverence love and delight-in God. 722. Intemperance doth weaken Reaſon, and contradict Religion : and in a little time doth either ſtupify or enragė our Spirits. 723. They, that take no Delight in the Exerciſe of Virtue; could take no delight in Heaven: either in the Employment, or in the Inhabitants thereof. 724. Religion confines us, as our Nature does; and, if this be contrary to Liberty, where is God's Liberty ? 725. It is not Liberty, to do what is not Fit to be done ; for this cannot be ſaid of God, who has all true Liberty. He is leaſt: of all Free; nay, he is the verieſt Slave in the world; who hath either Will or Power to vary from the Law of Right. 726. There is a Malignity in Sin, that Poi- ſons the Nature of Man ; ånd, through fin, One man is Formidable to another. 727. Theſe two things go toĝether; to know God; and to know the Difference of Good and Evil. 728. Voluntary Submiſſion is better Satis- faction, than impoſed Sufferings. os,"... 7291 The Caſe of Righteoufneſs is not over- come, where it is overborn. roa. 1 ز } 730. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. VIII. 1730. Men work themſelves into an Athe- iſtical Judgement, by Atheiſtical Practices. 73.1. If it were not for Sin, we ſhould con- verfe together as Angels do. 732. Mind and Underſtanding were made for God and for Eternity. Senſe holds a pro- portion to Worldly things and Time: 2.733. Virtue cannot be forced upon a man's Practice, nor Happineſs be forced into a man's Enjoyment. 5.734. Man, -that is a Moral Agent, muſt be i morally dealt withal. 73.5: It is eaſier to bear the Scorn of the Irreligious, than the Inſolence of the Hypo- crité. 7:36. Shall I juſtifie that Sin, by my Life; which Chriſt condemned, by his Death? 737. Natural Truths are Truths of God's Creation ; Supernatural Truths are Truths of God's Revelation. Nothing is more knowable, than: natural Truth ; nothing is more credible, than reveled Truth. 738. Moderation is Abating of our own Right; to comply with other mens? Neceſja- ties. ---739. God has im Himall Right: a pri- miary: Right, to demand the Obedience of His .Creatures a Secondary Right, to puniſh the Diſobedient, in order to the reclaiming of Him: and the Right of Pardon. 740, x The Pleaſures of Senſe; 2. the Pre- valency of Bodily . Temper.; 3. the Allurements of Pleafure, Gain, and Honour from without Hi the Preſence of the things of this “Life; and j this Cent. VIII. A P HORISMS this World; the Abſence of the things of the other Life, and the other world; 5. the great Improvement neceſſary to a higher Life ; the no Improvement neceſſary to this ; 6: the Depra- vation of our Principles, by ill 'ufe : theſe things make it hard to Live religioufly. * * 741. The great reveled Truth is the Sole Mediation of Jeſus Chriſt, and the grand Apoſtaſy is, either the deſerting this 'Truth, or the adding thereto. 242. We partake of the Death of Chriſt; by paſſing into the Spirit of Chriſt. The great work of Chriſt in Us lies; in implanting his own Life [Lively Nature) in the lapſed de- generate Souls of Men. Chriſt is not to be as in Notion or Hiſtory; but as a Principle, a Vital. Influence. 743. Morality is not a Means to any thing, but to Happineſs: 'every thing elſe is a Means to Morality. 744. Comply not with any falſe Medium; for recommending our Perſons, or our Service, 'to God. 745. Every degree of Separation is a degree of Alienation. 746. It is often found; that men of the dulleſt Parts are moſt liable to finiſter 'appre- henſions :: are moſt moroſe, cenforious, four. 247. Nothing more becomes us; tháni to know, what we are: Ignorance of one's ſelf is the cauſe of Pride': and the ſtrength of Con- fidence is the Weakneſs of Judgment. 748. They are the only Fools; who are felf- a -MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. VIII. ſelf-conceited, confident. Ignorance and Folly are the only things, that puff men up: -749. The verieſt No-bodies in the world are the greateſt Buiſy-bodies. 750. Sin is; in it felf, an ill- nratured thing; a Sinner is an Incendiary, and ſets the world con fire: 751. There is no Confuſion in the world ; but where Rational Creatures are, and act ex- orbitantly; as on Earth, and in Hell. 752: The pure Air foon receives Light ; but-groſs-bodies muſt be fired, before they can be enlighten'd. Separate Souls Souls in Bodies. 753. Expect no greater Happineſs in Eter- nity; than to Rejoice in God. :-754. We find it eaſier to go-on, than to go-back. 755. If I have not a Friend, God ſend me an Enemy: that I may hear of my Faults. To be admoniſhed of an Enemy, is next to having a Friend. 756. There is nothing more Unnatural to Religion; than Contentions about it. 757: To infift upon Antiquated and unne- ceffary things; or to be Contentious about pri- vate and particular Apprehenſions ; Hinders the Advancement of Truth, the Increaſe of Knowledge; and the Exerciſe of Charity, *788. God faid no foundation of Wicked- inefs, in the principles of His creation; it is an unnatural Super-ſtructure of our own, without à foundation. 1 i --7590 Cent. VIII. APHORIS M: S. 759. It is an act of Goodneſs, by Chaſtiſe- ment to reduce the Lawleſs and Diſobedient; and by Vengeance to controul Impenitency and Contumacy. It is good for the world; it Thou'd be fo; becauſe harm iş done the world, for want of it. 760. Had God borne-zeith the Iniquity of his Creatures, He had.condemned his own Law. The import of Puniſhment is, that the Law is right; and that God will maintain it: that Sin is wrong ; and that Men muſt forbear it. 261. The Puniſhments of God do not common cede the Meaſure of their Cauſe, or the Pro- portion of their End. 762. Worſhip God in Spirit: 1.8. in the Motion of the Mind and Underſtanding; in the free, full, noble, ingenuous Uſe of a Man's bigbeft Powers and Faculties. To serve God with the Determination of the Underſtanding, and the Freeneſs of Choice; firſt: to judge, and then to chooſe ; This is the immutable Religion of God's Creation; the Service of Angels and Men, ſelf-eſtabliſhed; not de- pending upon Inſtitution, indiſpenſable ; the Religion of the State of Innocency: and there is nothing beyond this, in the State of Glory: ; but as perfected there. 763. In Religious Worſhip, the preſence of the Mind may Compenſate for the Abſence of the Body ; but the Preſence of the Body can- not Compenſate for the Abſence of the Mind. 76.4. He, that doth not Govern himſelf by Sobriety; can neither do Right to Men, nor Honcur to God. b : 765. MORAL and Religious Cent: VIII. 771. We are not to ſubmit our Underſtand- 765 Truth is ſingles and thoſe, who meet in Truth, are United. 766. In the lower degree of Sin; God is Neglected : in the Higher degree of Sin, God is Affronted. 767. Arbitrarineſs, and Self-will, are great exorbitancies in the Rational world. 1768. When the Sinner hath uſed his Liber- ty, to Repent; and God hath uſed his Prero- gative, to Pardon ; then Sin, which hath been, is as if it had not been. 769. All the Inttances of Morality are Con- ſervative of Humane Nature, in its ſeveral Perfections. 770. No men ſtand more in Fear of God; than Thoſe, who moſt Deny Him, and leaſt Love Him. i .,, ings to the belief of thoſe things, that are con- trary to our Underflanding. We muſt have a Reaſon, for that which we believe above our Reaſon: 772. The right Uſe of our Power and Pri- vilege, is the Effence of our Duty; and the Foundation of our Happineſs. 773. Where Knowledge doth not attain the effect of Goodneſs, the Truth is held in Un- righteoufneſs. 774. The Rule i with::which a Chriſtian complies, is the Right of the Caſe: the Prin- ciple of his Mind, from whence he acts, is Love of Truth 77.6. It is worſe to have an Ill-affecied Mind; than an Ill-difpoſed Body..... :. 1 7 :. 777 Cent. VIII. A PHO R I S M S 777. When a man obftru&ts the Reaſon of his Mind, by the Gratifications of the Body; or when he ſubordinates the Reaſon of his Mind to the Deſires of the Body; tlten. he fins againſt Sobriety. 778. The Reaſon of things is the only Rulez . in matters of Natural Knowledges and the Revelation in Scripture is the only Rule, in all matters of Faith. 779... Man contradicts his own Principles, and departs from himſelf ; when he falls-off from God. 780. If a man has. wrong Suppoſitions in his mind, concerning God; he will be Wrong; through all the parts of his Re- ligion. 781. For men to confine the Divine Nature to any Material thing, or expect divine In- fluence from any Material thing, is Idolatry. 782. According to the Nature of Man ; according to the Attributes of God; according to the Principles of Righteouſneſs; according to the Reaſon of things: Theſe are Lares, which are not to be controuled. 783. Knowledge in the Underſtanding, is. Truth; in Practice, is.. Goodneſs. 784. Darkneſs ſpoils Modeſty: no man bluſhes in the Dark. 785.- By Vice, men differ frommen; as the Devils differ from God. 786; If I can thew a man: Argument and Reaſon ; I will convince his Judgment, againſt : his Will. 787. Goodneſs is the prop.r Notion of God.; and . MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. VIII. ) 3 and Thankfulneſs is the ſuitable Duty of Crea- tures. 788. No man is true to himſelf; if he be ill.employed. 789. What can a man look-for, when he is not True to himſelf ; when he has every thing within himſelf riſing-up againſt him- ſelf? 790. By Knowledge, one way; and by Af- fection, another way; is diſtraction and con- fuſion. 791. Nothing is more - Specific to Man; than Capacity of Religion, and ſenſe of God.* 792. None have more Feared God and Death, than thoſe; who have wrought up themſelves to Aſſert, there is 120 God; and that after death themſelves are nothing: which thews, that theſe men fin againſt the innate ſenſe of God, that is within themſelves. 793. There is an affected Atheiſin; by alie- nating our minds and underſtandings from the obſervance of God. 794. The Primitive Rules of Moral good and evil, carry Reaſon with them, ſo immu- table; that no time can aboliſh. 795. We muſt not put Truth into the place of a Means ; but into the place of an End. 796. Morality is acknowledged and owned, is farther ſettled and ellabliſhed, by the Gof- pel : is ſettled, as much as poſſible; viz. by the ز * More proper and peculiar to man, as man. Dr. I. Cene. VIII. APHORISMS. the Creation of Man ; by the Grace of the Goſpel. 797. Things are greater than we, and will not comply with us; we, who are leſs than Things, muſt Comply with them. . 798. Reverence God in thyſelf: for God is more in the Mind of Man, than in any part of this world beſides ; for we (and we only here) are made after the Image of God. 799. He, that doth Wrong to Himſelf, to Whom will he do Right? 800. Thoſe, who are Evil themſelves, are hard to Believe the Good that is ſpoken of Others : becauſe they are Challenged by Others' Good, which is wanting in Themſelves. H H CENA MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. IX. CENTURY IX. A 801. Proud man hath no God : for he hath put God down, and ſet Him- ſelf up. An Unpeaceable man hath no Neigh- bour : for he hath driven them all away. A Diſtruſtful man hath no Friend; for he hath đifobliged all : Who will be friendly to Him, who hath no good opinion of another? A Dif- contented man hath not Himfelf.: he hath loft himſelf, becauſe things are not, as he wou'd. 802. A man forceth himſelf at firſt; before he can Reconcile himſelf to Intemperance, Unrighteouſneſs, and Ungodlineſs: and a man kindly uſeth himſelf, when he is Virtuous. He cannot Satisfy himſelf at laſt to Sin. 803: Fudgment of Right, is the Firft and Eeading Principle in Religion. 804. It is not Wiſdom, but Preſumption ; fot men to do any. thing in Religion, without tiue. Reaſon; or divine Direction. 805. What is not from God, by Reaſon or by Scripture, - cannot Recommend Us to God. 806. "As there is no other Obje&t of Wor- Thip, but God'; 'that made Heaven and Earth: ſo there is no other "Mean of Worſhip, but the Lord Jeſus Chriſt. 807. Where Scripture doth not Direct, God refers us to the Direction of Nature ; therefore . i. Cent. IX. APHORISM S. herefore, where you have not a Text of Scripture for what you do, be Rational in what you do. 808. Givë me a Religion, that is grounded upon Right Reafon, and Divine Authority; ſuch as, when it does attain it's effect, the World is the better for it. 809. Future Miſery is not a Foreign Im- poſition by Power; but an Acquired Conſtitu- tion of Mind: it is Guilt of Conſcience, and Malignity of Spirit. 810. It is Blaſphemy to ſay, 1. That God is a true Cauſe of the Creature's Sin ; or 2. the only cauſe of the Sinner's Miſery; ſo that, if it were not for God's Power, a Sinner, as fuch, might be ſafe ; and, ſaving the Prohibition, good and evil are both alike. 811. Do not think, God has done, any thing concerning Thee; before thou cameſt into Being: whereby thou art determined, either to Sin or Miſery. This is a Falſehood : and They, that entertain ſuch thoughts, live in a Lie: 812. If the Obligation of Truth were taken- off; univerſal Reaſon, (which is the Rule of action, the Life of the world, the true Prin- ciple, that God hath ſet-up, as Governor of the World; by which all men ſhall be judged, with which all men ſhou'd comply:) this will thereby be dethroned and diſcharged. And what ſtarts-up, in the rooin? mens' Luſts; which are infinite and irregular: mens' Paſ- fions; which are tempeſtuous and boiſterous : menis' Hümors; which are out of the way of Reaſon: H 2 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Gent. IX. ciples in their proper Uſe. Reaſon: mens' Wills; which are lawleſs and exorbitant: Theſe wou'd fill all places ; ſo that all men wou'd be at a loſs: no man wou'd know what to do, or whither to have reſource if they once departed from the principles of true and univerſal Reaſon. 813. There is the fulleſt Satisfaction, from inward: ſenſe of Reconciliation ; with God, with the Reaſon of things, and with the Rulé of Righteouſneſs, Goodneſs, and Truth. 814. It is contrary to the order of things; for Will and Affections to go before Under- ſtanding and Judgment. It is natural, that Will ſhould follow; and that Underſtanding ſhould go before. 815. Șincere Intention is Evangelical Per- fection. 816. If we follow God in his Ways, when we have found Him out in his Works; we abide in the Truth : and if we do not, we Live in a Lie; and have not our higheſt Prin- groſs Folly and Superſtition will follow after. 818. Converſation with God, Innocency, and Righteouſneſs, is Heaven begun here: Wickedneſs and Guilt is Hell begun here. He, that takes himſelf out of God's hands; into his own, by-and-by will not know what to do with himſelf. 8203 The Effect of our Religion, is our Agreement with God; in Mind and Temper : and it is the uſe of our Religion, by it, as a Means, to introduce that Agreement: The AG- . 8.5 Cent. IX. A PHORISM S. 1 Accompliſhment of our Religion is, by the Ex- erciſe of it, to Enjoy God; who is our Ul- timate End, and Happineſs. 821. To do good, and to Serve God, are ma- terially the ſame ; and the Service of God is the Imitation of Him. 822. There muſt be greater Perfections, than We are inveſted with ; and Man is an Argument to himſelf, that there is a God. 823. Human Spirits are always in ſome con- junction with bigher Spirits. The lower things in the creation acknowledge ſome dependence on the higher : the higher are informative, directive, conſervative, motive, of the lower. 824. Malignity of Mind, if not cured, muſt End in Hell. 825. Can a Creature be Happy, without God; who cannot be at all, without Him? 826. Peace and Reſt depend upon a ſenſe of Reconciliation with God: which is Felt and Aſured, by Agreement with the Rule of Righteouſneſs; the Holy Law, and Wilſ, and Nature of God. 827. In Acknowledgement of what Chriſt hath done for Us; we ſhou'd be gracious and merciful, beyond what abſolute Reaſon and ſtrict Right does require. In Refentment of the great benefits we have by the Goſpel > we ought to act above the law of ſtrict Right and common Reaſon. 828. In Acknowledgement of whät Chriſt hath done and ſuffered, take-up this Reſoiu, tion; that it ſhall be better for every one, with H 3 whom ވެ H 3 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. IX. whom thou haſt to do; becauſe Chriſt hath died for Thee and Him. 829. Let God be Recommended to us, and and let us be engaged to God, by his Good- nefs. 830. That Faith, which is not a Principle of Life, is a Nullity in Religion. 831. One that is a Believer, and one that is Obedient; one that is an Unbeliever, and one that is Diſobedient, is the ſame. :832. If we be in a State of Religion, we find an internal Reconciliation with the Nature of God, and with the Rule of Righteouſneſs; ſo that we Harmonize with God, in all that is Good. .833• i. Some, out of Superſtition, dare not examine the doctrine of Religion ; but blindly, refer themſelves to other Men: 2. Some, out of Deſign, will not examine what they pro- fefs ; becauſe they practiſe upon Religion, and it is not Truth, but Intereſt, that is intended by them :'3. Some, out of Idleneſs and Self- neglect, do not examine their Religion ; all Their care being to be Denominated from it. 834.' It is a grófs miſtake, to Oppoſe the Faith of our Lord Jeſus Chriſt, to the Moral part of Religion : whereas the Faith of our Lord Jeſus Chriſt is on purpoſe to Reſtore and Reinforce the Principles of God's Creation and to Re-eſtabliſh the Moral part of Reli- gion. 835. The State of Religion lies in a good Mind, and a good Life ; all elſe is about Re- ligion and Men muſt not put the Inſtru- mental ; Cent. IX. A PHORI S M. S. mental part of Religion, for the State of Re- ligion. 836. Some things are Good in themſelves; and they make men Good. 837. When we do any good to Others; we do as much, or more, good to our ſelves. 838. Before a man is Provoked, he hath himſelf intire; but, after he is provoked, he knows not, how much or how little of him- ſelf will remain. 839. It is no lefs a Divine work, to Reſtore the lapſed Creation of God; than it was to Raiſe that Creation out of nothing. 840. An impenitent Sinner, during his Im- penitency, cannot be pardoned ; becauſe God cannot contradict Himſelf. The Rule of Righteouſnefs is the Law of his Action; and the Law of his Nature. 841. The more you are offended at your Evil Thoughts; the leſs they are youts : the more they are your Burthen, the leſs they are your Guilt. The knowledge or thought of evil , is not evil : it is not what you know, but what you conſent-to. 842. It is the way of operation with intel- lectual natures; to ſpeak with themſelves, be- fore they ſpeak with others; and it doth noť become us, to make too much hafte with the latter ; before the former be well over. 843. If God ſhou'd negle&t. [not puniſh] a Sinner, as a Sinner neglects God; (finning). they wou'd never meet to Eternity.“ 844. It is to be feared; that ſo much Cu- rioſity as a Man beſtoweth on any piece of H RE- H 4 MORAL and RelIGIOUS Cerit. 1x, ligion or Devotion, that is of his own For- mation : ſo much will He abate in his con- ſcientious. Obſervance of that; which is of God's Inſtitution. 845. Created Intellectual Nature has this, as its proper Perfection ; to have ſenſe and ap- prehenſion of God, in whom is all Fullneſs and Ferfection. 8:46. The true Uſe of the peculiar Per- fections of Intellectual Nature, Reaſon, and Liberty.;. is to Act upon God, and to Anſwer our Relation to Him. 847. There is a Capacity in Man's Soul, larger than can be Anſwered by any thing of his Own, or of any Fellow-Creature. 848. It is certain, that God intended Him- felf to be the peculiar object of Mind and Un- derſtanding in Man; becauſe Mind and Un- derſtanding in Man are beyond the Satisfaction tha; is to be had in any, thing, but God Him- felf: It is too big for the world; and too good 1 for it. 849. That action is ill, .wherein we loſe oạr ſelves : and there is no Recompenſe for the : loſs, 859; The Obedience of the Penitent, is the Evangelical Righteouſneſs of men : and the Forgiveneſs of Sins, is the Imputed Righ- teouſneſs of Chriſt. :::851. The Laws of God are not Impoſitions of Will or Power and Pleaſure ; but the Re- Solutions of: Truth Reaſon and Juſtice. 85206 Whereinſoever Men are concerned with God, they are ſure of ſuch an account of Cent. IX. A PHORIS M: S.. of His dealings with them; that they are Juſt and Righteous: and more we do not expect from a Brother, or a Parent, [from the beſt Friend ;] than that we ſhall have no other uſage from him, but what is juſtifiable by Reafon. 853. The State of Religion conſiſts in a divine Frame and Temper of mind : and ſhews it ſelf in a Life and Actions, conformable to the divine Will. 854. Nature is a Law to Inanimates ; Senſe is a Law to Senſitives; [Animals :] Reaſon is a Law to Rationals; [Men.] 855. The Generation of a Man, is by ſuper- inducing the Rational Soul upon the Senſitive ; which makes him more than an Animal : the Regeneration of a Chriſtian, is by ſuper- inducing the Divine Spirit upon the Rational; which makes him more than a Man. 856. God is to us, according to our Ca- pacity. Objects affect, as Subječts are capable. 857. Our Happineſs depends upon Temper within, and Object withoút. 858. Except in' Reconciliation with God, and the Favor of Him; there is no Security: except in Our applications to God, and His communications to Us; there is nő Hap- pineſs. 859. It was probable by Reaſon, it is certain by Revelation; that God will Pardon-thoſe who Repent. 860. God Created Man with a Vaſt Ca- pacity of Receiving, and (anſwerably here- unto) . : MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. IX. unto). with a Refleſs Deſire of, greater Good; than the Creature can afford. 861. Were it not for the Light; we ſhould not know, we had ſuch a ſenſe as Sight: Werė. it not for God; we ſhould not know the Powers of our Souls, which have an Appro- priation to God. 862. That is good, as a Means; which doth promote the End. There is the Religion of the Means; and there is the Religion of the End. There is in Religion, what is In- ſtrumental, and what is Final. 863. It is Natural for Man to Harmonize with the Nature of things. 864. Habits are loft; by forbearing thoſe Acts, which are Connatural to them, and Conſervative of them. 865. It is the deſign of the Goſpel; to re- duce men to the Obedience of thoſe Eternal Laws of Righteouſneſs, under which we were Made. 866. There is a Stupidity of Mind, through groſs ſelf-Neglect; and a Reprobacy of Mind, through unnatural felf-Abuſe. 86.7. Man hath, through the poſſibilities of his Nature; man bath not, through non-Uſe thereof. Matth. xxv. 29. 868. A Mind, blinded by Ignorance, and Depraved by: Vice; is Deformed; and in an unnatural, which is an uneaſy, State. 869. There is nothing in Religion Neceſi fary, which is Uncertain. 870. Where men are Renewed, Knowledge doth effect Goodneſs. ز 871. Cent. IX. APHORISM'S. 871. No man can Command his Judgment; therefore every Man muſt Obey it. 872. We hold all of God, and are accoun- table to Him; He is Proprietor, We the Stewards. 87.3. The Law of Right, and Rule of Rea- ſon, are the things endowed with Power of Warrant, or Reſtraint. 87:4. Be hard to take Offenſe ; Now to take Exceptions : What was ſuddenly or pleaſantly ſpoken, has no Teeth ; no ill Meaning. 875. Preſs no Argument, beyond a ratio- nal Propoſal: let every man be hear'd: it is elſe much the ſame, as to turn him out of company; for he is made no-body in it. 876. Contrary to the Nature of Man, as man, is the great Rule and Notion of Defor- mity. 877. Where Reaſon ſpeaks, it is the voice of our Guide ; a natural voice, we cannot but hear ; it is according-to the very make of our nature. It is alſo true in Religion, [Idem ejt, Sequi Deum & rectam Rationem ;] to follow, God and to follow right Reaſon, is: all one: a man never gives God an offenfe ; if he doth that, which Reaſon requires. 878. They are therefore greatly miſtaken who in Religion oppoſe points of Reaſon and matters of Faith: as-if Nature went one way, and the Author of Nature went another. Non aliud Natura, aliud Sapientia fuadet. 879. Man was made a Law to Himſelf. 880. Nothing without Reafon is to be pro- : poſed; ; MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent, IX. poſed ; nothing againſt Reaſon is to be believed: Scripture is to be taken in a rational ſenſe. 881. There is more folid Satisfaction, in good Self-Government; than in all the forced Jollities and Pleaſures of the world. 882. They that Force Things, often break themſelves'; but Things return to their courſe again. 883. It is a groſs Miſcarriage; for men not to conſider the End, not to conſult the Rule, not to be Governed by the Principle, of Life. 884. What is Heaven, by way of Obječt, but God Himſelf? what is Heaven, in the Subject, but our inward Health, and Strength; our Rectitude, and Sanctity; our Conformity to God; our proportionableneſs to Hiin, (pro modulo Creaturæ,) after the meaſure of created Beings? .885. It is dangerous to merit of bad Na- tures: 886. Reaſon is a Principle, uniform and Sa- tisfactory; Paſſion is a Principle, contradicti- ous and incendiary. 887. It is the peculiar. Excellency of Moral Virtųe ; that it does much Good, and can do no Harm. 888. They do not advance Religion, who [embody it ] draw it down to bodily acts ; or who carry it up higheſt, into what is My- ítical, Symbolical, Emblematical, &c. 889. Chriſtian Religion is not Myſtical, Symbolical, Ænigmatical, Emblematical ; but uncloathed, unbodied, intellectual, rational, ſpiritual. : 890 Cent. IX. APHORI S M S. $ ! keep a ; 890. He that Acts without Judgment of Reaſon, will ſoon Act contrary to it. 891. Malignity is Sin and Torment. 892. It is not for our good, to be at Li- berty to do our felves Hurt. This Religion us from which is not a matter of Revelation. 894: Heaven is a place, where God only Rules; where God is all in all. 895. It is but little Chriſt hath of 'Us; if he hath All 896. Make not an Injury, where there is none ; and there is none, where none is in- . tended : In ſuch a caſe it is a mere chance: 897. You do God Right, when you are Religious. 898. Fallibility is a Reaſon for Modeſty. 899. Either be a True Friend, or a mere Stranger: a true Friend will delight to do good; a mere Stranger will do no barm.. 900. No man is Convinced of Truth'; by another's falling into Paſſion : but rather fula pects Error and Deſign. Cena Moral and Religioùs cént. X. CENTURY X 1 IF great Works. gos. F we do not Revoke the Evil, which we have at any time commited; the Guilt will lye upon our Conſciences, without any Removal; and the Malignity will affect our Minds, without any Remedy. 902. There is no Happineſs, or Peace; but in the Compliance of the Temper of our Minds with the Reaſon of things: which is a Conformity with the Everlaſting Law of Righteouſneſs. 903. God takes a large Compaſs, to bring about his 904. As. God, in the Natural world, hath fitted one thing to another ; whereby Inepti- tude to the End is excluded: fo be will alſo; in the Intelle&tual world of Souls and Spirits, finally proportion Capacities and States. 905. The other world will be admirable for Congruities: 906. No man can be without the neceſſary Perfections of Humane Nature, Underſtand- ing and Liberty 907. Conſidering the Supernatural Proviſion of God for Man, and the Natural Accom- pliſhments of Man ; he is more Sufficient for the purpoſes of his Creation, than any inferior Creature whatſoever. 908. It is no leſs an Act of the Will; tho a man be, at the firſt attempt, unwilling: yea, though + . . . Cent. X. APHORISM S. 1 1 though he ſuffer great difficulty, in bringing himſelf to will. 909. God deſires no man's Salvation, with- out his Return; and God deſires no man's Re- turn, without his Conſent. 910. He that knows moſt, thinks: he has moſt ſtill to Learn. 911. Where there is moſt of God, there is leaſt of Self. 912. Pray, with Humility; and Do, with Diligence. 913. That Power is in vain, which is never in Uſe. 914. A great Faction is many Perſons, yet: but one Party; and that is but one Opinion ci ſuch a Faction is but one man, in point of Fudgement : one free-ſpirited man is, in this particular, equal to a whole Faction. 915. We Live by Grace; therefore it is comely for us to Acknowledge Grace. 1916. The Spirit of a Man is the Cdndle of the Lord; Lighted by God, and Lighting us to God. Res illuminata, illuminans. 917. Men are not ſo far to preſs the Prin ciples of God's Creation ; as to Neglect the Grace of God: nor fo far to depend upon the Grace of God; as to Negle&t the Principles of God's Creation.* 918. The Evil of Sin depends not only on the Will of God, forbidding it; there is an ? Intrinfcn : ز 1 * Not fa far to infift-on the Religion of Nature,, as to neglect the Religion of Jeſus Chrift: nor ſo far to inſiſt. on the Religion of Jeſus Chriſt, as to deny the Religion of Nature, Dr. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent, X Intrinſic Malignity in it, and it is deſtructive of the Subject. I 919. In the loweſt degree of Sin, there is a Variation from the Law of Righteouſneſs : in the higher degrees of Sin, there is a Con- tradiction to it, and an Inſurrection againſt it. 920. The direction of the Spirit makes not a Rule, diſtinct from Reaſon and Scripture : is not a third Rule. The Spirit adds only Af- ſiſtence; to find out the Reaſon of things, and ſenſe of Scripture. For theſe two, Reaſon and Scripture, are the whole Revelation of the Spirit; in reſpect of the Matter. 921. The Senſe of the Church is not a Rule ; but a thing Ruled. The Church is bound unto Reaſon and Scripture, and governed by them, as much as any particular Perſon. 922. The Notion of Faith in God, com- prehends in it Fidelity to God, 923. Where there is a Principle of Nature, there will be Progreſs to Perfection ; unleſs there be the Impediment of Violence. 924. An Holy Frame is a thing connatural to divine Truth. 925. He knows moſt, who Does beſt. 926. We cannot be Undone, but by our Selves. 927. God expects, Man ſhould Do; as He makes him capable. 928. Every man, that has to do with him that is truely Religious, is the Better for him. 929. True Religion hath done only good in the world: but Superſtition which is the Coun- terfeit Cont. X: APHORISM S. 3 terfeit of Religion, háth done the worſt and the greateſt Miſchiefs. 930. Religion doth recover the Soundneſs, and ſupply the Defects, of Nature: it doth beautify and adorn the Soul of man, with all thoſe Virtues; which accompliſh him for a Regular Life, and for an Happy End. 931. Truth is not only a man's Ornament, but his Inſtrument; It is the great Man's Glory; and the poor man's Stock: a man's Truth is his Livelihood, his Recommendation, his Letters of Credit.. · 932. Moral Endowments are the Materials of true Religion. There is no greater Piety, than true Virtue; but Virtue hath not the full Nature of Virtue, if there be not in it a re- ſpect to God. To have reſpect to God, 'is 'ej ſential to true Religion; and predominant in it. ?: Serie 933: The Highth of his Original, and the excellency of his End, repreſent Man'as a con- fiderable Creature ; that he was created by God, and appropriated to Him. 934. God's Image is upon Us'; and we bei long to Him. 935. Charity is a great deal better than Li- berty. 936. To have worthy Thoughts of God, and to be well-affected towards Him'; is the Sum of our Devotion. 932. God would never have made Manto that Highth and Excellency of Nature; if he had deſigned him only to worldly Drudgery: and Employment here below. .nl 1 I 938. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. X. 938. God is the Object, which does fully exhauſt and draw-out, which does perfe&tly exerciſe, and employ, the Faculties of Mind and Underſtanding. 939. Let us all fo Live ; as we fhall wil we had Lived, when we come to Dye; for that only.is, well, that ends well. 940. Many now think, Nothing is Enough for them : they may think kereafter, they had too Mucho 941. The being Righteous in our dealings with men, grounds an expectation of being Righteouſly dealt-with, by them. 942. The Reafon of a man's Mind muſt be fatisfied; no man can think againft it. 943; A man's Reafon is no where ſo much fatisfied, as in matters of Faith. 944: Repentance doth alter a man's caſe, with God; and therefore Repentance ſhou'd alter the caſe, between one Man and another. 945. God is more forward to Over-look, than Men are to Acknowledge, their Imper- fếctions. 946. It is to be ſuppoſed, that the matters. of Faith are perfectly agreable to the Nature and Relation of things.; which God originally made, and thoroughly underſtands, and which He neither Contradičts, nor Varies from ; be- cauſe that would be to Contradiet and Varyke from Himſelf. 947. The Religious repreſent.God to them- felyes, as Amiable; the Superftitious repreſent God to themſelves, 'as Formidable. 948. Cont. X. APHORISM 6 948: Religion is a true Friend to humane Nature in the firſt inſtance, it dóth Uphold and conſerve ; in the next, it doth Repair and Recover and Reſtore the Principles of God's Creation, loft in Man by ill ưſe, or neglect of Himſelf. 949. Religion doth lay the Foundation of mental: Peace, Satisfaction, and Content: 950. That which doth not, by it’s Self, or by it's Operation, Sanctify a man's mind, and make him better ; is not Religion. 951. Thoſe, who are fincére and boneft in their Religion, Are and Do always, what their Religion requires: they are fo, in their Temper; ; and they do ſo, in their Practice. 952 Hypocrites, Deſigners, and Practifèrs upon Religion, are noć under the Power of Religion ; but Religion is under the Power of their Deſigns. 953. As great a mind as God hath to Cone vert Sinners, He never did Force thein ; but doth Perſuade, and deal with them according to the Principles of their Make. 954: To "Impoſe whát is Unreaſonable, is to Uſurp upon the Creation of God: 955. A man is concerned to admit nöthing as Religion, but what is really fạch ; and what he does admit as Religion; he muſt be Anſwers able to, in Temper and Statë, in Life and Practice. 956. Religion doth poffefs and affect the whole mati : -in-the Undertanding; it is Know- ledge ; in the Life, it is Obedience, in the Affections, it is Delight in God; in our Car- riage 3 . , : < و 12 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. X. riage and Behaviour, it is Modeſty, Calmneſs, Gentleneſs, Quietneſs, Candor, Ingenuity ; in our Dealings, it is Uprightneſs, Integrity; Cor- reſpondence with the Rule of Righteouſneſs : Religion makes men Virtuous, in all Inſtances. -957: Religion has different Denominations and Names, from different Actions, and Cir- cumſtances; but it is One thing, viz. Uni- verſal Righteouſneſs : accordingly it had place, at all times; before the Law of Mofes, under it, and ſince. 958. Not-having mine own Righteouſneſs ; [ Phil. iii . 9; One of the durvánla 2. Pet. iii. 16.] is, in effect, not being recommended to God, by mine own Worthineſs ; not left to ſtand or fall, by mine own Deſervings. 959. Rom. i. 25. Worſhipped the Creature, mega + Ktíouvla. not more than the Creator, or above the Creator : but in conjunction with the Creator. 960. The Way, the Truth, and the Life [Fobn' xiv. 6.] that is, the true Way to eternal Life. 961. The golden Calf [Exod. xxxii. 1. ] was made, in ſtead of Mofes, the Mediator not in ſtead of God, Jehovah. The Idolatry of the world has been, not about the Object; but about tlie Mean, of Worſhip (Mediator. Keep your-felves from Idols [ 1 John v. 21.1 in oppoſition to Owning Jeſus Chriſt [ver. 20. So Rev. xiv. 9,11. contrary to 4, 2. and xiii. 5. and 2 Thef. 1. 3. Pbil. ii. 1o. Col. ii. 18. 962. None of thofe, who bad the Holy Spirit, in it's extraordinary Gifts, were ſaved by ز Gent. X. APHORISM S. by it : and Many, that had not the Holy Spirit in it's extraordinary Gifts, were faved without it; both before and ſince. 963. Sinners had rather be in any Com- pany, than alone with themſelves : had rather be in any Employment, than in Reflection upon themſelves. 964. The Creator of the world can be un- der no Confinement to any place in it.. : 965. Our moral actions are the foundation of our future condition. 966. Never was Religion any man's hin- drance : it is, at leaſt, Harmleſs and Innocent : and it doth not deſerve that Sacred Name, if it does us no Good. 967. If thou goeſt about any thing in a Paſion; thou takeſt upon thee to do a manly act, when thou art not a man. 968. He that behaves himſelf gravely, may command the Conſciences of other men; though he cannot ſtop their Mouths. No man is deſpiſed; but Himſelf is the main Cauſe of it. : 969. Nothing is more Spiritual, than that which is Moral. 970. A man may uſe, what he finds does better diſpoſe himſelf for any religious Duty ; as Faſting and Solitude may : but the Danger is, to fancy; ſuch a thing will recommend us to God. 971. A well-meaning perſon is more in danger of Superſtition, than of Hereſy: Re- ligious Ingenuity makes men abhor Profane- neſs and Hereſy. 972. 13 MORAL and ROLIGIOUS Cent X. 3 9727 The more we Ufe Wifdom and Virtue, the more they are our Own; and the more we have of them. 973.-ın.God, it is always infallibly as it Mould be; but in Creatures, is, and, ought to be, are often divided. 974. There is no Fate ; but on our part Reaſon and Prudence; on God's part Fro- vidence : and this Providence, and all neceſary Help; are as ſure and certain ; as the Exiſtence and Perfections of God. 97 3: No man doth think, Others will be better to Him; than He is to Them. 976. They, who miftake the Means för the End, may be reproved; without prejudice to the Means: for the Uſe of Means is nothing, if there be not thereby an Attainment of the End.- : 977. He that believes what God faith; with- out Evidence that God fays it ; doth not believe God, while he believes the Thing, which comes ftom God. 978. To talk much of one's Self, is to dif- patagé Others; to ufurp.over them, and give them Law. 979. Then you have hear'd a thing often enough ; when what you have hear'd is paſs’d into a Principle; and makes a Conſtitution of Mind, and is ſeen in Practice: 980. Our Zeal muſt be kindled with pure fire. from God's Altar; that it may rather Warm; thani Bum; Enliven, rather than En- flame. 981. Determinations, beyond Scripture, havé indeed Cent. X. RI APHORI S M S. 1 indeed enlarged Faith; but leſſened Charity, and multiplied Diviſions. 982. When the Love of Truth rules in the Heart, the Light of Truth will guide the Practice. 983. The Practice of Religion is the true Úſé of thoſe Faculties, with which God hath inveſted Humane Nature. 984. Some are the worſe for their Religion ; but ſuch Religion is certainly bad: If this No- tion be not underſtood and admitted.j.;" that * Difference of Opinion, in fome matters " about Religion, ſhou'd ņot make Difference " in Affection ;" We ſhall All be the worſe for our Religion. 985. The malignity of Sin does, in time, Vitiate the Principles of Nature; and the Sinner comes to Live intirely by Senſe and Paſſion ; who has been wont to put a Violence upon Judgment, Reaſon, and Conſcience. 986. He only can effectively Abfolve men from their Sins; who can looſe the Bonds of Death. 987. None fo Empty, as thoſe is. who are Full of themſelves. . 988. It is moft Chriſtian, and moſt Politic, and moſt Prudent; as the beſt rule for an eaſy: paſſage through the world, which at-belt is troubleſom enough ; neither to Provoke, dior be Provoked. 989. No man's Inferiority makes him con- temptible: Ēvery man, taken at his beft, -will be found good för Something. I 4 : 1990: , MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. X. 990. Religion begets in us Rational con- fidence, and a tranſcendent Pleaſure. 991. The work of this State is, to bring our Bodies into Subjection to our Minds; and to bring our Minds to Harmonize with God.. 992.. There ought to be a Sovereignty of mind and underſtanding, above Senſe and Af- fection. We ought to uſe the Means ; and enjoy the End. Man is more than bodily Teinper, Complexion, and Conſtitution. A man exiſting in Time, ought to conſider him- ſelf as laſting to Eternity. There ought to be a Subordination of the tranſactions of Time to the Subſiſtencies of Eternity. Theſe and ſuch like Principles of Reaſon are to the Soul; what Forms and Qualities are to Na- ture. 993. We may We may obſerve Scripture, in matters of Diſputation, not to ſpeak curiouſly; but ra- ther looſely, with indiflinction :. and ſome times to appear to favor both. Parts. 994. To be Challenged by the Reaſon of a man's cwn Mind, goes nearer to his heart; than to be cenſured by all the world beſides. 995. All the ways of God are ways of Goodneſs, Righteouſneſs, and Truth: why ſhou'd not Our's be fo too? 996. He that yields Obedience to Truth, does Right to himſelf; and, as a man knows things to Be, ſo ſhould he Da. 997. They have a Reaſon for it, which the Apoſtle had not; who reje&t the ITſe of Reaſon, in matters of Religion : but we muſt be Men, before we can be Chriſtianse 998. Cent. X. APHORISM S. 1 998. We cannot Remove too much Im- perfection from God; cannot Aſcribe too much Perfection to Him: therefore God is more Knowable, than any thing elſe. 999. Judgment and Practice will comply one with another. 1000. We ought not to Name God; with- out a Senſe of Him upon our Minds. CEN MORAL and RELIGIOAS Cent, XI. ) CENTURY XI. > I001.. Rom. i. 17. Juſtified by Faith. Habak. ii. 4. Gal. ii. 11. --faved Heb. x. 38. Live by Faith. Quotations in the New teſtament, out of the Old. Either there is 1. the like notion ; or 2. a parity of reaſon, though the caſe be different; or 3. they are founded in the proportion of Times one to another; or 4. they are bare Alluſion, or Accommodation; or 5. the reſpect of Type and Anti-type; or elſe 6. the Scripture delights in Scripture- phraſe ; or elſe 7. for the increafe of Senſe. 1002. God abates-of his own Right; that the Condition of Man might not be forlorn. Wherever there is a Right, there is a Power to moderate and abate-of that Right; yea, to part with it, if we pleaſe: Any man may take leſs than his Right; may pardon upon any Sa- tisfaction; upon no Satisfaction. We all fay, We have this Right: and will we deny it to God? 1003. There are Sufferings, which are no Puniſhments; as ļ, the effects of God's ab- ſolute Sovereignty: [Jacob and Eſau] 2. thoſe, which come for Probation and Trial: [Job] 3: which come for exerciſe and increaſe of Virtue. 4. which we are involved-in, thro' the neighbourhood of. Şinners: (Joſiah over- borne by Manaſſes Sin.].5. which prevent Sin and Cent. XI. A PHO RISM $. and Miſery : [as, knowing the power of In- fection, taking the Righteous away by Death from the Evil to come.] Thoſe Sufferings in this world only aré Punifhments; where Sin is the natural or moral Cauſe of Suffering. 1004. We are not Men, fo much by bo- dily Shapé ; aś by Principles of Reaſon and Underſtanding : wherefore thoſe, who dif- charge Reaſon from having any thing to do in mátters of Religion, do' no true Service to Re- liğion : do-råther purſue the Apoſtafy of the firſt Adam, and raże the foundations of God, For all the greater Rights, majora jura; a carica Sótald are founded in Reafon ; are preſup- poſed in Chriſtianity, are acknowledged and feinforced, 1005. The Materials of Religion are prin ciples of Happineſs, Ingrédients into it: our Obedieńce to the unchangeable Laws of Righ- teouſnefs is our Religion ; our being renewed in the Spirit of our minds, is the State of Re- Higiön ; our being reſtored to the Image of God, whereby we are prepářed' for future Glory, is the Effect of Religion ; our agree- ment with God, in Mind and Temper," is con- fequent upon Religion ; our worfhipping God, and doing Him Service, is the Uſe of Religion; our Háppinefs in the enjoyment of God, is the End, Refult, and final Accomplijhment of Religion. In thefe, we 'exèrċifè'our Religion; and enjoy our "Happinėſs : Out of theſe, we are neither Religious, nor Happy." TÖÓÓ: If; under pretence of the Spirit, any one produces what is inferior to: Senſe, Reaſon, MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. XT ز Reaſon, or the improved perfections of man in a natural way; he is certainly deſerted of God, ſunk below his Species; who will give ſuch a one Credit. Prov. xiv. Fools believe every word. It is great Weakneſs in us to take leſs at Man's hand for Aſſurance; than God, when He would have us believe, doth of His own accord give. 1007. Religion is not a Hear-ſay, a Pre- ſumption, a Suppoſition ; is not a cuſtomary Pretenſion and Profeſſion; is not an Affecta- tion of any Mode; is not a Piety of particular Fancy; conſiſting in ſome pathetic Devotions, vehement Expreſſions, bodily Severities, af- fected Anomalies and Averfions from the in- nocent Uſages of others : but confifteth in a profound Humility, and an univerſal Charity. 1008. Several Forms of words in Scripture expreſs the ſame State, and ſo vary only the notion ; (and ZoElSO ) differ not materially ; but in Subſtance are the ſame. To ſtand upon nice and accurate Diſtinctions of them, is need- leſs; uſeleſs ; ſince Scripture uſes them indif- ferently. (Regeneration &c.] This is fit to be known; to avoid troubleſome multiplicity in Religion, and the poſſeſſing the minds of men with thoughts, that Religion is more intricate and voluminous; than indeed it is: whereas Truth lies in a little compaſs, and narrozer room. Vitals in Religion are Few. 1099. I can give no Offenſe to any; when İ.worſhip Him that made me, in the trueſt Uſe and higheſt Improvement of my choiceft Fa- Cent. XI. A PHOR:ISM S. ز Faculties: for this Worſhip is internal, in- viſible,' mental, ſpiritual. 1010.- 2 Cor. xiii . 11. Be perfect] The fanie word in the original, as Matt. iv. 2.1. Mend- ing their nets. IOI I. It is not advifeable to make our- ſelves a Religion ; in materia libera : We ſhall be in danger of being tempted, to value our- ſelves by it ; to hold others to it; to abate as much for it, in things of weight. 1012. Col. ii. 23. 'Açaidia to, the Ne- glecting of the Body; hath no more of Re- ligion in it, fimply; than II Ano poor oægrós, the Satisfying of the Fleſh; mention'd with it: nor does there ſeem to be any reaſon; why Will-worſhip, in this fame paſſage, ſhou'd be taken in a worſe fenfe ; than it's companion in the place, Humility. 1013: In Worſhip, there is 1. Apprehenſion of the Object ; and Acknowledgement of it's Perfection : 2. Union with the Object; and Affection to it: 3. Senſe of Infirmity; and Dependence on the Object. Theſe are things in Worſhip; of which nothing can be done, but by the Spirit. 1014: The more Myſterious, the more Imperfect: That, which is myſtically ſpoken, is but half ſpoken: As Darkneſs is, in compare with Light; ſo is Myſtery, in compariſon with Kriowledge. 1015. A found Mind can not be, without Modeſty and Humility; a ſound Body can not be, without Temperance and Chaſtity: I017 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. XI. 2016. If I am, by the faculty of Reaſon, capable of God; then I am, by the uſe of Reafon, to take cognizance of God: if I am, by the faculty of Will, capable of chooſing Good; then I am in the uſe of Will, to chooſe that which is Belt: even God, the chiefeſt Good: if I have in me Superior and Inferior Powers; then I am to govern thoſe which are Inferior by thoſe which are Superior: if I am Accountable to One, who will examine me by Reaſon; then I am bound ſo to act, that I may be able to give Account of my ſelf to Reafon. 1017. It is no Diſparagement to the Divine Spirit ; that whạt is Pretended to come from it is examined, by. Reaſon and Scripture ; and alſo the ground of any man's Pretenſions to that Spirit. 1918. It is not Morally good ; to forbeas the Uſe, or abandon the Poffeſſion, of what is-Naturally good: Mortification is not deny- ing our Bodies; but denying our Lufts; Con.. tempt of the World is not Piety; but Con- tempt of thoſe that have the World, is Pride. And indeed, Pride and Humility are not diſting guiſhed by Wealth and Poverty. 1019.,We muſt Learn of the Divine Wife dom, Imitate the Divine Goodneſs, Depend. on the Dwine Power. 1020: We cannot Live among one another ; without being in fome Danger from one an- other: byt, this is the caſe of the Great and Rich; as well as of the Mean and Pear. The former have not leſs than the latter of Diſfatis- faction, Cent. XI. A P H O R I S M 9. faction, Anxiety, Fear, Danger : nay, the Rich Man hath as many Dependencies; as the Poor: though not the fame. 102T. Reaſon is the Foundation of Nature : Learning is the Super-ſtructure of Art. 1022. In the Goſpel we are taught the Expiation and the Extirpation of Sin : Satis, faction was Neceffary; to make Expiation ; that the Law might not be counted Võid, that Sin might not be counted Slight, that Repen- tance might not be counted Sufficient; and what hope is left to the Incorrigible of 'Im- punity ; which is not even allowed the Pea nitent, without Satisfaction ! ] that Puniſh- ment might not be counted Arbitrary, that Pardon might not be counted Indifferent; [buť a thing meet fit and neceffary for diſcounte- nancing Sin ; ) that Grace might not be counted Exorbitant; that Prerogative might not be counted Diſhonourable. By this Satis- faction, God provided for the Diſcountenan- cing of Sin, on the one hand; and for the Saving of the Sinner, on the other. 1023. As Sin is a Vitiating the Reaſon of Man ; the Reſtauration muſt be by the Reaſon of God; by Chriſt, 8 nó. 1024. God hath not provided better, for any effect ; upon which the Being and Wet-- fare of the Creation depends : than He hath? for that-Faith and Ohedience, upon which the Salvation of a Sinner depends. - * 10. 1025, Goodneſs and Wickedneſs cân not be Réconciled: God is unchangeable in the onez. and the. Impenitent is unchang'eable in the other, 2.1 ? MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. XI. other. God can not be reconciled to Unrigh- teouſneſs; and the Impenitent will not be re- conciled to Righteouſneſs. 1026. Man is enjoined nothing, by the Re- conciler ; but what is Good, and Beſt in it's ſelf; Neceſſary, and Beſt for Him: viz. to lay-aſide the Deviliſh Nature he was in, by Pride and Malice; and the Brutiſh nature he was in, by Senſuality and Intemperance. 1027. Let there be a proportionable care, againſt mif-apprehenſions in Judgement, miſ- expreſſion in Words, and miſ-carriage in Prac- tice. 1028. The beſt way to find out, what is Religion in us; is to inquire, what is True con- cerning God: for Religion in Us is our Re- ſemblance of God; who is ever beſt pleaſed with thoſe things in his Creatures, which are moſt eminent in Himſelf. 1029. Sinners are neither ſuddenly pu- niſhed, nor certainly pardoned, nor ever coun- tenanced, nor at all neglected, but graciouſly forborne. Our Time here is the Meaſure of God's Patience, and the Fruit of His Good- neſs. 1030. How much: Eaſier is it ; quietly to enjoy, than eagerly to conteſt! How vaſtly wiſer ! 1031. Allow for difference of Temper, be- fore you conſider the Religion of the party. The activity of Choler ſhou'd not have the eſteem-of-Divine Zeal; the mild Sanguine complexion fhou'd not have the honor of Chriſtian Meekneſs; the black Melancholy ſhou'd .. Cent. XI. A PHORISM S. { i The reaſon may ſhou'd not be condemned, for the heart of Unbelief; the dullneſs of Phlegm ſhou'd not fall under the cenfure of Dead-heartedneſs to- wards God. 1032. " Prince and Saviour,” is God's con- junction: We affect Punitive Power; and glory in it. Let any have the Executive part of Juſtice, a wiſe and good man will ſay; r4- ther than my ſelf. 1033. The fame Scripture [Asts v. 31.] makes Repentance ſtand for All in Us; and Forgiveneſs of Sins for All with God towards Us. 1034. It is uſual in Scripture to fumm-up all Religion, ſometimes in a ſingle Phraſe otherwhile in one Word. perhaps be; becauſe never any of theſe is alone. 1035. It is true Courage ; to ſuffer-for what is Good, and to bluſh-at what is Evil. 1036. To multiply Queſtions, is not the way to improve Religion: the Zeal of man fhou'd be turned, froin Curioſity of Specula- tion, to Honeſty of Practice. 1037. The great things of God are ſubject to His own reſolution: We are concerned, but not conſulted, in them.--[Melliah.] 1038. Evil bears-down the Law againſt it, by Violence; and ſets-up a Law for it, by Cuſtom. 1039. It was always Faith and Obedience; under every Diſpenſation, 1040. To a wiſe act of judgement, many things concur Reſpicere praeteriia, In pi. ? : К. E0 MORAL Moral and RELIGIOUS Cent, XT. . . cere præfentia, Circumfpicere contingentia, Pro- Spicere futura. Such fober meaſures are too cool and flow for Imagination ; which is active and unruly. Judgement is calm and fevere'; Invention is lively and pleafant. :: 1041 It is a great Performance, Hoc agere; to mind and attend to what we are about: He who hath not a certain mark in his Eye, will ſhoot at Rovers. Anima, quae ubique eſt, nullibiseft :: He, that thinks of every' thing, thinks of no thing. The moſt Buiſy men make the leaſt Riddance of Work. It is not within our meaſure and proportion; to he good at every thing. :. 1042. All Objects affect; and all Faculties incline: God and Nature have appointed a di- τι είing Principle ; [το ηγεμονικόν - that there might be in Multiplicity, a reduction to Unity', Harmony and Uniformity, in Vari- ety." 1043: Let the intermediate Ends be war- rantable; and the ultimate End worthy: 1044. They can make no Return, who lrave no Reception; they can give no Anſwer, who do not underſtand the Queſtion. 10450 The Devil often finds work for Them, who find one for themſelves: our Faculties can pot lie dłe z bat if not employed, will turn upon themſelves.? : "1046 In fending :Chrift, God did a New thing, ein reſpect of the Means ; an Old thing, in reſpects of the End: It was, in the ſtate of Créationit ought to be, in the ſtate of Re- generations STUS Fent. XI. A PHORISMS! 11.6 generation, it will be in the ſtate of Con- fummation. 1047. The Spirit of Pride is the great Mo- nopolizer of the world: but they only are in danger of Self-Conceit, who want Self-Know- ledye. The Proud man' lives in the Paradiſe of Fools; and neither in what he thinks, or does, or looks-for,: or:: promiſes : himſelf, is there any thing fincere. or true. 1048. Scripture mentions ſeveral påşticulars often ; (as Eph. iv. 31, 32.) not fo much for the ſake of making the Diſtinction accurate, as the Excluſion univerſal. 1049. Let not any man ſpeak; when he is himſelf in a Pallion; nor to any one, that is fo: -1050. Speak no Evil: out of Conformity to God, out of Contradiction to the Deving out of Obedience to Religion; out of Care for our Selves, out of Congderation of Others, out of. Allowance for Imperfectioni [the dm perfection of our State. - 1051: The Materiality of Vice is in the Complexion of the Body ; the Formality of Vice is in the Conſent of the Minder 1052. The ſelf-ſame thing in man: is the Matter of Virtue, and of Vice when the Conſent of the Mind is the Form of Yice, the Difient of the Mind is the Form, cofridWirtei; and vice verfa. There was: in-Man's Nature, at the Creation, the Matter of Vice, as well: as of Virtue; the one cou'd not have been; without the other; for the fame thing is the. Matter of either. And as this was in Man, fo Sini K 2 it MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. XI. it was in the World: and the Matter of Evil is not Evil. 1053. He, that wrongs any Creature, fins againſt God, the Creator : becauſe God is the Owner of the Creature, the Mainteiner of Right, the Avenger of Iniquity, the Rule of Obedience, in His Nature, or by His Will. 1054. It is Neceſſary to know, what God has reveled; concerning the way of Pardon by Chriſt: it is impoffible to know more than He has reveled, If men wou'd forbear to explicate farther; there would be more Chrift- ianity, and leſs Controverſy: 1055. Expiation of Sin is made: when, upon ſomething done or ſuffered, (either or both), according-to God's pleaſure appoint- ment and acceptance ; God is pacified, the Fault is pardoned, the Guilt extinguiſhed, the Puniſhment prevented, and the Sinner re- Jeaſed. [Archútgwois. Eph. i: 7. Col. i. 14. Hib. ix. 12. Kartagiouisi Tit. ii . 14. Heb. 1: 3: 1. Fobni. 7: Aglasuós Heb. ix. 13. 'A8- τησις αμαρτίας Ηeb. ix. 26, Ιλαςήριον· Rom. iii.-25. Inagués i John iv. 10. Katanazija Rom. v. 10, . 1056. A Good word coſts as little, as a Bad one's and is worth more : is more to the pura pofe: 1957: ** Thy good things” -- Inſtruments of Virtue, 'ånd Arguments to Thankfulneſs. - 1058. Conſcience is God's Vice-gerent ; Ozis. Evciäez the God; "dwelling within us. 1059. " That it might be fullfilled” that is it so comes to“ be fulfilled; this comes to be يم * sii Cent. XI. APHORISM S. be the caſe repreſented by the faid Prophet: [ive êxßałox'v, not ålti21xbv conſequential, not caufal. 1960. To lefſen the number of things. law- full in themſelves; brings the Conſciences of men into Slavery, multiplies Sin in the world, makes the way Narrower than God has made it, occaſions Differences among men, diſcou- rages Comers to Religion, rebuilds the Par- tition-Wall, is an Uſurpation upon the Family of God, challenges ſucceſſive Ages backward and forward, afligns New Boundaries in the world, takes away the opportunity of Free- Will Offerings. 106). Theſe four things are in conjunction: the Freeneſs of Grace, the Fullneſs of Satis- faction, the Virtue of Pardon, the Efficacy of Repentance. All is done for Us, that was proper ; or is poſſible. 1062. " Holding the Truth in Unrighte- " ouſneſs ; Leaving the Natural Uſe; Not Diſcerning the Lord's Body; Not Hold- ing the Head; Turning the Grace of " God into Laſciviouſneſs." are charac- teriſtical forms of ſpeech for Specifical mil- carriages, in their ſeveral inſtances, 1063. It pleaſed God to provide ſuch à Juſtification of Righteouſneſs ; that it ſhoud be practiſed by Chriſt; in the Human nature of Sinners: and ſuch a Condemnation of Sin ; that the Human nature of Sinners, in which Chriſt practiſed Righteouſneſs, ſhou'd notwith- ftanding Die. 1004. In a Sinner, there is an Inſurrection ! K 3 ot MORAL and RÉLIGIÕÈS CéntX. . of the Higher Faculties againft God; and of the. Inferior Faculties againſt the Superior. 1065. Some things are according-to the Nature of God - Holineſs, Righteouſ- neſs: fome, according-to the Relation we ſtand-in to God, as Creatures; Reverence, Submiffion: ſome, according-to our Capacity, as Intelligent and Voluntary ; Conſent of the Mind : fome, according-to our Compoſition and Make; (Soul and Body] - Reaſon above Senfe, Body ſubfervient to Mind, Sobriety fo- vereign to the Mind, Temperance conſer- vative of the Body: ſome, according-to the mutual Relation between Us and our fellow Creatures; - Juſtice, Righteouſneſs . Theſe are matters of general Obligation, and univerſal Acknowledgment. 1066. God accepts that, as the Condition of a Covenant; which was the Duty of Man's Creation. : 1067 He, that firſt Reproves is 'unwilling to. Puniſh. 1068. The Times behind us are junior ; the times before us, ſenior: the Seniority of the World is to come; the Juniority of the World is - paſs.d. [ Antiquitas Saeculi eft Juventus Mungi Why do we attribute perfection to the World, backward; and to a Man, for- . ward 1069. The Jewiſh Church was not ſo under the Lawas not to be under Grace; "and the Chriſtian Church is not ſo under Grace, as not to be under the Läw. 3-1070. Cent. XI. A PHORI S M S. ز 1070. It is a thing of the greateſt Impor- tance.; upon what Authority we Believe. 1971. The hiſtory of the Creation ment- tions only the poſitive Law: the ſtate of the Creation held-forth the moral Law. " [Eau TOIS vóuã need no other declaration.] 1072. "Evx219G. Bonez for all variety of States; for all diverſity of Seaſons ; for all dif- ference of Caſes; for all ſorts of Supply Seaſonable : when callid to act; when in danger to fall; when ready to be afáulted ; when brought to account. 1073. Too much Foreſight wou'd make too little Self-enjoyment. 1074: The Right to Pray is a Truſt; from thoſe, who are to pray with us : therefore no- thing doubtful and uncertain, or peculiar and fingular, ſhou'd be put into our Prayer; or be matter of it. 1075. Ill-nature doth not credit the effects of Good-nature. We ſhall hardlý think truely of God; if we be not like God: and They muſt needs miſrepreſent God; who think Him ſuch as Themſelves; before they have made Themſelves ſuch as Him. 1076. No man will attribute the Good done by another, to a better Difpofition ; thán is in Himſelf: therefore an ill-nátúrd man ei- ther will not believe, whàt is done by a gocd- natur'd man; or will aſcribe it to Deſign: or perhaps, to Folly. 1077. God accounts of Mëni, rather 1. ae- cording-to their fettled Conſtitution, than ad- çording to their particular Diſturbance; 2. ac- K4 cording i ci MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cont. XI. ز Cording to their general Courſe of Life, than any Occaſional act; 3. by what they do with Choice, than by what they do with Reluctance; 4.- in the full uſe of their Reaſon, than in the Hurry of Confuſion; 5.--- with their Intention, than contrary to it or without it ; 6. by.what they do through Reſolution, though after much Struggle: and God makes Allowance for Weakneſs and Frailty, in the Manner. 1078. The Execution of Malefactors is not more for the Credit of Governors; than the Death of Patients is for the Credit of Phyſicians. 1079. What is good, only becauſe God (our Creator) commandeth it ; we do out of Gratitude to God, (our Creator) who com- mandeth it: for it were Ingratitude to uſe our Faculties againſt Him, who made and gave them. 1080, The Virtue of every Inſtrument lies in it's Uſe; and if the End be not attained, the Inſtrument is vain : So it is, as to Inſtruments of Religion ; Prayer, Faſting, Sacraments; when we are brought to a Religious frame of mind, and put upon a Religious courſe of life : then the Uſe of the Religious Inſtrument is right: not elſe. 1085. Among Politicians, the Eſteem of Religion is profitable: the Principles of it are troubleſom. 1082. Embodied “acts, ſuch as the Sacram. mental are; are beneath acts purely mental and ſpirituals ſuch as Prayer is. " It is not for the credit. ز Cent, XI. APHORISMS credit of Religion, to lay all the ſtreſs upon one motion in Religion; and to be remiſs in others: nor to advance a temporary act, ac- comodate to the ſtate of Imperfection ; above acts purely ſpiritual, which are to continue to Eternity. 1083. 1 Cor. xi. The Failing is, een desexgi- Www• doing without Difference: the Indiſpo- fition is, χίσματα, αιρέσεις. V. Intemperance : the Danger is, xgillanot rate agbluza 1084. The moral part of Religion conſiſts of things good in themſelves, neceffary; and in- diſpenſable: the inſtituted part-of Religion con- fiſts of things made neceffary only by the de- terminations of the Divine Will. He, that denies the former, is Atheiſtical; he, that de- nies the latter, is Infidel. 1085. It is a pregnant argument, that Wif- dóm hath not governed the world: that many have more readily received pretending Entbu- fraſm and Preſcience, with ſácred regard; than wifeſt Laws and beſt Reaſons. Socrates over- threw Enthuſiaſm and Superſtition ; when he taught men to receive no Doctrine, againſt or without Reaſon. 1086. The world will never be releaſed from the Superſtitions of the Roman Church till men confine themſelves, in matters of Re- ligion, to free Reaſon and plain Scripture. 1087. God aſſured his rejection of the Jewiſh Church, and His acknowledgement of the Gentile Church; by His taking Prophely wholely from the one, and at the ſame time giving it to the other. 1088. . 1 : MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent: XI i i 1988. God, who made us what we Are, wou'd have’us employ and improve what we Have: Faculties, without any acquired Ha- bitsy witnefs for God; and condemn Us. L 1089. Weigh every matter of Religion ; till the mind receives Satisfaction about it: God gives this Allowance ; and will ſtay for Obſervance; in that particular ; till it be done. L' 1ogor. If you See not well, Hear the better; if you fee pot far, hear the more : „the Con- fequence of Truth is great ; therefore the Judgement about it muſt not be negligent. 109r. The ſtate of Religion in it's Subject, conſiſts of three parts; 1. the due Compoſure of the mind; it's calm and quiet Temper, it's ſettlement in Peace through the eſtabliſhed Government of fober principles of Reaſon and Underſtanding over Senſe and brutiſh Affection. 2. an univerſal Reconciliation with the whole Creation of God; particularly, a living in Concordo and good Will with thoſe made in otra.Image and Likeneſs; a hearty and trúe. Endeavor to promote and advance the general good of Mankind. 3. the Mind being united to God, by Faith and good Affection. 1092. Why ſhould one deal roughly with his Boſom-Friend, the Senſe of his Mind which;-if in Peace, is his Solace in all Soli- táries to." gratify an Acquaintance, which goes and comes ! --21093'Let our Souls have their Due; and our Bodies not too much. 1094. 'Adunia, 'Atagasic. Happineſs, Heari's-Eaſe in the world-Not trouble our- felves Cent, XI. A P H O'R ISM S. cs felves backward, for thoſe things that aregone; nor forward; for that which is not yet. 1095. The perfection of Wiſdom muſt abound in Care; the perfection of Goodneſs, in Beneficence; the perfection of Power, in Activity. 10g6. The moſt advantageous - Inſtitution of Religion is in Health and Strength : the moſt neceffary Uſe of Religion is in Anguiſh and Death. We are not then fit to Learn' ; when we are called to Uſe. 1097: Fear, is the denomination of the Old Teſtament ; Believe, is the denomination of the New 1098. Fallibile falli, is no more; than Fragile frangi, and Mortale mori. Every Creature is fallible; may fall in reſpect, of his Being; may fail, in his Operations; he may be up-held ab extra ; but is ab intra defectible both ways. What is Created, muſt be Finite; and what is Finite, muſt be Fallible : when therefore God made a Creature, [finite and fallible). He reſolved to Forgive ; upon Re- pentance and Amendment. ..1099. If Placability be an Excellency here below, it is by Derivation from above; is . ori- ginally there, and fo- more abundantly.: for what is by Imitation and Participation, muft be Leſs where it is ſecondarily, than where it is primarily. 1,100. He, that repents, for what is done in time paſs'd; reſolves to:obey, in what he does for time to-come, 7 ܙܨ 1 ! CEN MORAL and RELIGIOUS Gent. XII. CENTURY XII. IIOI. A S Sin is a Reflection upon God, the Sovereign; ſo He is concern'd to vindicate his Honor: as Sin is Malignity in the World; ſo God, the chiefeſt Good, is concern'd to oppoſe it; and deliver the Crea- ture from it. 1102. The worſt of men do not ſo much need Our forgiveneſs; as the beſt of men need the forgiveneſs of God. We have cauſe to be Diſpleaſed with our-felves; but not to Throw- ز away our-felves. · 103. There is no hindrance of God's Par- don, from the Unchangeableneſs of His Na- ture, from the Strictneſs of His Laws, or from the Neceſſity of His Juſtice. 1104. The great Excellence of Chriſt's Sa- crifice did confiſt in the Moral conſiderations belonging to it. 1105. It is Venerable, to have Will to do Good; when one has Power to do Hurt. 1106. He is wanting to his own Life, who cuts-off his Acceſs to God: accordingly, no Creature is ſo unprovided and deſolate, as the Atheiſtical and Profane; the one has denied God in principle, the other in practice. But Religion provides-for the worſt condition; be- cauſe it admitts us to the full uſe of God. 1107. There is but One Church fone Re- Jigion) in all ages. It is thought, the World does Cent. XII. A PHORISM S. does not grow Old; it is certain, the Church does not. 1108. All acts of Vindicative. Juſtice and Mercifull Forgiveneſs, are ſubject to Wiſdom. Actual Puniſhment is not neceſſary to the up- holding of Government: but only the Power of Puniſhing, or Pardoning; as ſeems good to Wiſdom 1109. Many make and uſe their Religion but as an outer Garment, made in faſhion; to put-on abroad, put-off at home. ITI0. The favorable Declarations of God are called His Covenant — [ The Rain-Bow.] 111. In worldly and material things, what is Uſed is ſpent: in intellectuals and ſpiritual things, what is not Uſed is not Had. 1112. Men are in Thought and Appre- henſion ſuch, as they are in Temper and Af- fection. 1113. A good man's Life is alf of a piece. 1114. The Scripture denominates none a Sinner ; from common Infirmities, involuntary Acts, invincible Errors, ſtrong Temptations, or firſt Irregularities. 1115. Our beſt Entertainment is with our own mind; and by communication from other good minds. 1116. It is a wonder, any ſhou'd think That might be done by Sacrifice : which cou'd not be done by mental Devotion. · Nothing in Sacrifice cou'd be acceptable to God; but the meaning of the Sacrificer. 1117. Quære, Were - Sacrifices Expreſſions of Homage, Signs of Gratitude, Impoſition of 3 !! MORAL and Religious Cent. XII. } pure and ވެ of Mulets, or Gratification of Prieſts, the Servants of God? 3 11.18. We are abſent from God; not by being other-wbere, than He is; who is every- where a but by being other-wiſe, than He is; who is all Good : by a ſenſual Life, a worldly Mind; a wicked State. 8 Tóma, á Mix' tfónw. 1119. Jewiſh Sacrifice was 'Avcépernois é jezga Thôr. Heb.-x: 3. Chriſt's Sacrifice was "Apecis ei jaatimet Matt. xxvi. 28. 17120; : The. Being, which is moſt undefiledis not to be ſerved, yugais ucocédecin with difeaſed minds. [Nothing with Blemiſh was to be Sacrificed. ] We muſt come to God withi intention to forſake Sin, when we pray it may be forgiven ; with diſpoſition to maké uſe of the Grace we beg; with refolution to fet-about what we pray we may do: For our Prayers are to be Inſtruments of Piety and Virtuer. ,S!... 11292 God hath rejected His own Inſtitu- tions; when they have been made Final, put in competition with Morals, or made compen- ſations' fór Morals Ifa. i. 11-17. Ixvi. 3: Mico-vi. 7, 8: Jer. vii. 4, 5, Amos v. 21. Hao Ixiv. 6. Rom. xii. i. Eph. v. 27. Rev. xix. 8 rifoba- jii. 7,-8, 9. Rom. viii. 2. In- ſtitutes have their foundation, in the Will of God and the matter of them is alterable: Mörals have their foundation, in the Nature ofi.Godz and the matter of them is neceffary and unalterable. T12Make allowance for Ignorance and Incogitaney, før Neceſſity; for harder: Cira cumſtances, Cent. XII. A PHORISM $. 2 tances, for Miſapprehenſions and Miſtakes, for Frailty and Infirmity: be wanting in-ng- thing, that the Reaſon of the thing and the Equity of the caſe call-for. 1123. Take-away the Self-conceited; and there will be Elbow-room in the world. The Leffon given by Wifdom is Γνώθι σεαμά. and none have learned it, but the Wiſe. :* 1 I 24. It is ſoon enough to Determine, at laſt; it is too ſoon to Determine, at firſt, 1125. Creatures univerſally beneficial have been look'd upon, as lively Repreſentatives of God: [Sun, Moon] therefore it is Nature's Senſe, that God is Good and Communicative. If God be not endeared and recommended to: as by His Goodneſs; we ſhall never be engaged to His Service, by our Senſe of it: for our Returns are the Fruits of our Refentment... 1126. Sometimes, more than Men; other- while, leſs than Children: one-while, Melan- choly and wholly at a loſs; as if we could do nothing: another-while, Intoxicated with Pride and fond Opinion ; as if we cou'd do all things: Of the multitude of thoughts, which come into our minds; how Few, come to any thing! That is nothing to use by-and- by which a little before was.: obe of the greateſt things in the world. 1127. Religion is not a Syſtem of Doce trines, an Obſervance of Modes; a Heat of Af- fections, a Form of Words, a Spirit of Qenio foriouſneſs. js-Linie : 1128. Look we upon our-felves,i as {ubor- dinate and fubfervient: take no more than the ز *. MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. XII. 1 the place and proportion of ſecond Cauſes. God will do the work of the firſt Cauſe ; but ex- pects, We ſhou'd do the work of the ſecond Cauſe. There is a Conjunction of the firſt and ſecond Cauſe to the fame Effect, in their ſeveral Orders. 1129. Perfection is always to be meaſured, by it's Nearneſs to the Pattern of Perfection. 1130. Power may do Harm; Wit may di- rect thereto ; but Goodneſs fanctifies both. 1131. Platoniſts' principle of Creation, 'Epws nd Llevize the Activity of divine Love; the Non-entity of all Creatures. The groſſeſt Errors are but Abuſes of fome noble Truths. 1132. Chriſt died, for the eſtabliſhment of the New Covenant, his Teſtament: and roſe- again, to be his own Executor of it. 1133. Mankind have the work of the Lamy written in their Hearts ; (Rom. i.) in reſpect of the principles of the Creation : and they have the work of the Goſpel written in their hearts ; in reſpect of the principle of Reſto- ration : that the Goodneſs of God will Pardon. 1134. We are not Free from Good, but to it: we are ſo made Free, as (under God) to be Subject to the Rule, engaged to the End, obliged to Others, true to our Selves. 1135. All Expectation hath ſomething of Torment. 1136. Some run abroad, to fetch nothing home: ſome are ſo ever a-doing, that nothing is done: fome can not Do, for want of Think- ing; and can not Think, for Thinking. 1137. Fulfill all righteouſneſs, Matt. iii. 15. that Cent. XII. À PH OR ISM S. that is, accompliſh all Declarations concern ing the Meſſiah. Pfali cxliii. Dan. ix, 16. 1138. Some ſpeak, only becauſë they will not hold their Tongue: 'making Speech an End, not á Means. If we cannot Govern our tongues, we may Impriſon them."EqrGolovtwo, 1139. Every thing is dangerous, to him that is afraid of it: 1140. When Anger goes before, matter of Repentance commonly follows after. 114.1. Rule of Right is the Weak inan's Strength, and the Strong man's Curb: il makes Minė niy-own, and arraigns the In- truder's violence. 1142. He, that repents; is Angry with him- ſelf: I need not be angry with him. 1143: It is not a Warranty of our action ; that the thing comes in our Minds: our own Reaſon, and the Reaſon of things is more to us than Suggeftion. [Enthuſiaſm:] 1144. It is the Madneſs of Superſtition; . to think, to charin God by Cerimonies: indeed, to expect That from any thing; which God hath not promifed, and which Reaſon cannot account-for. 1145. Cautelous Suſpenſe, for want of Ar Curance ; is Better than confident Preſumption, upon Pregnancy of Imagination. It is Saier to ſuppoſe; than to determine. 1146. Let our Love to one another reſena ble God's Love to us all: Love of Benevolence, to make us Lovely; and Love of Compla- cency, when we are ſuch. 1 L 1147 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent, XII. 1147. We may juſtly wonder, how any one can ſo far deceive himſelf; as to think, he is Religious: who nouriſhes in himſelf ſuch diſ- poſitions of mind; as, when we deſcribe the Deviliſh Nature, we aſcribe to the Enemy of God and Man. He, that is bad, is then worſt . of all; when he feigns himſelf to be good. 1148. We muſt not take Religion upon us, as a Task; nor bear it, as a Burtben. 1149. He, that neither knows himſelf, nor thinks he can learn of others; is not Fit for Company. 1150. In the Death of Chriſt there are 1. many Excellencies, Worthineſſes; as Relig- nation to God, Compaſſion to Man: 2. ſin- gular Virtues exerciſed ; as Faith in God, Pa- tience, Meekneſs, Gentleneſs: 3. due Ac- knowledgements made; as Man's debt of Obe. dience, God's demand of Right, the Law's authoiity, the Sinners' cauſe not defenſible, Creatures' inſolency corrected, eminent in- ſtance of Impartiality: 4. fitting Submiſions to God; to raze out the memory of man's mil-behaviour by affectation, Uſurpation, In- folence, Bold practice; to reſtore a Creature- ſtate ; 15. ſingular Intimations ; of the Cauſe- leſsneſs, Filthineſs, and Demerit of Sin ; 6. neceſſary . Ends ſerved; Impediment to'divine Goodneſs removed, Man put in a new way of life. 11gi. Where Evil is removed, and Wé. diſburtheñed; we enjoy our Eaſę, rather than eſtimate our Engagement. : :: 1152. Ceat. XÍT. A PHP ở R S M S : 3 SM 1152. To the Willing mind, every thing is an Argúment; to Faction and Deſign, 10% thing is Evidence enough 1153: It is not ſo bail, to Forget God; as it is to Miſrepreſent Him; a Neglect is not ſo bad as an Abuſe. 1154. Contradiction (Repugnancy) in terms, is a Limitation upon Omnipotency in Naturals Turpitude in the fact, is a Limitation upon Omnipotency in Morals: becauſe the pers, fections of Wiſdom and Holineſs are effential to the divine nature: 1155. A wiſe man will not communicate. his differing thoughts to unprepåred minds, of in a diſorderly manner Tamaraw. Phr. 1156. 1. Sin is Pardonable; 2. God hath a. Right to pardon ; 3. it is very credible, God will pardon thoſe who repent; 4. it is not at all credible, God will pardon obftinate and con- tumacious finners: 5. in what war, in uſe of what means, upon what terms God will pardon fin ; lies in God wholly to reſolve, détermine, and declare: 6. it is declared in Scripture, that God doth pardon ; in and through Chriſt. 1157. Chriſt did, 1. what the divine Will and Pleaſure thought fit; 2. what Reaſon and Equity called-for; 3: what was worthy and valuable too, in it's ſelf; 4. what was uſeful and tending to noble purpofės ; 5. what was available and effectual, in reſpe of iſſue;. Om what was pleaſing and acceptable to God: 1158. It is not in our power, to bring our Condition to our Minds ; but it is our daty, to bring our Minds to our Condition. L 2 1159 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent, XII. ; 1159. Irreſolution lofes Buis’neſs; Rafhnefs Jpóils it. 1160: If we do not fee cauſe to reverence God, on the account of His excellency and perfectionſ to ſubmit-to and obey Him, on the account of Our relation and ſate; to refer our-felves to Him, have faith truſt and affiance in Him, on the account of His care of Us ; , to love and delight-in Him, to acquieſce in Him, and make Him Final to us, as our Cen- tre'; to be thankfull and gratefull, on the ac- count of His goodneſs and kindneſs; if we are ftrangers to theſe inſtances of Piety, or un.. ſatisfied as to them; we can give no good ac- count of the uſe of our Reaſon: for we are recitirally obliged, in all theſe particulars which are the materials of Godlineſs. And if 'it had not been for that excellent Object, we call GOD; and for the noble Act, we call Gødlineſs', there had been no need of the fa- culty of Reaſon among men: but a high ele- Vation of Senſe and Imagination had been ſuf- ficrent. Leolia Fons Leftor. Nothing is of Faith, that is not in Sériptüre's nothing is neceffary, as otherwiſe., exprefled; nothing is certain, as farther made- out? We may" Live in Chriſtian Love and Union without Confent and Agreement in non-fçriptural exprefſions or forms of words. 19962: God, as the author of Nature and of Grace,"des' ágree perfectly with Himſelf. 1163. In the heavenly and divine ſtate, to be able to do Good, to be Willing, and to Doich are repreſented as Convertible 1164 ܐ ܙ ܙ ܝ ܐ 1 3.1? mision . . زرد Cent., XII. APHORISM S. 1764. Charity of univerſal extent, is better; than Truth of particular apprehenſion. If we maintained only ſuch Truth, as.is unque. ſtionable ; our Religion wou'd be cool enough, Defend God's Truth, in God's Way. nies 1165 A Stranger is admitted, upon Rer commendation; an Offender is pardoned, upon : Interceſſion, an Enemy is reconciled, by Mer, ; diation INT i > 1.166. The appearances of God in human Shape, under the Old Teſtament; were Premy pårations to the appearance of God in human Nature, under the New. 1167: We can make nothing a Mean of Worſhip; but it will be inferior to our-ſelves. 1168. It is neither neceſary, nor indeed poſible, to underſtand any matter of Faith ; Farther than it is Reveled, that is not, Reveled, which is not made Intelligible: that which can he put into Words, may be taken into a man's Underſtanding — Myſtery is not what is Un- intelligible, and cannot be underſtood, inoy it is Reveled; but that which is peeifical and critical in the Profeſſion : which they only underſtanı', who are pépvá pièyos; initiatedenen 1 169. Saving Faith is no Jingle Act, The, preciſe notion of Faith is not a Scripture no- tión. jo-01 1170. We are all of us at times in a Fool's Paradiſe, more or leſs.; as if All were our own, all as we would have it 6 00 1171. Repine ! Is not the world Moral, worſe than the world Natural our bad Man ners are our bad Times: We con i mn the L 3 Effect, MORAL and RELIGIOUS Cent. XII. Effect, which is Suffering; and abſolve the Cauſe, which is the Sinner. 1172. If God ſhou'd ſo negle&t. Us, in any one moment of our Lives; as "We neglect God, the whole time of our Lives : what would our Beings be worth to Us! 1173. We are to acknowledge God, as the Original of our Being and Father of our Spi- rits; to be thankful to Him, as preſerving and maintaining us; to he governed by Him, He be- ing Supreme and Sovereign; to ſerve Him, as our Lord and Owner; to reverence admire and adore Him, as the inoſt Perfect Being; to believe in Him, as moſt Certain and Infal- lible ; to trift in Him, and commit our Selves and our Concerns to Him, as being moſt Faithful; to love and delight-in Him, aš the firſt and chiefeſt Goodneſs; to reft in Him, as the Centre of immortal Spirits ; in all things to refer our-ſelves to Him, as being Ultima'e and Final. 1174: There are A Mictions, for our Good; Temptations for our Trial; Difficulties, for our Exerciſe; and Employments, for our Powers and Graces. 1175. The God of Truth and Holineſs will not give fuch Atteſtation to Impofture, For- gery, and Iniquitý ; as wou'd be an invin- cible Temptation : which excuſes Mis- belief, as well as invincible Ignorance excuſes' a Mif- carriage; the one in point of Faith; the other, in point of Practice. 1176. ** God heareth not Sinners” - i.e. doth not Miracles for them, or by them; doth nothing ز 1.. way. derſtand, concerning things I ſhould underſtindi Cent. XII. A PHORISM S. nothing to give them Credit, in their evil 1177. No Signz can warrant our Belief; unleſs it be in conjunction with a Doctrine worthy of God. 3178. It was the Blaſphemy of the Holy Ghoft; to traduce the Evidence of Miracles, with Indignity to Chriſt; who did them, and was atteſted by them I 179: Miſery ſpeaks for it’s Self, when no- thing is ſaid ; and Goodneſs ever pities it but. Obſtinocy is another Provocation. 1180. An Impenitent cannot be a Believer; for all neceffaries to an act of Faith are want, ing. God can lay-aſide His Anger : but We cannot lay-afide Our Fears. I 181. To be miſchievous to men, becauſe of their Religion, will lie heavy upon men's Conſciences ; when they conſider, How little Religion they had themſelves; when they were ſo miſchievous : And, if any die Mara tyrs; thofa, who put them to death, are Mura therers of the worſt kind. 1182. Enthuſiaſtic Doctrines me good things ítrained out of their Wits. Among Chriſtians, thoſe, that pretend to be Inſpired, ſeem to be Mad : among the Turks, thoſe, that are Mäd, are thought to be Inſpired. 1183. If any ſpeak, in a language a language I do una as having ſtudied and conſidered them and what is ſaid is not at all Intelligible to Me'; though he pretends to the Spirit, I do not violate Charity to think, the Speaker under- stands ز I 4 MORAL and RELIGIOUS Gent, XII. 1 * Stands not Himſelf well, but that he ſpeak- - eth Words without Senſe. For the Parts of men are not ſo vaftly dif-proportionate; and what is moſt Spiritual-is molt Rational 11871A Wiſe: man is ever ready to ac- knowledge; that he owes the better half of that Title to good Converſation. 118.59 It is inconſiſtent with any kind of Honeſty and Virtue; to neglect and deſpiſe all kind of Religion. 1186. It is not good to Live, in Feft; ſince we muſt Die, in Earneft. 1187: Where God owed Nothing ; He is not unrighteous, if He gives Leſs. * 1188Where the Doctrine is neceſſary and important; the Scripture is clear and full : but, where the Scripture is not clear and full ; the Doctrine is not neceſſary or important. o 1189. Goodneſs is contrary to Pravity and Wickedneſs, and alſo contrary to Severity and Anger : the former is eſſential to the Nature of God; the latter is ſubject to the Will of God se 1190.God can be wanting to None, in puwhat is:neçeſſary to bring them to. Good : buţ God may and does abound unto Some, in what is conducing to their Advantage. 1191. The Reaſon of the Thing is as cer- tạin, as Ņature and Infallibility: the Reaſon of the Mind is as certain, as the Fallibility of the Man can admitt. | 192, I Cor. xy. 47. By our Creation at firſt, we were Earthly; through our Regene- ration 1 y Virtue, we are Heavenly: 1 . ܢ 1193 Cent. XII. APHORISM S. 1194 1193. The Law fuppoſes, that the Judge is an Advocate for the Priſoner ; and will ſug- geſt ſuch Defences, as are lawfull. .. As we do for our Selves, we ſhou'd do for Others ; Excufe, where we cannot Juſtify. 10 7495 Doubts and Miſtakes are excufable; in a Creature, who is finite and fallible : but Neglets and Abuſes are inexcufable ; in a Creatures that is Intelligent and Voluntary. 1196. Yeſterday we were not ; To-day we are bát litte; Tomorrow we may be nothing. 1197 To confine Mind and Reaſon to God, is no more than to confine the Eyes to what is Viſible, and the Ears to what is Audible : the Faculty is in full Liberty ; though con- fined to it's proper Object. 14168. Some make their laſt Underſtanding, the firlt thing they donen sorte sono di ne 1109 In the Reconciliation by Chriſt, the Rights of God, and the Neceſſities of Men, are equally conſidered. i 190110 srl; : 1997 po tibbo A re&tified Underſtanding, that hath a ſettled Judgement of Truth ; a Jančtified Na- gures reconciled to Goodneſs; a pacified Con- ſcience, diſcharged of Guilt: Theſe things are contained in a State of Religion. se bo SambA tort or gubnog at Toe as small or lo nółss i dT 1011 TOLOST ade validilistal bris 97015 as niş: to vaikidats i orizat sis:1725 25 ai briMi srijo simbs (bo no Mori A JE Foung tová TVZ ISIT 911999 SI ZG rotonda vidi svow thn lovo O cutiv vin100157 EDIE A PRAYER for M 100 28 99 LED Mooit valita A Prayer for Morning or Evening. Oft Bleſſed God, the Creator and Go- vernor of the World; the only true God, and Father of our Lord Jeſus Chriſt. We thy Creatures were Made to ſeek and find, to know and reverence, to ſerve and obey, to honour and glorify, to imitate and enjoy Thee; who art the Original of our Beings, and the Centre of our Reſt Our Reaſonable Nature hath a peculiar Reſervation for Thee ; and our Happineſs conſiſts in our Affimilation to, and Employment about Thee. The nearer we approach unto Thee, the more free we are from Error, Sin, and Miſery; and the farther off we are from Thee, the farther off we are from Truth, Holineſs, and Felicity. Without Thee, we are ſure of nothing ; we are not ſure of our felves : but through Thee, there is Self-Enjoyment in the mind; when there is nothing but Confuſion, and no Enjoyment of the World. We could not conceive Thee to be per- fectly Good, ; if we did not look upon Thee, as the Deteſter of every thing that is unjuft, wicked and impious : we ſhould Miſrepreſent Thee unto the world, if we ſhould ſay, that Will and Power alone, Govern in the Diſpo- fare of the affairs and ſtates of Thy Creatures ; for Thou, O God, doft all things with the greateſt Reaſon, in exacteſt Righteouſneſs, in the fulleſt Equity that is pollibie. 19999019 We acknowledge ; that the Law of our Na- ture, and of our Religion, as Vien; reſults ne- ceffarily i D MORNING and EVENING, çeffarily from our Relation to Thee, as our Creator and God ; and that it cannot be, that we ſhould be Diſ-obliged from our Obedience; which is the moral Neceflity, and high Pri- vilege of our Being. Bring back therefore our Minds, by jụſt and wife Reflections, to centre themſelves in Thee; that through Re- pentance and Pardon, our Sins may be, as if they had never been ; and our Souls may be in perfect Reconciliation with thy Nature, and Will, and Law; and with the Meaſures of everlaſting Righteouſneſs, Goodneſs, and Truth: that our Minds may be in Love and Good-will, in Concord and Agreement with the whole Creation of God; with whatſoever derives from God, Holds of God, and Aca knowledges Him. We know, thou canſt not vary from the Perfections of thy Nature ; and therefore we cannot Promiſe our ſelves, that thou wilt Pardon without Repentance; or Fear, that Thou wilt Condemn thoſe who do Repent. But when we ſin againſt Thee, we Wrong our own Souls; and Wickedneſs makes us Enemies to our Happineſs, and to our Beings. · Let us always Live in the Fear, and Appre- henſion of God, without whom we cannot Live at all. . Let the Light of Truth, and the Help of Grace, be vital Principles of Action in us; that we may, in the Time of Life, at- tain the Ends for which we live; and that our Religion, which Begins in Knowledge, may proceed in Action, Settle in Temper, and End in Happineſs: that we may make it the work and A PRAY E R för and buſineſs of our Lives, to Reconcile the Temper of our Spirits to the Rule of Right- eouſneſs; and to Incorporate the Principles of our Religion into the Complexion of our Minds; that what we Attribute to God, as his moral Excellencies and Perfections ; we may propoſe to our felves, as matter of Prac- tice and Imitation; and that what is our beſt Employment in this world, and will be our only Employment in the next ; may be our free Choice, and our tranſcendant Pleaſure. Let us not put-off that Repentance and Re- formation to our laſt hours, which is a Buſineſs of Difficulty and Leiſure ; as the working-out all Vicious Habits, eſtabliſhed by frequent Acts, and long Cuſtom ; and the working-in of Re- ligious Diſpoſitions, by contrary Practice, and Now Degrees, muſt needs be. Free us timely, by Conformity unto the Goſpel of Chriſt, froin that Rancour and Malignity; with which our former Practice of Sin hath poiſoned and de- praved our Nature. Help us to fhun the Beginnings of Sin, which are Modeſt; and to dread the iſſues of Sin, which are Impudent; becauſe, where- ever: we Begin to Miſcarry, we know not where we ſhall End : and to keep our ſelves within the Meaſures of Reaſon, and Nature ; and never to Subordinate Religion, Conſcience, Juſtice, or any thing that is Holy, to ſenſual Pleaſure, worldly Gain, or popular Reputation. Eſtabliſh in us à God-like Temper, and make us ſenſible of it in our felves; that we may the more caſily pait with this world, to go MORNING "and EVENING: t 5 go to God by Death, whenever thou calleſt us thereunto; and may not be without Founda- tion of Hope, and future Expectation ; and ſo run from Death, or be in Bondage to it, as a prevailing enemy: that we may have in our Conſciences none of the Fuel of Hell ; and ſo not fear the kindling of thoſe Fires upon us: that we may not, at laſt, be abandoned from God, upon any unpardonable Provocation ; in- wardly ſelf-condemned, by a guilty and awa- kened Conſcience ; which would render' us extremely and eternally miſerable. But grant, that our religious Knowledge being digeſted into True Goodneſs, before we die ; we may Depart hence to an Eſtate agreeable and happy, natural and proper to that holy and heavenly Temper, in which we have ſettled ourſelves here, by Religious Uſe, Practice, and Cuſtom: and that this Divine Conſtitution, which was recommended to our Souls by the Excellency of its Nature, may be Perpetuated and Con- ſummated in us, when we are gone from hence; and we be for ever with Thee, in whoſe preſence is fulneſs of Joy, and at whoſe right hand are pleaſures for evermore. All this we humbly beg of Thee, O Lord, as we are capable; for our Selves, and for all Chrif- tian People, and for all Mankind; through Jeſus Chriſt our Mediator and Redeemer': In whoſe Name and Words we ſum-up our Pe- titions ; ſaying, Our Father, be...tor F IN 1 Si EIGHT LETTERS OF Dr. ANTONY TUCKNEY, A N D Dr. BENJAMIN WHICHCOTE : CONCERNING 1 The Uſe of Reaſon in Religion. The Differences of Opinion among Chriſtians. The Reconciliation of Sinners unto God. The Studies and Learning of a Miniſter of the Goſpel. Written in SEPTEMBER and OCTOBER, MDCLI. 36 It is better for us, that there ſhou'd be Difference of Judgement ; if we keep Charity: but it is moit un- manly to Quarrel, becauſe we Differ.” Dr. WHICHCOTE's Aphoriſms, No. 569. si By the way, I will obſerve; how little there is in many s6 Controverſies: if Wife and Temperate men had the management of them. But when once there is Sula $6 picion and Jealouſy, theſe make and increaſe 6 Differences.' Dr. WHICHCOTE's Diſcourſes, Vol. II. Diſc. vii. p. 152- Tærpe putant parere Minoribus ; es que Imbarbi didiceré, Senes perdenda fateri. Hor MDCCLIL TH E PREF AC E. TI HE deſign of this ſecond Pre- face is to give ſome little ac- count of the reverend Per- fons, whoſe letters it introduces; and of two or three others, who are oc- caſionally mentioned in the letters : which account will render all farther diſcourſe unneceſſary and ſuperfluous, on the part of the Editor. ANTONY TUCKNEY was born in the laſt year of the fixteenth century, towards the end of the year ; at Kir- ton near Boſton, in Lincolnſhire; where his Father was Miniſter. He was, at fourteen years of age, matri- culated of the Univerſity of Cam- bridge ; being admitted of Emmanuel College there : which ſhews, that he had been educated hicherto in a dir- like to the church eſtabliſhment; for that college, though it abounded for miny а. 11 P R E F Ä . ; 1 many years in moſt excellent ſcholars; and might therefore very juſtly be eſteemed and flouriſh, on their ac- count; yet was much reſorted to, for an other reaſon, about this time viz. its being generally look d-on, froin' it's firſt foundation, (which Tuckney himſelf acknowledges ;) as a Seminary of Puritans. Our young Scholar took his firſt degree, before he was ſeventeen years old ; and was choſen Fellow of his college, three years after : in MDcxx he proceded M. A. and was fome time in the Earl of Lincoln's family, before he reſided on his fellowſhip. When he came back to live in col- lege, he would not remain idle and un- profitable there ; but ſoon became an eminent Tutor, and had many per- fons of rank and quality admitted un- der him : in this uſeful and hono- rable employment he continued, ha- ving taken his third degree of B. D. in MDCXXVII, about ten years; after which, tir'd probably of a college life, and wiſhing to ſettle in a family-way, he P R E F A CE. iii he accepted the invitation of his countrymen; and went to Boſton, as an Affiftent to the famous Vicar of that town; Mr. John Cotton: to whom he was probably very agreable on all accounts ; and for whom, though a very zelous Non-conformiſt, his Dioceſan Biſhop WILLIAMS, when Lord Keeper, procured a Toleration under the Great Seal, for the free Ex- erciſe of his miniſtery, notwithſtand- ing his diffenting in Cerimonies; to long as done without diſturbance to the Church : But this was probably not very long; for Mr. Cotton quit- ted his native Country, before the ci- vil wars; and withdrew, as many other reſolute Non-Conformiſts did at that time, to New-England. On his departure, the Corporation of Boſtanz choſe Mr. Tuckney, who was now married," into his place: and he kept this Vicarage, at their requeſt, till the Reſtoration; or rather, his title to it; for he took no part of the Profit, when he no longer reſided on it. Dr. How a 2 iv P R E É A CE. How was his Succeffor, after the King's Return in MacLX. When the Parliament thought fit to convene an Aſſembly of Divines, Mr. TUCKNEY was one of the two nomi- nated for the County of Lincoln ; this ſummons he cheerfully attended, for divers reaſons; and took his family up with him to town: nor did he any more return to Boſton. He is ſaid to have been much conſidered, in the Affembly ; and obteined, as all the Favourites did, a pariſh in London : and when Lord MANCHESTER turn’d- out Dr. HOLDSWORTH, Maſter of Emma- nuel College, and the Lady MAR- GARET's Profeſſor of Divinity at Cam- bridge, from both thoſe Preferments ; Mr. TUCKNEY was put-in Maſter and Love, the Maſter of Bennet, Pro- feffor ; in MDCXLV. He did not go down to reſide on this new Employ- ment wholely ; till he was choſen Vice-chancellor, three years after : when he removed all his Family to Cambridge, ſerved that Office with credit, and commenced D. D. the year after 3 P R E F A C E. V aſter; together with his friend ARROW- SMITH, then maſter of St. Jobri’s col- lege ; and his pupil WHICHOTE, then provoſt of King's. In MDCLIII Dr. Hill Maſter of Trinity college, dying, Dr. TUCKNEY preached his Funeral- ſermon, which he printed ; and with it. an account of the deceaſed : this making a very important vacancy, Dr. ARROWSMITH was removed to Trinity- college; and Dr. Tuckney choſen by the Fellows, to be Maſter of St. Fohn's: and when the new maſter of Trinity reſigned the Chair of Regius Profeſſor of Divinity two years after, on account of his health ; which he had fill'd with honor for ten years, from Dr. Collins' ejection ; the new maſter of St. John's was, invitó et peené coäetats, as he faith himſelf, cho- ſen, by the unanimous vote of the re- gular electors, to fuccede him there alſo. But although thus legally poſſeſſed of theſe two conſiderable preferments; although his behaviour in both was ir- reproachable and even highly coni- a 3 mendable; 1 :: vi P R E F A C E. mendable; though he ever conſulted the intereſt both of the Univerſity and his College, and the honor of the Chair; yet he was civilly turn'd- out of both, at the Reſtoration : for Dr. GUNNING, a man of learning and character, and a great ſufferer for his unſhaken loyalty, was to have them both. Accordingly, duplicates of the following letter were ſent to the Vice- chancellor, and to our Doctor ; and that to the latter was accompanied by one from the ſame Lord MANCHESTER; who had brought him back to Cam- bridge, fixteen years before; and through whole hands, as now again Chancellor of the Univerſity, the Royal Orders regularly pafs'd. C. R. 1 WHEREAS THEREAS we are credibly in- formed; that Dr. Anthony Tuckney, Mafler of St. John's col- lege, and one of the Profeſſors of Di- pinity, in our Univerſity of Cam- bridge, is well ſtricken in Years: and by P R E F A CE. vii by reaſon of his Age, and ſome Infir- mities of Body, may not bereafter be so well able to undergo the burthen of thoſe two Places; We, out of our princely care both of that our Uni- verſity, and the ſaid Dr. Tuckney, do judge it meet ; that be, the ſaid Dr. Tuckney, before the end of this In- Atant June, do recede from the afore- Said Maſterſhip, and Profeſor’s place; with the Rectory of Somerſham, an- nexed thereunto by the grace and fa- vour of our royal Grandfather. Which fignification of our faid pleaſure if the faid Dr. Tuckney Mall ſubmit un- to, We ſhall be so well pleaſed with that his ſubmiſſion; that We ſhall gra- ciouſly accept thereof : and will be rea- dy to remember it, for his Good; up- 012 any juft occaſion. And farther ta- king into our princely confiderätion the great pains and diligence of the ſaid Dostar, in the diſcharge of ibe ſaid Profeſor's place ; Teithout that bene- fit, which ſhould have been received by bim from the ſaid rectory of Soruer- fhäm à :4. viii PR E É A CE. 1 fham ; which, during the late unhap- py and rapacious times, was unjuftly. detained from him : upon that his fübmiſion, Our will and pleaſure is, and We do hereby order; that what- foever perfons during the natural life of the ſaid Dr. Tuckney fall after his ceſſion be elęEted or promoted to the faid Profeſſor's place, ſhall before their admiſſion thereunto give ſufficient aſſu- rance in Law to the ſaid Dr. Tuck- ney, for the yearly payment of one hundred pounds out of the rectory of Somerſham to the ſaid Dr. Tuckney, for the reward of his former pains, by even and equal Poriions, at the four u Jual feaſts of the year ; that is to Jay, at the Nativity of our Lord and Saviour, at the Annunciation of the bleſſed Virgin, the Birth of St. John Baptiſt , and the feaſt of Michael the Archangel; during the continuance of the ſaid Profeffors, and the natural life of the Jaid Dr. Tuckney: any Grant or Statute to the contrary not- withſtanding. Given at our Court : at 1 P. R E F A CÉ. iš at Whitehall, June 1, MDCLXI. B) his Majeſty's Command, EDWARD NICOLAS. The Earl of Manchėjtèr's Letter. S. I Rg OU will find, by this incloſed; what the King's pleaſure is; and how acceptoble it will be to Him, that you make a ſpeady quitting of your maſter- fhip of St. John's college and the place of Regius profeſſor. It is not out of any Diſlike of your Perfon, or Diſtruſ of your Ability ; but for thoſe reafons, which are expreſſed in His own Let- ters. One of them I ſend you ; that jou may keep it for your ſecurity : the other is deliver'd to the Vice-chan- cellor ; to be kept in the Regiſtry of the Univerſity : And I doubt not, but his Majeſty will take care ; that the conditions be performed. The Profits of both places You are to enjoy, till Midſummer next; and there with ſome convenient rooms, is allowed yout, till Sturbridge Fair; a your Stay con- X PREF A CE. conveniency being allotted for Dr. Gunning's uſe : and I hope, you will find all civilities from Him. I ſhall upon all occaſions improve my intereſt for your advantage ; with the reality of Your aſſured Friend to ſerve you, E. MANCHESTER, Whitehall, June 3 MDCLXI. The poor infirm and aged man of LXII only, knew himſelf too weak however to contend with the Court; ſo he took his ſhort warning, receded from Cambridge, and lived private and retir'd in London; till the Plague, the Fire, and the Five-mile Act drove him out of the great City ; and obli- ged him to remove often from place to place. While he ſtay’d, he was no- minated a Commiſſioner, on the Non- conformiſt fide, at the Savoy confe- rence ; but never attended ; alleg- ing (as Mr. BAXTER with ſome indig- nation obſerves) his backwardneſs to fpeak; P R E FACE. xi fpeak'; though he had been the Doc- tor-in the Chair at Cambridge. But every one will fee, whence this back- wardneſs to ſpeak aroſe ; and will ex- cuſe his pleading it, though it were an αργυραγχη which occafioned it: for we may remember, he had only 1001. per ann. allowed; in compen- fation for all he was required to part- with The Fire conſumed all his Library. At length, after many re- movals and ſome troubles, he return'd to die in London ; and was buried in the Church of St. Andrew Under ſhaft, in February MDCLXIX. Dr. TUCKNEY printed ſome Sermons in his life time; and ſeven years after his death, Mr. JONATHAN TUCKNEY his Son, ſometime Fellow of St John's and a young man of great hopes ; till a deep melancholy , deprived Him of himſelf, and the world of any benefit from his abilities ; publiſh'd in a quarto volume, forty of his Fa- ther's Sermons · which he followed in MDCLXXIX by a collection of all his La- tin pieces; conſiſting of Sermons ad Clerum, : xii P R E F A C E. . for Clerum, Poſitions, Determinations in the Chair and for his own degree, Lec- tures c. To each book Mr TUCK- NzY prefixed a ſhort preface, in the reſpective language of each : and to the latter is annexed a ſhort account of the Doctor by W. D. who was very probably Dr. WILLIAM DILLINGHAM, TUCKNEY's ſucceſſor in the headihip of Emmanuel college. From theſe his writings our Profeſ- appears to have been a man of great reading, and much knowledge '; à ready and elegant Latinift ; but nár- row, ſtiff and dogmatical : no enemy to the royal or epiſcopal power, as it ſhou'd ſeem ; but above meaſure ze- lous for church power and eccleſiaſ- tical diſcipline : which ſuch men as TUCKNEY, ARROWSMITH, °C. very ſincerely wiſhed and hoped to have ef- tabliſhed, by authority of the Parli- ament, following the repeted advice of the Afiembly; and they ſadly re- gretted their diſappcintment: their new maſters conſtantly turning a deaf ear to all ſuch admonitions. This the latter P R E FACE. xiii latter frankly owns, in his Taftica fa- cra, II. ii. 10; where he reckons the loſs of church diſcipline amongſt the cauſes of the heterodoxy ſo rife then in England : tells; how often and earneſtly the Aſſembly had labour'd to reſtore it; but adds pathetically and elegantly out of Virgil; Ter conatus ibi collo dare brachia circuin; Ter fruſtra comprenſa manus . effugit imago : Par levibus ventis, volucrique ſimilli- ma fomno and concludes thus, in a marginal - Dicam aperte ; quæ jam- dudum eviluit, (under the Biſhops, I ſuppoſe ;) nuper evanuit (under the In- dependents diſciplina*. In purſu- note; ance * Ex illo Pauli elogio, 1 Cor. xi. 2. proclive eſt colligere; quantum viguerit apud primaevos Chriſtianas ecclefiaftica Dif- ciplina--lub Papatu miſere foedata eſt; it verfa in rem pecuni- ariam. ---Reformatio Germanica quantum abfuerit a Difci- plinae puritate, teftantur &c. --- quantum Anglicana fub Epiſcopatu, conflat * ea queremonia ; quam ab illius ordinis viro primario, D. Lanceloto Andrews, extorſit rei ipſius ve- ritas et evidentia. - Poſt exaufloratam Epiſcoporum præla- turam, xiv P R E F À CE. ance of theſe principles, we find Dr. TUCKNEY always fierce; when he mentions the freedom, which the new Government openly encouraged : in one of his determinations, on the ſub- ject of Divorce ; he rails furiouſly at Milton, whom he calls infamis et non uno laqueo dignus; in moſt of them, the Papiſts Socinians and Armi- nians are fallen-upon, in the ſame breath ; in one, upon the queſtion of the unaccountableneſs of Princes, if I may ſo ſpeak; he deplores, in very ſtrong terms, the treatment and death of King Charles. He is faid by CA- LAMY to have mainteined the dignity of his Poſts, both of Vice-chancellor and Maſter; and to have been moſt reſolutely diſregardful of the arbitrary and irregular commands of thoſe in au- 1 turam, eccleſiam hanc noftram Diſciplina, ut Aeneam olim uxor Crëuſa, Lacrymantem, et multa volenteni Dicere, deſeruit ; tenuelque receffit in auras. Sæpius quidem Coetus ille presbyterorum, qui Weſtmonafterii paucis abhinc annis convenerat; ex mandato Ordinum, utri- ufque fcilicet domus Parliamentariæ ; conatus eft eam reducere : verum, ut de Aenea et Crëuſa ſequitur apud Poetam, Ter conatus. Tact. Sacr. II. ï. 10. PRE FAC É. Xv authority ; beyond any of his brethren: and he ſays. of himſelf in theſe letters, when Dr. WHICHCOTE had given a hint of impoſing ; that “ in the Af- ſembly, he voted againſt ſubſcribing or ſwearing-to the Confeflion, &c. ſet- out by authority :” which was the more meritorious in Him; as he is af- firmed to have had a great hand him- ſelf, in framing the Confeſſion and Catechiſms; and particularly, to have drawn the expoſition of the Com- mandments in the larger Catechiſm. In his elections at St. John's ; when the Preſident, according to the Cant of the times, wou'd call upon him to have regard to the Godly ; the Maſter anſwer'd, No one ſhou'd have a greater regard to the truely Godly, than himſelf; but he was determined to chooſe none but Scholars : adding, very wiſely ; They may deceive me, in their Godlineſs' ; they can not, in their Scholarſhip. This Story of Him, ſo much to his honor, is ſtill upon re- cord in the College ; and was told me by the preſent worthy Maſter. Upon 1 1 xví P R E F A G E. Upon the whole; he ſeems to have been a very honeſt and good man, a very induſtrious and learned ſcholar; his imperfections and weakneſſes flow'd from his principles, rather than from his difpofition; and he was worthy to have lived in better times, and a leſs prejudiced or bigotted age, BENJAMIN WHICHCOTE was defcen- ded of an ancient and honorable fa- mily; which had been ſeated in the County of Salop, for many genera- tions: he was the fixth ſon of CHRIS- TOPHER WHICHCOTE, Eq, by Eliza- beth his Wife, daughter of EDWARD Fox, Eſq; of Greet in the ſame coun- ty; and was born at Whichcote-Hall, in the pariſh of Stoke ; March 11, He was admitted in Emma- nuel college, Cambridge, under Mr. ANTONY TUCKNEY, MDCXXVI ; upon whoſe leaving the college, Mr. Tho- MAS HILL. became his Tutor : here he took his degrees regularly ; going out Bachelor of Arts. MDCXXIX, Maſter of Arts, MDCXXXIII, Bachelor of Divi- nity MDCXL, In the ſame year, that he MDCIX. - P R É F A G E. *vii he took his ſecond degree, he was e- lected Fellow of the college ; and his tutor Hill-leaving the Univerſity the year after, Mr WHICHCOT É then took Pupils himſelf, and became very con- fiderable for his Learning and Worth, hiš Prudence and Temper, his Wif- dom and Moderation, in thoſe times of trial : not was leſs famous, for the number rank and character of his Pu- pils; and the cáre he took of them : many of thein becoming afterwards men of great figure themſelves; as WALLIS, SMITH, WORTHINGTON, CRADOCK, $€. On the 5th of March MVcXXXVI, he was ordained both Deacon and Prieſt at Buckden, by WILLIAMS Bi- ſhop of Lincoln; which irregularity I know not how to account for in a Prelate ſo obnoxious to the ruling Powers both in Church and State ; as WILLIAMS is known to have been. And I imagine, our young Divine im- mediately ſet-up the afternoon lecture on Sundays in Trinity church at Cam- bridge ; which, Arch-biſhop-TIELOT- b SON xviii P R E F A G E. son ſays, he ſerv'd near twenty years. He was alſo appointed one of the Uni- verſity. Preachers : and in MDCXLIII was preſented, by the Maſter and Fel- lows of his college, to the Living of North-Cadbury in Somerſetſhire. This vacated his Fellowſhip; and upon this, I preſume, he married ; and actually went down to his new Living : but was ſcon call’d back to Cambridge, be- ing pitch’d-upon to fuccede the eject- ed Provoſt of King's college, Dr. SA- MUEL COLLINS; who had been in that poſt thirty years, and was alſo Regius Profeſſor of Divinity. This choice was perfectly agreable to Dr. COLLINS himſelf, though not quite ſo to Mr. WHICHCOTE; who had ſcruples about accepting what was thus irregularly offer'd him; and there is ſtill extant, in the hands of Sir- FRANCIS Which- COT E Bart, the Doctor's great Nephew; which that Gentleman has done me the honour to fhew me; a ſhort Sche- dule, containing very imperfect heads of reaſons pro and con, which occurr'd to Him in the courſe of this delibera- tion P R E F A C E. xix > tion and debate with Himſelf. Hap- pily for the College, for the Univer- fity, and for the Church of England; he determined at laſt to accept the place ; for ſomebody elſe wou'd cer- tainly have been appointed, had He declined it; and ſo good a one, upon every account, cou'd very hardly at that time have been found. I mean, one; whoſe Capacity ſhou'd have been ſo indiſputable, his Reputation for Pi- ety Learning Prudence and Temper fo eſtabliſhed, his Intereſt and Credit with thoſe in Authority' ſo very con- fiderable, and his Fortune fo indepen- dent: by all which in conjunction our Author was enabled to do ſo much more Service than any other man ; without ſtooping to any thing, un- worthy of his character. So the was admitted Provoſt, Murch 19, MDCXLIV. By the fame authority, Mr. TUCKNEY was made Maſter of Em- manuel; Mr. ARROWSMITH, of St. John's; and Mr. Hill, of Trinity: and thus four very intimate Friends, after a feparation of ſome years; ſave b 2 that XX P R E F A G E. that the three laſt met in the Aflem- bly of Divines, at Weſtminſter ; ſaw each other again, in the ſeveral moft honorable ſtations of the Univerſity : to which their Learning and Piety had deſervedly recommended them. This reunion of four men, fo.very dear to each other, muſt have been very ſatiſ, factory and delightful to each ; if it had nct ſoon appeared, that WHICH: COTE the youngeſt, but by far the moft conſiderate of the four, was now be- come a very different man from what the reſt had left him, a dozen years before ; He had by this tine diſen- gaged himſelf, from the narrow and Alaviſh principles of his Education ; and not content to have emancipated himfelf, he employed all his Credit, Weight and Influence, which were juſtly great ; in ſpreading and propa- gating a nobler freer and more gene- sous ſett of opinions : theſe the young Maſters of Arts eſpecially ſcon cordi- ally embraced, to the no ſmall diffa- tisfaction of the other three : who in vajn oppoſed their authority, in the fupport . . P R E F A CE. xxi -ſupport of what would not ſtand the teſt of Reaſon; nor cou'd, without violence and ſtraining, be deduced from Scripture. After much ſmothering of their diſcontent in ſilence, or utter- ing it only to inward friends. ; it broke- out at length in the frank and honeft expoſtulation from TuckNEY, which opens the following Correſpondence. Before this, TUCKNEY, ARROWSMITH, and WHICHCOTE went-out Doctors in Divinity ; and were created together in July MDCXLIX ; TUCKNEY had ſerv'd the office of Vice-chancellor, and WHICHOTE was now in it; when his old tutor broke the Ice, in MDCLI; and fairly confefs’d the diſpleaſure, his friends and He had conceived, To return to Dr. WHICHCOTE: he reſigned his Somerſetſhire Living, and the College preſented to it his friend the learned Mr. Ralph Cudworth, in MDCĪ; though this latter had left the college, in which he was brought-up; and was now maſter of Clare-ball : the next year, King's college comple- mented their new Provoſt with the rectory xxii P R E F A C E rectory fine cura of Milton in Cam- bridgeſhire ; void by the death of Dr. COLLINS. This agreable piece of preferment he kept, as long as he lived ; though after the Reſtoration, he was obliged, or adviſed, to take- out a Grant of it under the Great Seal, ad corroborandum ; and he thought proper to reſign it, the year after ; in order to reſume it immedi- ately, by a freſh preſentation from the college. Dr. WHICHCOTE was ſo zelous to preſerve a ſpirit of fober Piety and ra- tional Religion, in the Univerſity and town of Cambridge; in oppoſition to the fanatic Enthuſiaſm, and ſenſeleſs Canting, then in vogue ; that He ſet after-noon lecture for Sun- days, at Trinity church ; which (as has been obſerved before) he ſerved for near 20 years : an other was ſet- up on Wedneſdays, at the ſame Church; as Mr. BEARDMORE tells us, (in his account of his tutor TILLOT- SON, lately printed by my learned friend Dr. BIRCH, with His life of that up an P. R E F A CE. xxiii that excellent Prelate ;) which was ſerved by a ſett of the very beſt preachers, fellows of divers colleges ; friends it is probable and followers of WHICHCOTE. Dr. Hill ſet-up two other ſuch ſunday lectures; at St. Michael's church, for the morning ; and at All-ſaints, for the afternoon : at the former he conſtantly preached himſelf; of the latter he took a fourth part to himſelf: and this was ſo much the faſhion of the time and place; that Mr. BEARDMORE obſerves his Tu- tor TILLOTSON, uſually heard four ſermons every Lord's-day; and Dr. TUCKNEY remarks, in his account of Dr. Hill; that the Goſpel was no- where ſo freely preached, and fo ab- ſolutely without charge to any ; as then at Cambridge. The happy effect of Dr. WHICH- cote's pains in this way appeared in the great talents and excellent per- formances of ſo many eminent Divines, after the Reſtoration : of whom moſt, of thoſe who had received their edu- cation at Cambridge ; were formed at xxiv. PR E FACE at leaſt, if not actually brought-up, by Him. His truely Chriſtian temper, and the worthy uſe He made of his great credit and intereſt with thoſe in authority; at a time, when ARROW- SM Í TH; LIGHTFOOT, and others, were apprehenſive of a total deſtruction hanging-over and threatning theſe Seats of Learning į may be ſeen juſtly celebrated in the Sermon preached at his Funeral by TILLOTSON; and in the ſhort character given of him by Burnet, in his Hiſtory of his own times* : His géneroſity to his Prede- ceſſor Collins, and other ejected members of the Society ; fully con- futes the injurious inference, which the Oxford Hiſtorian draws malig- nantly, from a falſe Fact: See the paſſage in Athenae Oxon. Vol. II. where Tuckney is mentioned p. 576. Our Provoſt had too great and noble a ſpirit, to follow a party fervilely ; and was never ſo attach'd to any, as not to ſee and own and wiſh to ſerve real merit; where-ever it was to be found:- of which we have one remark able * See the Teſtimonies fubjoined to the Preface to the Aphoriſms. PRE I A CÉ. XXV able proof, in Mr. ABRAHAM Hile's account of Dr. BARROW ; prefixed to the works of that excellent Philo- ſopher and Divine. BARROW was thrown-out; at his firſt application for the Greek Profefforſhip ; merely on account of his being a Royaliſt : yet he ever acknowledged with gratitude Dr. WHICHCOTE's good offices and rea- dineſs to ferve him in it. And not- withſtanding the differences between Dr. WHİCHCOTÉ and his old Tutor, which make the ſubject of theſe letters; and which, the reader will ſee, were irréconcileable; He joined with the other fix electors, a very few years after, in raiſing Dr. TUCKNEY to the Divinity Chair. His Predeceffor COLLINS had now been long dead; and Dr. WHICH- COTE's conduct was too moderate and obliging, to diſguſt any : yet at the Reſtoration he was removed from the Provoſtlhip, by eſpecial order from the King; and Dr:JAMES FLEETWOOD was put into it. But though remo- ved; he was not diſgraced er frowneda С on; xxvi P R E F A C E. on; ſo far from it, that he was on the contrary only called-up, from the comparative obſcurity of a Univerſity life, to a higher and more conſpicu- ous ſtation ; from a place, where he had already done much real ſervice; to one, where there was ſtill much to be done; by men like him. Accor- dingly, he was elected and licenſed to the Cure of St. Anne's Blacka friars, in November MDCLXII; and that Church being burned down in the dreadful Fire of MDCLXVI, he retired to Milton, for a while : but was again called-up, and preſented by the Crown to the Vicarage of St. Laurence Jew- ry; vacant by the Promotion of Dr. Wilkins to the See of Cheſter. This was his laſt ſtage ; and here he continued in high and general ef- teein, preaching twice every Week ; to his Death in MDCLXXXIII : the cir- cuinſtances of which may be ſeen in the Sermon at his Funeral. He was buried in the Chancel of his own Church; when Dr.Tillotson preach'a, who was the week-day Lecturer there. He P R E F A C E. xxvii He is reckoned by Füller, who printed his Hiſtory of Cambridge in MDCLV; among the Writers of Emma- nuel college : but I cannot find, that he publiſhed any thing before the Re- ſtoration; or in any part of his life. He was married, but I cannot learn, to whom; when he was about thirty- four years of age of age : probably he never had any children; certainly he left none : but made three of his Ne- phews his Executors : one of whom, his name-fake, a merchant in Biſhop- gate ſtreet, to whom he bequeathed all his MSS, put them into the hands of Arch-deacon Jeffery, and to Him we owe three volumes of diſcourſes : which for the excellent ſpirit, found judgement, and ſweet temper, moſt con- ſpicuous through-out, will ever be ad- mired by all men of ſenſe : though to- tally void (as were alſo his Latin per- formances, of which one or two are preſerved, and in my hands ;) of all the graces and ornaments of ſtyle and compofition. To many indeed, a greater proof can not well be given of the C 2 xxviii P R E F A G E. thor. the intrinſic merit of theſe Sermons; than the Lord SHAFT ESBURY's having printed one volume of them in MDCXCVIII, with a large preface, high- 1: in praiſe of the incomparable au- τ8 και κλέβ όπο' ολέται. THOMAS Hill, born at Knighton in Worceſterſhire, admitted of Em- manuel college in O&ober MDCXVIII, took his firſt Degree there in MDCXXII; after which he went to the famous Mr. John COTTON of Boſton, as ma- ny other young men ſeem to have done ; and “ ſpent ſome good time with Him, (fays Dr. Tuckney) for his farther perfecting; and the more happy ſeaſoning of his fpirit.” Upon his return to college, he was choſen Fel- low and proc-ded M. A. in Mocxxvi: not long after which he became an eminent Tutor; and fo continued, till MDCXXXIV : when, being now B. D. he was preſented to the Living of Tickmerſo in Northamptonſhire. Here he fo greatly diſtinguiſhed himſelf; that he was nominated a member of the Aſſembly for that County, } in: P R E F A C E. xxix not in MDCXLIIS; attended, and preach'd often before the Houſe of Commons, on ſolemn occaſions, as public Faſt- days &°C; and was choſen one of their morning week-day preachers at the Abbey, as on the Lord's-day he officiated at St. Martin's in the Fields. He was at firſt appointed, by the ſame authority of Parliament, Maſter of his own College; but this ſeeming a ſphere large or confidera- ble enough for ſo active a man, that deſtination of him was changed; and he was put into Dr. COMBER's place, who was turn'd-out from the headſhip of Trinity college. He was a celebrated a celebrated and diligent Preacher; and did not ſlack his pains, on being thus promoted; but on the contrary ſet-up two lectures in the town of Cambridge, as above-men- tioned ; one of which he ſupplied him- ſelf altogether, and was much reſorted to; the other, in conjunction with three aſſiſtents. He printed only a few Sermons; which are now little known or inquired after : though Dr: XXX P R E F A C E. Dr. Tuckne», who preached his Fu- neral Sermon at St. Marie's on the 22d of December, MDCLIIT, and print- ed with it a large account of Him, ſays ; “ he had made a fair progreſs, in a learned confutation of the great daring Champion of the Arminian Errors ; whom the abuſive Wits of the Univerſity with an impudent bold- nefs wou'd ſay, none there durft ad-- venture upon. By this adverſary I take John GOODWIN to be alluded-to; who two years before had dedicated his folio volume, called Redemption re- deemed, to Dr. WHICHCOTE Vice- chancellor, and the reſt of the heads of houſes at Cambridge : and in that bold, but not (as Dr. TuCKNEY calls it) immodeſt or ſcurrilous, addreſs, had challenged and required them to con- fute him ; if he was in an error. For the reſt ; Mr. Hill proceded D.D. in MDCXLVI; and died in MDCLIIT: the Univerſity Orator, Mr. WID- DRINGTON, at St. Marie's; and Mr. TEMPLAR, one of the fenior fellows of his college, in their Hall; making each P R E F A C E. xxxi each a ſpeech on the occaſion: as did alſo Mr. John Ray, then of the Col- lege ; afterwards of the Royal Society : and well known by his learned and uſeful Writings. JOHN ARROWSMITH was born at or near Newcaſtle upon Tine, in the county of Northumberland; the ſame year day and hour, that his collegue in the Aſſembly and Univerſity Dr. JOHN LIGHT FOOT was born at or near New- caſtle under Line, in the county of Stafford; viz. March 29. MDCII. He was admitted of St. John's college in Cambridge in mocxvi; and took his firſt two degrees from thence, in the years MDCXIX and MDCXXIII: in this laſt year he was choſen Fellow of Ka- therine hall; where, as I ſuppoſe, he reſided ſome years ; and probably en- gaged in the Tuition of Youth ; but in Mocxxxi he married, and removed to Lynn in Norfolk. He continued in this town, very much eſteemed, ſome ten or twelve years ; being firſt Ar- fiftent or Curate to another, after- wards Miniſter in his own right, of St. + Xxxii P R E F A Ć E. St. Nicolas Chapel there. He was call’d-up to aſſiſt in the Affembly of Divines ; for the county, in which he now lived; had a Pariſh in London, and is named with TUCKNEY HILL and others in the liſt of Triers, as they were call’d ; i. é. perſons appointed to examine and report the integrity and abilities of Candidates for the Elder- fhip in London, and Miniſtery at large. When Dr. BEALE, Maſter of St. John's college, was turn’d-out by the Earl of Mancheſter; Mr. 'Arrow- SMITH, who had taken the degree of B.D. from Katharine Hall eleven ycars before, was put into his place; ás alſo into the royal Divinity Chair, , from which the old Profeffor COLLINS was removed : and after about nine years poffeffion of theſe honors, to which he added that of a Doctor's de- gree in Divinity, in MDCXLIX; he was farther promoted, on Dr. Hill's death, to the maſterſhip of Trinity college: with which he kept his profeffor's place only two years ; his health being cons P R E F A C'E. xxxiii conſiderably impaired. He died in MDCLIX: and was ſucceded at Trinity college by Dr. WILKINS. Dr. TUCKNEY, his ſucceſſor in the Chair, ſpeaks of his behaviour in it as very great and worthy ; and of his own exceding unwillingneſs to come after him: but adds, he accepted it at laſt; to ſave the Univerſity the reproche and diſgrace of having a Pro- feffor to ſeek aliundè ; as none among themſelves were diſpoſed to undertake the province. Dr. ARROWSMITH friends TUCKNEY and Hill; a very learned and able, but a ſtiff and nar- row Divine; was, like them, offended with the popularity and credit of Dr. WHICHOTE : for though they all re- ſpected and loved his perſon, they cou'd none of them bear-with his free- dom. But . ARROWSMITH's natural Temper was incomparably better than his Principles; and he is repreſented by both ſides, as a man of a moſt ſweet and engaging diſpoſition. This even appears, through all the fourneſs and d fe- was, like his 1 xxxiv P R E F AC E. ſeverity of his opinions, in his Tactica ſacra; a book written in a clean ſtyle, and with a lively fancy . ; in which is diſplay'd at once much weakneſs and ſtiffneſs, but withall great reading ; and a very amiable candor towards the perſons and characters of thoſe, from whom he found himſelf obliged to dif- fer : even towards. JOHN GOODWIN above-mention'd; whom Dr. TUCK- NEY (a very good man too, but ira- cundior paullo;) ſpeaks-of with ex- ceding ſharpneſs: whereas with our gentler author, he is do&tus vir et di- ligens; (abfit enim ut ei quam meretur laudem invideam, ut ut aliter ſenti- enti :) p. 217. doetus et difertus, fed judicii ſequioris. p. 147. This book the Maſter dedicated to the Fellows and Students of his Cole lege, and printed it in MDCLVII:; to ſupply, as he cou'd, the failure of Sermons; which his ill health wou'd not permit him to preach in the Chapel*. He had alſo printed tliree * The curious reader will not be diſpleaſed to ſee a far- ther ſpecimen of this work, now ſo little known or inqui- red P R E F A C E. XXXy three fermons, ten years before ; and in MDCLIX, the year of his deceaſe, his friends HORTON and DILLINGHAM, maſters of Queens and Emmanuel col- lege, red after ; I will therefore here ſubjoin an other paſſage out of it, from the concluſion of that chapter; which imme- diately precedes a profeſs'd inquiry into the origin and pe- culiar caliſes of the Heterodoxy then ſo rife in England. Atqui, ut dolori debito fibula tandem aperiatur ; eft quod An- gliae matri chariffimae compatiamur univerſi: eo quod annis hiſce noviſſimis, qui diu apud nos floruerat Veritatis balteus, cum illo cingulo quod Jeremias Dei juſſu lumbis ſuis detrac- tum in foramine petrae abfcondiſlet, computruiſſe videatur. Ea fiquidem tempora redierunt, de quibus Hilarius ad Conſtan- tium de quibus Optatus ad Donatiſtas - Circumſpice leEtor, et diei, fi potes; Ecquis apex eft Fidei, quem Controver- fiae non foedârunt ? ecquod membrum, in toto corpore religionis Chriſtianae ; quod alicujus Haereſeos lepra non pervaſit? Uti- nam vero non niſi foris, in regionibus tranſmarinis, lues ifta graſaretur ! ſed, ut olim Africa, ita nunc (proh dolor!) An- glia, quotannis aliquid monſtri parit. Unus, appellat Evan- selium ; ut expellat Veritatem : Alter, Furem praedeftina- tuin adunco, quod aiunt, naſo ſuſpendens; Paulinae interim praedeftinationis furtum et rapinam meditatur : Tertius, dum Synodum Weſtmonafterii nuper habitam toto Coelo errare contendit ; errat ipſe, toto Tartaro : Quartus, Redemtionem redimere conatus eſt; ſed quo pretio ? ipſius nimirum Elec- tionis Reprobatione; et ipfius Gratiae reditu in Ingratiam : Quintusy -- ſed reprima me : nam de Biddelli noſiratis erro- ribus horrendiſque blaſphemiis tacere praeſtat, quam pauca di- Sin autem hujus faeculi Borboritas et Gnofticos, fi Quaerentes, Trementes, al ósque Fanaticos oratione proſequi vëllem ; non ad Clepſydram modo, fed et od Amphoram queri- monia noſtra protrahere'ur. Tact. Sacr. II. i. 7, The Authors of the firſt ſecond and fourth of theſe books, the titles of which are play'd-upon; were, Dr. John Playfere ; Mr. William Sancıoft, afterwards Arch biſhop of Canterbury; and Mr. John Goodwin. Biddell made him elf very famous, in theſe days; and the Seekers, Quakers, and other fanatic fects began to be firſt talk'd of. cere. xxxvi PRE-F A C E. lege, printed a collection of his The- clogical Aphoriſms in quarto ; with the title of Armilla Catechetica. Theſe two lait mention'd Doctors, Hill and ARROWSMITH, being ſpo- ken-of with ſo much reſpect and af- fection by Dr. WHICHOTE, in his firſt letter; and being with him in the places of higheſt rank in the Uni- verſity ; and appearing to be ſo cloſe- ly connected with TUCKNEY, as in (ther things ; fo alſo in the diſplea- fure conceived againſt the Provoſt's new doctrines : I thought, the reader wou'd be pleaſed, to have ſome ac- count of them all in this place: which has been collected with ſome care, from the beſt authorities I was able to procure. A word or two has been ſaid, by way of Note, concerning ſome others : where it was imagined of uſe to illuſ- trate or explain the paſſages, in which their names occur. One” only being .forgotten, I will juſt add here concern- ing Him ; that Paul BAYNES was Fellow of Chriſt's college, ſucceded Mr. P R E F A C E. 1 G E. xxxvii Mr. Perkins in the rectory of St. An- drew's at Cambridge, and printed fome notes on the Epiſtle to the E- pheſians. It remains only, that I acquaint the learned and curious, the candid and patient reader ; (as I have by this time good reaſon to call and think him :) with the hiſtory of the Letters, now preſented to Him. The origi nal tranſcripts of them, in Dr. WHICH- cote's own hand ; were, as I ſuppoſe, part of the treaſure entruſted with Dr. Jeffery: but I cannot learn, that they are now in being. For I have been very inquiſitive after them ; hoping, by means of them, however haſtily or ill written, to ſatisfy my-ſelf in the true reading of divers paſſages ; which I cannot now be poſitive of. That Dr. WHICHCOT E wrote a bad hand, is pret- ty plainly hinted in the letters ; more than once : that they were written : at firſt, and tranſcribed by him after, in great haſte; is alſo very certain : Dr. WHICHCOTE ſeems beſides to have had in his temper a warmth eagerneſs and xxxviii P R E F A CE. and enthuſiaſm, but always under the command of his Reaſon ; which made him, when handling a favorite argu- ment, or inforcing a truth which he was under the power of, utterly ne- glect his ſtyle ; and muſt have ren- der'd him in a ſtill greater degree im- patient, under the cold reſtraint of writing accurately. From all theſe conſiderations I have reaſon to ſuſpect, that Dr. WHICHCOTÉ. might not al- ways write exactly; nor Mr. Jef- Fery always read exactly : for the copy in my hands was not taken by the Arch-deacon himſelf, but by his Bro- ther; though it is corrected through- out by the former. For my felf: I have taken the leaſt poſſible liberty ; have followed, almoſt to a degree of affectation, the old mode of ſpelling ; have copied my copy, with the utmoſt fidelity ; and never varied from it, without abſolute necef- ſity. The paſſages, which the firſt writers wrote in the margins, are now taken into the text; but ſince they are quoted and referr'd-to, as being in the PRE FAC E. XXXIX the margin ; I have taken care to keep them ſtill ſeparate, by inclofing them within crotchets. And the re- ferences all through are made moft preciſe and diſtinct; and free from all poſſible ambiguity. If any ſhall be of opinion; that the letters are not of fuch confequence, as to deſerve being made public ; I am not diſpoſed to diſpute that point: yet, let me be permitted to ſay; the fubjects, debated in them, are of un- queſtionably great concernment and the men, who debated them, were ex- cedingly capable of handling them acutely and judiciouſly : even confi- der'd in the loweſt poſſible light, they are curious remains of the laſt century; and let us ſomewhat into the hiſtory and ſtate of one of our Univerſities before the Reſtoration. And, to ſay no more ; one advantage they may be of, to the very beſt and wiſeſt of us all ; to teach Us, by the example of theſe learned and good men, who, though they cou'd not either bring- over the other to his own way of think- ing; P R E F Ä C. E. ing; yet preſerved a reſpect and ef- teem for each other; and lived on in friendſhip and charity. ; if not in great intimacy and familiarity : teach Us, I ſay, by their example, how to “ Dif- fer without Quarrelling; to deal with each other in meekneſs calmneſs and reaſon; and ſo to repreſent the moſt high-God and Father of us all, who applies Himſelf conſtantly to Our fa- culties; and deals with Us in no other way, than by Reaſon and Argument. SAMUEL SALTER. March 8, MDCCLIII. Yarmouth in Norfolk. (1) Τρ Τ Η Ε RIGHT WORSHIP FULL Dr. WHICHCOT, Provost of King's COLLEGE ; Α Ν D VICE-CHANCELOUR of the University of CAMBRIDGE. Theſe preſent, SIR, ECAUSE I underſtand, that Mr. Cradock * was pleaſed, not long ſince, to ſay ; (He knows, to whom ;) that ſome of Us deal diſingenuouſly with you: in ſpeaking againſt ſome of your Tenents; without dealing with you in private: though I B * Samuel Cradock, heretofore a pupil of Dr. Whichcote's at Emmanuel college, and at this time fellow there; became Univerſity Preacher, in this year 1651; and was afterwards preſented by the college to the living of North-Cadbury in Somerſetſhire, where Whichcote and Cudworth were his two next and immediate predeceſſors, and whence he was ejected for non-conformity in 1662. He wrote and publiſhed many books ; and died in 1706, aged 85. His younger brother was Zachary; afterwards Chaplain in ordinary to King Charles II, and Provoſt of Eton college. B doe Dr. TUCKNEY'S doe not fancy, as, ſome others, this affected I were not idolized; to the prejudice of Saving Grace : yet, if I muſt uſe the word ; truely, Sir, I deſire to be ſo ingenuous with you ; as, out of that ancient and ſtill continued love and reſpect I Lear you, to crave leave to teil you; that my heart hath bin inuch exercited about you: and that, eſpecially fince your being Vice- chancelour, I have ſeldom heard you preach; but that ſomething hath bin delivered by you, and that ſo authoritatively, and with the big words, ſoinetimes of " divineft reaſon," and ſometimes of " more than mathematical de- « monſtration;” that hath very much grieved me; and, I beleive, others with me: and yeſ- terday, as much as any time. I paſs-by many things in your ſermon; and crave leave to note three or foure. I. Your ſecond Poſition, -“ that all thoſe things, wherein good men differ, may not “ be determined from Scripture ; and that itt « in fomne places ſeems to be for the one part, and in ſome other places for the other.” I take to be unſafe and unſound, II. Your firſt advice, that we wou'd be o confined to Scripture words and expreſſions ; « in which all parties agree; and not preſs « other forms of words, which are from fala “ lible men: and this wou'd be for the peace of Chriſtendom.” I look-at, as more dan- gerous: and verily beleive ; that Chrilt by his blond never intended to purchaſe ſuch a peace; in which the moſt Orthodox, (for that word I > KC 6 inuit FIRST LETTER > And yet, muſt uſe; though it be. now-a-days ſtomached:) with Papiſts, Arians, Socinians, and all the worſt of Hæretiques, muſt be all put into a bag together; and, let them hold and maintain their own, though never ſo damnable hærefies; yet, as long as they agree with Us in Scripture expreſſions, they muſt be accorded -with. III. Your ſecond Advice gives your ingenu- ous man liberty to propound his own different conceptions; and, it may be, to brand the con- trary opinion with the black mark of cDivi: " nity taught in Hell:" which will take-away as much peace; as the former Advice promiſed to give us. This libertas prophetandi, in moſt that ever hitherto preſſed it, did ſemper aliquid monſiri alere : and when I diſcerne, whoſe foot- ſteps appear in theſe two Advices ; I am very: ſorry to ſee Dr. WHICHCOT, whom I ſo much love and honour, to tread in them. Of both theſe advices, what ground there was from the : Text * ; I leave indifferent men to judge. Sir, your heart, I beleive, was full of them; and. that was the reaſon of that ſo importune' pro- pounding of them. And although you told us, You cou'd not paſs them by ; 'yet My dul- neſs is ſuch, as to think; many a good mini- ſter wou'd have made as profitable a fermon, from that text; and, having inſiſted on Chriſt's . giving Repentance, which You omitted; wou'd never have thought of thoſe notions : and, it may be, wou'd have as much ſmiled-at Him; * Probably, Like xxiv. 47. B2 that 4 Dr. TUCKNEY's 3 * * * that ſhou'd have told him that the text cou'd not be well handled, without them : as at Him, that ſhou'd have ſaid ; that a Commencement oration cou'd not have been made, without a large diſcourſe of Re&ta Ratio . IV. Your diſcourſe about Reconciliation ; that it doth not operate on God; but on Us; ç trat e nobis naſcitur, &c;” is Divinity, which my heart riſeth againſt: and though, if you meant, that for God fö to diſſemble and over- look fin, as to be reconciled to them that con- ținue in it; is an impoſſibility to the nature of God, and Divinity (as your deepe word had it,) taught in Hell ; yet to ſay, that the ground of God's reconciliation is from 'any thing in Us; and not from His fțee grace, freely juſtifying the ungodly; is to deny one of the fundamental truths of the Goſpel, that derives from Heaven; which, I bleſs God, lyeth neer to my heart: it is dearer to me, than my life : and therfore you will pardon me, in this my bolder mappnoia and freeneſs : in which if I have exceded, you will eaſily impute all overſights to the ſtraytes of an hour which I had, to write this letter ; and a cop- py of it. And, Sir, altho' your Speech and Anſwers the laſt Commencement were, in the judgement of abler men than my ſelf, againſt My Commencement Poſition the former year S; and + Dr, Whichcote had been very large on this ſubject; in his ſpecch at the Commencement of this year. Which his ſon Jonathan Tuckney, who printed it with the reſt of his Latin pieces in 1679; calls vindicatio Fidei ci fuperbo Rationis magiſterio, The Sermon I have not ſeen ; t but FIRST LETTER: 5 5 ز and your firſt yeſterday Advice directly againſt My Commencement Sermon; and what You delivered yeſterday about Reconciliation, if I miſtake not, fatly againſt what I have preach- ed for you in Trinity pulpit*: yet in holy reve- rence I call. God to wittneſs, that all this I have laid aſide ; nor hath it putt any quick- neſs into my pen. But Zeal for God's Glory and Truth; Defire, that young ones may not be tainted; and that your name and repute may not be blemiſhed; and that My ſelf with other your friends may not be grieved, but comforted and edified by your miniſtry, and ſo may have more incouragement to attend upon it; have been the weights upon my Spirit, that thus ſett the wheel a-going which, if upon the wheels, in Solomon's phraſe, t will have better acceſs to you; and acceptance with you ; which with my humble ſervice I deſire to preſent; and ſubſcribe myſelf, Sir, Your unfeigned Friend and Servants September 8, 1651. A. TUCKNEY. but I find one of his, on 2 Tim. j. 13. on the uſefulneſs of compendiarie ſyſtemes, commended and referr'd to, in the epiſtle to the reader before the ſecond edition in 1958, of the Affemblie's Confeffion and Catechiſms : which is moſt proba- bly that here hinted at. * Dr. Whichcote preached a lecture at Trinity church in Cambridge, (as Arch-biſhop Tillotſon faith) for near 20 years together; which was continued, after he left off, by a combi- nation of learned fellows of colleges : as Mr. Beardimore ſeems to ſay, in his paper on the Archbilhop's death ; juſt pub- lifh?d by the reverend Mr. Birch. + See the marginal reading, Prov. xxv. 11. and the Coin- mentators on that text. Dr. B 3 Dů WHICHCO TE's i Dr. W HIGH COTE's FIRST LETTER; In Á N SWE R. SIR, I : ; : : is Received your letter, laſt night; and my ſleep ſince hath been moſtlý meditation thereon: and in the iſſue, iny thoughts ſuggeſt; If I be faulty,“ let the Righteous reprove me; it Thall not break my head * :” and bleſſed be the man, that rids me of an Error! Sir, I afſure you, I have taken many things of late years, ſince your return to the Uni- verſity, very kindly' from 'you ; and have layd them up by me, as certain expreſſions of your faithfullneſs to me; but your pläjä deal- ings with me in this your letter, I preferr be- fore all the reſt : and I do give you the advan- tage thereiñ òf á Meſſenger ſent to me from Heaven. Onely I muſt examine the things that you fay, for, faith the Apoſtle, « ſhou'd án « angel from heaven bring, &c.it”..: Sir, I do fpeak my heart to you, I'do not diſſemble; I have had you all along in very high eſteem ; and have borne you -reverence, ' beyond what you do or can imagine; laving in me ai living and quick : ſenſe of my firft relation i * Pf. cxlj: 5. + Gal. j. 8. See in the preface ſome account of Dr. -Hill and Dr. Arrowſmith... ta FIRST LETTER. 7 to you : and, of all men alive, I have leaſt af fected to differ from You; or to call in quæf- tion either what You have done or faid or thought: but your judgement I have regarded with reverence and reſpect. I do not, I can not, forgett iny four firſt yeares' education in the Univerſity under you ; and I think, I have principles by me, I then received from You. In the next place I acknowledge DR. HILL riſing-up in the ſame place, as to Me; and continuing the relation of Tutor to me, for the next three years; and my inward hearty Friend, before and ſince. And give me leave to ſuper- adde Dr. ARROWSMITH, though not in that relation to me; a later acquaintance indeed, but my friend of choice ; a companion of my ſpe- cial delight : whom in my former years. I have acquainted with all my heart, I have told him all my thoughts; and I have ſcarcely either · ſpoken or thought better of a man; in reſpect · of the ſweetneſs of his ſpirit, and amiableneſs of his converſation: Sir, to my great grief and trouble, I have been of late very ſenſible of an abatement of former familiarity and openneſs ;; and we have not converſed with that ſingleneſs and ſim- plicity of heart, as heretofore : our Hearts have not ſeemed to be together, when our Per- fons have bin; but we have looked upon one another, rather with ſhieneſs and fear; than with : former love and good-will. I have ſometimes attempted to make a diſcovery of the matter; but I have mett with reſervedneſs, and an endeavour to; decliñe all diſcourſe of that nature: where- upon В 4 8 Dr WHICHCOTE's upon I reſolved, that time wou'd work-out all diſplicency and offence; and lead into a good underſtanding. Sir, your letter hath now giver me the happieſt advantage poſſible; by diſcover- ing to me the cordolium : I am freely willing, heartily ready, to be accountable, to give fatis- faction. If I have done prejudice to ſaving grace, by idolizing natural ingenuity ; the Lord re- prove itt in me, and diſcover to me this fin, by any hand whatſoëver. If I have given true cauſe of offenſe and grief, to the hearts of good men ; I deſire, I may know itt: I ſhall be ready to deprecate itt. If I have any way tainted the minds of young ones with errour and falfhood; bleſſed be the man, whoſoëver he be, that confutes that errour. I heartily pray, that no man may receive an Opinion from me; but onely abide in the Truth: I never hear with better acceptance, and greater delight; than when the ſpeaker profeſſeth to correct a miſtake : I wou'd be, I am ſure, a lover and purſuer of Truth. Now, Sir, to deal clearly with you; the matter of your letter meets with no guilt in my con- fcience : I am not felf-convinced; not ſelf- condemned: either you have miſtaken me; or, in my underſtanding, it is God's truth you do reprove. To make this appear to you, I will give you an account in particulars. 4.* For the matter of my Commencement Speech; I muſt ſtand to it, as a manifeſt truth of God; of great importance: it was well conſidered by me; God was fought, for direc- tion and aſſiſtence; and hath bin finice acknow- ledged FIRST LETTER: 9 ledged, by me. I ſhou'd fin againſt God, ftante hoc judicio, to decline it, to diſown it. And I affure you, Sir, preaching ſeven years ſince at Trinity lecture, on the firſt chapter to the Romans; and taking notice withall of fome- what in the ſecond ; theſe phraſes of the Apoſtle, concerning men not under a goſpel diſpenſation To gyaçov. Tý Jig, I. v. 19. leaving the natural uſe, v. 27. without natural -affection, v. 31. holding truth, in unrighteouſ- nefs, V. 18. τα αόρατα αυτά τους ποιήμασι νούμενα, ν. 20. γνόντες τον θεόν, ν. 21. εις ασύνετον καρδίαν, εις πάθη ατιμίας, εις αδόκιμον νύν, ν. 28. έθνη τα τε νόμο ποιη φύσει, ΙΙ. V. 14. and εαυτοις vójcos-have forced upon me all thoſe notions I do entertain, or have publiquely delivered ; con- cerning natural light, or the uſe of reaſon. I : now forbear many other parallel ſcriptures, to eſtabliſh the truth; and inſtance onely in theſe: my fermon-notes upon which lying yet by me of ſeven year's date, being a good evidence for me; that the notion itſelf, was by me pub- liquely declared, long before your Commence- ment Quæftion*. And indeed I took not offenſe at your quæſtion; but was well enough ſatisfied in your explication and defenſe of it: thinking, ifwe differed in ſome expreſſion, yet we agreed in ſenſe and meaning. And, I aſſure you, that the primary intention of my Commencement fpeech was, de certitudine et dignitate Chriſtia- nae religionis ; thinking that a ſubject worthy i. * Articuli Fidei non funt ad normam humanæ rationis exi- gendi. Vid. A. T. Præfectionn. &c. part 2. fage I. ſuch 1 410 Dr. WHICHCOTE's ſuch a meeting, and to edification : wherto whatſoëver I ſaid, of its fatisfactorineſs to true Reaſon, the mind and underſtanding of man, came in as acceſſory; and primarily neither fore- ſeen nor intended. What befell us in diſputa- tion, was fudden, occaſional, unthought-of; it may be, before the anſwer, as little known to me, as the argument; wherof however I have no record by me: and therfore I referr that part to Conference; wherby the me- mory of the argument may call-back the me- mory of the anſwer. Concerning your Commencement Sermon; truly I doe not think, it hath bin in my me- mory, of many months; till your letter yeſter- night cauſed me to recall it : ſure I am, I had no confideration of it; in my late preparing or preaching of my ſermon : neyther do I now know, whether there be any inconſiſtency; be- tween what you then ſaid, and I ſince. Con- cerning fermons you have preached for me at Trinity ; .(which truly is a great obligation-up- on me: and I hope, you will not imputé ſuch baſeneſs to me; as indignly to reflect upon fo great' a reſpect and kindneſs to me :) as I was not preſent to hear, ſo to this hour. I know no more, ’bate what is in your letter, concerning them ; than onely that my wife ſtill told me, how much ſhe was revived by your excellent paines, as, I think, upon“. We, as ambaſladours, beſeech you to be reconciled. +." But to call in quæſtion or contradict you, in i i Cor. V. 26. ... aught ) • FIRST LETTER. II . aught you had taught, was neyther in the ſenſe of my mind; nor indeed, within the compaffe of my poſſibility: the things being wholely unknown to me. In the laſt place, concerning my late fermon; I have betaken my ſelf to my notes; my řule in ſpeaking, and I ſhall give you the Poſitions: as I find them written, and remember them fpoken. * I. I perſwade myſelf; that all truly good *** men among us, do ſubſtantially agree; in « all things ſaving « II. That ſome things, wherein we differ, are not certainly determined in Scripture ; -" but that which both parties ſay, ſeems to : have countenance fomewhere or other. Yea, " I think, God máy have reſerved ſomewhat ** from us, as not hujus temporis; or His ſecret, se and that He wou'd not have us know. Nolite * altum fapere, in this caſe. « III. The propoſal for peace---That all be looked-upon as fallible, which is ultra et citra “ fcripturam.”---And, Sir, is there on earth power to adde, alter or change? is not the foun- dation of Proteſtancy, Sacra fcriptüra eſt adae- quata regula fidei ? are not ſcripture förmes of words ſufficient, yea apteſt, to conveyand carryall ſaving truth to the mindės and underſtandings of men ? Farther I argued thus for peace among good Chriſtians.--Good men, differing in is their own expreſſions, yet agree in fcripture es formes of words: acknowledging, the mean- ( ing of the holy Ghoſt in them is true; and they « endeavour to underſtand and finde it out, as . is well 12 Dr. WHICHCOTE's "well as they can: therfore they ſhou'd con* “tinue.friends; and think, they agree; l'ather " than think, they do not agree ;::(becauſe they do agree, in what is God's and infal- iri lible; though they differ, in what is their own and fallible :) and upon this conſidera- « tion forbear one another; and not impoſe « their own, either ſenſe; or phraſe.” And I think, all. Proteſtants hold; that Cuilibet. Chrif tiano, conccditur judicium diſcretionis: againſt the Pope's uſurpation of Judex infallibilis vilia bilis in rebus fidei. And truly, Sir, I think; I ſhou'd give a great deal too little to the wiſdom of God in Scripture : if I ſhou'd not think it, without any humane ſupplement, ſufficient; to con- vince Popery, to aſſert the divinity of Chriſt, and to declare the notion of His death, and to ſecure the mindes of men from whatſoëver ſuppoſed hærefy or blaſphemy. And I per- fwade. my-ſelf; that good men have light enough, and direction plain and full enough, from Scripture ; to enable them to diſcover and decline ſuch wicked. company, as your letter ſuppoſeth, And, Sir, wheras, you ſay; you diſcerne, in whoſe footſteppes I tread : if you meane any late author, I can aſſure you ; I can ſhew you all theſe matters in a Poſition - in EMANUEL college..chappel, at Problemes * made by me, fourteene yeares agoe, teſtate et regimine ecclefiae : which I wonder that thoſe times ſhou'd beare, and not theſe. * Difputations in the college-chapels of Cambridge are called $o de po- Pioblenis; FIRST L ET 'T E R. 13 f So that it is true, that you ſaye'; my heart was full : for indeed, my head hath bin pof- , ſeffed with this truth, theſe manie yeares; and I have long ſince freely reaſoned and diſputed it, with ſome of the ancienteſt, and in chiefe place in the univerſity : ſo that I am not late or newe in that perſuaſion; concerning ſcrip- ture ſufficiency and non-impoſing. “ IV. The propoſal for progreſs and growth es in knowledge-That an ingenuous-ſpirited 5. Chriſtian, after application to God, and dili- gent uſe of ineanes to finde-out truth"; might fairely propoſe, without offenſe taken, "s what upon ſearch he findes cauſe to beleeve; "s and whereon he will venture his own foule. This (I ſaid) might be converſe to mutual edifi- cation ; and without diſturbance to the world : and ſo I have long thought; and do continue to think ſo ſtill : and, if herein I be in an er- rour, I ſhou'd be glad to be ſhewn it. For the point of Reconciliation - I ſhall write you out a coppy, of my notes, in that point: wherby you will eaſily underfand, how you wrong both my wordes and meaning. “ Chriſt doth not ſave us; by onely doing « for us, without us : yea, we come at that, sc which Chriſt hath done for us, with God; «ç by what he doth for us, within us. For, in " order of execution, it is, as the wordes are s placed in the text; Repentance, before For- «s giveneſs of fins : Chriſt is to be acknowledg- ed, as a principle of grace in us; as well as an advocate for us. For the ſcripture holdes- w forth Chriſt to us, under a double notion ; "1. to - Dr. WHICHCO TE's "1. to be felt in us, as the new man; in con tradiction to the old man: as a divine nature;- "? in contra-diſtinction to the degenerate and a-- " poſtate nature: and as a principle of heavenly "life ;. contrary to the life of ſin, and ſpirit of " the world :: 2. to be beleeved-on by us, as « a ſacrifice for the expiation and atonement of «« fin; as an advocate and meanes of reconcilia- (ation between God and Man. And Chrift “ doth not dividedly performe theſe offices; one; " and not the other. For reconciliation be tween God and Us, is not wrought, as ſom- " times it is ſaid and pretended to be in the: world, between parties mutually incenſed : ic and exaſperated one againſt another: when: *: the urgency of a caſe makes them to forbear hoſtility, and acting one againſt the other ;; " their inward. antipathie and enmitje in the “ mean while rather increaſed, inflamed: bes. “ cauſe they take not up the difference fạirely, " nor come to agree in the cauſe; but cauſa « continens odii ſtill continues : ſo that, though, an amneſtie be conſented-to, yet are they not « friendes; but in heart enemies. · Wherfore 's our ſaviour, to diſtinguiſh, faith; If ye from your heartęs forgive not;. &c. g But with " God there can not be reconciliation ; with- :- ss out Our becoining God-like: for God's ss acts are not falſe, overły, imperfectas God cannot make a vaine ſhew; God, being perfectly under the power of goodneſſe; can i 1 Mait, xviij. 350. . 67 1.0t FIRST LETTER. 15 CC or not denie himſelf: becauſe, if he thou’d, he " wou'd depart from goodneſſe ; which is im- poſſible to God. Therfore We muſt yeelde, « be ſubdued to the rules of goodneſſe, receeve ſtamps and impreſſions from God; and God “ can not be farther pleaſed, than goodneſſe “ takes place. They therfore deceeve and flat- « ter themſelves extreamly; who thinke ofre- "! conciliation with God, by meanes of a Saviour, acting upon God in their behalfe; and not “s alſo working in or upon them, to make them * God-like. Nothing is more impoſſible than to this ; as being againſt the nature of God: which is in perfect agreement with good- - neſſe, and hath an abſolute antipathie againſt iniquity, unrighteouſneſſe and fin. And we “ cannot.imagine, that God by his Will and * Pleaſure can go againſt his Nature and Being.' [The phraſe, "Divinity minted or taught in Hell;' I finde not in my notes : but it was ſuddainly ſpoken ; upon this abuſe.of God and cheat of our-felves.) “ To put this upon a Saviour to' doe; and impotently to flatter vur-ſelves in " the conceit of ſuch a thing, which a purte “ Dei ponit repugnantiam ; were, inſtead of re- “conciling Heaven and Earth, to divide God againſt Himſelfe. And this is a demonſtra- “ tion in Divinity ; beyond which no demon- « ftration in Aſtronomie is nxore certain. · If “ we wou'd be true to our-ſelves, let our faith - have no contradiction from within us; let: so not our ſenſe give our conceits the lye; let us taſte and fee, &C. " 66 D) Now, 16 Dr. TUCKNE Y's Now, whether there be anie thing in all this, contrary to “ free grace, freely juſtifying “ the ungodly;" as you ſeeme to inferr: I leave to your ſelf upon ſecond thoughts to judge. Or whether this whole diſcourſe be not, as was: by me intended, wholely pointed againſt thoſe, that “turn the grace of God into wantonneſſe;" and pretend to be reconciled to God, through Juſtification ; wheras they continue enemies to God, through want of Sanctification ; and the renewing of the ſpirit by Chriſt. Sir, You wrong me very much ; ir mil- quoting, oritur e nobis; and attributing it to the ground of our acceptance with God. I finde in my notes theſe wordes, Salvatio naſcitur e nobis, fufcipitur “ a nobis ;” in the gloſs I had upon the wordes, viz. " the true notion of ſal- sovation : a ſaviour to give repentance and for- s giveneſs. Some look at ſalvation, as at a « thing at diſtance from them; the benefit of « ſome convenient place to be in ; exemtion « from puniſhment; freedom from enemies a- « broad: but it is the mending of our natures, « and the ſafety of our perſons, our health and «s ſtrength within our ſelves,” [Nothing in this is intended to leave-out the authour of our ſalvation; or 92 quo ſalvatio oritur :] “ and our good ſtate and condition with God; the “ work of grace and favour towards us and upon us; our being reſtored to righteouſ- “ neſſe, goodneſſe and truth ; and our being " reconciled to God, ſo as we may truly finde " the kingdom of God within us.--- *** Dr. TUCK ( 17) Dr. T U Č K N Er's i SECOND LETTER. SIR, HA AVING now at laſt this morning, ſince tenn o'clock, gotten a little free liberty from company, to conſider of your large letter; in which your love putt you to ſo much paines in writing it: I have borrowed two or three houres from my preparation for to-morrowe's ſermon; to give you a fhorte and ſuddaine ac- count of my thoughts about itt. And firſt, Sir, I cannot but very thankfully acknowledge your favour and love; in that your ſo earneſt care and endeavour for my ſatisfaction: and your pious ingenuity; in being ſo deſirous, in caſe you ſhou'd be out of the way, of bet- ter information and direction. For thoſe larger expreſſions of your greater reſpects, to the two others you mention, and my felfe ; whatever They may be, I, who do or ſhou'd know my own meanneſs; do freely and really, without glozing, profeſſe my ſelfe unworthy of them: and therfore inuſt impute them, to your goodneſſe, wholely; and not at all, to anie deſerts in my ſelf. What expreſſions of ſtrangeneſſe you have of late obſerved in Thein, I muſt leave to You с and 18 Dr. TUCKNEY's and Them : for my felfe, this I can very truly ſay; that as, from my firſt knowledge of you, I have ever loved you; fo, fince my returne hither, your great worth in your ſelf, and much kindneſſe to me, have obliged me more affec- tionately to honour you. This indeed, I muſt confeſſe, is my- I cannot well ſay whether, Temper or Weakneſſe; it may be both: that I have no ſkill in court-complements and dif- ſemblings; to hide diſtaftes in the diſguiſe of a counterfeit ſmile. I have learnt it from Sir FRANCIS BACON; that an unreſerved openeſſe and freeneffe have bin ever eminent in thoſe, that have bin moſt manly and generous: I am none of them; butt in this foe farr like them, that I deſire to deale plainely with all: eſpe- cially with thoſe, whom I moſt reſpect. And truly, Sir, if there have bin any abatement of intimacy and freedom, either in Them or My- felfe; I think, in your letter you have layd your finger on that fore. I think for Them, I am ſure for My-ſelf, that the onely cordolium is and hath bin ; that we fear, the truth of Chriſt, much dearer than deareſt friendes, hath bin and may be prejudiced; and ſo young ones in the univerſitie tainted, and others greeved, by a veine of doctrine ; which runnes up and down in manie of Your diſcourſes, and (in thoſe] of ſome others of verie great worth; whom We verie much honour, and whom You head, as fome think; though, for this laſt particular, I verily think otherwiſe. A brief ſynopſis, or ſome fewe particulars of it, I ſhall preſent You with by-and-bye. Sir, SECOND LETTER. 19 Sir, you take too much paines, in clearing your-felf from reflecting upon me, in your Commencement ſpeech and anſwers and laſt Lord’s-day's ſermon. In my letter I from my heart told you, I heeded it not: I beleeve, it was not ex intentione operantis; whatſoever it were, operis. If the truth of God be not oppo- fed; I hope, He will quiet my heart; though I be. For what you ſay, about your commence- ment ſpeech and anſwers ; “ that the matter of to it is a manifeſt truth, and of great impor- tance; your declared judgement feven yeares " before, out of Romans the firſt and ſecond; "s in which manie paſſages, which you cite, « feeme to make for it; that you were not " offended with my quæftion, but fatisfied “ with my explication ; and that your inten- «« tion in that ſpeech was de certitudine et dig- “ nitate Chriflianae religionis; and what was ſpoken about Reaſon was acceffary, and not primarily intended :"--Give me leave free- ly and playnely to expreffe my-felfe - That a diſcourſe de certitudine, &c. was indeed an ar- gument fitt for ſuch a meeting : but that cer- tainely I beleeve, moſt of your auditours wou'd have judged, might have bin more ſatisfactori- ly and theologically made-out, from the cer- tainty of divine teftimonie, and faith in it; than of reaſon: and wou'd gladly then, and at other times, have Failh to have bin advanced ; rather than Reaſon cried-up: which is yet fo frequently [done], that it is now cramte, not bis but centies cocta ; and fo proves nauſeous : and your C2 20 Dr. TUCKNEY'S your then ſo large diſcourſe about it, but the fourth edition of what manie of them had be- fore, in your poſition, determination, ſermons, at Trinity and otherwhere. And for ſtrangers, miniſters and others, who had before but fini- ſter thoughts of your judgement in that par- ticular ; their prejudice was more confirmed : and ſo increaſed, that it hath bin a greefe to divers of your friendes to hear and read what they doe of you in that kinde ; and that from all quarters : So that I beleeve, it had bin your wiſdom to have forborne: but they apprehended it to be then carried-on with a high hand, both by your ſelfe and others; fo as rendered moſt of your auditours more diſaffected than fatis- fied : who conceeve, that that ſaying of “ the - candle of the Lord, &c. *” ſo over-frequent- lie quoted, makes nothing to that purpoſe; and thoſe inſtances out of Rom. I and II as little: the firſt of the places relating to the ſearching of our owne, or, as PISCATOR conceeveth, of another's heart and actions; not of divine truths: and the latter to what is Theologiæ Naturalis, in which natural reaſon is of more uſe ; not to what is purely ſuper-natural and evangelical : in which what uſe yet there is and may be of reaſon, and the exerciſe of itt; in my poſition I endeavoured to expreſſe. But that our faith ſhou'd be ultimately reſolved in rationem rei, ex parte objecti; and that ex parte fubje&li, ratio kumana fhou'd be fummus judex ; which was expreſfely afferted by you, in your * Prov. xx. 27. anſwer SECOND LETTER. 21 anſwer to my argument: as I then ſaid, it was new, ſo now I thinke it very ſtrange divinity. And for that you then ſaid, and now in one part of your letter write; that all proteſtants hold, that Cuilibet Chriſtiano conceditur judicium diſcretionis; it is very true, as you well adde in your letter, againſt the Pope's uſurpation of Judex infallibilis vifibilis in rebus fidei : a true beleever thou'd not be a brutc, but have ſom thing above a Collier's faith t; implicity to be- leeve, whatever the Pope and his church ſaith : nay, he is to be amongſt thoſe evyevéçigo I, and it is a part of the ingenouſneſſe of his ſpirit, as he is a man, eſpeciallie as a Chriſtian, araxgíveiv, to ſearch, and with the judgement of diſcre- tion to judge, whatever the beſt men ſuggeit. But you will pleaſe to obſerve, what is there faid ; " they ſearched the ſcriptures, whether " thoſe things were fo”; by which it ap- pears, that the ſcriptures were the rule, by which they judged of the doctrine delivered to them: ſo that what the ſcripture or divine teſtimonie of God held-out, they withoute diſpute beleeved: and judged, not itt; but man's doctrine, by itt. And although man's under- ſtanding be ſubjectum naturaliter receptivum illuminationis fupernaturalis ; and, eo nomine, when Faith acts, Reaſon acts alſo: yet this is verie farr from reſolving Faith into Reaſon. Au’STINE from the word hath taught me ; quod ſcimus, debemus rationi ; quae credimus, authoriteti. + Fidcs carbonaria, a proverbial phraſe, us'd afterwards by Dr. IVhichcote, lett. 3. and by Dr. Arrowſmith in his Tactica facra, printed 1657. I Acts xrii. 11. C3 But 22 Dr. TUCKNE Y's upon what But I have forgotten my-felfe ; in ſo farr launch- irg into a diſpute, which I intended not, about the Commencement buiſneſſe.--I more briefly touch you write, about your laſt fer- mon: in which you ſay, you have betaken “ your-ſelfe to your notes. ; which are your rule " of ſpeaking”: but, I ſuppoſe, ſuch a rule, as you doe not ſtrictely tie your-ſelfe unto; as appeares by your firſt marginal * annotation in your letter. And truly, Sir,' were I not ſo conſcious to my owne dulneſs and unfaythful- neſs of memorie, I ſhou'd be very prone to think; that your delivery in the pulpitt and theſe notes differ : and the rather, becauſe I perceeve others, of better judgements and me- mories than my-felfe, agree with me in think- ing; that you ſpake to the ſenſe, that in my former letter I expreſſed. But I am confident, you write ; as you apprehend, you fpake: and we muſt beleeve Your notes, rather than Our memories : and therfore I ſhall followe them and, as I goe along, compare them with my letter : in which, it may be, I might in fome thinges be miſtaken. When you perſuade yourſelf, that “ all truly good men among us do fubftantially agree; “ in all thinges faving”: that word ſiibſtantially is a good ſalvo; but-thoſe things Javing --iit may be, we do not agree what is meant by them. What and how manie they are, manie good men differ in; and, it may bc, you and I ; * P. 15. N. B. What the M S. has in the margin, is here every where inſerted in the text; but, for diſtinction fake, put within [hooks,] doe : SECOND LETTER. 23 doe : I beleeve, thoſe fundamentall ſaving thinges are, in fome mens' judgements, butt very few ; and they leave out of them very many ſubftantial truths; in which if good men Thou'd differ, itt wou'd be very uncomfortable: and, as I wrote, itt wou'd be verie unſafe and unfound to ſay, that they are not certainely de- termined in the ſcriptures; butt that they Thou'd feeme, in ſome places or other, to coun- tenance the two contrary parties. Some thinges of leſſe conſequence, I grant, may not parti- ticularly be determined by ſcripture ; but by conſequences: and though ſome other thinges, of greater conſequence and higher nature, may be “ God's ſecrets”; yet I beleeve, whatever Göd reveles or delivers in ſcripture, they are ſo farr hujus temporis, I meane hujus vite et mundi ; that, although they be not curiouſly to be inquired into and judged and meaſured by our reaſon and underſtanding; yet they are, ſo farr as delivered by God, hublie to be be- leeved and ſubmitted-to : and ſo are by God determined in the ſcriptures, though we may not eaſily determine of them. And this per- fection I give to the ſcripture; which, in your next paragraph, you inſiſt upon : for whereas, in your firſt propoſal, I conceeved itt dangerous; that, " in caſe both parties hold to ſcriptore ex- " preſſions," though they may differ, and that dangerouſlie, in their contrary interpretations of them ; they ſhou'd agree":-as a manifeſt fyncretiſm with the worſte of hæretiques; who will not denie the wordes of ſcripture : and therfore in councils and fynods thej have con- fentely C4 24 Dr.TUCKNEY's ز '. ; tures ftantely framed ſome wordes, to expresie the true meaning of ſcripture; againſt heterodoxie : which as You in publique, ſo divers : times in private I have heard others. expreffe , a diflike of inſiſting-upon, as fallible. You aſk me, "whether on earth there be any power to adde alter or changes and whether « it be not the foundation of:. proteſtancy, Scriptura facra eft:adacquata:regula fidei ; and are not ſcripture-formes ſufficient, yea ap- teſt, to convey all ſaving truths to the mindes !! and underſtandings of men?'”: And after- ward, You “ think, you ſhould give a great “ deele too little to the wiſdoin of God in fcrip- if you ſhou'd not think it ſufficient, without any human ſupplement, to convince popery; and to affert the divinitie of Chriſt, 5 &c; from whatſoever ſuppoſed hærefie or ” blaſphemie: and you are perſuaded; that ?? good men have light enough from ſcripture, to inable them to diſcover and decline ſuch 15 wicked company; &c: and that you argued Safor peace among good Chriſtians; who, tho' differing in their own expreſſions, yet agree *. im ſcripture formes. of wordes"; &c: and Fatherfore thou'd continue friends.; and think, ose they rather agree; than not becauſe they ...do: agree, in what is God's and infallible, I though they differ, in what is their own and «fallible. I anſwer-That I beleeve, there is no power on earth. to adde alter or change the ſcriptures :; : which are the adæquate rule of firith: lui Iverilie beleeve too ;: that true explications and interpretations of the wordes 8 ; SECOND LETTER. 25 1 of ſcripture, though in different wordes from itt, are no ſuch additions or alterations. Nor dare I condemn ancient and modern councilsand fynods, in their oμoύσιος, αχωρίσως, άτρέπως, ασυγχύτως, perſona, &c; nor other orthodox commenta- tors, and paraphrafts; as guilty of ſuch a pro- phane violation : nor, I beleeve, will you your- ſelf; who, it may be, too much affect ſchoole- expreſſions : which often rather darken the dif- courſes, than illuſtrate the truth. Theſe are no human ſupplements; as though the ſcrip- ture without them were imperfect: but they onely argue an imperfection in our underſtand ings; which need ſuch helps and gloſſes, to reade what is written ; though in its ſolfe it be ſufficientlie legible. I beleeve alſoe; that ſcrip- ture formes of wordes are ſufficients and, in a true ſenſe, apteit; to convey to us' all ſaving truth : for in ſuch truths, neceflarie to ſalva- tion, we truly hold ; that the ſcripture, xarà tò ontò, is playne and evident : but thoſe thinges, which are ſo ſaving, You before ſuppoſed all good men agreed-in; they were thoſe other thinges, in which you conceeved they differ, which heere you ſpeak-of: and, even in thoſe thinges moſt ſaving, though to a cleare and un- diſtorted eye they are cleare enough; yet, if the minde and judgement be weake; it may be, the fame truth of fçripture, fullie cleare in its felfe, may be ſpoken in other wordes more playnely to ſuch a weak capacitie : The .childe, it may be, will better underſtande the mother's liſping, than when the ſpeakes more plainelie. All childrens' catechifmes are not made-up of the expreſs 2 26 Dr. T UCKNE Y's (6 expreſs wordes of ſcripture : other wordes; expreſſing the true ſenſe of them, may more diſtinctely and particularly diſcover anie corrup- tion : which was the occaſion of orthodox di- vines in all ages framing of newe wordes and expreſſions; more punctuallie to holde-out old truths; againſte hæretiques’ innovations : that as They, in their owne wordes, give a falſe ſenſe of ſcripture; ſo We, in ours, may give a true. Nor is this, by anie orthodox divines that I knowe of, accounted anie diminution of the wiſdom of God in fcripture; though ſome others have accounted it foe: (of whom bye- and-bye ;) who are guilty not onely of “ſup- poſed hærefies and blafphemies," as your worde is; but of real ones. And although goode men, as you ſay, have-light enough from fcripture, to diſcover and decline ſuch wicked companie ;, yet truly I muſt not oppoſé ortho- dox explications of ſcripture to ſcripture: but thankfullie acknowledge it a great mercie of God; that, by ſuch helps, I may the better underſtand ſcripture ; and ſo better diſcover their depravations of itt: which, whilſt I am weake and unwarie, I may be the ſooner. de- luded by; if I muſt be ſo charitable as to agree with them, if they adhære to the infallible ex- preſſions of ſcripture; onely differ froin man's expreſſions, which are but fallible. But you “ argued thus, for peace among good Chrif- istianis; who, agreeing in ſcripture formes of “ wordes, Thou'd rather think, they do agree; « than not: and becauſe they differ onely in ** their owne expreffions, which are fallible. How I ſhoulde think that they agree, when they SECOND LETTER. 27 they hold contradictory aſſertions ; I cannot think : and for who are good Chriſtians, when every one, that is indeed fo, is prone to think another fo; and when hæretiques of old, and divers of later times, have bin ſober and tem- perate; nec fine larva ſummae pietatis :-I think, that we ſhou'd look rather to their doctrines, than their perſons. I ſaid, I was forrie to ſee you treade, in theſe propoſals, in ſome bodies footſteppes: to which you anſwer ; “ that, if I meane anie late au- .thour, you aſſure me; that theſe matters you had in a Probleme, fourteene yeares " ſince; and therfore wonder, that thoſe times " ſhou'd beare them; and not theſe : ſo that “ you acknowledge, your heart is full, and head se hath bin pofſeffed, of theſe truths, thefe " manie yeares; and have long ſince freely ss reaſoned and diſputed them with the ancient- Feſt, and ſuch as were in chiefe place, in the “ univerſitie ; &c.” — Sir, thoſe, whoſe foot- ſteppes I obſerved, were the Socinians and Ar- minians ; the latter wherof, I conceeve, you have bin everie where reading, in their workes; and moſt largely, in their Apologie : and thoſe very things, which You hint, They dilate. And truly I wou'd not have my good friend come near thoſe mens' tentes: though J. Good- WIN*, like a colonel, can march up in the face of * See the dedication and preface of JOHN GOODWIN'S Redemption redeemed; which was printed this very year 1651 in Folio, and delicated to the reverend Dr. BenJAMIN WHICHCOTE Vice-Chancellor, and the other heads of colleges, &c. in the Univerſity of CAMBRIDGE. This work is often cenſured by our author's friend, ARROWSMITH, in his Tactica facra. all 28 Dr. TUCKNEY's all ſuch imputations. Sir, God knows my heart, that from itt I doe free you in my thoughtes from ſuch aſperſions; as having heard you declaring your ſelfe againſte their characte- riſtical tenents: and accordinglie have con- ſtantly cleared you, both by letter and worde of mouth; when both wayes I have too fre- quentlie found you in that kind afperſed. I doe not well underſtand the latter end of this paragraph of your letter; which I ſup- poſe, in your hafte, you left imperfect : but if it be, as I thinke it is; that you are not Jate nor newe in that perſuaſion of fcripture ſufficiency, &c; I hope that, more than four- teene years ſince, you were ſettled in that per- ſuafion : in which TIMOTHY was, when much younger *: but if in your poſition then you did ſoe aſſert ſcripture ſufficiency, as to take- away or diminiſh the due uſe of confeffions of faith and catechiſmes, &c; which in other wordes do explaine ſcripture expreſſions, and meete-with emergent errours and hæreſies ; in ſo doing you trode in the Arminians' ſtepps: who do therfore decrie them; becauſe they finde their heterodoxies mett-with by them. And if it were fourteene years ſince, you were then but a yonge divine; and might be more ſub- ject to miſtake : in which, by thoſe reaſonings and diſputes which you mention, it may ſeeme; that thoſe ancienteſt and chief ones of the uni- yerſitie you diſputed with, were not altogether of your minde: and therfore, although, what 2 Tim, iij. 15, 16, 17, we SECOND LETTER 29 ز we ſuck-in betime, we hardly diſcharge our- ſelves of, afterward; yet, be your head and heart never fo fullie poſſeſſed with ſuch notions; it will be your greater advantage to be the ſooner dif- poſſeſſed of them Your next is about « an ingenuous-ſpirited Chriſtian's liberty, after application to God, " and diligent uſe of meanes to finde-out truth; fairely to propoſe, without offenſe taken, “ what upon ſearch he findes cauſe to beleeves " and whereon he will venture his foule : and or this conduceth”, you , you think, “to mutual edifi . “cation ; and that, withoute diſturbance to the << world. And thus, as you have thought, ſo you “ continue to think ; &c:" --- I acknowledge the caſe, as you have written itt, warily pro- poſed: the man muſt be ingenuous'; pro- vided he bee ſo really : 'make application to “God'; if in ſinceritie, a directe way to be guided by Him : 'with a diligent uſe of ineanes to finde-out truth'; if with a ſingle heart and eye, not likelie to miſle itt :' he fairely and i without offenſe propoſeth'; it is not expreſs- ed, whether onely in private ; or alfoe in pub- lique: and the truth may be ſo fundamentall, and ſo eſtabliſhed; both by God, in his worde; and by Chriſtian magiſtrates, in their conſtitu- tions and lawes; that the contrarie will: vėrie hardly be ſo fairelie propoſed, as“ not to fall foule and with offenſe both on the weake, to their ſtaggering; and the ſtrong, to their greefe: but it is that, which upon ſearch - he findes cauſe to beleeve ; and wheron he will venture his foule': this laft clauſe, of venturing 30 Dr.TUCKNEY's, venturing his ſoule, I do not much heede; ſuch efficacie of errour may ſo ſeize on a man, that he may with great confidence beleeve a lie but, as you put the caſe, he doth not only beleeve ; but findes cauſe to do ſo : if fo, that juſtifies both God || ; and man : and therfore God forbidde, that I ſhoulde condemne him! This conduceth to mutual edification; and is withoute diſturbance : and if anie be troubled, it is as ſome are with Chriſt himſelfe **, and his goſpell II; it is their faulte, not his : though ſome truthes are not of fo great import in themſelves, or fo neceſſarie to be knowen; that they ſhou'd force us upon the diſturbance of others contrarily minded, by our unſeaſonable inforcing them. But, in caſe the man onely think, he findes cauſe to beleeve ; and itt be indeed a non-caufa pro cauſa : though he ſhoulde be trulie ingenuous; manie in this kind upon deſigne perſonating ſuch a temper: and though he ſhoulde ſeek to God for guidance; He often anſwering ſome according to their Idol ſet-up in their heartes $ : truths may be ſuch, and ſo fundamentall , and ſo eſtabliſhed ; that he ſhoulde rather ſtifle his owne firſt ſcrupling thoughtes, and check him ſelfe rather, than ſpeak them out; to the en- dangering of others *. And trulie, ſuch for the moſte part are thoſe truths; which now-a- daies 'They call in quæſtion, who plead mofte for this liberty : ſuch are Socinians, Arminians, and the colluries of all ſortes of Sectaries amongſt us; who under the protection of this Liberty, 2 Theſſ. ij. II. John xvj. 2. Acts xxvj. 9. Ezek. xiv. 23. 1 Sam. xvij. 29. ** Matt. ij. 3. * Prov. XXX. 32. 11 Matt. x. 34, 35. Ezek. xiv. 4. which SECOND LETTER. 31 *, ar ; as, att all you ſay, which they ſo crie-up, run-out into all the wildeſt and fouleſt extravagances. And therfore whatever an EPISCOPIUS, a a: J--*, or a Junius Brutus, might pleade ; yett for a lover and affertour of Truth, either to be a full uniſon with them, or were it but even --- times, woulde bee but unſuitable; ſo, at ſuch a time, in which ſuch a principle hath let Hell break looſë; in my poor thoughts, is very un- ſafe: att leafte, very unſeaſonable. For the point of Reconciliation, you give me (I thank you) a coppy of your notes: “ wherby," " I will eaſily underſtand; how I have as wronged both your wordes and meaning: your “ diſcourſe being both intended and pointed a- gainſte them; who pretend to reconciliation “ with God, in juſtification ; and continue ene- “ mies to God, for want of ſanctification : in " which," you ſay, you ſay, “ Chriſt doth not ſave us, by onlie doing for us, without us : yea, “ we come-at that, which Chriſt hath done for us, with God; by what he doth for us, within us; for in order of execution, it is as the wordes are placed in the text; Repentance before Forgiveneſs &c: For the Scripture holdes- « forth Chriſt to us, under a double notion ; 1. to be felt in us, as the new-man ; &c. 2. to “ be beleeved-on by us, as a ſacrifice and advo- • cate for attonement and reconciliation ; &c. " God cannot make a vaine ſhew; God, being perfectlie under the power of goodneſs, can * Theſe three blanks are in the MS; whether Dr. Tuck- ney wrote fo at firſt, or Dr. Whichcote left then fo in his copy, or Dr. Jeffery in the tranſcript he made from Dr. Whichcote, I cannot fay. ز .60 ز 1 86 not 32 Dr. T U C K N Y’s ز not denie himſelf', &c. nor can be farther “ pleaſed, than goodneſs takes place: they “ therfore deceeve themſelves ; who think of “ reconciliation, by meanes of a ſaviour acting " upon God, in their behalfe; and not alſo “ working in and upon them, to make them -56 God-like.” Sir, I acknowledge, your notes have helpt my memórie: I did think, you had ſimply denied Chriſt's working upon God, in our reconci- liation: and had you putt-in the word onlie, before the word acting ; I had not bin ſo ſubject to have miſtaken : and yett I was not alone in the miſtake; and fo, I hope, you will rather ſay, I was in the wronge ; than that I wronged your wordes or meaning: being doubt- full, what you ſaid ; and therfore inſerted two parentheſes in that paragraph of my letter, ( if I miſtake itt not, and if you meant.) And itt ſeemeth, you did meane, as I there wrote: and therfore, as to that particular, as I have receeved your ſatisfaction ; ſo I crave your pardon. Some other things in this there are, in which I crave your ſecond thoughts; as you referre me to mine :: eſpecially about the order of thoſe two notions, under which Chriſt is held-out to us in the goſpell; that he is firſt felt in us, as the new man; before he is beleeved-on by us, as a ſacrifice and advocate: in this I neede a little more light and proofe. If by beleefe you mean, aſſurance that Chriſt is our expiation and advocate; I ſhall not eaſilie diffent from you: for in ordi- narie courſe, as God workes, ſo he gives us to feele ſomthing wrought, in us; before he bring us to that aſſurance of our peace and pardon : that SECOND LETTER. 33 that worke of the ſpirit; with the witneſſe of the ſpirit, being the matter of our evidence : though I dare not ſay fo univerſallie; I dare not abſolutelie ſay, that a ſinner, converted immediatelie before death, may not have, from the wittneſs of the ſpirit, aſſurance of his peace; though by reaſon of ſhorteneſs of time, weake- neſs of bodie and head, and confuſion of ſpi- rit in regard of his former finnfull life, he hath little eyther time or abilitie or litt to reflect-upon what God hath now in the inſtant wrought in him. But if by beleefe you mean, faith’s relying or caſting himſelfe upon God in Chrift for mercie ; I beleeve, the experience of manie a humble finner will be a wittneſs; that hee hath in this ſenſe beleeved in Chrift; as a ſacrifice and advocate for him ; when as yett he could not fay, he hath felt anie thing of the newe man in him: I mean, as to his feel ing: for, as for the reallitie of the worke whomſoëver and whenfoëver God juſtifieth, hee alſo fanctifieth : and, for the order of nature; ſeeing that faith is before the amoTéacéut of juſtification, and faith can not bee withoute a renewall; I was never much againſt FERINUS his opinion; that fanctification, that is, firſt ſanctification or regeneration or vocation, is in nature before juſtification : in which ſenſe I ad- mitte what you ſay, “that wee come-at that which Chriſt hath done for us with God, by ( what hee doth for us within us. And for that which you adde; that in order of exe- 'cution, repentance is before forgiveneſs”;~- I grante itt; in the full accompliſhment of itt: D but 34 Dr. TUCKNEY'S but yett ſo, as that God, not onlie in his eter- ñall election had before purpoſed, and by the death of his Son after purchafed;: our reconci- liation : but, even in the execution of that pur- poſe, and application of that purchaſe, Hee is before us; and is ſetting-out firſt that happie meeting of our fulle reconciliation*. Nor in this doth God make a'vaine ſhew; nor is itt contrarie' to his goodneſs, freely to juſtifie the ungodlý, ſuch as are fo immediate antecedenter ad juſtificationem, though not conſequenter; fo as to continue ſuch: for fo indeed God cannot "he farther pleaſed, than goodneſs takes place: and, that hee may bee pleaſed, hee ever takes order; that ſanctification ſhall ever be joyned with juſtification. Šir, in the laſt paſſage of your letter you ſay; “ I wrong you very much ; in miſquoting, ori- “ tur e nobis ; and attributing itt to the ground " of our acceptance with God: you onlie ſaid “ itt of ſalvation, to expreſs the true notion " of it; that, whereas ſome think, it is a thing at diſtance from them; freedom from ene- « mies abroad: Itt is the mending of our na- “ tures, and the ſafetie of our perſons; the o workè of grace within us, and his favour ď towards'us; our being reſtored to righteouſe “ neſs" ' and goodneſs, and reconciled to • God.” Sir, I am ſorry, that I ſhoulde give you occa- fion the ſecond time to ſay, I have wrong'd' you again ; and this ſecond time very much it was not my ſingle apprehenſion, that your wordes, as ز II Cor. V. 19. with 20. you SECOND LETTER 35 you delivered them, did ſeem to look at the ground of our reconciliation. And this naſcitur e nobis, , in the true and conſtant acception of that worde, looks fufpiciouſlie that way, That you ſaid itt of ſalvation, helpes, þut little : for that is a large worde: and both in it's ſenſe and I beleeve your's, conteins reconciliation in itt. And trulie, Sir ; to ſay, that eyther ſalvation or reconcilia- tion naſcitur e nobis; is, in my poore judgement, a very dangerous expreſſion: ſure I am, a ſtranger to ſcripture manner of ſpeaking:which, as all ſhoulde much heed; ſo I expect that You will, eſpeciallie: who before, in contra- diſtinction of the fallible expreſſions and formes of wordes of man's making, judged, and that trulie, fcripture expreſſions to be apteſt to con- veye a!l ſaving truths to our underſtandings. And I thou'd be glad to knowe, what author you quoted that ſentence out of; unleſs it were your owne: as I have bin apte to think, that both in your ſermons and privatt diſcourſe you do often, as it were, quote your-ſelfe; in uttering latine ſentences and axiomes, both in Logick Philoſophie Law and Divinitie, which are of your owne making. Butt, whoſe-fo- ëver itt was, and what-ever orthodox expoſi- tion you give of itt; in which yett you ſtill fete the worke of God within us, before his worke about us ; yett, that of eyther reconciliation or ſalvation it thou'd be faid, that naſcitur e nobis ; I muſt ever humbly conceeve, that it is not ccording to that υποτύπωσις υγιαινόντων λόγων*, 11 Tim. j. 13. D 2 which 36 Dr. TUCKNEY's which wee ſhou'd hold faſt, and not pare from. às ز Sir, by this time I have quite tired-out myſelfe; and fear, I ſhall much inore tire you, with theſe weake lines; that were written as faſt as my hande could runne, and that by fittes and ſtartes, as my company and other occaſions ſtill calling mee away wou'd give leave : elſe you had seceeved them on ſaturday ; but neceſſarie oc- caſions prevented mee. It may bee, they will come to you too ſoone, now; being ſuddaine raw thoughts, unworthie of your more mature judgement : but, although they will expreſs my weakneſſe; yett itt will be enough, if you can read in them my love to you and God's truth : from which double ground itt is, although I have wearied you too much alrea- die, that I crave leave yett farther to burden your patience; in making good what I pro- miſed, in the beginnyng of my letter, about what hath bin a trouble to fome, as concern- ing ſome others; and to ſpeake out my whole · heart and thoughts, about your-ſelf. Sir, for yourſelf; from your firſt coming to CAMBRIDGE, I trulie ſaid, I loved you: as finding you then ſtudious and pious, and very loving and obſervant of me. I remember, I then thought you fomwhat cloudie and obſcure in your expreſſions : but I then left you. · Since I have heard ; that, when you came to be I.ec- turer in the colledge, you' in a great meaſure for the yeare laid-aſide other ſtudies; and be- took yourſelf to Philoſophie and Metaphyſicks : which, ſome think, you were then ſo immerſed in; SECOND LETTER. 37 in ; that ever ſince you have bin caſt into that mould, both in your privatt diſcourſe, and preaching ; both for wordes and notions : both which, I fear, have rendered your miniſtry leſs edifying: as partlie not being well under- ſtood, by very manie of your auditours; and leſs affecting the heart, when ſo buiſying the head to underſtand both wordes and things. And how richly uſefull a ſpirituall plaine pow- erfull miniſtry wou'd bee in the univerſitie.; I need not tell you : but that, in former times, when the quæſtion was, why CAMBRIDGE men were accounted more profitable preachers than OXFORD men; Mr. BAYNES faid, the reaſon was, that God had, from the firſt refor- mation, bleſſed CAMBRIDGE with exemplary plaine and ſpirituall preachers, and ſo goodlie pictures hung before the women conceeving, helpt to make the birth more beautifull. When times were very evil , God in mercie kept your fpirit uprighte; which, with your other worth, brought you as into repute with others, ſo into the place of the univerſitie preacher; wherein God hath hitherto preſerved you: and may Hee keepe you ſtill, and make you much more fruite- full and ſerviceable! And I beſeeche when God returns you to that taſke, that you woulde think much of 1 Cor. xiv. 19, affect not to ſpeak in ſchoole-language ; nor to runne-out in ſchoole-notions : it is farre different from the ſeripture, both ſtyle and matter : it was begot in the depth of anti-chriſtian darkeneſs; and, yery both good and learned men judge, will va- niſh in darkeneſs; at the light of brighter day: which you, Sir, D 3 38 Dr. TUCKNE Y's which wee hope is approching. Some are readie to think; that your gréat authors, yoù ſteere your courſe by, are Dr. FIELD, Dr. JACKSON, Dr. HAMMOND; all three very learned men: the middle ſufficiently obſcure; and both hee and the laſt, I muſt needs think, too corrupt. Whileft you were fellow here, you were caſt into the companie of very learned and ingenious men; who, I fear, at leaſt ſome of thein, ſtu. dyed other authors, more than the ſcriptures ; and PLATo and his ſchollars, above others : in whom, I muſt needs acknowledge, from the little inſight I have into them; ì finde manie excellent and divine expreſſions: and as we are wont more to liſten to and wonder at à Parrot, ſpeaking a few wordes; than a Man, that ſpeakş manie more, and more plainlie; and all intelli- gibly: ſo whileft wee firide ſuch gemmes in ſuch dunghills , where wee leſs expected them ; and hear ſome ſuch divine things from them wee have bin too much drawen-away with ad- miration of them. And hence in part hath rurine a veine of doctrine; whích divers very able and worthy men, whom from my heart I much honour, are, I fear, too much knowen by. -The power of Nature, in Morals, too much advanced --Reaſon hath too much given to itt, in the myſteries of Faith.-A re&ta ratio much talkt-of; which I cannot tell, where to finde. Mind and Underſtanding is all'; Heart and Will little ſpoken of.-The decrees of God quæ- ftion’d and quarred; becauſe, according to our reaſon, wee cannot comprehend; how they may ftande with His goodneſs: which, according to your SECOND LETTER. 39 your phraſe, Hee is under the power of.-Thoſe our Philoſophers, and other "Heathens, made fairer candidates for Heaven; than the ſcriptures ſeeme to allowe of: and They, in their virtues, preferred before Chriſtians, overtaken with weakenefles.--Akinde of a Moral Divinitie min- ted; onlie with a little tincture of Chriſt added.: nay, a Platonique faith unites to God. Inhe- rent.righteouſneſle ſo preached, as if not with the prejudice of imputed righteouſneſs, which hath ſometimes very unſeemnlie language given it; yett much ſaid of the one, and very little or nothing of the other. This was not Paul's manner of preaching.--This inherent righteouſ- nefs may bee perfect in this life.-An Eſtate of Love, in this life; above a life of Faith.--And ſome broad expreſſions, as though in this life wee may be above Ordinances :-with divers o- ther principles of religion, by ſome very doubt- #fullie ſpoken of.-And, in caſe anie cannot fo well digeſt theſe, I muſt needs ſay, I coulde not but wonder to heare ſome ingenucus men.com- playning, in the pulpitt and elſewhere, of their rixae et lites; and that, about notions and ſpecu- lations, ſects and ſuperſtitions; aș all opinions are accounted, which a man may hold, and yett bee never the better man for them:.and ſo, that there is a God and a Chriſt, will thus come to bee. but a notion and ſpeculation. Sir, theſe are ſome and the moſte (if my wearie head coulde remember, more, , my hand," though wearie, fhoulde write them; , becauſe I woulde now, once for all, unboſom my-ſeife to you.:) of the cordolia; which I, and other of your friends, D have 40 Dr. TUCKNEY's not take it ill, if wee love what wee coniceeve have bin affected with: And although, God knowes,.wee love you and Them ; yet you will the truth of God more: and therefore can not deſert itt; though wee bee little able to main- tain itt. And I hope, that the thoughts of your being reputed a Wiſe man, and both you and They Learned men; will not ſtoppe your eares to the weaker ſuggeſts of your true friend: and the rather; becauſe, whatever otherwiſe your worth and abilitie is ; yett I knowé you are not ignorant, what verie ſiniſter thoughts are con: ceived, and reportes ſcattered, both of your ſelfe and ſome others: which from my ſoule I deſire may, by your fulle and plaine appearing for the truth of God; be reallie confuted: and that we may joyne head and heart and hand, and with one ſhoulder, in the worke of the Lord; grow- - ing up in the truth in love ; which was one of the greateſt encouragements I had, in myreturne to CAMBRIDGE; as hoping to have much helpe in this kinde, by the companie and aſſiſtance of ſuch friendes; whom I ſo much honoured, and fo intirely loved: as the contrarie hath bin the trouble of my ſpirit, in ſuch an unhappie diſap- pointment.--Sir, will you pardon this unrea- ſonable tediouſneſs; and this . open-hearted and plaine-ſpoken freeneſs? itt hath bin from the integrity of the heart of cur worthy Friends Camiride ; et ANTH: TUCKNEY, 15, 1651 1 Dr. (41) Dr. WHICHCOTES . SECOND LETTER. 1 SIR, Y. OU conceive. I ſaid ; that Faith is ulti- | mately to be reſolved in rationem rei, e parte obječti ; and ratio humana to be fummus juidex, ex parte ſubjecti :- I ſhall give you an account, what I have faid ; and what I do mean. There are veri- tates, quae fundantur in rationibus rerum ; atque barum eft theologia naturalis : as, that Deus eft optimus, as well as maximus; that creatura te- netur Deo obſequi, ſecundum poſſe. There are veritates, quae nituntur revelatione Dei ; atque barum eft fides divina : a as doctrina de Chriſto ex- a piatore, redemptore, liberatore; revelatio de cre- b atione in circumftantiis. And ratio fubje&ti doth judicare de ratione objecti; et de materia revela- tionis : but by judicare, I mean not an autho- ritative act; but a perceptive and apprehenſive act: as when. viſus judicat de coloribus, auditus de fonis. For a judging diſcerning faculty is wholy d regulated in its apprehenſions a ratione d objecti, five a qualitate materiae : nam intellectus nyllum habet libertatem circa ſuum objectum; non facit rem aliter fe habere, fed percipit rem ut eſt ; et concipit fecundum imaginem receptam: hoc eſt, judicat. с 1 42 Dr. WHICH COT E's judicat. Atque veritas, a parte intellectus, cons fiftit in-conformitate cum veritate rei. I have full aſſurance 3. that matters of faith are. fo, as they are rey.eled, becauſe they are reveled by God: who alone hath power over them, to make them as they are; and is infallibly true, and neceſſarily good. [ I am fatisfied, that they are Teveled by God; 1. ab argumentis infitis, five e artificialibus ; e b. e. in artificio rei. fitis : et 2. a duetu divini ſpiritus : for, as. St. AUGUST, , faith, fi fpiritus fanétus. mihi non perſuaſerit, bafce-litteras eſe a Deo datas ; nondum mihi pero fuafit Chriſtiano efe.] For thoſe things, which, quantum ad me, are matters of faith; as, they are reveled by God : apud Deum ſunt materią libertatis et beneplaciti; et ergo, antecedenter ad determinationem Dei, poſſent aliter effe : and God might otherwiſe have determined them. But - materia theologiae naturalis intrinſecam habet: 12€- ceffitatem, aut infallibilem * connexionem termino- rum: In materia theologiae naturalis I do fcire; becauſe I can demonſtrate, ex principiis certis peceffariis et infallibilibus : in materia fidei I do credere; becauſe I take things to bee ſo, as tem veled by God: which, if God woulde, might have bin otherwiſe; becauſe abſolutely and of themſelves they were in an indifferency. Hence f it appears; that materia fidei cannot bee .contra rationem rei; becauſe materia fidei eſt-inaterią voluntatis et libertatis ;- et ratio reiieft materia neceſſitatis et naturae : as, it cannot bee de fide, Deum non eſſe . optimum; vel, creaturam non de- *. f Inſolubilemi bere SECOND LÉTTER. 43 Y foil. 176mature Bere Deo fübėje. When therfore wee declare anie thing to be ſecundum rationem rei, and therforè neceſſarilie fo; weë do noe prejudice to faith: becaufe fides verfatur in alia materia; tatem Dei, etiam in occultiſimis; eſſe rationabi- lifimam. BÓN AVENT. Certain it is, that religion is the trueſt and higheſt reaſon; as, on the contrarie, irreligion is fottiſhneſs.] I do withoute fcruple beleeve what God hath reveled, and as He hath reveled; becauſe God is infinite in knowledge, infallible in truth, and'neceffärily good: whënce He cannot deficere, or declare contra veritatem facti, rationem rei ; oř, in matters of his own voluntary determina- tion, Otherwiſe than as He hath refolved them : And in omni materid libertatis Deus babet fupre- mam poteftatem ſtatuendi. I do proxime 6 et imme- diate reſolve my faith into divine revelation in ſcripture ; and therein reſt, with aſſurance and confidence: as foreknowing, luminè natürce, that what God reveles is certainly true; and iii- fallible: whom I knowe to be infinite in under- ſtanding and knowledge; and in full agreement and neceffarie conjunction with goodneſs and truth. [Neither am I lighte of faith in be- leeving *: but I knowe, that matters of my faith are matters of divine revelation, as I ſaid before in the margent; a qualitate materiae, quae eft Jeongetjs, de qua intellectus judicat; ét per dułtum divini ſpiritus, a quo intelleétus illuminattır et in- 1 bo * Prov. xiv. 15 fiituitur.] 44 Dr. WHICHCOTE's fpiritual fen- ftituitair.] And when I have before mee a max- ter of faith, or peece of divine revelation ; I do judicare de fenfu : not by making what ſenſe I will; but by finding oật God's meaning. For the power I have of judging, is not a matter of fation and apprehenſion : and is as much regu. lated and determined per qualitatem materiae, as guſtus per guftabile. And, if I þee fond or par- tiål, or gratifie anie corruption, I am obnoxious to God, and doe it att my peril: God making an accounte, that hee hath ſpoken plaine enough to be underſtood; if I am ſerious. To give you what I mean together-1. there is, which is neceſſarie; and cannot be otherwiſe : as, bonum eſt amare Deum. . 2.. there is, which is in itſelf contingent; and determinable at the pleaſure of Him, who hath power : as, whether mán fhou'd bee or no. 3. there is, which is h declared by Him, who is infallible ; as expiatio peccatorum in ſanguine Chriſti. The firſt is fub- je&tum naturalis fcientiae ; and is in ratione rei: the fecond is, materia libertatis et beneplaciti Dei : the third is, materia fidei. So proximum motivu4172 fcicntine eſt ratio objectiva ſive ratio rei: at ratio motiva fidei eft revelatio Dei. [So you ſee, I a- gree with you in your quotation out of S. Aug: quod ſcimus, debemus rationi ; quae credimus; au- thoritati.] Religio autem complectitur et natura- i lem fcientiam, i et fidem divinam : ſo that there is in religion both demonftrabile et credibile; credi- bile, propter auihoritatem dicentis ; demonſtrabile, per neceffitatem reż. And no oppoſition between them ; quia vcrfantur in alia et alia materia : fcil. SECOND LETTER: 45 ſcil. fides, in contingenti fimpliciter et in ſe ; fcientia autem, in neceſſaria. Yett, if anie think fitt to call them of the firſt kinde matters of faith; as they are declared in ſcripture : fince ſcripture awakens our incogitancy, becaufe of our apo ſtafie and degeneracy: I liſte not in this reſpect to contende with him. Onlie lett him then re- member; that they are allfoe of themſelves knowable :: and ſtand not on the foundation of revelation onlié. But lett him not think, there is anie thing de fide ; which is contrarie to nåtu- ral knowledge. [Mr. PERKINS, CALVINE, and others, acknowledge; that the doctrine of faith will well conſiſt with the principles of reaſon: and doth not deſtroy that knowledge of God, which is lumine naturae.] Contra rationein rei, in naturalibus, eſt impoſſibile : contra rationem rei, in moralibus, eſt maliim et deforme. When God demands and challenges, k " Are not my wayes k equal ?” doth not hee appeale to man's princi- ples and rules, wherby, hee is able to diſcerne and judge; whereby God ſhall be juſtified, and Man convinced ? Certainely, natural light and conſcience condemnes iniquitie ; and gives teſti- monie to wayes of righteouſneſle. If this bee not ſo, unde Dèus judicabit munduin infidelium ne- gativè ; and where ignorantia ſcripturarum eft:om- nino invincibilis ? But I fullie perſuade my-felfe: that you and I do not diſagree herein, in reſpect of our in- ward fenſe and meaning: and if wee differ on- lie in expreſſion, I preſs itt not; but think an other's expreſſions may be apter and fitter than mine: I am not ſuch an du. Ikdir. The 46 Dr. WHICH COT ES The ſumme of what I ſaid, in my ſpeech, in fermons, and otherwiſe; amountes - to this that materia theologiae naturalis is demonſtra- ble, by reaſon ; and that materia fidei ſacris lit- teris.contenta. eft fumme credibilis; and ſatisfactó- I rie to reaſon: 1 and unbiaſſed reaſon, not in a compromiſe with ſenſe, not ingaged in a worlds lie deſigne, .. findes no matter of exception au gainſte it. In the meane while acknowledging; and my reaſon eaſily telles mee ſo; that, if God deign to ſpeak to mee of himſelf and his owne affaires, actes of his infinite wiſdom and power; I ſhall hear illuſtriora et longe majora finito intel- Lectu : and which tranſcend my underſtanding far beyond the tranſcendency of the ſunne, not wrapt-up in cloudes, to my ſight. But this tranſcendency lies in amplitudine et plenitudine obje&ti; non in contradictione rationis : {Nos Ju- -mus Deo et felicitati noftrae omnino impares : ] and in this caſe I may be moſt illuminated, in reſpect of my ſelfe ; when I leaſt comprehend the ob. jeet. Quicquid recipitur, ad modum recipientis re- cipitur : * the bucket, moſt filled in the ſea, yett leaſt conteines the ocean. * This ſeems to have been a favourite Thought of Dr. WHICHCOTE's. We have it again in his third Letter thus expreſsid ; “ Though the diſproportion will be to our ad Vantage, the veſſel more certain to be filled, becauſe of the "fea's dimenſions:" and otherwhere, Thus; « The ocean " can but fill the veſſel; which a much leſs quantity of wa- ter can do." The like occurs in a Sermon of Dr. TUCK- NEY's before the Houfe of Commons, 1643. “ It is our " Happineſſe; not that our Vefſel is ſo little, but that the “ Fountain is ſo full ; &c.” Balme of Gilead, p. 12. 66 go You SECOND LETTERE 47 You ſay, “it is now Crambe, non bis ſed centies 56 cofta ; &c": m ---I have, at ſeveral times, ex- m amined ſeveral pointes by the ſame principle; fciper rationem rei: as indeed tota materia theo logiae naturalis is ſo examinable ; and certainlie, this is not ad nauſeam recoquere cramben; no more than it is upon all occafions, in matters of faith, to prove by fcripture: for it is a new examination, in an other matter; and ratio hua jus et illius rei are two things : though univer- fallie, ſecundum rationem rei in materia neceſſaria judicare, be the ſame principle; as alſo it is, in omni materia fidei judicare fecundum revelatio- nem a Deo factam in fcripturis. You ſay, “auditours wou'd have bin better * fatisfied; if I had theologically diſcourſed de « certitudine et dignitate Chriſtianae religionis, (. from divine teſtimonie and faith in itt; rather « than by reaſon, &c;" Sir, it was to $956pevov, whether religio Chriſtiana did niti authoritate Dei ; were indeed from God; and ſo were materia fidei : ſo that I was to ſhewe, that itt was Jeongeniis, and to prove that, a quali- fate materiae : and that itt is, beyond all con- viction or controule of humane reaſon. And I endeavoured to make it appeare'; that the truth declared by God, concerning our relief by Chriſt, was amiable, gratefull, acceptable to minde, and underſtanding, and ſuch as fpake ittſelfe from God; as our Saviour fpake him- felfe to be Chriſt, to the inward ſenſe of the Samaritans *. And to this purpoſe reaſon was n John iv. 42. made What Dr. WHICH COT È's made uſe of, as a receiver, as a diſcerner; as a principle to be inſtructed and taught ; not as God ſpeakes : Divine truth allwaies carrying it's own light and evidence ; ſo as that the mind receiving itt is illuminated, edified, ſatisfied. Sacra ſcriptura eſt autóniços eft Deo digna, eſt Fide digna : it ſpeaks for itt felfe, it recom- niendes itt felfe to its ſubject, itt fatisfies the reaſon of the minde; procurés it's owne en- terteinment; by it's owne excellencie. I adde allfde ș that the perſuaſion of the holie fpirit contributes to the minde's aſſurance and fatisfac- tion. I receive the truth of Chriſtian religion, in a way of illumination affection and choice : felfe am taken with itt, as underſtanding and knowing itt; I reteine itt, as a wellcome gueſt ; itt is not forced into mee, but I lett it in ; yett foe as taught of God: and I ſee cauſe for my continuance to embrace itt. Do I diſ- honour my faith, or do anie wrong to itt; to tell the worlde, that my minde and underſtand- ing are ſatisfied in itt? I have noe reaſon againſt itt; yea, the higheſt and pureſt reaſon is for itt! (What doth God ſpeak to, but my reaſon? and thoulde not that, which is ſpoken-to, heare? should itt not judge, diſcerne, conceeve, what is God's meaning ] In what is next in your letter, You ſay and acknowledge, what I contend-for; that wee thould bävergíveiv* &c; that natural reaſon is of uſe, in evangelical matters; but more, in " matters theologiae naturalis.”. In the laſt place of this fection, you fall-off from the quæſtion; I my ز S É COND. LETTER. 49 quæſtion ; when you ſay- They beleeved. « without diſpute, what the ſcripture held-out ; "and judged not itt, but inan's doctrine by itt.” My buſineſſe was to prove the divine authoritie of ſcripture; or the truth of Chriſtian reu ligion: after this is done, then we will examine mens doctrine by itt : but, to prove AUTOTIÇA fcripturae, I muſt conſider ſcripture, fecundum materiam ; not produce itt, as a wittneſs. When you ſây ; that " To YuwÇov Tð Jeg con- cernes not truths, but the ſearching of hearts ; " our owne, and others:" I cannot herein gueſſe at your meaning. Somewhat following, you ſay, belongs to matters theologiae naturalis wherein wee agree : To that purpoſe. I pro- duced thoſe texts, in my letter to you; and I underſtand só guwçov ſo too; ſcil. de cognoſci- bili per lumen naturae. [I ſince gueſſe, that this might referre to that other place; p* P " Candle of the Lord”: a place, I now ſent you not; but, you ſay, over-quoted by mee: I do perſuade my ſelf; that is in the wordes, which I have alledged them for. You inſtance in the uſe of the principle; and I inſiſted on the qualitie fittneſs and ſufficiencie of the principle; as from God, and in the hands of God: for a Candle is res illuminata illuminans. When you ſay, “ that cuilibet Chriſtiano con- “: ceditur judicium diſcretionis, is true; as againſt " the Pope &c:” I conceeve itt univerſallie true : as in omni materia, fo contra omnes perfo And I muſt either fee cauſe, why I be- leeve the ſcripture; in whole and in part: or * Prov. XX. 27. E 21as. . my 50 Dr. WHICHCOTE's q my faith muſt bee fides implicita9 ; foe, farre as I doe not ſee cauſe. Theſe five proteſtant principles have ledde mee into all the concluſions I lay-out, about the rule of faith. 1. Sacra ſcriptura eſt αυτόπιςος. . 2. Sacra ſcriptura eſt adaequate regula fidei. 3. Omnia ad falutem neceſaria perſpicue traduntur in ſcripturis. 4. Cuilibet Chriftiatio conceditur judicium diſcretionis . 5; Quilibet abindet in fuo fenfu: and Fides non eſt cogenda t. I underſtand them all, in a real and full fenſe; according to the import of the wordes, and what neceſſárilie followes from them: and fo, I verilie perſuade my-ſelfe, they will patronize my four next following conclu- fions. You ſay r; it may bee, You and I may differ ; in the number of things ſaving : I hope, wee doe not differ, in the enterteining of anie thing ſaving; becauſe of Omnia perſpicue traduntur, one of the five principles : and it is not equal- lie neceſſarie to determine the number, as to enterteine the ſaving principles. I do enter- teine the whole ſcripture ; and in the ſenſe my underſtanding telles me, the holie Ghoſt meant: uſing all meanes and helpes I hear-of in the worlde, ſo fárre as I have opportunitie ; viz. . Fathers, Councils, Expoſitors, Comments, Con- feffions, Syſtemes; and what manie convened have agreed, I have conſidered, wherein they have agreed, with greater reverence: becauſe T ز + See Dr. WHICHCOTË's third letter, q. : ratic SE CON D | ETTER. 51 fatio plurium hominum is the beſt in the world; eſpeciallie, if they have bin free from the ſuf- picion of faction and partialitie : which, you knowe, verie manie councils were not. [You miſtake me (therfore]; if you think, I mean to lay-aſide the endeavours of Fathers, Coun- cils, or any good men, to cleare-up fcripture- truth againſt errour : but I abate of the degree of certaintie, in what is ſo done, of what I finde in ſeripture. Is there not alſo an imperfection in the un- derſtandings of thoſe, who make interpretations? ſo that, though wee thank them for their good will, and make uſe of their paines.; yett everie one for himſelfe is to diſcerne, on glofféma core rumpat vel illuſtret textum. A laudable endeam vour of them I acknowledge; and I am beholden to them for their help; and I will dulie conſider what they ſay: but I am not ſure, becauſe They ſo reſolve; I muſt ſee with my owne eyes ; my own underſtanding muit be ſatisfied : otherwiſe I equalize them to the pen-men of ſcripture.] And I perſuade myſelfe, becauſe of omnia per: Spicue &c; that Hee, who with an honeſt inten- tion of finding-out the will of God, in order to conformity therewith and obedience thereto; ſeeking to God to teach him ; ſearcheth care- fullie holie ſcripture: will miſfe of nothing fa- ving. Notwithſtanding the greateſt difference, that ever I hear’d-of; yett I beleeve, no good man leaves-out anie fundamental : yea, I am apte to think; that manie, who have bin exaf- perated one againſt another; are farre nearer to one another in ſenſe, than in wordes. In reſpect E 2 of 5? Dr.WHICHCOT É's out the preſſions, : of God; who ſearcheth hearts, they agree; inord than in the view of the worlde, which onlie ſees difference, in matters of conſequence, betwen perfons conſiderable ; there are twentie miſtakes of meanings: and coulde they ſee one another's heartes, they woulde thinke better one of an- other: [But) oppoſites too often ſtudy to repre- fent each other in the worſt ſenſe : I perceeven itt, in men alive ; therfore ſuſpect itt of the dead. - "If once diſaffected to each other, they never after deele fairely with one another. ] In what you next ſay, for a good while toge- ther; either wee do not differ; or itt is not a pointe, wherein I did engage ; and I will not multiplie quæſtions, or meddle with other mat- ters; ſince I onlie intend to give you an account of what I delivered : or, if we do differ, I doé not perceeve my-felfe confuted. [I agree with you, that things reveled in fcrip- gure are to be matters of our enquirie ; and that wee are not curiouſlie to pry into God's ſecrets: μη υπερφegνειν παρ' ο δει φρονείν, αλλά φρονείν εις O gapecvel• * but ſtill, I ſay, fundamentals are ſo cleare; that there is little danger of good men differing about them.] For the quæſtion about an ingenuous nian's libertię, you reſolve my caſe with mee, and as I doe; and then diſpute the quæſtion about'à pretender and deceiver: I follow you not in any newe quæftion; I leave his oppoſer to take care to.diſtinguiſh: my caſe was in a&tu fignato, and : * Rom. xii. 3. fo SECOND LETTER 53 fo determinable ; your's is in actu exercito, et cuin omnibus circumftantiis individuantibus. "Singula- rium non eft fcientia. For my owne part, I plead not for libertie of propoſing; though I wou'd be verie glad not to bee impoſed-upon : 's for 1 s underſtand our Saviour, « Calt not your pearles &c. left they rent you *; &c." as granting a penſation for reſervation and ſecreſy ; in cafe perſons will bee miſchievous. [You feemet to argue againſte an ingenuous libertie ; bé- cauſe Hæretiques have bin unexceptionable; and of unblameable life : but, on the other ſide, I finde; ſcripture-hæretiques are infamous in their life. + What is added of Socinians, Arminians, &c ; ' in reſpect of mee, is groundleſs: I have v given no cauſe nor occaſion ; I rather approve him, who ſaid ; Non - Jum Chriſtianus alicujus mominis : I may as well be called a Papiſt, or Mahometan ; Pagan, or Atheïſt. And trulie, Sir, you are wholely miſtaken, in the whole courſe of my ſtudies: W you ſay, you finde w mee largelie in their Apologia ; to my know- Ledge I never ſawe, or heard of the booke before : much leile have I read a tittle of itt. I ſhou'd lay-open my weakeneſs, if I ſhou'd tell you, how little I have read, of the bookes and authours you mention : of tenn yeares paſt, nothing at all. I know not, who ſhou'd bee : your informer : but trulie, in a thouſand gueſſes, you cou'd not have" bin farther off from the ز * Matth. vij. 6. 8. Jude 40 t II Pet. ij. 1, 3. II Tim. iij. E 3 truth SA Dr.-WHICHCOTE's truth of the thing. And for ſchoole-men i #doe not think, I have ſpent four and twentie houres in them divifim, theſe fourteene yeares, Dr Field on the Church I ree'd over, eight: tècne yeares agoe.; but have not looked into Hiiri, I beleeve, theſe tern yeares ; JACKSON and HAMMOND. I have a littlc lookt into, here and there; a good while ſince; but have not read the hundredth parte of either of them ; frulie I Mame myſelfe to tell you; how little I have bin: acquainted with bookes; bụt for your fatisfaction I doe: while fellow of EM- MANUEL colledge, employment with pupills tooke my time from mee. I have not read mánie bookes; but I have ſtudyed a fewe; meditation and invention hath bin rather my life, than reading: and trulie I have more read CALVIŅE, and PERKINS, and Beza; than all the bookes, authors, or names you mention, I have allwaies expected reafon, for what men fayè; lefs valuing perſons or authoritie, in the ſtāting and reſolving of truth: and therfore have read Them most, where I have foundę itt. have not lookt-at anie thing, as more than an opinion; which hath not bin under, propt by convincing reaſon, or plaine and fatif factorie fcripture. Had I given leſſe to Scrip- füre;-than I have doniI beleeve, I had bet ter avoyded; thắn have: don, thoſe offences agaimnie nireéis whereof: youadvertiſe mee, that x maniè have taken them. * If I knów my owne heart; nothing of worldlie: deſigner:or reſpect to caught lefs than the honouri of God, and the Påfètierofimy foulę, rules in meę; to the baş lancing SECOND LETTER 283 lancing of my judgement, in the diſcerning of truth : I keepe my felfe free, to followe rea- ſon and ſcripture; and I am never engaged againſte them, whoſoëver Thewes them mee. I rather affect to ſpeake with them, who dif- fer from mee; than thoſe, who I thinke, agree with mee ; (I ſpeake of matter of opinions ; for about fundamentalls I am ſatisfied:) that I may be ridde of my imiſapprehenſions: wherein I daylie ſuſpect my ſelfe; and ſee cauſe to thinke, that I may bee in ſome errours; as well as I have bin : whereof I have had ex- ferience.---But this is vanitie, to uſe ſuch a περιαυτολογία . I am aſhamed aſhamed to thinke, what I have don; and cou'd blot itt oute agen: but to ſatisfie you; wherein you have inee in ſuſpicion; though itt bee folly in mee to do itt, I lett itt go. You ſeeme in your letter to anatomize my life; but the deſcription doth not characterize mee : you cou'd hardlie have ſhot farther from the marke. That I mighté not cauſeleſslie ſuffer in your thoughtes, I have written you ſomthing that is true: wherein yett. I applaude not: my-ſelf; but itt is my neceſſitie: bene novi, quam fit mihi curta fripellex: - [You ſay, becauſe Hæretiques, X in their y wordes, - ſay what is falfe; therefore Wee, in Our wordes, what is true"; and this, in thinges ultra hitráque fcripturam : but the quæftion wilt hee, Who Thall bee the judge ? ſhall a forreigne power command iny inwarde ſenſe To ſpeake-indeed I will alke leave; but I muſt thinke, as I fee cauſe. ? Unleffe you ſay, fomez have E 4 56 Dr. WHICHCO TE's how you 14 have a priviledge of infallible interpretation of that I may ſafelie repoſe on that interpretation, which fome give; I do not conceeve; how can make good ſomthing that you ſay, withila lines of the bottom of the ſecond page.] Whereas you ſuggeſte, that “ Fundamen- GE talls maye be ſhaken, and endangered'; by ſuch a free propoſal;. &c."— Truely, I thinke; this cannot worthily be conceeved of luch truths : magna, eli veritas, et praecclebit : veritas: non2 quaerit angulos : the foundations of truths neceſſarie to ſalvation are ſo immove- ablie layd by God; that no power, eyther of the Devil or of the degenerate world, can over- turne them: and the lighte of them is ſo fulle, fo cleare, ſo ſatisfactorie; that no ingenuous ünengaged teachable minde, as everie good man's mind ſhou'd bee, can beę miſtaken about them. Omnia perſpicue traduntur, &c. In the nexte place you brand thoſe, who have pleaded for ſuch a libertię ; " Socinians, Armi- a nians, colluries of ſectaries, &c.” [Do wee ňot agree with Papiſtes, in what they hold that is true ? the world underſtandes not the point, you and I reaſon about; when Socinians and Arminians are fpoken-of .) May. wee temper and qualifie Divinitie with prudential confidera- țions.? May, wee do God's work for him; tak ing. itt oute, of his bandes or is itt not better to leave the caſe, to Deus providebit.? Cuilibet 6 Chriftiano em judicium diſcretionis , S. is the foun- dation of Proteítancy: therfore eyerie Chriſtian muſt think and beleeve, as thee findes cauſe. And" thậll hee ſpeak in religion, otherwiſe than a SECOND LETTER, $7 ز . than he thinkes; or, if hee bee asked, ſhall hee anſwer falſe ? [The greate engagement upon men, to hold them to truth; is : that att a man's perill itt is, to runne'away with # lie.] Truth is Truth; whoſoever hath ſpoken itt, or howſoëver itt hath bin abuſed : s butt 8 if this libertie may not bee allowed to the univerſitie, wherfore do wee ſtudy? wee have nothing to do, but to gett good memories; and to learne by heart. Methinkes, in what you ſay here, you do not ſufficientlie conſider; who principallie ſtandes charged, and is the grand ſuper-intendent over truth in the r worlde. 7 In the point of Juſtification, what I ſaid and meant was this; that the beginnings of Grace are wrought in us, before God actuallie juſti- fies finners. ' Dantur praeparatoria ad juſtified : Çationem, hath bin frequentlie determined in the ſchooles by Dr. WARD. A finner non om- nino in motu converſionis eft fubječtum incapax, i. e. non. Fuſceptibile, juſtificationis : and this you do not onlie acknowledge, but att large ex- plaine and give a farther accounte of, for which I heartilie thanke you. By firſt and ſecond, in the double notion of Chriſt; I conſidered diſtinction, rather than order: Whereas you continue to take offence at that ſpeech of mine, ' de interna noſtra ſalute. ; neſciiur :e nobis, fufcipitur a nobis . --- give mec leave to make uſe of a proverb of SOLOMON ; * The wringing of the noſe bringeth forth ff bloud”*: Where the ſenſe is not to he . E E * Prov. XXX. 33 reproved, : 58 Dr. WHICHCOTE's 1 reproved, wee ſhoulde not make a man offer der for a worde. 3. 1. I meant itt diſtincta lie; or in a contra-diſtinction to thoſe thinges, quae extra nos ſunt vel circa nos ; et fic' minus poftrá: nam quae maxime noftra funt, nobiſcum portamus : but not independentlie, in reſpect of God; qui intimior nobis eſt intimo noſtro. That precept of wiſdom, · Acknowledge " Him in all thy wayés ; " I am fure, over? Fules mee; head, heart, hand : itt is the in- ward ſenſe of my foule, digeſted into a tem, per, complexion, conſtitution. I never leave God oute; I ever give Him the principal place; Omnia a Deo, Omnia fub Deo, Omnia cum bono Deo. In the ſenſe of my minde, I was verie farre from taking from God; to give to my- felfe : God is reallie all in all to mee; I hold of Him, derive from Him, live by Him, en- joy my ſelf under Him, hope in Him, expect from Him: there is nothing more written in my heart, than the ſenſe of my dependencie up- on Him: there is nothing, that I am more free to acknowledge ; than His influence, ope- ration and preſence: fo farre was itt from mee to underſtand what you fetch out of the wordes; that nothing ſeemes to mee more horrid, 'monſtrous, violent, contra-natural: iny: heart rifeth with indignation againſt ſuch a thing; I have a perfecte antipathie in my foule againſte-itt: I ſhoulde ſinne againſte all the experience I have of God in my life ; if I a flioulde ſay or thinke ſuch a thing." 2. In conjunction with a paſſive exegetical; in which cafe the latter is explicative and re- tIfaj. xxix, 21. Prov. iij. 6. ſtrictive; 3 SECOND LETTE-R. 59 s :12: ftri&tive; yea, as it were corrective of the for- mer:: and the latter wholelie .over-rules; and fubdues the former ; and becomes mafter of the ſenſe. 9 .:. 3., Itt was purſued with a comment, which you diſlike not : whereto I now referre myfelfe. 4. Itt was but as a gloffe, upon the wordes of the text; “ Repentance, and Forgiveneſs ”; and I ſpake itt of Repentance, reſpectively as in Us; whereas I had before conſidered Re- pentance, reſpectively to Chriſt; as his gift. 5. The explication of Chriſt's giving us Re- pentance, is to give to Us to repent: and re- pentance is truely our acte, ſub Deo. Deus open. ratur per modum purae efficientiae : Voluntas ere- ata producit vitalitatem et formalitatem actus. God is not properlie ſaid to repente in us, but to work repentance in us: Wee are truely and properlie faid to repente, ſub aſſiſtentia, motu, dučtu, divini ſpiritus ; or as in compoſition with God's grace.--Cauſa creata co-operatur ad, on- nem ačtum-all ſaye. O 8 Whereas you addę, that I doe not keepe to υποτύπωσις υγιαινόντων λόγων: cérnes mee remarkablie; who fo plead for fcripture-expreſſions :-- 1. TWVEAUTĀV GWTNSIŁY xategyáceo.fe*, I. conceeve to be a deeper phraſe; as alſo others I coulde alledge!. 2. I accordinglie ſubmitte that phraſe, as alſo I doe all others that are mine, to the cenſure and examination of everie hearer; and am farre from impoſing of itt : remembring S.. AUG: fi quid proponitur contra rationem, aut fa- cras litteras; meliore autboritate rejicitur, quam oferitur. In * Phil. ij. 12. which con. bo Dr. WHICHCOTÈ's * ز In the nexte' place you adviſe mee « not to « affect ſchoole-phraſes and learning, in preach- ing; nor the uſe of Philofophie and Meta- phyſicks." * Truelie, Sir, underſtanding that I oughte not to co do the worke of the Lord negligentlie”*; buť to ſerve Him in the ut- moſte uſe and improvement of myſelf, and what God hath given me : T have, to my beſt, endeavoured to confirme truth, and convince the underſtandings of men therein: and to that púrpoſe, as I have bin able, have made uſe of all thoſe principles; that derive from God, and fpeak: him in the world : thinking, that the efficacie of the application depended upon the folid confirmation of the doctrine. And I am fürė, I have all along bin well underſtood; by perfons of honeſt heartes, but of meane place and education : and I have had the bler- fing of the foules of ſuch, at their departure out of the world. I thanke God, my conſcience telles me; that I have not herein affected worldlie Thewe: but the reall ſervice of truth. And I have alwaies found in anyſelf, that ſuch preaching of Others hath moſt commanded my heart ;' which hath moſt illuminated my head. My way hath bin ; firſt to make-out, then to confirme, laſtlie to apply: 'making more uſe of the principles of God's creation in man, in matters of reaſon and natural light; than I have don, in matters of faith, ^ .--The time I have ſpent in Philoſophers, I have no cauſe to re- pent-of; and the uſe I have made of them, I Jer, xlvjij...IO. dare SECOND LETTER. 61 tare not diſowne: I heartily thank God, for what I have found in thein; neyther have I, upon this occaſion, one jot leſs loved the ſcrip- tures. I find the Philoſophers that I have read, good'; ſo farrę as they go: and it makes me fecrettlie bluſh before God, when I find ey- ther my head heart or life challenged by them: which, I muſt confeffe, I have often found. - Į have fountimes publiquelie declared, what points of religion I have found excellentlie held-, forthe by them; and I never found then ene mies to the faith of the goſpel. I think, St. Aug. faith of St. Paul; non deftruit verini, quod invenit in latere Paganorum : and our Sa- vour reproves the Jewes, by TYRE and ȘIDON; I have thought itt profitable to provoke to jea* louſie lazie or looſe Chriſtians, by Philofophers as Paul did the Jewes, by the Gentiles, enter- teining the faith of Chriſt. je By what rule you judge; that Hee, whe uſėth a Latine or Greek phraſe or ſentence in an Engliſh diſcourſe, muſt needs quote.; I do not underſtand : much leſs, upon that account; be thought to quote himſelfe.." Some things I ſhou'd have ſaid before; which, though out of place, (for I have but broken pieces of time ; and I putt things down, as chey come into my head :) I crave leave. here to adde - That ſome impute itt to mee, as Socinia aniſm; that I affert the uſe of reaſon, în ſacris.- If a Socinian thinks, he can by reaſon convince of falſehood any thing of Chriſtian, religion ; and I joyne iſſue with him, on this point; and Mew him, that there is nothing of true reaſon againſte y 62 Dri WHICH COTÉ das againſte anie thing of Chriſtian faith ; do áno ſwer all his objections"; which fomtimes ] have don : and more-over ſhewe him, that the fubftantials of Chriſtian faith ; eſpeciallie, capita de Chriſto expiatore, redemptore, liberatore, as reveled in fcripture; are the moſt credible mat- ters in the world : anſwerable to the deſire of a inan at a lofle in himſelfe, ſatisfactorie to his earneſt, longing, awakened expectation from God: I conceeve, in this caſe, I deſerve as little to be called a Socinian as David, for ex- torting GOLIAH's ſword cut of his hand, and cutting the maſter's head off with itt, did de- ſerve to be eſteemed a Philiſtine. 5 For the points you impute to mee and others, or to mee or others, whom I ſuppoſe you think I value---ſome of them I knowe nothing of ; others I muſt denie wholely; and ſome, I con- ceeve, are miſtaken. “ The power of nature, in morals, too much advanced : too much given to reaſon, in mat- ters of faith.”_Of theſe I have, in the fore- going part of this diſcourſe, given account; and thereto I referre my felfe: and I think, I have not given too much." [God is acknowledged principal ; Underſtanding, a diſcerning power ; Principles, received from God, to be employ- ed under Him.] ". A re&ta ratio talkt-of; which I cannot < tell, where to find” Surelie, a recta ratio may there be found; where vera fides is to be found. 7 « Mind SECOND LETTER. 63 ୧ • Mind and Underſtanding is all : Heart to and Will little ſpoken-of." - I beleeve this findes no authour. [In vulgar uſe, Mind a comprehends Underſtanding and Will.] « The decrees of God quæſtion'd and quar- " rell’d, &c."--- I do not remember, that I have heard anie one call them in quæſtion : and I knowe none, that ſubmits not to them; as they are declared in ſcripture: finding there no inconſiſtencie in them with goodneſſe, or the rationes rerum. 3 Philoſophers made fairer candidates, & C.' For their eternal ſtate, I have left them to God: I dare not affirm; that God neyther did, nor coulde, revele aught of Chriſt to them; or accept them, in and through Chriſt.o Philoſophers in their virtues, preferred be- « fore Chriſtians, over-taken with weakeneſſes” - A great miſtake! itt was allowing themſelves in Sin ; envie, ſpight, malice, fury, &c; things, which ſpeak Hell, as it were, broken loofe and come-up upon the world: turners of the grace of God into laſciviouſneſs, whom the Apoſtle doth more decrie. Privatio maligni- tatem ponit, negatiò abfentiam forme. s " A kinde of moral Divinitie minted, &c." This I underſtand not. [Our Saviour inſiſts much on moral Divinitie * St. Paul neglects itt not t. St. James is whole in itt ; ſo as to feeme lefs to mind Faith. St. Peter and St. John abundant in that you call minted mo- ralitie. - Do not, Sir, differve one truth; to SET : * Matth. chap. V. vi. vij. + Phil. iv. 8. ferve 64 Dr. WHICHCOTÉ 's T ſerve another.--Sunt omnes divinæ veritates ami- I ca'veritates.] “ Inhærent righteouſneſs ſo preached, &c." I am a ſtranger to anie thing; eyther truely, in reſpect of itſelfe; or intentionallie, in reſpect of the perſon ; ſpoken to the prejudice of the righteouſneſs by faith. Inhærent righteouſneſs, perfect in this life.”-I knowe nothing beyonde a ſincere en- deavour after itt ; and a dif-allowing of all ini- quitie, fo farre as known or ſuſpected, and 1 diligent ſearch without partialitie. 7 " An eſtate of Love, above a life of Faith." I wiſh, I had it ! O that my heart were ena- moured, inflamed with love to God! O that I u were united to Himn; as by faith, ſo by love!,v* « Above Ordinances”-In my apprehenſion, the perſon was miſtaken by ſuch as ſo inter- e preted him; hee onlie meant Fornialities. 4 “ Divers other principles of religion by ſome " verie doubtfullie ſpoken-of.”-_Wherein I am *concerned, I hope to give an account; when they are particularized in. For I am under the power of the Apoſtle's rule; of " Be readie to a render a reaſon”; and I will give to anie an account of my religion : and I will learn truth of anie. Complaints in pulpitts, and elſewhere, of is rixae and lites; about notions and ſpecula- “ tions, ſects and ſuperſtitions, &c."--I can- not gueſſe, whom this ſhou'd referre to ; ney- other knowe I the matter. q But whereas you fubjoyne :... 1 Cor. xiij. 13. + 1 Pet. iij. 15. . ; : SECOND LETTER. : 65 ſubjøyne --- -' " that there is a God, may come to bee accounted a notion and ſpeculation :"--- I thinke, there is noe danger of that: becauſe Deuin-elle; eft ſcibile et demonſtrabile ; Ž and X Chriſtüm eſſe, eſt materia fidei : and I ſay with St. Aug: as before in the margent; ſi ſpiritus hoc non perfuaferit, nondum mihi perſuaſit Chrif- tiano élje.--I do not conceeve, that they who have endeavoured by their propoſalls to prevent differences among good men, or to allay heat ; if in all apprehenſions they do not meete; and upon this account have given reaſons for mo . deration, in matters of opinion or curioſitie of ſpeculation ; 4 I ſay, I do not think; that they have comprehended anie ſuch pointes, as you inſtance in, under the name of opinion, or mát- ter of ſpeculation. Neyther is hee to bee thought to undervalue one pointe of religion ; who ſpeakes little of itt, when his argument is another : but is rather to bee thought to keepe cloſe to his text: w * * * * . 1 .. Dr.. TUCKNEY'S THIRD LETTER SIR, IT TT being Truth, not Victorie, that wee contend-for ; reciprocare ſerram wou'd give but a harſh found to ingenuous cares : and both your time and mine wou'd bee unthriftilie F miſpent 66 Dr. TUCKNEY's miſpent, in ſuch needlefs conteſts. I ſhall therfore contract things, as much as I can. --- For your large and learned diſcourſe, in the three firſt pages of your letter ; wherein you give an account of what you have ſaid, and what you do meane :---for the ſubſtance of itt, I accord with you: and though I do not affect RETT Toloveiv, et minutias captare; yett give mee leave, by way of annotation onlie, and in tran- fitu, to touch upon a verie fewe things; and then verie fuccinctlie to ſpeak-to what hath bin the matter of the eyther ſeeming or real difference. a True: but fo, as that there is fides diving of the former forte of truthes; quatenus reve- lantur : which, in the ſecond page, you are not unwilling to allow. -I b I beleeve, in ſomthing more than bare circumſtances. c. I admitt of the diſtinction of « authori- "tative and perceptive”; which others expreſſe by judicium decifionis et diſcretionis. Faith, I acknowledge, is the act of an intelligent or ra- tional creature: ſo that Underſtanding and Rea- fon are neceffarie; both ad recipiendum divinam revelationem, et ad eliciendum aétum fidei : but that ſo, as that in manie things I muſt credere auch more, than I can ratione percipere. If in feripture I perceeve, that a Trinity in Unity is reveled, as a divine truth; and ſo, in the matter of God's decrees: though I cannot ful- die perceeve or comprehend them, I will ney- ther doubt nor quarrell them; but humbly be- ofve them: and ſo Reaſon's judging of them falls с THIRD LETTER: 67 ز falls ſhort of the eye's judging of Cclours. If, in true proprietie of ſpeech, viſus may be ſaid to judge of them; and it doth not rather be- long to an inward and higher facultie. d True; the underſtanding cannot rightlie judge otherwiſe, than the thing is: veritas rei being regula veritatis intellectus.* But our pre- ſent diſpute is, about the power of Reaſon to judge of matters of Faith : And as the Apoſtle of ſpeakes of " a ſpirit of wiſdom and revela- " tion”; ſo wee conceeve, that to our right un- derſtanding ſuch myſteries, ex parte Jubječti, hee muſt bee a ſpirit of wiſdom; and fo ratio muſt bee divinitus illuminata : and, ex parte objecti, a ſpirit of revelation ; and ſo obje&tuni muſt bee revelatum. And this revelation muſt bee of the formalitie of the object, which is underſtood and beleeved ; and ſo, by this il- lumination of the underſtanding and revelation of the object, the diſcerning faculties is fully regulated in its apprehenſions of theſe myſte- ries : and therfore I cannot tell, whether you, may fay; “ it is wholely regulated, a ratione objecti, &c. e From theſe argumenta artificialia infita, and this materia Deo digna ; I beleeve, a man may affirmativè argue to his fatisfaction, in mat, ters of faith ; as from ſuch arguments Divines rightly argue the Scriptures to bee the worde of God: but I beleeve too, that in arguing nega- give, that ſuch and ſuch particulars are not mat- ters of faith; wee had need bee very warie, : f. Intellectui. + Eph. j. 17 how 68 Dr. T UCKN E Y's . af- how wee conclude : for although that, which reallie and indeed is materia Deo indigna, can- not bee matter of faith ; yett that, which ſeemes ſo to us, may bee. And I beleeve, both Armi- nians and others have bin too bold; to reject that which in Scripture is playne enough re- veled : as concerning ſome of God's decrees : becauſe they eyther can not or will n9t appre- hend, how themſelves inay bee Deo digna. f Wee fullie yeeld, that materia fidei is not contrarie to reaſon : butt then wee beleeve, itt is in manie things much above itt: as you terwards ſay, that this tranſcendencie lieth not in contradiétione rationis, but in amplitudine et plenitudine obječti : and that may bee too bigge for our underſtanding to comprehend; though not for our faith to beleeve. And as that, which you cite out of BONAVENTURE, is true; Credendum eſt, voluntatem Dei, etiam in occul- tiſſimis, eſe rationabiliffimam : ſo is this allſo, which I adde, out of the ſame authour; Facit enim ad rationem virtutis, ut fides credat fine ra- tione. - g As proximè et immediatè, ſo I hope you mean ultimò too : ſo I underſtand the following wordes, "and therein reſt”: my faith, both firſt and laſt, I reſolve into God's revelation. But I pray, Sir, look over the notes of one of your late ſermons in St. MARIE'S-; (I do not remember the text:) and towards the latter end of itt, if I do not much forgett, you did, with ſome confidence, affert the laſt reſolution in rau tionen rei: as the like was aſſerted, in the dif- pute at the Commencement. The THIRD LETTER. 69 : itt to, reaſon h. The ſecond and third parts of this diſtri- bution, as to the thing in hand, do coïncidere: they are both materia fidei; as the firſt is ſcien- tide and fidei 100; quatenus a Deo revelatur. i You meane, I ſuppoſe; that religion, quoäd objektum, reacheth to ſuch things which may naturallie bee knowen; as well as to what are beleeved from divine revelation: otherwiſe divine faith, the firſt part of divinitie, doch in cognoſcerdis vel potius credendis take-up the wilole of religion, as religion ; eſpeciallie, as Christian. k The juſtice and righteouſneſs of God is theologiae naturalis: and therfore that which I wou'd ſay here, is; that in theologia naturali, Deus ad nos noftraeque rationis judicium provocat* ; in rebus fidei ſupernaturalis, rationem contemnit: noftraéque intelligentiae, cum caecutiens immo cae- ca ſit, nullam rationen habet ufo. 1 I am not herewith unſatisfied; if reaſon will be ſatisfied and content, that divine reve- lation ſhall bee above itt; and that faith may beleeve, what reaſon cannot comprehend; as you afterwards grant : and if in the ſpeech you had ſpoken as much of faith, as you did of rea- and had as much aſſerted the tranſcenden. cie of faith above reaſon, as you did the agréa bleneſs of itt with, or the non-contradiction of your faith right and honour; as by what you did ( as you ſay in the bottom of this page ) you did it no wrong or diſhonour. However, I muſt fon; Irai. j. 5. * Ezek, xviij. 25. i Cor. j. 20. 1: Cor, xj: 13 F 3 ſtill 90 Dr. Í UCK NË Y's Still think, you had don your-félf more right ; if you had then treated on another argument. m If that Crambe be nauſeous, I crave pár- don for my incivilitie in that expreſſion. To what you adde in this paragraph, I onlie fay; 1. I wiſh, that you wou'd pleaſe more ordina- riely to chooſe rather ſuch texts and arguinents to treat-of, which are fidei divinae; they wou'd bee moſt apt to begett divine faith in the hea- rers : and not ſo much and ſo oſten ſuch; as, you ſay, are examinable by ratio rei: and fo by the nature of your matter in hand you ſhou'd not bee, as you think, neceſſitated fo to handle itt. 2. Though the ſcriptures, which are ſo full of ſuch truths, may out of themſelves a- bundantly furniſh us to cleare you; without being over-much beholden to ſuch kind of ra- tional diſcourſes. 3. I pray, Sir, conſider the Prophets' 2nd Apoſtles' ſermons: whether they bee generally upon ſuch arguments; and what is their manner of handling them: whether knottie and obſcure, to buiſy and amuſe the brain ; and not rather plaine and facile, and in the demonſtration of the Spirit; rather than of this kind of reaſon; the more to affect the heart. n When, in the former papers, you ſaid ; that the intention of your ſpeech was de ccrti- tudine et dignitate Ckrilliande religionis : I then - did; and now do think; that the dignitas et cer- titudo may more theologicallie bee demon- ſtrated, from the certaintie of divine teſtimo- nie; and of faith in itt, by that divine teſti- ponie: I in part meant fcripture ; which I S. think THIRD LETTER 71 think, ſhou'd bee ſo farre diſtinguiſhed from that, which is moſt properly called Chriſtian religion, as that which conteines itt; and ſo may bee a full proof of itt: and though it may be not to a Heathen, yett to a Chriſtian audi- torie, ſuch as yours was: and, even to the Heathens themſelves; though, I. freely ac- knowledge, theſe arguments, taken from the matter and other particulars that are inſita in the ſcripture, are verie ſtrong and good; and more proper for ſuch an adverſarie : yett 1. they of themſelves are not ſufficient to per- ſuade; for which I referre you to your quota- tion out of AU’Stine, in the margent of the page*. 2. beſides, the certainty of divine teſti- monie; which bears full wittneſs from heaven to the Chriſtian religion, contained in ſcrip- ture : as namelie, the foretelling and fulfilling of propheſies concerning Chriſt, and his Apo- ſtles' and others' miracles to confirme itt, are arguments; which not only to a Chriſtian's but a Pagan's underſtanding and conſcience ſpeake God as much, if not more fully and directely, and to as much conviction.; as anie of thoſe arguments, which are taken a ratione rei. And therfore, as you knowe; a learned mant, who hath latelie written a tract of the reaſonableneſs of Chriſtian religion; 'ſpeciallie uſeth that argument, as moſt convincing. There is verie good matter, in manie of the Heathens' writings ; and fuch, as is Georgian but they want ſuch miracles, and other divine teſtiinonies; to ratifie them; which the truth + Dr. Hammond. : * Page 42. ? F 4 ol 72 Dr. TUCKNEY'S7. of ſcripture and Chriſtian religion is honoured and confirmed by: • And therfore I did not, I think, fo falle- off from the quæſtion : as conceeving, 1. I may prove the truth of Chriſtian religion, which was To SAT Levov, by the divine authoritie of the ſcripture. 2. If that be quæſtioned, the proofe of it is not, as your rule is, “I muſt conſider ſcripture ſecundum materiam”: there is no ſuch abſolute neceſſitie of itt, that it cannot be proved otherwiſe-itt may, by the certaintie of the teſtimonie, both of God in propheſies and miracles; and of the beleevers faith : in which there are manie things, which give more than a humane teſtimonie to itt. p For what you ſay, to that of Prov. xx. 27; that; " I inſtance in the uſe of the principle; « and You inſiſte-on the qualitie fittneſs and is ſufficiencie of itt, as froin God and in His & hand as res illuminata illuminans : and ſo you perſuade yourſelf; that is in the wordes, şi which you have alledged them for:”-ſan- fwer; 1. that I indeed inſtance in the uſe of the principle; and that uſe to which by inter- preters, and by both the ſenſe and context of the wordes, they are there applied : and itt is rimari res hominum, non Deị * ; and no more çan from the place bee inforced. And when hee faith, it is the candle of the Lord", for this uſe; we can no more inferre thence that itt is ſo for: farther uſe; in the things of God and inyſteries of faith: than hee, that faith * Zeph. j. 12 ſuch THIRD LETTER. 73 1 ſuch a man is the King's ſearcher in the Cur- tom-houſe, to finde-out merchants" conceled goods; can thence inferre, that hee is ſo to ſearch-out the King's Council : or, becauſe a candle, can helpe to ſearch-out a dark corner in the houſe; that therfore itt can in a dark night help mee to ſee the heavens. 2. Though ſome interpreters adde; not onlie man's ſecrets, but God's councils; yett they explaine them- ſelves to meane that Grace, which out of his love hee reveleth by his worde; and infuſetli by his fpirit: and ſo “ the ſpirit of a man” is, as itt were, naturaliter capax divinae illumina- tionis ; ſo being ſo being by the ſpirit illuminated, wee denie not but it can perceeve the things of God; which otherwiſe it cannot *: In theſe things eſpeciallie, however there is a ſpirit in a man; yett the inſpiration of the Almightie giveth un- derſtanding. 9 I meant not, onlie Papiſtes; though this judicium diſcretionis is by our divines aſſerted againſt them: but, as you ſay, contra omnes perſonas : the quæſtion is; whether, as you adde, in omni materia? nor will I in that gain- ſay you ; if wee agree in the right meaning of judicium diſcretionis . I take itt, as DAVENANT. + and our other divines do; who, though they * I Cor. ij. 4 + John D'AVENANT, D.D. Maſter of Queen's College, and Lady Margaret's Profeſſor of Divinity at Cambridge - He was ſent by King James to the ſynod of Dort;, and at his Return from thence made Biſhop of Salifoury. Some of his Lectures and Determinations are in print ; and He had great Reputation, as a Divine, do :74 Dr.TUCKNEY's do truely affert ſuch a judicium; yett you knowe, in what ſenſe : they denie itt to bee judex, ſo I am ſure they will not allowe itt to bee fummus judex, in rebus fidei ; which in the Commencement-houſe was afferted: but of that perceptive judgement; which you ſpeak-of before, I have alſo before ſaid fomthing; and therfore no more now. And as for thoſe pro- teſtant principles, which you mention; the Quilibet abundet in fio fenfu, is but the Vulgar's bad: tranſlation of the Apoſtle's #mecoogcío.gw t, and may be of dangerous conſequence: and therfore rejected by our divines. Neque hacc fententia Chriſtiana elle poteft, is BezA's judgement of itt. The Apoſtle's Ang>pogía requires our own certioratio; but not from our own conceptions, but from the revelation of the ſpirit and word of God. For the other, Fides non eſt cogenda ; in a true ſenſe I admitt it: but how farre the reall and full ſenſe of itt and the former principle will in- trude, and the neceſſarie conſequents of them ; I cannot tell: and therfore, till I knowe that, I muſt émrégeiro And, before I goe farther, to cloſe-up all about the power of ratio, in retus fidci ; I have in publique * given as much to it, in theologia, both naturali and Supernaturali ; as I think you in reaſon can require : but in theſe ſupernatural myſteries ފް + Rom. xiv. 5. * Viz. when he kept Exerciſe for his Luctors degree at the public Commencement 1650, on this Theſis ; Articuli Fidci ad normein humanae Pationis non funt exigendi : men- tioned before, or THIRD LETTER 75 bee offended att my faithfull playnnefs with of faith, I beleeve, as you well expreſs it, itt is not to be accounted either authour, inven- ter, or controller. 1. itt was never able to finde them out at firſte. 2. when reveled, not able fullie to comprehend them; muſt not bee ſuch a judge of them, as to arraigne them att it's barre : fo as, if they be eyther reallie above itt, yea or ſeeme to beé contrarie. to itt, to reject them; as, in the matter of God's decrees, is too frequent with Arminians and others : or To as laſtlie to reſolve them eyther in rationen rei, ex parte obječti; or in rationem nofiram, tanquam fummum judicem, ex parte fubjeéti. If thoſe, and ſome other ſuch particulars, which I expreſſed in my poſition, be granted ; there will reallie be little controverſie: and if they were clearlie and plainlie in publique de- clared; itt wou'd take-away manie men's ſuf- picions and miſprifions. And if withall you and others wou'd pleaſe ſo farre to denie your ſelves; as to forbeare the inſiſting-on theſe arguments, of the power of nature and reaſon, in your diſcourſes diſcourſes ; which in ſcripture are ra- ther abaſed, than exalted : it wou'd prevente heats and oppoſitions, which att all times are uncomfortable; and eſpeciallie, in theſe craſie times, may prove of verie ill conſequence to the Univerſitie. And I beſeeche you, Sir;, not to you: your and others' ſo much going in another ſtrayne, hath not onlie much offended and o- pened the mouths of verié manie conſiderable men of another judgement; but allſo made ſome others applaude themſelves in their cor- rypte 76. Dr. TUCKNE Y'S T rupte judgement: as conceeving and conclud: ing, though I beleeve falſelie, that they have their abetters amongſte Us. Sir, what followes of the fourth page; fo farre as I can well read and underſtand itt, I do not diffent from itt. As for the hopefulneſs of good men's lefs differing in things ſaving; and that through fiding and paſſion, differences betwen them appear, and ſeem to bee, more than they are ; I denied neyther of theſe : but I then ſaid, and yett thinke ; that they may not onlie differ, in the number of Fundamentals; but alſo in their reſolved judgements, about verie material truths; and that, without miſtaking one ano- ther's mindes, or making one another's judge- ments other and worſe than they are; and yett on both handes agree in ſcripture-ex- preſfions: in which caſe, as better to forme their judgements, and to diſcover worſe men's errours, great uſe was of other than fcripture wordes and expreſſions ; and this, without anie alteration of, or addition to, or derogation from, the holie ſcriptures: which was the thing I ſpake-to in my former paper. $ For: matter of impofing - upon, ; I am not guiltie. In the Affemblie, I gave my vote with others; that the Confeſſion of Faith, putt-out by Authoritie, ſhoulde not bee required to beę. eyther ſworne or ſubſcribed-too; wee having bin burnt in the hand in that kind before: but fo as' not to be publickly preached or written againſt; which indeede is contrarię to that . " libertie of propheſying ”; which fome ſo call-for ; but, you ſay, you plead not for though : THIRD LETTER 77 . though your ſecond advice in your ſermon ſeemed, in mine and other men's eyes, to look fullie that way : but I beleeve, what you now write ; and onlie adde, that as you plead not for that libertie ; ſo what hath tini faid by others; hath not bin to impoſe on you; but onlie ás freelie to affert, what they think is truth ; as what you did aſſert was fo, in your judgement : and therfore were not culpable of maintaining rixas et lites; as hath bin " charged. Though I heartilie' and humblie deſire of God; that wee inay either ſo inward- lie agree, or outwardlie not expreſs diſagree- ment; that we may not give occaſion of ad vantage, to more fortes of inen than one; that watch for our halting. t That which I ſpake of Hæretiques' be- ing ſober and temperate &c'; was not to your ſecond propoſal, about liberty of propoſing, &c; but to your firſt, of agreeing with them that agree in ſcripture expreſſions: And where- as it was pleaded, that ſuch agreement was defired amongſt good men; I replied, that it was not ſo eaſie to know, who they were: ſeeing Hæretiques were not fine larva pietatis, and were ſomtimes ſober and temperate ; not - unexceptionable and of unblameable life"; as your wordes are. Whereas you find Scrip- ture Hæretiques infamous in their life; I eafi- lie grant itt of thoſe Gnoſtique Borboritae*, and * Theſe were Haeretics, called Borboritae ; and theſe - joined with the Gnoftics, as here, are often mentioned in our Author's Latin pieces; and in his friend ARROW- SMITH'S Tafica facra. Conf. núnaqlace Bogtops Ii Pet. 1. 22. } و verie 78 Dr. TUCKNE Y'a verie manie others, which authours ſpeak-of. And yett in fcripture I finde falſe prophets, in Theep's cloathing; and thoſe in TIMOTHY, having a forme of godlineſle of; Phariſees, whited fepulchres *; which is enough to ex- preſs that larve pietatis Iſpake-of. Arius and NOVATUS and others, at leaſt for a time, ſpeciouſlie devout and pious; and all that I read of St. FRANCIS in BONAVENTURE, and of LOYOLA in RIBADENEIRA, and of BEL- LARMINE in FULLIGATTI, I do not look-at as Legend; what Bertius and others ſay of ARMINIUS, you know; often thoſe, that have bin moſt peſtilent, have bin, in outward de meanour, at leaſt for a time, ſober, and ſome ſevere : but ſobrii ad evertendum rempublicam ; enough to juſtifie what I ſaid ; that wee are rather to look to their doctrines, than their perſons. v For that of Socinians and Arminians ſeeing I ingenuouſlie cleared you, from thoſe imputations; both in my own thoughts, and againſt others miſpriſions; I hope, you will cleare mee, from being in that kind injurious to you: nor will you take in ill part my cordiall good wiſhes which I expreſſed, that ſo good a friend might not bee in confinio of ſuch men's tentes : and although hee, that hath the name of Chriſt called upon him, may and ought, in the ſenſe you meane, to ſay,--- Non fum Chrif- tianus ullius nominis : yett, when diverſities of judgements have unhappilie begotten diverſi- + II Tim. iij. 5. | Matt. † Matt. vij. 15. Kuiji. 27. ties THIRD LETTER. 79 ties of denominations; I had rather, by reaſon of my adhæring to the truth, that CALVINE maintained ; men ſhoulde call mee a Calviniſt: than by reaſon of eyther an indifferencie, or by a propending to ſomthing that Socinians of Arminians hold; men, though unjuſtlie and finfullie, ſhoulde befmeare mee with their ap- pellation. w As to what followes in this page, concern- ing your ſtudies; I muſt intreate your pardon, as of my too greate boldneſs, in that it may bee unſeaſonable freeneſs ; fo of my miſtakes, occa- fioned by my miſ-apprehenſion, or rather miſ- information : and I crave leave onlie to adde I. as to that about the Schoole-men; when I fpake of them, I underſtood, not onlie that narrower compaſs of them; which fome make, from ALBENSIS * to BIEL; but ſo as to take-in ز 3 t For Albenſis, a learned friend conjectures, ſhou'd be rea'd Alenfis, or Al. Alenſis, i.e. Alexander Hales. And I find him ſo called by our author's great friend Dr. ARROW- SMITH, in his ſecond oration, at the end of Tactica facre : P. 14: as alſo by Dr. TUCKNEY himſelf in his Latin works ; where he often quotes him. We might alſo read Albertus : and the ſame Dr. ARROWSMITH obſerves, that after Alenſis and Antefodorenfis had conducted Ariſtotle to the door of the Church ; Albertus and Thomas carried him into the inmoſt receſſes of it. Hottinger divides the ſchool- men into three ages; which he calls Vetus Aetas, Media, and Nova : the firſt beginning with Lanfranc of Pavia, a- bout A. D." 1020; the ſecond with Albertus, about 200 years later, the laſt with Durandus de Sto Porciano, a- bout 1330; and extending to the Reformation. The firſt age, he ſays, was pudentior; and towards the end of it lived ALEX. HALES; the ſecond was impudens & temeraria; in it flouriſh'd Albertus, T. Aquinas, Durandus, Duns Sca- tus, Bonaventure, Occam, &c: the laſt was longè impuden- tiffima; in it liv?d and wrote Biel, Eekius, &c. Vasquez, 80 Dr. T UCKNEY'S Vas@uez; SUAREZ, and other later; authoułg of that. -kind: your peruſing of whom ſo little in fo manie yeares, but that you ſay itt and I beleeve you; I cannot but wonder : and muſt conclude ; - that: eyther thoſe fewe houres of your converſe: with them made a verie deepe inpreſſion in you; moulding you much that wáy ; or, as nafcitur, non fit Poëta, that the na- tural främe of your head was much in that channel: which muſt keepe us from wonder- ing, or finding faulte ; if in your diſcourſes the ſtreames do ſo much anſwer the fountain. - 2. They, that told mee of FIELD, JACKSON, HAMMOND, added alſo CHILLINGWORty, and Hooker's Eccleſiaſtical Politie : in the firſt booke whereof, though it bee manie yeares fince I redde itt, and I have itt not nowe. by mee'; if I forgett not, there bee divers things ; which divers diſcourſes now-a-dayes much fymbolize with. 3. I verilie thought, you had rea'd the Apologia Remonſtrantium; a booke, which, when it came out, we ſo gree- dilie bought and rea’d: as juſtifying their Con- feffion of Faith before putt-out, againſte the examen of the Contra-Remonſtrants : in which they ſpeake out more fullie, than they had don before; and in both which of their bookes they are large in the argument wee ſpeak-of. 4. What you fay of your little reading and more meditating ; I impute to your great mo- deſtie, in leſening your own due :: or if, as I have cauſe; I muft beleeve you; as I cannot but much approve your courſe of Meditation ; to give mee leave to intreat you, to give dili- gence THIRD LETTIR. 81 gence to Reading. I have thought, that Ber- NARD was in the right; when hee faid, le&tio, fine meditatione, arida eſt; meditatio, fine lectione, erronea. In our meditations, wee may una- wares flip into an errour; which, becauſe our own, of our own ſelves, we are hardlie re- ſtrained from * ; from which another's hand may eaſilie helpe inee up. And if, for that and other ends, I would gladlie conferre with the living ; the ſame motive may perſuade mee to converſe with others, that are dead ; in their writings: and the rather, becauſe they uſe to bee more digeſted ; than others' extem- porarie diſcourſes: eſpeciallie, if, as you do, wę make choice of thoſe, that are moſt pious and learned. I look-at it, as a kind of Com- munion of Saints ; in which I may expect a greater bleffing: but ſo, as not reſting on their authoritie. And ſhoulde not their writings bee better than my thoughts, yett with mee I find itt thus; that by reading I have more hints, and better riſe, for more and better notions ; than otherwiſe of myſelf I ſhou'd have reached unto: hereby I ſhall bee better acquainted with the true hiſtorie, ſtating, and phraſing, of any point of controverſie; which otherwiſe I ſhall too often ſtumble-att. But; Sir, may you not juſtlie diſdeigne this my follie; in ſug- geſting that to Him, who needes no fpurrs to itt; and better knowes itt, than hee who pre- ſumes tò ſuggeſt itt! SCULTETƯs' character, which in his Speculationes Evangelicae hee gives * Ecclef. iv. 9, 10. G of E2 Dr. TUCK NE Y's of AND: OSIANDER, of which from my heart I cleare you; makes mee' afraid to bee autod daxlos. (See Scultet: Lib. II. cap. v. p. 16.) * In the half of this page, Sir, you expreſs ſo much ingenuity and integrity; and withall ſo much condeſcenſion, for my ſatisfaction; that, although you ſay, you are aſhamed in the wri- ţing of itt; yett I may more bluſh in receiving itt. I from my ſoule free you from deſigne; I þeleeve, you love and ſeeke the truth; and yett think, you may in ſome things miſtake. You ſay, that I ſeeme to “ anatoinize your *. life”: God heļp mee more to ſearch into my own heart; that I may not bee ſo iuchi miſtaken, in the one; as it ſeemeth I am, in the other! God knowes, I am not wont to look yerie much into others; who have ſo much to look-after, in my-felf. What I did herein, I intreate you to thinke, and Į wou'd not deceeve you, was not from an ill- minded or buify curioſitie; but out of love and faithfullneſs, having ſuch an occaſion, to hint ſomthing what others ſaid and I ſomwhat fear- ed: and if you will pleaſe to do as much for mee, ſuch' " balm ſhall not break my head." y For this in the margent; I freelie grant imperfection, in the beſt interpreters; nor did I ever allow them the priviledge of infallible interpretation: and, if my pen wrote itt; my heart never thought itt. And trulie I have, as carefullie as I cou'd in theſe ſtraits of time, rea'd over the place you mention in iny ſecond page; and can neyther there, nor anie where elſe in my whole paper, finde anie ſuch wordes: pr. anię other; from which I can think, THIRD LETTER. 83. think,,, how anie ſuch inference can bee made. The like I muſt ſay of what followes; where you ſay, that I ſuggeſt; Fundamentalls may bee ſhaken and endangered, by ſuch a free propo- fall: Nothing, all the paper over, that I cair find; which either faith or ſuggeſteth anie ſuch matter: I ſpake of the ſtaggering of weake men; no titile of the ſhaking of fundamen- tall truths: and therfore ſome of your fol- lowing lines might have bin ſpared. Yett this let mee now ſay; that if ſuch an ex- preſſion, of the ſhaking fundamentall truths, had fallen from my penne ; itt might ve- rie well have been juſtified: and that, from Scripture. Not as though the truth in itt ſelf coulde bee ſo fhaken, as to weaken itt : but ſuch ſpeeches reſpect partlie intentionem operan- tis, vel operis; and partlie the effect, which thereupon followes ; in the minds of weak and unſtable perſons. And ſo not onlie the Ark may bee ſhaken; but even the foundations may bee deſtroyed * : (and if you conſult in- terpreters upon this place, you will finde; that I do not wreſt itt; in applying itt to this purpoſe :) as the Apoſtle preſúmes, they may; in his μη πάλιν θεμέλιον καταβαλλόμενοι: 4 ? What I ſaid, I think, is verie juſtifiable; that, when both Hæretiques and the Ortho- doxe hold to Scripture expreſſions; and They, in their wordes, give a falſe ſenſe of them; the other in theirs may give a true : not to command anie man's inwarde ſenſe wou'd ſeemě to inferre : but, as in three or foure lines before I had ſaid ; by expreſſing the i as you * Pl. xj. 3. † Hebr. vj 1. G 2 true 84 Dr. TUCK N E Y's 3 true fenſe more particularlie and diſtinctlle, to diſcover their corrupt one : which, I added, , was the occaſion of orthodoxe Divines' fråming of newe wordes and expreſſions'; more pune- tụallie to hold-out old truths, againſt Hære- tiques' innovations. And what is amiffe in all this; I can not féę į nor have you fhéwen mee. 2. Sir, here 'batę mee a little : I ſaid not that All, that ſo pleaded, were ſuch: but my wordes were, ſuch for the moſt part : and that, if neede bee, I ſhall bee able to juſtifie: name- lie; of thoſe that have written of that argu- ment:: whom onlie Í related to. But I im, pute this to your hafte, and broken pieces of time, which after you ſpeak of; as I do moſt of what followeth in this page : 'as that ; Fr. May wee temper and qualifie divinitie with " prudential conſiderations”? I ſee not, how this relates to what immediatelie went before of Socinians and Arminians; who are in this kind as faultie.as anie. If you ſaid itt, in refe- rence to interpreters' or fynods' framing of wordes for clearing of ſcripture, againſt others falſe,glofſes : I think itt a verię harth cenſure, and wholelie unjuſtifiable; if both this and what followes, to the forcing and impoſing uponi others. judgements ;, you make "to your- felfán adverfarię, where you found höne. if I do not remember, itt is ſo ſtiled by our Divines and, thou'd itt Þy fomë, both they and you will give mee leave to think that alrere are other foundations of "Proteſtáncie, lower and of more importance. & Truth THIRD LETTER 85 B ** Truth is Truth, whoſoëver ſpeakes itt : or and I will readily agree with Papiſt, Socini- an, or anie; fo farre as hee afferts itt: be- «c cauſe itt is not His, but God's. "---- But this libertas propbetandi I take to bee no ſuch Truth: and I do not the more like itt, but rather the more fufpect itt; becauſe Socinians and Arminians do fo inuch pleade for itt: and that, as itt is apparent, out of deſign ; thát they might not be hindred in diffuſing their poiſon, in their other corrupt tenents ; which they are more commonlie knowen by: though the worlde is not now ſo ignorant of Socinianiſm and Arminianiſm, as to confine the one to the denial of Chriſt's divinitie and ſatisfaction &c; or the other to the five.cona troverted articles. This of libertaś prophetandi, you cannot but knowe, that they are generallie noted for; and this, in the Countrie, as well as in the Univerſitie ; it may be; in the Univer- ſitie moff: and therfore the propoſall of this libertie there, may be moſt taken notice of in the propoſer; as itt may bee of more ill influence unto the yonge auditours: and a ſtudent in Di- vinitie "neede not to be confined, as you ſpeak, the getting of a good memorie and learn- lis ing Hy heart his invention and judgement will have buis'nefs: more than enough, in aright underſtanding and more full:clearing of ięceeved truths; árid finding-out:"othersthat itt inay bee, yettilie hid ; without fuch a libera tie of oppoſing, or- döübtfullie diſputing, tegi Tôv. Trepangoposguevavi much more without à Carteſian Enoxa or ſuppoſing them for er: rours, toos to ; G 3 1 } 86 Dr. TUCKNE Y's * i rours, or not eſtabliſhed truths ; till I coming de novo, withoute anie prepoſſeſſion of them, Thall ſtudy and reaſon my ſelfe into a beleife of them. And ſomthing founding this way, I thought I heard, within this twelvemonth, out of the pulpitte. 2. By. this your laſt expreſſion, I think, I now better underſtand your meaning before ; about which I doubted : and, itt may bee, miſ- took : that, whereas in my former paper I fpake of this libertie, as dangerous to the weake; and becauſe ſymbolizing with Armi- nians and Socinians, the aſſerting .of it by a'lo- ver of truth was at all times unſuitable; and eſpeciallie, in theſe ſo erroneous times, unſafe ; at leaſt, very unſeaſonable. This, you conceeve, was a ſuggeſtion ; that Funda- * mentalls may bee ſhaken and endangered : - which cou'd not worthilie be conceeved --- " that this was to temper and qualifie Divi- “ nitie with prudential conſiderations --- the " taking of God's work out of his handes, " &c; and not ſufficientlie to conſider, who principallie ſtandes charged, and is the grand Superintendent of truth in the world.” If this, Sir, bee your meaning ; I inuſt profeffe to you, that I am not convinced ; eyther of anie unworthie conception, or incon- ſiderate expreſſion. Not in ſaying, if I had ſaid itt, that fundamentall truths mighte be fhaken; of which before: And the reſtraining of ſuch a libertie is no tempering or qualifying Divinitie with prudential conſiderations: unleffe it can bee proved, that ſuch a Tolération be is io .;. true THIRD LET'T E R. 87 + true Divinitie ; or everie thing that by ſuch å ſufferance may bee vented. bee vented. A prudential pre- vention of the corruption, of what is true Divinitie; will, I hope; bee no fault in him; who is a faithfull and wiſe ſervant *. And his keeping of the depoſitum, which he is betruſted- with by his maſter. t, doth not take his inafter's worke out of his hand; but acknow- ledgeth Him principallie charged with his own truth; and to bee the grand Superintendent of itt in the world: whilſt, as a Steward under his Lord, hee, according to his dutie, is faithfull to his truſt; in being carefull, that not onlie his fellow-ſervant may not be in- fected; whom hee hath the charge of : but that the truth ittſelf, though it cannot be in ittſelf weakened or over-maſtered, may not bee corrupted or blemiſhed; which hee is bound earneſtlie to contend for $. a. Thoſe « beginnings of grace,” which you mention, are, I ſuppoſe, much-what the ſame with, or itt may bee leſs than, that firſt ſanctification, or regeneration, which I ſpake- of. And that actuallie juſtifying,” which you adde, the ſame with what I called éroténcoude of juſtification: ſo that herein, I hope, wee ſhall not differ. . For thoſe «s pre- parations to juſtification,' which Dr. WARD I fo frequentlie determined in the ſchooles i + G4 * : 11 Matt. * Matt. xxiv. 45. + 1 Tim. vj. 20. xxiv: 45. I Cor. iv. 2. Jude iii. I SAMUEL WARD DD. Scholar of Chriſt's College, Fellow of Emmanuel, and at laſt Maſter of Sidney; was very eminent 88 Dr: TUCKNEY'S 1 : -ſchooles ; and which Papiſtes do fomuch diſ- pute-for : I profeſſe, I coulde never yett fo rin pen my thoughts about them; as peremptori- lie to determine them, one way or other. : Sure I ain ; that manie good. Divines determine againfte: then : and I think, in ſome caſes, :when God doth ſuddainlie come upon ſome finners, flagrante. facinore ; and then preſentlie .convert them: itt will bee.verie hard to diſcern them. That expreſſion of yours, of “a ſin- “ ner non.onnino in motu converſionis &c”; I do not well underſtand: unleſs your meaning bee ; that a finner, qua talis, without anie movings toward converſion &c-iffo; though, as I ſaid, before your &acténeoua of juſtification, in puneto rationis, a renovation goeth firſt; which doth elicere ačtum fidei, by which we are actuallie juſtified: yett in hoc motu God moves firſt; and, ſo farre as Juſtification conſiſts in pardon of ſinne, itt is verie confiderable; whether imme- diate antecedenter itt hath for it's object å fin- - ner, as a ſinner, under the guilt and in the i ſtate of finne; though it do not ſo leave him : and ſo God properlie juſtifie the ungodlie: ز eminent as a Difputant and Determiner of Theological Quer- tions, in Lady Margaret's Chair: which hc filled after Dave- rant; and being turn'd-out and very ſeverely handled in 1643, (which he ſurvived a very little while) was then ſucceed- ed by Dr. Holdſworth, Maſter of Emmanuel; who was never admitted: being himſelf haraſs’d and perfecuted, and at laſt turn'd-out of all his Preferments. Our Dr. Tuckney had his Maſterſhip of Emmanuel College, Dr. Love; Maſter of Bennet, his Profefiorship &c. Dr. Ward was ſent with Biſhop Carlton, Dean Hall, and Dr. Davenant, to the fynod of Dort; and died of the ill viage he met with, by Impriſonment and otherwiſe, in 1643, In. THIRD LËTTER. op 89 e In your paper, xatà To øvlèv, order is con- ſidered and expreſſed; and not onlie diſtinc- tion. 5 I think, You pinch too hard; in calling that, *--* a wringing of the noſe”; which was but a wiping-away of that which dropt from itt: and in applying that *, which is ſpoken of ſcorners, and ſuch as watch for iniquitie, in catching-at and perverting the right wordes of the Prophets ; to mee, who in a friendlie way did expreſſe to you my diſſatisfaction with an unjuſtifiable exprefſion. " I cordiallie embrace, what you herein fo orthodoxlie piouſlie and patheticallie expreſs ; of your ſo depending on God: and of his being all in all.. And I verilie beleeve, you meane much more by itt; than Papiſtes and Armini- ans &c do, in their large expreſſions of the : influence of the firſt cauſe into the ſecond; in itt's operations both of nature and grace; who, notwithſtanding that, give too too much to man and his free will . A great aſſerter whereof in our time, in his verſes upon his quæſtion in the commencement houſe, had theſe two for the cloſe SCIRE tuum nihil eft, oculis ni GRATIA praefit; Ni praeſt votis, Velle tuum nibil eft. is By that “conjunction with a paffive exe- getical, I ſuppoſe you meane the addition of recipituin- nobis : and fo that recipitur ſo * Ifai. xxix. 216 : « qualifies 590 Dr.:TUCKNE Y's ; qualifies and corrects” your nafcitur ; that it prevents. anie ſuch ſenſe, as was feared and ob- jected. I woulde not ríay &EETÁČELV " elſe; I coulde think; if, according to Popiſh :or Ar- mirian doctrine; gratia oblata per liberum ar- bitrium recipitur ; this woulde bee a moral naſcitur. I acknowledge, voluntas.creata, or creatu- ra, is the:ſubjectum or principium quod, (in ſu- : bordination to God, the principium a quo ) that doth formaliter producere a&tum credendi . et poenitendi : but I woulde not willinglie ex- prefs it, by producere vitalitatem actus ; though that word.may be tolerable, in a ſchool-ſenſe : but dubious, in ſenſu theologiae puriori. . I conceeve ; that xategyá Seo.Je is not of ſo deepe a ſenſe, as: naſcitur : for although ſom- times in Scripture it expreſſeth. a. meritorious efficiencie * ; [Somtimes idem quod udtogoo, ita proſpere ago, ut..potiar :, and ſomtimes vinco, ſupero; when I obteine by labour and overcome ... difficulties:) yett verie often, both in other au- { thours and Scripture, it ſignifieth anie efficien- cie in general ; even of a cauſe, fine qua non, and a caufe per accidens op: and therfore much more, a medium adminiſtrans; or a cauſe, ſo called propter. Solam praefentiae neceffitatem : as our Divines commonlie and trulie anſwer the Pa- piſtes; who, in their diſputes about good workes in reference to Salvation, bring 11 Cor. iv, 17, and this of Phil. ii. 12. and urge the word xateg- -gyásao. Je againſt us. A, naſci therfore, in the : + Rom. v. 3. * Rom. j. 27. vij. 8. 1. Cor. v. 3. iv. 15. Jam. j. 3. true THIRD LETTER. 9.1 not true importe of itt, doth fignifie more than ſuch a xategy Leo Je and itt is a farre different thing to ſay, a 'beleever now by faith, and the improvement of grace receeved, doth by. -work- ing, as a means, come to ſalvation ; and to ſay, that grace or falvation ab eo naſcitur. x Itt was a fupplicatorie advice, that you would not affecte to ſpeake in ſchoole-lan- guage; nor to runne-out in ſchoole-notions : -“ the uſe of Philoſophie and Metaphy- fiques”. à Your care not to do the worke of the " Lord 'negligently”; but to improve your ut- moſt in His ſervice, and ſolidlie to confirm His truth; I both beleeve and approve-of: ney- ther did I, nor do I think; in what you have done, you have affected worldlie glorie : and what bleſſings you have had from the foules, eyther of living or dying men, I rejoyce. in ; and deſire; they may be multiplied a thouſand fold: and ſhou'd hope, it wou'd bee fo; if you wou'd pleaſe to liſten to my advice or deſire before mentioned : in being more playne and facile in your diſcourſes. For although; as you ſay, you have bin all along well underſtood; by perfons of honeſt heartes, but of meane place and education : and, as I may adde, you have herein bin more than approved ; by diverſe fchollars, upon diverſe grounds : yett itt will not bee amiſſe for you to hear alſo, what very many others fay.-Vox populi, in this is, vox Dei. And this lett mee ſay ; I know divers, of ho- neft heartes, of ſeveral conditions and educa- tions ; ز + i 92 Dr; TUCKNEY's $ tions; that have bin verie färre, with all their beſt attention; from being able all along to underſtand you. Some of meane place and education may have ſtronger : parts; which meeting with honeſt heartes, will better be able to go along with you: :but JACOB will drive-on, arizmas ! * k Your both reading and making uſe of Philoſophers'; eſpeciallie, in (haming looſe and fcandalous Chriftians with their better principles or practiſes ; I do not remember, that eyther in my paper or otherwiſe, I ever did blame in you: provided it bee onlie to the ſhaming of profane and looſe Goſpellers; without giving occafion of caſting ſhame upon the Goſpel itt- ſelf.: What I have bin in tħis kind ſo affected with, in the reading of SALVIAN and ſome others; I cannot bee diſaffected, in hearing the like from you. Though this you will give me leave to adde; that the Scripture ſcarce anie- where ſpeaks particularlie of the Philoſophers and wiſe men of the Heathens, with approba- tioni and honour ; but generallie with diſlike and contempt. And tho' in ſome fewe places, itt upbraids the children of the church, in their abominations, with the more : commendable practiſes of the heathen : yet. farre oftener itt Ipeakes of them, as abominable ; and of their principles and practiſes, as of rockes to bee ayoyded; thân as of fayre patternes to bee imi- tated. "And therfore we thou'd followe Scrip- ز *** Ad pedem puer.orim. Gen. xxxiij. 14. 1. e. ſoftly, as the Children are able to bcar. Y į ture's 1.45 THIRD LETTER. 93 « that you ૮૮ ture's pattern; if wee ſhou'd more.inſiſt-on their Warkneſs; ignorance, their falling ſhort of and coming croſs to Chriſt; than on the admiring and advancing of their knowledge and virtues: which att beſt were but dim and dead, whilſt not enlighten'd and enliven'd by Chriſt. I think itt verie ſtrange; that you ſhou'd ſayy that “thoſe you have redde, you have found good ; ſo farre as they have gon : ” in thoſe fewe that I have redde, I have found them ſcattering a great deale of what is bad, with what is good in them; all along in the way--- as alſo, that you adde; never found them enemies to the truth of " the Goſpell.” Primitive Chriſtians found them ſuch; even amongſt the chiefeſt and fubtleſt enemies they hadde to deale with : and TERTULLIAN eyther was of an other mind from you, or rea'd other Philoſophers than you do ; when he called them. Haereſium Patriarchas. v It was not ſo ſaid abſolutely; but qualifi- ed with a parentheticall---as itt were. And though hereinn I would not præſcribe, yett I muſt needs ſay, that the ordinarie uſe of inoſt is, when in Engliſh ſermons and diſcourſes they make uſe of Latine or Greek ſentences ; they intende, that their auditours Thou'd take them for quotations, from, or expreſſions of, other men: and 119t their own. Which courſe trulie I approve-of; and ſo do manie better than I: and although I: admitted of GROTIUS his excuſe, in his præface: to his annotations on the Evangeliſts; that hee for- bare 94. Dr.. TUCKNEY'S: . bare mentioning of names, in his quotations- quod ea videam factiofo. hoc faeculo . magis ad ob- limandum quam ad defaecandum judicium vale- re; ( who yett for the moſte parte writes his quotations in a.. diſtinct character; that wee may know them not to bee his owne:) yett I beginne to bee half of the mind, that itt is the faireſt and moſt ſatisfactorie. way, in, ſuch quotations; to expreſs the authour, as well as the fentence: that the reader or auditour may have, better meanes, to know, whether itt be wholelie His; and not wholelie or in parte ours. & The generall purporte of this paragraph I freelie yeeld. to. For the Socinian's fallacie is, his Reaſon; againſte. which I may oppoſe, mine:-and I fullie. accord with AQUINAS, in this very poynte thus expreſfing himſelfe--- Cum fides : infallibili veritate innitatur, impoſſibile fit de verbo demonfirari-contrarium; manifef- tum eſt , probationes quae contra fidem inducuntur, non eſe demonſtrationes ; fed folubilia argumenta. o. For this I referre myſelfe allſo to what is faid before, ? I meant a re&ta ratio in corrupte nature: and there I cannot finde righte, but more or leſſe diſtorted and depraved. Where Faith is, there is a renewall.of God's image; in know- ledge, as well as holineſs and righteouſneſs: and there a liberum arbitrium ad bonum ſpiritu- ale is: in parte renewed; as well as a re&ta ratio ; and a beleefe of that, to which reaſon cannot reach. w I believe, itt doth; as manie can witt- neſs: and although ſomtimes mind in qur En gliſh TH'IRD L E T'T E R. 9:52 ; glifh uſe of the worde include the will ; as, when we fay; wee have no mind to ſuch 'a. thing; yett in moſt: ordinarie acception, mind; and underſtanding are ſynonymous. $. As they are declared. Rom. ix; and ex.... playned by thoſe Divines, which wee muſt ac- : count orthodoxe; they have bin.conceeved in- conſiſtent with that goodneſs, and thoſe ratia- nes rerum; which ſome frame for their ideas. o I beleeve ; that, as you cannot affirme, that God did not; ſo neyther, that hee did revele Chriſt to them; the Scripture ſeeming to ſpeak otherwiſe of them: and therfore itt had bin beſt, to have left them in ſilence to their judge. s I ſuppoſe, you heere give me the wordes : of your notes : which if you confined your ſpeech to, I muſt acknowledge a miſtake. 1 Our faviour did not come to deſtroye the inoral law; and therfore hee could not bee againſte moral duties : and, Gnoſtique. Libertines in the Apoſtles' time ariſing, no wonder that the Apoſtle that wrote laſt, (pake to Dutie;, as Paul, in laying the foundation, ſpake much for Faith. God forbidde, Sir, that I ſhoulde, as you phraſe it, “ difſerve one truth; to ferve «« an other”! And I think, in my preaching, I uſe to preſs inward grace and outward obe- dience; as muck as ſome others. And woulde you, and ſome others, as fullie and as frequent- lie inſiſt on “free juſtification, by the imputa- ps tion of Chriſt's righteouſneſſe;" as you and they ز : 96 Dr. TUCKNEY'S to they do on inhærent holineſs and righteouſneſs: that no diſſervice may be done to that, by preſ- fing of this ; matter of complaynte wou'd bee prevented : but, when this is infifted upon; with the flighting terms of notions and ſpeculations given to the other, when contended-for; mee itt is juſte matter of offence. ..7 Some have expreſſed a perfection above this. u Hee, that hath “ Faith, which worketh " by Love; cannot but joyne Love with his Faith: but trulie, Sir, I hope, you do not defire in this life ( in which the Apoſtle faith, wee walke by faith”*; and is itt is our * life” + ;) to come to ſuch an eſtate of Love above Faith; that, with ſome of our high- flowen menne, you might heere bee above Faith: which onlie in an other worlde is ſwallowed-up into Vifion; and foccaſeth, in ſome reſpects; though, in ſome other, itt even there abides to eternitie. 4 In the ſermon on Matth. v. 20. Ordi- nances ſpoken-of were more than Formalities, Itt hath bin too often ſaid in publique by fome: and wee had more than a touch of itt, in this daye's ſermon. X But yett, if that bee but a notion and Speculation ; which a man may holde, and not bee the better man for itt : trulie, by this rule, Deum eſſe and Chriſtum effe may come to beę no better than notions and ſpeculations. * II Cor. V. 7. + Gal. ij. 10 They THIRD LETTER. 9.7 ز Y They were all ſuch things, as a man may lolde and bee never the better man; and they inay, bee the inoft ſubſtantiall fundamen- talls: and diſputes about God and Chriſt were particularlje named. I will not take upon mee, to chooſe other men's texts for thein: but:yett, I ſhou'd bee glad, that Goſpell-preachers wou'd pleaſe to think of ſuch as wou'd leade them to inſiſt: upon Juſtification by Faith", and " im- * puted Righteouſneſs”: and not onlie, oral- moſt onlie, on ſuch; as give them occa- fion to ſpeak of. “ inhærent righteouſneſs”: of the advancing of Faith above Reaſon, and of the Impotencie and Weakneſs of Nature; rather than the Power of itt: that Faith is the condition of the covenant of Grace &c. But I, that have bin too bold, in this long letter, with your Time, in this particular.; may bee conceeved almoſt impudente in being ſo over- bold with Your and Others Libertie But I crave pardon for all: and nowe that I have freelie opened my minde to you ; I have don. what, in faithfullneſs to God and you, I thought I might bee. bound to. I commend You and : the ſucceſfe of all to God, and reſt. Your verie: playne, : bụt verie true Friende; O&. 8; 1651. A. T When you have looked over theſe papers, if they bee worthe your labour to do ſo; I deſire you wou'd pleaſe to returne them: as not having anie COPPY of them. H Dr. 1 ( 98 ) i Dr. WHICH COT E 's THIRD LE T T E R. S IR, I Have obſerved ; that replies upon replies prove more troubleſom, than profitable : and the farther they go-on, ſtill the leſs of mat- ter; but exceptions, on one ſide and other, againſt wordes and phraſes: alfo omnis ingenii acies poſt primum impetum hebefcit. Yett, lince I preferre to give You ſatisfaction, before anie other buiſneſs; fomthing I ſhall farther adde : leaving manie things to diſcourſe. a. b. Creatio eft cognofcibilis, Izımine naturae; et. Scriptura infuper atteſtatur : quo reſpectu dici poteft efe de fide. Modus autem et circumftantiae creationis unice innoteſcunt per revelationem a Deo; ideóque non niſi materia fidei. € “You ſay, in manie things wee muſt “ credere much more than wee can ratione per- *.cipere”. in your f you quoted mee, that the tranfcendencie "lies. in amplitudine 'et plenitudine obječti ; non in contradictione rationis : and were therwith ſatisfied. Credere includit Cognofcere ; aliter fides eft im- plicita : and I do not ſo much reach the thing, as beleeve in general, what God means is .. true. I call THIRD LET TE R. 99 ز I call in quæſtion none of God's counſils or decrees ; anie where reveled in fcripture : '[Mr. PERKINS and CALVINE and beſt inter- preters give for a rule, in finding-out the ſenſe of ſcripture; never a ſenſe contrarie to the common principles of reaſon and natural light.] my reaſon hath nothing againſte them ; but admires and adores : yett I much doubt, notwithſtanding what you ſaid before of ortho- dox explications, to help our imperfections ; whether anie fallible creature can adde anie thing to them, or make them farther out : and whether itt bee not preſumption to at- tempte itt; without ſpeciall commiſſion. Verie proper and ordinarie to ſay, that faculta- tes ſingulae judicant de rationibus fuorum obje&to- 7H111. As non ſemper ſignificat aequalitatem, fed fimi- bitudinem exempli gratie, illuſtrationis ergo : fr mile non eft idem, nec per omnia fimile : fimilitudo non currit quatuor pedibus. Aliquod luminofum tranſcendenter fe habet od vim vifivae feculiatis ; ficut aliquod credibile ed intellectum. d's But our preſent diſpute is about the " power of Reaſon to judge of matters of « Faith:” ſo after in [ 9 ] Did you ever find mee leaving God out, or not acknowledg- ing Him principal, original ; and the creature mere vanitie, dividedlie from him ; a lye, in contradiction to him? I have declared the qua- litie and fittneſs of the principle, as from God, in the hand of God; "the candle of the Lord": Res illuminata illuminans. heart and ſoule I acknowledge and aſſert (and wholelie With all -my H 2 100 Dr. WHICHCOT E's : wholelie depend thereon,) the holie Spirit's ſuperintendencie, conduct, preſence, influence, guidance, government of man's mind, in the diſcerning of the things of God. There is no- thing, that I have more infifted upon; and more carefullie endeavoured to demonſtrate de induſtrici , upon texts purpoſelie choſen ; occa- ſionallie ſtill interpoſing clauſes to this purpoſe. Yeà, itt had a large place in my ſpeech ; ati which, you ſay, ſo much offence was taken. I am not clearer, fuller, in anie point: I ex- perimentallie know itt, I thank God, to be true; I have wittneſs of itt within mee; itt is my fufficiencie, itt is my ſtrength, itt is my ſecuritie : God with mee is All in All.--- God forgive them the palpable breach of the ninth commandment; who have defamed mee in this kind! Nothing is leſs true of mee: I might rather have bin accuſed of anie eville in the world.--- Do not you yourſelf in your , fay; " I cordi- « allie embrace what herein you ſo orthodoxlie, piouſlie and patheticallie expreſs ?" --- I all- wayes conſider, and ſo expreſs , the mind of man in conjunction with the good ſpirit of God. I abhorre and deteſt from my ſoule all creature- magnifying ſelf-ſufficiencie. I coulde be abun- dant herein : for iny hearte is full of indigna- tion againſte this ſuppoſition. The moſt ſe- crette ſenſe of my foule echoes to that text by you quoted, Eph.j. 17; and all other of that nature." I know them to bee all true. ". I cannot tell, whether wholelie regulated a ratione cbjcali”. --- Yes; tanquam a regula --- j which THIRD LETTER. 1ΟΙ. which was that I fpake to : but a Dei ſpiritu, tanquam ab illuminante et dirigente. So reaſon is not empowered contra Deum, aut fine Deo : but fub Deo is implied. I acknowledged to you before, that formale motivum fidei eſt: revelatio fidei : and you muſt allwayes remember ; that there is in Religion, (I here underſtand Religion materialiter ) ſci- bile, per neceſſitatem materiae; as well as credi- bile, propter authoritatem dicentis: and ratio cb- je&ti rei never over-ruled, contradicted; and ratio fubje&ti allwayes directed, determined. In that, which is onlie matter of faith, revela- tion is all in all: ſo ratio objectiva is never againſte itt: ( you fullie grant with mee in your f, that materia fidei cannot bee contrarie to reaſon: ) for that ( I mean, ratio objectiva ) is neceſſarie, infallible, immutable, pofitis ter- minis; as, Juppofita creatura capaci, eam debere Deo fubeffe: but in that, which is materia theo- logiae naturalis ex fe, there is partim fcientia, partim fides ; fc. fcientia rei in je ei rationis ab- je&tivae ; fides autem, quatenus revelaiae. e I do not think, that to ingenuitie and in- differencie, tempers, which qualifie to a re- ception from God; as carnalitie and deligning do indiſpoſe : anie article of Chriſtian faith feems to bee materia Deo indigna : and ſhoulde itt, itt woulde not bee in a man's power to be- leeve itt as from God, while itt fo feems ; though a man ſhou'd ſtruggle with himſelf never ſo much. A man can not think againſte the reaſon of his mind : that of neceilitie muſt be ſatisfied.--- But, I think, a man inay trulie H 3 ſay not bee contra rationen rei? and, if ſo ; put IO2 Dr. WHICH CO TE's ſay of the grand articles of Chriſtian faith ; ex- piation, remiſſion of finnes ; that to one ac- quainted with his own ſtate and condition, and conſiderațive of God's goodneſs, the matter of thoſe articles reveled is rather a matter expect- ed, as becoming God, Godlike; than eyther contrarie to reaſon, or unworthie of God. I beleeve, in the true uſe of underſtanding, a ſee rious and conſiderative mind wou'd bee apte to think; that eyther God wou'd pardon íinne, to penitents who reform, abſolutelie ; or elſe wou'd propoſe a way, in which --- and terines and conditions, on which hee wou'd forgive and bee reconciled : God being dulie looked upon, as the fountaine and original of goodneſs. So that, when the revelation of faith comes; the inward ſenſe, awakened to the entertainment thereof, faith ; "EYPHKA: itt is, as I ima- gined; the thing expected proves ; Chriſt, the defire of all nations: fc. the deſire of their ſtate : at leaſt, the neceſſitie of their ſtate. So far am I from quarrelling with anie of the revelations of God; my reaſon is no where fo ſatisfied, as in matter of Chriſtian Faith. & If I did ſay, the laſt reſolution was in ra- tioncin rei ; it was in materia neceſſaria ; in ob- jeéto theologiae naturalis. Are not ratiónes boni. et mali , aeternae et indiſpenſabiles of this forte ? and have not you granted, that materia fidei can .: the cafė, this is evidentlie ſecundurii rationem rei as that wee are to make conſcience of eville: The looſe Antinomian pretendės the libertie of the Goſpell, againſt conſcience of finne: may not : : THIRD LETTER 10:3 not I confidentlie conclude, that what hee faith cannot bee de fide; becauſe itt is contra rationein. rei? It is not diſhonourable to Faith at all, to ſay; that itt doth acknowledge rationes rerum, tanquam prius natas, fixas et immobiles ; makes no attempt upon them, endeavours no alteration in them. All theſe are neceſſarilie ſo, pofitis ferminis : as, fi fit creatura, ut Deo ſubſit : ſince fides hominum eſt in materia arbitraria, reſpeEtic voluntatis et beneplaciti Dei. [" Godly, ſo- « berly, righteouſly*.” Tria capita doctrinarum quae nituntur rationibus rerum. And there have not onlie acknowledgment, but Countenance protection and confirmation, 'under and by the grace of the goſpell. Simus Homines, ut fi- mus Chriſtiani ; ſaid one.] For farther ſatisfac- tion herein, I referre you back agen to what immediatlie præceded, e, e, Sir, I doubtę not, but upon farther conſideration you will ſee this, as cleare as the ſunne; and not at all derogato- rie to faith, nor diminutive of God's power. . You have alreadie granted to mee, what is cyther æquipollent to itt, or neceffarilie antece- dent to itt ; ſc. quod materia fidei non poteſt elle contra rationem rei: if therfore I do prove a thing to bee contra rationem rei, I doe thereby deſtroy itt, as a matter of faith. I ſpeake of the Truth and Realitie of the thing; not of what may ſeeme to fondneſs and partialitie This principle will certainlie over-rule Antino- mians; and there is no danger of acknowledg- ing this rule in divinitie : for it will not bee, * . Tit, ii. II, 12 G4 what 104 Dr. WHICHCO TE's what may ſeeme to this or that party, that is carnal; in a worldlie confederacie or deſigne : but onlie what reallie and in truth is contra ra- ticnem rei. h The diſtinction is not vayne: becauſe an- plior eft materia divinae libertatis, quam revela- tionis: in the ſecond place I conſider materiam libertatis; abſtrabendo a revelatione : in the third, eandem matcriam; fub revelatione. You cannot fay, that God hath reveled to us all that he hath determined: nothing becomes a matter of our faith, till itt is a matter of divine reve- lation : for you well ſay, that revelatio Dei efi de formali objeéto fidei. Idem in diverſo ſtatu diſtingui poteſt a ſeipfo. i I acknowledge your diſtinction betwen religion, and Chriſtian religion : preciſelie this latter includes the former, and ſuperaddes a forme. And I did meane, that religion had pro obječto et materiam ſcientiae naturalis, ortam è rationibus rerum ; et materiam fidei, nixam authoritate Dei. k I wou'd rather ſay, non vocat rationem ad confilium ; than contemnit rationis captum. God indeed conſults not with us, but with his own wiſdom and goodneſs; (wee being patients and under his cure ; ) for the invention contri- vance and proviſion of remedie: yett God pro- poſeth, with reſpect to our underſtandings ; viz. what they can receive, what they are able to beare. And indeed, the matter which hee doth propoſe, viz. expiation of finne, in the blood of Chriſt; and our renovation by Him, into his divine ſpirit ; are things gratefull to man's وز THIRD LETTER. 105 man's mind: and, in the ſenſe before ex- preſs’d, as it were, expected. 1 If you had heard equallie and impartialie, and had not too ſoone conceeved a prejudice; you might have heard, as you deſire, as much ſpoken of Faith as of Reaſon: alſo you had not miſſed of that, of the want of which you now complayne--- I meane, the excellencie and tranſcendencie of matters of faith to finite apprehenſion ; and the happie fuperintendencie of the holie ſpirit over man's mind : which two had large place in that Speech -- But Acuit ira animum; ne poſit cernere re&tum*. Itt was then expreſt, and hath bin ſince ac- knowledged, to you; that magnalia Dei are majora intellectu finito ; wee are now but viato- res; yea, when comprehenfores in patria, beati- tudo obječtiva will be inadæquate, as too bigg for us ; though the diſproportion will bee to our advantage; the veſſel more certain to bee filled, becauſe of the fea's dimenſions. The peace of God, the life and ſalt of the world, is ſaid to paſs all underſtanding : yett the mind is never more filled, nor better ſatisfied, than in theſe things. This tranſcendencie of the object to the facultie, is not the mind's gree- vance; but eniargement and happineſs; becauſe itt is not in a way of contradiction to the princi- * Dr. WHICHCOTE ſeems to have cited the old metrical Saw, by memory; ſo as not only not to have preſerved the words and meaſure; but even not the ſenſe of it. Acuit, in Latin, is from his purpoſe wholely; though ſharpens, in Engliſh, is proper; in one ſenſe of the word." The verſe is, Impedit ira animum ; ne pofſit cernere verzen; if I remember it. ples 106 Dr. WHICH CO TE's ples of the mind: therfore in this caſe there is no danger of the mind's being exafperated, and made to quarrel; but a fayre opportunitie of the mind's being abforpt, ingulft in happineſs: Sir, you will pardon mee; upon this third provocation from you, I muſt not bee wanting to my own innocencie : at leaſt not to God's truth. I think, I did my ſelf right, where I did God fervice: and in this reſpect I appeale from you to God. I well know, that the love of Truth ruled in my heart, and I then had, and ſtill have, ſuch evidence and affurance of being in the truth; that I cannot but think, I never ſpent hour in my life upon a better ac- count. Sir, I had well conſidered the matter of the ſpeech, before I came there; had re- folved my ſelf, upon manie thoughtes, of the certaintie, of the truth, of the importance and uſefulneſs to the auditorie : when I underſtood your taking offence, and ſome others; I ſo much to your authoritie and judgement, that I re-examined all over againe: et tandem confirma- tior evado; and am fullie ſettled in my thoughts, that the matter is unexceptionable; and that which muſt be ſtood-to: highlie tendingto God's honour, and worthie the Goſpell: and there is nothing of realitie againſt itt; but iniſtakes, mif- apprehenſions, jealouſies, and miſpriſions. Sir,this I woulde not write to you; did I not think the honour of God and Truth engaged, the intereſt of foutes concerned; and were not I my ſelf fo aliured; as that thereto, if called to itt, I muſt give atteſtation with my life. Therefore, Sir, chough I deerelie love you, in my relation to you; and highlie honour you, for your owne worth; gave THIRD LETTER. 107 worth: yett cannot I, out of reſpect to you, give-up fo noble, ſo choice a truth; ſo antido- tical againſt temptation, fo fatisfactorie, fo con- victive, fo quietive ; in fo full confirmation, to my mind, of the truth of Chriſtian religion. Sir, this knowledge, God being merciful to mee, I will keepe, till I die: not out of worldlie defigne, but out of love to my foule. But if I finde itt greevous to others, I ſhall then onlie reſerve itt to my felfe; or at moſt ſo farre on- lie coinmunicate, as I am admitted by ſuper- intendents; and deſired by thoſe, with whom I maintaine intimate converſe : for itt is my judgement in the caſe, that noble truth is not to bee impoſed or proſtituted. I m For the preſent, I confeſſe, I do extreamlie wonder attyour advice; upon divers grounds: and att ſeveral things, which you ſay in this paragraph. But I do ſo reverence your perſon ; that I ſhall dulie weigh and conſider what you here offer.--- 56 Not ſo much nor ſo often to handle ſuch texts, as are examinable by ratio rei.” Are not ſuch truths of high importance, of clear- eſt evidence and aſſurance, knowable lumine innato et naturali, quorum non poteſt eſſe ignorantia invincibilis ? whereas de Chrifto there eaſilie may bee ignorantia invincibilis; which, as neceſſarie as the knowledge of Chriſt is to Salvation, neminem damnat : the neglect and contradiction whereof damnes, where Chriſt doth not----the know- ledge and obſervance whereof neceffarie, where Chrift comes to ſave. I mean, the neglect and contradiction veritatum, quarum non eſt invinci- bilis ignorantia, damnes ; whereas ignorantia in- Matt. X. II, 13. vincia . 1 108 Dr. WHICHCO TE's vincibilis de Chriſto doth not damne. Such points are, the creature's due obſervance of God, complyance with His will, ſurrender of ſelf up to Him, dependence upon Him, acknowledge- ment of Him, affection ſettled on Him, refer- ence to Him: good ſelf-government and mo- deration in worldlie deſires and affections; and compoſure in a ſtill, quiet, calm, ſerene appre- henſion of God: the minde diſcharged of paſ- fion, undue affection and moleſtation from fenſe: juſtice, righteouſneſs, equall and fair dealing with men; no inſolencie, uſurpation, arrogancie, oppreffion: and a multitude of ſuch excellent doctrines; which, if fettled in the heartes and lives of men, wou'd make this worlde reſein- ble Heaven ; whereas nowe the contrarie ſpeak Hell broken looſe. And too much and too often on theſe poyntes! The ſcriptures full of ſuch truths: and I handle them too inuch and too often! and not diſcourſe of them, rationallie! ---- Sir, I oppoſe not rational to ſpiritual; for ſpiri- tual is moſt rational : But I contradiſtinguiſh rational to conceited, impotent, affected CAN- TING; (as I may call it; when the Ear re- ceeves. wordes, which offer no inatter to the Underſtanding; make no impreſſion on the in- ward ſenſe.). And I think, where the demon- ftration of the ſpirit is, there is the higheſt pureſt reaſon; ſo as to ſatisfie, convince, com- mand, the minde: things are inoſt thorowlie ſeen-into, moſt cleerlic underſtood; the minde not ſo much amuſed with forms of Wordes, as made acquainted with the inwards of things ; the reaſon of them and the neceſſarie connexion of THIRD LETTER. 109 of termes cleerlie layde-open to the mind and dir- covered. I have no ſkill at all in the Bible; if the Prophets, and Apoſtles, and our Saviour himſelfe are not frequente in rationall arguments and argumentations. I acknowledge ; that, in matters merelie arbitrarie, and of püre revela- tion; as manie matters they are engaged in are'; as inatters of faith, matters divinæ voluntatis e't beneplaciti; for which no rule but pleaſure: for inz gratuitisnon fit injiiria: as Matt. xx. 15.) they ſay, Deus dixit; and that is enough and moſt proper, in that caſe: but they carefullie make appear, that ratio rei is not to the contrarie. They do prové, per rationes rerum, in neceffariis ex fe ; per autho- rinatem Dei, qucad ea quae determinantur a libera Dei voluntate. . And this I dare undertake to make-out, by a thouſand fcriptures. I allways thought; that that doth moſt af feet and command the hearte; which doth moſt fullie ſatisfie and convince the minde: and what reacheth the minde, but reaſon; the reaſon of the thing? anima apta nata eft fubeſſe rationi : generoſus animus bominis ducitur. And the choi- ceſt objects and matters admitt of the cleereſte higheſt fulleſt reaſon : becauſe they are moſt lightſom and bright. Ratio rei plus valet, urget magis, in Deo; quam in creaturis : in God, is allways infallibly, as ſhou'd bee; Deus certainlie optimus, as well as maximus : in the creatures, is and ought to be often divided. Whether I am "i knottie and obſcure,” in the apprehenſion of others; I am not ſo competent a judge : I well under- ΙΙο Dr. WHICHCOT E's underſtand myſelfe. Judicium fit penes Auditores. I am nothing, but as God enables mee. n&o Dignitas et certitudo Chriſtianae religi- önis are not proveable, by teſtimonie of ſcripture; but ſubſequentlie to the demonſtration of the divine authoritie of fcripture: now ſince, as you well ſay, Chriſtian religion is conteined in fcrip- ture, as the principal matter of itt; they both ſtand and fall together: and are proved or im- pugned by the ſame arguments. "If I had don, as you præſcribe; I ſhoulde then have remo- ved the quæſtion from Chriſtian religion to the fcripture : and muſt, iiſdem argumentis , ſc. ex qualitate materiae et per teſtimonium Spiritus ; have proved the divine authoritie of ſcripture. There are but three heads of arguments, wherby to prove the authoritie of ſcripture: fc. 1. inſta argumenta : which I comprehend un- der qualitas materiae. 2. teftimonium ſpiritus divini. 3. tradition. Qualitas materiae conſiſts of verie manie ingredients; as de qualitate ma- teriae ſunt, 1. antiquitas doctrinae. 2. fanétitas et puritas ejufdem. 3, finis; ſc. extirpatio mali, et liberatio a reatu. 4. harmonia fingularum par- tium inter ſe. 5. continuatio doctrinae fucceffiuis temporibus. 6. praeditiones, eventibus compro- batae. 7. explicatio fallaciarum Satanae et im- proborum. 8. virtus obligativa conſcientiarum. 9. declaratio poenarum iniquitatum, quas fcelerati de facto luunt. 10. enarratio invictae fidei, quae ubique in Martyribus triumphans eft. 11. pietas ſcriptorum, et candor ; in agnofcendis infirmitati- bus ſuis; et in dando gloriam Deo. 12. miracula. Theſe reſpectively qualifie the ſeverall partes of fcripture: THIRD LETTER. III ſcripture: wherfore you cannot well contra- diſtinguiſh, as you do, the foretelling and ful- filling of propheſies and miracles : for theſe, and all the reſt, are argumenta petita a ratione rei; atque ſunt de qualitate materiae. Hence it appears; that I, proving the nobleneſs and truth of Chriſtian religion per teftimonium fpiri- tus, et per qualitatem materiae ; omitted no ar- gument, but Tradition. Teſtimonium ſpiritus, though itt bee triumphant, where itt is.; the ſpirit being his owne wittneſs, and carrying along his owne evidence : yet itt is but argu- mentum fingulare: nothing to him, that feels itt not; though enough to him that doth: where- as, to affert and declare a Jeongétteid, a ratione rei, aut a qualitate materiae; is to uſe a generall argument, univerſallie concluſive. But I have you excuſed in this exception: if you had had you, had bin prevented ; and indeed, the greateſt part of our difference is; that you miſtake mee. So, you ſee, that Your two arguments, pro- phecies and miracles, are de materia ſcripturae : but why you adde“ Faith in itt,” I cannot in the leaſte imagine. I let itt paſs in your for- mer paper; being not able to find-out your meaning: and now you ſend itt mee agen; but without anie comment. For itt is but bi- mana credulitas, and not fides divina; till I receeve upon divine authoritie : and this I am not negligentlie to ſuppoſe or imagine ; but to have itt made-out to mee, For hee, that be- leeves what God faith ; without evidence, that God faith itt; doth not beleeve God, while hee my ſpeech before this miſtake on your part ز ز ! ri2 Dr. WHICH COTÉ's hee belcevės the thing that is from God:et cadein ratiorie, fi contigiſſet, Alcorano Turcico credidiflet; and for evidence might have alledged his faith in itt. I inult therfore confeſs; that, in this paragraph of your's, iný unind receeves no fa- tisfaction. My faith cannot bee argumentuin pro ſcriptura; but authoritas ſcripturae eft fidei pro fundamento et ſtatumine. P I receeve no ſatisfaction att all,in your ſcant and narrow interpretation of Prov. xx. 27. where- by you prejudice God's talent, committed to our truſt; and fo leſſen both our charge and work. The uſe, as you expreſs itt, is inadæquate to the principle : [ſo farre as you weaken the princi- ple in man, you alſo leſſen man’s: finne and guilt; and ſo make man leſs accountable to God, and leſs obnoxious : ] “ The candle of " the Lord” ſignifies no ſhallow thing : itt is a principle; which ſpeakes much of God in the worlde; and is of great pregnancie : and, under the ſuper-intendencie of God's ſpirit, is of -great ſufficiencie and efficiencie. - And, I am ſure, itt hath verie manie parallel and con- ſignificant ſcriptures; in the ſenſe given by mee.... For the purpoſe, for which you quote Jobxxxij. 8. and I Cor. ij. 14. I refer you; back agen tod: I will as freelie and fullie acknowledge God, as I can poffiblie, and will thankfullie learne of you to do-itt more, I count itt true ſacriledge, to take: from God; to give to the Creature : :yett I look att-itt; as a diſhonouring God, to nullify and make baſe his workes ; and to think Hee made a forrie worthleſs peece, fitt for no uſe; when THIRD LITTER. 113 ز « So Sir, I per- when hee made man. I cannot but think of a noble able creature ; when I reade ad imagi- p2em et in fimilitudinem Dei: or if, in ftatu lapſo, itt bee as nothing; then you vilifie the reſtitu- tion by Chriſt: as more hereafter. 4 By quilibet abundet fuo fenfu, I underſtand no more; than cuilibet Chriſtiano judicium diſ- cretionis : and I ſhoulde rather have adjoined ite to that, as equivalent to itt ; than to fides non el cogenda. This the fruite of haſte ----- *s as laſtlie to reſolve in rationem rei,ex parte ob- « je&ti; et in rationem noftram, tanquam fummume judicem, ex parte ſubjecti.” ceeve, you took verie deepe offence: elſe what your ſelfe quote heere of mine, wou'd give you fatisfaction, viz. “ perceptive judgement: neyther auther, nor inventer, nor controuler; ? as you well expreſs itt.” For the former part-- in rationem rei, ex parte objccti ; I referre you back to g and d; becauſe I woulde not repete. For the latter, in rationeni tanquam judicem, ex parte ſubječti : I remember, I then told you; that it was improper to call the ſcripture judex; which connotes a perſon ; but regula et norma fidei. [I then expreſt myſelf; that judex tenetur fententiam ferre ſecundum legenz ; non pro fuo arbitrio : atqiie judex eft infra legem, et legi fubje£tus.] If I did ſay, ſummus judex ; itt was reſpectively to perſons, ſeverallie conſidered ; in the ſenſe acknowledged by all Proteſtants.--- Cuilibet Chriſtiano judicium diſcretionis; as ao gainſt the Pope, who arrogates to himſelf to I be C6 ز 1 114 Dr. WHICHCO TE's be judex infallibilis, vifibilis ; quoad fenfum fcrip- turae, et controverſas fidei : ſo excluſively, in re- ſpect of fellow-creatures, not aſſumed by God in ſpecial, as His inſtruments; not indued with infallibilitie, quoad koc: but ſubmiſſively, in re- ſpect of God and revelation from Him; both of matter wordes and meaning: all which deter- mine Us; and at our perill bee itt, if we wil- linglie miſtake, or willfullie elude, his ſenſe. God, who is xagdioyezens, is judge. Wher- fore I marvaile, that you ſhoulde ſtick att itt ſo; *for the diſcerning to reſolve in rationem hujus vel illius hominis, tanquam judicem, ex parte fubječti : in as much as everie Chriſtian muſt have partici- lar knowledge, muſt fee with his own eyes, muſt not compromiſe, muſt himſelf bee ſatisfied: aliter redibit fides imțlicita, papiſtica, carbonaria: and wee muſt to ROME again. " the power of nature” To mee a ſtrange imputation! I have indeed called upon men ſuppoſing, as I ought, God to bee with them; to uſe and employ all gifts, both of grace and nature: the neglect of which, I am ſure, will prove matter of ſelf-conviction. But for this I referre you back to d. ---- “ Suſpicions and “ Mifprifions-- cauſing Heats and Oppoſitions--- “ Your and ſome other's ſo much going in an « other frayne --" Where they are ſo ground- leſs and cauſeleſs, and ſome take too much upon them; there is no certain remedie applyable ; I do not think, while this temper continues, i brisson noteid on * The words “ for the diſcerning” are extremely ob- {cure, if not abſolutely unintelligible; and ſeem to be out of place here. offences - Exalting 3 THIRD LETTER. HI5 > offences can bee avoided. ---Sir, permitt mne al- ſo animam liberare; and to deale freelie and cleerlie: and I pray, itt may bee without of- fence. Lett the matter of difference bee dif- covered: in order to a removall and a more in- ward cloſing. I cannot returne to that frame of {pirit, in the judging and diſcerning the things of God; you here and there, in my apprehen- fion, feeme to adviſe mee to. I have had, in the former parte of my life, experience thereof; and having freelie and fullie delivered myſelf up to God, to bee taught and ledde into truth; my minde is ſo framed and faſhioned by Him, (or elſe I am greatlie deceeved in my religion ;) that Ican no more look back, than St. Paul, after. Chriſt diſcovered to him, coulde re- turne into his former ſtrayne. * I give much to the ſpirit of God, breathing in good men ; with whom I converſe, in the preſent worlde; in the univerſitie and other where : and think; that, if I may learne much by the wri- tings of good men, in former ages ; which you adviſe mee to.; and, I hope, I do not neglect: that, by the actings of the divine ſpirit, in the minds of good men now alive, I may learn more: and I muſt not ſhutte my eyes againſt anie manifeſtations of God, in the times in which I live. The times, wherein I live, are more to mee; than anie elſe : the workes of God in them, which I am to diſcerne; direct in mee both principle affection and action. And I dare not blafpheme free and noble ſpirits in religion, who fearch after truth with indifference and in- genuitie: leſt in ſo doing I ſhould degenerate * Hiric illae lacrymae ! I 2 into 1:46 Dr. WHICHCOTE's сне މް into a {pirit of Perſecution, in the reallitie of the thing; though in another guiſe : For a miſtaken ſpirit: may conceit itt ſelf to bee acted by the zeal of God. And I have obſerved that, in former times, ſome ; whoſe names and memories I otherwiſe honour, and value their writings ; have bin ſharp and cenforious, ſevere and keen: even to the perfecution of ſuch, whom I doubte not but God had receeved. And I greatly feare that fome allſo, in our times, do fo too. And I do beleeve ; that the deſtroying this ſpirit out of the Church, is a peece of the Reformation ; which God, in theſe times of changes, aimes- att: and I feare to bee under the power of the anti-character to the worke that God is about ; and to ſtand diſaffected to what God is doing in the worlde. [Hereby I give not way to looſe wilde phanſies in religion ; nor to bolde pre- ſumptions : but I do acknowledge true worth ; and dulie conſider what I finde cauſe to thinke God imprintes on the ſpirits of truely good men: who-with Honeſt heartes ſeeke to Him, to be ledde into truth.] --- Sir, you have now an ac- count of the ſecret ſenſe of my Soule ; and I have told you, what God hath whiſpered in my beare: or elſe. I am under ſuch a deluſion; as I think, God never delivers ſuch up tó; as with honeſt heartes ſeeke to Him. And I pray you, Sir, ſo farre as you value mee in religion, con: ſider this thing with freedom ; laying alide a- while præ-luppoſitions and præ-poffellions. They, who differ from mee, in ſome apprehen fions; though I may conceeve the things, as I apprehend them, weightie; and ſo, in refpeci of ... THIRD LETTER. 117 ons from God : as in the caſe of th27 of my own perſon, I'am bound : may bee as honeft-hearted towards God and as well lovers of Truth ; as I my-ſelf am. In this caſe I muſt leave Them to runne Their hazard, of being right or wrong; as I muſt do Mine : 'everie one ſtands or falles to his owné maſter : [Neyther herein do Iconſider Men'; as you feeme to under- ſtand me: ſo much as the account they give for what they ſay. Somë rules and principles be- ing certain and infallible; with which no refo- lution, in matters leſs certain, may in anie wiſe claſh.] And, where I ſuppofe miſtakings, in matters of weight; and itt is a hard matter for mee to determine an equall neceſſitie to ſeveral perſons of different parts, education, apprehenſions, and under various manifeftati- " wife minded” * "* yet I have nothing har- der to ſay, than that " God ſhall revele even this to them.” I perſuade myſelf; if ſimple mil-apprehenſion, or ignorance, of ſome matters in religion for a time; through darker manifeſtation of them from God; were ſo extreamlie dangerous, as ſome ima- gine; our Saviour, in good affection, had ſooner declared them ; more fullie awakened the non-conſideration of his diſciples. ---- But, to rețurne' to what I was ſaying before; I am out of doubte, that trulie good men, dear to God, féll under the perſecution of the tongue, the pen, the mif-report, of perfons of emi- nencie; whom, fave in this, I do not condemne; but think them among the number of the bet- . 1 * Phil. iij. 15. + I 3 ter 1:18 Dr. WHICHCOTE's 1 ter ſort of their times : in cauſes, wherein they were not onlie honeft-hearted and meant well but were little, if at all, miſtaken. And I pray God, our zeale, in theſe times, may bee fo kindled with pure fire from God's altar ; that itt may rather warın, than burn; enliven rather, than enfiame : and that the ſpirits of good men may truely be qualified with Goſpell-principles, true fruites of the divine ſpirit. Gal. v. 22, 23.-- And truely, I think; that the members of the Church, if not the leaders; notwithſtanding all the perfections of times before us, ſo much pretended or applauded; in this point have verie much yett to learne. For I am perſuaded; that Chriſtian love and affection, among all partakers of the Goſpell-grace is a point of ſuch impor- tance, and certain foundation ; fo preffed upon us by our Saviour, and his Apoſtles; that itt is not to be prejudiced, by ſuppoſals of differences, in points of religion anie wayes diſputable; though thought weightie, as determined by the parties on eyther ſide: nor yett by the trulie different perſuaſions of thoſe ; who cannot bee ſatisfied, eyther in our conceited formes of ex- preſſion; or particular determinations beyond ſcripture: which, as ſome have obſerved, have indeed enlarged Divinitie; but have lefſened Cha- ritie, and multiplied Diviſions. For the main- tenance of truth, is rather God's charge; John xvi. 13.) and the continuance of charitie; our's: ( Heb. xiij. 1.) “Let brotherlie love continue.”' There is no exception. Let him bee cautious, who limitts; as conlidering, that the account is tem THIRD LET TER.. 119 to bee given to God. I think, I may ſuppoſe; without offence ; that the cunning Devill, who is allways vigilant to do miſcheefe; may lay a fnare, in the notion of Orthodoxie, againſte Charitie. In paradijo Dei ſerpens latet in infidiis. And, as I ſaid before, perſons valuable for their love and deſire of truth, differing from us, gene- rallie meane better ; than our prejudice, occafi- oned upon this difference, admitts us to con- ceeve of them : for I make account, that ſcrip- ture is ſo cleere and ſatisfactorie, in matters of weighte ; (Omnia necejcria perſpicue traduntur :) that none, but They, who unworthily practiſe and deſign upon truth; can bee miſta'ten: and theſe in religion are not conſiderable ; as not being under the power of itt, but ſerving ends : but, ſure enough, where the Love of truth rules in the hearte, the Light of truth will guide the minde. I beleeve, it is not to bee found; in ſcripture, or otherwhere; that honeſtie uprightnefs, integritie, are in conjunction with hæreſie: and the ſcripture way is, to rectifie ſimple miſapprehenſions with tenderneſs. : [In- deed that principle, of ſcripture's perfection fuf- ficiencie and perſpicuitie, inclines me to think; that They, who fullie come-up to ſcripture ; and fet themſelves with ingenuitie to find-out the ſenſe; ſeeking to God, to guide them; be . ing not under the power of anie luſt, or cor- ruption, or worldlie intereſt; will not ſubſtanti- allie differ, in their reſolved judgeinents about verie materiall things: as you ſeem to ſuppoſe, r.] Sir, this I write to you, out of a good mind; and in the fear of God: with greate reſpect to I 4 You,.. 1 20 Dr. WHICH CO TE's You, who I deerlie love and highlie honour : I think, You write your heart to Mee , and to do I to You: ELIJAH deſpiſed: not, what the Raven brought: I may bee miſtaken ;...but I think, I am not. However, this is my judge- ment; and I am under the power of theſe ap- prehenſions: and I pray to God, if I bee in the wrong, to revele farther unto mee; and bleſſed bee the meſſenger, ſent to mee on His errand ;; the inſtrument Hee uſeth, to remove mee from my errour.---Neyther is itt in my mind, by aught of this I write, to countenance anie looſe libertie in religion : for I am well re- ſolved concerning ſuch, in the defence of whom I ain engaged ; that they are under the power of what in religion is moſt vital and character- iſtical. You were pleaſed to contra-diſtinguiſli Orthodoxie and Ingenuitie; which I chooſe rather to reconcile : ånd think, that they may fayrely ſtand together. r In things or expreſſions, only determina- ble by fcripture, extra ultra citra ſcripturam ; how ſhall I diſcover more or leſs orthodox who hath extarordinarie commiffion? who hath the priviledge of infallibilitie? who ſhall judge ?: by what warrant can we characterize on diſtinguiſh, by non-ſcripture phraſe? $. For myſelfe; I ſhall take no more liber- tie, than is allowed to mee : Impotentis eſt, non poffe:fibi:foli: sapere; et ſilere. But I thoulde bee glad ; that everie other perſon, that is confiderable: in religion ; shoulde both have and uſe the libertie, to tell mee; what he fondes: caule to beleeve or diſbeleeve. Not << outwardlie 1 ...THIRD LETTE R. · 121 as outwardlie to expreſs diſagreement &c,"--- Whatever others have don; I am ſure, I am yett to beginner and herein I ſhall followe your counfil. t. I never meant, that the cauſe ſhou'd bee eſtimated by men's perſons; but inen's expref- ſions, by the rule of truth; and their preten- ſes, by the rule of goodneſs. z I only ſay ; itt wou'd fignifie ſomthing: if you wou'd firſt reſolve, who ſhall judge:? [Vider.] & The WALDENSES and ALBIGENSES plea- ded for itt : all under oppreſſion have ſeen itt : Véxatio dat intelle&tum. 6 Itt is cleerlie the foundation of Proteſt- ancie ; as Judex infallibilis vifibilis is of Poç pery B You make Socinianiſin and Arminianiſm leſs formidable : but ſurelie you do not well, movere terminos ; much leſs, to multiplie diffe- rences.- Is itt enough ? the religion of the nation? of one's education ?--- You ſay, in finding-out new truth, and cleering the " old”--- Do you in earneſt and confideratelie ſuppoſe this:--- 1. A good ground of Mode- ration, forbearance and tenderneſs. may do well, for his own uſe: but, according to your principles, hee may not propoſe to others what hee finds. XA ſteward's diligence and fidèlitie in his truſte; is one thing; and his uſurpation upon his Lord; is an other. Let the Lord make rules for his houſe; and the Steward take care for the obſervance of them. The trufced muſt 2. This $ 122 Dr:WHICH COTE's inuſt keep within the limits of his commiffion. Non amo nimiuin diligentes, oficiofos ni mium. Let not UZZAH reach-out his hand to the tottering ark : let not Saul's haſte or danger put him on facrificing. ---*" Contend-for the faith " -- but againſt whom? * " ungodlie, turning the grace of God into laſciviouſ- neſs, denyers of the Lord Jeſus.-- Is there heere a check to the ſpirit of ingenuitie ? Yea rather, “ woulde to God, that all the Lord's “ people were Prophets. I” Speak to my ſpi- rituall edification, who can. Ś I onlie borrowed the Prophet's phraſe ; not conſidering the context : my meaning was inoffenſive" - An unjuſtifiable phraſe- reci- pitur; a moral naſcitur.' I perceeve, itt is verie hard to remove an offence, once by you . taken. Herein, I promiſed my ſelf; I ſhou'd ſatisfie you ſtrain and ſtretch, to the utmoſte poſſibilitie of the worſer ſenſe: in your » you are firſt ſatisfied, then doubte; but in your you are quite off againe. Cer- tainely, that “ voluntas creata doth formaliter producere actum credendi et poenitendi eli- cere a£tum fidei and faith the act of an intelligent rationall creature c all which you ſay; importe as much as nafcitur, in my fenſe: 0 Formaliter and Vitaliter are equivocall, in ordinarie uſe : atque ufus et communis conſen- Sus fint regula vocabulorum. Verba valent 24 Nummi. Loquendum cum Vulgo. os :. you : but g с : * Jude 3. † 4i I Numb. xi. 29. ct Ab 1 THIRD LET TÉ R. ..! 123 1 insipit Abeonaſcitur”--Before, you did [falfif*]tor- ture, to make confeſs what was not there; heere, give me leave to ſay, mif-quote: itt was è not à: and theſe diſtinguiſh cauſes, matter and ef- ficient, or cauſe and ſubject. * Have I not allways conſidered the mind of man, in order to good; as in conjunction with the divine ſpirit? and is not Chriſt the founda- tion of recoverie in the creation? So that a recta ratio is to be found. 7 I think, our Saviour's doctrine needes no apologie; nor that of his Apoſtles after him. X This is eternal life: to know thee, the on- lie true God; and Jeſus Chriſt, whom thou haft fent. * w I have verie much heere to fay: but I will reſerve myſelf for another time. Are not the third chapter to the PHILIPPIANS, and the third chapter to the GALATIANS, fulle in the arguments you deſire? If ſo, you have an anſwer. . For thoſe you conjoyne with mee; I think, their excellencie lies in a reall and effectuall partici- pation of Chriſt and of his ſpirit. I profeſs myſelf as full and cleere, as any one in the worlde ; in that grand poynte, of our acceptance with God, in and through Chriſt: - Yett I confeſs, I can- not but marvaile; to ſee you balance matters of knowledge, againſte principles of goodneſs; and ſeeme to inſist-on Chriſt,leſsas a principle of divine nature in us; than as a ſacrifice for us. I ac- knowledge; they both ſpeak the rich grace of God in Chriſt to man: I mean, expiation of * Thus written in the MS, with a line drawn through it. John. xvij. 3. finne, 124. > Dr. WHICH COT-E's... : finne, in the bloud of Chriſt, and trųe parti- cipation of the divine nature, to the making of us trulie Godlike or conform to God, through Chriſt being formed in us:: and I know not well -or rather dare not, compare them: both be- ing the proviſion of Heaven, to make us capa- ble of happineſs; and fundamentallie neceſſarie to our fafetie. But certainlie, if wee conſider difficultie or danger, in relation to perſons; as the ſubjects or receevers of theſe great bleſſings from Heaven: then one is more eaſilie under- ſtood and readilie pretended; when-as the. other; as whollie contrarie to carrnalitie, is ſtuck-att and greatlie neglected. How eaſie to fay, [many alllo continuing to “make proviſion "for, the fleſh, to fullfill the luſtes thereof; *" while they fo ſay and think ;] Chriſt died for mee---ſelf-flatterie ſaying itt, as well as faith; -- and. I do fiduciam in eo collocare—the greateſt finner having leaſt matter of ſelf-confidence:--- when-as whole inordinate ſelf riſeth-up in rebel- lion, againſt ſelf-ſurrender into divine will; and real transformation of man into the ſpirit image and nature of Chriſt! And this latter being the great demonſtration of the veritie of the ſubjects. faith of the former; itt may ſeeme; that the formner may bee beſt ſecured, by the frequente confirmation of and much inſiſting-upon-the lat- ter: the former being underſtood once for ever, upon a full declaration and thorowe conſiderati- on.of it ; (for once knowen, and ever: intel- ketis. poft primum ačtum eft in habituz-et-tranſt in memoriam intelle&tivam; atque fides conſoli- dat;" comfortat," fimplicem intelligentiam :) but . * Rom. xiii. 14 the THIRD LETTER. 125 the latter being not otherwiſe to be knowen, than by being felt: which is not, ſave aś ſen- ſualitie is mortified and crucified. [In the Apoſtles' times, Juſtification by Faith in Chriſt was not knowen; or not beleeved: whereas now it is both knowen, and generallie profeffed : in which reſpect itt may be well ſaid to bee Do&trina illorum * temporum. Men are to be both informed ſatisfied and convinced a- bout itt. In the Apoſtles' times ; to relinquiſh the Moſaical diſpenſation, and to entertein'the Gof- pell-frame, and to acknowledge all types, pro- miſes, propheſies concerning God's Meffiah, fullfilled in this perſon Jeſus Chriſt; fignified in perſons ſome more remarkable work of God: than now to acknowledge Chriſt, and profeſs ſome expectation from him; when-as iit is the religion of the Nation, and the firſt point of Education; and whoſoever ſticks at itt, is looked- att as a prodigie and monſter. Now that Chriſt is more knower and freelie profeſſed, let him allſo be inwardlie felt, and ſecretlie underſtood; as a principle of divine life within us, as well as a Saviour without us. [Chriſt is the Leaven of Heaven; ſent into the world, and given to us; to leaven us into the nature of God.] And this, I conceeve, is worthie Goſpell-preachers (as your phraſe is) to do ; in this progreffe and pro- ficieneïe-of Goſpell knowledge and grace, and farther advance of the kingdom of the Meſſiah: ☆ 'ſpeciallie, when-as wee live in a croud of mennej who indeede profeſſe ſome zeale for Sic MS: but Q. whether it ſhould not be lorum. that 1 126 Dr. WHICHCO TE's that happie poynt, of“ Juſtification by Faith; yett are ſenſiblie degenerated into the deviliſ nature of malice, ſpight; furie, envie, revenge: in this caſe, the juſtification of faith in the world; as allſo the ſubject's ſatisfaction, of the truth of itt in himſelf; is the certain conjuncti. on of fanctification, holineſs, and a divine na- ture, with itt; in the nature and reaſon of the thing, as allſo God's purpoſe and worke. But, though I knowe, your jealouſie and ſuf- picion is groundleſs; in reſpect of mee and others : and that you are wholely miſtaken, in your apprehenſions: as fointime the tenn tribes. were, concerning the two *: yett, becauſe I highlie honour your perſon, and greatlie con- fider you in religion; and the matter is of high importance and conſequence: I ſhall bee, as the ſuſpected there, (from v. 21. to the end of the chapt.) zelous and earneſte for your ſatisfaction: and therfore, to what I have here and there, occaſionallie, now and before ſaid, I farther adde --- I am verie free to ac- knowledge Chrift, the onlie foundation; ſince the apoſtaſie and finne of man: Hee alone gave the ſtoppe to God's juſt diſpleaſure; His inter- poſing prevayled with God, not to take the for- feiture; or, if taken, Hee procured the reſtaura- tion and recoverie. Upon this accounte. I ac- knowledge : Chriſt, in parts of nature, reaſon and underſtanding; as well as in gifts of grace : ſo that Chriſt is not by mee 'anie: where left- out, nor faith neglected; no, npr. not adyan- ز * Yoh. xxij. 10---21 ced THIRD L E T T E R. 127 ed to a ſuperioritie' and ſupereminencie. everie- where : for I beleeve, that. I hold and enjoy my reaſon and underſtanding, by and under Chriſt. And what I have meant expreſt and endeavoured all along, hath bin ; to call men to the due and carefull uſe and employment and improvement of what they hold by and under Chriſt. You have no cauſe to ſuſpect mee for ſcant and narrow apprehenſions of free grace, Chriſt's merittes and divine goodneſs.: yeti I confeſs my ſhallowneſs; but that is my greevance and bürthen : and I woulde have my. apprehenſions raiſed, and my thoughts of the Goſpell enlarged. I attribute to the creature, upon itt's own accounte, nothing but unwor- thineſs inabilitie and inſufficiencie : and look-at Chriſt, as the onlië ground of acceptance; and his ſpirit, as the onlie principle of enablement power and ſufficiencie. Sir, theſe things being by mee freelie and heartilie written and profeſſed, as the moſt in- ward ſenſe of my mind; bee pleaſed to look back, and conſider with your-felf; how .unſuitable to the frame and temper of my ſpirit, that repre- ſentation hath bin; which you have made of mee to your felfe; in your own thoughts : ſo that I may ſay; that none hath leſs trulie knowen mee. a Give mee leave heere, though out of place, to adde---What is in man more confi- derable, than that, which declares God's law to him, pleades for the obſervation, accuſeth for the breach, excuſeth upon the perfor- mance ! $ - The 3 128 Dr. WHICHCO TE's t 8:The rule, whereby I muſt judge Ora thodox--Thoſe, who ſpeak conforınablie to my inward ſenſe of God and his truth, to my im. partial apprehenſion of the ſcripture-dictate, and the rationes rerum. c. Who leaves them rather to their judge, than hee; who pafſeth no ſentence pafſeth no ſentence upon them, as to their final eſtate? Uk We walk by faith”, till wee bee com- prehenſors; till wee bee pofſeffed of all that bleſſedneſs, which is promiſed and expected. A true complacential love fignifies fomthing of fruition, in what degree foëver : and whether, and how farre, a man may enter into this ſtate. in this life ; let Him determine, who hath acted to the utmoſt extent permiſſible, of a trulie divine free and unreſtrained faith: which is the prodromus thereto. oft Sure, itt. will not bee a caſting ſhame on the Goſpell; to ſay and ſhew, that what hath bin moſt worthie and like to divine, in feverall ages of the world ; hath held beſt and fulleſt conformitie with the Goſpell. - In reading Heathen authours I have affected to imitate the Bee; rather than the Spider. When I faid, "..good, as farre as they have gon”; I did not exclude mixturam mali : but that they have don well in ſome truths, wherein they have engaged; (not doubting nevertheleſs of a farther advance, accedente lumine gratiae :) as, de fruitione ultimi finis; de tranquillitate ani- mae; de contemptu 17.1ndi ; de amore veri; de zelo rectitudinis et juſtitiae : Theſe and other noble truths they have well defended and juſti- fied TH I'R D 'LETTE R. 129 fied'; againſte the baſe practiſe of the degenera- ting and apoftatizing worlde. Eft aliquid prodire tenus; ſi non datur ultra. Fides divina non contemnit regulam boni mora- lis. Now theſe things of them, as they are uſe- full to true beleevers; ſo they are reprochfull to vayne pretenders, who are not honeſt. Non ſemper cauſam criminantur, qui qui perfonam. 4 Media ordinem menſuram.et amabilitatenz ſumunt a Fine. Nunquam fiftendum eſt in-ulit Mediorum : omnia Finibus perficiuntur. They, who miſtake the Means for the End, may be reproved; without prejudice to the Means. Sir, I will only ſuperadde my craving your pardon for this tediouſneſs; which I little in- tended, when I begunne. I perceeve, the matter under examination doth not lefſen in our handes. If you can receeve anie ſatisfaction " concerning Mee, by aught I have written ; I have enough : Your-ſelf I leave to your owne greater experience, and better thoughts. I ſhall not the leſs honour you; though my judgement do not wholelie come-up to you-----When you have peruſed, I pray, return to mee this paper: for I have no coppy. c co K Dr. ( 130 ) Dr. TUCKNEY'S FOURTH LET TE R. S IR, AL LL the ſpare time I coulde gaine, fince the receit of your laſt papers, has bin 1pent in writing-out a coppy of them: which, according to your deſire, I return; with thanks for your paines in them, and with craving par- don, if I ſpare mine at preſent'; (if at all) in replying to them. Currente rota urceus exit. Farther to engage, will make the worke long and bulkie; and my ſpare time is ſhort and little : and I have other things to employ itt in. Your præface, though itt feeminglie Thoote att rovers; yett, I gueſs, is particularlie levelled att my replies : which I deſired, might be pro- fitable; but, itt ſeemes, are troubleſom. If exceptions againſte wordes and phraſes,” I am content they ſhall go in the rank of that Canting, you afterwarde ſpeak-of. « Omnis “ ingenii acies poft primum impetum hebeſcit” ſo brittle the metal may bee; and if the affail- ant hath ſpent all his powder, and wroughte himſelfe out of breath, in his firſt charge : and then a broom, worne to the ſtumpes, rather fcratcheth, than cleanfeth. But ſome heavie dull menne are a wakened and come to them- ſelves, FOUR T H LET'T E R. 131 ſelves, at the ſecond or third encounter Bos laljus fortius figit pedem. In the bodie of your after-diſcourſe, in ſome things I finde you immovable; you being, as you write, under the power of them: and ther- fore itt would bee in vayne, as to them, for mee to move anie farther : itt is enough, that I have faithfullie expreſſed myſelf to you about them. In ſome other particulars, you ſatisfie mee, that your judgement is found; for the main: thoughz I remayne unſatisfied, in diverſe things that you, expreſs about them. But that, which moſt dif- ſuades mee from farther engaging, is; that up and down in thoſe papers, though you expreſs divers times more reſpect to mee, than I de. ſerve; yett withall there are in divers places ſcat- tered ſome harde wordes: as, ſuſpicions, jealou- fies, provocations, torturing (and itt was all- moſt falfifying) your wordes; your perceev- ing itt is harde to remove an offenſe once by mee taken ; and that ſome take too much upon them, &c. -- which muſt needs render mee verie diſingenuous in your eyes : and therfore att preſent, I cannot but think itt beſt to for- bear. However, when I can gaine anie little time, and I hope itt will not bee long, before I ſhall;) I may putt down in writing ſome kind of reply to what in your papers I am not ſatisfied in : that, although I willinglie forbear your trouble; yett att leaſte, when I am dead; ſome, that ſhall 'light on my papers, may ſee; that itt was not becauſe I had nothing to ſay, that I now ſay nothing: but onely, that I K 2 heartilir i, 1. : 132 Dr. WHICHCO T'Ê's heartilie and humblie beſeech God; that both You and I may bee kept in the Faith, and may followe the Truth in Love. Which with deſire and preſents of my due reſpects, I remaine, SIR, Yours, to love and honour you; October 31. 1651. ANTH. TUCKNEY. Dr. W HICHCO TE's FOURTH LETTER. SIR Ince I know, if I know myſelfe ait all ; hat, in the diſcerning of truth, I do not dallie; nor have anie worldlie deſigne: but with aill indifferencie of mind do receeve from God, what I have aſſurance is from Him: I cannot practiſe upon any judgement; nor uſe anie force to 'command my underſtanding into other ap- prehenſions, in the matter debated betwixt us ; than I have expreſt to you. For what ſenſe wordes fpoken by God bear, and what thë-rea- jon of the thing appears to bee, to my under- ſtanding, affifted by: God's Spirit; themſelves give law to'mee, and wholely over-rule inee ? niinė own perſuaſions conceptions and thoughts ſo grounded. Whertore if, in this poýnte of diſcerning . S FOUR T'H LETTER. 133 ز diſcerning, we differ; there is no helpe for it : wee muſt forbear: one another : and nothing is to bee done, unleſs ſo farre mutuallie to value each other's judgements; as, to think, thạt from ſuch difference there is occaſion given to each of us, to examin our own ſpirits; whether we reteine that indifferencie and ingenuitie in dif- cerning, wee ought allwayes to bee cloathed withall. I think not the worſe of You at all, for aught wherein wee differ ; but conceeve, you ſee moſt cauſe to ſay and apprehend, as you do. My ſelf I ſubmitte to your cenſure: and will onlie ſay, that if you conceeve other- wiſe of mee, than as a lover of and purſuer after truth; you thinke amiffe. For thoſe pal- ſages, at which you ſecme to take offenſe; and of which you make particular application to your ſelf; I can aſſure you, that the ſenſe and intention of my mind was innocent and harm- leſs: and I am ſure, nothing paſſed my penne; which fignifies, in my ſenſe, dif-reſpect toward you; or under-valuing your judgement. Some wordes you repete, were primarilie your own ; what I ſaid in the præface, I alledged as a prin- ciple for nzy action; other things reflected not upon you, as you ſeeme to expreſs : leaſt of all, ought you to have recalled a worde; blotted- out, before itt paſſed my handes, and a better putt into itt's roome. Had I not highlie valued your perſon, and cordiallie affected to have given you ſatisfaction ; I had not alienated my- ſelf and time from other occaſions; which, being then a publique perſon, * I cou'd verie * Vice-chancellor of the Univerſity, which office he had laid-down, the morning this letter was written. hardlie } 134 Dr. WHICHCOT E's hardlie do. And coulde I, ſyllabicallie and to a tittle, have ſaid as you ſaid, non reclamantibus judicio et conſcientia; I was under a temptation to do itt, through the reſpect and honour I bear to your perſon ; and a deſire in mee, to keepe all fair. Sir, wherein I fall fhortof your expecta- tion, I fail for truth's fake; wherto alone I ac- knowledge my ſelf addicted. So juſtifying no- thing, contrarie to my due reſpect to your per- fon, whom I honour and ſhall moſt readilie ferve, I take leave ; and reſt, SIR, Your's in all Obſervance, BENJAMIN WHICHCOTE. Cambridge: Novem, 3, 1651. FI NI S. BOOKS printed for and ſold by J. PAYNE, at Pope's-Head in Pater-noſter-Row. COMPLETE COLLECTION A COM PER TE of the SERMONS and TRACTS, written by the late truly Learned and Pious JOHN JEFFERY, D. D. Archdeacon of NOR- WICH. Publiſhed with the Approbation and Af- fiftance of the Author's Relations; and Beauti- fully printed in two large Volumes, Octavo, Price bound Eleven Shillings; with the Head of the Author engraved from an original Painting, and Memoirs of his Life. *** Several Pieces are now firſt printed from the Author's Manuſcripts, which make near two Thirds of the Second Volume. 1 II. SELECT DISCOURSES upon di- vers IMPORTANT SUBJECTS, viz. Concerning the firſt tranſaction between God and Man. The dangerous efficacy of Temptation. The proper ſecurity of Innocency. The next and immediate cauſe of Sin. The ſeveral diſpenſations of true Religion The ſingular perfection of Chriſtianity. By JOHN JEFFERY, D. D. &c. Octavo, Price bound 45. 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