DEMONSTRATIO LUCULENTA, NOVA: Or, A New Method of DEMONSTRATING That ROME CHRISTIAN (and Not, Hea­then,) is the WOMAN, Called BABYLON, in th' Seeventeenth Chapter of the REVELA­TION. By Wal. Garrett, Rector of Everly in Wiltshire.

I will give you a Mouth, and Wisdom, which All your Adversaries shall not be able to Gainsay, nor Resist,

Luk. XXI. 15.

IT is Frequently Observ'd by Monsieur de Meaux, in his Exposition of the Revelation, with what Great Confidence, and Assurance, the Protestant Party Abroad, and particularly in Hol­land, do Assert the Truth of the above said Proposition. He calls it Asseûrance étonnante, an Asto­nishing Assurance, Pref. p. 64. l. ult. and, une Confiance qui étonne L'univers, a Confidence, that Ama­zes the Whole World, Pref. p. 41. l. 11. And I cannot but Commend them highly for it: for it is not Easy to be too Zealous in a Cause of such Concernment; and where our Confidence, (were it as Great, as it is said to be,) is nothing so Astonishing, as our Reasons.

But I am afraid my own Coun­trymen have not the same Opinion of them, that I have. And there­fore to Provoke their Zeal, to a Just Emulation of our Brethren beyond Sea, I humbly Offer to their Pious Consideration, these following Remarks; whereby I hope to put it past all Doubt, with men of Sense and Ingenuity, That Rome CHRISTIAN, (and Not Heathen) is That Wretched WOMAN, in the XVII. Chap. of the Revelation.

And this I mean (with God's Good Help) to Prove at present, only by Comparing the Woman in the XVII. Chap. with the Woman in the Twelfth. From whence I thus Argue: The Woman In the Wilderness, Rev. XVII. is the Same with the Woman, that Fled into [Page 2] the Wilderness, Rev. XII. But the Woman, that Fled into the Wil­derness, Rev. XII. is a Church; Ergo, The Woman In the Wilder­ness, Rev. XVII. is a CHURCH likewise. That the Woman, Rev. XII. is a Church, appears so Plainly from the Description, that is There given of her, that it is Confest on All hands. For she was seen in Heaven, Clothed with the Sun, and the Moon under her Feet, and upon her Head a Crown of Twelve Stars. And being with Child she cri'd, Travailing in Birth, and Pained to be Deliver'd. Upon which words let us hear Monsieur de Meaux for All. A Woman Clothed with the Sun C'est l'Eglise (says he Presently) toute Eclatante de la Lumiére de Jesus-Christ, It is the Church, Shining all over with the Light of Jesus Christ.

The Moon under her Feet, is according to him, in the next words ‘The Dim and Changeable Lights of Man's Wisdom.’ And her Crown of Twelve Stars, he calls ‘The Twelve Apostles.’ Her Tra­vail-pains he refers to her Suffer­ings; and Handsomly applies to this purpose That of Primasius, que l'Eglise Enfante parses Souffran­ces, ‘That the Church Brings. forth Children by her Sufferings; and that the Blood of her Mar­tyrs makes her Fruitful.’ Well then, we need not give our selves any further Trouble about the Woman in Rev. XII. for she is Confest to be a Church, by One who Never makes a Good Interpre­ter of the Revelation, but when he cannot Possibly Avoid it.

The Proposition, then that must be Fought for, is the First, viz. that the Woman In the Wilderness, Rev. XVII. is the Same with the Woman that Fled into the Wilder­ness Rev. XII. That the Woman that was Clothed with the Sun, and had the Moon under her Feet, and upon her Head a Crown of Twelve Stars, Fled into the Wilderness, is the Express Affirmation of Rev. 12.5. and is not Possible to be Deny'd, neither is it by Any man. And it shall go very hard then, but I will Convince 'em if it be Possible, That the Woman In the Wilder­ness, Rev. XVII. is the Same with the Woman that Fled into the Wilderness, Rev. XII. 5. And why not? I pray, Sirs, For,

Consider, That from the XII. Chap. to the XVII. Chap. inclu­sively, the Same Matter in Gene­ral is Treated of, viz. The Affairs of the Church, and State of the Roman Empire. There is no New Subject entred on, in all those Chapters; from what had been Begun, Chap. XII. as is Confest by Every body. And, Why then must we needs make One Woman, of her that Fled into the Wilder­ness, Rev. XII. and Another, of her that was Seen in the Wilder­ness, Rev. XVII? I confess my self Utterly Unable to Imagin Any Reason, (and without Reason, we know, non sunt Multiplicanda Entia) that may Justly minister any Colour of Suspicion, that they are Two Several Women; but Only that [Page 3] they are so Little LIKE. Which, methinks, should be no such Great Argument of Diversity.

For to This the Answer is Ob­vious enough, viz. That possibly the Woman, Rev. XII. 1. did not Continue Fixt, and Permanent, in her Heav'nly State, Clothed with the Sun, &c. but might in Process of time, Exchange her Heav'nly Ornaments, Rev. XII. for such as the Woman in the Wilderness appeared in, Chap. XVII. that is, her Clothing of Light, for a Vesture of Purple, (a more Fashio­nable Dress, it may be, in that Wilderness, whither she Fled; and so, no wonder if the Woman struck into it.) her Divine Know­ledge of Jesus Christ (wherewith she Formerly had Allur'd so Many to his Service,) for an Intoxica­ting Cup of Superstitions, and Idolatries, to make the Nations Drunk withal: And her Crown of Twelve Stars, for the more Modish Ornaments, of Gold, and Precious Stone, and Pearls. And, lastly, It is not Impossible, but that, Instead of being Persecuted by the Beast with Seven Heads, and Ten Horns, as she had been in Heaven; she might Afterwards, being Trickt up A la mode du De­sert, prove so Taking in his Eye, as to win him to her Friendship, and to have him at her Devotion, and to Manage him at her Pleasure that is, in the Stile of the Prophe­cy, to Sit upon him, or Preside over him; as she was seen to do, Rev. XVII. So that, the Wilderness she fled to, seems to be, the Pomps and Vanities of this Lower World; which, like an Eagle, Greedy of her Prey, she Flew upon, Rev. XII. 14. So soon as she had got an Emperor of her Own Profession, Rev. XII. 4, 5.

To this I dare Averr, there's nothing Possible to be Reply'd, but that, De Facto, the Christian Church of the Roman Empire, has never yet been Guilty of any Such Degeneracy. And this is the Post, that I am now to Beat 'em from. Which Thus I do; to wit, by only Minding them, That it is Ex­ceeding Manifest, tho' it has not (that I Know of) been taken Notice of by any Other, That the Woman in Heav'n, Clothed with the Sun, &c. was Afterwards, upon her Quitting of that Station, Foully to Degenerate. This I say, is Ex­ceeding Manifest, even from the Description, that we have of her in Rev. XII. without going to the XVII. Chap. for a Proof of it. For it is both Apparent, and Confest, That by the Woman's being in Heav'n, Clothed with the Sun, having the Moon under her Feet, and upon her Head a Crown of Twelve Stars, is Signify'd her Apostolical Purity. But, What was to become of all those Fine things, when she was come into the Wilderness? Was she to be in Heav'n Still; and to remain Still Clothed with the Sun; to have the Moon under her Feet in a Wilder­ness, and upon her Head a Crown of Twelve Stars? And, Is there then [Page 4] a Wilderness in Heav'n? If Mon­sieur de Moze, will Affirm This, I Know of no body so Fit to Dispute the Point with him, as the Man in the Moon; to whom therefore I must remit him. But if he will shew himself a Fair Antagonist, and Grant, that the Wilderness, the Woman fled into, was in that part of the Universe, where All Other Wildernesses are said to be, Is it not Then Exceeding Plain, that this Foolish Woman Chang'd from Heav'n to Earth; and Con­sequently, from being Clothed with the Sun, &c. (that is, from being toute éclatante de la Lumiére de Jesus Christ, all over shining with the Light of Jesus Christ,) to What? I pray, Tell us your self, Sir; for Protestants I Need not Tell; and your Own men will not Believe me. But it must needs be to Somewhat, as Different from what she was Be­fore, as Earth from Heav'n; and as the Dimness of a Cavern, from the Lustre of the Zodiac. But it is worth ones While, to hear what Monsieur de Moze says of this No­table Flight of the Woman's; L' Eglise cache son Service dans des Lieux Retirez, says he, The Church Conceals her Service in Secret Places. But, What? In Heav'n Clothed with the Sun still, and the Moon under her Feet? I trow Not. Wherefore she lost those Heavenly Indications of her Piety; and What Others Got she in their Stead? For Since it is Every way so Undeniable That the Woman Left her Heav'nly for an Earthly Station; Would not Any one be Apt to Ask, What Clothing had she, when she Came into the Wilderness? And, What did There Become of her? Is not This a very Natural Enquiry, as Can be? And is not That as Proper an Answer to it, which is given in Chap. XVII. to wit, That, in the Wilderness, she came to be Clothed (Not with the Sun, but) with Purple, and Scarlet Colour and Decked with Gold, (for the Wilderness, it seems, is not a Place for Hiding, but Ap­pearing in) and Precious Stone, and Pearls, having a Golden Cup in her Hand, Full of Abominations, and Filthiness of her Fornication, &c. And upon her Forehead a Name written, (instead of her Apostoli­cal Crown in her Heav'nly State,) Mystery, Babylon the Great, the Mother of Harlots, and Abomina­tions of the Earth. And so far from being Persecuted Now, as she had been Before; that, on the Contrary, she had e'en made her self Drunk'n with the Blood of Saints, and with the Blood of the Martyrs of Jesus. And That, by vertue of her Sitting on the Beast in the Wilderness, which Before had Persecuted her.

But This is Rome Heathen, they say; tho' she be no where said to have Gone into the Wilderness; Whereas the Church, that is Ex­pressly said to have Fled into the Wilderness, has no Notice taken of her There at all; nor is there any mention of her Habit in the Wilderness; tho' one could not but Expect to find one. But there is no Occasion for such Shuf­fling [Page 5] at all. For, Is not All the Woman's Wilderness-Description, for matter of Fact, Apparently Evident of the Church of Rome? I speak Now to Protestants. And if the Papists could but See their Worship to be Idolatrous; they would Confess (and All the World with them) that Nothing could be a more Lively Representation, than This is, of the Christian City of Rome. They must therefore Own thus much at least, to their Con­fusion, and Astonishment, That the Spirit, in this Prophecy, does most Wonderfully Favour the Hypothe­sis of the Protestants.

But I was saying, That upon the Woman's Coming out of Heaven into the Wilderness, it would be a very proper Enquiry, What Then Became of her; and of her Heavenly Ornaments, the Sun, Moon, and Stars, which she could not Carry into the Wilder­ness with her? I now add, That S. John, While he was Receiving these Visions, is Plainly Intimated to have had the Same Thoughts about her. For Instantly, upon her being Represented to him in her Wilderness-Condition, when I saw her, says he, I Wondred with Great Admiration, Rev. XVII. 6. As who should say; Having Ob­serv'd it to be so Common a thing in these Visions, to Describe People by their Habits (as in Rev. I. 13. IV. 4. VII. 9. IX. 7, 17. XI. 3. XII. 1, 3. XIII, 1. XIV. 1. XV. 6.) and finding, that this Woman had Chang'd her Station where she had been Clothed with the Sun, &c. for a Wilderness; I was Resolv'd to Observe, What kind of Figure she would make There. For by the Vision of Chap. XII. I had only understood, that she was Fled into the Wilderness, vers. 5, 14. but had not Seen her in the Wil­derness till Now. So when I saw her, in the Wilderness, Clothed with Purple, &c. and Remembred How Glorious I had Seen her Be­fore in Heaven, I could not but stand Amaz'd, at the Vastness of the Alteration.

But now, If this Woman were Rome Heathen, (as the Papists, and their Favourers, would have it,) What Matter was there, of such Mighty Admiration? or in­deed, of Any at all? Poor Mon­sieur de Meaux upon the Place, seems to have been Aware of this: and what do ye think, he Assigns for the Reason of the Surprize? Peut estre, saies he, ‘It may be, the Prophet was Astonisht to see, that She that was Represented to him so Rich, and Powerful, should be Tumbled down in One Moment.’ A Wretched Shift! For, 1. no such thing had Yet been Signifi'd to S. John. And, 2. When it was, he does not Wonder at it at all, as may be seen in the Following Chapter. For indeed, it is God's Ordinary Way of Dealing with the Persecutors of his People: The Instances where­of are Many. And 3. the Pro­phet tells us Himself, what it was, he Wondred at, by saying, When [Page 6] I Saw her, I wondred &c. That is, I wondred at the Sight of her as she was Then Represented to me. She had been a Great Wonder Before, in Heaven, Rev. XII. 1. but, in the Wilderness, I lookt upon her as a Greater, So that I was beyond Measure Astonisht, and Surpriz'd, to find her in That Habit, and Condition, so Vastly Distant from her Former.

Lastly, Let but Any Judicious, Sober Person, Compare the Ac­count, that is given of this Admi­rable Prophecy, in the Protestant Way, with what the Papists, and their Favourers, Afford us of it, and I doubt not at All, but he will Pronounce of Ours, That it is Truly Noble, and August; and Such as one might Expect from the Divine, All Seeing Wisdom of the H. Spirit of Prophecy: the Proofs whereof are Extant Still; Fresh, Visible, and Conspicuous at This Very Day; in the Womans most Excessive Grandeur, Pride, and Tyranny; as also in her Multiply'd Superstitions, and Idolatries; and (I wish, I could not Add, what cannot Possibly be Dissembled) in her being Drunken with the Blood of Saints and with the Blood of the Martyrs of Jesus. But to give so Gallant a View, of a Church so Glorious, and Attractive, for above Two Hundred Years, (as is done in Rev. XII. Themselves being the Interpreters;) and Then, to Huddle her down, in Hugger-mugger, (as it were,) from Heaven into a Wilderness, no man Knows Where, nor Why; and There to Leave her, from about the Year 323. Lost, Bewildred, and Forsaken Utterly; without Tink, or Ty­dings to be Heard of her for Ever After (Altho' it be Pretended at the Same Time, that she was to Continue in the Wilderness but Three Single Years and a half, or Thereabouts;) What a Sneaking, Lame, Abrupt, Short-sighted Bu­siness is it! and in All respects Dishonourable, Mean, Ridiculous, Pitiful, and Contemptible!

From All which, I Conclude, That the Woman, the Church, upon her Leaving Heaven, was Forthwith to Degenerate to such a State, as Rev. XVII. Assigns to her in the Wilderness: and there­fore, That she did Accordingly Degenerate.

It is therefore Clear to Ad­miration, what our Adver­sary So Undauntedly in Every Corner of his Book Denies; viz. That the Apocalyps does make Mention of a Corrupted CHURCH. It is more than Probable indeed, that he might never have Seen the Evidence, I here Bring of it: For I do not Know, that it was any where Extant, but in my Exposi­tion of Rev. XVII, XII and XIII. near Twenty Years ago made Publick. Since therefore I have a little Room left for it, I care not if I Proceed to Examin his Main Objection, against the Common Protestant Exposition of the XVII. Chapter (set on foot by Mr. Mede) which makes the Woman in that [Page 7] Chapter, to be the Christian City of Rome: to see if it be such a Dreadful, and Redoutable Attack, as Himself makes of it.

We must know then, That whereas the Angel there Ex­pounds the Seven Heads of the Beast, to be Seven Kings; adding, Five are Faln; One is; &c. The Protestants say, That by the Five Kings that in S. John's time were Faln, are meant, Kings, Consuls, Decemvirs, Tribunes, Dictators, that is, the Five Several Sorts of Supreme Governments, that Rome had Enjoy'd, before her Heathen Emperors, who were the One King Then Reigning. But now against This Way of Interpreting, what a Heavy Out-cry does our Adversary make! He calls it une Bizzare Imagination, pag. 328. lin. 16. ‘a Fantastical Imagination, to take Kings for Forms of Government; and to Count among the Kings of Rome, the Consuls, who Drove them Thence.’ He makes as if he had been too Hard for Mons. Juriéu upon that Point; and Reck­ons it amonst his Choses bien plus Pressantes, his most weighty Ob­jections, which his Antagonist Dar'd not Enter the Lists withal. Whereupon he thus Vaunts him­self, in these words: ‘I had De­manded of him (says he) Where he had Learnt, That Forms of Government were Kings; what Example of Scripture he had for it. Where he had found, that a King was any other thing, than a Single Man, in whom the Sove­raign Power Resided, and in one word, A MONARCH. And, How then could he Think, that Two Consuls, Ten Decemvirs, and Seven or Eight Military Tri­bunes were a KING; &c.’ And at this Wild Rate he Runs on for Many Lines together.

I Know not what Mons. Jurieu has since Reply'd; but, I think, he could not be to Seek for an Answer, when Daniel (whose Visions most Resemble those of the Apocalyps,) calls Four Kingdoms by the Name of Four Kings: Dan. VII. 17, 23. And, that by the Fourth of those Kings, is meant the Roman King­dom, we have the Concurrent Testimony of ‘All Interpreters, both Jews, and Our own; Antient, and Modern; None Excepted.’ So Malvenda, a Learned Papist, who wrote in the Year 1621. in his De Antichristo, Lib. V. Cap. 24. Sect. equidem haec, &c. In which Place it is Observable, That Daniel speaks of the WHOLE Fourth Kingdom, from First to Last; from its First Rise, Dan. VII. 3. to its Utter Ruine, verses. 23, 26. So that he Calls the Whole Succession of its Kings, Consuls, Decemvirs, Tribunes, Dictators, Emperors, and Popes, by the Name of a KING.

So again When David, Prophe­cying of the Glory of Christ's Kingdom, says, ALL KINGS shall Fall down before him, All Nations shall do him Service, Psal. LXXII. 11. it were both Ridiculous, and Im­pious, to Interpret him of Monarchs [Page 8] Only; and not, That All Nations of the World, be they Kingdoms, States or of What Denomination soever Else; with their Supreme Governours, of what sort, or Form soever, shall Adore and Serve Him that Made them; (as the Reason is intimated, Psal. LXXXVI. 9.) And there are Many Passages of Scripture to Like Effect. So Shame­less is the Confidence (altho' the Naughtiness of his Cause Requi­ring such a Management, there's No Man much Astonisht at it) wherewith he would Perswade his Simple Reader, That a KING is no where taken Otherwise in Scrip­ture, Than for One Man, a MO­NARCH.

O Babylon! Nostris tandem Spollanda Trophaeis!
Magna etenim VERI Vis est, et Ʋbique Valeb [...]t.

Lastly, King for All Sorts of Su­preme Governours; Father, and Mother, for All Sorts of Honou­rable Persons; Murder, Adultery Theft, Falswitness, for All Sorts of Like Practices; Bread, for All Sorts of Necessaries, &c. is in scripture of All Others, a Figure the most Usual.

But this is more than I thought to have said, For I Design'd at first, Only to Satisfy Mons. de Meaux's Curiosity, (who Long'd to Find in the Revelation some Mark of a Corrupted Church, and kept such a Heavy Stir, with Complaining of Our Hard Measure to the Church of Rome upon That Ac­count) by shewing, nay, DEMON­STRATING, (if That be So, which Cannot be Confuted) That the Woman called Babylon the Great, Rev. XVII. is the very Same with the Woman, the Church, Rev. XII. And I hope, I have so done it, as to Leave no Scruple in the Mind of Any Pro­testant, at least, that shall Peruse this Paper, That there are very Evident, and Unquestionable Marks of a CORRUPTED CHURCH Discover'd in the Revelation.

Consectary.

From hence it follows, that the Woman, Rev 12. is the Church of that Particular City of Rome; and not, the Christian Church of the Roman Empire at Large: as All Other Interpreters, (for ought I Know) by an unhappy Oversight have Expounded her. For the Woman, Rev. XVII. 18. is on All hands Agreed to be that Indivi­dual City of Rome. And the Wo­man, Rev XII. to be a Church. If therefore These be the Same Wo­man, (as I have here Demonstrated them to be,) the Woman Rev. XII. must be that Particular Church of Rome: or, if you please, The Wo­man, Rev. XII. 1. must be as much the Church of Rome; as the Wo­man, Rev. XVII. 18. is the City of Rome. According as I have Ex­plain'd it in my Notes on the Se­venteenth, Twelfth, and Thir­teenth Chapters of the Revelation.

And this Notion was it, that put me upon Examining, whether, as the Primitive Church was De­scrib'd by that Particular Church of Rome, So the Reformed were not likewise set-forth with Parti­cular Respect had to the Church of [Page 9] England. The same which Pre­sently I Found, to my no small Surprize, and Admiration, to be True indeed; and thereby a Door set Open to the Understanding of the Five First Chapters (according to my Late Exposition of them;) and of Whatever Visions else, be­long to the Reformed Churches.

But my Business is at present, with the Church of Rome only Concerning whose Condition in the Wilderness, for a Further Il­lustration of what has been Al­ready said, I shall Shut up All with these following Remarks. First, Observe, That she is not shewn to S. John in the Wilderness, but by one of the Vial Angels, Rev. XVII 1. that is, not till she was Arriv'd to the Height of her Impieties, and the Sentence of Destruction was gone forth against her. For the Vials are her Last Plagues, Rev. XV. 1, 6, 7. And by this Time, the Beast she Sate on, (or the Empire she Presided over,) was be­come Full of Names of Blasphemy, (that is, Idols;) and, for several Ages, she had Exercis'd a Full Power over him. Next therefore, we may take Notice of the Advan­ces, that she made to that her Wil­derness-Condition. Where First we find her Habited in Purple, and Scarlet-colour, &c. To Denote her Grandeur, Pride, and Luxury. Which was her First Step; and Presently upon her Coming to En­joy the Favour of her Emperors, it had a most Remarkable Comple­tion in her. Hodie Effusum est Venenum in Ecclesiam, This Day is Poyson (meaning that of Riches) Pour'd into the Church; said a Voice from Heaven at the Same Time. As witnesseth the Legend of P. Sylvester. See also Morney, Myst. In Progress. 4.

The Next Step was her Multi­farious Superstations and Idolatries; with which her Mass (or Service) Book was Braught; Call'd in Rev. XVII. 4. a Golden Cup (for the Good Prayers it contain'd) but in respect of its Idolatrous Mixtures, said also to be Full of Abominati­ons, and Filthiness of her Fornicati­on. And with this Cup of Love, when once she had Sufficiently Be­witch'd her Paramours, That Name began to be Conspicuous in her Forehead, (verse 5.) Mystery, Ba­bylon the Great, the Mother of Har­lots, and Abominations of the Earth. As if it were said, Behold, the Church of Rome is Plainly That Babylon of the Revelation; and it has been a Mystery to us All this While; we Found it not till Now. This Fatal Inscription then, when first it came to be Discover'd, and Cri'd-out upon, by the* Waldenses, and Others, in the Twelfth Century; it put her into such a Rage, that she Soon Verify'd the Remaining part of her Character, (which was her Third, and Last Advance,) in making her self Drunken with the Bloud of the Saints, and with the Bloud of the Martyrs [Witnesses, or Preachers] of Jesus. And in this [Page 10] Lamentable Pickle was she Repre­sented to S. John, by one of the Vial-Angels.

But you will say, Where was the True Church all this while? Why, it continu'd in that Remnant of the Woman's Seed, Rev. 12.17. which the Dragon, by Her Own Means, Persecuted for Keeping the Com­mandments of God (which Phrase is Us'd with Particular Respect to the Second; even in the Com­mandment it self,) and having the Testimony of Jesus Christ. It Continu'd, I say, in those Few Per­sons, (in her Own Communion, till they were Forc'd out of it) whose Teachers are Called Wit­nesses Rev. 11. Who from the word of Jesus Christ, bore Testimo­ny all along, against the Over­spreading Abominations of the Ro­mish Synagogue. And so much for This Time.

FINIS.

SOLI DEO GLORIA.

Printed in June 1700.

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