AN ANSWER TO THE PREFACE.
THE Design of your
Preface seems reducible to these two
Points, viz.
- I. Of the
State of the
Controversy between the
Papists and
Protestants in
general. And,
- II. Of the
Disputes that have heretofore been, and are at this day managed against you, by
Us of this
Church in
particular.
2. Ad pag. 1.] The
former of these you introduce with a short harangue of
‘
the Mischief which Heresie
and Schism
bring along with them, not only to the individual Persons that are guilty of them, but also to the Nations in which they are propagated. You represent to us
the miserable Broils, and other worse Consequences that have attended these Controversies of Religion in this and the last Age:’ And from thence you conclude,
‘
how much they are to be commended who labour to establish Truth and Unity, and those to be condemned, who seek all means possible to obscure the one and obstruct the other.’
3.
Answ.] To all which I have only this to
reply; that we need no Arguments to convince us of these things. There are none more sensible of the
Mischiefs of
Schism and
Heresie than we are; or that do more truly lament the Divisions that are in
[Page 2] the
Church, or would more heartily contribute, what in us lies, to the
closing of them. But then as we have good cause to believe both from the Authority of
Holy Scripture, and from the Nature of Mankind, that whilst there is a Devil in Hell, and Men of Interest and Designs upon Earth, there shall also be
Heresies, that
they who are approved may be made manifest: So we
1 Cor. xi. 19. cannot but complain that those should be the most forward to charge us both with the
Guilt and
Mischief of them, at whose doors the
Crime, and therefore the
Evil Consequences of it, will one day be found to lie. The
former of these, it will be the business of the following Discourse to make good: And for the
latter, whosoever shall impartially consider the
Origen of those Broils with which the World has, you say, been agitated
in this and the last Age upon the account of Religion; not to mention those other
Mischiefs of
Treasons, Plots, Massacres, Persecutions, and the like, will soon be convinced who they are that have cause to complain of
these Evils. For what you add,
4. Ibid.]
‘
That they who will but impartially consider matters, will find that Catholicks
have upon all occasions sought the most Advantageous Means
to procure this Christian Peace;
tho to their grief they have still been hindred from effecting this Good Work.’
Answ.] I do not well know what you design by it. If by
the most Advantageous Means, you understand those
Means of
Knowledg which God has given us whereby to come to discern the Truth of Religion; such as, 1.
A diligent reading of the Holy Scriptures, the
using of all imaginable
Assistances for the understanding
the sense of them, by studying the
Original Languages in which they were written,
searching of Antiquity, collating parallel places, and the like. 2. The
divesting of our selves of our
Prejudices, and forming in our Minds an
impartial desire to
find out the
Truth, with an honest
readiness to
embrace it, on what side soever it lies. And lastly, to all this add our earnest
Prayer to
God for his Grace to bless and prosper our Endeavours; these I confess are the best
Means to discover
Christian Truth; and to exhort all others to the use of them, the most
advantageous way to promote it. But then I cannot imagine why you should seem to appropriate
these Means to your
[Page 3] selves, as if you only sought
Truth and
Peace by them; seeing it cannot be deny'd but that
We have employ'd all these with as great diligence as
you can pretend to have done it. But now some
other Means indeed there are, which you have pursu'd, and which it may be you understand by this Expression: and then We neither
deny your
Assertion, nor
envy you the
Glory of being singular in your Endeavours of procuring Peace by them. Such are, 1. The
Means of
Force and
Violence; your
Holy Leagues, and
private Treacheries, your
Inquisitions, Plots, Persecutions, and such like. 2. The
Means of
Fraud and
Deceit, your
false Expositions and
Misrepresentations of your Doctrine to deceive the ignorant and unwary, till you get them into your Nets. 3. The
Means of
Confidence and
Uncharitableness, your bold
Anathema's and
vain thundrings of
Damnation against all that differ from you, your assuming the
Name and
Priviledges of the
Church Catholick to your
single Communion, and excluding all others out of it, as
Schismaticks and
Hereticks. And lastly, to mention no more, the
Means of
gross Ignorance, and
blind Obedience; by depriving Men of their liberty of
reading the
Holy Scripture, by keeping your
Service in an
unknown Tongue, by teaching Men to depend intirely upon your
Churches Dictates, and not to depart from them, tho
Sense, Reason, Scripture, all be contrary to them. These are, I confess, some of those
peculiar Means whereby you have sought to procure
Christian Peace; and Experience tells you, that they are indeed the most advantageous of any to the
Cause you have to defend. And if these be the
Means which you say we have
opposed, I hope we shall always continue so to do, and rather bear all the
Evils of these Divisions, than either
buy Peace upon
such Terms, or
pursue it by
such Means as these.
5. Ad p. 2, 3.] To what I observed from the late
Methods that had been taken up in our
Neighbour Country to avoid the entring upon
particular Disputes, which I said you were sensible had been the least favourable of any to your
Cause, you reply,
‘
That you have never declined fighting with us at any Weapon:’ which how true it is, the account before given of your managing the
present Controversie with us sufficiently declares. And indeed you seem in some sort to have been
sensible of it; and therefore recur to your
Antient Authors for proof of your
Assertion. The
Sum of what you say is this:
[Page 4] 6. Reply.]
‘
That there have been three
sorts of Protestants
since the Reformation; 1.
Some who appealed to Scripture only,
neither would they admit of Primitive Fathers
nor Councils. 2.
Others who perceived that they could not maintain several Tenets and Practices of their own by the bare words of Scripture,
and despairing of Fathers and Councils of latter Ages, pretended at least to admit of the first four General Councils,
and of the Fathers
of the first three or four hundred Years. 3. Others finally who ventured to name Tradition
as a useful Means to arrive at the true Faith.’ And all these you say you have convinced of their Errors.
7.
Answ.] It has always been your way to multiply
Sects and
Divisions among
Protestants as much as ever you were able, and then to complain against us upon the account of them; and here you have given us a notable Instance of it. The
three Opinions you have drawn out as so many different Parties amongst us, do all resolve into the very same Principle:
‘
That the Holy Scripture
is the only, perfect, and sufficient Rule of Faith:’ So that all other Authorities, whether of
Fathers, or
Councils, or
unwritten Tradition, are to be examined by it, and no farther to be admitted by us than they agree with it. This is in effect the common belief of all
Protestants whatsoever, as appears from their several
Confessions, and might easily be shewn out of the Writings of our
first Reformers, and the most eminent of those who have lived since, and built their Faith upon the same Foundation. It is true indeed, there have been some who, the better to maintain their
Separation from the
Church of England, have from this sound
Principle, That nothing is to be received by us as a Matter of Faith, but what is either plainly expressed in the Holy Scripture, or can
Evidently be proved by it, drawn a very
ill Consequence, viz.
That nothing might lawfully be done or used in the Worship of God, unless there were some Command or Example for it in Scripture; and have by this means run themselves into great Inconveniences. But the
Rule of
Faith, which an uninterrupted
Tradition, by the common consent of all Parties of Christians; however otherwise disagreeing in other Points, has brought down to us, and delivered into our hands as the
Word of God, this has among
all Protestants been ever the
[Page 5] same,
viz. The Holy Scripture. And if for the farther proof of the Truth of our Doctrine, we have at any time put the issue of our Cause to the decision of the
Church of the first three or four hundred Years, it is not because we suppose that those
Fathers who then lived; have any more right to judg us, or determine our Faith, than those that follow'd after; but because upon examination we find them to have yet continued (at least as to the
common Belief received and establish'd amongst them) in their
Purity; and that what was generally establish'd and practised by them, was indeed conformable both to
their and
our Rule, the
Word of God.
8. This then is our
Common Principle, and this you cannot deny to be most reasonable. For whatsoever
Authority you would have us give to those
Holy Fathers, yet it cannot be doubted, but that,
1st, Being
Durandus. l. 4. Sent. d. 7. q. 4. de S. Gregorio; Nescio cur non possit dici quòd Gregorius cum fuerit Homo, non Deus, potuerit Errare.
Men subject to the same Infirmities with our selves, they were by consequence obnoxious to
Errors as well as we; and therefore may not without all examination be securely follow'd by us.
Especially if we consider,
2dly, That we are expresly forbid in Holy Scripture, to rely on any Persons whatsoever without enquiry, whether what they teach be true or not:
‘
Dearly Beloved, (says St.
John) believe not every Spirit, but
1 John 4. 1.
try the Spirits whether they be of God or no.’ The same is St.
Paul's Doctrine,
To prove all things, and then hold fast that which is good.
1 Thess. 5. 21. St.
Peter exhorts all Christians
to be ready to give a reason of the
1 Pet. 3. 15.
Hope that is in them: And our Blessed
Saviour himself once gave the same encouragement, of examining even his own Doctrine;
And why (says he)
of your selves do you not judg that which is
Luke 12. 57.
right?
Nay but,
3dly, these
Holy Fathers were not only capable of
Erring, but in many things they actually did
Err, and are forsaken by you upon that account. The
Millenary Opinion was generally received in the
first Ages of the Church. They derived it from St.
John to
Papias, from him to
Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Melito, Tertullian, &c. Yet is this Opinion now rejected by you. The Doctrine of the
necessity of Communicating Infants, was the Common Doctrine of the
Fathers in S.
Austin's Time; and is confess'd by your most Learned Men, Cardinal
Perron and Others to have been generally practised in the
[Page 6]
Church for the first
six hundred Years: Yet have you
Anathematized
Concil. Trid. Sess. 21. Can. 4. those who shall now assert, with
those Fathers, that there is any
necessity at all of
communicating Children before they come to Years of discretion. I need not say what
Heats arose between
One of your own
Popes and St.
Cyprian about
rebaptizing of Hereticks; and both of them in the
wrong. The
Ancient Fathers generally believed, that the
Souls of the Blessed do not yet enjoy the Vision of God: But from the time of
Pope John
the XXII. the contrary is become the
Catholick Doctrine among you. The
necessity of communicating in both kinds, was believed in the Time of
Pope Gelasius, and the Council of
Constance,
De Consecr. Dist. 2. Sess. 13. in that very
Canon in which it took away the
Cup from the
Laity, yet confess'd that
Christ had establish'd it in
both kinds, and the
Church constantly administred and received
in both kinds,
Conc. Trid. Sess. 21. Can. 1. in obedience to his
Institution: but 'tis now no less than
damnation to say, that
one kind alone is not sufficient. In the
primitive Church it was generally received, that
the Souls of the Faithful, after they are deliver'd from the burden of the Flesh, are in Joy and Felicity. Now you teach that they go first to
Purgatory, a place of Pain and Sorrow, inferior in nothing but the duration, to
Hell it self.
Other Instances I might add to shew, that you your selves do no otherwise follow the
Fathers, than as you esteem them to have follow'd the
Truth, and therefore have thought fit to forsake them in the several
Points I before mentioned: And therefore certainly you ought not to condemn us, if we pay
no other deference to them: nor appeal to them but only as
Witnesses of the
Doctrine of the
Church in those Times, not as
Judges and
Masters of our Faith.
9. Ad Pag. IV.] Reply.
‘
And in all these several ways you say you have shewn us to be Mistaken, insomuch that there has not been any thing like an Argument produced against your Faith, or to justify your Schism, but what has been abundantly Answer'd and Refuted.’
10.
Answ.] This,
Sir, is a Boast which I believe the World will think you might very well have spared at this time. I need not send you back, as you have done us, to our
Ancient Authors; and desire you once more to consider what has been offer'd, both from
Scripture and
Antiquity, by
Monsieur de Mornay,
[Page 7] Aubertine, Chamiere, Blondell, Daillé, Larrogue, and Others abroad; by Bishop
Jewel, Bishop
Morton, A. B.
Usher, Dr.
J. Forbes, Dr.
White, Dr.
Barrow, and many more of our
own Country: and whose Names among the wisest even of your own
Church are much more valued, than for a
Coccius or a
Brerely to be able to obscure them. I appeal only to the present Times to witness against you; and would intreat you, before you tell us any more of your
Performances, to give some good
Reply to that
Catalogue I have sent you of above
fourty Treatises lately published in all these kinds of Arguments that you speak of; and your declining of which do's not very well suit with such vain Pretences.
11.
Ibid.] You add;
‘
That you have so far complied with the Infirmities of your Adversaries, that you have left no Stone unturn'd to reduce them to the Unity of the Faith, and that by meekness as well as powerful Reasoning.’
12.
Answ.] It must be confess'd indeed that you have not been wanting in your Endeavours to convert us. Your
Zeal has even equall'd that which our
Saviour Christ once remark'd, or rather reproved in your Predecessors the
Scribes and
Pharisees: and I would to God it had not too often produced the same Effect also. As for the
Means that you have made use of for the carrying on of this Work, I have already in part recounted them to you. And shall only now add, that if your
Meekness has been no
greater, than your
Arguments have been
powerful, we shall have as little cause to applaud the
One, as we have hitherto had to be convinced by the
Other. And indeed whosoever shall consider your behaviour towards those you call
Hereticks; will find that some Other word would better have suited your
Character than that of
Meekness. If there be any, who deluded by your present pretences of
Moderation doubt this, let them look only upon the
Actions of a
neighbour Kingdom, and whose
Clergy has ever been esteemed the
most moderate of your
Church. For if such a deportment as theirs towards our
Brethren, be the Meekness you boast of; I shall only beg leave to say with
Solomon, that then
the tender Mercies of some
Prov. 12. 10. Men
are Cruel. But you go on to shew us wherein you have
[Page 8] made a testimony of this
Meekness: You say,
13. Ibid.]
‘
You have not only condescended to satisfy the curiousity of them that have more leisure by writing large Volumes upon every particular Controversy—but you have gone a shorter way to work; and to some have manifested the unerrable Authority of the Church of Christ, against which he had promised that the Gates of Hell should not prevail.
Others you have shew'd it from the nature of Truth
and Error,
and the Impossibility
that a Universal Tradition
could fail, especially when God
had promised that the Words He would put into their
Mouths, should not depart out of their
mouths, nor out of the
Mouths of their
Seed, nor out of the
Mouth of their
Seeds seed, from hence forth and for Ever.
To others you have proved the Innocence and Antiquity of your Doctrine from the testimony of learned Protestants themselves.’
14. Answ.] This indeed was a great
Condeseension; that being so well satisfied on all these accounts that you had the
Truth your selves, you should so far vouchsafe, as for our sakes, to
prove that you had so. But truly, unless you can produce some better
proof that your
Church cannot
Error than this, that our
Saviour once said of his
Church, That
the Gates of Hell should not prevail against it, you will never satisfy any reasonable Man of it. How often,
Sir, have you been told, that here is something indeed to establish the
Perpetuity of the Church, but nothing of its
Infallibility. Unless you will suppose (what you know we utterly deny) that the
Church cannot subfist except it be
infallible in every Point. The
Church may fall into
many Errors, and yet continue a
Church still. A Man is never the less a Man, because he has an
Ague, or some other
Distemper upon Him. And whilst the
Church thus subsists,
Christ's Promise is made good, that
the Gates of Hell should not prevail against it. Though now,
2dly, Were the
Infallibility of the
Church in this Text clear to a Demonstration, yet still the main Thing would be wanting, how to prove
your Church to be
the Catholick Church, and to have alone the right to this
Promise, which for ought appears from this Passage
any Other may pretend to upon as good grounds as She.
[Page 9] 15. Again; As to the Point of
Tradition, With what confidence can you say it is impossible that should fail, seeing the
Instances I have before given of your departure from the
Tradition of the
Primitive Fathers in so many particulars, plainly show that it has fail'd? For your argument which you alledge from
Isa. 59. 20. It has the same Faults with the foregoing, and one more. For that passage;
1st, If it speaks any thing at All of these Matters, it is for the
Perpetuity, not
Infallibility of the
Church. 2dly, That there is not One word in it of any priviledg, either in the
One or the
Other kind bestow'd upon
your Church in particular; and the
Greek, or any
other Church may as reasonably argue from it as your selves. Nay,
3dly, 'Tis plain from the
Context that it do's not belong to any of us,
‘the
Covenant here spoken of being made with
Zion, and those that turn from Transgression in Jacob;’ that is (as St.
Paul himself applies it,
Rom. 11.) to the
Covert Jews, when they shall come in and embrace the
Gospel of Christ.
16. And for your last
Method, the Concessions of
Protestants themselves, this will but little avail you: seeing if it could be proved that any of our
particular Writers had said some things in favour of your Doctrine, this would be of no force against any but themselves, any farther than their Arguments shall upon Examination be found to warrant their Assertions. We have often told you, that our Faith depends not on any
Humane Authority. Such Concessions may shew the
weakness or
Error of him that made them, but they are nothing available to prescribe against the
Truth of the
Gospel. And this, I say, supposing that you could produce the
Opinions of
Protestants (as you pretend) in favour of your
Doctrines! But now let me tell you,
the Collection to which you refer us, has been found so very insincere by those who have had occasion to examine it, that should we allow these kind of Authorities to be as
conclusive against us as you can desire, you would not yet be able either to advantage your selves, or to convince any others by them.
17. Ad
Pag. 5.] You see,
Sir, what little reason we have to expect very much from these
Methods, which in your great
Humility you have condescended to make use of in order to our Conversion. And we cannot but congratulate our good Fortune, that you seem to tell us you have yet some
better Arguments
[Page 10] in reserve; those which you say MIGHT have been brought to prove the
Authority of your
Church. And though you think us so fond of flying off to particular Disputes, that no
Arguments can keep us from them; yet I do hereby promise you, that when-ever you shall have clearly made out this
Proposition, That
the Church of Rome is
Infallible, and whatsoever she proposes to be received by us is the
truly Catholick Faith, without which there is
no Salvation; and then shew me, How I shall
infallibly know, amidst so many different
Proposals of her Doctrine, what that
Faith is which this
Church teaches
as necessary to that End; I will from thenceforth become as blindly obedient a Disciple, as the most implicit Believer whose Credulity you have ever yet imposed upon with these Pretences.
18.
Ibid.] For your next Allegation, That you could never get us to take your
Doctrine aright, if what I have heretofore said be not sufficient; I will once more put you in mind that you must first resolve to answer from Point to Point,
the Doctrines and Practices of the Church of Rome
truly Represented, before you can expect to be credited by us. And if from what we have
truly said concerning you, you are indeed grown to be look'd upon (in your own words)
to be as bad as Devils, and your Doctrines as the Dictates of Hell it self; though I believe in this excess you do something
misrepresent both your selves and us; you may attribute it if you please to our
Calumnies against you, but I believe all indifferent Persons will be able to find out some
better Reasons for it.
19. Ad
Pag. 6.] As for your
Expositions which you from hence thought fit to publish to the World, as your last reserve for our
Conversion; the World is sufficiently satisfied with what
sincerity you have proceeded in them. And for what you add, in the
close of this first Point, concerning the
Character of the Times that we are fallen into, such as you say S.
Paul foretold, in which
Men will not endure sound Doctrine; it is indeed too true, but withal it is such a
Complaint as is equally made on all hands, whilst every one thinks his own way the best. But I will, in return, send you to another
Character of the
same Apostle concerning these Days, which is all your own, 2
Thess. 2. vers. 3, to the
13th; and I think it is
so plain, that you may without an
infallible Interpreter understand the meaning of it.
[Page 11] 20. And thus far you pursue the
former Consideration, of the
state of the Controversy between the Papists and Protestants in general. Your next work is to give some accounts of your
Disputes with us of this Church in particular.
21. You begin with the History of the first Conversion of the English by
Augustine the
Monk, sent hither by
Pope Gregory the Great. But your account of it is so very uncertain, that I would willingly hope, however you quote
Bede for it, yet that you never read one word of him, but took it upon the Credit of one of your
New Converts, whose Errors in this Point you
Reason and Authority. have as blindly embraced, as his Book testifies him to have most implicitly taken up your Prevarications.
22. Ad
Pag. 7.] Reply. You tell us, That
‘
notwithstanding the long want of intercourse with Rome,
and the Members of that Communion, occasion'd by great Oppressions and Persecutions during the reign of Pagan Kings,
yet had there not many Errors crept into this Christian part of the Nation. For S. Augustine
found only two Customs amongst them which he could not tolerate, the One their keeping
Easter at a wrong time,
and the Other some Errors in the Ceremonies in Administring Baptism.
These two he earnestly sollicited them to Amend, but they were Obstinate, and would not suffer any Reformation in those two Points, TILL God was pleased to testify his Mission,
and the Authority he came with, by the Authentick Seal of Miracles.’
22.
Answ.] In which
Relation you are many ways mistaken. For,
1st, As to the
intercourse that you say was a long time lost between
Rome and the
British Churches, by reason of the
Persecutions of
Pagan Kings; this is not easy to be credited: It being the middle of the
5th Century e're the
Romans left this
Island, and the
Saxons were called into it. It was near the middle of the
6th before the
Britains were disposses'd of the rest of their Country, and forced to retrench themselves within the Mountains of
Wales. During all this time their intercourse with
Rome, if they had any, might well have continued; and it was not fifty Years after, that
Austin the
Monk came into
England. 2dly, you say, that
Austin found only
two
[Page 12] Customs among the Christians here that he could not tollerate. 'Tis true indeed, upon the second meeting that he had with
the Brittish Bishops, he told them,
‘
That though in many things they were contrary to the custom of his Church, yet if in those two mentioned
Eede Lib. 2. c. 2.
they would obey him, and joyn with him in preaching the Gospel to the Saxons, he would bear with them in the rest:’ But did they therefore acknowledg his Authority in complying with his Desires? so you would make us believe.
‘
They were Obstinate, say you,
TILL God was pleased to testify his Mission, and the Authority he came with by the Authentick Seal of Miracles.’ As for his
Miracles, we have no great Opinion of their Authority, since we read in the passage to which I just now referr'd you, that
Antichrist himself shall come with this
Attestation. It is the
Doctrine that must give credit to the
Miracles, not these to the
Doctrine. Should an
Angel from Heaven
Gal.
[...]. 9.
preach any other Gospel than that which we have received, St.
Paul has commanded us, for all the Wonder, to bid him be
Anathema. But I return to the
History, in which you so notoriously prevaricate, that I cannot imagine how one that pretends in this inquisitive
Age to deliver the
Antiquities of his own
Country, durst betray himself so notoriously ignorant of it. See,
Sir, the words of your own Author
Bede, expresly contrary to
Bede. Loc. cit. your Allegation.
‘
But they answer'd, that they would do nothing of all this, nor receive him for an Arch-Bishop.’ Insomuch that
Austin came to high words with them, threatning them with that Destruction which they afterwards, to their cost, met with from his new
Saxon Converts. And your illustrious Annalist Card.
Baronius, cannot forbear making some severe Reflections upon the State of our
Island at that Time, as if God
Baron. Annal. Tom. 8. An. 604. had therefore given it into the hands of the
Barbarians, because of the
refractory and
schismatical Minds of these Bishops.
23.
Ibid.] Reply.
‘
Your Adversaries (you say)
acknowledg, that when St. Austin
came into England,
he taught most, if not all the same Doctrines the Roman Catholick Church
now teaches, &c.’
24.
Answ.] If S.
Austin (as you call him) taught the
same Doctrine which
Pope Gregory the Great taught, who sent him
[Page 13] hither, and whose Disciple we are told he was, I must then put you in Mind that a
very Learned Man has lately shew'd you (and I may reasonably presume you could not but know it) that he
did not teach most, much less all the Doctrines which you now teach. No, Sir, the
Mystery of Iniquity was not yet come to Perfection; and tho your
Church had even then in many things declined from its
first Faith, yet was it much more pure than now it is. Had you when you took this
Pretence from
Protestants Apology,
p. 57, &c.
2d Edit. your Friend Mr.
Brerely, look'd into the
Answer that was at large made to it; I am perswaded you would have been asham'd to have again advanced so
false and
trifling an
Objection. Look, Sir, I beseech you into
the Protestants Appeal, or if that
Prot. Appeal, lib. 1. cap. 2. be too much for
one of your Employments, look into the
Treatise to which I refer you: There you will find, 1. That the
Vind. of the Answ. of some late Pape
[...]s,
p. 72, &c.
Scripture was yet received as
a perfect Rule of Faith. 2. The Books of the
Maccabees, which you now put into your
Canon, rejected then as
Apochryphal. 3. That
Good Works were not yet esteem'd meritorious: Nor, 4.
Auricular Confession a
Sacrament. That, 5.
Solitary Masses were
disallow'd by him: And, 6.
Transubstantiation yet unborn. That 7. The
Sacrament of the
Eucharist was hitherto administred in both
kinds: And, 8.
Purgatory it self not brought either to
certainty or to
perfection. That by consequence, 9.
Masses for the Dead were not intended to deliver
Souls from
those Torments: Nor, 10.
Images allow'd for
any other purpose than for
Ornament and
Instruction. 11. That the
Sacrament of
Extreme Unction was yet
unform'd; and even 12. The
Pope's Supremacy so far from being then establish'd as it now is, that
Pope Gregory thought it to be the
fore-running of Antichrist, for one Bishop to set himself above all the rest. These are the
Instances in which you have been shewn the vast difference there is between Pope
Gregory's Doctrine, and that of the
Council of Trent; and which may serve for a
Specimen to satisfie the
World with what
Truth you pretend, that we acknowledg that S.
Austin when he came into
England, taught most, if not all the same Doctrines that you now teach. And this may also suffice for your next Argument founded upon it,
viz.
25. Add pag. 7, 8.] Reply:
‘
That these Doctrines and Practices were either then taught and exercised by the British
[Page 14] Christians also, or they were not. If they were not taught by them, certainly we should not have found them so easily submitting to them. If they were taught by the British Bishops also, then they were of a longer standing than S. Austin'
s time: and we must either grant they were introduced by the first Preachers of the Gospel here, or evidently shew some other time before St. Austin
when this Church
embraced them.’
26.
Answ.] A
Dilemma is a terrible thing with Sense and Truth, but without them 'tis a ridiculous one; as I take this to be. For,
1. It is evident from what I have before said, that
Austin did not teach the
same Doctrines, nor establish the
same Practices that you do now teach and establish; but did indeed in most of your Corruptions differ from you. So that like
the unwise Builder, you have erected a
stately Fabrick, and
founded it upon the Sand.
2. Had he been as very a
Romish Missionary as your self, yet is your
Argument still inconclusive. For whereas you suppose the
Brittish Bishops submitted to him, they were on the contrary so far from either obeying his
Authority, or following his
Prescriptions, that, as I have shewn you, they utterly rejected both: and I will presently add, that for above a
hundred Years after his Death, they utterly refused so much as to
communicate with his Proselytes, nor esteem'd them any more than
Pagans. So that I may now turn your own
Argument upon you, that seeing they had such an Abhorrence for
Austin and his Followers, that they look'd upon them no better than
Heathens, it very probably was, because they neither approved what he
taught, nor saw any cause to submit to that
Authority to which he
pretended. You see,
Sir, what an admirable
Argument you here flourish with; and how little cause we have to expect any great
Sincerity from you in
other matters, when in the very
History of your
own Country you so wretchedly prevaricate, and against the express
Authority of that very
Person whom you
quote for your Relation.
27. Having thus given us a proof either of your
Skill or your
Integrity in the account of the
first Conversion of our Island under
Pope Gregory
the Great; you next make a very large step as to
[Page 15] the progress of your
Religion, and such as still confirms me more and more, how very unfit you are to turn
Historian.
28. Add pag. 8.] Reply.
‘
This Faith and these Exercises (say you)
taught and practised by St. Austin
were propagated down even till King Henry the
VIIIth's
time.’
Answ.] In which account, whether we are to complain of your
Ignorance or your
Unsincerity, be it your part to determine; this I am sure, they cannot both be excused.
29. I have already shewn you that that
Faith which was found in the
Church of England in King
Henry the
VIIIth's time could not have been propagated down from the time of
Austin's coming hither, seeing that
Monk neither taught nor practised the greatest part of those
Corruptions which were afterwards by degrees brought into
ours, as well as into the
other Churches of the
Roman Communion. But however not to insist upon this
Fundamental Mistake: Can you,
Sir, with any Conscience affirm, that the
Doctrine which you now teach was till King
Henry the
VIIIth's time without interruption
received and
practised in this
Country?
30. First; For the
Brittish Bishops whom you before bring in as submitting themselves to
Austin; your own Author
Bede expresly declares that in his time (which was an hundred Years after the Death of
Austin) they entertain'd
no Communion with them.
‘
Seeing (says he)
to this very day it is the Custom of
Lib. 2. cap. 20.
the Britains
to have no value for the Faith
and Religion
of the English,
nor to communicate
with them any more than with Pagans.’ Which
Henry of
Huntingdon thus confirms:
‘
That neither
Lib. 3. Hist.
the Britains
nor Scots,
(i. e. Irish)
would communicate with the English,
or with Austin
their Bishop any more than with Pagans.’ So that for one Age, at least, the
British Bishops then neither own'd the
Authority of your
Church, nor had any manner of
Communion with the
Members of it. But,
31. Secondly; Have you never heard of some
other Kings of
England, who, with their
Parliaments, have most stifly opposed the Pretences of the
Pope, and refused all
Messages from Him, and made it no less than
High-Treason for any one to bring his
Orders or
Interdicts into the
Kingdom? What think you of another
Henry, no less brave than his Successor, whom
[Page 16] you so revile, in his Defence of himself against
his Rebellious Subject, but
your Saint, Thomas a Becket? I could add many
Acts of Parliament made long before King
Henry the
VIIIth's time to shew you, that tho he indeed proved the most successful in his Attempts to shake off the
Pope's Authority, yet that several other of
our Princes had shewn him the way, and that the Usurpations of that See were neither quietly own'd, nor patiently submitted to by his
Royal Predecessors. And then,
32. Thirdly; For the matter of your
Doctrine, it must certainly be a great piece of
Confidence in you to pretend that this came down such as you now believe and practise, from the time of
Austin the Monk, to King
Henry the
VIIIth's days. I speak not now of the great Opposition that was made to it by
Wickleffe, tho supported by the
Duke of Lancaster, the
Lord Marshall of England, and divers others of chiefest note in this Kingdom, in the time of
Edward the Third, and
Richard the Second. I need not say in how many Points he stood up against the Doctrine of your
Church; what a mighty Interest he had to support him against the Authority of the
Pope, and the Rage of the
Bishop of London and his other Enemies on that account; so as both freely to preach against your Errors, and yet die in Peace in a good old Age. The number of his Followers was almost infinite, and tho severe Laws were afterwards made against them, yet could they hardly ever be utterly rooted out. But yet, least you should say that
Wickleffe was only a
Schismatick from your
Church, which constantly held against him; I will rather shew you in a few
Instances, that even the
Church of England it self, which you suppose to have been so conformable to your present
Tenets, was in truth utterly opposite to your Sentiments in many Particulars. And because I may not run out into too great a length, I will insist only upon two, but those very
considerable Points.
33. The first is the Doctrine of
Transubstantiation: which as it came but late into the
Roman Church, so did it by Consequence into
ours too. Certain it is, that in the
10th Century the contrary Faith was publickly taught among us. Now, not to insist upon the Authority of
Bede, who in several parts of his Works, plainly shews how little he believed your Doctrine of
Trans
[...]bstantiation; this is undeniably evident from the
Saxon Homily translated by
Aelfrick, and appointed in the
Saxons
[Page 17] time to be read to the People at
Easter before they received the
Holy Communion; and which is from one end to the other directly opposite to the Doctrine of the
Real Presence as establish'd by your
Council of
Trent. And the same
Aelfrick in his Letters to
Wulfine Bishop of Scyrburne, and to
Wulfstane Archbishop of York, shews his own Notions to have been exactly correspondent to what that
Homily taught.
‘
The Housell (says he)
is Christes Bodye
not bodelye,
but ghostlye.
Not the Bodye which he suffred in,
but the Bodye
of which he spake when he blessed Bread
and Wyne
to Housell a night before his suffring, and said by the blessed Bread,
Thys is my Bodye,
and agayne by the holy Wyne,
This is my Bloud
which is shedd for manye in forgiveness of Sins. Understand nowe that the Lord
who could turn that Bread
before his suffering to his Bodye,
and that Wyne
to his Bloude ghostlye,
that the selfsame Lorde
blesseth dayly through the Priestes handes Bread and Wyne to his ghostlye Bodye
and to his ghostlye Bloud.’ All which he more fully explains in his other Letter. Nay it appears
H. de Knyghton de Event. Anglice
l. 5.
p. 2647, 2648. by a Recantation of
Wickleffe mention'd by
Knyghton, that even in the latter time of that Man's Life there was no such
Doctrine then in
England as
Transubstantiation publickly imposed as an
Article of Faith. By all which it is evident that your great
Doctrine of
the Real Presence with all its
necessary Appendages, was not, as you pretend, propagated down from
Austin's to King
Henry the Eight's time, but brought in to the
Church some hundreds of Years after that
Monk died.
34. The other Instance I shall offer to overthrow your Pretences is no less considerable,
viz. the
Worship of Images. It is well known what Opposition was made not only by the Emperor
Charles the Great, and the
Fathers of the
Synod of
Franckfort, but by the
French Clergy in their
Synod at
Paris, and by almost all the rest of the
Bishops of the
Western Church against your pretended General Council of
Nice, wherein this Doctrine was first establish'd. The Definitions of this
Council being sent to the
Emperour out of the
East, he transmitted a
Copy of them into
England. Hereupon
Alcuinus, who had formerly been his
School-master, wrote an
Answer to him in the Name of the
Clergy of England, to declare their dislike of
this Doctrine: and the account of which our ancient
Histories give us in these words.
‘
In the Year from the Incarnation
[Page 18] of our Lord 792 Charles
King of France
sent to Britain
a Synode
Hoveden. Annal. ad Ann. 792. Simeon Dunelm. Hist.
p. 111. Mat. West. ad An. 793. Spelm. Conc. Tom. 1. p. 306. Booke
which was directed unto him from Constantinople:
in the which Book alas! many things unconvenient and contrarye to the true Fayth were found: in especial, that it was establyshed with a whole consent almost of all the Learned of the East,
no less than of three hundredth Bishops
or more, that Men ought to worship Images,
the whiche the Churche of God
DOTH UTTERLYE ABHORRE. Against the whiche Alcuine
wrote an Epistle wonderouslye proved by the Authoritye of Holy Scripture,
and brought that Epistle
with the same Booke, and Names of our Byshops
and Princes
to the King
of France.’ And thus neither was this Doctrine nor Practice propagated down from
Austin to King
Henry the Eighth; but on the contrary unknown to
Austin, and rejected as you see by the
Church of
England, almost 200 Years after his first Conversion of it.
35.
Ibid.] And this may suffice to shew both your Skill in
Church-History, and the little pretence you have for that vain and most false Assertion,
‘
that your Religion was taught and practised by S. Austin,
and propagated down even to King Henry
the Eighth'
s time;’ whereas indeed it is made up of such Corruptions as crept into it long after his Decease. Your next business is to rail at King
Henry the Eighth, which you do very heartily, tho let me tell you that better Men than
See
[...]h
[...]anus. you are, even of your own
Commuion, and who were much more acquainted with the Affairs of those Times, speak better things of him. And had he been as bad as you are able to represent him, yet I could send you to some of the
Heads of your
Church, who have as far excell'd him in
Wickedness as ever any of your
Canonists have pretended they did in
Authority. But the Merits of Princes, as well as ordinary Persons, are measured by some Men, not according to their real worth, but as they have served their Interests, or opposed the Usurpations. And tho King
Henry the Eighth be now such a
Monster, yet had he not thrown off the
Pope's Supremacy, you would have made no difficulty to have forgiven him all his other Sins whilst he lived, and would have found out somewhat to justify his Memory now he is dead. We know how one of the best
Popes of this last
thousand Years called Heaven and Earth to celebrate the Praises of a
Traytor that had murder'd his
Master,
[Page 19] and possess'd himself of his
Empire. And
Cromwell himself, tho a Usurper, and Heretick, yet wanted not his
Panegyrists among those pretenders to
Loyalty, who now cannot afford a good word to the
Honour of a
Prince, from whose Royal Line their present
Sovereign at this day derives his Right to the
Crown he wears.
36. But however, were the Vices of that
Prince otherwise never so detestable; yet I shall leave it to the World to judg who proceeded with the most
Care and
Sincerity in the Point you insist upon of his Divorce with Q.
Catherine: the
King who consulted almost all the Learned
Men, as well as the most famous
Universities of
Europe, and then acted according to their Determination: Or the
Pope who by his notorious jugling with him in the whole process of that Affair, shew'd that he resolved to decide it not by any Laws of
God or the
Church, but meerly as his greater
Interests with the
Emperor or the
King should move him to do.
37.
Ibid.] The next step you make is from King
Henry, to his Son King
Edward the Sixth. And here you tell us,
Reply, p. 8.]
‘
That as Schism
is commonly follow'd with Heresy,
so now the Protector,
who was tainted with Zuinglianism,
a Reform from Luther,
endeavour'd to set it up here in England.’
In which you again discover your
Zeal against us, but not
according to Understanding. There is hardly any one that knows any thing of the beginning of this
Reformation, but will be able to tell you that the chief
Instrument of it was one whom you have not once mentioned,
Arch-bishop Cranmer. I will not deny but that the Protector concur'd with him in his design, but whether he was
Zuinglian, or what else, neither you nor I can tell. Dr.
Heylin, who on this occasion is usually
See your Hist. Coll.
p. 103. your
Oracle, seems rather to think he was a
Lutheran, tho easie to be moulded into any form. But this I know, that had you been so well vers'd in these things, as one who pretends to
Hosp. Hist. Sacram. par. 2. p. 33. Lampadius par. 3. p. 439. Scultetus Annal. ad. An. 1516. write
Historical Remarks ought to be, you would have spared that idle Reflection of
Zuinglius's being a
Reform from Luther, it being evident to those who understand his
History, that neither himself, nor the
Cantons in which he preach'd were ever
[Page 20]
Lutherans. But on the contrary, whereas
Luther appear'd but in the Year 1517,
Zuinglius began to preach against the Corruptions of the
Church of
Rome some Years before, when
the very Name of Luther
was not yet heard of: And had several
Conferences with
Cardinal Matthews then in
Switzerland to this purpose, before ever the other appear'd in publick against them. So unfortunate a thing is it for Men to pretend to be witty upon others, without considering their own
blind side. But you go on;
38. Ad pag. 9.] Reply.
‘
And from that time the Catholick Doctrine
which had been taught by our first Apostles,
and propagated till then, began to be rejected and accused as Erroneons, Super stitious, and Idolatrous, and they who profess'd it, persecuted.’
Answ.] This is still of the same kind, as
false, as it is
malicious. How false it is that the Doctrine you now profess was either
planted here by our
first Apostles, or
propagated till this time in the
Church of England, I have already shewn. And for the
Persecution you speak of, methinks you should have been asham'd to mention that word, being to name Q.
Mary's Reign in the very next Line. But what at last did this
Persecution amount to? Were any
Roman Catholicks banish'd, or put to death for their
Religion? Were the
Laws turn'd against them; or any
Dragoons sent to convert them? No;
Bonner and
Fisher, and two others,
Heath Bishop of
Worcester, and
Day Bishop of
Chichester were deprived of their
Bishopricks, and the three first
imprison'd. A very few of the inferiour
Clergy suffered in the same manner, and all after much provocation. This was the very utmost of what you call
Persecution: and soon after we meet other kind of
Trials: For this
King dying,
39. Ibid.] Reply. You tell us
‘The
Catholick Religion began again to bud forth under Q. Mary.’
Answ.] And then as if you were afraid of
burning your Fingers in those
Fires which Her
See Dr.
Burnet's Cont. of his Refl.
[...]n
Varillas p. 4, 5.
Persecution kindled against us; you immediately pass to Her
Sister's Succession: And to whose Reign I will so far comply with you, as to pass
[Page 21] without one word of
reflection, which you know I might here have occasion enough to make.
40.
Ibid.] Reply.
‘
But that Bud being early nipped by her Death, Queen Elizabeth,
by the Advice of the new Council which she chose, and to secure her self in the Throne, resolved to destroy the Catholick
Interest, and set up a Prelatick Protestancy,
which might have the Face of a Church.
But other pretended Reformers opposed her Prelats,
and call'd their Orders Anti-christian,
and would needs have the Rags
and Remnants
of Popery,
as they called them, taken away: Telling them, that if the Word of God
was to be the sole Rule
of Reformation,
such things as were not to be found in that Rule
were certainly to be rejected.’
Answ.] The
Method by which Queen
Elizabeth proceeded in her
Reformation, was such as will sufficiently justify both her
Piety and
Prudence in the choice of it. Never was more care taken that nothing should be done out of
Interest or
Passion; but all things be establish'd upon the best and surest Foundations. And had not some
misguided Zealots, out of a too great
Affection to those
Models they had seen abroad, run into unreasonable
Oppositions at
Home, the
Church of England had at this day been the most
flourishing, as it is the
most Primitive Church in the
World.
41. But though this then be a Matter justly to be lamented by Us, yet certainly you have no cause to complain of that great
Queen's proceedings towards you. It is well known how many Years pass'd before any severe Laws were made against
Recusants; and how the Attempts of the
Pope, and the
King of Spain from Abroad, and of your
Brethren in compliance with them at Home, forced her to that Severity, which was afterwards, but with great
Moderation, used against you.
Bonner, though infamous for his
Cruelties in Queen
Mary's days, was yet suffered to go in safety now.
Heath lived not only in great security, but even in favour with the
Queen her self.
Tonstal and
Thirleby, found a Retreat with the
Arch-Bishop at
Lambeth: The rest of the
Bishops continued in quiet amongst us; only three chose to retire beyond Sea. When the
High Commission
[Page 22] was establish'd for
visiting the
Churches of England, they were expresly ordered by her
Majesty's
Injunctions to reserve
Pensions for those that refused to continue in their
Benefices: And the
Reformation it self appear'd so reasonable to them, that of
nine thousand four hundred beneficed Men in
England, there were but
fourteen Bishops, six Abbots, twelve Deans, twelve Arch-Deacons, fifteen Heads of Colledges, fifteen Prebendaries, and
eighty Rectors of Parishes that left their
Benefices upon the account of
Religion. Consider,
Sir, this procedure, and then compare it with that of the
Queen her Sister; or if these things be too far out of your reach, look upon the
Methods that have been used in our
Neighbour Country, and that not in the severe Accounts of any particular Persons, but in the publick
Edicts, in the Report which one of your own Party,
Monsieur le Fevre has publish'd with the
King's Permission; and then say freely, which has most in it of the true Spirit of
Christianity, the meekness whereby this
Princess establish'd the
Truth in her
Kingdoms, or that furious
Zeal which has been
employ'd to
root it out of this
Other.
42.
Ad Pag. 9.] Reply.
‘
From that time (you say)
the Nation has been variously agitated with Disputes.’
Answ.] And give me leave to tell you we are in great measure to thank you for it. They were your
Brethren, that creeping into
Chambers and
Conventicles, under pretence of a purer Reformation, endeavoured to divide us among our selves, and especially to draw as many as they could from the Establish'd Religion, which you have ever the most hated. Such was
Faithfull Commin in the
9th Year
See Foxes & Firebrands, Part 1, & 2. †See
Camden's
Eliz. ad Annum 1568.:
Father Heath in the
10th of that
Queen's Reign: and both discover'd to be
Priests in
Masquerade. And it was in this very Year † 1568 that the
Puritans chiefly began to appear: And the
Heads of them which our
Historians mention,
Hallingham, Coleman, and
Benson, are named in a Letter that dropt out of
Father Heath's Pocket, to have been some of
your Emissaries. How far the same Policies
Foxes and Firebrands, Part 1. p. 37.
Ed. 80. See A. B.
Bramhall's Letter to A. B.
Usher. p. 611. have kept open our Divisions since it is now no longer a
Mystery. We know how Provision has been made to tutor up
Scholars, not only in
Learning, but in
Handy-craft Trades too, in
Italy, France, Germany, and
Spain: How they have been
[Page 23] taught twice a Week regularly to dispute
pro and
con, concerning
Presbytery, Independency, Anabaptism, Atheism; every one to take his part among us, according as his
Fancy or
Genius leads him. Who was it but a St.
Omer's Josuit that confess'd
Foxes and Firebrands, Part 1,
p. 7. (as we are credibly informed) that they were twenty Years in hammering out the Sect of the
Quakers? And indeed the Principle they go upon to refuse all
Oaths, is a neat Contrivance for
Priests and
Jesuits to avoid the
Oaths of
Allegiance and
Supremacy, without a possibility of being discover'd. But this may suffice to shew how unreasonable you are to complain of those
Divisions which your selves have in great measure been the
Authors of amongst us: and shall, I hope, make us hereafter better understand one another, than to give you any longer the opportunity of keeping up these
Differences amongst us, and then I am sure we need not much fear whatever you can do in your
own Shapes to ruin us.
43.
Ibid.]
‘
During this Time, you say,
all things were carried to an Extremity against you: so furious was our rage against the Truth.’
Answ. But certainly you here again
make History, and do not report things as they truly pass'd in those Days. I am sure if we may conclude any thing, either from the
Writings or
Actions of those Times, nothing can be more
moderate than we shall find them both to have been. It was then our XXXIX
Articles were drawn up, and in which I am confident you will not have the face to say, that things were
carried to any undue
excess against you. And if the
Homilies in some Particulars may seem somewhat severe, yet I believe there are but
few Expressions in them that you have not
very well deserved. But this first
Dream gives you occasion in the next
Paragraph to run into a contrary Extravagance, and that as groundless as the foregoing: For you add,
44.
Ad pag. 9, 10.] Reply.
‘
That things growing calmer in King James
and King Charles
the first
Time, such Calumnies and Accusations (as had before been used)
were looked upon by the more Learned Party as the Effects of Passion; and Moderation taught them to acknowledg the Church
[Page 24] of Rome
to be a Mother-Church,
and that Salvation
was to be had in Her. That many of those Accusations which were brought against Her, were but the Dreams of distracted Brains; and the more moderate Persons begun to look upon Her with a more favourable Eye.’
45.
Answ.] I wish you had here given us some
Proofs of what you say, that so we might have known who these
Learned Men were, and what
those Charges that they begun to leave off against you. It is well known how earnestly
King James wrote against your
Church; King
Charles the first was your avow'd Enemy even to his
Death: The most
Learned Men of those Times have left such
Volumes against you as you never were, nor ever will be able to Answer: and I shall hereafter shew you, that even those whom you alledge as excusing you from
Idolatry (which is I believe in your own Estimation, our
severest charge against you) are for all your Preten
[...] far from thinking that there is either
Falshood or
Calum
[...] in such an
Accusation.
46. It is therefore great
Confidence in you, without the least shadow of Authority for what you do, to represent such Eminent Persons as Favourers of your Doctrine. But
[...]s has been ever your way, and we ought not to wonder at it, seeing we can remember the time that we our selves were reported to be
Popishly affected: and it is but a few
Months since that some of you put out a book to shew an
Agreement at this day
between the Church of England, and the Church of Rome; though I suppose he may by this time begin to repent of an undertaking, which has brought nothing but infamy to the
Author of so false and scandalous an Attempt.
47. What you mean by our acknowledging your
Church to be a
Mother-Church, I do not very well comprehend. We confess indeed it was a
Roman Missionary that especially contributed to the Conversion of the
Saxons: and this I believe no Man ever denied; but let me tell you, that if your own Historian
Bede be to be Judg, our
Country was much more beholden to the
Labours and
Prudence of the
Scots &
French, than to the
Romans. Look into
Answer to Reason & Authority
pag. 83, &c. the
Account that has lately been given by a
Learned Person of our
Church in His
Answer to
One of your
New Converts. There you will find that they were
Columba, Aidan, Ced, Ceadda,
[Page 25] Finan, Colman, Trumhere, Agilbertus, and
Felix, that restored
Christianity and propagated it among the
Saxons; when the planting of it by
Austin was almost lost. Insomuch that at the Death of
Deus-dedit Arch-bishop of
Canterbury, there was in all
Brittain but one
Bishop of
Roman Ordination, remaining;
viz. Wini, who called in two
Brittish Bishops to his Assistance for the Ordaining of
Ceadda to be
Arch-bishop of
York. And to shew what great Obligations we have to own the
Church of
Rome as a
Mother-Church; when things are now in peace, and the
Paschal Controversy laid aside, and great Hopes that all things would come to a right understanding,
Wilfrid returning from
Rome, revived again the
Old Quarrells, and forced
Colman and his followers to retire into
Ireland; St.
Chad to leave his
Bishoprick of
York; and so deprived our Country of the benefit of so many excellent
Pastors, as
Bede himself, no Friend to them, could not chuse but give an extraordinary Character of them. But that you may see what little reason we have to acknowledge
See
Masox de Minist. Angl. l. 2. cap. 4.
Bede. l. 3. c. 6. Ibid. l. 2. c. 2.
your Church above all Others to be
our Mother-Church, I will lay this whole Affair in short before you. Our whole
Island heretofore was divided into four
Languages; of
Britains, Scots, Picts, and
English. As for the
Britains, they were so far from being Converted by
Austin, that at his coming he found an
Establish'd Church amongst them, and that utterly refused to have any thing to do with Him. For the
Scots, they were
Ibid. l. 1. c. 13. establish'd
Christians before
Austin's Time, under
Palladius their
Bishop; and your own
Annalist carries their Conversion yet
Baron. ad Ann. 429. higher. The
Picts embraced our Faith at the preaching of
Columbanus, who came hither out of
Ireland, 32 Years before
Austin's arrival. And lastly, for the
English, tho we are far
Bede. l. 3. c. 4. from detracting any thing from the
Labours of S.
Austin, yet neither may we forget that the Glory even of their
Conversion is not his alone; but must be ascribed to those other Holy Men who were His
Fellow-workers in the Gospel, Felix, Aidan, Ceadda, Lethardus, &c. and some of which had begun before Him, and prepared the way for that
success which afterwards attended his
Preaching.
48. As to what you add, that they began to confess then too, that
Salvation was to be had amongst you; it is what we do not any more deny at this day. We do hope that
some Men amongst you may be saved, because we hope there may be
some
[Page 26] in your
Church who live in a more excusable
Ignorance of the Truth, and that these holding still the
Foundation, and being ready to submit to any Conviction that should be offer'd, may by God's Grace, and a general Repentance, even for their very
Errors among the rest of their
unknown Sins, be saved through
Faith in
Christ Jesus. But yet that you may not
mistake our
Charity, give me leave to tell you,
(1.) That we think it much more difficult for any one to be saved in your
Church now, than it was before the
Reformation; because that then your
Errors were neither so well known, nor so fully refuted as they have been since: and therefore
Ignorance was in
those Days much more
invincible, and by consequence more fit to
excuse than it is now.
(2.) That for those who live, as you do, in a
Country where you might, would you sincerely apply your selves to it, find sufficient means of
Instruction, it is yet
more dangerous than in those Parts where these Helps are wanting.
But especially (3.) will this hold good against
you whom
God has call'd to be the
Pastors of his Church, and whose
Character engages them to be in an especial manner, sedulous and inquisitive; Earnest in their Prayers, and unprejudiced in their Desires to know the
Truth, more than against the
Lay-members of your
Church. So that however we will not judg you, yet neither can we with any comfort say that God will acquit you.
And (4.) for those whom by this
Argument you endeavour to draw away from us; That we confess that Men in
your Church may be saved, but that you utterly deny that they can be in
Ours, and therefore it is best for them to be on
Yours, that is, the
safer Side. If they do indeed use all possible means to be satisfied in the
Points in debate betwixt us; if they indifferently apply themselves to the examination of them; and after a diligent trial, remain at last convinced in their
Consciences that yours is the
best and
purest Church; we shall then be encouraged to
hope well of them, as we do of others of
your Communion, notwithstanding such a
change. But now, should
Interest, or
Prejudice, or any
Humane Motives chance to have interposed to byass their
Judgments; if they chuse your
Religion, without this
diligent, and impartial Examination, and suffer themselves
without Reason to be
seduced by you: We must freely profess
[Page 27] our
Charity in this Assertion is not meant for them; nor do we think your
Church in this
Case any way of Salvation at all to such
Converts, much less a
safer than that of the
Church of England. In short, the Sum of this Matter is; We hope
honest Men may be
saved in your
Communion; but we are sure they
shall be in
Ours. Whether God will condemn you for professing
Errors that you do not know to be such, we cannot tell, we believe he will not; Sure we are he would damn us, should we who are convinced of your
Corruptions, be seduced by any base Motives to go over to you. And this is enough for
us to know; The Other is
your Concern, and do
you look to it. But you go on, and tell us;
49.
Ibid.] Reply.
‘
That the Aversion which the People had imbibed from so long continu'd Slanders, could not be removed; and the arising Factions
in the State blew up the Coals afresh, and pretended this Moderation was nothing but an inclination to Popery,
which so frighted the Mobile,
that they were ready to join with any Party that pretended to suppress such a Monster as they thought it to be: From hence came Rebellions,
and the horrid Murder
of King Charles
the First.’
50.
Answ.] That the
People had an
Aversion to
Popery then, I can easily believe, from what I have the satisfaction to find in them
at this day. But that this
Aversion sprung from any
Slanders that had been laid upon you heretofore, I no more believe, than I do that it proceeds from our
Misrepresenting your Doctrine now. No,
Sir, believe me, there is enough in
Popery to make an
honest Man
hate it, without raising any
Calumnies against it to render it the
more odious: and I do not find since your Endeavours to
vindicate your selves against us, that it begins to be at all more liked than it was before.
51. For what you mention of the
Original of the
Civil Wars in
King Charles the First's Reign, I readily grant that the
fears of
Popery contributed much to blow up the People into
Rebellion. But I am perswaded we must look somewhat farther, if we mean to rise up to the
true Authors of them. Shall I tell you freely what I think? I do believe there was more at the bottom of those
Civil Wars, than either the
People did then believe,
[Page 28] or it may be the
wisest Men are at this day able sufficiently to dive into. But yet thus much we do
all know,
1st, That the
King himself in the very first breaking out of them, observed, that the
Fanaticks proceeded upon
Popish Principles against him.
‘
Their Maxims (says he)
are the same
See the King's large Declar▪ about the
Scotch Troubles,
p. 3, 4.
with the Jesuits;
their Preachers Sermons have been deliver'd in the very Phrase and Stile of Becanus, Scioppius,
and Eudaemon Johannes.
Their poor Arguments which they have deliver'd in their Seditious Pamphlets
printed or written, are taken almost verbatim
out of Bellarmine
and Suarez;
and the means which they have used to induce a Credit of their Conclusions with their Proselytes, are purely and meerly Jesuitical
Fables,
See his Majesty's Declarat. after the Battel at
Edg-Hill. Kings Works,
part 2. pag. 213.
false Reports, false Prophesies, pretended Inspirations
and Divinations
of the weaker Sex; As if now Herod
and Pilate
were once again reconciled for the ruin of Christ
and of his true Religion
and Worship.’
2. That in the Year 1640, there was discover'd to the
Arch-Bishop of Canterbury a Design, in which the
Pope, Cardinal Richlieu, many of the
English Papists, but especially the
Jesuits, were concerned in stirring up those Divisions that had just before broke out in
Scotland, for the Ruine of the
King and of the
Arch Bishop. This may be seen at large in the
Histories of those Times, and the very Papers themselves may be
Vol. 3.
p. 1310, &c. found in Mr.
Rushworth's Collections.
3. That Sir
William Boswell, his Majesty's Resident at that Time at the
Hague, and to whom this Discovery was first made; did find out
‘
that the Romish Clergy
gull'd the misled party of our English Nation under a Puritanical Dress.
That
See in the Life of A. B.
Usher, Append.
p. 27. Letter 17.
they had received Indulgences
from the See of Rome
and Council
of Cardinals,
to educate their Scholars in Principles and Tenets contrary to the Episcopacy
of the Church
of England.
That within the compass of two Years, above sixty of the Romish Clergy were gone out of France,
to preach up the Scotch Covenant,
and to pull down the English Episcopacy,
as being the chief support of the Imperial Crown
of our Nation.’
4. That
Arch-bishop Bramhal being in
France, some time after the
King's Death, did there learn how all these things were managed: That in the Year 1646, above an
hundred
See Bp
Usher's Life, 293. Letter,
p. 611.
Romish Clergy were sent over into
England; who were most of them
Souldiers in the
Parliament Army; and were daily to correspond
[Page 29] with the
Romanists in the
King's Army: That in the Year 1647. they had a
Consult with one another, wherein they discoursed about the
Death of the King, and
England's being a
Commonwealth; that hereupon the
Romish Orders wrote to their several
Convents, but especially to the
Sorbonists, to know whether it might be lawful to make away the
King and the
Prince? In short, that the
Sorbonists return'd,
That it was lawful for Roman Catholicks
to work Changes in Governments for the Mother-Churches
Advancement, and chiefly in an Heretical Kingdom,
and so lawfully make away the King.
5.
Salmonet Hist. des troubles d'Angleterre, liv. 3. p. 165. That after the Engagement at
Edge-Hill, several
Romish Priests were found among the slain of the
Parliament Army. This Father
Salmonet declares in his History of those
Civil Wars, printed in
France, with the
allowance of the King: and adds, that the
Parliament had two
Companies of
Walloons, besides others of that Religion in their Army.
6. When the Rebellion broke out in
Ireland, it was we know bless'd with his
Holinesses Letters, and assisted by his
Nuntio, whom he sent on purpose thither for that Service.
Answer to Philanax Anglicus.
pag. 61. Lastly; that
Monsieur du Moulin has confirm'd this with several plain Instances, which he declared himself ready to make a legal Proof of before his
Judges, and after 17 Years attendance, in a
new Edition of his Book desired once more that he might be called to account for it, and yet
died without being ever attempted to be
disproved.
These things, I say, we know of this
Matter, and therefore tho I do confess that the
Fears of
Popery was the pretence to blow up the
People, yet whether there might not be some
other Persons and
Designs at the
bottom, I shall leave it to the
Reader to consider what
Credit he will think fit to give these
Relations, and then
judg as he sees
Cause.
52. Ad pag. 10.] Reply.
‘
During this War, there was (you say)
a good understanding between the Papists
and the Prelatick
Party, which was the cause of a no less pleasing Union after the Restauration of King Charles
the Second
till Shaftsbury
and his Adherents invented a malicious Calumny, laying a pretended Plot
to their Charge—The Truth of which being detected by a subsequent real One,
the more moderate of the Church of England
again
[Page 30] began to favour them: Only still the Laws
enacted against them being in force, there were Persons enough ready to put them in Execution.’
Answ.] To all which I have nothing more to say, but that being come now to the Affairs of our
own Times, I suppose every Man is already satisfied what to
believe as to these things: Or, if he be not, I am sure there is nothing here to direct him. The accounts of these
Transactions have been publish'd by
Authority; and those who desire more nearly to consider them, may recur to
the History of the latter of the Plots mention'd; and to the several
Trials and
Narratives, especially to Mr.
Coleman's Letters, for his Information in the
former.
53. Ad pag. 11.] Reply.
‘
In this posture were Affairs, when it pleased God to take to himself his late Majesty:
No sooner was his present Majesty
ascended upon the Throne, but he declared Himself a Catholick:
yet was pleased to declare that he looked upon the Church of England
as proceeding upon Loyal Principles,
and that he would protect Her. This gain'd the Hearts of that Party, and had so much Power over the Parliament,
that notwithstanding the Conclusion of a Sermon
preach'd before them, in which it was declared, that an
English Man might be
Loyal, but not a
Papist, that
Parliament testified its Loyalty to such a degree as shall never be forgotten.’
And thus after a long
Story nothing to the purpose, and that too fraught (as we have seen) with many Falsifications, we are at last come to the Point to be considered,
of the Controversies that are now depending betwixt the two Churches, and the
Original whereof you here recount to us.
54. Ad pag. 11, 12.] Reply.
‘
This was the occasion of our following Controversies, and the first thing that appeared in Print
against the Roman Catholicks,
tho the Author
of the Present State of the Controversies
would not take notice of it. And the more considering Men of your Party (you say)
look'd upon it as the throwing out of the Gauntlet,
[Page 31] and bidding defiance to all the Catholicks of England.
This produced a Remonstrance
from you, and that an Answer
from the Doctor,
and there (as almost all our
Controversies have done since)
it ended, tho a Reply
was prepared and approved of. But it was thought fit by those (who were to be obeyed) to let the Controversie
die, rather than stir up a Religious Litigation upon a Point which not only the Protestations of Catholicks,
but their Practices had justified them in.’
55.
Answ.] What
you thought of that Passage in Dr.
Sherlock's Sermon I cannot tell; but
others think that by your Clamours against it you have given the
Doctor occasion to satisfy the
World that what he had said was but too true. And since you tell us that there is an
Answer ready
prepared and
approved, and that the
Controversial Spirit is now let loose, so that our Quarrels will not be much increased by such an
Accession, I dare say the
Doctor will be very glad to see that
Answer, and whether it has force enough to convince him of his
Mistake. As for your pretence why you declined engaging any farther in
this Dispute, viz.
‘
That it was a Point, which not only your Protestations, but your Practices had justified you in;’ tho I readily acknowledg that the
English-man has in many of your
Communion been too strong for the
Papist, (and far be it from us to detract from their worth) Yet as to your Assertion in the
general, that both your
Protestations and
Practices have sufficiently justified you in this Point, give me leave to tell you that we are not very forward to credit the
One, because we have known too much of the
Other. We cannot so soon forget the Names of
Mariana, Suarez, Bellarmine, of
Parsons, Stapleton; and many
others of your
Communion, as not to remember what sort of
Loyalty has sometimes been taught in your
Schools. Who were they that Sainted
Thomas à Becket, and have applauded even the
Assassines of some
Princes since, but the venerable
Heads of your
Church? And in what esteem
Campian and
Garnet are at this day among you, we are not ignorant. When that wicked Wretch
J. Castell assaulted
Henry the Fourth of
France, he found an
Apologist among you; and the
Arrest of the
Parliament of Paris against him, stands at this day among the prohibited Books in the
last Index set forth at
Rome. They were these
[Page 32] things that moved our King
James the First, to set out his
Admonition to all Christian Princes against you; and even that your
Card. Bellarmine was not ashamed to answer, in defence of his Doctrine of the
Popes Authority over Kings: In short, he that would know what Credit is to be given to you in your Assertion as to this matter, need only recur to Mr.
Foulis Collection, and I am confident he will then confess that the
distinction the
Doctor made in behalf of his
Country-men of your
Religion, is the
best Apology that can be offer'd, and the most to the Honour of our
Nation, tho it may be not so much for the
Credit of
your Church, viz. that your
Principles consider'd, the English Man
may be, I will add, and
has often been found Loyal, but then he has laid aside
the Papist to be so.
56. Ad p. 12.]
Reply. You tell us,
‘
That this Imputation of the Doctor's,
joyned with the Mistakes that most Men had conceived of your Doctrine, gave occasion to the Representer
to shew your Doctrines truly as they are in themselves, without the mixture of the particular Opinions of the Schoolmen,
or the Practices
which are neither universally nor necessarily received.’
Answ.] And this Book, tho it produced not any manner of
Authority for its
Representations, and was contrary in
most Points to the Opinions of the chiefest Writers of your
Church, soon received an
Answer in every particular. There your
Doctrine was
truly stated from your own
Authors, his
false Colours detected, and to your
shame never
replied to. For I suppose no one will be so far
mistaken, as to think that
Tristle that came out against it deserves the Name of an
Answer.
57. Ad pag. 13.] And whilst
this Book yet subsists in its full force, and that we have so effectually shewn you the
Opinions of the most Eminent Divines of your
Church, the
Practice of the
Generality amongst you, and the very words of your
Councils and
Liturgies, to be utterly inconsistent with your
new Representations, that you are not able to make any
reasonable Defence of the one, and are forced utterly to
reject after all the other; What a
Forehead must that Man have that can tell the World as you do,
‘
That we CANNOT DENY’ (what yet you complain of Me in this very Book for
denying) that
‘
[Page 33]
all Catholicks
do believe according to that Doctrine which the Representer
expresses,’ and which you in vain endeavour (as I shall hereafter shew you) to
defend.
58. Ad pag. 14.] Reply.
‘
During this Dispute two Books (you say)
were publish'd, with the same Intention: The first, The Acts of the Clergy of
France in their General Assembly, 1685.
in which was shewn in one Column
the Doctrine of your Church
from the words of the Council of Trent,
in the other the Calumnies
of Protestants
against you, from the very words of their Authors.
And this you think to have been so clear a Proof of what the Representer
had said, that you suppose his Adversaries
would not think fit to contest it longer against such plain and ample Testimonies.’
Answ.] And here you think you have found out somewhat to boast of: A
Wonder indeed not every day to be seen; a
Book never yet
answered by us. 'Tis true, I do not know of any one here at home, that has taken the pains to examine the
Clergy's Quotations, as the
Answer to
Papists protesting against Protestant Popery has done, for the Instances there offer'd by their
Humble Imitator the
Representer. But then the discovery that was made by that
worthy Author of the whole Cheat, by distinguishing
Matters of Dispute, from
Matters of Representation, has abundantly confuted all their Pretences. We charge you (for Instance) with
Idolatry, for
worshipping of Images, Praying to Saints, and for
adoring the Host. If you do not
worship Images, nor
pray to Saints, nor
adore the Host, then indeed we
Misrepresent you. But now for the
other Point, that
therefore you commit Idolatry, this is our
Consequence which we draw from those
Practices, and must be put to the Trial betwixt us. If our
Reasons be good, our
Conclusion will be so too: If they are not, we are then
mistaken in our Opinion, and you may say we are in an
Error, but we do not therefore
misrepresent you. We never yet pretended that you
thought Idolatry to be
lawful; or that you
confess'd that you
committed it: We accuse you of it only as a thing which upon the
Premises before mention'd, we
conclude you to be
guilty of; and in that certainly, if
we misrepresent any Body, it must be
our selves, not
you.
[Page 34] Now this one thing being observed, the
Book you mention is utterly overthrown, and both the Artifice and the Evidence fall together.
59.
Ibid.] The
other Book you tell us you publish'd was the
Bishop of Meaux's Exposition, and what has been done on this occasion is very well known, and I shall not need to give any account of it.
60. Ad pag. 17.] And thus have we done with the two
Points to which I reduced the Sum of your
Preface: What farther remains is your Advice to the
Readers of our Books, what they are to take notice of, and what to pass over in them. You tell them that you will
‘
lay down the true State of the difference betwixt us, and that whatever they find written by us that does not immediately oppose some of those Tenets, they should pass it over, tho never so plausible or pleasing.’
61. Now how
Politick such an
Advice as this may be to hinder the good effect of our Writing, I will not dispute; but sure I am it is highly
unreasonable. For what if the very
Subject of the
Controversie should be (as indeed at this time it is) whether those things which you here lay down be your
Churches Doctrine, or only your
private Exposition of it? Ought not the
judicious Reader in this case to consider our
Allegations, and see whether we have not
reason to say that you do endeavour to delude them, by pretending that to be your
Belief, which in truth is not received by the
Generality of your
Church as such? As for instance: You positively deny that
‘
the Holy Cross is upon ANY ACCOUNT WHATSOEVER to be worshipped with DIVINE WORSHIP.’ Now this we
deny too, and therefore as to this
Point there can be no
Dispute betwixt us. But now what if I should undertake to shew, that you here impose upon your
Reader, and that whatsoever you pretend, yet
your Church does teach, that
the Holy Cross IS TO BE WORSHIPPED with DIVINE WORSHIP, and Practises accordingly? Is not this think you fit to be considered by him? Or is the
Bishop of Meaux's Exposition become so far the
Guide in Controversie in
France and
England, that all other
Expositions are to be look'd upon as
superannuated, and this only to contain the
true Interpretation of your
pretended Catholick Faith.
62. But indeed I do not wonder that you would perswade your
Proselytes not to read our Books, since you easily guess
[Page 35] that those things may well stagger them, which were not your
Obstinacy or your
Prejudices too strong, for your
Reason and
Conscience to grapple with, must long e're this have
convinced, as they have sufficiently
confuted, your own selves.
63. Ad pag. 27.]
‘
And because you are not willing to prolong Disputes, you do here declare, that if the Defender
do meddle hereafter with such Points as those which are not of necessary Faith, you shall not think your self obliged to answer him, tho after that he may perhaps boast how he had the last Word.’
Answ.] That is to say, the great business of the
Defender has been to
discover your
true Doctrine, and
yours to
dissemble it. Now if the
Defender makes any
Answer at all to your
Reply, it must be to maintain those
Doctrines to be
yours which he had laid to your
Charge, and which you
deny; And this if he does, you here declare you will have done with him: Which I think is plainly to confess, that you have had enough of this
Argument.
64. But,
Sir, the
Defender has such a kindness for his
Subject, and such a respect for
You, that he is resolved not to part either with
you or
it. And therefore, for what concerns his
Subject, he will still make good in the several Points in which he advanced it, his distinction of
Old and
New Popery against you, and which
in your last Defence you have been
shewn your self to allow of: He will prove that you do palliate the ancient Doctrine of your
Church; and that greater Men than any either the
Bishop of Meaux or
your self, have and do interpret your
Churches Sense in a much other manner than you
represent it. And to this you may return or not, as you think fit. For
your self, he is resolved to be so far your
Humble Servant as to joyn issue with you upon your
own terms, and shew you how you have
abused the
World to no purpose at all; for that even taking your Doctrine as you
misrepresent it, yet still we are not able nevertheless to embrace it. But then for your other proposal, of throwing aside all the rest of our
Points, only for the sake of those
t
[...]o which you mention, here he desires to be excused: It being much more for the
Edification of his
Friends
[Page 36] the Populace (and
whose Applause you know
he courts) to give them a full prospect of your
Doctrine, and your
Misrepresentations of it, than to run the
Circle with you in the single Point of the
Churches Authority, in which they may more easily be amused and deluded by you. But you say,
65. Ad pag. 24.] Reply.
‘
That you may be bold to foretell without pretending to be a Prophet,
that nothing of this will be done by Me, but that I shall either still fly to the Tenets and Practices of Particulars, or misrepresent
your Doctrine, or fob off
your Arguments
with such an Answer
as I think sufficient to Monsieur Arnaud's Perpetuité,
which I said wanted only Diogenes'
s Demonstration to confute it.’
Answ.] I am very glad,
Sir, you profess your self to be no
Prophet, (and I have long been convinced that you are no
Conjurer) for if your
Arguments be no better than your
Guesses, I shall have a very easie Task of it. I have already told you what
Method I resolve to proceed in, and I hope you will comply so far with me as to excuse
one part of it, seeing I go utterly besides my measures to gratify your Desires in
the other. As for your fear that I should fob off your
Arguments, by which I suppose you mean that I shall endeavour to
elude them with some imperfect
Answer, I do promise you it is groundless; I will very carefully sift your
Reply to the bottom, and not let any thing, that is not very impertinent, pass my
Examination. But shall I beg leave now that I have satisfied
yours, to confess my
own Fears; and that is, that as far as I can yet judg by what I have hitherto read of your
Reply, I shall find but few Arguments in it either to
fob off, or to
answer. For having already consider'd your
Calumnies, I much doubt by that time I have rectified your
Mistakes too, I shall have little more remaining to
encounter.
66. As to Monsieur
Arnaud's Perpetuité, I do still say that
Diogenes's Demonstration is the best
Confutation of it. The Case in short is this; Monsieur
Aubertine has shewn in the first
Ages of the
Church, that the Doctrine which we now embrace of the
Holy Eucharist contrary to
Transubstantiation, was the ancient
Catholick Doctrine of the
Church. This he confirms by a multitude of clear
Testimonies drawn out of the Writings
[Page 37] of those
Fathers who lived in those Times. Now for
Monsieur Arnaud after this to think to confute this
Evidence by a
Logical Argument, that had not the Doctrine of
Transubstantiation been the Doctrine of the
Church at the beginning, it could never have become so afterwards; and that such a little shift is sufficient to overthrow all those Testimonies, this must certainly be a meer
Reverie, (you will I hope excuse me that Expression, now you know the meaning of it) and needs no other
Confutation, than to shew him that the
Matter of Fact is evidently opposite to his Pretences.
67.
Ad Pag. 25.] Reply.
‘
But such things as these (you say)
are now adays put upon the World without a blush: and they who are this day Ingenuous, Learned, Honest Men, shall be to morrow Time-servers, Blockheads, and Knaves, if they chance to cast but a favourable Eye towards Popery.’
Answ.] O Tempora! O Mores! To what a sad State are we arrived, that Men should be able
to do such ill things, and yet
not blush at them! But what now is the
Matter?
‘
Why, Men who were yesterday esteem'd very honest Men, are the next found out to be Knaves and Time-servers.’ Good
Sir, be not too
hasty; 'tis possible this may be done, and yet no cause of blushing neither, unless for those
Persons who are so found out. For, 1. What if we mistook those
Men for
Honest Men, who at the bottom were not so? And when we saw our
Error, alter'd our
Opinion? And as every thing that is done, must be done some day or other; What if we took them for
honest Men to
day, and to
morrow find that they were not
so honest? Is it any Crime for one upon good grounds to change his Mind in this
Case? Again, 2. There is a certain Season when the worst Man first begins to be so. Now, what if one that had hitherto done nothing to forfeit his
Reputation, should begin to do such notorious ill things as to deserve our
Censure? Here we had both reason to believe him an
honest Man whilst he was so, and as much reason to believe him
otherwise, since his Actions have declared his
Change. So that then, for ought I can find, we must come at last to the
grounds of these
Charges, before we can judg of them. And for that, whenever you will
[Page 38] please to give us your
Instances of the
Persons who have been thus censured by us; that have been heretofore esteemed
honest, ingenuous Men, and are now found out to be
Knaves and
Blockheads; though I shall have no occasion to justify any such censure, till you can prove that I have been concern'd in passing of it; yet I doubt not but those who have done this, will be able to give you abundant satisfaction for it.
68.
Ibid.] Reply. You conclude all with an Insinuation, the most likely to catch those that are not well acquainted with you, of any thing in your whole Book:
‘
That it is not likely you should palliate your Doctrine to gain Proselytes, seeing that Proselyte the first time he should see you practise contrary to your Doctrine, would be sure to return and expose your Villany.’
Answ.] But yet to this I Answer;
1st, That 'tis possible you may
palliate your Doctrine, and your
Proselyte never
discover it. It is no such strange thing for Men to
profess one thing and
do another; and yet by subtle
distinctions justify themselves to those who are prepared to deny
Sense and
Reason, rather than not believe them. You tell us for instance, that the
Holy Cross is upon no account whatsoever to be worshipped; And yet certainly your
Good-friday Service directly leads you to it. But then if your new
Proselyte begins to enquire what this means; presently you tell him a Story of
Absolute and
Relative Worship; and he who knows nothing more of the Matter than you are pleased to let him, humbly submits himself to
yours and the
Church's Judgment.
69. If we urge your
Expressions against you, and he fortunes to get something of this by the end; Either you confidently
deny that you have any
such words, (a Case which has happen'd to my self in
this very Allegation) or if you are
baffled there; then 'tis not (for instance)
Come, let us Adore the Cross; but,
Come, let us adore Christ who suffered on it: concerning which we must discourse a little by and by.
70. If this too fails, and we shew you plainly that you say,
We adore thy Cross, O Lord: So that our
Saviour is himself
distinguish'd from his
Cross which you worship; then the
Cross there is put to signify
Christ's Passion; though I am afraid the
[Page 39]
Adoring of Christ's Passion is something like that which you call
Jargon, and we in plain
English, Nonsence.
71. If even this be beaten off, and other
Hymns produced in which that
Cross is plainly specified which
bore Christ's Sacred Members; the Tree upon whose Arms the Price of the World hung: then you have your
Figures ready, 'tis a
Metonymie in
one line, a
Prosopopaeia in the
next; in the
third a
conjunction of both together: And with these
Quirks the poor
Implicite Proselyte's Head is turn'd round. He believes there is something meant by all these
hard words, though he knows nothing of the Matter; and his Opinion of your Integrity, joined with the good assurance with which you pronounce your
Oracles, and thunder out your
Anathema's against us as
Hereticks and
Schismaticks; Calumniators, Falsifiers, Misrepresenters, and what not? makes him that he no longer questions your Pretences.
72. As for your
Authors he knows nothing of them; or if he did, yet those who have so many
tricks to elude such
clear Expressions of their
publick Rituals, could not want
distinctions enough to
expound them. Or however a general out-cry against them as
private Men, and for whose Opinions
the Church is not to Answer, will at once silence all such
Allegations that they shall not make any the least
impression upon them. By all which it appears that you may (as we affirm you do)
palliate your Doctrine, and yet your Proselyte be never the wiser for it.
73. But now,
2dly, if he should
discover something of this kind, yet is it not necessary, that he should therefore presently
return and expose your Villany. I will suppose that those
few Proselytes you have made, may all be reduced to these two kinds;
Men of Conscience, or
Men of Interest and Design. For the
latter of these, whilst they serve their
Interests by the
Change, there is no great
fear of their making any such
dangerous Discoveries. Religion is not their Concern; and whether it be
New Popery or
Old that they embrace, they neither know, nor care: it is to them indifferent; and they understand, as well as value, both alike. As to the
Conscientious Converts, (allowing for their
Capacities, and that they are able to overcome all the foremention'd Difficulties, and to discover the Cheat, which I fear is what the much greatest part of these are not able to do): It is indeed hard to say what a
terrible Conflict
[Page 40] this will be apt to make in them. But yet the Point of
Reputation, the
Opinion of the World, shame of Return. and the
dangers those commonly run who venture to
reveal such Sacred Mysteries; these Considerations have sometimes kept
good Men a longer time in suspense, than any of your
Proselytes have yet had to resolve upon a
return to us. And who can tell, what
Time and
Changes may one day bring forth?
74. Again: We know there have been many in your
Church, who though they have
discover'd these
Prevarications, yet have thought, that as long as they did not themselves
join in your
Errors, they might hold their Tongues, and live quietly in an
External Communion with you: and their Eyes have been so dazled with the
Splendor, Succession, Extent, &c. of your
Church, that they have preferr'd it with all
its Faults to Others who seem to them to want these
Advantages. Such were the famous
George Cassander, Father
Barnes, and others that I might mention. Nay, it is no very long time, since a Person yet living,
Monsieur Ferrand, has publish'd a Book to shew, that were the
Church of Rome as
corrupt as we
pretend it to be, yet we ought not nevertheless to
separate from it. And should any of your
Converts be of this
Perswasion, they may still continue to all appearance in your
Church, though they see the
Errors, and your
falsifications of the
true Doctrine of it.
75. But,
3dly, though I do affirm that what you publish is not the
Ancient Doctrine of your
Church, yet I do not deny but it is that which you endeavour to make pass with your
Converts as such. This you teach your
Proselytes, the
Bishop of Meaux his
Dioces; and they rarely meet with any one that maintains the
contrary. But this do's not hinder, that because this is the
Popery of a few English
Missionaries, and
French Expositors; that therefore it has been all along the
Common Doctrine of your
Church; or is conformable to the practice of other Countries at this day. And all Men have not the leisure to go into
Italy or
Spain; or the ability to read over your
several Authors for satisfaction in it.
76. But,
4thly, to quit all these
Suppositions; yet since you make it no less than a
Mortal Sin to have any
Doubts of your
Religion; you are sure, as soon as any such arise in their Minds to hear of it in
Confession from them. Being thus acquainted with the
first Motions of this kind, you presently take all the
[Page 41] ways imaginable to
stifle them, and hinder them from coming to an
open defection from you. So that though your
Proselyte should begin to stagger; yet unless he utterly abandon your Party without ever consulting you in it, (which
Men of
Conscience will never do) he is almost under an
Impossibility of ever doing it at all.
77. To all which I will add but this farther: Which well may, and I am perswaded do's keep many from
telling of Tales, and exposing (as you call it) your
Villany; and that is, that when you receive a
new Convert into your
Church, you require a
terrible Oath from him, never by
any Argument to
leave or to
forsake you, upon pain of
Perjury and
Damnation if he do's. And to the end the
Reader may know, what is the
last step he is to
make, if he has any
thoughts that
way; and to convince him what little force there is in your
Suggestion, I will here transcribe it from your
Pontifical, in its full
length.
The
Oath that is ordered by the
Church of Rome to be administred to a
New Convert. (Pontif. Rom. Ord. ad reconc. Apost. Schism. vel Haeret.)
I. N.
having found out the Snare of Division with which I was held, after a long and diligent deliberation with my self, am, by the Grace of God, return'd with a forward and ready Will, to unity of the Apostolick See:
And lest I should be thought to have return'd not with a pure Mind, but only in shew, I do hereby promise, under the pain of falling from my Order, and under the Obligation of an Anathema
to thee Bishop
of such a Place; and by thee to Peter
Prince of the Apostles,
and to the most Holy Father
in Christ our Lord N. Pope,
and to his Successors, that I will never through the Perswasions
of any Persons
whatsoever, or BY ANY OTHER MEANS return to that
[Page 42] Schism,
from which by the Grace of our Redeemer freeing Me, I am deliver'd: But that I will always remain in all things in the Unity
of the Catholick Church,
and in the Communion
of the Bishop of Rome;
and therefore I do say upon my Oath,
by GOD ALMIGHTY and these SACRED GOSPELS, that I will without wavering remain in the Unity
and Communion
aforesaid; And if (which God forbid) I shall BY ANY OCCASION or ARGUMENT divide my self from this Unity, MAY I INCURRING THE GUILT OF PERJURY, BE FOUND CONDEMN'D TO ETERNAL PUNISHMENT, AND HAVE MY PORTION WITH THE AUTHOR OF SCHISM IN THE WORLD TO COME.—So help me God, &c.
Thus do's your new
Proselyte swear himself firm to your
Party; at least I'me sure he is here required to do it. And now you may as well expect that a fellow
Conspirator should discover the
Treason he is to commit, as a
Convert thus engaged to you, (though he should find it out) expose your
Villany.
AN ANSWER TO THE REPLY, &c. Being a further
Defence of the EXPOSITION of the DOCTRINE of the
Church of England.
INTRODUCTION.
IT was the Opinion of a
late Author concerning a very short
Treatise that he had publish'd upon most of the Points in
Controversy between
us and the
Church of Rome; that tho he had neither put himself to the expence of any new
Arguments against us; nor produced the Authority of either
Ancient Fathers, or even of
Modern Writers to back his Assertions; he had nevertheless answer'd in that one
Treatise, not only all those
late Discourses that had just before been publish'd by our
Divines on those Subjects, but a great part of all the Books and Sermons that had ever been writ or preach'd against his
Church. Tho I am not very fond of following any
Copy which that
Author can set me, and in this especially do think his
Vanity so ridiculous, that he is rather to be
pitied than
imitated; yet being once more called upon for a farther
Vindication of my self, to another review of the most considerable
Articles wherein we differ from those of the
other Communion, I cannot but observe, that not only my present
Adversary has not advanced in this
[Page 44] new Attempt one jot beyond what I had before confuted, but that in all their
Books, their whole Business is meerly to
transcribe one another; so that from the
See the Reply, Pres.
p. vi.
Bishop of Condom's Exposition, even to the
The Original whereof was first published in
Spanish, Anno 1616.
Eye Catechism, there is nothing
new; but the same
Answer that is made to one, do's really in
effect overthrow them all.
2. 'Tis this has put me upon the troublesome design, not only of resuming and collating the
Bishop of Meaux's Exposition, and the
Vindication of it, with the
Reply that is now before me on
every Article; But to search all those
other Treatises that have been publish'd since the
Representer first broke the Peace with us: To convince the World that
Matters are now driven as far as they can go; so that in reading
any one of their
Books they may really find as much, as when they shall have taken the pains to consult them
all. If this will not engage them to produce something more than they have yet done to answer our
Arguments, it shall at least I hope excuse us, if we from henceforth dispense with our selves the trouble of
large Confutations; so that instead of transcribing again our
own Books, as often as they shall please to furnish out a
new Title to their
old Objections, we shall need only to direct them to those
Replies that have been already made; and in which their Pretensions have been
confuted before they were
publish'd.
3. It was the Complaint of S.
Austin against such kind of
Antagonists as these in his Time;
‘
That whether out of too much
St. Austin. de Civit. Dei. lib. 2. c. 1. blindness,
by which even the clearest things are not seen; or out of an obstinate stubbornness,
whereby even those things which are seen,
are not endured,
they would defend
their own unreasonable Notions after a full Answer
had been given to them, as if it were Reason
and Truth
it self that they maintain'd.—And therefore (says he)
what End shall there be of Disputing,
what measure of speaking,
if we must always answer
those that answer
us? For they who either cannot understand
what is said,
or are so harden'd with
a Spirit of Opposition, that tho they did understand,
yet would they not submit; they answer, as it is written, and they speak Iniquity, and are indefatigably vain.
Whose contrary sayings if we should as often refute, as they have resolved with an invincible Forehead
not to care what they say, so they do but by any means contradict
our Disputations;
who do's not see how infinite,
and troublesome,
and fruitless
this would be?’
The
ANSWER to the
FIRST ARTICLE.
YOU will excuse,
Sir, this little Address to my
Reader; I shall from henceforth keep
close to your
Reply, and notwithstanding
Reply p. 1. St.
Austin's Insinuation to the contrary, attend you once more whithersoever you shall please to lead Me. And to shew how exactly applicable what I have before said of your
Books in
general, is to your
Reply above any in
particular; the
first Observation I have to make is, that for what concerns the common Cause of Religion in this
first Article, you have entirely taken, or rather indeed
stollen it (since I do not remember that you have once mention'd your
Author) out of
T. G's Discourse against Dr.
Stillingfleet, and which that most
Learned Man had fully answered some Years since. And yet you neither take notice of his
Answers, nor offer any one thing to prevent the
same Replies from being made by me to the same Objections.
2. You begin your
Vindic. p. 22.
Vindication with a
scandalous Charge of
‘
Calumnies, Misrepresentations, &c.’ This you persist in in your
Reply p. 2.
Reply; and so does
T. G's first Answ. Pref.
pag. 3.
T. G. against his
Adversary.
‘He tells him how in the prosecution of his Argument, he should be forced to lay open
his frequent Contradictions, Calumnies, and
Misrepresentations:’ By which the
Reader may now see that you meant me no
Harm in all these
hard words against me; but you found them in your
Author, and you transcribed the
railing with as little Judgment as you have done the
Reason of his
Books. After this
short and
civil Preface, you tell Me,
3. Ad pag. 2.] Reply.
‘
That there was a time in which the
Reply p. 2.
T. G's first Answ. Pre
[...].
pag. 15. Genuine
Sons of the Church of England,
excused the Roman Catholick Church
of that odious Imputation of Idolatry;
and *
SOME of them (never
T. G'
s secon
[...] Answ. p. 1
[...].
excommunicated nor censured by the Church of England
for it) maintain'd, that We cannot defend the Charge of Idolatry
against the Church of Rome,
without denying that Church
to be a true Church,
and by Consequence without contradicting our selves, and going against the intention of the
[Page 46] Reformation,
which was not to make a new Church,
but to restore a sick Church
to its Soundness, a corrupt Church to its Purity, &c. [See
T. G. first Answer,
Pref. p. 7.]’
Answ.] Had you but ingenuously own'd from whence you had taken this
Objection against our
Church, the
Reader would presently have known whither to have gone for the
Confutation of it. But seeing you are resolved to make it your own, I shall answer two things;
-
1st, That what you have said is
false.
-
2dly, That you either
did, or
ought to have known it to be so.
4. First, It is
false that those whom from
T. G. you are pleased to stile
the Genuine Sons of the Church of England, have excused your
Church of that
odious Imputation of Idolatry, or by consequence did think that we could not
defend it against you without
contradicting our selves, and going against the
intention of the Reformation.
5. Your first Author is Dr.
Jackson; and he so far from excusing you in this Point, as you most wretchedly assert, that
Dr. Jackson,
see his Works, 3 vol. Fol.
Lond. An. 1673. in a set
Discourse under this very Title,
‘
Tom. 1.
Of the Identity or Aequivalency of Superstition in Rome
Heathen, and Rome
Christian,’ he spends above 17 Sheets on purpose to prove the
Charge of Idolatry upon you: and answers all your
Evasions, by which you endeavour in vain to clear your selves of the
Guilt of it. The very Subject of his
first Chapter is to shew,
‘
That Rome
Christian in latter Years, sought rather to allay than to abrogate the Idolatry of Rome
Heathen; p. 933.’ In his 25th
Chapter, having mention'd that Conclusion of your
Church,
‘
Pag. 946.
That Saints are to be worshipped with Religious Worship:’ He pronounces Sentence against you in these very words,
‘*
This we say is formal Idolatry. The Title of his 27th
Chapter is positive,
Ibid.
p. 954.
That the same Expression of our respect or observance towards Saints or Angels locally present, cannot without Superstition or Idolatry be made to them in their Absence.’ And in the 28th
Chapter, speaking of your form of commending a departing Soul;
[
Ibid.
p. 961.
‘
Depart out of this World in the Name of God
the Father Almighty
who hath created thee, in the Name of Jesus
[Page 47] Christ
the Son of God,
who suffer'd for thee; in the Name of
Breviarium Roman. de Ord. Commendationis animae Deo.
the Holy Ghost,
who was poured forth upon thee; in the Name of Angels
and Arch-angels;
in the Name of Thrones
and Dominions;
in the Name of Principalities
and Powers;
in the Name of Cherubims
and Seraphims;
in the Name of Patriarchs
and Prophets;
in the Name of Holy Apostles
and Evangelists;
in the Name of Holy Martyrs
and Confessors;
in the Name of Holy Monks
and Hermites;
in the Name of Virgins,
and of all God's Saints and Saintesses;
This day let thy Soul be in Peace, and thy Habitation in Holy Sion.]’
‘
If (says he)
thus they pray with their Lips only, they mock God as well as the Saints.
If thus they pray with internal Affection of Heart and Spirit, they really worship Saints with the selfsame Honour wherewith they honour God—They might with less Impiety admit a Christian Soul into the Church Militant,
than translate it into the Church Triumphant
in other Names besides the Trinity.
They might better baptize them only in the Name
of God the Father,
and of S. Francis, S. Benedict,
and S. Dominick, &c.
without any mention of God the Son
and Holy Ghost,
rather than joyn these, as Commissioners with them in dismissing Souls out of their Bodies. To censure this part of their Liturgy as it deserves, it is no Prayer but a CHARM, conceived out of the Dregs and Reliques of HEATHENISH IDOLATRY, which cannot be brought forth but in BLASPHEMY, nor be applied to any sick Soul without SORCERY’
See more in express words, cap. 24. § 8. p. 943. cap. 27. § 2. p. 956. Tom. 1..
6. This is the first of our
Church-men that you say excused you from the
odious imputation of Idolatry. And since I perceive his
Authority is of some weight with you, as being one of
the Genuine Sons of the Church of England, which
T. G. would not allow his
Adversary, nor it may be will you therefore esteem
Me to be; I hope you will for his sake, who here charges your Offices with
CHARMS and
SORCERY, as well as with
Superstition and
Idolatry, be from henceforth a little more favourable to my Reflection on another occasion of your
Which he also in express words charges your Adoration of the Cross with,
cap. 24. §. 4. p. 941. oper. Tom. 1.
MAGICAL INCANTATIONS.
7. I have been detain'd a little longer than I designed in this
first Author; but I will make amends for it, by referring
[Page 48] you for the
Dr.
F
[...]ILD. A. B.
LAUD. Dr.
HEYLIN. three next to the like account which
See in the Preface to his first Book concerning the Idolatry of the C. R. and his general Pref. to the several late Treatises,
&c. Lond. 1673. Dr.
St. gave to your Friend
T. G. from their own words: As for
Mr.
THORNDIKE. Mr.
Thorndyke, it is confess'd he was once in the
Opinion that you mention; but you knew very well that he changed his Mind before his Death. You may see by an
Extract that has lately been
Mr. Pulton
considered. Lond. 1687. publish'd out of his
Will, what an ill Notion he had of your
Church in general, and for the
Point before us,
T. G's Reverend and
Learned Adversary eight Years ago publish'd a
Paper from
Dr.
Sti
[...]ling. Conferences against
T. G. Lond. 1679. pag. 89. Mr.
Thorndyke's own hand, in which, among other Exceptions against you, he makes this his
12th:
‘
To pray to Saints
departed for those things which only God
can give (AS ALL PAPISTS DO) is by the proper Sense of their words DOWN-RIGHT IDOLATRY. If they say their meaning is by a Figure, only to desire them to procure their Requests of God; how dare any Christian trust his Soul with that Church,
which teaches that which must needs be IDOLATRY in all that understand not the Figure.’
8. Such was the
last Judgment of this
Learned and
Pious Man in this matter. If after this it be necessary to say any thing to his former Opinion; I will only observe, that the ground of it was this
Mistake, viz.
‘
Just Weights and Measures,
p. 6. Edit.
Lond. 1662. cap. 1.
That a Christian Church without renouncing the Profession of the true God, cannot be guilty of IDOLATRY.’ Now this
De Imag. lib. 2. cap. 24. pag. 2153.
Card. Bellarmine himself, and others of your
Church, do utterly deny:
‘
For (says he)
it is Idolatry,
not only when one adores an Idol
leaving God,
but also when an Idol
is adored together with God.’
9. The last of your
Divines whom you cite as excusing you from
Idolatry, is the Reverend
Dr.
HAMMOND Pract. Disc. Lond. 1674. § 44. p. 351. Sect. 50. p. 353, 354. Dr.
Hammond: but your falseness is as notorious in him as in all the rest. For in a particular
Discourse of Idolatry, § 44. He approves and explains the design of
our Homilies against the peril of Idolatry: §. 50. He says,
‘
That your worshipping of Images
in the most moderate way that can be, is for ought he knows a kind of Idol-Worship,
but to be sure a prohibited Act: §. 54.
That to put up those Petitions
to the Blessed Virgin
which are terminated in her self,
Sect. 54.
p. 354.
(as many Forms, if not her whole Office may appear to be) are Acts parallel to the Old Idolatry. §. 56.
That your worshipping
of Images,
notwithstanding all your distinctions
of worshipping
Sect. 56.
p. 355.
God mediante Imagine,
or relativè, &c.
is Idolatry. §. 64.
That
Sect. 64.
p. 357.
[Page 49]
the Worship
of the Bread
in the Sacrament
must certainly be Idolatry.
That your Error about Transubstantiation,
and your good design of worshipping Christ there may, he hopes, be some excuse for you; but that your Opinion will not hinder it from being at least material Idolatry,
and the worshipping
of something that is not God.’
10. So that now upon the whole it remains, that there is not so much as a shadow of
Truth in your
Assertion, that
the true and genuine Sons of the Church of England
have excused your Church of the odious Imputation of Idolatry. My next business is to shew, that you
did or
ought to have known that there was not one
word of Truth in what you said.
11. Now this will depend upon the
Answer which I shall leave any
honest Man to give to these two plain
Questions. 1. Whether when you
stole all this out of
T. G. you either
did not, or
ought not to have known, that Dr.
St. had answered all these
Cavils many Years since, and shewn that there was no
Truth nor
Sincerity in them? 2. Whether a Man that
quotes but
six Authors for an Assertion derogatory to the
Establishment of their
Church, and contrary to the
publick Doctrine of the
Homilies and
Injunctions; and to the
private Opinions of the Generality of the
Divines of it, ought not to have been sure that those
Authors at least did affirm that which he pretends they did? The latter of these will conclude against you, that you
ought to have known that what you here say is
false, because you
ought to have examined these
Authors, and then you would have known it to be so. And for the former (were not your Conscience unfit to be appeal'd to in a matter of
Truth against
your self) I durst appeal to your own
Soul, whether you did not know, that the
Learned Man I have so often mentioned, had shewn
T. G. how false these
Pretences were? But I go on with you to your next
Paragraph: where you tell Me,
12. Ad pag. 2.]
Reply.
‘You
would gladly know, wherefore at this time I charge you with the odious Imputation
of adoring Men
and Women, Crosses
and Images,
&c.’
Answ.] To satisfie you in which Demand, I
reply, 1. That I charge you with this, because
it is true, and I have both
[Page 50]
shewn it already, and will yet farther
shew it to be so. 2. I do it at this time, because at this time you have the Confidence to deny it, nay to charge us with
Calumny, and
Misrepresentation for having ever accused you of it. So that your wise
Question is in effect but this; We the
Vindicators and
Representers of
New Popery have publickly exposed you to the World as a
pack of Knaves, that have
misrepresented our Doctrine, and wherefore do you go about to
vindicate your selves, and not suffer us to make silly People believe in quiet that what we say
is true?
13.
Ibid.] Reply.
‘
Where (say you)
do I find any thing of this in the 39 Articles?
and for the Book of Homilies,
I must be little versed in our own Doctrine not to know, that several eminent Divines of our own Church,
do not allow that Book
to contain in every part of it the dogmatical Doctrine
of the Church of
England’ [Thus
T. G. speaks into your
Mouth, and you, as
his Engine, eccho them to us.
T. G's first Answer to Dr.
St. Pref.
p. 8, 9.]
Answ.] Now to this you should have known that Dr
St. gave this
Answer.
‘
That the Articles
of our Church
have confirm'd
Answer to several late Treatises; by Dr.
Still. Lond. 1673. The general Preface.
those Homilies;
That these Articles
were not only allow'd and approved by the Queen,
but subscribed by the whole Clergy
in Convocation,
Anno. 1571.’
‘
Now (says the
Dean) I desire T. G.
to resolve me whether Men of any common understanding would have subscribed to this Book of Homilies
in this manner, if they had believed the main Doctrine
and design of one
of them had been false
and pernicious,
as they must have done, if they had thought the Practice
of the Roman Church
to be free from Idolatry.
I will put the Case that any of the Bishops
then had thought that the Charge of Idolatry
had been unjust, and that it had subverted the Foundation of Ecclesiastical Authority:
that there could have been no Church
or Right of Ordination,
if the Roman Church
had been guilty of Idolatry;
would they have inserted this into the Articles
when it was in their power to have left it out? And that the Homilies
contain'd a wholsome
and Godly Doctrine,
which in their Consciences they believed to be false
and pernicious?
I might as well think that the Council of Trent
would have allow'd Calvin's Institutions
as containing
[Page 51] a wholsome
and Godly Doctrine,
as that Men so perswaded would have allow'd it the Homily
against the Peril of Idolatry.’
14. For your Objection from
T. G'
s first Answer to Dr. Still.
Pref. pag. 9, 10.
T. G.
‘That several
eminent Divines of our
Church, do not allow that Book to contain in every part of it the
publick dogmatical Doctrine of the Church of England; and three of whose Names’ (from *
T. G. still) you adorn your Margin with. He answers,
Dr.
Still. ibid.
Be it so:
‘
Surely there is a great deal of difference, between some particular Passages and Expressions in these Homilies,
and that which is the main Design and Foundation of one of them. But in this case we are to observe, that they who deny the Church of Rome
to be guilty of Idolatry,
do not only look on the Charge as false,
but as of dangerous consequence,
and therefore altho Men may subscribe
to a Book
in general as containing wholsome
and Godly Doctrine,
tho they be not so certain of the Truth
of every Passage in it, yet they can never do it with a good Conscience, if they believe any great and considerable part of the Doctrine
therein contained to be false
and dangerous.’
15. Thus did this
Reverend Person confute your
Oracle: If you had offer'd any thing to prevent the
same Answer from being return'd to you, I should have been far from complaining against you for advancing of an
old Argument with
new Strength: But when you saw how unable
See Dr.
Still. Conferences against
T. G. p. 22, &c.
T. G. was to defend these
Cavils, nevertheless still to produce them; and tho you could not but be conscious to your self at the same time that they were not to be maintain'd; I shall only say, that it serves to convince me of the Truth of what an ancient
Greek Poet once observed, and the meaning of whose words you may enquire among the Learned at your leisure;
[...].
16. Ad pag. 3.]
Reply. Your next
Paragraph consists of a Story of Q.
Elizabeth, and that too
eccho'd form
T. G's Inspiration:
T. G's Dialogues against Dr.
Still. p. 17. But to this I have already return'd my Answer, and when you shall think fit to speak out what you mean by it, you shall not fail of a farther
Consideration from me, if I be not prevented by your receiving it from a more
proper hand.
17. And thus have we done with what concerns the
general Cause, in this
Introduction; and the
Sum of all is this; That
[Page 52] of four
Paragraphs of which it consists; the
first is
Calumny; the
second false (and I am reasonably perswaded
known by you to be so): the
third impertinent, and long since answered (as was also the foregoing) by the Reverend Dr.
St. the
last seditious: I go on to the following part of this
first Article, to examine what relates to
my self in it.
18. Where first you except against my quoting your
particular Authors to find out your
Churches meaning, and call it
Calumny, tho what Calumny it is to say that those Authors, whom you cannot deny but that I truly cite, have expounded your
Churches Sense otherwise than
you and
some others do, I cannot imagine: But however you tell us;
Ad p. 3, 4.
Reply.]
‘
That you have nothing to do with the Doctrine of the Schools: That I must take your Doctrine from your Councils;
the publick, authentick,
and universally recieved Definitions
and Decisions
of the Church.’
Answ.] And in this you still follow your old
Guide
T. G.
Dial. against Dr. Still.
p. 56, 57.
T. G. But I have
First Part Preface. already shewn you the
weakness of this
Pretence; and for your next supposal that even those
Authors do not say what I affirm they do, if your
Proofs are as convincing as your
Assertion is confident, I have already promised you all you can desire,
‘
That I will not fail to confess that you deserve not so ill a Character
as I thought.’
Repl. p. 4.
Ad pag. 4.]
Reply. Your next
Paragraph charges me with
‘
UNSINCERITY in
stating the
Question betwixt
Catholicks (as you call them) and
Protestants, for that I
represented you as allowing us to hold
the ancient and undoubted Foundation of the Christian Faith.’
Answ.] And is it not the
ancient and
undoubted Foundation of the Christian Faith which we hold, and which has been deliver'd down to us in those very
Creeds which your selves
profess, and into the
Faith of which you still
baptize your
Children? Nay, do not you your self confess this to be
true in the very place where you
cavil against me for this Assertion
Vindic. Art. 1.
p. 24.
Vindic. p. 24. where you grant, that what we hold is
the ancient and undoubted Foundation, and only deny that it is
[Page 53]
intirely so? And again, in this very
Reply in which you repeat your Accusation;
Reply, Art. 1.
pag. 4.
P. 4.
‘
I told him (say you)
that we do not allow that Proposition, ESPECIALLY IF HE MEAN all Fundamentals.’ So that then the
Unsincerity lies not in my saying that what we hold is
fundamental; for this you tell me
(Vindicat. p. 24.)
NO BODY EVER DENY'D, but for pretending that you allow'd that we held
ALL which you esteem'd to be
fundamental. Now for this I must observe,
1st, That you dare not say
positively that I affirm'd any such thing,
Reply; See before.
‘
I told him (say you)
that we do not allow that Proposition, IF he mean ALL Fundamentals.’ So that you positively charge me with
Unsincerity for pretending that you granted what you do not, upon
supposition that I
MEANT any such thing.
2dly, That to make something of this charge, you are forced to go back from your own Concession: For whereas in your
Vindication you had said plainly, that tho you do not allow us
Vindic. p. 24. to hold
all Fundamentals, yet
no body ever deny'd that we held
some of them; here you clap in an
Insinuation even against this too:
‘
I told him that we do not allow. that they hold the ancient
Reply p. 3. and undoubted Foundation;
ESPECIALLY, if he meant ALL Fundamentals.’ So that tho you do deny it
ESPECIALLY if we mean
ALL Fundamentals, yet you do not altogether allow even that what we hold is
fundamental.
But,
3dly, Where at last do you find that I ever said, that you granted that we held
ALL which
you esteem to be
fundamental? In my
Exposition, I tell you, in the very next words to those you
cavil at, that this was the thing to be put upon the issue;
‘Whether those
Articles which you had added to this
ancient and
undoubted Foundation as Superstructures to it,
Expos. C. E. p. 5.
were not so far from being NECESSARY Articles of Religion, as YOU PRETEND, that they indeed overthrow that Faith
which is on both sides allow'd to be Divine.’ And when in your
Vindication you first made this
little Exception; I again repeated it in these very words, which you take no notice of in your
Reply:
‘
But the Vindicator, jealous for the
Defen. of the Expos.
p. 5.
Authority of his Church,
and to have whatsoever she proposes pass for fundamental, confesses that we do indeed hold a PART, but not ALL those Articles
that are fundamental. THIS therefore
[Page 54] must be put upon the issue.—’So that whereas you accuse me of perverting the
Bishop of Meaux's Sense, it is indeed you that have (I fear wilfully)
perverted mine. What I said, both of you acknowledg,
viz. that what we hold is the
ancient and undoubted Truth; and you cannot deny the
State of the
Question to be just as I have said,
‘
Whether what you farther advance, and what we reject, be not so far from being Fundamental Truth,
that it is indeed no Truth at all,
but rather contrary to, and destructive of that Truth
which is on both sides allow'd to be Divine?’
20. Ad p. 5.]
Reply. But you go yet farther in this
Point against me; and accuse me in the next place
‘
of perverting your own Sense too, by saying that you confess
that those Articles
which you hold, and we contradict, do by evident and undoubted Consequence destroy those Truths
that are on both sides agreed
to be fundamental. And you
wonder with what Spectacles
I read this.’
Answ.] The Spectacles I use are p'ain Honesty and plain Reason; if you have better, I envy you not. In stating the
Question between us, I said
Expos. C. E. p. 5.
Def. p. 5.
‘
the thing to be put upon the issue
was, Whether those Additions
which the Church of
Rome has made to the ancient
and undoubted faith,
were not so far from being Fundamental Truths,
that they do, even by your own Confession,
overthrow those Truths
that are on both sides allow'd to be Fundamental?’ This you deny you ever said, and yet in the very next word
[...] you confess the
contrary:
Reply p. 5.
Vindicat. p. 23.
‘
'Tis true (say you)
I tell him, that were the Doctrines
and Practices
which HE ALLEDGES the plain and confess'd Doctrines
and Practices
of the Church
of Rome,
he would have reason to say that they contradict our Principles:
But I tell him also that we renounce these Doctrines
and Practices.’ But this is not now the
Question, whether you renounce these
Doctrines and
Practices or no: Did not you
confess that those
Doctrines which I charge you with do
overthrow the
Truths that are on both sides allow'd to be
Divine? This you
cannot, nay you
do not deny: And this was what I asserted, and for which you most injuriously accuse me of
perverting your Sense. As to your
denial of these things, that I have already shewe to be a
groundless Pretence, and shall
[Page 55] yet farther prove you to be as guilty of prevaricating in your
Evasion, as it is evident you have been in your
accusing of me.
21.
Ibid.] For the
Parallel you add between our charging you as guilty of
Idolatry upon the account of your
Worship, and the
Fanatick's Clamours against us for
our Ceremonies, and against the Justice of which you think we have little to say, it still more confirms me that the ancient
Poet I before mention'd was a
wise Man: For after so full a
Confutation as has been given to this
Parallel by
Answer to the Amicable Accommodation—
The View of the whole Controversy,
&c. two several Hands, for you to presume still to say, that we have little to reply to it; this would certainly have made any other
Creature in the
World blush, but a Man that has taken his leave of
Modesty.
22.
Ad pag. 6.] For your last little
Reflection, which you have dubb'd with the
Title
‘of
Protestant Charity and
Moderation;’ I shall only tell you, that to charge you with
adoring Men and
Women, Crosses, Images and
Relicks, is no more a breach of
Charity, than it would be to charge a Man with
Murder or
Theft whom I actually saw
killing his Neighbour, or
stealing away his Goods. If you are indeed
guilty of doing this, 'tis
Charity to admonish those of their danger, whom you might otherwise ensnare by your
confident denying of it. But the
truth is, it is the Justice of this
Reflection that so much troubles you: and you could be well enough content we should
accuse you of doing this, if you could but find out any means to prevent our
proving of it.
The
ANSWER to the
SECOND ARTICLE.
That Religious Worship terminates ultimately in God alone.
1.
AD p. 6.]
Reply.
‘In the beginning of this
Article you seem a little concern'd that I took no more notice of what you had said in your
Vindication, concerning your
Distinctions of
Religious Worship: You pretend that I did not do it, because if I had,
all my Quotations
[Page 56] out of your Liturgies would have signified just nothing; neither could I have made so plausible an Excuse for my Calumnies
and Falsifications: And you
conjure me not to obstruct the Hopes
of a Christian Unity
by a future Misapplication
of these Terms.’
2.
Answ.] It is perhaps none of the least Instances of that
Perplexity, into which
Sin and
Error commonly lead those who have been involved in them, to consider what a multiplicity of obscure and barbarous
Terms the Iniquity of these latter
Ages has invented to confound those things, which are otherwise in themselves of the greatest
Clearness and
Evidence. Whilst Men kept to that
Primitive Rule of the
Gospel,
Mat. iv. 10.
‘
Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him ONLY shalt thou serve;’ the
Law was simple and easie, and there was no need of any
Distinctions, either to excuse or to condemn the
Worship of any other besides him. The
Command was so plain, that the
Devil himself had nothing to say to it: As for the
Sophistry we are now to encounter, (and by which you would have been able to have taken that
offer which our
Saviour refused, and yet have salved your
Conscience of any breach of the
Precept too) he was either yet to
learn it, or else it appeared to him so thin and contemptible, that however he has since inspired others with it, yet he was
ashamed himself to
insist upon it. But however, seeing Mens words are their own, and let them express their Conceptions after what manner they please, it is enough for us that we understand their meaning; I shall content my self to draw up a short
Summary of what you here offer, and which indeed is all that your Party has to insist upon on this occasion, and we shall hereafter see when you come to the Application of these
Distinctions, whether there be any thing in them to excuse you of that
Guilt we here charge you with.
3. But before I enter upon this Enquiry, I cannot but observe the Change you make in the
Title of this
Article. Hitherto we have had it in these words,
Monsieur
de M. Expos. Art. 3. Vindic. Art. 2.
‘
Religious Worship is terminated
only in God: Now you add another
Restriction,
Reply, Art. 2. That
Religious Worship terminates ultimately
in God alone:’ By which you would seem to imply, that
Religious Worship may
terminate upon the
Objects to which you pay it, as
Saints or
[Page 57]
Angels; (and wherein you certainly depart from your
own and the Bishop of
Meaux's former
Principle) but that
ultimately it must
end in
God alone. But the truth is, (
Answer to Papists Protesting,
p. 29, &c.
Sect. III. what you have been already told) all Worship do's properly
terminate in the
Object to which it is given. You may
honour a
Saint for
God's
Sake, and it is an
honour to
God by
accident so to do: but when all is done, still the
proper Honour that is given to the
Saint terminates in him, and do's not pass to any other. And this you must confess, unless you will spoil all your own
Distinctions. For whatever the
Honour be that you give to the Saints, either it must
finally terminate in them, and then your new
Addition is useless; or if it pass on to
God, you must either dishonour
God if you give him such an
inferior Honour as you do the
Saints, and which is altogether unsuitable to his infinite
Nature and
Majesty; or if you give the
Saints the
same Honour you do
God, then you raise them up into a state above the condition of
meer Creatures, and so yet more
dishonour God, by setting up
Competitors with him in his
Service. So that then your new modelling of this
Position will stand you in no stead: and you must after all say, either that
no Religious Honour must be given to any other but God, (as our Saviour has declared, and as we affirm) if you do truly believe that
all Religious Honour ought to terminate in Him alone; or you must confess, that
Religious Worship may be terminated, and that
ultimately, upon the
Creature; which indeed your
Practice shews you do believe, and for which we justly accuse you of
Idolatry.
4. But we will examine your own
Scheme, that so we may the better understand your Pretences. And,
Ad Pag. 7, 8.] Reply.
1st, As to the
words (you say)
‘That
Honour, and
Worship, and
Adoration, may admit of
different Senses, and according to them be
differently applied. There is a
Divine Worship proper to God, and there is a
Civil Worship that is
paid to Men; and a
Dulia, or
inferior sort of Religious Worship, that you give to
Saints Angels, and
Holy Things. 2dly, That as to the
outward Actions of the Body, whether
Bowing, Kneeling, &c. there may be a
difference in these two; they being not so
appropriated to God, but that they may be paid to the
Creature also. That therefore,
3dly, both
[Page 58] the
Actions and
Expressions are to be distinguish'd, according to the
Excellency of the Object on which they are terminated. If the
Excellency be
natural, or
naturally acquired; then the
Honour that is paid is
Civil or Humane. If it be
Supernatural, then the
Honour is
Religious. And this
Religious Honour is either a
Sovereign Honour proper to God alone, call'd
Latria; Or it is
Inferior, and of which there are
several degrees according to the several measures in which God bestows his supernatural Gifts upon his Servants; and is that you call
Dulia. And this
inferior religious Honour may be paid, not only to
rational Natures, but sometimes also to
inanimate Things.’
5.
Answ.] This I think is the
sum of what you desire me to take
notice of; and I will now return you a few
general Reflections upon it. And,
1st, Though we are contented to take all these hard
words in your
own Sense, yet I must observe to prevent any
misapplication of them to the Passages of either
Holy Scripture, or
Primitive Antiquity, before St.
Austin's Time. That for what concerns the
Hebrew Phrases of the
Old Testament, by which this
Worship is express'd, they are all of them promiscuous, and indifferently used with reference both to
God and the
Creatures. But now with the
Greek Phrases in the
New Testament it is otherwise. One of them indeed,
viz. that from whence you derive your term
Dulia, is ambiguous; but for the other two,
[...] &
Mat. 18. 26.
[...], the
former is never
at all, the
latter never but
once, and that too in a
parabolical sentence, applied to any other
Worship than that of
God only; not to any
Humane or
Civil respect.
2dly, As to the distinction you make between
Civil and
Religious Honour properly so called, we readily embrace it: and we do confess, that the difference must be taken from the
diversity of
excellency in the
Objects on
which they are terminated.
Reply,
p. 7. From which we infer, that there must be therefore the same
proportion between
Civil and
Religious Worship, as there is between
God and
Men. Seeing then there can be no
Analogy between these two, neither can there be any between the
Worship that is paid to the
One, and to the
Other. By consequence, that
properly speaking, there can be no other
Honour attributed to a
[Page 59]
Creature but what is
Civil, and which must be
diversified, according to the
different Excellencies of those to whom it is given. And this you your self allow in your
Vindication, [p. 28, 29.] where you declare that this
Honour is but an
extrinsecal Denomination from the Cause and Motive, not from the Nature of the Act; and that you do
renounce any other sort of Religious Worship
which is so from the Nature of the Act,
and by consequence only due to God. And here again in your
Reply you found the
Appellation of
Religious Honour with reference to the
Saints,
‘either upon the
Motive of it, which is
religious; or,
Ibid.
p. 8. because it
ultimately refers to God, for whose
sake, and upon account of whose
Gifts we
honour them.’ Now taking this then to be not only your own
private Opinion, but the
Sense of
your Church; and that you may see, I desire to
close as far as possibly I can with your
Notions, I add,
3dly, That as to the
first of these,
‘
The Religious Motive;’ We are content in this respect to allow the
denomination of
Religious Worship to
others besides
God. Such is the
Honour we render to our
Parents, to
Civil Magistrates, &c. upon the account of
God's Command so to do. And thus the two terms of
Civil and
Religious are not
opposite, but
co-ordinate, and consistent with one another.
Secondly, For the
other Grounds on which you call this
Honour, Religious, namely upon the account of those
Supernatural Gifts or
Excellencies which God has bestow'd upon his
Creatures; We are ready to allow of this too. And thus we confess, that the
Honour which
we, as well as
you, pay to the
Saints, may be called
Religious; when we
bless God for their
Excellencies, and
pray to him for
Grace to
follow their Examples. We never denied but that
godly and
religious Men were to be reverenced, not only for their
other Qualities, but yet more especially for their
Sanctity and
Devotion. But then,
4thly, As for
Religious Honour properly so called, and as it respects not meerly the
Religious Motive, or the
Supernatural Gifts which
God has bestow'd upon his
Servants, but the very
Nature and
Quality of the
Act it self; such Acts by which we pay not only all that worship which may be due to the
Excellencies of a
pure Creature, but the proper
Exercises of
Religion, as
Prayer, Confession, and such like; and these with all the Circumstances of a
proper, religious Worship; in the
House of God, in the
[Page 60]
midst of his Solemn Service; it may be in the
same Breath and
Form in which we
address to the
Creator; this is that
religious Worship which we constantly affirm, and which you your self confess may not without impiety be given to any but
God only; and it is for this we charge you with that, which by your own acknowledgment none of your
Distinctions reach to, nor will therefore excuse you of,
viz. Idolatry.
5thly, As for the
outward Expressions of this
Honour by
bodily Actions, as
Bowing, Kneeling, Prostrating, &c. these we confess are
ambiguous, and must be determined by the
other Circumstances. But then we deny that they are to be interpreted
meerly according to the
intention of him that performs them. There is an
External Adoration, which no
Internal Act of the
Understanding or
Will can excuse, if it be applied to any besides
God. Such as is perform'd with those
Circumstances of a
Religious Worship before mention'd, as to
Time, Place, Words, and the like. In short, it is, we say,
Idolatry by any
External Act whatsoever, to shew that we do attribute
Religious Honour to any other but
God alone.
6thly, And for the rest, we do affirm, That there are some other kind of
External Actions so peculiarly
appropriate to
God, that they cannot without
Idolatry be attributed to any other. Such as,
1st, Sacrifice
Bp of
Meaux's Expos.
Sect. III. p. 4., by your own
Confession:
See this prosecuted at large in Dr.
Still. first Answer to
T. G. p. 190, to 283. to which I will,
2dly, add all those other things of the like kind which
God appropriated to himself under the
Law; as
Religious Adoration, Erection of Temples and
Altars, Burning of Incense in token of
Divine Worship, Solemn Invocation, and
Vows; in all which neither our
Saviour nor his
Apostles having made the least alteration, we ought certainly (as both the
Jews and
Primitive Christians most undoubtedly did) to esteem them still his own peculiar Prerogative.
Having thus establish'd in
General our Notion of
Religious Worship; let us see if any of these Distinctions will (as you pretend)
excuse you of that
imputation which has been laid upon you.
ANSWER TO THE THIRD ARTICLE, OF THE INVOCATION of SAINTS.
IN the beginning of this
Article I cannot but acknowledge
Reply, p. 10. a commendable Endeavour in you to clear the true
State of the
Question betwixt us: And tho I am not absolutely of your mind, nor do I see any Cause for your
Supposal that Mr.
P. 11.
Thorndyke spoke the
Sense of the
Church of England in every one of those
Particulars mention'd by you in Order thereunto, yet I will not enter into any
Controversie with you about them.
1. And first, Be it allow'd that the Words
Prayer, Invocation, Calling upon, Address, &c. are or may be
Equivocal; i. e. (as that Learned Man phrases it)
that we may make use of the same Expressions
in signifying our Requests
to God and to Man; tho yet for the two first of these,
viz. Prayer and
Invocation, they are seldom Applied to any Other than a
Religious Sense. This
T. G. long since observed, and you have now borrowed it from Him; and you may make what use of this Remark you please in managing of this
Controversie.
2. We do not deny but that we ought to
Honour the
Saints departed, as well as
Holy Men upon
Earth; Only we desire that that
Honour be such as becomes
them to
receive, and
us to
pay. We honour them when we
praise, and much more when we
follow their
Faith and
Patience. And because the
Reason and
End of this
Honour is
Religious, you may without being contradicted by me call the
Honour it self
Religious too; seeing
[Page 66] you explain your self to mean no more by it, than an
an External Denomination from the Cause and Motive, but not
Vind. p. 28, 29.
from the Nature of the Act its self.
3. Nor will I dispute with you, lastly, Whether the
Saints in Happiness do not in General pray for the
Church Militant: For 'tis to as little purpose to deny what cannot be disproved, as to affirm what one cannot prove. I have as great an Honour as any Man for Mr.
Thorndyke's Memory; but yet I cannot see the Proof even of this in those
Scriptures which (as you say) He
proves it by. Some
Fathers I know have said
Reply, P. 11. so; but their saying it is not to Me a sufficient Proof of a
Point of
Doctrine. When all is done, the
Congruity of the thing is the
best that can be brought for it. And if upon this account you are resolved to call them
Advocates or
Intercessors between God and us, you will I hope excuse me if I do
Ibid. not comply with you in it. That they are full of
Charity towards us who are Members of the same Body with them, I make not the least Question: But
how they
express it I do not certainly know, because many Particulars there are from whence such a Matter is to be concluded, which are all hidden from my Knowledge. One thing I know, That we have a
Mediator at the Right Hand of
God, who
knows all our Wants, which I see no reason to believe the greatest
Saint in Heaven does. I am likewise assured that his
Right to
intercede for us is founded upon the
Sacrifice of his
Death. And since the
Gospel gives this
Honour and
Prerogative to
Him ONLY, to appear in the Presence of God for us, I shall never whilst I live help forward an Ambiguity in those
Titles, of a
Mediator with God, or an
Advocate with the Father, or an
Intercessor in Heaven, by attributing of them to any
Saint whatsoever. These
Expressions so applied are
dangerous, and
scandalous; and 'tis but a frivolous Pretence for the doing of it, that possibly the
Saints may do something for us in
Heaven, upon the account of which the
Titles of our
Redeemer may in
some sense be given to them.
2. As for the
State of the
Question which you next propose, you should know by this time that we are by no Means
Reply, p. 11. agreed that the only thing in dispute betwixt us is,
Whether it be lawful for us to Pray
to the Saints
that they would Pray for us? and,
Whether such kind of Addresses as these are of
[Page 67] such a Nature as to make Gods (for so you tell me I
very disrespectfully
Ibid. call them; tho I believe you will find 'tis your
Misrepresenter's Phrase, and not
Mine) of Men and Women. You do indeed with your
Guides T. G. and the Bishop of
Meaux tell us, that all the
Prayers of your
Church, be their Words never so repugnant, must yet be reduced to
this sense, PRAY FOR US: But you have often been told, that this is utterly disallow'd by us. However, to take off all occasion of
Cavil, as far as is possible, I will offer you the
State of the
Question in such Terms as you shall have no just cause to except against it;
viz.
‘
Whether it be Lawful to pray to the Saints,
after the manner
that is at this day prescribed
and practised
in the Church
of Rome?’
And I will so far comply with you, as to consider it in
both respects: 1. According to your own
Representation of it: 2. According to that which is indeed your
Practice, and fre
[...] ly acknowledged by the greatest Men of your
Church to be so.
I. POINT.
Whether it be
Lawful to
pray to the
Saints, to PRAY FOR US?
3. This is the least that can possibly be made of this Matter: And because I would bring the
Point to the fairest Issue that may be, as I have proposed the
Question according to
your own desire, so I will dispute it with you upon
your own Principles.
4. And
first; for what concerns the
Terms of the
Question, they are exactly taken from your own
Words: You tell us in your
Vindication, that all you say is,
‘
That it is
Vindic. p. 30. LAWFUL to
Pray to the Saints; and here in your
Reply, That the Difference between us is
Whether it be LAWFUL
Reply, p. 11. for us to
Pray to them?’ In which yet you seem to fall a little below even the Bishop of
Meaux Himself, who tells us,
‘
[Page 68]
That your Church
teaches that it is PROFITABLE
at least
Exposit. Sect. IV. p. 5.
to Pray
to them.’ But however such is our Security according to
Both of you, that neither
You nor
He care to say it is our
Duty so to do, or that we run any
Danger in the neglect of it. Whatever therefore be the Issue of this
Dispute, it is wholly your Concern to look to it; thus much we are Agreed in, That there is no
Sin in our
Omission. For where there is
no Law, there is
no Transgression.
5. But I will now presume to go farther: And since you dare not say that such an
Invocation is
Necessary, I will undertake to affirm, that neither is it
Profitable, nor indeed
Lawful, but utterly
forbidden. And for proof of this, I shall lay down no Other
Foundation than what you have your self establish'd;
viz. That
Religious Honour or
Worship may be taken in a double Sense:
‘First,
Strictly, and so is due
Only
See Vidicat. p. 27. to
God: Secondly, More
largely, and so may be paid to
Creatures.’ And what you mean by these
Terms, you thus more fully express:
‘That by
Religious Honour in this latter
Ibid. p. 28, 29.
sense, and as you apply it to the Saints, you understand only an
Honour so called by an
extrinsecal Denomination from the CAUSE and MOTIVE, but not from the NATURE of the ACT it self.’ That is such an
Honour as may be in it self
Civil, and is only CALLED
Religious because it is done for
God's sake, and in
Obedience to
God's Commands. But for a
strict and
proper Religious Worship, such as is in its
own Nature so, this you confess with us to be due to
God ONLY. From whence I conclude, That to give such a
Worship to any
Creature, must be to pay that
Service to the
Creature which is due only to the
Creator; and that is, in
Our Sense, to Commit
Idolatry.
6. And now from this
Principle which you have your self laid down, and which you think
‘
will be alone
sufficient to
Vindic. p. 28.
Answer all Objections
brought against your Doctrine;’ I take leave to inferr,
‘That if even such an
Invocation as you confess you pay to the
Saints, be
strictly a
Religious Honour, in the very
Nature of the
Act it self, and not barely by an
Extrinsecal Denomination from the
Cause and
Motive of it; it will then remain that you are guilty in this
Service of giving that
Worship to the
Saints which is
due only to God, and are by Consequence therein guilty of
Idolatry’ And this I shall shew,
-
[Page 69]I. From the very Nature of the Act it self.
- II. From the Circumstances of it.
I. That the very
Nature of the
Act it self of
Invocating the
Saints, does shew, that it is
strictly and
properly a
Religious Worship.
7. This is what I know Monsieur de
Meaux denies: He tells us,
‘That when you
pray to the
Saints, you do it in the
same
Expos. Artic. IV.
Spirit of
Charity, and according to the
same Order of
Brotherly Society, which moves us to
demand Assistance of our
Brethren living upon Earth.’ Thus he smooths
your Invocation of
Saints departed, to make it lie even with
our desires of one
anothers prayers. But did he in good earnest believe, that nothing but a
Spirit of
Charity, and the
Order of
Brotherly Society, is to be discerned in the
Act of calling upon
departed Saints to
pray for us? We have indeed that
Charity for
them, as to believe, that they have
Charity for
us: and though they are highly advanced above us, we yet take them to be our
Brethren. But is this all that is implied in the
Act of
calling upon them to pray for us? For my part, I cannot but believe, that Monsieur de
Meaux himself was sensible of a
vast difference in the
Case, as appears by his endeavouring to blind it afterwards. And I shall now offer some Reasons, that may perhaps
convince others, as they have fully
satisfied my self about it.
8. For 1. If the Nature of that
Act of
Invoking the
Saints in
Heaven, be the same with that of desiring my
Christian Brother to pray for me upon
Earth, then on the other hand this is also of the
same Nature with that. And by consequence, I may as well fall down upon my Knees here in
London, and desire my Christian Brother, who is now, it may be, in
Japan, or somewhere in the
East Indies, or perhaps on his
return homewards, to
pray for me, as do the like to S.
Peter or S.
Paul, who, for any thing I can tell, are at a vastly greater distance from me, than my
Friend upon
Earth is. But if there be something more than a
Spirit of Charity, or an acknowledgment of
Brotherhood, in
calling upon my
living friend, who is out of all
natural distance of
hearing, there is also something
[Page 70] more than this in
calling upon the
dead, who it may be are a thousand times farther from me, than the living can be from one another. Would not such an
Invocation of my
Friend, think you, suppose him to be more than a
Brother, or a
Man? Would not the
Nature of the
Act ascribe to him not only the praise of
Charity, but likewise the
power of
hearing and
knowing all that is said upon Earth, at any distance whatsoever? I grant, that if this were indeed no more than according to the Order of
Fraternal Society; neither would it be any more than so for you to call upon the
Saints deceased to pray for you. But if the
former would be more, when you have said all that you can, the latter must necessarily be so too: And you do thereby
Elevate the
Saints above the condition of Creatures. For whether you believe them to be
Omnipresent or not, the very
Act of
invoking them indifferently in
any place, and their being called upon in
several places at the same time, does imply their
Omnipresence, unless you could give us some other ground of certainty, that they hear you, besides this, that wherever
they are when they are
spoken to, and wherever
you are when
you speak to them, 'tis all one, they do as surely know what you say, as if they stood within the
common distance of hearing. Now that
Action, which in the very
Nature of it ascribes an
Immensity of
presence to the
Object, about which it is conversant, is
religious in the
very Nature of the
Act. And then I leave it to you to determine whether it be
Idolatrous or not, if it be paid to any thing that is not
God. But,
9.
Secondly, If you are not yet satisfied, I would desire to know, whether
prayer to
God, which you will not deny to be in its
own Nature a
religious Act, be not so upon this account as well as others, that 'tis an
Acknowledgment of his
Immense Presence. But how is it such an acknowledgment, otherwise than as we do in
all places, and at
all times call upon him. Since therefore you do in
all places, and at
all times call upon the
Saints as well as upon
God, I pray tell us why this
Invocation should not also be in its
own Nature religious Worship. If you allow this, then you have already pass'd sentence upon your self: If you do not, I should be glad you would find a little leisure to shew us the difference. This is an
Argument that has been often enough urged to be taken notice of; and if you shall still go on to say nothing to it, we shall conclude the reason to be, that indeed you have nothing to
object against it.
[Page 71] 10. And what I have now said of this
Invocation, upon the account of the
distance of the
Saints from us, that they are now out of the compass of all
Civil Commerce; and therefore to
pray to them must be properly a
Religious Worship, will be yet further confirm'd,
Thirdly, by another of your practises; in that your
Church allows not only
Vocal, but even
Mental Prayer to be made to them. Now this can be no
Act of
Civil Honour, seeing no
creature, such as Man (the
Object of all
Civil Honour) is, can be capable of searching the Heart, so as to find out the
secrets of it. For
God, even God only knows the secrets
1 Kings VIII. 31.
of all the Children of Men. And therefore to pray in our
minds to the
Saints, to offer up the
secret aspirations of our
Souls, in
Honour to any
Creature, this must be an
Act of
Religious Worship, and such therefore as by your own acknowledgment is
due to God only.
11. Now that you could not be ignorant of these things, and by consequence are the more
inexcusable in this your
Worship, appears from what Monsieur
de Meaux has told us;
viz.
‘That by addressing
Prayers to the
Saints, and honouring
Expos. Sect. IV. them
all the World over as
present, you do not attribute to them a certain kind of
Immensity, nor the
Knowledge of the
Secrets of the
Heart, which
God has reserved to Himself; seeing it is manifest, that to say a
Creature may have the Knowledge of these things by a Light communicated to Him by
God, is not to
elevate a Creature above his Condition.’ Thus he gives that to the
Saints in the
Close, which He deny'd in the
Beginning. They have not
a kind of Immensity, nor do they know the Secrets of our Hearts; No, by no means, for that is necessary to be said to save your selves from giving
Divine Honour to the
Saints: But for all that they have the
Knowledge of these things by a
Light communicated to them by God; and this is also necessary to be said, to save your
Invocation of them from being a
foolish and
absurd Devotion. And for the same reason he supposed before, that some Grounds,
‘which He would not examine, might be had to attribute to the
Saints some
certain Degree of Knowledge as to those things that are acted amongst us, as also of our
secret Thoughts.’ Thus he doubles, and treads with fear, like a Man that has lost his Way in a dark Night, and is afraid of a Ditch every Step he takes. To say that the
Saints know
[Page 72] All our
Wants and
Desires, and the
Secrets of our Hearts, is to give them
a certain kind of Immensity which He dares not say they have; and therefore those Words are slipt in, that
‘
some Grounds may be had to attribute to them a certain Degree
of Knowledge, as to these things.’ Now
a certain Degree of Knowledge, seems not to be
a certain kind of Immensity; and so you are for a while safe on that side. Well, but
a certain Degree of Knowledge as to these things, will not serve to make all the
Prayers of All Men, at
any time, and in
any place, to this or that
Saint, wise and
profitable Prayers. For a
certain Degree is but a
Degree; And to answer all that is, or that you would have to be done in this kind, nothing will serve but a
certain kind of Immensity. And therefore on the Other hand, a Creature
may have the Knowledge of these things, i. e. of ALL these things. So that now the
Prayers are
profitable again; but then what shall we do to keep off
Immensity from being
attributed to the
Creature? He has a Trick for that, and it is this;
viz. That this kind of
Immensity or Knowledge of
all Prayers that are or can be any where offer'd to them, is
communicated to them by God, and as long as
God has made them thus
immense, we may do so too.
12. And thus he represents the
Saints as
Dii facti, Made Gods, and that by the
Almighty himself; which being done with respect to
Omnipresence, may, whenever a wretched
Cause requires it, be done as well with respect to
Omnipotence, and all the other
Divine Perfections; and in one word leads to such
Consequences, as cannot but stir up the Indignation of all good Men. Nothing should be maintain'd in the Minds of
Christian People with more care than the
distinct Notion they ought to have of
God and his
Creatures. But your
Doctrine and
Practice in this kind does so confound these Apprehensions of the
One and the
Other, that they cannot tell what
Prerogative, as to the matter of
hearing Prayers, God has above his
Saints; since they hear all, as well as He.
Prayer to
God every where is that which principally supports in the Minds of Men the
apprehension of his being
every where present: And tho much of it is due to the
natural Impressions which
God has left of himself in our Souls, yet the
Reflexions we make upon it, are chiefly owing to the frequent
Addresses we make
every where, publickly and privately, to the
[Page 73]
Invisible Being, the
Lord of All, of whom we have some knowledge by
Nature, and more by
Christian Instruction. But when
Prayer is made to other
Invisible Beings as generally as to
God, how can it be otherwise, but that the
People should conceive them to be as
Omnipresent as
God himself is? Especially if it be considered, that when their
Educated and
Philosophical Men, come to vindicate their
Practice and
Doctrine from this imputation, they cannot so much as speak
sense about it, but with all their
Art, talk more meanly and confusedly than meer
Nature would instruct an Honest man to do. The difference between the
People and the
blind guides on the one side, and between the
Seers on the other, being only this, That the
Worship, and the
Notions of the
former go together, and are of a piece; but the latter, with as bad a
Worship, have better
Notions; and give that
Honour to the
Saints by their
Practice, which their
Notions (as they would have us think at least) deny to them. But for that reason they are the more to blame; and tho their
Idolatry be not so
gross as the Peoples, yet it is more
inexcusable.
13. And yet if we may judge of their thoughts by their words, some of the refined
Controvertists do not come much behind the
Common People in this stupidity. If they think otherwise than they say, they are to answer to
God for that too.
Cardinal Bellarmine, and
others, who had none of these
De Cultu
[...]. lib. iii. c. 9.
Expounding designs to carry on, speak out
freely, and tell us, that the
Saints are
Dii per participationem, God's by participation; and upon that account he justifies the Practice of the
Church of Rome, in
swearing by them, and
making Vows to them. Nor
Expos. §. IV. p. 7. indeed do I see how that differs very much from
Monsieur de Meaux's giving them the
Knowledge which the hearing of all Prayers requires, as by a
light communicated to them by God. For what is that but to say, that
God has (in effect) made them
partakers of his
Immensity? Nay, the
Representer (if we may conclude any thing from his arguing) seems plainly to yeild, that the
Saints have a
Natural Knowledge of our
Prayers:
‘
For (says
Part 1. §. ii. p. 3. he)
Abraham heard the Petition of Dives, who was yet at a greater distance from him (than the
Saints are from us),
even in Hell: and told him likewise the manner of his living whilst as yet on Earth. Nay, since 'tis generally allow'd, that the very Devils hear those desperate Wretches who call on them, why should we doubt that the Saints
want this priviledge?’
[Page 74] 14. No wonder therefore if
Bellarmine makes a greater difference between the
Prayers to the
Saints, and our
desires of good mens
Prayers upon
Earth, than Monsieur de
Meaux seems willing to acknowledge; and looks upon it to be a
Worship due to them, thus (in the words of your
Synod of
Trent) suppliantly to call upon them: For what can be more reasonable than
Conc. Trid. Sess.
ult. to esteem that
Prayer, the
Invocation of Suppliants, and the
Worship of Invocation, which is made with such deference of respect from the very
Nature of the Act, as is due to
God the
only Omnipresent Being? And what more
unreasonable and
foolish, than to call our
desires of each others
Prayers by such
Titles as these?
And hitherto have I shewn, that in the very
Act of praying to the Saints, without any regard had to the
form or substance of your
Petitions, or the
circumstances with which you call upon them, you give
proper, religious Worship to them, which you acknowledge it is unlawful for you to do. I proceed,
Secondly, to shew this yet more plainly,
II. From the
Circumstances of it.
15. And here to avoid, if it be possible, all your little
Cavils so usual upon this occasion, as in speaking to the former part of this
Argument, I have managed it so as not to concern my self with any of your
distinctions of
Supreme and
Inferiour
Reply, p. 7.
Religious Worship; so here I will not insist on those
Exteriour Actions of the
Body, which you tell me are
Equivocal, and of which
Monsieur de Meaux roundly affirms,
‘
That the Nature of
Expos. p. 8.
that Exteriour Honour
which you render to the Saints,
must be judged from the internal Sentiments
of the Mind.’ The
Circumstances I shall now insist upon are such, as are not liable to any of these Evasions; but will, if not silence a
Contentious Spirit, yet I am confident, satisfie any unprejudiced Christian, that the
Prayers which you make to the
Saints are
properly a
Religious Act, and not only called so by an
external denomination from the
Cause and
Motive of them.
16. For 1. What else can be gathered from those outward
Circumstances, of the
Place, Time and
Manner (to say nothing of the
Gestures of the
Body) with which you
call upon them? Do not all these speak plainly to us what the
Nature of this
[Page 75] Worship is? You
pray (for instance) to the
Saints in the
House of
God, it may be, in a
Temple which you have consecrated at once to the
Service of
God, and to the
Honour of the
Saint whom you
invoke. You accompany these
Prayers with
Incense smoking before their
Images; a
Circumstance which was once reckon'd as a peculiar instance of
External Religious Adoration; and which was therefore thought so appropriate an
Act of
Divine Worship among the
Primitive Christians, that they chose to die rather than to throw a little Incense into the fire upon the
Heathen Altars. You call at the same instant upon the
One and upon the
other, and too often place them in an equal rank with
one another.
‘Thus, if you
confess your
Missal. R. in ord. Miss. sins, you do it to
God Almighty, to the
B. Virgin, to St.
Michael the Archangel, to S.
John Baptist, to the Holy Apostles S.
Peter and S.
Paul, and in short, to
All the Saints: If you
commend a departing Soul, you bid him go out in the
Name
Rituale R. Ord. Comm. An. of
God the
Father Almighty, who created him; and of
Jesus Christ, Son of the
living God, who suffer'd for him; and in the
Name of the
Holy Ghost, who was poured out upon him; in the
Name of
Angels and
Archangels, of
Apostles, Evangelists, &c. If you
conjure a
Tempest, you call upon
God and
Ritual. Fr. de S
[...]les. p. 77. in sin. the
Holy Angels; you
adjure the
Evil Spirit, you
contradict him, by the
Vertue of our Lord
Jesus Christ, and the
Blessed Virgin Mary. In the
Offices of the
Church, your Addresses to
God, and the
Blessed Virgin, are so inter-woven with each other, that there is no alteration but only in the
manner of the
Expression, and very often not in that neither: As when you
pray (for instance) That the
Virgin Mary and
Her Son
Offic. B. V. pag. 84. would
Bless you.’ In the
Doxologies of your greatest Men at the End of their Works, nothing more frequent than to see
‘
Glory and
Praise return'd to
God and the
Blessed Virgin;’ and in your ordinary Conversation no exclamation more frequent than that of
Jesu-Maria. Even your solemn
Excommunications
Pontific. R. Ord. Excom. & Absolv. p. 196, 197. and
Absolutions are made in the
Name and
Authority of the
Holy Trinity, the
Blessed Virgin, and all the
Saints; and the
Passion of Christ joyn'd in equal rank with the
Merits of the
Virgin Mary for the
remission of their sins. By all which it undoubtedly appears, that either your
Invocation of
God himself is not
properly a
Religious
[...]t; or if that be
strictly a
Religious Worship, the other will be so also.
[Page 76] 17.
Secondly, Another
Circumstance which plainly shews your
Invocation of Saints to be in the very
Nature of the
Act a
Religious Service, is, that you offer not only your
Prayers, but your very
Sacrifice too to their
Honour and
Veneration: And this I am sure you will not deny to be truly a
Religious Act. Thus in the
Missal of
Salisbury.
‘
Accept, O Holy Trinity,
this Oblation,
which I, unworthy sinner, offer in Honour
of thee,
and of the Blessed Virgin
In Ord. Missae. fol. 146. Mary,
and of All Saints.’
And in the Common
Roman Missal,
‘
Accept, O Holy Trinity,
this Oblation
which we offer to thee in memory of the Passion. Resurrection,
and Ascension
Ord. Miss. p. 311. Paris. 1616.
of our Lord Jesus Christ,
and in Honour
of the ever Blessed Virgin Mary,
and of the Blessed John the Baptist;
and of the Holy Apostles Peter
and Paul.’
And in the
Post-Communio of the
Mass of the B.
Virgin.
‘
Having received, O Lord,
the defence of our salvation,
Rituale Fr. de Sales. par. post. p. 19. Lyon. 1632.
grant, we beseech thee, that we may every where be defended
by the Patronage
of the Blessed Virgin,
for whose Veneration
we have offer'd
this to thy Majesty.’
Now, not to enter on an Enquiry, how far these
Expressions will in some measure apply the very
Sacrifice it self to those
Saints; it being hardly intelligible otherwise what
Honour can be done to the
Saints, by a Sacrifice offer'd solely to God; it cannot be doubted, but that this being confessedly a
proper Religious Act, whatever
Honour is hereby done the
Saints, must be
strictly and
properly a
Religious Honour; not meerly in
denomination, but in the very Nature of the thing it self. And I desire Monsieur de
Meaux to tell us, whether this too
be done with the same Spirit of Charity,
and in the same Order of Brotherly Society
with which we intreat our Brethren upon Earth to pray for us. And what would be thought of him, that out of
kindness or
respect to his
fellow Christian, should offer up the
Son of God for his
Honour, or (as the last
Prayer has it) in his
Veneration.
[Page 77] I do not pretend that this is properly an
Act of
Prayer to
Saints; and therefore I propose it only as a
Circumstance from whence to conclude what the true
Nature of your
Invocation of them is. For if it appear, that the other parts of that
Worship you pay to the
Saints, are
properly Religious Acts, it will not be doubted but that your
praying to them is certainly so too. And tho you have restrain'd the
terms of our
Question to this one particular
Instance, of
calling upon them, yet it suffices me in general to conclude against you, that you do give proper
Religious Honour to others besides
God, if it appear, that any part of that
Worship you pay to the
Saints is such.
18. Nor is it by any means to be forgot here, that in almost every one of these
Masses you desire to be
accepted by the MERITS of that
Saint in whose
Honour or
Veneration the
Mass it self is
offer'd. I will give you an
instance or
two of this.
Regard, we most humbly beseech thee, O Lord, these things
Missale in usum Sarum. Fest. Januarii. fol. x.
which we offer to thee: and by the MERITS
of thy Blessed Bishop Julian,
deliver us from all sin.
Let the MERITS
of S. Bathildis
obtain, that these gifts
may be accepted by thee.
We load thy Table, O Lord, with mystical gifts,
in commemoration
Ibid. fol. xiii.
of S. Agatha
thy Virgin and Martyr; humbly beseeching thy Majesty, that by the help
of HER MERITS
we may be freed from all Contagions.
Thus (as I have heretofore observed) do you joyn the MERITS of
Christ, whom you suppose to be the
Offering, with the MERITS of your
Saints; and make a
Bathildis or a
Julian, joynt
Intercessors with the
Son of
God for your forgiveness. What is this but truly to ascribe to the
Creature the
Honour of the
Creator, and to
worship them with a
Religious Worship, in the utmost
propriety of the
Expression?
19. I shall add but one
Circumstance more, and that of another sort of
Service with which you sometimes accompany your
Prayers to the
Saints, and which I think will undeniably convince you, that you do give them the most
strict Acts of
[Page 78]
Religious Service; and that is,
Your making of Vows
to them. That this is a
proper Act of Religion, both the
Holy Scripture
Numb. XXX. Deutr. XXIII. evidently shews, and the
reason of the thing it self declares; A
Vow being in its own
Nature nothing else than a
Promise made to God; and such by which he is acknowledged to be the
Searcher of the Heart, and the just
Avenger of all
perfidious Promisers, as he is the bountiful
Rewarder of those who are faithful in his
Service. And your own
Authors unanimously acknowledge
Aquinas 22ae. Qu. 88. A. 5. it to be an
Act, not only of
Proper, but of
Supreme Religious Worship.
20. And yet even this too is paid by you to the
Saints: and I desire you to consider what you then did, when at the entry into your
Order (if you herein, as I suppose, agree with the manner of your Brethren the
Dominicans), you solemnly
Vid. Annot. Cajet. in
D. Th. Qu. 88. Ar. 5. p. 313. Lugd. 1562. vow'd to
‘
God, to the B.
Virgin, to S.
Benedict, and to
All the
Saints, that you would be
obedient to your
Superiors.’ Now this I the rather remark, because the
Answer that is made by your Writers, to justifie this
Practice, plainly condemns you (not only in this
Point, but in that of your
Prayers too) upon your own
Principle, as
Idolaters. They acknowledge the
Act to be PROPERLY RELIGIOUS; That these
Vows are made after the very SAME MANNER to
God and the
Saints. And
Card. Cajetane anticipating
Ibid. this
Objection,
‘That to
Vow is an
Act of
Supreme Religious Worship; and how then may it be
given to the
Saints?’ Answers,
‘That it is an
Act of the
same kind to VOW and to PRAY; but (says he) We
pray to the
Saints in Order to
God, and therefore in the same manner we
Vow to them too.’ And the main Excuse which He makes for both, is the utter ruine of
yours and
Monsieur de Meaux's Pretences, viz.
‘
That the Saints are GODS BY PARTICIPATION.’ A Remark which
Card. Bellarmine
Bellarm. de Cult. SS. Lib. iii. c. 9. p. 2235. D. thought so considerable, that He from thence distinguishes between the
Promises that are made to
Men on
Earth, and to the
Saints in
Heaven; so that the former are
Only Promises, the latter are
Vows;
‘
Because a Vow
does not agree Otherwise to the Saints,
than as they are GODS BY PARTICIPATION.’
21. The Consequence of all is this plain
Conclusion, That if a
Vow be
strictly and
properly an
Act of
Religious Worship,
[Page 79] and not only call'd so by an extrinsecal Denomination from the Cause
and Motive
of it; and
Prayer (as
Card. Cajetane says) be an
Act of the
same kind with it; then are they both
Acts, by your own Acknowledgment, due
only to
God: And therefore it must be a Sin to give them to any Other; and being a Sin in a matter of
Religious Worship, whereby that
Honour is given to the
Creature which is due only to
God, it remains, according to our
Notion, that it must be
Idolatry.
22. And thus have I hitherto argued against that
Worship you pay to the
Saints, upon your own
Principle, and according to your own
Proposal: I shall only add, to close this
First Point, That whether these
Arguments shall be thought of force sufficient to convict you of what I am persuaded you are
guilty in this
Service, it is your
Concern alone to weight. If they are, I need not say any thing to
exaggerate your
Offence which you commit in this
Matter: If they are not, yet whilst we are neither defective in our
Veneration towards those
Blessed Souls, but pay them all that
Honour (as I have before shewn) of which they are now
Capable; whilst we transgress no
Command of
God in our
Omission of these
Superstitions; nor fail continually to
Address our selves to the
Throne of
Grace, through our
Great and
Only Mediator Jesus Christ; We are not only sure of his
Intercession, who we know is able both to
Hear and
Help us; but also in a most likely way of obtaining the
Charitable Assistances of those
Holy Souls too, who, if they have any
Knowledge of us, or
Concern for what passes Here below, will doubtless need no
Sollicitation to be kind to us; but without our Intreaty offer up their
Prayers to
God, for
all those who thus serve him in
Sincerity and
Truth.
23. But I must now go much farther, and bring my
Charge more closely against you, by shewing, secondly,
II. POINT.
What the
True Doctrine and
Practice of the
Church of
Rome is, as to the
Point of INVOCATION of SAINTS?
Now the
Sum of this
Point may I think best be reduced to these
Four Considerations, by which you endeavour in your
Reply to justifie your selves in this Particular.
For, I. As to the
Prayers themselves, you cannot deny but that in the natural
Sense of them they do imply a
proper and
formal Invocation of the
Saints to whom you Address: But then you tell us, That the
Churches Sense is much otherwise; and therefore that whatever their
Words may seem to imply, yet the
Intention of them all is
One and the
Same, viz.
PRAY FOR US.
II. That as to what We object concerning the MERITS of the
Saints, your concluding of All your
Prayers in this Form,
‘
Through Jesus Christ our Lord,’ plainly shews, that you mean no more by it than this,
‘That God
Reply, Art. iii. §. 18. p. 23. would vouchsafe to call to mind the glorious
Actions and
Sufferings of his
Saints, performed in and by
His Grace, and upon those Accounts accept your
Sacrifices, or hear your
Prayers.’
III. That for those Addresses you have the Warrant both of
Scripture and
Antiquity. Whereas,
IV. We have neither against them: Those Pretensions I offer'd in my
Defence being either
false or
deceitful; or at least not conclusive enough to engage you to lay aside a
Practice which has been so many
hundred Years in the Church, and that by our
own Confession.
This is the
Sum of what is said on this
Occasion, not only by your
self, but by the
generality of
your Party: And to this I shall answer with all the
Plainness and
Candour that I am able.
SECT. I.
Whether
all the
Prayers that are made to the
Saints by those of the
Church of Rome, are fairly to be reduced to this
One Sense, PRAY FOR US?
24. For thus it is that you
Expound your selves.
‘
That in what Terms
soever those Prayers
which you address
Reply, Art. iii. sect. 16. p. 22.
to the Saints
are Couch'd,
the Intention
of your Church
reduces them always to this Form, PRAY FOR US.
You charge me with VOLUNTARY fixing the Words of your Addresses,
which are Equivocal,
to a Univocal
Sense; and that Had I either as became a Christian
or a Scholar
taken notice of this Direction
laid down by the Bishop
of Condom,
both in his Book,
and in his Advertisement,
I should have saved my self the labour of Amassing such an Appendix
as I have made to this Article,
and the Reader
the trouble of perusing it to as little purpose. Since tho your Church
does indeed make her Addresses
to the Saints
for Protection
and Power against your Enemies;
for Help
and Assistance,
and the like; yet it does Appear manifestly to any one Who is not WILFUL
in his MISTAKES,
that all these are reduced to an Ora pro nobis;
it being a kind of Aid, Succour,
and Protection,
to recommend the Miserable to Him who alone can succour
them.’
25.
Answer.] Such then are your Pretences. To your
Reflections I have spoken Already; I come now to examine your
Reasons: And to convince
Others, if not
You, that I was not WILFUL in my MISTAKES as to the meaning of your
Prayers, but that you are a sort of
Miserable Shufflers, in your
pretended Expositions of them. For tell me now, I beseech you, by what Authority is it that your
New Guides
Answer to Dr.
St. p. 399, 406, 407.
T. G. and the Bishop of
Meaux undertake thus to detort the plain
Expressions of your
Addresses to a Signification utterly repugnant to the
natural Meaning of them?
Have any of your
[Page 82] General approved Councils
positively defined this to be all your
Full Answer, p. 6.
Design in them? And if they have not, are you not, according to your
own Language, in your accusing of me on this
Ibid. p. 7. Occasion, a
Falsifier, a
Calumniator, and a
Misrepresenter TOO? Does the
Council of Trent, where it decrees this
Service is to be paid to them, say that this shall be the
Universal, Ecclesiastical Sense of these
Devotions? Nay, does but so much as One single
Rubrick in all your
Offices give us the least Intimation of it?
26. It is, I know, pretended by
Monsieur de Meaux, That
Catechism. Conc. Trid. Part. IV. p. 345. Tit.
Quis Orandus sit? your
Catechism authorizes this
Exposition of them; where it
‘teaches the Difference there is between your
Praying to
God and to the
Saints. For that you
pray to
God either that He would give you Good things, or that He would deliver you from Evil, but to the
Saints, that they would
undertake your
Patronage, and
obtain for you those things you stand in need of. That from Hence arises two different
Forms of
Prayer; for that to
God you say properly
Have mercy upon us, or
Hear our Prayers; but to the
Saints, Pray for us.’
27. Such are that
Bishops Pretences, and it must be confessed they have something that is plausible in them; tho what will soon vanish when it comes to be examined to the Bottom. For be it allow'd, as He desires, that there are here proposed two
different Forms of
Prayer; for indeed we do not deny but that in General you may
pray with other Sentiments to
God, than to the
Saints; tho too often in your
Prayers themselves we find no great care taken to distinguish them: To
God, as to the
First and
Supreme Dispenser of All
Good; to the
Saints only as His
Ministers, and
inferiour Distributers of it.
‘But does this therefore reduce all the
Prayers you make to the
Saints, in whatever Terms they are conceived, to this
One Form, PRAY FOR US?’ Judge, I beseech you, by those Words which immediately follow in the
Catechism, but were not for the turn of an
Expounder, and therefore His
Lordship thought good to omit them:
‘Altho it be Lawful,
Catechism. ibid. IN ANOTHER MANNER, to ask of the
Saints themselves that THEY WOULD HAVE MERCY UPON US, for they are very
Merciful.’
28. If this be ANOTHER MANNER from the foregoing then I am sure
all the
Prayers of your
Church are not
[Page 83] to be reduced to that
One Form, Pray for us. But what is this
Other Manner?
‘We may
pray (says the
Catechism) that
Ibid. being moved at the Misery of our
Condition, they would
Help us with their FAVOUR and DEPRECATION with
God.’ So that Here then is somewhat more, at least in the opinion of your
own Catechism, than a
meer praying for us; Here is Encouragement to ask not only their
Prayers, but also their
Favour and
Interest too. But indeed the
Catechism goes yet farther: For giving a Reason
why Angels
are to be invocated,
‘They are (says the
Catechism) to be
prayed to,
Pars iii. de Cultu & Invocatione SS. n. 19, 20. p. 255. because they both continually look upon
God, and most willingly undertake the
Patronage of our
Salvation which IS COMMITTED to them:’ And from thence in the next
Section it infers the like Necessity of
Honouring the
Saints.
29. This is plain dealing, and gives us an
Authentick Exposition of that Passage in the
Council of
Trent, whose
Sense you no less pervert than that of your
Liturgies; viz.
‘That for
Concil. Trid. Sess. xxv. de Invocat. &c. p. 292. Obtaining the Benefits of
God by his
Son Jesus Christ, you should betake your selves to their (the
Saints) Prayers, Aid, and
Assistance: And to this End, that you should not barely
invoke them, but
invoke them in a suppliant
manner; as those who
reign now
with Christ.’ A
Circumstance this which was not put in by Chance, but was thought so considerable as to be mention'd in Pope
Pius's
Profession of Faith, where nothing superfluous was to be admitted; and where you declare,
‘That you
firmly believe that the
Saints who REIGN
together with Christ, are to be
Venerated and
Invoked.’ Insomuch that (as I have before observed) your great Cardinals,
Cajetane and
Bellarmine, doubt not to call them
‘
Gods by Participation; and to deliver it as the
Catholick Doctrine’ (and we know how conformable the
Catholick Practice is to it amongst you)
‘That the
Saints are
set over us, and
take
Bellarm. de SS. beat. L. I. c. 18, 20.
care of us, and that the
Faithful here on Earth are RULED and GOVERN'D by
them.’ By all which it appears with what Sincerity you pretend that all your
Church teaches is only to
pray to to the
Saints
‘in the
same Spirit of
Charity,
Bishop of Meaux's Expos. Sect. IV. and according to the
same Order of
Fraternal Society, with which you demand the Assistance of your
Brethren living upon
Earth.’ And how false it is, that you are taught to reduce
all the
Forms of your
Addresses to this
One Meaning,
[Page 84]
Pray for us; seeing you both
direct the
Faithful
‘to
recur to them for their
Prayers, Aid, and
Assistance;’ and suppose them
capable as
Reigning together with Christ, and
Gods by Participation, but especially as having the
Care of the Faithful committed to them, to Rule and Govern them, to lend you Other
Help and
Assistance besides that of their
Prayers, and (as I shall presently shew)
pray to them
accordingly so to do.
30. But
Secondly, We will examine this
Point a little further; for indeed the whole
Mystery of this
Service in the
Church of
Rome depends upon a right understanding of what
Notion they have of the
Saints above. And because I will do this without any suspicion of Falsity, I will deliver nothing but from
Card. Bellarmine's own Words. In his Book of the
Eternal Felicity of the Saints, among Other Reasons that
De aeternâ felicitate SS. lib. 1. cap. 4. he gives
‘why the
Place and
State of the
Blessed should be called the
Kingdom of Heaven, He has this for one, Because all the
Blessed in
Heaven are
Kings, and all the
Qualities of
Kings do most properly agree to them. The Just (says He) in the
Kingdom of their
Father, shall be themselves
Kings of the
Kingdom of Heaven; for they shall be
Partakers of his
Kingly Dignity, and of the
Power, and
Riches, and other
Goods that are in the
Kingdom of
Heaven.’ Which is, I suppose, a plain Paraphrase of what he elsewhere says,
‘That they are
Gods by
Participation, or Partakers of the
Dignity
See before. and
Power of God.’
31. Having thus established His
Foundation, He now goes on to the
practical Demonstration of it.
‘The
Goods (says He) of an Earthly Kingdom are usually reckon'd to be these
Lib. 1. cap. 5. p. 20. Colon. 16 26. Four,
Power, Honour, Riches, and
Pleasure. An
Earthly King has
Power to command His
Subjects; If they do not obey Him, He can punish them with Bonds, Imprisonment, Exile, Scourging, Death. Again;
Kings will be Honour'd with an
Honour almost above the Nature of Men; for they will be
adored upon the
Knee; nor will they vouchsafe oftentimes to hear those that speak to them, unless in this
bended posture, and with their
Face down to the
Ground.’ But yet (as He afterwards shews) this
Power is mix'd with
Infirmity; this
Honour oftentimes changed into
Disgrace. But with the
Saints above it is much otherwise:
‘For
their Power is
exceeding great, and without any mixture
Ibid. pag. 26.
[Page 85] of
Infirmity.’ This He illustrates with a
Story, which at once shews what their
Power is with reference to us, and How they are
pray'd to in the
Church of Rome upon presumption of it.
‘St.
Gregory (says he) relates in his
Book of
Dialogues, That
Lib. iii. cap. 36. a certain
Holy Man, being just ready to be slain by the
Hangman, whose Arm was stretch'd out, and Sword drawn for that purpose, cry'd out in that Instant,
Saint John hold him; and immediately his
Hand wither'd, that he could neither put it down again, nor so much as move it. S.
John therefore (continues the
Cardinal) from the highest
Heaven heard the
Voice of his
Client, and struck his
Executioner with this Infirmity so suddenly, as to hinder the Stroke already begun.
This is the
Power of those
Heavenly Kings, that neither the almost infinite
distance of
Place, nor the
Solitariness of a poor and unarm'd Righteous Man, nor the multitude of Armed Enemies, could prevent S.
John from delivering his SUPPLIANT from the Danger of Death.’
32. I shall not need to transcribe what He in the next place adds concerning the
Worship that upon this and other accounts is paid to the
Saints, beyond that of any
Earthly Monarch. But from what has been said, I conclude, That it is the
Opinion of those in the
Church of
Rome, that (as the
Council of Trent expresses it)
The Saints reign together with Christ; and, are
Gods by Participation; that is, are made
Partakers of the
Dignity and
Power of
God. 2. That therefore whatever Intercourse the
Faithful upon
Earth may have with them, it must be vastly different from what they have with their
Brethren here below, who are neither admitted to such a
Dignity, nor
Partakers of this
Power. 3. That since the
Saints are thus
Kings in
Heaven, when those of the
Roman Church address to them in a SUPPLIANT
manner, as their CLIENTS, for
Help and
Assistance, they do not do this in the
same Spirit of Charity, nor after the same Order of Fraternal
Expos. Mr. de Meaux, sect. IV.
Society with which they would desire the Prayers of their Fellow-Christians yet living. And, 4. That seeing the
Bless'd in
Heaven have
Power together with God of taking
Care of us, and bestowing
Blessings upon us; there is neither
Truth nor
Reason in that vain Pretence, That
all the Prayers that are made
Reply, p. 22.
[Page 86]
to them, must be reduced to this One form, PRAY FOR US; but that we ought indeed to understand them to
desire of the
Saints, what both their
Principles allow them to do, and their
Words declare that they do
desire; viz. THEIR HELP
and ASSISTANCE,
as reigning TOGETHER WITH
Christ.
33. But,
Thirdly, I have yet more to say in
Answer to this Evasion. It is well known how much those
Prayers you make to the
Saints, scandalized many of the most Eminent Men of your
Church. Wicelius doubted not to say of one of your
In Elencho Abusuum.
Hymns, that it was full of downright
Blasphemy, and horrible
Superstition; of others, that they were
wholly inexcusable. Ludovicus Vives profess'd, that he found little difference in the
Lud. Vives Comm. in S. August. de Civ. dei. lib. viii. cap. 27.
Peoples Opinion of their
Saints, in many things, from what the Heathens had of their
Gods: and that numbers in your
Church worshipp'd them no otherwise than
God. Now this the
Council of
Trent could not but know, and it then lay before them to redress it. If therefore those
Fathers had thought, that there was no
other form of
Invocation allowable to the
Saints, than (as you now pretend) to
Pray to them to
Pray for us, is it to be imagined, that at such a juncture as this they would have taken no care about a thing so justly
scandalous, not only to the
Protestants, whom they desired to reduce, but even to many of their own
Communion? How easie had it been for them to say,
‘That to satisfie the
complaints of these
Learned Men, and of their
Enemies; and to prevent any mistakes of the like kind for the future,
it seem'd good to the Holy Ghost and to them to declare, that in what
terms soever the
Prayers of their
Church were conceived, yet that the
Ecclesiastical sense of them was in all one and the same, viz.
Pray for us.’ But now instead of such a
declaration, and which such wise men in this case would never have omitted, they regard no
Complaints that were made against this
Service; but roundly decree an
Invocation to be
due to them, and establish it upon the
Old Foundation before-mention'd, and which had given rise to all these excesses,
viz. that the Saints REIGN TOGETHER WITH CHRIST; and were therefore in A SUPLIANT MANNER to
be call'd upon; and that for the obtaining benefits of
God, they were to fly, not only to their
Prayers, but also to their
Help
[Page 87] and
Assistance: And when according to their
Order for reciting the
Missals and
Breviaries, they were again set out, the
one Four, the
other Six years after the
Council was ended: the
Hymns and
Prayers were left still as we see, and not so much as the least
Note in a
Rubrick, for a right
Exposition of them.
34. Nay, I will go yet farther: There was not only no Care taken
then, but at
this day men are suffer'd to run, without Censure, into the
same Excesses. We know to what Extravagance
Card. Bona, Father
Crasset, and but the other day
Doctor J. C. our own Countryman, have gone; and no One of your
Church censures them for it.
Cassander immediately after the
Council, no less complain'd of these things than
Vives and
Wicelius before; and that too was disregarded. On the contrary, whilst the
Extravagances of these
Votaries are encouraged, the moderation of the others is censured by the highest
Authority of your
Church. The
Psalter of S.
Bonaventure goes abroad with permission, but the
Comments of
Lud. Vives are put in the
Expurgatory Index, and
George Cassander's Works
absolutely prohibited. If
Advices are given from the
Blessed Virgin
Crasset devotion veritable, pref. p. 2. to her
indiscreet Worshippers,
‘All the Servants of the
B. Virgin run to Arms to encounter him: The
Learned of
All Nations write against him, the
Holy See condemns him,
Spain banishes him out of all its Dominions, and forbids to
Read or
Print his Book, as
impious and
Erroneous.’ But if a
Crasset in his Zeal for the
Mother of God, runs into such
blasphemous Excesses as no pious Ears can hear, without indignation; If he rake together all that the
Folly and
Superstition of former
Ages has said or done the most excessively on this Subject, to make up a
Volumn scandalous to that
Church and
Society that endures him; not only the
Divines of his
Order approve it, but his Provincial
licenses it to be
Printed; the
King's Permission is obtain'd for
[...]; and the
Expounders themselves are so very good natur'd, that they cannot see any harm in it. And then let the World judge what your
true Doctrine, as to the
Invocation of Saints, must be. For,
35.
Fourthly, Had the
Council of Trent been of the same Opinion with
Monsieur de Meaux, I shall leave it to any reasonable man, that will but be at the pains to examine your
Offices, to say, whether there was not great need of some such
Advertisement
[Page 88] as I before said. As for example: In the
Office of the
Blessed Virgin you thus address to Her:
‘
We fly to your protection,
O Holy Mother of God; despise
not our Prayers
which we make to you
in our Necessities; but
Officium B. Virg. p. 84. Antw. 1631. deliver
us from all dangers, O Glorious and ever Blessed Virgin.—’And again,
‘
Vouchsafe that I may be worthy to praise thee, O Sacred Virgin: Give
me strength and power against thine Enemies.’
Ibid. p. 103.
Now that these
Prayers are conceived in as formal terms as any can be to
God himself, is not to be deny'd: I desire you therefore to tell me by what Rules of
Interpretation, by what
Publick and
Authentick Decree of your
Church, we are to
expound a
Prayer made to the
Blessed Virgin, that
She would give
strength and
power, into a desire that she would
pray to
God that
He would do this?
36. But however, let us for one moment
suppose this to be reasonable, and try whither such a
method of
interpreting will carry us. For instance, thus you
Ibid. p. 497.
Pray to the
Apostles.
‘
O ye just Judges and true Lights of the World, we pray unto you with the Requests of our Hearts, that ye would hear the Prayers of your Suppliants.’
That is to say,
‘We do desire you in a
friendly way,’ and only
after the Order of Brotherly Society, though in complement we call our selves indeed
your Suppliants, and intreat you to
hear our Prayers, that you would
Pray for us.
‘
Ye that by your Word shut
and open
Heaven, deliver us, we beseech you by your COMMAND from all our sins.’
That is, you who by your
Prayers to
God are able to incline him either to
shut or
open H
[...]aven, we intreat you, that by YOUR COMMAND, meaning only
your Prayers, you would
deliver us; that is to say, would
Pray to God, that
He would
deliver us—, from all our sins.
[Page 89]
‘
You to whose COMMAND the Health and Sickness of all men are submitted, Heal
us who are sick in cur Manners, and restore
us to vertue.’
That is to say, O ye Holy
Apostles, to whose
command, as far as
Prayers may be so called, the
Health and
Sickness of all is
subjected; forasmuch as your
Requests can prevail with
God to
submit it to you:
Heal us, i. e.
Pray to God that
He would Heal us, who are sick in our manners; and
Restore us; that is to say,
intreat God, that
He would
restore us to
Vertue.
37. Such, according to your Principles, is the
Paraphrase of this
Prayer. If this be a natural way of
Expounding, then be also your
Pretences allow'd of: But if to pray in such words as these, meaning no more than what I have express'd, be a downright mocking both of
God and his
Saints, then let the World judge what we are to think of your Interpretations.
38. But however, for once let us
allow even this too: What shall we do with those Prayers where
God and the
Saints are both join'd together in the same Request. As for instance,
Let Mary
and Her Son
bless us.
Officium B. Virg. pag. 105.
Here, I doubt, it will be something difficult to reduce them to what you call the
Churches Sense, PRAY FOR US, unless you pray to
God too as well as to the
Saints, to
pray (to whom I cannot imagine) for you.
39. I shall add but one Consideration more, from your
Service of the
Saints, to overthrow your
new Expositions; but that such as I shall be very glad to receive an
Honest Answer to. For be it that in defiance of all
Sense and
Reason, your
Prayers to the
Saints, in what
terms soever they be conceived, must all be
interpreted, as you pretend. Yet what shall we do in those
Cases where the very
Nature of the Service utterly refuses such kind of
Colours? As,
I. When in your
Vows, you vow'd (as I before observed),
[Page 90]
‘
To God,
and the Blessed Virgin,
and to St. Benedict,
and to all the Saints,
that you would be obedient
to your Superiours.’
II. When in your
Doxologies, you give
‘
Glory to God,
and the B. Virgin Mary,
and last of all to Jesus Christ. So
Greg. de Valencia.’
‘
Praise be to God, and the Virgin Mother Mary,
also to God Jesus Christ,
the Eternal Son of the Eternal Father, be Praise and Glory.’ So
Card. Bellarmine closes this very
Dispute of the
Worship of
Saints.
‘
Honour and Glory be to God,
and to the most Holy Virgin Mary,
and to all the Saints.’ So your
Collector of the
Lives of the
Saints.
Vers. Open my lips,
O Mother of JESUS.
Resp.
And my soul shall speak forth thy Praise.
Contemplat. pag. 23.
Vers. Divine Lady,
be intent to my aid.
Resp.
Graciously make haste to help me.
Vers. Glory be to JESUS and MARY.
Resp. As it WAS, IS, and
ever SHALL be.
So Dr.
J. C. Now what you will think of all this I cannot tell, but sure I am S.
Athanasius pronounces it to be downright
Idolatry, and what no good Christian would ever be
See below. guilty of.
III. When in your
Commendation of a departing
Soul, you bid him,
‘
Depart out of the World, in the Name of the
Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost; of
Angels and
Archangels, of
Patriarchs,
Rit. Rom. Ord. Comm. Anim.
Prophets, Apostles, and of
all Saints,’ as I have before at large recited it.
IV. When in the
Confession of your
sins, you
confess,
[Page 91]
‘
To God
Almighty, and the Blessed Virgin Mary,
to S. Michael,
Missale R. in Ord. Miss.
the Archangel, to S. John
Baptist, to the Holy Apostles Peter
and Paul,
and to all
the Saints.’
V. When in absolving your Penitents from them, you join,
‘
The Passion
of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the Merits
of
Rituale Rom. deSacr. Poenir.
the Blessed Virgin,
and of all the Saints;
together, for the remission of all his sins.’
VI. When in your
Conjurings against storms,
‘
You contradict the Evil Spirit by the Vertue
of our Lord
Rituale Fr. de Sales. p. 77. Jesus Christ,
and of the Blessed Virgin.’
VII. When in your
Excommunications, you shut men out of the Church,
‘
In the Authority of God Almighty,
the Father, Son, and
Pontific. Rom. Ord. Excom. & Absol.
Holy Ghost, and of the Blessed Apostles, Peter
and Paul,
and of all the Saints.’
VIII. When in
Absolving them from this Sentence, you
‘
Remit this bond, in the same Authority of God Almighty,
Ibid.
and of the Blessed Apostles, Peter
and Paul.’
Lastly, When in
consecrating of a
Church or
Altar, you
‘
Bid this stone be Sancti✚fied,
and Conse✚crated,
in the
Ibid. de Consecrat. Ecclesiae. p. 124.
Name of the Fa✚ther,
and of the S✚on,
and of the Holy ✚ Ghost;
and of the Glorious Virgin Mary,
and of all the Saints.’And again,
‘
Let this Church be Sanc✚tified,
and Con✚secrated,
in
Ibid. p. 127.
the Name of Fa✚ther,
and of the S✚on,
and of the Holy ✚ Ghost;
to the Honour of God,
and of the Glorious Virgin Mary,
and of all the Saints.’
[Page 92] Now in all these several instances, there is no room for any such
interpretation as you pretend in the Case of your
Prayers; but here either your hearts join in what your lips utter, and then it is plain you give as
Proper Divine Worship to the
Saints as you do to
God, which you confess to be
unlawful: Or if they do not, what is this but to speak
words of
Vanity in your most
Solemn Service, and in which you ought especially to take heed not to offend?
40. Thus do the very
Words of your
Liturgies utterly refuse such an
Exposition as you pretend to be your
only meaning in all your
Prayers to the
Saints. I will add yet one Consideration more, to shew the insincerity of it,
Fifthly, from the concurrent
Practice of the most eminent
Persons of your
Church, and whose
Authority you cannot with any justice except against.
41. Now of this the famous
Psalter of S.
Bonaventure, may alone serve for a sufficient Evidence; which as it has been publickly set forth, and
authorized amongst you, so I need not tell you, that the design of it was to apply all the Addresses that are made to
God in the
Psalms and
Hymns of the
Church; nay, and even the very
Creeds to the
Blessed Virgin.
Come unto Mary
all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and
Psalterium S. Bonavent. Psalm 2.
she shall refresh your Souls. Come unto Her in your temptations, and the Serenity of Her Countenance shall establish you.
When I called upon thee thou heardest me, O Lady,
and from thy high Throne didst vouchsafe to remember me. Blessed
Psal. iv.
art thou, O Lady,
for ever, and let thy Majesty
be exalted for evermore.
O Lady,
in thee do I put my trust, deliver my Soul from mine Enemies. O give thanks unto the Lord,
for he is good: O
Psal. vii.—cvii.
give thanks unto His Mother,
for her Mercy endureth for ever.
42. I might pass at this rate through all the other
Psalms, and to these add the
Te Deum, Benedicite, Athanasian Creed, &c. all
burlesqued to He
[...]
Honour: But there has been so many large
Speculum B. Virginis,
&c.
Collections of these already publish'd, that I shall subjoin only one Prayer at the close of all.
[Page 93]
‘
O my Holy Lady Mary!
I commend to thy
blessed Trust
and especial Custody,
and into the Bosom of thy Mercy,
this day and every day, and in the hour of my Death, both my Soul
and Body:
I commit all my Hope and Consolation, all my Troubles and my Miseries, my Life and the End of my Life, to thee; that by thy most Holy Intercession
and Merits
all my Works may be directed and disposed, according to THINE and THY SONS Will. Amen.’
43. I will not now insist upon this, that this
Book has been often
Printed among you with
Licence and
Commendation, and particularly my
Editions of it; the one
Italian and
Latin, Printed at
Genoa, 1606. with the
Licence of the Superiors, and submitted by the Translator
Giovan Battista Pinello to the
Censure of the
Church; the other at
Leige in the same Year, by
le Sage: But this last had the Honour of being particularly commended by the
Vicar of that
Church, and
Censor of
Permiss. Jo. Chapeaville. Leodii 17. Nov. 1606.
Books, as a Piece
‘that was profitable to be
Printed, and very piously and commendably to be recited by all Men in their private
Prayers, to the Honour of the B.
Virgin.’ The
Author of it is at this time a
Canonized Saint in your
Church, and is now in his turn
Worshipped by you. If therefore you approve these
Addresses (as I presume you must) be pleased to try, ('twill be a pretty
expounding Task) how you can reduce all these
Hymns and
Prayers to this One
Sense of your
Church,
‘PRAY FOR US.’ But if you disallow these
Addresses, as (what in truth they are)
Scandalous and
Idolatrous, what then shall we say if you pray to those as in Heaven now, who whilst they lived were guilty of such desperate Superstitions?
44. And now I am instancing in your
Saints, I cannot forbear presenting you with a Strain or two of your Pious, but very Superstitious and Indiscreet St.
Bernard: and this too to try your Faculty of
Expounding.
‘
To thee, O Holy Virgin Mary,
as to the Ark of God, as
Vid. in Psal. S. Bonav. Leodii, 1606. p. 238.
to the Cause of Things, as to the Business of Ages, do all look that are both in Heaven
and Hell;
both they that have gone before us, and we who now live, and they who shall hereafter be born.—All Generations shall call thee Blessed, O Mother of God!—
In thee the Angels
have found Joy, the Righteous
[Page 94]
Grace, and Sinners
Pardon for Ever. Worthily do the Eyes of the whole Creation look upon thee, because in thee, and by thee, and of thee the kind Hand of the Almighty
hath re-created whatever he had created. We embrace thy Footsteps, O Mary,
and with most devout Supplication we fall down before thy blessed Feet. We will hold thee, and not let thee go till thou shalt bless us. For thou art able, &c.’
45. But I insist too long upon these Matters; and therefore
Defence, Append. 2. Def. part 1. p. 89. in stead of multiplying new
Instances, shall refer you to those I have already offer'd: And from your
Saints descend to the
Heads of your
Church; One of which thus piously
Greg. VII. Baron. Ann. ad an. 1080. T. xi. p. 532. See Platina in his Life. call'd upon S.
Peter and S.
Paul at the Head of a
Synod, in
Excommunicating the
Emperour Henry IV.
Anno 1080. in these
Words.
‘
Blessed Peter,
Prince of the Apostles, and thou O Blessed Paul,
Doctor of the Gentiles; Vouchsafe, I beseech you, mercifully to incline your Ears unto me, and hear me.’ And then, after some Particulars too large to be transcribed, He thus goes on:
‘
Go to now I beseech you, O Fathers
and Holy Princes,
that all the World may know and understand, that as you
have in Heaven
the Power of Binding and Loosing, you have also on Earth
Power over Empires, Kingdoms, Principalities, &c.
For you
have often taken away Patriarchates, &c.
from the Wicked and Unworthy, and have given them to Religious Men. Let the Kings
and all the Princes
of the World now learn how great you are, and how much you can do, and fear to undervalue the Command
of your Church:
And execute Judgment on the aforesaid Henry
so suddenly, that all Men may know that he shall fall, not by Chance,
but by your Power.’
This is a blessed Prayer for a
Pope to make; and I doubt will be found to signifie somewhat more than to
pray to those
Saints to
pray for Him. If you think otherwise, let us see your
Paraphrase, and then we shall be able the better to judge of it. To conclude, Let any Man but read over the late Books of Father
Crasset, and Dr.
J. C. and then I will leave Him to believe if He can, that all you mean in your
Invocation
[Page 95] of
Saints, is only to desire them to
pray for you.
46. And this may suffice to your first Pretence, of the
Interpretation you would put upon
these Addresses. As for the Authority you would be thought to have from
Holy Scripture, for them, it is so very
trifling, as not to deserve a
Consideration. For who would not
laugh at that
Man that should seriously argue after this manner?
1. When the
Children of Israel were under Oppression,
Judges iii. 9. God raised up a
Deliverer or
Saviour for them, who delivered them: Therefore it is lawful to
pray to Saints as our
Saviours in
Heaven. Again,
2. St.
Stephen calls
Moses a
Ruler and a
Deliverer of the
Acts vii. 35. Galat. iii. 19. Children of
Israel; and St.
Paul a
Mediator, because at the delivery of the
Law God sent it by his Hands to them: Therefore we may now give the Titles of
Mediators and
Redeemers to the
Saints departed, with reference to our
Spiritual and
Eternal Concerns, tho they neither are, nor have been, either
Redeemers or
Mediators to us.
3. St.
Paul tells
Timothy, That if he discharged the part of
1 Tim. iv. 16. a faithful
Pastor, as He exhorted him to do, He should be a blessed
Instrument of Salvation both to
Himself and
Others: Therefore we may now pray to
Timothy as our
Saviour in Heaven.
47. Are not these, Sir, weighty
Arguments? And were you not resolved utterly to
confound us, when you alledged such Proof out of Holy
Scripture as this? But you have one Passage at least that will do our Work.
‘Grace
and Peace
are the proper Gifts
of God:
But this
Revel. i. 4. St. John
wishes to the Seven Churches
of Asia,
not only from God,
but also from the Seven Spirits
which are before the Throne: Therefore We may warrantably pray
to the Blessed Virgin,
Let the Virgin Mary
and Her Son
bless us.’
A notable Proof this, and almost as terrible as that which follows: The
Holy Scripture says of
Princes,
‘That they are
Gods; therefore we may
pray to the
Saints as
Gods too.’ But we will consider every part of it.
‘
Grace and Peace are the
[Page 96] proper Gifts of God.’ This is confess'd: What will you infer from thence?
‘
But these St. John
wishes not only from God,
but also from the Seven Spirits.’ I answer, 1. If your own
Gloss be good, those
Seven Spirits are set to signifie the
Gloss. Ord. in loc. Rhemists Test. p. 700.
Seven fold Gifts of the
Holy Ghost; and your own
Rhemists in their
Annotations (from whence I am apt to believe you borrow'd this Argument) confess it may be well understood so. But, 2. Not to deal too strictly with you; Let us allow these Seven
Spirits to signifie Created
Angels; What will be the Consequence? St.
John wisheth all
Grace and
Peace to the
Churches of
Asia from
God, by the
ministration of his Holy
Angels, whose Ministry He employs in dispensing His
Graces and
Blessings for the Preservation of His
Church: Therefore we may wish to the
Church now,
Grace and
Peace from
Christ and the
Blessed Virgin, who is neither
Angel nor
Ministring Spirit, nor that we know of any way employ'd by
God for the
Service of it. Nay, but this will not do yet: We must carry it yet further. St.
John wishes all
Peace and
Happiness from
God and his
Holy Angels to the
Church: Therefore We may not only
Wish the like from
God by their Ministration, but may solemnly
pray to
Saints and
Angels themselves, together with
God, for
Grace and
Peace. And if this be your way of Arguing from
Holy Scripture, 'tis well you have
Infallibility of your Side, for I am confident otherwise you would never persuade any Man, by way of
reasoning, to submit to your
Conclusions.
48. But the
Representer has yet a Passage to justifie the utmost Extravagance of former Times, and prove even that
Prayer, which
Bellarmine was fain to deny they ever used,
‘
Of the Virgins commanding
our Saviour by the Right which as a Mother she had over Him,’ to be most agreeable to Holy Writ. For does not the Scripture say of
Joshua, c. X. 14. That
‘
He spoke to the Sun,
and it stood still, the Lord OBEYING the Voice of a Man?’ This is an
Argument that must be carefully look'd to, or, like
Wit that depends upon a
turn of Expression, 'twill be utterly lost. And therefore in the
Vulgar Latin and
Doway Bibles, this is a good
Proof; but in our
own, 'tis none at all. For as we render it, it would be a most wild
Inference thus to conclude;
Joshua pray'd unto God that the
Sun might stand still; and God
hearkned unto his voice,
[Page 97] and
answered his Request: Therefore we may
pray to the Blessed
Virgin by
the Right of a Mother to command her Son.
But be it as he desires; God
obey'd the voice of
Joshua; i. e. as the
Chaldee Paraphrast has it,
He accepted his Prayer; as the
Doway Bible it self
expounds it,
‘
He condescended to work
Doway Bible in loc. p. 488.
so great a Miracle at the Instance of his Servant:’ How will it even thence follow, that we may desire the
Blessed Virgin to
command our Saviour by the
Right of a Mother over him? But such
Twigs as these must be laid
hold on, when Men are resolv'd to keep to their
Conclusion, tho at the same time they have not so much as the
shadow of a Proof to support it.
SECT. II.
After what manner it is that the
Church of
Rome
Reply, sect. xviii. p. 23, 24.
prays to
God through the
Merits of Her
Saints?
This is the next
Point to be considered by us; and thus you establish it.
49. Reply, p. 23.]
‘
You tell us, that the Word Merit
is Equivocal,
and misapplied by Me: That the Truth of your Doctrine is, I.
To reduce all your Prayers to this Form,
That God
would be pleased not to regard your Unworthiness,
but (the Merits
of our Redeemer
ever supposed) respect the Merits
of his Saints
also, and for their sakes
hear your Prayers,
and accept your Sacrifices. II.
That this is plainly shewn in your solemn concluding
of All your Addresses
in this manner, Through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Whereby it appears, that you mean no more, than to beg of God Almighty
that he would vouchsafe to call to mind the glorious Actions and Sufferings of his Saints, performed in and by his Grace, and upon these Accounts accept you. III.
And finally, That for this you have the Authority
of the Holy Scripture
it self.’
50.
Answ.] For Answer to which
Discourse, I must first desire you to come a little out of the
Clouds, and not play with us in ambiguous Terms, whilst you charge
Me with it. The word
Merit, you say, is
Equivocal; and the two Senses you
[Page 98] give it are, First, To signifie that We do by our own
Natural force alone deserve the Reward of
Grace and
Glory. And in which Sense if you pretend that we charge you with pleading your own
Merits, you do certainly most falsly accuse us. The
other Sense you give the word is, That our
Good Works may be said to
Merit, because they apply the
Merits of
Jesus Christ to us, and are the
Means by which we attain
Eternal Life, in vertue of the Promises of
God, and
Merits of our
Blessed Redeemer. In which were you sincere (for all the
impropriety of the Speech) yet we should not be far from agreeing with you. But now what is all this, to your
praying to God to hear you by the
Merits of the
Saints? This may do well in its
proper Article; but here it serves only to amuse the
Reader with that which is nothing to the purpose, that so he may be disposed to forget what you were to
prove. Jam dic Posthume
de tribus Capellis.
51. You tell us then, in the next
Paragraph, That you pray,
‘
that God
would not respect your own Unworthiness, but regard
Reply, p. 24.
the Merits
of his Saints,
and for their Sakes,
i. e. for their Merits,
Hear your Prayers, or accept your Sacrifices.’ But where then is the
Misrepresentation? For this is the very thing we charge you with,
viz. That not content to
Address your selves to
God, in the
Name and
through the Merits of our
ONLY Mediator Jesus Christ, you have sought out to your selves other
Intercessors, in whose
Name, and through whose
Merits to offer up both your
Prayers and
Sacrifices to
God. And whether we do not in this very justly accuse you, let your
Addresses themselves satisfie the
World.
O
Blessed John the Baptist,
reach out thy Hand to us, and be to us continually a Holy Intercessor,
to the Clemency of the most High Judge, that through THY MERITS we may DESERVE to be freed from all Tribulation.
O God!
by whose Grace we celebrate the Memories of thy Saints Saturninus
and Sisinnius,
Grant that by THEIR MERIT we may be helped, through our Lord.
Mercifully accept, O God,
our Offerings
which we have made unto thee, for the SAKE of the Passion of thy Blessed Martyrs Saturninus
and Sisinnius;
that by their Intercession
they may be made acceptable to thy Majesty.
[Page 99] And in the
Breviary of
Salisbury, we find this to be a part of the Constant
Service:
Be propitious we beseech thee, O Lord,
unto us thy Servants,
Breviarium in usum Sarum in Servit. B. Virg. par. 2.
through the glorious Merits
of thy Saints
whose Reliques
are contain'd in this Church;
that by their pious Intercession
we may be protected in all Adversities.
Grant we beseech thee, Almighty God,
that the Merits
of thy Saints
whose Reliques
are contain'd in this Church
may protect
us, &c.
It were infinite to recount all the other
Prayers which run in the same strain throughout all your
Offices, insomuch that the very
Missal. Rom. p. 367.
Canon of the
Mass is infected with it. I will mention only one
Instance more, which is indeed a
singular one; not so much because of the Expression of it, wherein the General word of
Merit is restrain'd to the particular
Merit of his Death, as because it was made to one who died in
Actual Rebellion against his Prince; and concerning whom therefore it was for some time debated amongst you, Whether he were
damn'd or
saved?
‘
BY the BLOOD of Thomas
(a Becket)
which he SHED
Mornay de la Messe, p. 826. Saumur, 1604.
for THEE, make us to ascend to Heaven
whither He is gone.’
52. It remains then, that you do recur to the
Saints not meerly for their
Prayers, but that by their
Merits and
Intercession they would obtain
Grace and
Pardon of
God for you. This is the Doctrine of your
Catechism:
‘
That the Saints
help
Catech. Trid. par. iij. p 256. de Invoc SS. n. 24. tit.
Sa
[...] cti suis Meritis nos adjuvant.
us by their own Merits, and are therefore the rather to be
worshipped and
invoked, because they both
pray continually for the Salvation of Men, and that
God bestows many Benefits upon us by their
Merit and
Favour.’ 'Tis from hence that the
Master of the
Sentences interprets your
praying for their
Intercession, to be the same thing as to
pray that by
their Merits they would help you. And
Aquinas,
‘
We pray to the
Aquin. 22dae. q. 83. art. 4. Saints (says he)
not to inform God
of our Petitions by them, but that by their PRAYERS and MERITS our Prayers
may become effectual. We may say to the Saints (says
Card. Bellarmine)
Bellarm. de Bear. SS. l. 1. c. 17. Save me,
or Give me This
or That;
provided we
[Page 100] understand, Give it me by thy Prayers
or Merits.’ So that in all this we say no more of you, than what both your
Doctrine and
Practice warrant us to do.
53. Let us see therefore how you excuse your selves in this Matter. You say,
‘That your
Concluding of all your
Prayers Through Jesus Christ our Lord, shews that you desire all at last by his
Merits.’ But indeed this is but a poor Shift; and as a very Learned Man has long since told you, that
Close
Dr. Jackson, Tom. 1. p. 941. comes in in your Addresses, much after the same manner that the mention of a certain
Sum of Money does in
Deeds of Trust, only
pro formâ: And you are never the less guilty, for this
Conclusion, of what we charge you with,
viz. That you join the
Merits and
Intercession of the
Saints, with the
Merits and
Intercession of
Christ for
Pardon and
Acceptance. And to the end that you may see what
sensless Petitions you hereby make to God in these
Addresses, I will only take one of your
Prayers in the
literal meaning of it, and apply it in a plain
Paraphrase
Idem. ib. to your
Pretensions, by way of
Petition to some Earthly Prince. Thus then you pray upon the Third of
May.
‘
Grant we beseech thee, Almighty God,
that we who Adore the Nativity of thy Saints, Alexander, &c.
may by their Intercession
be deliver'd from all Evils that hang over us, through Jesus Christ our Lord.’
Now changing only the
Names, this, according to
your Exposition, will be the
Paraphrase of it.
‘
I beseech your Sacred Majesty
that you would vouchsafe to pardon my Offences
against you, and deliver me from those Evils
that hang over me for them, at the Intercession
of your Lord Chancellor, &c.
and in Honour of this his Birthday;
and that for the Sake
of the Prince
your Son,
our Royal Lord and Master.’
In this extravagant
Petition, the very Transcript of the foregoing
Prayer, he must be blind who sees not that the Conclusion of it,
for the Princes
sake, &c. is very impertinent, and does not at all hinder but that the
Request is
formally made by the
Interest of my
Lord Chancellor, and in
Honour of his
Birthday:
[Page 101] And therefore that notwithstanding this
Conclusion (which is really the
Remains of your
Old Forms, before ever any
New Intercessors were put into them) you remain justly chargeable with what I accused you of, That you make the Saints
joint Intercessors with
Christ to
God; and desire not only through his
Merits, but by
theirs also, to obtain your Requests.
54. As for your last Pretence of Holy
Scripture for this Practice, it is every jot as little to the purpose in this, as I have shewn it to be in the foregoing
Point.
1.
‘God tells
Isaac (say you) that he would
bless him, for
Reply, p. 25.
his Father Abrahams sake. Moses, praying for the People, desires
God to
remember Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, i. e.’
Because
God, in pursuance of his
Covenant made with
Abraham, blessed his
Son, and
Moses put him in mind of that
Covenant, to appease his Anger, that he should not destroy the
Israelites; Therefore it is lawful now to pray to
God not only by the
Merits of
Christ (the
only Mediator of
God's Covenant with us) but also of the
Saints too, for Pardon and Salvation
2.
‘
God, in remembrance of his Promise made to
David,
Reply, ib. shew'd Mercy unto
Solomon for his Sake: Therefore
Solomon might have urged to
God the
Merits of
David for
Pardon of his
Sins; and therefore we (who have
another, and
better, and
only Advocate) may address to
God by the
Merits and
Intercession of the
Saints for Forgiveness.’
I wonder you did not put in the
City Jerusalems Merits too, to
prove that we may not only pray through the
Merits of the
Saints, but of their
Cities also: For the Text seems as express in this, as in the other: I
Kings xi. 32.
‘
But he shall have one Tribe
for my Servant David's sake,
and for Jerusulems sake,
the City which I have chosen out of all the Tribes
of Israel’
3. What you mean by your last Passage, I must confess I
Reply, ib. cannot divine; unless you think that because
Elijah, who was sent by
God's express Command to make a Proof of his
Divinity before all the People of
Israel, who were gone after
Baal, began his Prayer with that usual Character of his being the
God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; it was therefore through their
Merits that the Fire came down from
Heaven, and burnt up
his Sacrifice.
SECT. III.
In which the
Arguments offer'd by the
Vindicator for the Establishing of
this Worship are particularly
Consider'd, and their
Weakness laid open.
55. Hitherto we have been clearing the matter of
Fact, what your Practice in this
Invocation of Saints is; I come now in the next place to examine your
Arguments, and see what grounds you have to support so great a
Superstition.
And First, for what concerns the
Holy Scripture, I find you do not much care to be try'd by that: You plead
Possession for your Warrant, and are resolved that shall be sufficient, till we by some
better right can throw you out of it. Now in this I cannot but commend your discretion; for indeed those who go about to found this
Article upon the
Authority of
Holy Writ, do in the Opinion of many of your own
Church but loose their Labour, since (as they tell us) for the
Old Testament, the
Holy
See Defence of the Expos. p. 8. in annot.
Patriarchs and
Prophets that lived before
Christ's Incarnation were not yet admitted into
Heaven, and therefore were not Capable of being
pray'd to; and for the
New, it was not express'd there for fear of Scandalizing the
Jews, and least the
Gentiles should have been thereby moved to think, that the Worship of new
Gods had been proposed to them.
56. Wherefore passing by the
Holy Scripture, which you look upon as unfit to be appeal'd to in this
Case, let us come to the
Possession you so much boast of; And see how you defend it against those Arguments I offer'd to prove
‘That this
Custom
Defence ibid. of
Calling upon the
Saints had no footing in the
Church before the latter
End of the IV.
Century; and was then but beginning to creep into it.’ And to reduce your
Confusion to the clearest
Method I can, I will distinctly consider your Allegations in these two
Periods.
First, Of the first 300 Years, wherein I affirm that there was no such prac
[...]ice in the
Church.
Secondly, Of the
F
[...]urth Century; towa
[...]ds the latter End of which I confess it began to appear; tho' still with very great
difference from what you now Practise.
I. PERIOD.
That the
Custom of
Praying to Saints had no being in the
Church for the First 300 Years.
57. Now for this I shew'd you in my
Defence,
‘That the
Defence of the Expos. Art. 3. p. 6.
Fathers of the IV.
Century did certainly herein depart from the
Practice and
Tradition of the
Ages before them; because * That you were not able to produce so much as
One Instance out of the first three
Centuries of any such
Invocation: * But rather were forced to
Confess, that
nothing of that kind was to be found amongst them. * That this was in effect what your greatest
Authors, Card. du Perron, Card. Bellarmine, and even the
Bishop of
Meaux himself had done: * And that indeed your
own Principles oblige you to
this Acknowledgment; seeing you both allow that without believing that the
Saints departed go forthwith to Heaven, they could not have
pray'd to them; and yet cannot but say that this, the
Holy Fathers of the first three
Ages did utterly deny.’ These were my
Arguments; let us see how you clear your
Possession from the force of them.
58. First, You clap a
Marginal Note upon my Assertion (in
earnest of your
future Civility)
‘
Primitive Fathers
Reply. p. 17. §. 13.
CALUMNIATED by the Defender:’ And to wipe off this
Calumny you undertake to shew that they did
Pray to the
Saints within the
First 300 Years. This is I confess to the purpose, and if you can do it, let the Note of
Calumny stick upon
Me; but indeed I rather think that this
Undertaking will fix another, and a much more proper
Note upon
You. But let us hear your
Proofs.
Ibid.] And first you say,
‘My
Brethren the
Centurists of
Magdeburg acknowledg that
Origen prayed to
Job, and admitted the
Invocation of
Angels.’
59. Answer] If this be true, then,
Sir, I tell you in one word, that my
Brethren the
Centurists were mistaken; and that, (considering the time they wrote in) is no great Wonder. But now did you never hear in your Life, that your
Brethren, Erasmus, Sixtus Senensis, Possevin, Bellarmine, Baronius, Labbé, Du Pin, &c. have all confess'd, that neither the
Tracts, nor
Comments upon
Job were
Origen's? Has no one ever told you,
[Page 104] Secondly, that another of your Brethren
Card. du
Perron, has
Replique au roy de la Grande Bretagne liv. v. c. 13. p. 982. utterly rejected the
Authority of
Origen, as an incompetent Witness in
matter of fact, and that especially in the very
Point before us? Were you indeed so ignorant, Thirdly, as not to know how opposite this
Father is to you (as I shall presently shew) in his undoubtedly
genuine Works as to this matter? As for the other Passages you quote, Fourthly, out of his
Comments upon
Ezekiel; besides that He there supposes the
Angel present with Him: Could you look upon this
place and not see that
another of your
Brethren, your own
Editor, calls it an
Apostrophe to His Guardian Angel; and I desire you to try if you can make any more of it. And Lastly, for what you
finally alledge out of his
Lamentations; did you in good earnest not know that it was a
Book mark'd, not by your
Brethren only, but by your
Holy Father Pope Gelasius as
Apchryphal; and rejected as such by all the
Learned Men of your own
Communion? So
unfortunate, or rather
unfaithful have you been in your first
Entry upon
Antiquity. It may be you will go on a little better.
Reply.] You tell us in the next place a story of one
Justina,
Reply p. 17. n. 14.
‘how being in danger of
making Shipwrack of her
Chastity by the
Magical Art of St.
Cyprian, she had recourse to the
Intercession of the
Blessed Virgin Mary, begging of Her to assist Her whose
Virginity was in danger.’
60. Answer.] If by this Story you design to prove the
Invocation of Saints to have been the
Practice of the
Church within the first 300 Years, (and indeed it is for this you do produce it,) I must then again complain of your
Unsincerity; seeing it is both acknowledged by your own
Authors, and indeed
Reply p. 17. confess'd by your own self, that
Gregory Nazianzen was mistaken in the relation, and attributed that to the great St.
Cyprian, Bishop of
Carthage, which could not belong to Him. As for the other
Cyprian to whom
Card. du
Perron, Baronius, &c. apply it, He is not pretended to have lived
See Baron
Mart. ad 26. Sept. p. 376. Edit.
Paris 1613. Et annal. ad ann. 250. n. 5. within
that Period, and so your
Proof is without the
Compass of what you undertook to shew.
61. But Secondly, Had there been any truth in this
Story, even with reference to this other
Cyprian, how comes it to pass that none of the ancient
Martyrologies, no not your own
[Page 105]
Breviary, since the
Reformation of it, makes the least mention of any such thing: Would all these have omitted so Considerable a
Passage had there been any grounds of certainty in it.
62. To Reply therefore to this Instance, I say, It is more than probable that St.
Gregory took up this
Story either from some
flying report, or out of some
Counterfeit Acts: For one part of it, at least that which relates to St.
Cyprian Bishop of
Carthage, you confess your
Baronius calls it Explodenda fabula. ad ann. 250. n. 5. Billius Caecutiisse hic Gregorium in Orat. annot. Vid in Martyr. ubi supr. selves that in this he was certainly mistaken. And if any other
Cyprian we hear nothing either in
Eusebius, or any other
Historian or
Writer of that Age. The first
Cardinal Baronius has produced being
Beda and
Adelhelmus, who lived not till the
Eighth, and
Metaphrastes in the latter end of the
Ninth Century. But however let us see even what they say of this matter. They tell us that the
Cyprian here meant was
Bishop of
Antioch, and suffer'd Martyrdom at
Nicomedia with St.
Justina: And thus it stood in your own
Breviary too till the
Reformation of it by the
Order of the
Council of Trent. But now it is beyond dispute evident
Vid in Brev. Eccles. Sarisb. ad 26. Sept. that this is
utterly false; for that in those times there was no such
Bishop of
Antioch, both the accounts of the Succession of that Sea given us both by ancient and modern
Historians plainly shew; and
Card. Baronius himself confesses it: Who is therefore forced for the credit of the business contrary both to his own
Authors, and to your
Ancient Brevaries,
Ibid. to degrade him from a
Bishop to a
Deacon. And for this He has no Authority. So evident do's it remain, that this whole matter is what the
Card. calls, one part of it at least, a
Fable to be exploded by all Wise Men. And this is another
Proof either of your
integrity or
ability in
Church History. But we will hope the next may be
better.
63. Reply.] And thus you go on with your Undertaking,
‘
You tell Me you will not cite Dionysius
the Areopagite,
Reply ibid. pag. 19.
because it may be I will not allow Him to be the Author
of the Book under his Name:
Nor Justin Martyr,
because I shall be apt to say he does not speak plain enough: Nor Irenaeus,
tho' He says plainly that the Virgin Mary
was made an Advocate
for the Virgin Eve’(I presume you mean that
Eve pray'd to the Virgin
Mary 4000 years
[Page 106] before she was born, as Father
Crasset says they
built Temples
Crasset par. 2. Trait. 4. qu. 3. p. 99. to Her ere she came into the World)
‘
because it may be I shall find out an Evasion for that too.’
64. Answ.]
Quid dignum tanto feret hic promissor
Hiatu?
You will not insist upon
Dionysius, nor upon
Justin Martyr,
Horace de Art. poet. nor upon
Irenaeus: But what then
will you insist upon? for you have said nothing at all to the purpose yet.
After all this
Gaping, we have two Testimonies only offer'd to us for the practice of 300 years: One a passage of
Origen already rejected as
Spurious: And the other out of a Tract of
Methodius, if not certainly
Spurious, yet justly suspected by your own
Critick's, being neither
quoted by any of the Ancients, nor mention'd by
Photius; and of a Stile more Luxuriant than that
Fathers other
Writings are; and that speaks so clearly of the
Mystery of the
Trinity, of the
Incarnation, and
Divinity of the
Word, whom He calls, in a Phrase not well known in his time, CONSUBSTANTIAL with the
Father; of the
Trisagion never heard of for above 100 years after His death; of the
Virginity of
Mary after Her
Conception; and of
Orginal Sin; that your late
Critick Monsieur
du
Bibliotheque. T. 1. pag. 530.
Pin had certainly reason to place it among his
Spurious Works, however it be now cited with such assurance by you.
65. But to quit this
Exception against the
Book: The very
Passage it self is so manifest a piece of
Oratory, that had you ever consulted it, in the
Greek set out by
Combefis, you could not have doubted of it. He had begun his
Apostrophe two or three
Pages before what you produce; and he ushered it in with this express
Introduction, to prepare us for it,
‘That he
Methodius Gl. Edit. Combefis. Paris cum S. Amphilochio. 1644. would conclude his
Speech with an Address to the
City of the
great King, and to all his
Brethren and
Fathers there, as if they were now present with him; and accordingly he
Apostrophe's the
City Jerusalem, p. 426. The whole
Catholick Church, p. 428. A.
All the
People of
God, ibid. B. The
Blessed Virgin, ibid. C.
Holy Simeon, p. 429. B. And so concludes all, joyning with that Blessed Man in his
Address to our
Saviour Christ.’ And tho his Expressions may be very high, (as the whole Sermon is) yet we cannot but think it very unreasonable to conclude the dogmatical
Sense of the
Church from the
Rhetorical flights of a single Man,
[Page 107] were the Piece otherwise never so
Genuine: But indeed it is worthily rejected (for the reasons before mentioned) by the Learned
Criticks both of
your and our
Communion.
66. This then is the
sum of your
Arguments to Establish this
Practice in the first three
Centuries. Were it necessary, after what has been done by so many
better hands, to recount the
Opinions of those
Holy Fathers as to this
Point, I should certainly be able to make some better Proof of the Antiquity of our praying to
God only, than you have been able to do of your Addressing to the Blessed
Virgin and to the
Saints.
67. In the
Epistle of the
Church of
Smyrna concerning the death of
Polycarp, Anno 167. we find that the
Jews had perswaded the
Heathens, that if they suffer'd the Christians to have the body of that Holy
Martyr, they would leave Christ, to Worship
Polycarp:
‘Not knowing (says that Letter) that
Apud Euseb. Eccles. Hist. lib. iv. c. 15. p. 109. B. Ed. 2. Vales. Paris. 1678. it is not possible for us to leave
Christ, who hath suffer'd for the Salvation of all those that are saved in the World; nor to
serve or
religiously Adore any other. For as for
Jesus Christ, We
Adore Him as being the
Son of God. But as for the
Martyrs we
love them as the
Disciples and
Imitators of the
Lord. And that very justly considering their insuperable Zeal which they bore to their
King and
Master, and God grant that we may be both the
Disciples of their
Piety, and
partakers of their
Glory.’
68. This is indeed the true
Spirit of
Christianity, and the exact account of the
Honour we now pay to the
Saints. We Adore only our Saviour Christ, as the
Son of
God, and therefore (as the Ancient
Latin Translation of this Letter reads it)
Edit. Usser. we
pray to no other. But for the
Saints, we
Love and
Honour them; we recite and magnifie their
noble Acts: We encourage our selves by their Examples to the like performances, as those who earnestly desire to be
partakers of
their Glory. This is all the
Honour they are now capable of receiving; and this was all that the
Primitive Church in those best Ages, was ever known to have given to them.
Irenaeus lib. ii. c. 57. p. 218. Ed. Paris. 1675.
69. The
Church of Christ (says
Irenaeus) does nothing
‘by the
Invocation of
Angels, nor by any other
perverse Curiosity; but by addressing her Prayers
purely, and
only, and
openly to the
Lord who has made
all things.’
70.
In Rom. l. viii. c. 10. Tertull. de Orat. cap. 1. Cypr. de Orat. Dom.
Origen tell us, that to
Invocate the Lord, and to
Adore God, are the same thing. So do
Tertullian and
Cyprian, using
[Page 108] the words to
Pray and to
Adore promiscuously in the same signification. In a word, this was the constant
Doctrine of those
first Ages; and I will chuse to deliver it in the words of that Father whom you have especially alledged to the contrary:
‘We Worship (says
Orig. contr. Cels. lib. viii. pag. 386. Ed. Cantabr anno. 1658.
Origen) the one only
God, and his one only
Son, and
Word, and
Similitude, with our utmost Supplications and Honours; bringing our
Prayers to the
God of all things, through his only begotten
Son;—
Ibid. 395. We must
pray to
God only, who is over all, and to his only begotten
Son the first born of every Creature, and beseech
Him as our
High-Priest to carry our Prayers which we make to Him, to his
God and our
God, to his
Father, and the
Father of all those that live according to the
Word of
God.—
Ibid. pag. 400. This is our
Profession of
Faith, which we constantly maintain as long as we live, by the blessing of
God, and of his only
Son Jesus Christ, who was manifested amongst us. As for the
favour of
others, (if that be to be look'd after) We know that
thousands of thousands stand before him, and ten thousand times ten thousand minister unto Him. These as our
Brethren and
Friends when they see us imitating their Piety towards
God, work together to the Salvation of those that
CALL UPON GOD, and
PRAY as they
OUGHT to do.’
71. I will add but one
Testimony more in a matter both so plain in its self, and so often insisted upon by others, and it is of
Novatian proving the
Divinity of
Christ, from the
Churches
Novatian de Trinitate. c. xiii. p. 17. A. Ibid. C. D. ad fin. Tertull. Paris 1675.
praying to him,
‘For none but
God (says he) knows the Secrets of the Heart as our Saviour did—If
Christ be only a
Man, how is He
every where present to those that Call upon him? Seeing this is not the
Nature of a
Man, but of
God, to be
able to be
present in every place. If
Christ be only
Man, why is a
Man called upon as a
Mediator in
Prayers, seeing the calling upon a Man is judged of no value to give
Salvation? If Christ be only
Man, why is any
Hope put in Him, seeing that
Hope is represented as Accursed that is placed in
Man?’
72. Such was the Opinion of the
Church in the first three
Centuries: As for that extraordinary
discovery you are pleased next to make,
‘That all you do in your
Liturgies is, to beg of
Reply p. 19. §. 14.
God to hear the
Prayers of his
Saints, and that for this you are able to furnish Me with many Examples out of the ancient
Liturgies and
Fathers within the first 100 Years;’ it is so
false
[Page 109] an
Assertion, and so
vain an
Undertaking, that either you must be ignorant even to astonishment both in the
Doctrine of your
own Church, and in the
Acts of
Primitive Antiquity, or else most certainly you never believed, either what you
say or what you
promise.
73. But tho you are not then able to answer my
Challenge of producing any Warrant from the
Fathers of the first 300 years for this
Doctrine and
Practice; it may be you are able at least to answer my
Presumption from those times against it:
viz.
‘That those
Fathers did not believe that the
Souls of the
Just went streight to
Heaven, and therefore by your own
Principles could not have believed that they ought to be
prayed to as there.’
74. Reply] To this you say,
‘
That you are not bound to defend
Reply p. 15. §. 12.
every Argument
that Bellarmine
and Suarez
bring, especially when Others
of your Writers
think them unconclusive. In short, you cannot deny
the matter of Fact, tho you would be thought to
suppose rather than
allow it to be true; And all you have to say is, That whatever they
believed besides, sure you are they did
pray to the Saints.’
75. Answ.] That the
Fathers about the latter end of the IV.
Century began to
Invocate the
Saints we do not deny; tho' it were rather in the way of a
Rhetorical Compellation, than of a
formal Address. And if herein they contradicted any other of their
Principles, we know they were but
Men, and as such might possibly in their
Religious heats do some things not entirely consonant to themselves in their
Cooler hours. Now then taking it for granted that those
Fathers I heretofore mentioned did teach, that the
Saints departed do not yet enjoy the
Beatifick Vision, I say with those great Men of your
Church, whom you here forsake, that they could not reasonably
pray to them. Since it is upon this
Vision, especially, that you found your Opinion of that
particular knowledge you suppose they
Ordinarily and
Constantly have of those things that are done here below, and without which it would be
Vain and
Absurd to call upon them. And therefore tho you have no regard to
Bellarmine's or
Suarez's
Authority, yet for the sake of
Sense and
Reason answer their Arguments; and tell us a little (upon your own
Principles)
[Page 110] how those
Fathers could think the
Saints were fit to be
pray'd to, if by
denying them to be yet in
Heaven, they by consequence must have
deny'd them to have any
ordinary and
certain knowledge of what is done here upon
Earth?
76. Reply.]
‘
But Sixtus Senensis (you say)
after all concludes,
Reply, p. 16.
That those Fathers
do not intend to exclude the Saints departed
from the Beatifick Vision,
but only from that Perfect Happiness
which we shall enjoy after the Resurrection.
And it would have been much more Christianlike
in Me, to have imitated his Example, than to argue as I do against their Praying to Saints
from this Principle.’
77.
Answ.] Had I been crampt, as he was, with a
Defininimus of my
Church, I might possibly have been tempted to make
Excuses for those
Fathers, as he did. But a Man need only look upon their
Words, as they are cited by him, to see how little such shuffling will avail, to reduce their
Doctrine to your
Pretences. And the
truth is, this
Sixtus Senensis was so
Honest as to confess, tho you were not so
Honest as to take notice of it. For having offer'd that
Exposition of their Words which you mention, he immediately subjoins,
‘
Thus (says he)
have I interpreted the Expressions of S. Ambrose, Austin,
and Chrysostome.
But if there be some Sayings
of the Holy Authors which CANNOT suffer such an Interpretation,
yet we should at least remember that this ERROUR ought not to prejudice the Learning
and Piety
of such Illustrious Fathers,
seeing the Church
in their time had not yet determined any thing Certain to be believed in this Matter.’ Thus
Sixtus Senensis; ingenuously confessing how the
Case stood. And this you cannot be presumed not to have seen in him, seeing they are in the very same place with what you
transcribed from him. And what then must I think of such a
One, as values not how he
reports things, so he may but by any means seem to
say somewhat; tho he knows at the same time, that he cannot expect long to triumph in his Unsincerity.
78. And now there is but one thing more remaining, to get over this unlucky
Period of the
First 300 Years.
Reply.]
For what if the few Writings of the Ancients of the First 300 Years which remain, be silent in this Particular,
does it
Reply, p. 18. sect. 14.
follow that they approved not the Practice?
[Page 111]
Answ.] No, Sir, this in not the
Case: We do not pretend to a bare
Silence of those
Holy Fathers, but we produce their express
Authorities against you: And that I hope is a good
Argument that
our Possession is at least 300 Years better than
yours; and that
you, not
we, have been
Innovators in this Particular.
79. Reply.]
‘
Had this Custom of Praying to Saints
been only
Ibid.
introduc'd in the Fourth Age,
and been so dangerous as Moderns would persuade the World that it is, certainly the succeeding General Councils
would have taken notice of it, or some One of the Fathers
would have written against it. But, on the contrary, we find the Fourth General Council
allowing this Invocation
in the Third Person, Let Flavian
the Martyr
Pray for us.’
80.
Answ.] To your
Instance from the
Fourth General Council, I reply, That besides that you your self confess that it is nothing to the purpose, there being a mighty difference between
wishing that the
Saints would
pray for us, and
praying to the
Saints for their
Aid and
Succour, you should have known that this
Council was held in the middle of the
Fifth Age, and so is without the compass of what I am here to consider.
81. But I will go yet farther with you as to this
Instance; and to that end I must tell you, that your
Authors have very much deceived you in their Accounts of it. For first, It was not the
Synod, but only a
Party in that
Synod, that cry'd out,
Let Flavian
the Martyr
pray for us. And secondly, Even they that did cry out thus, were as far from designing to
pray to
Flavian at all, as you were from understanding the meaning of their
Exclamation. The Occasion of those Words in short
Labbé Conc. Tom. iv. Act. xi. p. 697. B. was this: In the Eleventh and Twelfth
Actions of that
Council there arose a difficult Debate concerning
Bassianus and
Stephanus, whether of the two was lawful
Bishop of
Ephesus. Bassian had this Plea, That he had held it quietly Four years; that
Proclus and his
Successors, Bishops of
Constantinople, had communicated with him as lawful
Bishop of that
See; among whom was
Flavianus but lately deceased. Upon this the Fathers that were of
Bassianus Party urged to the
Synod, that
Flavian by communicating with him, had acknowledged him to be lawful
Bishop of
Ephesus: And thereupon press the
Holy Bishops to have this respect to
Flavian a Catholick and
Martyr,
[Page 112] as to acknowledge
Bassianus to be the true
Bishop, seeing he had
Communicated with him as such. And here comes in among other
Expressions, this that is the Subject of our present Debate. The
Bishops and
Clergy of
Constantinople cry out, in Honour of their late
Martyr,
‘This is the truth; this we all say: Let the Memory of
Flavian be eternal; let the Memory of the
Orthodox Flavian be
eternal: Flavian lives after his Death;
Let the Martyr pray (or entreat)
for us; Flavian judges with us.’This was the Occasion of those words; and it plainly shews, that all they meant by them was, That the Judgment of
Flavian, a Holy
Bishop and
Martyr, should prevail with the
Synod to judge of
Bassianus side, with whom
He had
Communicated.
82. As for your Argument, That had this
Custom of
Praying to
Saints been introduced in the
Fourth Age, it would certainly have been condemned in the following: I reply, First, That this is at most but a meer
Presumption, against plain and undoubted
Matter of Fact, and such as not only this, but too many other Corruptions which have crept into the
Church, without any notable Opposition for some time made to them, abundantly overthrows. But, Secondly, Tho your
Argument therefore (if we should allow it) would be good for little; yet it has another Misfortune too, which most of your
Proofs labour under, that it is as
false as it is
unconclusive. For, Good Sir, did you never, in your Enquiry into these Matters, hear of such a Canon as the Thirty fifth of the
Council of
Laodicea, Anno 364. expresly condemning the
Worship of
Angels? Did you never meet with such an
Order as that of the Third
Council of
Carthage in S.
Austin's time, commanding
‘all the
Prayers
Can. 23. that were made at the
Altar to be directed to the
Father?’ At least I am confident you cannot be ignorant what
Vigilantius did in opposition to this
Superstition; and whose
Piety S.
Hierome himself (tho his hot
Antagonist) could not but acknowledge. Nor was he alone in this Quarrel: S.
Jerome speaks of several
Bishops that were of his
Party, and join'd with him in his Endeavours against this growing Evil. Even S.
Austin himself, as appears from many Places of his Works, spoke not a little contrary to it, and plainly insinuates he
Vid. Epist. ad Januar. Ep. 119. would have done more, had not this
Practice already so possess'd Mens Minds, that it was not safe so to do.
[Page 113] 83. But to quit all these, The
publick Declaration which
Epiphanius made against the
Collyridians (a sort of
Women in those days
Superstitious in their
Honour of the
Blessed Virgin) is alone enough to shew that this practice did not pass without
Opposition in those times.
‘
'Tis true (says he)
the body of Mary
was holy, but She
Epiphan. Haeres 79. pag. 1061. C. D.
was not therefore God.
She was a Virgin,
and highly honour'd but She was not set forth to us to be worshipped;
but She her self worshipped
him who was born of her flesh. And therefore the holy Gospel
has herein armed us before hand; our Lord
himself saying,
Joh. 2. Woman, what have I to do with thee?
Wherefore do's he say this? But only least some
should think of the Blessed Virgin
more highly than they ought;
He called her Woman,
as it were foretelling
those Schisms
and Heresies
that should arise upon Her account.—
But neither is Elias
to be adored,
tho he be yet alive: Nor is St. John
to be adored;
nor Tecla; nor any of the Saints—
Ib. 1062. C.
If God will not permit us to worship Angels
how much less the daughter of Anna?—
Let Mary
be held in Honour,
but let the
Ib. 1064. D. Father, Son,
and Holy Ghost
be worshipped.
Let no one worship
Ib. 1065. B. Mary.
For tho She were most fair,
and Holy,
and Honourable;
yet She is not therefore to be adored. In a word;
Let
Ib. 1066. D. Mary
be held in Honour,
but let God be Adored.’
84 To conclude this
Point you tell us;
Reply]
‘
That it seems most extravagant to you that Protestants
Reply, pag. 18.
should demand of you to shew them some testimonies of the Fathers
of the first Three Hundred years, who lived under persecution, few of whose Writings
remain, the greatest part being lost and destroy'd, and yet reject the Fathers
of the IVth. Age
who wrote when the Church
began first to be in a flourishing Condition. Can any one imagine that the Church
when in Grots
and Caverns
taught one thing, and when She came into the light practised another?’
85.
Answ. What
meer Harangue is this? But we must be contented where better is not to be had. And therefore I reply,
1st. As to your
insinuation, which since
Cardinal Perron first invented it, has been the constant
common place of the little crowd of
Controvertists that have follow'd after,
viz. That the
Fathers of the first Three Hundred years
lived under
persecution, and therefore
wrote but
little, and of that little the greatest part was
[Page 114] lost too; tho I can easily excuse this in you as a
Sin of
Ignorance, yet I must needs say of the
Cardinal and
Others, that they have herein greatly injured those
Holy Men; who were neither so
lazie nor
fearful as they have
represented them to have been.
86. For not to say any thing of the foundation of all our Religion, the
Holy Scriptures, which were written within this
period; how large a
Catalogue has
Eusebius alone preserved of the works of those Holy
Fathers: And yet how many of the
Latin Church has he omitted: Look into his
History, and there you will find those great names,
Clemens Romanus, Papias, Quadratus, Aristides, Hegesippus, Justin Martyr, Dionysius of
Corinth, Pinytus, Apollinarius, Melito, Modestus, Irenaeus, Theophilus, Tatian, Bardesanes, Clemens Alexandrinus, Rhodo, Miltiades, Apollonius, Serapion, Heraclitus, Moscarinus, Candidus, Sextus, and
Arabien; all to have been Writers of the Second
Century: Tertullian, Judas, Beryllus, Hippolytus, Caius, Africanus, Dionysius Alexandrinus, Nepos, Cyprian, Origen; in the Third. And the Writings of which last Author only were said to have amounted to Six Thousand
Volumes; and which tho St.
Jerome retrench'd to a third part, yet still he left Two Thousand to him.
87. In what sort of Writings were these
Holy Men defective? Some publish'd
Apologies for our Religion; Others disputed against the
Heathens, the
Jews, the
Heretick's of those times. Some wrote of the
Discipline of the
Church; Others
moral Discourses, for the direction of Mens
Lives and
Manners. Their
Histories, their
Accounts of the
Holy Men, who suffer'd for the Faith; their
Comments on the holy
Scripture, their
Sermons are yet upon Record: And when such was their
diligence, why should it be
insinuated as if
living under persecution they
wrote but little; and therefore that it is
unreasonable to
appeal to them?
88. Nor is your next pretence any better: that their
Writings are
lost and
destroyed: For tho it be indeed in great measure true, that in respect of what they
wrote there is but a small part brought down to us (and we have some reason to believe that the
Opposition they made to your
Corruptions has been in some
See
Def. of the
Expos. p. 127. &c. measure the
Cause of it;) yet have we still enough to shew us what the
Faith of those
times was, and how vastly you have declined from it. And when both the Writings of
Holy Scripture, and of those
Fathers that do remain speak so
plainly against you, we have no great reason to believe that those which are lost were at all
more favourable to you.
[Page 115] 89. But
can any one Imagine, that the Church when in Grots and
Reply. p. 18.
Caverns should teach one thing, and when it came into the light practise another? I answer, yes; this is very easie to be imagined.
Affliction keeps men close to their
duty, whereas
Prosperity too often corrupts the
best manners. When it pleased
God to convert the
Empire to
Christianity, there were but too many instances of
Heathen Customs, accommodated to the
principles of the
Gospel; and this was one. Whether it were that they could not so soon forget their
ancient Rites; or that they thought it a
religious policy to extend the
pale of the
Church by suiting
Christianity as much to the
Heathen Ceremonies as it was possible, and to
dispose men thereby the more
readily to embrace it; Or whether finally, that
simplicity of the
Gospel which suited well enough with a
State of
persecution, was now thought too mean for an
Establish'd Church, the
Religion of the Emperour, and they were therefore willing to render it more
pompous, and set it off with
greater lustre in the Eyes of Men, tho in so doing they a little departed from the
purity of their lower and better State.
90. Let us add to this, the
Opinion which then began to prevail among those
Holy Fathers, of the
particular intercession of the Saints for us; and which both the
prayers that were made in those days at the memories of the
Martyrs, and the
Miracles God was sometimes pleased to work there; not to say any thing of the
Visions and
Apparitions that were sometimes thought to be seen there, very much confirm'd them in. Now this naturally prepared the way for the
Invocation which follow'd upon it. For now the
Poets began instead of their
Muses, to call (more
Christianly) upon the
Saints and
Martyrs to assist them. The
Orators, following the
Genius of the
Age, indulged themselves all the liberty of their
Eloquence, in
Apostrophe's to the
Saints at their Memories. And as things seldome stop in their
first beginnings, by degrees through the
Ignorance of some, and
superstition of more; they fell into a formal
Invocation, about the beginning of the Vth.
Century.
91. But here another
accident fell out for the
carrying on of this
Service. For about this time
Nestorius began to teach that men ought not to call the
Blessed Virgin the
Mother of God. Now this made some think his design was secretly to revive the
Heresie of
Arrius or
Sabellius under a new Cover; and their Zeal for the
Divinity of Christ made them in the
Council of Ephesus, Anno
[Page 116] 431 condemn his Opinion as
Heretical; and in Opposition to Him they fell into the
contrary extream, of an immoderate magnifying of Her; tho' (as I shall presently shew) they still continued within much better
bounds than you do now: It being almost Three Hundred years after this, before ever the
Invocation of
Her or the
Saints, was
publickly Establish'd in the
Church. And this brings me to my next Proposal; which was Secondly;
II. PERIOD.
To consider what
Grounds this
Superstition had in the IVth.
Century.
92. And here,
first, to what I said concerning the
first beginnings of this
Invocation, viz. That the most part of your Allegations from this
Age were rather
Rhetorical flights than
formal prayers; you return very pleasantly.
Reply.]
‘
That the Rhetorick
lies wholly at my door, who fly to so poor a shift. That these passages
are some of the duriores loci
more difficult places which some only nibbled
at; Others could not digest;
and I shift off under the notion of Rhetorical Flights
or Novelties.’
93.
Answ. One would think by this
Droll you had been lately reading the judgment of your
University of
Doway concerning
Bertram.
‘
Altho (say they)
we do not much value that Book, yet since he has been often Printed
and is read by many, and that in other ancient Catholick's
we tollerate many Errors, and extenuate,
or excuse
them; often times find out some contrivance
or other to deny
them, or to set a convenient Gloss
upon them when they are Opposed to us in disputes, or in engaging with our Adversaries; we do not see why we should not allow the same Equity
to Bertram.’
94. But what now is this
shifting? Why I said that, which all the
learned Men in the World must allow to be true,
viz. That the
Fathers of the
IVth. Age were many of them great
Orators, and made use of
Rhetorical Addresses to the
Saints. And that from those
conditions they sometimes expresly put into their
Writings,
[Page 117]
[...], &c.
If thou hast any sense, If thou hast any concern for what is done here below, and the like; we may reasonably conclude, that this was
all they
meant, even where they do not express any such thing.
95. But did not those
Fathers do somewhat more than this? Can all their
Expressions be fairly reduced to such
Apostrophe's? To this I have already said, that We do acknowledge that about the latter end of this
Century, S.
Basil, Gregory Nazianzen, Gregory Nyssen, amongst the
Greeks, and their great Imitator S.
Ambrose among the
Latins, did begin to
Invocate the
Saints. And had you thought fit to consult that Excellent
Treatise to
Discourse of Worship of Saints in Answer to Mr. de Meaux's Appeal to the IV. Age. which I referr'd you, or rather to take notice of what was said there, (for I am apt to believe you did
Consult it) I should not have been troubled with these impertinences here. And therefore tho it were not difficult to find some considerable
faults with those few
passages you have alledged from those Holy
Men; (as when you say that S.
Basil exhorts those who are in
Tribulatian to flie to the
Saints, those who are in joy to have recourse
to them, whereas He only Historically relates what they did do,
‘
He (says he)
who is afflicted flies to them, He who is in joy runs to them)’yet I shall quit all to you, and without either
shifting or
nibling leave you to make the most you can of them.
96. But then that you may not put any more such
Crude notes upon your
Reader as you have done here, where you say,
‘That
Protestants grant Praying to Saints
to have been established
in the IVth. Age:’ I will very briefly
transcribe from two Learned Men of our
Church some considerable
differences between what the▪
Fathers of this
Century did, and what you do now; and of which if you will not yet be perswaded to take any
notice, I hope at least all indifferent persons will see by them how
impertinently you alledge their
Authority for your
Excuse.
First, That in your
Church, Prayer to
Saints is look'd upon
Ushers answer to a challenge. P. 409. as a part of
Worship that is
due to them; insomuch that (as I have shewn)
Cardinal Bellarmine places it among one of those
Advantages that accrues to them upon their
Canonization: But this those Holy
Fathers never believed; on the contrary they absolutely
define prayer, as a
service proper to God only, and argued against the
Arrians upon this very
Topick, that Christ must needs be
God, because the
Church prayed to him.
[Page 118] If you pretend that there are two sorts of
Prayers, one
proper to
God, another that is not: I reply, 1. That this is
false, because (as we have seen) all
Prayer is a
Religious Worship, and therefore
proper to
God only. Secondly, It concludes nothing; because you offer the most
proper sort of
Prayer for
Help and
Assistance to the
Saints, that you can do to
God himself.
Secondly, In your
Church you allow
mental Prayer as well as
Vocal to be made to the
Saints: But in the
Primitive, this
P. 401. was reserved as peculiar to Him who
searcheth the Heart, and
alone knoweth the
Secrets of all the
Children of Men.
Thirdly, In your
Church it is resolved that the
Saints are capable of
hearing and
knowing your
requests: In the
Primitive this
P. Ibid. &c. was never
determined, and the contrary seems to have been the most generally received.
Fourthly, In your
Church formal Prayers are made to the
Saints; But the
Addresses of these
Holy Fathers were either
wishes
P. 405.
only, or requests of the same nature with those which are in this
kind usually made to the
living; where they who are requested, be evermore accounted in the Number of those that
pray for us, but none of those that are
prayed unto by us.
Fifthly, In your
Church the Saints are made not only
joynt Petitioners with us, but
Advocates too; and that to plead not only
P. 408.
Christs Merits, but their own likewise. But against this these
Fathers openly protested as an open derogation to the high prerogative of our
Saviors meritorious Intercession, and a manifest encroachment upon his Great
Office of Mediation.
Sixthly, In your
Church it is thought a more
proper way of access, and a
surer means of
obtaining your
requests to address by
P. 410: 416. some
Saint to
God, than to go immediately to the
Throne of
Grace, through our
Saviour Christ. But this those Fathers earnestly opposed, exhorting all men to go directly to
God by his
Son Jesus Christ.
Seventhly, In your
Church the Saints are indifferently called upon all the World over; which does in effect attribute a
Divine
Discourse in Answer to Mr. de Meaux's Appeal to the IVth. Age. p. 82. &c.
perfection, viz. That of
Omnipresence to them: But in the Primitive
Church, those who sought the
Intercession of the
Saints, limited their
presence to some
determinate places, as particularly to their
Memories, where they thought them within
Hearing; and did not call upon them
indifferently every where.
Eightly, This in your
Church is an
establish'd practice; they
[Page 119] who oppose it are declared to
do wickedly, and an
Anathema is pronounced against them on that account. But in the Primitive there was no
Rule, or
Order for it; it was the effect of a
private and
voluntary Zeal, encouraged it may be by the
Guides of the
Church, but no part of the
established Service of it.
97. And this may suffice to shew how vain your pretences to the
Antiquity even of
this Age are to warrant your
Superstition; and upon what slender grounds you affirm, after your
Master the Bishop of
Meaux, that this
Invocation of Saints was
Establish'd, nay that
we grant it was
Establish'd in the Fourth Age. But to convince you yet more with what little reason you either boast of this, or tax us with receding from our
old principle of being
tryed by the
Fathers of the First
Four General Councils; upon this account I will now make you a more Liberal offer; and that is to prove if you can any Authentick
Establishment of this
Service in the
Church. I do not say now in the
Sixth Century; but in the
Seventh: Nay or even before the latter end of the
Eighth: In
short, I do affirm that the
first solemn Establishment of it was in the Second
Council of Nice 787. and indeed that
Synod which decreed the
Worship of Images in opposition to the
Second Commandment, was the most
proper to define the
Religious Invocation of Saints contrary to the First: And because there is something almost as bad in the
manner of the
Establishment, as in the
thing it self, I will
close all with a brief account of it.
98. About the end of the
Sixth Century both the
Worship of Images, and the
Invocation of Saints, having taken deep root in the minds of many Superstitious persons;
Controversies began to arise about them; and generally the same persons were found to be either
Friends or
Enemies to both.
In the year 754
Constantine Copronymus called a
Synod of
Baron ad Ann. 754. N. 38. Spondane. Ibid. N. 6. 338
Bishops, to Examine into these matters, and both the
Invocation of Saints, and
Worship of Images were utterly condemned by them.
99. Thirty years after this
Council the
Abettors of these
Superstitions
Binnius in Syn. Const. p. 1663. T. VI. Concil. Labbe. prevailing, another
Anti-Synod was convened by the Au
[...]hority of the Empress
Irene at
Nice. In
Action. VI. this the
Acts of the former
Council of Constantinople were recited, and instead of the
Canons which they made in
condemnation of this
Worship;
Defin. XV. XVII. two others were read in their Names, Establishing of it. How
[Page 120] this came to pass it is not known; but this the
Annot. Epi-Phan. in def. XVII.
Nicene Fathers themselves acknowledge that the
other Synod had
established the quite
contrary: Nay they were such Enemies to this
Invocation, that
Binius tells us, they exacted a solemn
Binnius Annot. in Concil. Const. T. VI. p. 1663. Baron. l. c. Oath of all their party,
That they would never invocate the Saints, Apostles, Martyrs, or the Blessed Virgin. And yet have these good
Fathers transmitted down to Posterity those
two spurious Canons of the
Council of Constantinople, as
approving that very
Worship, which the
Council in the
true definitions of it had utterly
disclaimed.
100. As for the
Synod of
Nice its self; if the
definitions there made were of any force; that of
Frankford, seven years after, has utterly taken it away; in which
‘
it was so wholly abrogated,
Act. Concil. Franc. in lib. Cant. praef. in l. 1.
and annulled, as not to be placed in the number of Synods,
or be any otherwise esteem'd of than that of Ariminum.’ And I should beglad you would find me any other (but
pretended) establishment of it, before your
Synod of Trent in the very last Age.
I have only now remaining in the last place to shew;
SECT. IV.
What our Reasons
are against this Service?
101. You had ask'd me in your
Vindication,
‘
What Authoritie have you to oppose us? You say that [to
invocate Saints] is repugnant to Gods Word: Shew that word, if you cannot we are in possession, and the Antiquity and Un-interruptedness of our Doctrine,
Vindic. p. 30.
besides the reasonableness and innocency of it, confirms us in our belief.’
102. To this I answered;
‘That every
text of Scripture that appropriated Divine Worship to
God alone was a demonstration
Def. pag. 9. against you: And that that one passage of St.
Paul, Rom. X. 14.
How shall they call upon him in whom they have not believed? were not men
willing to be
contentious, might End the
Controversie. And for the
Authority you speak of, that it was rediculous to pretend
prescription for that, which has not the least foundation neither in
Holy Writ nor in
Primitive Christianity; of which not
one instance appears for the first
Three Hundred years after
Christ, and much to the contrary.’
[Page 121] 103. To this you now reply in your
Margin with great Assurance;
Reply p. 21. §. 16.
‘
Protestants destitute of Scripture Proofs
against the Doctrine of Invocation of Saints:’ But all you have to say in the
Book is,
‘That you do not give
Divine Worship to the
Saints, nor call upon them in that
strict sense in which they are Duties only to be paid to
God.’ That is to say, you
play with
Words, and make use of such
distinctions as if they were
allowed, a man might evacuate any other of
Gods Commands, without a possibility of being confuted. And I desire you to tell me what answer you would make an
Impudent Woman that should give her
Husbands Bed to another, and being charged by you for breaking the
Seventh Commandment, should tell you that you were not to be so uncharitable as to judge of what she did by the
External Act, that the Law forbad only
lying with another man, as with her Husband; and that in this
strict sense she was still
Innocent, by reserving that
highest Degree of
Conjugal affection to him only, the giving whereof to another would make her
guilty.
104. But since you are so desirous to know what our
Reasons against this
Invocation are, I will now very freely lay them before you, if you will first give me leave only to prepare the way for them, by
stating truly the difference between us in this
matter, which you are wonderfully apt either to mistake or to palliate.
105. You tell us in your
Vindication,
‘That
All you say, is that it is
lawful to pray to the Saints; and so again in your Reply.’
Vind. p. 30. Repl. p. 11. Expos. Sect. IV. p. 5. Papist Repl. N. 2. p. 2. The difference (you say) between us is,
‘
Whether it be lawful for us to beseech or intreat them to pray for us?’ Monsieur de
Meaux in the same moderate way tells us, that the
Church teaches that it is profitable to pray to the Saints: And the
Representer (from the
Council of Trent) says of a true
Papist,
‘
That his Church teaches him (and he believes) that it is Good and profitable, to desire the intercession of the Saints, reigning with Christ in Heaven.’ In your Discourses with those of our
Communion, there is nothing more Ordinary with you, than to make them believe, that you value not
praying to the
Saints, nor
Condemn any for not doing it. That if this be all they scruple in
your Religion, they shall be received freely by you, and never
pray to a
Saint as long as they live. Nay I have heard of some who have gone so far in this matter, as to venture their
Religion
[Page 122] upon it, that you do not
necessarily require the
practise or
profession of this service at all; nor
pronounce any
Anathema against us for
opposing of it.
106. But this is not ingenuous; nor as becomes the Disciples of Christ. For tell me now I beseech you: If we unite our selves to your
Church, will you not oblige us to go to
Mass with you? Or can you dare for our sakes to alter your
Service, and leave out all those things that relate to the Blessed
Virgin and to the
Saints in it? Shall we be excused from having any thing to do with your
Litanies and
Processions, your
Vespers or your
Salves? Or will you
purge all these too in Order to our
Conversion? When we lie in our last
Agonies, will you be content to
Anoint us in the
Name of the
Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost; and leave the
Angels, Arch-Angels, Patriarchs, Prophets, and
Apostles, Martyrs, Confessors, Virgins, and all
the Saints out of the Commission? And when our
Souls are now expiring, shall we be sure you will not then at least trouble us with that
long Beadroll which your
Office prescribes to be
call'd upon in that Ceremony? If you have indeed the Liberty to do this, why do ye not use it, and remove so great a stumbling block as this out of our way? But if you cannot dispense with these things for our
common Conversion, how shall we believe that you can do it to satisfie a private Proselyte?
107. The truth is
Invocation of Saints in your
Church is not esteemed so
indifferent a matter as you would have it thought to be. It is a
Worship you
suppose due to them: And to which they acquire a right by their
Canonization. So
Cardinal Bellarmine informs us: And therefore in your
Profession of Faith set forth by the order of
Pope Pius IVth. you are obliged with
‘
a firm Faith to believe and profess, that the Saints,
who reign together with Christ, are to be Venerated
and Invoked.’ And tho the
Alarm which the
Council of Trent was in upon the News of the
Popes sickness, and the haste which thereupon they made to conclude that
Synod permitted them not to frame any
Canons in this last, as they had done in the other
Sessions; yet the materials put together in the
Chapter shews us what
Anathema's would have been thunder'd against us. For to take it only as it lies in that
Session.
Concil. Trid. Sess. 25. There we find
‘
the Bishops
and Pastors
of the Church
commanded to teach (what therefore I hope is undoubtedly
the Churches sense in this point) That the Saints
who Reign together
[Page 123] with Christ
offer up their Prayers
to God for Men: That it is Good
and Profitable
in a suppliant manner
to call upon them:
And that for the obtaining benefits of God
by his Son Jesus Christ our Lord,
who is our only Saviour and Redeemer, we
should flie to their Prayers, Aid
and Assistance. They declare
that those who deny (which you know we all do)
that the Saints
who enjoy Eternal Happiness in Heaven are not to be invoked,
or say that this Invocation
is Idolatry (as we generally believe it to be)
or that it is contrary
to the Word of God;
or derogatory to the Honour
of the One Mediator
between God
and Man Christ Jesus;
or that it is foolish to supplicate
those who Reign in Heaven in word or in mind; do think
WICKEDLY.’
108. These are the words of your
Council. If therefore you permit your
Prosolytes to
profess what they do not
believe; if you receive those as
good Catholicks into your
Church, whom nevertheless you know to remain still infected with
wicked Opinions, contrary to the
Doctrine and
Practise established amongst you; If you allow them to assist at your
prayers, without any intention to joyn in them, nay in an Opinion that they could not
pray with you, without committing a grievous sin; Then go on to make folks believe, as you do, that you oblige no body to
pray to the
Saints, and that they may be of your
Church, and yet still
believe or
do what they please in this matter. But if otherwise this be all
gross Hypocrisie, if there be nothing but
cheat and
design in these pretences; then may I humbly desire all sincere
Members of our
Communion to beware of such
Guides, as value not how they
charge ours, or
palliate their own
Religion, so they may but by any means draw unwary men into their Net.
109. But the
Council of Trent goes yet further: It does not only Establish this
Doctrine, but in express terms
Anathematises those who oppose it: For in the
close of that
Chapter I but now mentioned,
Concil. Trid. Ibid. thus it
decrees:
‘
If any one shall teach or THINK contrary to these Decrees: let him be ANATHEMA. All which your
Epitomator Caranza thus delivers in short,
The Synod
commands
Caranza Summ. Sess. XXV. Conc. Trid. p. 482. Lovami 1681.
(all those who have the care of Souls) that they should teach the Invocation of Saints;
the Honour of Reliques;
and the Use of Images;
and that those who teach otherwise do think
WICKEDLY. And if any one shall teach
or think
contrary to these Decrees,
Let him be ANATHEMA.’
[Page 124] 110. It remains therefore that your
Church does
teach and
require of all its
Members both the
profession and
practise of such an
Invocation, as I have before
explain'd: And of which I now undertake to shew:
- 1. That it is
repugnant to
Gods Holy word.
- 2. Contrary to
Antiquity.
- 3. That is
unreasonable in the
constitution; and
- 4.
Unprofitable and
unlawful in the Practise.
I. It is repugnant
to Gods Holy Word.
111. And here, First I will not doubt once more to tell you that to
pray to
Saints after the manner that it is now done in the
Church of
Rome, is contrary to all those passages of
Holy Scripture which attribute
Religious Worship to
God only; such as
Deut. VI. 13.
Thou shalt fear the Lord
thy God
and serve Him, and swear by his Name; and again Chap. X. 12, 20. XIII. 4. &c. All which our Saviour Christ has taught us to interpret with such a restrictive term, as excludes all others from a share in our Service.
Mat. IV. 10.
It is Written, Thou shalt Worship
the Lord
thy God,
and Him ONLY shalt thou serve. I have already shewn that all
Prayer made to a person that is absent, with a Confidence that he is able both to
know our
wants, and to
hear our
Prayers, and to
answer our
desires, is in its
own nature a
Religious Worship. Now then from these
places of Holy
Scripture, I thus argue: It is repugnant to
Gods Word to give any
proper Acts of
Religious Worship to any but
God only; but all such
prayer as is made in your
Church to the
Saints departed, are
proper Acts of
Religious Worship; and therefore it must be contrary to
Gods Word to
pray to any but
God only.
112. Nor am I here at all concern'd in your distinctions of a
Supreme and an
Inferior Religious Honour; seeing both you and I are agreed that all
Honour properly Religious (such as
Prayer) is comprised under these prohibitions. If I were, I would then tell you that the
Devil here did not require of
Christ such a
Supreme Worship, but on the contrary acknowledged himself to have a
Superior, from whom He derived his Power of disposing of
all the Kingdoms of the Earth, and the Glories of them. All he desired was to have some
Religious Honour paid to Him. And our
Saviour by alledging this Sentence of the
Law against
[Page 125]
it, Evidently shews that it is not only such a
supream Religious worship as some of you pretend, but that
all such Honour in general, is the peculiar service of
God alone. But this (if you stand to your own
principles) you cannot object, and for others, what I have now said may suffice to obviate their pretences.
113. Secondly, What I have now concluded from this
general Principle of
Holy Scripture, I will in the next place more particularly inforce from these other passages, where the
worship of
Creatures is expresly prohibited. In the
Xth. of the
Acts, when
Cornelius fell down at St.
Peters feet, and would have
worshipp'd him,
‘
he took him up saying, I my self also am a man.’ It
Acts X. 25. is a poor shift here to say, that
Cornelius would have worshipp'd St.
Peter with a
supream divine worship; he was not certainly so ignorant as to think, that when the Angel bid him send to
Joppa for
Simon Peter, who lodged with
Simon a
Tanner, he meant he should send for the great
God that had made
Heaven and
Earth. Nor is it of any more moment which others amongst you suggest,
viz. That
Cornelius did well to adore him, but that St.
Peter out of
modesty refus'd it. And the answer he gave,
‘
I my self also am a man,’ utterly overthrows all such insinuations; being as much as if he had said, that no
Man whatsoever was to be
worshipped.
114. But this will more evidently appear in another instance,
viz. that of St.
John, Revel. XIX. 10. who when in his
Ecstacy
Rev. XIX. 10. XXII. 8. he fell down and would have worshipp'd the
Angel that discoursed with him, the blessed
Spirit utterly forbad him;
See (says he)
thou do it not, for I am thy fellow servant: WORSHIP GOD. In which words are plainly establish'd these two
Conclusions against this service;
1st. That
Angels (and so likewise the
Saints) being our
fellow Servants are not to be
worshipp'd: 2dly, That
God only is to be
adored.
115. But St.
Paul is yet more plain: He exhorts the
Colossians in general, and in them us:
Colos. II. 18.
Let no man beguile
Colos. II. 1
[...].
you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping
of Angels. It is answered by some among you, that this was said in Opposition to the
Heresie of
Simon Magus who would have
Sacrifice offer'd to the
Angels: Or at least of some Others, who thought that tho' Christ had abolish'd the
Law, yet was it still to be observed out of respect to the
Angels by whom it had been deliver'd. But besides that I do not find
[Page 126] any such thing charged by any of the Ancients upon
Simon Magus, as is pretended; had S.
Paul designed only to forbid one particular
Act of
Religious Worship being paid to them, would he in General have said that they were not to be Worshipped? Or had he intended to signifie the
abolishing of the
Law, would he not have said so here, as well as in his other
Epistles; and not have given such an obscure insinuation of it, as when he meant to forewarn them against
observing the
Law, to bid them
have a care of worshipping Angels. But the truth is the meaning of the
Text is too plain to be thus eluded. And I shall give it to you in the words of an
ancient Father who lived in those very times in which you yet pretend such a
service was
establish'd:
‘
Those who maintain'd an Observance of the Law
together
Theoderet in loc.
with the Gospel,
taught also that Angels
were to be worshipped;
saying that the Law
was given by them. This Custom remained a long time in Phrygia
and Pisidia.
Upon which account the Synod
of Laodicea
in Phrygia,
forbad them by a Law
to PRAY TO ANGELS.’ But.
116. Thirdly, And to come more immediately to the
Worship of
Invocation. The same
Apostle in that Question, Rom. X. 14.
Rom. X. 14.
‘
How shall they call upon Him
in whom they have not believed?’ furnishes us with another
maxime of Holy
Scripture against all such
Prayers; viz. That no one is to be
invoked in our
religious addresses, but
He only in whom we
believe. But now
Reason, Scripture, the
Common Creeds of all Christians shew that we are to
believe ONLY in
God the
Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost, and therefore upon Him
ONLY must we
Call. As for your distinction that this indeed in
one sense is very
true, but then in another and
secondary sense Others besides
God may be both
believed
Reply. p. 21.
in, and
called upon; if you mean in a
civil respect, it is indeed
very true, but nothing to your
purpose, seeing in this
sense we can no more
believe in than we can
call upon such persons as are
absent from us, and
know nothing at all of us, which is the Case of the
Saints departed. But for believing in a
religious sense, as it is properly an
Act of
Divine Faith, and the foundation of that
Assurance with which we
call upon God by our Saviour
Jesus Christ; this admits of no
distinction, nor may it by any
means, or in any
measure be applied, without Sin, to any other than
God alone.
117. I will add but one
principle more of
Holy Scripture against
[Page 127] this
Service, and so
close this
first Point. Rom. XIV. 23.
Rom. XIV. 23.
That whatsoever is not of Faith is Sin. But now those
Prayers which have no foundation in
Holy Scripture cannot be of
Faith; for (says the same Apostle Rom. X. 17.) Faith
cometh by Hearing, and Hearing by the word of God; And therefore such
Prayers must be
Sin. If
God has any where revealed it to you, that you may lawfully give such a
religious Worship to the
Saints, shew this, and our dispute is ended. But if you cannot do this, nor by consequence cannot
pray to them with any well grounded perswasion of Conscience, that this is what
God allows, and what the
Saints are capable of receiving, I do not see how it can be avoided but that to you it must be
sin so to do.
[...],
S. Basil. Reg. Miral. 78. cap. 22.
[...]. As an ancient
Father argues from this very
principle in the like manner.
118. For the Other part of this
Service, the
intercession of the
Saints for us; I might to this Oppose all those passages of the
New Testament, where Christ is set forth to us as our
only Mediator. But I shall content my self with one single
text, 1. Tim. II. 5, 6.
There is one God,
and one Mediator
between God
1 Tim. II. 5. 6.
and Men, the Man Christ Jesus,
who gave himself a Ransome
for all. Now if there be but one
Mediator, then
Saints and
Angels are not
Mediators as you pretend. If the foundation of Christs
Mediatorship be this,
‘
That he gave himself a Ransome
for all;’ then seeing the
Saints have not done this, it must follow that neither can they be our
Mediators. And this cuts off your new distinction of a
Mediator of
Intercession, and a
Mediator of
Redemption; which besides that it is the issue of your own Brains, and was invented only to support a tottering Cause, is here utterly destroy'd; seeing the
Foundation of Christs
Mediating now in
Heaven, and
appearing in the presence of God for us, is by vertue of His being our
Mediator of
Redemption upon
Earth; and he therefore is become our
intercessor there, because He
shed his bloud for our
Expiation here. This is that great Argument upon which the
Author to the
Hebrews so much insists,
Chap. IX. X. And the
Analogy of the
High Priest under the
Law, making first the
Expiatory Sacrifice for the
people, and then
Entring into the
Holiest to appear before
[Page 128]
God for them, most evidently confirms it to us. And this may suffice for the
1st. Point, That this
Service is contrary to the
principles of
Holy Scripture.
II. It is
Contrary to
Antiquity.
119. And here I am fallen into a
vast Ocean; and should never have ended, should I go about particularly to shew how vain your pretences are to
possession for this
superstition. It shall suffice me at present only to
point out to you a few of those
Remarks which others have more largely pursu'd; and which do abundantly declare how little conformable the
best and highest Antiquity has been to what you now practise.
120. I have already given some short account of the first three
Centuries: And how little able you are to lay any claim to the
Authority of them. You have there seen what the
Opinion was of those
Holy Fathers, touching the
State of the
Saints departed: How they thought that they do not yet enjoy the
Beatifick Vision, and by consequence were not in a condition to
be called upon by the
Church on
Earth. I have shewn you the
Fathers arguing against the
Arrians for the
Divinity of Christ from the
Churches praying to Him; and which evidently proves that they thought none but
God was capable of such a
service. I have offer'd you the
definition which those
Holy Men gave of
Prayer; viz. That it was an
Address to God, a Conversing with God, and the like; and in all which they still restrain'd it to Him as His own peculiar
prerogative. There we find no mention of any
calling upon the
Blessed Virgin or the
Saints. No distinction of
supreme and
inferiour religious Worship; of
Mediators of
Redemption and
Intercession: in short none of those
Evasions with which all your discourses on this
Point are now filled; and without which indeed, according to your
principles, it is impossible to explain it.
121. But I will now add yet more. It was a general
custome in the third and following
Ages (concerning which we are particularly to enquire)
to pray for the Saints departed, for
Martyrs and
Confessors, nay for the
Blessed Virgin her self, as has been elsewhere
fully proved, and I suppose you will not have
Discourse of Purgatory and Prayers for the dead. the
confidence to deny it. Now let me appeal to any reasonable man to say; could the
Church in those times have
prayed
[Page 129] in a
suppliant manner to the
Saints, as
Reigning with
God, nay and
Gods themselves by
participation, to
aid, and
assist them, when on the contrary they thought them in such a
State as to need
prayers to
God for them? Is it to be believed, that they Addressed to those as
Mediators and
Intercessors with
God, for whom they themselves
interceded to
God? It is a memorable remark that has been made to confirm the force of this
Argument, that since the prevalency of this
praying to Saints in the
Church of
Rome, your
publick rituals have had a notable
change. Those very Saints which in your ancient
Missals you
pray'd for, being now
a la Mode pray'd to. Thus upon IV. Kalends of
July in the
Sacramentary of
Pope Gregory I. above 600 years after Christ we find
Sacrament. Greg. p. 112. this
Prayer made in behalf of S.
Leo, one of your
Popes.
‘
Grant O Lord
that this Oblation
may be profitable
to the Soul
of thy Servant Leo.’
But in the present
Roman Missal, the
Collect is changed, and
Missale Rom. pag. 612. the Address made by the
Intercession of the
Saint now, that was formerly made by way of
Intercession for Him.
‘
Grant to us, O Lord,
that by the Intercession
of Blessed Leo,
this Offering
may be profitable
to US.’
And of this change, Pope
Innocent the
3d. gives this honest
Decret lib. 3. tit. 41. p. 1372, 1373. account:
Viz. That the Authority of Holy Scripture
says, that he
‘
injures a Martyr,
that prays
for a Martyr;’ (wherein yet his
Infallibility mislead him, it being S.
Austin and not the
Scripture that said so)
‘
and they do not want our Prayers,
but we theirs.’ Which the
Gloss thus more fully expresses;
‘It was changed
(viz. this
prayer for Pope
Leo) because anciently they pray'd FOR
Him, but now TO
Him.’ And from whence therefore we may warrantably infer, that in those
first Ages praying TO
Saints was not establish'd, seeing it was then the general Custom to
pray FOR
them.
112. The truth is, the whole face of the
Ancient Church seems clearly opposite to the
present practise: Some doubted whether the
holy Saints departed, do at all
concern themselves for us, or
conduce any thing to our
Salvation. So
Origen. And these to be sure never
prayed to them. Others made open opposition to such service. So the
Council of Laodicea; S.
Epiphanius, Vigilantius, and others before mention'd. Now you
Canonize Saints, and esteem it necessary so to do, to prevent mens
praying to those in
Heaven, who are it may be at this time tormenting in
Hell.
[Page 130] But in those first
Ages we find none of these
Apotheoses; and
Bellarmine himself could not find out any instance of any
Saint
De beatit. SS. lib. 1. C. 8. that was
Canonized before the VIIIth. Century. If we go into your
Churches, we find them filled with
Altars and
Chappels, Images and
Reliques of the
Saints: Candles are lighted up before them;
Incense is burned to their Honour: But in those
Primitive Ages, not the least shadow is to be met with of any such
Superstitions. Your
Books of
Devotion are now filled with little else than
advises how to pray to the
Blessed Virgin; to
list your selves into her
service; to
vow your selves to her
Worship; her
Psalter, and
Rosary, and
Salutation is in every part of your performances. Even the
Catechism of the
Council of Trent it self, the most
Cautious Book that has been set forth for some
Ages in your
Church, having taught you first how to
pray to God, fails not to instruct you that you must in the next place have recourse to the
Saints, and make
Prayers to them.
How comes it to pass, if this were the
primitive practise too, that none of those
Holy Fathers, in any of their
practical discourses have ever treated of these things? Nay on the contrary, they every where thunder in our Ears, that
Protestant, Heretical Maxim, that we must
pray to GOD ONLY, and that we ought not to address our selves to any other.
123. In all your
Sermons, you call upon the
Blessed Virgin for assistance. In the Ends of your Books, her
Name seldom fails of standing in the same return of
praise in which
God and our
Saviour are
Glorified. Your
publick service, and
private prayers, are all over-run with this
superstition. But is there any thing of this in the
Primitive Rituals? Look I beseech you into the account that has been given us of the
publick service of the
Ancient Church by
Justin Martyr, Tertullian, nay by the
Clementine Constitutions themselves: Consult the Relation which
Pliny made to the Emperour
Trajan of their
Manners. Try those famous
Liturgies of the
Church within the first 100 years, which no body has the
Reply. p. 19.
happiness to be
acquainted with but
your self; see if you can pick us up but
one instance, but some
shadow of an
instance to flourish with on this occasion.
124. What are the
Lives of your
Saints, but continued
Histories of their
Devotion to the
Blessed Virgin, and the
Saints, and the
favours which upon that account they received from them? But in the ancient Compilers of such kind of
Discourses, we find
[Page 131] only dry accounts of their
Piety towards
God; of their
Zeal and
Constancy in the
Faith; of their
patience in
suffering any thing, rather than submit to such
superstitious practises as these, which the
Heathens indeed would have drawn them to, but which the
Church utterly abhorred. But for their
knight errantry in Honour of the Blessed
Virgin; for watching whole Nights before her
Images; or in her
Chappels; for turning
Vagabonds in order to the visiting her Chamber at
Loretto; or fetching a
Feather from
Compostella; of this New
Method of
Piety there are not the least traces.
125. I might run out these
remarks into almost infinite
Examples, were they not things as well known, as your
contrary superstition is notorious. But I shall reserve these, and some other Observations of the like kind, till you think fit to call me to account for them. In the mean time I conclude from this short
specimen I have here given, that certainly the face of the
Church must be very much changed as to these things; Or otherwise that so great a difference could not possibly be found in the
Lives, the
Writings, the
Actions, the
Customs, the
Opinions, the
Expressions, Prayers, Practises, of those
holy Fathers, from what we see and lament in your
Church at this day. I go on thirdly to shew;
III. The
Unreasonableness of this
Service.
126. And for that I shall offer only this one
plain Argument; If the
Saints cannot ordinarily
hear your
prayers, nor are able to attend
distinctly to those
Addresses that are made to them: If those whom you
Canonize are not indeed such as you suppose, but many at this day tormented in
Hell, upon whom you call for assistance in
Heaven: If some of those to whom you
pray never had any being, but either in the
Heralds Office, or in the fruitful Womb of a
Legendaries Brain: Then it cannot be doubted but that to pray to the
Saints must be the most
unreasonable Devotion in the World; you speak to the Wind, and call upon them to as little purpose as if you should here in
England make an
Address to a Man in
China or
Tartary; and you might as well have continued the
Deities, as you do the
practise of the ancient
Heathens in this service: It being altogether as wise a Devotion to pray to a
Jupiter or an
Apollo that never lived in the World, as to a St.
George or a St.
Christopher that never
[Page 132] had any more being in it than they. And yet were we now to inquire into these Circumstances, without a full knowledg of which this Invocation can never be a
reasonable service, what uncertain accounts should we receive from you. For,
127. First. As to the main foundation of all
‘Whether the
In his suppress'd Edition. Expos. of Mr. de Meaux. Sect. IV. p. 7.
Saints hear your
prayers?’ In what doubt is your Bishop of
Meaux still in his
Exposition, and you know he was once in a great deall more? All he has to say is that you teach
‘
That your prayers to the Saints
are very profitable,
Whether it be that they know them by the Ministry
and Communication
of the Angels;
or whether it be that God
himself makes known to them our desires by a particular Revelation;
or whether it be that he discovers the secret to them in his Divine Essence
in which all truth is Comprised.’ If we enquire of your more Ancient
Authors, we shall find all full of
Uncertainty. Lombard thought it was
not incredible to suppose
Lombard sent. lib. IV. dist. 45. Scotus ibid. Qu. 4. Gabr. Biel. in Can. Miss. l. 31. that the
Saints might know the
prayers that were addressed to them.
Scotus went a little farther, and judged it to be
probable that
God revealed these things to them: And so did
Gabriel Biel. Those who pretend to more certainty yet are able to give but very little reason why;
Bellarm. de Eccles. Triumph. l. 1. cap. 20. unless you will take this for a reason, that their
Church generally belives so, and that otherwise it would be vain and absur'd to
pray to them. In short, how the
Saints hear your
prayers you do not pretend to know; and I desire you to give Me but one rational Argument to convince me that (by whatever means it is) they do
ordinarily, and
constantly, and
certainly, and
particularly, understand the
Addresses that you make to them. For to deal freely with you, I never yet met with any thing that but inclined me to believe this, but much to the contrary.
128. Secondly, Concerning the
Canonization of your
Saints, may I beg leave to ask you: Are you sure that all those whom your
Church has placed in
Heaven are truly there? if you are not, I am sure you do very
unreasonably to
pray to them. Now this I the rather desire to be satisfied in because here again I find your
Authors very much unresolved what to say.
First, It is but the
common Opinion, (no matter of
Faith)
Bellarm. l. 1. de. Beat. SS. c. 8. 9. Vasquez. l 1. de Ador. disp. V. c. 3. that the power of
Canonizing Saints belongs to the
Pope; and therefore it cannot be without all doubt whether those whom he
Canonizes are infallibly
Saints or no.
Secondly, The Jesuit
Vasquez tells us, there are
Catholicks
[Page 133] (He means those of your
Communion) who do not think it without doubt that all whom your Church has
Canonized are indeed
Saints: And he mentions no less a man than
Cardinal
Cajetane. libr. de Indulg. c. 8. Canus loc. Theol. lib. 5: c. 5. Gerson de 4: dom. cons. 2. &c. de Exam. doctr. cons. 1. See Bishop Taylours Polem. disc. pag. 333.
Cajetane for one. And that
Cardinal in the book to which
Vasquez refers, alledges the great Doctour of your
Schools S.
Thomas for another. To these I will add
Melchior Canus, Antoninus, and
Gerson, who at most esteem it but
piously credible, not
absolutely certain. But
Augustinus Triumphus goes farther; and doubts not freely to declare that all who are
Canonized by the Pope cannot be in
Heaven. And
Prateolus tells us that
Herman the Author of the
Heresie of the
Fratricelli was for twenty years together after his death
honour'd as a
Saint, and then his body was taken up and burnt for a
Heretick. And now if you are not yet sensible of the danger you run by this means, whilst you not only call upon a
damned soul for
aid and
assistance, but (as in some of your
prayers you do)
pray unto God so to give you Grace on Earth as he has glorified them in Heaven; I shall leave it
De SS. beat. l. 1. c. 9. Sect. secundo. to your own
Cardinal Bellarmine to inform you of it.
Thirdly, It is confessed by those of your own
Church that among your
Canonized Saints, some there have been whose
Lives were not to be
commended: Others whose
Opinions have been condemned as
Heretical; and for my part, when I consider the
Character of some to whom you
pray, such as
Thomas a Becket, Dominick, &c. I cannot but say, that if these be the men whom you place in
Heaven, what the poor
Indians did of the
Spaniards, that then the other is certainly the more desirable portion. For, and I am perswaded that were but S.
Martin again alive to summon their
Souls before him, as he once did that of a
supposed Saint in his time, they would make the same
Confession that
Vid Bellar. de beat. SS. l. 1. cap. 7. wretched
Spirit is reported to have done, and prove much more worthy your
Compassion than your
Adoration. Now that which the more encreases this danger is
Fourthly, The almost infinite
Number of
Saints that have been received amongst you, and whose
Consecration depending wholly on
matter of Fact, in which you do not pretend the
Pope to be
Infallible, it can hardly be supposed but that he must have very often proved mistaken. For to keep only to your own
Order; a late
Author of yours tells us, that your
Domestick Saints
Calendarium Benedictinum ad 26. Dec. alone did long since by computation amount to
fourty four thousand. And I find another
Dr. Jackson T. 1. p. 937. list increasing them to
fifty thousand.
[Page 134] Now to consider all the Arts and Intrigues that are used to procure these
Canonizations; by what
Popes many of them have been placed in Heaven; what Characters several among them have in your own
Histories of their Lives; these and many other
Reflections would I confess prompt me, were I otherwise as well satisfied of the
Innocence of this
Worship, as I am fully convinced of the
unlawfulness of it, yet to
pray to the greatest part of your
Saints, as he once did to
Saint Cutbert; Si Sanctus sis, Ora pro me: IF THOU ART A SAINT, pray for me.
129. It is I know, the last refuge of many, who consider this uncertainty, to say, That at least your
good intention shall render these
Prayers acceptable to
God; for what (says the Learned
Vossius Thes. Theol. p. 106.
Erasmus) if the Saints do not perceive our desires, yet Christ do's know them, and will for them give us what we ask? But yet still this will not make it a
reasonable Service; nor can you with a firm Faith
call upon those in
Heaven, of whom you have at most, but a
Pious Credulity that they are there: And tho' some of your
Authors do believe, that your own Piety shall
excuse you, yet others utterly deny it, and doubt not to say, that you may as well excuse the
Heathens themselves, who in worshipping the parts of the World, supposed (according to
Varro's Divinity)
Catherinus Annot. in Cajet. dogm. de Canoniz. pag. 135. that they Worshipped the
Divine Nature, that was
diffused through it. But
130. Thirdly, That which is the worst of all, is, that you have not only
no certainty of the Happiness of those
Saints whom you
Canonize, but you
pray to some who (for ought appears) never had any
Being in the
World.
Now among these, I shall not doubt in the first place, to account our own
Country Saint and
Champion St.
George, and of whom our
English Legends still recount so many
Miracles; tho'
Cardinal Baronius himself has confess'd that they are for the most
Baron in Martyr. R. Apr. 23. part absolutely
false. In the
Roman Breviary since the
Reformation of it by
Pope Pius V. there is no account at all of his
Life; and your own
Ribadeneira. ad 23. April.
Authors tells us the reason is,
because there is no certain truth
of any of those things that are extant concerning him. And indeed, if the Antient Histories of this
Saint were justly censured by
Pope Gelasius, as Apocryphal, we have no great reason to believe, that the latter
Legends deserve any better reception. As for the famous Story which still continues in those
equally Books of the Ignorant, The
English Lives of the Saints, and
[Page 135] the
Sign Posts; where we see this great
Champion, like another
Perseus, mounted to deliver the fair
Andromeda from the
Dragons Mouth;
Baronius charges
Jacobus a Voragine with the pure
Invention of it, and almost every Body now, but our
English Compiler, is grown asham'd of it. In short, if there be any Foundation at all in
Antiquity for this Story, it is but little for the satisfaction of those who
Worship this
Saint. Your own Authors confess, that this
George lived about the time of
Dioclesian, that he was by Birth a
Cappadocian; that he had Encounters with
Athanasius a
Magician: Now all this seems to perswade us, that our S.
George was no other, than
George the
Arrian Bishop, who was also a
Cappadocian by Birth, who had Encounters with S.
Athanasius, whom the
Arrians called a
Magician; and who was Deified by those
Hereticks, after his violent Death in the time of
Julian. And in Memory of which perhaps it was, that they first mounted him upon a
Camel, (being led through the Streets upon one) and then for greater decency changed it into a Horse; to which
Jacobus a Voragine added the
Dragon and the
Lady; with the Warlike
Equipage of
Cask and
Lance: And thus is our Tutelary
Saint, brought under suspition of being, if any thing at all, a wicked
Heretick; that persecuted one of the greatest
Bishops of his time, for asserting the
Divinity of the
Son of God; and yet is this Man still
pray'd to in your
Church; and I have now by me an Antient
Ritual in which he is seen Armed at all points, his Spear in the
Dragons Mouth, the
Lady by him on her
Knees: and these
Prayers addressed to him.
Saint GEORGE,
famous Martyr; Praise
and Glory
become thee: By whom the princely Lady
being grieved by a wicked Dragon,
was preserved.
Almighty and Everlasting God,
who mercifully hearest the prayers of those who call upon thee; we humbly beseech thy Majesty, that as for the honour of thy Blessed and Glorious Martyr S. George
thou causedst the Dragon
to be overcome by a Maid, so by his Intercession
thou wouldest vouchsafe to defend us against all our Enemies visible and invisible, that they may not be able to hurt us, through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Now what is this but to mock
God in his solemn
service? To
pray to him through the
Intercession of a man that either never
[Page 136] lived in the World, or it may be was one of his most hated Enemies; and deified by a
crew of wretched
Hereticks, for his fury in opposing the
Eternal Generation of the
Saviour of us all.
131. And what I have thus chosen more particularly to insist upon in this
Example, I might shew in several others not a whit less
fabulous. Our Saviour in S.
Luke gives a parabolical account of the different States of men in the other World, under the names of
Dives and
Lazarus. As for the
former there was no great danger of making him a
Saint. But for
Lazarus he is
transubstantiated into a real man.
Temples are built among you to his
Honour: Anniversary solemnites are Consecrated to
Baron. Ann. ad Ann. 3. §. 44. his memory, and because he was represented in Scripture as full of sores, he is now made the
Patron of the
Lepers in
Heaven. From the Greek word signifying a
Spear, you have first found out a name for the
Centurion that ranour Blessed
Lord into the Side; and having metamorphosed the
Spear into a
Man, it was no hard matter to make the
Man a
Saint: And now upon the
15th. of
March, who so much Honour'd, as S.
Longinus. Nay
Baron. Not. in Mart. XV. March. what is yet more pleasant,
Baronius assures us that his
Venerable Body is kept in the
Church of St.
Austin at
Rome.
132. S.
Christopher is another of your
Saints that never lived. He is pretended to have suffer'd under
Dagnus King of
Lycia, who also never was in the World; and being of a
Giantly stature to have dwelt by a River side where there was no
Bridge, and there he made it his business in
Charity to carry over all that pass'd that way: Which our
Saviour so much approved as to suffer him once upon a time to carry himself over upon his shoulders. Now all this
Cardinal Baronius confesses to
Not. ad Martyrol. Jul. 25. be a
meer Legend; but our thorough paced
English-Irish Collector, tho he confesses he never saw any approved
Author that said it, yet for the
Pictures sake which are so common amongst you, declares generously that he was resolved to believe it. And the
ancient Ritual I before mention'd,
prays to our
Saviour that in consideration of his riding over the
River upon S.
Christophers back, he would
deliver you from all dangers.
133. I should never have done should I insist on this manner upon all the other Imaginary
Saints whom you
Worship. Such were our own Country-woman again, S.
Ursula and her 11000 Virgins; who is pretended to have been
Daughter to
Dionet King of
Cornwall, in the time of
Marcian, when there was no
[Page 137] such King in
England; and to have been Martyr'd at
Cologn, whither she went by Ship, being the first and last that ever sail'd thither; and yet this Lady makes no mean Figure in your
Church. She is
Patroness under
God and the
Blessed Virgin, of a whole
Religious Society; and with great Devotion
pray'd to,
December 21. I might to this
Visionary Saintess, add others of the same Sex; S.
Catharine, S.
Margaret, &c. But I shall content my self with one Memorable Instance, not so commonly known, which may suffice to shew with what uncertainty you
pray to many in these Devotions. The account is given by one of your
own Communion, and who
himself discover'd the
mistake.
134. About eight Miles from
Evora a City of
Portugal, there
Ressendii Epist. ad Barthol. Kebedium. pag. 168. is a place which they call the
Cave of the Martyrs; where they pretend were slain a great number of
Christians with their
Bishop and his two
Sisters; to one of which, called
Columba, there was a
Chappel erected, and in the place where the
other was slain, there issued out a Spring of sweet
Water, called to this day,
Holy-well, and very good for curing a weak sight. The Sepulchre of the
Bishop himself is in a
Church of the
Blessed Virgins, empty, and open. Over it is a
Table of
Stone supported by
four Pillars, so that a Man might go under it. Hither came all those that had Pains in their
Loyns, and imploring the
aid of this
Martyr, they went away certainly
Cured. There was also the
Picture of this
Bishop: and upon this Stone Table they
Sacrificed the
Mass, in
Honour to him, calling him by his proper Name VIARIUS.
135. This was the ancient
Tradition, and
Worship. When
Ressendius, who relates this Story, came hither, in order to the publishing the Life of this
Saint, among others he was then Writing; he desired the Priest who had given him this account of their
Martyr, to shew him if there were any antient
Records, or
Inscriptions, that confirm'd it. Upon this he brought him to the
Altar beforemention'd, and there he found this Inscription.
[Page 138] S. Q. JVL. CLARO. C. V. IIII. VI RO VIARVM CVRANDA RVM ANN. XXI.
Q. JVL. NEPOTIANO. C. I.
IIII. VIRO. VIARVM CVRAN DARVM. ANN. XX.
CALP. SABINA. FILIIS.
The
Priest pointing with his
Finger to these Words VIARUM CVRANDARUM,
See (says he) the proper Name of the
Martyr VIARIUS: And for CURANDARUM, it is as much as to say
Cura Cutarum, i. e. a
Bishop. As for the other
Names (continued he) I suppose they may be the
proper Names of the other
Martyrs that suffered with him.
136.
Ressendius held his Countenance as well as ever he could, but went immediately away to
Cardinal Alphonsus, who was at that time
Bishop of
Evora, and told him all that had pass'd, and how a couple of
Heathens, Overseers of the
High-ways, had been Worshipp'd there for Christians, and
Martyrs. The
Cardinal commanded the
Tomb to be stopped up, to the great discontent of the people, who had been wont to receive mighty relief by their Addresses to this
Viarius; and cursed the Learning and Curiosity of
Ressendius, that had deprived them of so
great and useful a
Saint.
137. I shall make no other
Application of this
Story, than what I find in the complaint of another
Learned man of your
Church,
Cassander Consult. p. 971. as to this very matter.
There is also (says he)
another Error,
not uncommon; that neglecting, in a manner, the antient and known Saints,
the common People Worship
more ardently, and diligently, the new
and unknown;
of whose Holiness
we have but little assurance, and some of which are known to us only by Revelation;
insomuch that of several of them it is justly doubted,
Whether EVER
[Page 139] THERE WERE ANY SUCH PERSONS IN THE WORLD.
138. From all these Considerations, I now conclude against the
reasonableness of this
Invocation. 1. No Man can
reasonably pray in Faith to such Persons, as he can never be sure are able either to
hear his
Prayers, or to
answer his
desires: But you can never be sure that your
Saints are able to do either of these; and therefore you cannot
reasonably pray with any good assurance to them. 2. It is
unreasonable to
pray to those as
Saints, who, it may be, are not in
Heaven, nor ever shall be there: But this is very probably the
Case of many of your
Saints, and you cannot be sure it is otherwise, when you address to them; and therefore it is
unreasonable in you to
pray to them. 3. To pray to those who never were in the World, is the most
unreasonable thing that can be imagined; but in your
Prayers to many of your
Saints, you address to those that never were in the World; and therefore upon this, and upon all the foregoing Accounts, I conclude it very
unreasonable to pray to the
Saints at all.
There is yet one thing more remaining to finish this whole
Subject of
Invocation of
Saints, viz.
IV. That it is
Unprofitable, and
Impious in the
Practice.
First, That it is
Unprofitable.
139. And if the former consideration stand good; this will necessarily follow from it. For if either those whom you
pray to are meer
figments of your own
brain, that have neither
Truth nor
Existence; or if tho they do
Exist, yet they are not
Saints as you suppose; or tho they should be
Saints too, yet have no means
ordinarily and
particularly to hear your
prayers, nor can attend to those numberless addresses that are at the
same time from all the parts of the World put up to them; it must then be a most
unprofitable, as well as a most
senseless practise to
pray to them; and what our
Saviour once objected to the
Samaritans, will be found no less true of you, that
ye worship ye know not what, nor why.
140. But let us allow that you
invoke none but what have
lived, and are
sanctified: Let us also grant that which yet the
Holy Fathers so much doubted of, that the
Saints do already enjoy the
Beatifick Vision; and therefore (according to your Divinity)
[Page 140] are capable of understanding your
prayers, by whatsoever way it be that they do so: I dare yet ask of you, what
profit is there in
this service? For tell me now, I beseech you, O ye
Worshippers of
dead men? Have we not
an Advocate in Heaven, Jesus Christ
the righteous, who is the sole and full
propitiation of our
1 John II. 1.
sins? Has he not promised that
whatsoever we ask the Father
in HIS NAME,
we shall receive it? Has he not told us that he
Jo. XIV. 13. Ib. VI. 6.
is the Way, the Truth, and the Life? And that
no one can come to the Father
but by him? Is it not he that has set us an Example how we ought to
pray; when ye pray
say, Our Father
which art in Heaven: Shew us if you can any
precept, or
encouragement, or
Example, for going to any other. Is it that our
Saviour Christ has not compassion enough for us, that you go to others as
more merciful? Thus some of you I know have said: But on the contrary the
Scripture tells us
‘
That we have not a High Priest
Heb. IV. 15, 16.
which cannot be touched with the feeling of our Infirmities,
but was in all points tempted like as we are:’ And from thence presently infers
‘
Let us therefore come boldly unto the Throne of Grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find Grace to help in time of need.’ Or is it finally, that the
interest of the Blessed
Jesus is not great enough with his
Father; unless you add a mad
Francis, a bloody
Dominick, a Rebellious
Becket, an enthusiastick
Ignatius, to be joynt
Advocates with him? If these indeed be your
thoughts, let us plainly know the
impiety of them? And upon what unchristian
foundations the
benefit of this
practise is established by you? But if you dare not say that any
Saint in Heaven can prevail, where Christ alone cannot; if you are
ashamed to own, that you think any one can
love us more dearly, than he who
gave himself for us, and
redeem'd us with his own most precious Blood; or by consequence can be more ready to
hear and
intercede for us: Tell me then, what
profit is it, that having this
fountain of living water, you run to the
broken Cisterns of the
merits and
intercession of your fellow
Creatures, which can
hold no Water.
141. But I will go yet further, to shew you the
unprofitableness of this
service. It was objected by a great Man of your own
Church;
‘
If (says he)
the Saints
know our necessities, and
Durand. in sent. IV. d. 45. q. 4.
those defects which we express in our Prayers:
How comes it to pass that we do not oftner find our selves relieved by them? To this he answers;
That altho the Saints
in Heaven have doubtless
[Page 141] the greatest Charity imaginable for us, yet they have withal their Wills
so intirely conformed to the Will of God,
as not to lend any assistance to us, but according to what they see the Knowledge
and Will of God
disposed towards us.’ An excellent
reflexion certainly; and which no one can doubt to be most true. But then it will follow from it, that you do in vain sollicite the
Saints, who cannot lend you any assistance, till
God is pleased to permit himself to be
intreated for you. Whilst our
Heavenly Father is our
Enemy, all the
Host of Heaven are so too. We must first be reconciled to him, before ever we can expect any
favour or
acceptance with them. In short, it was the Conclusion of an antient
Father, whom I before mentioned,
‘That the only way to make the
Angels and
Saints our Friends, is to make
God so first:’ And tho' we know little of what those blessed
Spirits above do for us, yet we have all the reason in the World to
believe that they
Love and
Hate according to the
Divine Pleasure; and if they do
pray for us, the most ready way to obtain their
Prayers, is to be constant, and zealous, and persevering both in our
Prayers and Piety towards
God, through his
Son Jesus Christ our Lord.
142. I shall conclude this with the words of S.
Austin,
‘
Let it not
De verâ Religione. p 290.
Lugd. 1664.
be any matter of Religion to us to Worship dead Men;
because if they have lived well, they desire no such Honour, but rather that we should Worship him;
by whose Illumination they rejoyce, that we are Companions of their Piety. They are therefore to be Honoured
for our Imitation,
not to be Worshipped
out of Religion—
And the same let us think of Angels;
that they above all things, desire that we should, together with them, Worship God only,
in whose Vision they are happy—Tying our Souls to him alone,
from which Religion
derives its very Name, let us lay aside all Superstition. Behold I Worship one God,
the One principle of all things—Whatsoever Angel
loves this God,
I am sure that he loves me
too. Whosoever remains in him, and can understand the Prayers
of Men, in him he hears me. Whosoever has God
for his Good, do's in him help me—Let the Adorers
of the parts of the Universe tell me: What good person is there that he does not reconcile to himself, who Worships him only whom every good person loves, and in whose knowledge he rejoyces, and by recurring to which principle, he becomes good. Let therefore Religion
bind us to the One God Almighty,
&c.’ But I insist too long on these Reflections: I add only,
[Page 142] Secondly, To
close all, That this
Invocation of
Saints departed, is as
Impious, as it is
Unprofitable.
143. For First, To take this Practice in the most Moderate
Sense that may be, yet to
pray to any Creature after the manner that you do to the
Saints departed, is to make them the
Objects of a proper
Religious Worship, and to pay that Service to the Creature, which is due only to the Creator; and this certainly cannot be done without a very great
Impiety.
144. Secondly, To
pray to the
Saints but only as
Intercessors, even this do's usurp upon the peculiar Prerogative of our
Blessed Saviour, who is our
only Mediator, and whose singular Priviledge it is
to appear in the presence of God for us. And to joyn others with Christ in his great Office and Employment, to make to our selves
new Mediators; what is this but tacitely (at least) to imply, that we dare not trust either his
Mercy, or his
Interest; in the concern of our
Everlasting Salvation. But then
145. Thirdly, To
pray, as you evidently do, not only that the
Saints would
intercede for you, but that God would be merciful to you, not only through the
Merits of Christ, but of the
Saint whose Memory you celebrate; this is a downright undervaluing of our Saviour's
Bloud, and do's despight unto the Covenant of Grace.
146. Fourthly, To pray to the
Saints, (as if we may be allow'd to understand the meaning of plain words you do) as the Arbitrary Dispensers of Benefits to you, that they would themselves grant you those things which you ask of them; this makes your
Service yet more
intollerable. And tho' you seek to evade the justice of this
Censure by those unreasonable
Expositions of your
prayers, I have before refuted, yet I am sure it ought to be more than enough to make us avoid that
practice which cannot be excused but by such forced Interpretations, as should men use the like on other Occasions, all
Society must be overthrown, and Mens
Words be no longer relied upon as sufficient to declare the
Sense of their
Minds.
147. Fifthly, As to what concerns the
practice of the
people in this point, it cannot be deny'd; nay, it is by some of your own
Church openly complain'd of, how much their
hope and
confidence, their
Love and
Service are hereby lessen'd towards
God; and what greater signs of
Zeal appear in them towards the Blessed
Virgin, than towards our Saviour Christ himself. And indeed,
[Page 143] you who ought to have better inform'd them, are the very Persons that have especially help'd to mislead them. 'Tis from you they have learnt, as a great
practice of
piety, to
salute her ten times, for
God's once. 'Tis you that have taught them to joyn
Mary still with
Jesus in their Mouths: Insomuch, as if it be possible, to let her Name be the last Expression of their dying Breath. 'Tis you that have told them, that to
list themselves into her
Fraternity, is one of the surest means in the World to ascertain their
Salvation. From you they learn in all their
prayers to call upon her: at the
sound of a
Bell thrice every day wherever they are, or whatever they are about, to fall down upon their Knees and salute her. Your
Confessions, Absolutions, Excommunications, Vows, Thanksgivings, Visitations, Commendations, Conjurations, are all transacted in
her Name, as well as in the
Name of the
Holy Trinity. Whilst our Saviour Christ is represented by you either as still in the state of
Pupillage, an
Infant in her Arms, or
expiring upon his
Cross, she has her
Crown, and
Glory about her Head; sometimes the
Moon under her feet, and not seldom the whole
Trinity joyning to set forth her
Honour. Her
Titles in all your
Offices are
Excessive: The
Queen of Heaven, the
Mother of Divine Grace, the
Mirrour of Righteousness, the
Seat of Wisdom, the
Cause of our joy, the
Tower of David, the
Ark of the Covenant, the
Gate of Heaven, the
Refuge of Sinners, the
Help of Christians, the
Queen of Angels, Patriarchs, Prophets, Apostles, Martyrs, Confessors, and all Saints: These are the common Names you give her, in your
Hymns, your
Litanies and
Prayers to her. And what Impression all this must make upon untutor'd minds; how much greater value they will be hereby apt to set upon her than upon Christ himself, every mans
reason will soon tell him, and a sad
experience confirms it to us.
148. But indeed Sixthly, It is here (in the Words of the
Isaia XXIV. 2.
Prophet) As with the people so with the Priest: Your Superstition is not at all less, tho much more inexcusable than theirs. Witness those great Names for whom you have appeared to be so much concern'd; St.
Bernard, St.
Germain, St.
Anselme, St.
Antonine, St.
Bernardine, &c. And whose
Blasphemous Devotion I have before exposed to the World. Let the Writings of
Card. Bona, and Father
Crasset, the
Contemplations of the
Blessed Virgin, and the late
Apology for them in our own Language be consider'd. For I am very much mistaken, if it be possible for the most ignorant
[Page 144]
Zealot to be more unreasonably
extravagant, than these Learned Men have approved themselves to be.
149. Nor may you turn off these with your
old distinction, that they are but
private persons, and for whose
Excesses therefore your
Church is not to Answer. They were
approved in what they did, and many of them are at this day
Worshipped by you as
Canonized Saints; and 'twas this Superstition that especially contributed to their Exaltation. Who was it that composed that exorbitant
Hymn, yet used in your
Church, Ave Maris Stella, but your devout St.
Bernard? S.
Herman, another of your
own Order, made those
others neither less extravagant, nor less authorized by you,
Salve Regina, Alma Redemptoris Mater, and
Ave Regina Caelorum. And the late
Editor of his Life tells us, That being Lame in
Calendar. Benediction. To. 3. Jul. 19. Body, and Dullin Mind, he pray'd earnestly to the
Blessed Virgin in this
Romantick manner:
‘
Help, O help, the doubly wretched Herman.’
His Prayer smote the tender hearted Virgin, and immediately she appear'd to him, and offer'd him his choice, whether he would have firmness of Body, or Accuteness of Mind. He chose the latter, and express'd his Gratitude to his great
Benefactress, by composing those famous
Hymns beforementioned to her
Honour.
150. It was another of the same
Order, and that had in your Opinion two the greatest
Characters any Man can pretend to; a
Pope in the
Church Militant, and now a
Saint in the
Church Triumphant,
Pope Urban 11. Ibid. Jul. 29. who appointed the three Solemn
[Devotions I have spoken of, to be every day paid to the Blessed
Virgin at the
sound of a Bell, and composed the
Course of the
Virgin, that what was done before by the
Monks only, might from
thenceforth become the
Public Service of the
Church to her.
151. What is the great Commendation that is given of S.
Gerard, and he too a
Saint of your
own Order. But that having caused an
Image of the
Blessed Virgin to be curiously wrought, he set it up
Ibid. Sept. 24: in a
Chappel built on purpose for it, and appointed
Incense and sweet
Odours to be every day for ever
burnt to it. That he taught the
Hungarians to call her their
Lady, having perswaded their King
Stephen to make his Kingdom Tributary to her. In short, that he never heard the Name of
Mary pronounced, but he Worshipp'd it, bowing his Face towards the Ground.
[Page 137] 152. 'Twas this was the great thing for which yet another
Cal. Ben. To. 4. Sept. 30. of your
Order St.
Joscio was
Canonized. Whose Piety to the
Virgin whilst he lived, was rewarded with a notable Miracle at his death. For no sooner was he dead, but there grew
five Roses of an extraordinary
sweetness out of his
Head, two out of his
Eyes, two out of his
Ears, and one out of his
Mouth; and upon every one of them a Letter of the
Virgin Mary's name; so that the whole M. A. R. I. A. was composed by them.
153. Thus has this devotion to the
Saints, almost wholly overcome your piety towards
God. Your
Devotions, your
Histories, your
Lives, your
Miracles, are all framed to promote it. And now I am mentioning those Evils which from these kind of
Legends have been derived to corrupt both the
Opinions and
Practice of those who are acquainted with little else than these
Fables: I will refer it to your self to tell me, whether you can endure to see the
Dignity of our
Saviour, and the
Majesty of
God himself, so lessen'd as it is by many of your
Communion, to encrease the
Veneration of the
Saints.
154. When St.
Gothardus was chosen by the
Emperor Henry to
Ibid. ad IV. Maii, p. 3
[...]0. To. 2. succeed
Bernard in the Bishoprick of
Hildersheim, and the
Monk modestly declined that
Honour; the
Blessed Virgin the same night appears to him, and sharply reproves him in this
Ranting Rhetorick, Scito Imperatorem MEO id JUSSU motiri.
‘
Peccasti penicaciâ tua in ME & filium.’ Know (says she) that the Emperour has done this at MY COMMAND; Thou hast sin'd by thy obstinacy, against ME and MY SON. This indeed was as became the
Queen of
Heaven; and one would think by it, that she still maintain'd the RIGHT of a MOTHER over
Her Son.
155. But you have dealt yet worse with our
Saviour than this; your Writers represent him at this day as a
little Child in
Heaven, as if he were ever to continue in the same impotent State, in which your
Pictures and
Images express him. Thus we read in the
Life of St.
Paula, That the
Blessed Virgin appear'd to
Cal. Ben. To. 1. Jan. 5. her with her LITTLE BOY, who kist
Paula, and squeezed some of his
Mothers Milk into her Mouth. Nor was this any thing extraordinary; The Writer of her Life assures us, that she was often wont to
take him into Her Arms and
play with him. And the like happened to many other of your
Saints; as for instance, Saint
Ibid. Mart. 30.
Aldegundis, St.
Francisca, of whom we are told, that being committed
[Page 138] to the care of an
Arch-angel, she did oftentimes read the
Office of the Blessed Virgin in the night, by the Light that proceeded
Ib. Mart. 9. from his Rays: And was for her diligence in it so acceptable to the
Virgin, that she several times came down from Heaven to refresh her, and offer'd her Son to be
kiss'd, and
embraced by her.
156. But the Favours of the
Blessed Virgin to St.
Ida were of all
Tom. IV. p. 590. Dec. XI. others the most considerable.
‘For coming down into Her Cell with her INFANT JESUS; Behold (says she) O
Ida! thy
Love: Take Him into thy Lap, and satisfy thy self with the Kisses and Embraces of him whom thou
lovest.—’My Author goes on beyond all bounds even of
common decency: But I must stop here, and not repeat those
Blasphemies, which cannot be read without trembling. But, O Blessed
Jesus! How long wilt thou suffer this dishonour? and permit an unbounded
Superstition to run to these Excesses? I appeal to all the Christians of the World, what mean, dishonourable Notions must they have of the God of
Heaven and Earth, that in such a discerning Age can presume to publish such
Romances? These Stories might indeed become a
Homer, or a
Virgil; But what is
fancy in them, being applied to a
Venus and a
Cupid, is an unpardonable
Blasphemy to be thus used of the
Saviour of the World, who is
God over all blessed for ever.
157. These are the effects of this
Superstition: I might add many other Examples no less Horrible, in which our
Blessed Lord has been diminish'd to make up the Honour of his Servants. But I shall shut up all with an Impiety of another kind, though the effect of this Worship; and which ought the more to be taken notice of, both because it was done by a
Society which would be thought at least the most zealous of any for their Faith; and was exposed publickly in the sight of the Sun, and before the Eyes of many to whom I now write. The thing I mean is the
late Procession of the
Jesuits at
Luxemburg, May 20. 1685. designed for the
See the Account publish'd by that Society:
La S
te Vierge Patrone Honoree & Bienfaisante dans la France
& dans le Luxembourg. Glory of the
Blessed Virgin
‘
the Honour'd and Affectionate Patroness of France
and Luxembourg.’
The
Procession indeed was singularly extravagant; and it needed the skill of that
Learned Society, to put
Prophaness into so
Scholastick
[Page 139] a dress. Heathenism and
Christianity walk'd together, as if the
Fathers of the Society had equally reverenced the
Ancient Deities of the One, as the
Modern Deities of the Other.
On the one side were carried the
Image of the Blessed
Virgin, and the
Holy Sacrament. On the other,
Mars, Vulcan, the
Cyclops and
Nayades, Ceres, Flora, Pomona, &c. And these too with all the
Pomp, and even under the Names of GODS and DIVINITIES.
At several Stations, where the
Procession was to rest,
Theatres were erected, to serve
to inspire agreeably (say the
Learned Fathers in the Account which they
printed of this days Work) a
Piety towards our Lady of Consolation. So the Blessed
Virgin there is called.
The second of these
Theatres, was for the GOD
MARS;
who commands his
Warriors to take heed not to commit any insult from henceforth upon the
Chappel of our Lady of Consolation. This is
Mars's care: And the Device for the GOD
Mars, was
Procul, ô, procul ite profani.
Virg.
In the third
Theatre, Ceres, Flora, Pomona, &c. rejoyce at the return of our
Lady of Consolation. And their
Motto, still under the Title of
Divinities, was
Jam redit & Virgo, redeunt Saturnia Regna.
It were too long to transcribe all the other Follies and Impieties of this days
Solemnity, in which the Holy Scripture found no room; the
Sacrament but very little: The whole Piety was designed to the
Blessed Virgin; and because
Christianity had not
Gods enough in it, to set forth her
Glory, all the
Poetic Deities were revived, to
inspire agreeably a Devotion into the People for Her. This was indeed a Master-piece of Contrivance; and what Invention shall next be had, to excite a Devotion to her, we may expect to see the first time the
Gentlemen of the
Society shall have Occasion to make their
complying Consciences do something extraordinary, for the Flattery of a Prince so much their
Friend, and therefore so much their
Favourite as he, for whose Honour
[Page 140] this
Solemn Procession was in great measure designed. In the mean time, I shall leave it to the
Reader seriously to consider, what sad Effects such a
Devotion as this has given birth to; and what just Cause we have to oppose a
Superstition, contrary to the
Holy Scripture, unknown to the best and most
Primitive Antiquity; unreasonable in its self, and which is worst of all, not only, very
Unprofitable, but very
Wicked too in its
Practice.
ANSWER TO THE FOURTH ARTICLE, OF IMAGES and RELIQUES.
IN the beginning of this
Article you tell me (but with very
Reply, p. 25. little reason) that you might
have past over this point without any further consideration; the best Argument you bring for it, being, if I mistake not, this, That you are not obliged to defend what I had advanced against you upon it. And indeed tho the
reason be but a poor one, yet I am perswaded you had done better both for the interest of your Cause, and for your own credit, to have contented your self with it, and have past over this
Article altogether; rather than by giving such loose Answers to my Allegations, to have satisfied the World, that you have no just
Exceptions to make against them.
2. Were I minded in return to excuse my self the trouble of any farther
Answer to you, I could, I believe, give you some more plausible pretences for it. I might tell you,
(1st,) That your
Distinctions are now so well known, and have been so often exploded by us, that there is no longer any danger that even
‘
my
Reply, Ibid.
friends the Vulgar should be circumvented by them.’ I might add,
(2dly,) And that with great truth, that this whole subject has been utterly exhausted by that
Learned Man, I have so often mention'd, in his
Defence of the
Charge of
Idolatry against
T. G. and from whom you have here again borrow'd your chiefest strength. I might mind you,
(3ly,) How after two endeavours to
reply to him,
T. G. was forced to give over; and it is now above eight years since neither he nor any of your
Church has thought fit to
[Page 142] carry on the
Dispute. I might desire you,
(4thly,) To compare your performances upon this point with what the
Representer ventur'd not above a year since to make a flourish with; and see if you could find out but any one thing in all you here repeat, that his
learned and
judicious Adversary had not utterly confuted. But he too has forsaken the
Cause; and I am now called upon to give you the
same Answers that have been made to both these, and then
without pretending to be a Prophet, I dare be bold
Reply, Pref. to say for all your blustring, you will go off the Stage as tamely and quietly, as any of your Predecessors have done before you. There is a certain
Circle of Shifts and Distinctions which you all run; and no sooner are those spent, but your
bolt is shot; you drop the
Question, and begin again upon a new score.
3. These and many other reasons I might offer to decline any farther Examination of this
Point; but I have promised you before, that I would neither
misrepresent your Doctrine, nor FOBB
Reply, Pref. OFF
your Arguments. And I will here perform it with such exactness, that
[...]even your
Incense and
Holy Water shall not be forgotten. And if for our diversion you shall think fit the next time you write to add to these all your other follies, of
Holy Ashes, Consecrated Candles, Agnus Dei's, and in one word, whatever
Superstitions of the like kind, your
Pontifical, Ceremonial, Missal, Breviary, Office of the Blessed Virgin, with all the
Rationals and
Comments that have ever been written upon them can furnish you with, I do once more promise you, that no pretence of their
Impertinence shall hinder me from sifting both
them and
you to the Bottom. As to the present
subject, I shall observe this plain
Method:
- I. I will make good the Charge of
Image-Worship against you.
- II. I will shew you, that in this service too, you are
truly and
properly guilty of
Idolatry.
4. But before I enter upon these Particulars, I must stop so long as to consider the new
Introduction you endeavour to amuse your
Reader with:
viz.
SECT. I.
Of the Benefit
of Pictures
and Images.
Reply, p. 26.
AND which brings to my mind what
Tully (reckoning up the several
Opinions of the
Philosophers concerning the
Nature of
Tusc. Qu. l. 1. Sect. 17.
the Soul) said once of
Aristoxenus, who of a
Fidler became a Philosopher, and asserted the Soul to be a
Harmony;
‘
Hic ab artificio suo non recessit, & tamen aliquid dixit.’ You tell us then,
5. Reply, §. 19.]
‘
That they are the Books of the Ignorant, silent
Reply, p. 26, 27.
Orators, apt to increase in us the love of God and his Saints, and (O Elegant!) BLOW UP
the DYING COALS
of our AFFECTIONS
into a FLAME
of DEVOTION,
That the representations of Holy persons, and of their glorious actions, do by their powerful Eloquence inflame us towards an imitation of their Graces and Virtues, and renew in us afresh the memory of the persons whom they represent, with a reverence and respect for them.’
6.
Answ.] In all which tho you fight with your own shadow, and say nothing that either contradicts our Principles concerning
Worship, or justifies your practises; yet have you been so unhappy as to offer just matter for our
Animadversion: For,
1st. It is no small mistake in you, thus to joyn
Pictures and
Images together, as if they were all one; when yet both your own
Superstition, and the
Opinion both of the
Jews and
Gentiles (as to the point of
worshipping of them) have always made a very great difference between them. As for the
ancient Heathens, they
adored their
[...],
Statues, or
Graven Images; because they conceived them most apt to be
animated by their
Gods, of which they were the resemblances. Whereas
Pictures were not thought so capable of receiving that
animation. The same was the distinction of the
Jews too, who upon this very account have always look'd upon the former sort of
[...]
Maimon. See Dr.
Hamm. of Idolatry, Sect. 40.
Sculptures to be the thing especially forbidden in the
second Commandment; insomuch that they thought it
unlawful to have them even for
Ornament; but for
[...] Id. Ibid.
Pictures painted or
woven, those they did not esteem to have been absolutely forbidden to them. And at this day in your
Church, your
Images are set up with
solemn Consecrations to receive your
[Page 144]
Adoration. But I do not know that any
Pictures are dedicated for
Altar-pieces, or other uses, with the
like solemnity.
2. Another Confusion of the like kind you make in what follows, in speaking of the
Pictures not only of
Holy Persons, but of their
Actions too. For every body knows how much more use there may be, and how much less danger there certainly is in
Historical Representations, than in
single Figures, but especially
Carved Images.
3. Were the
benefit of
Images never so great, yet you know this is neither that which we dispute with you, nor for which they are set up in your
Churches. Your
Trent Synod expresly defines that
due Veneration is to be paid to them. Your
Catechism says that they are to be had not only for
Instruction, but for
Worship. And this is the
Point in
Controversie betwixt us. We retain
Pictures, and sometimes even
Images too in our
Churches for
Ornament, and (if there be such Uses to be made of them) for all the other
Benefits you have now been mentioning. Only we deny that any
service is to be
paid to them; or any
solemn Prayers to be made at their
Consecration, for any
Divine Vertues, or indeed for any Vertues at all, to proceed from them. This is our
Business; the rest is all
Impertinence in such
Discourses as these, where men are to
dispute, not
harangue. And for
Images set up in
Churches, with these
Ceremonies, and for this purpose, I add
4. That were the
benefits of them otherwise never so great, yet will not this be any manner of Excuse to you for the
violating of
God's Law, seeing, as you have been often told, and indeed do your self confess,
No Evil is to be done, for any Good whatsoever that may come of it. Tho now
5. I am not altogether satisfied of the great
usefulness of
Images for the
instruction of the
Ignorant. They may indeed serve to call Good things and Persons to their remembrance, when they have before been
instructed, and by consequence in that respect are no longer
ignorant of what is
represented by them. But let a man, that is properly
Ignorant, i. e. who never heard of the
XIIth (for
Rev. XII. 1. instance) of the
Revelations, see the
Virgin Mary ten thousand times painted with a
Half-moon under her
feet, I do not believe he would become one jot the
Wiser for it. Nay,
6. In opposition to your Pretences, though all this is out of the way, yet I dare affirm,
lastly, that for such
Images and
Pictures as are too often
[...]d both in your
Churches and
[...]ouses, they are
[Page 145] so far from serving to any of those
Uses you pretend, that on the contrary, if Men are not very well
instructed, they will be apt to beget in them most pernicious Notions, contrary to the Honour of God, to the Nature of our Saviour Christ, and to the Covenant of His Gospel.
7. For tell me, I beseech you; Was not this the great reason wherefore
God forbad any
Resemblance to be made of Himself under
Deut. IV. 15. Isa. XI. 18. the
Law, that it was a lessening and debasing of his Nature so to do? And does not St.
Paul urge this very consideration against the
Athenian Idolatry? Acts XVII. 29. And is not the
Divine Nature
Act. XVII. 29. as excellent now, and as much debased by yours, as ever it was by their
Representations of it? I need not tell you of the frequent Pictures of
God the Father in the shape of an
Old Man, and commonly in a
Pope's Dress; and the meaning of which (if one may conjecture the
design of this by the Natural
tendency of it) can be no other than this,
viz. to perswade the
Ignorant, that as you sometimes call the
Pope a
God on
Earth, so
God is no other than the
Pope of
Heaven.
8. And this, were it only in some
Sacred Places, would yet be too
prophane for any Pious
Christian to endure. But alas! you have not been so reserved. Every
Office carries this Abuse in it; Hardly a
Psalter or
Catechism without it: Nay, I will add, what I should hardly be credited in, had not thousands among us with indignation beheld it, that in the open Streets of your
Cities, we may see That
God who is over all blessed for ever, exposed to the
scorn and
meanness of a
Sign-post.
9. How miserably have you by these
Pictures, abused the
Mystery of the
Sacred Trinity; sometimes you make it a
Monster; As where you paint one
Body with
three Heads; One
Head with
three Faces; sometimes
one Body with
two Heads, and a
Pigeon in the midst; of which Card.
Capisucchi makes mention. The
Sacred
Capisucchi, pag. 613. Gerson.
Trinity in the
Belly of the
Virgn, which
Gerson says, He saw with his own Eyes in a
Church of the
Carmelites; the most ordinary Figures are, Either an
Old Man holding a
Crucifix in his Hands, and a
Pigeon upon
his Shoulder; Or, (as in your
Eye-Catechism) on one side an
Old Man with a
Globe, on the other a
Younger with a
Cross upon
his Shoulder, and a
Dove betwixt them: And what is all this but to debase the
glorious Godhead? In St.
Paul's Phrase, to
Rom. I. 23, 25.
change the truth of God into a lie, by
representing the Incorruptible God by an Image made like unto a Corruptible Man? And where is there a
[Page 146] Christian so insensible of that dishonour that is hereby done to the Majesty of that
God, whom the
wiser Heathens themselves never debased to the likeness of any created Being, as not with the same
Apostle to have
his Spirit stir'd within him, at the sight of such
Impiety?
Acts xvii.
10. Nor are you at all less excusable in your Representations of our Blessed
Saviour, and the
Holy Virgin; not to descend to any other of the
Saints. For besides that such Similitudes exhibit only one, and that his inferior Nature,
viz. his Manhood; how do these
Pictures insensibly breed a mean Opinion of him, in the minds of the
Ignorant and
Unwary? As
1st, Nothing is more ordinary in the most
solemn Places of your Worship, than to see our Blessed
Lord still set forth as a
Child, in the
Arms of his
Mother. And what
Notions this has bred in many of your
Communion, I would to
God the greater esteem they seem to have for the
Virgin, than for
Christ, did not too plainly shew. But that which renders this more intollerable, is, that you thus represent him not only upon
Earth, but at this time even in
Heaven; and indeed, seeing in your
Legends, you speak of him as a
Child still, I do not wonder if in your
Pictures, you represent him too as such.
11. Thus in one of your
Eye-Catechisms, set forth in
Portugal, for the Instruction of the People; the latter part of the
Ave-Maria, is set in this manner before them. All sorts of
Men and
Women upon
Earth, are drawn in an open
Scene, upon their
Knees, and
Hands lifted up to
Heaven, and in the
Clouds over them, the Blessed
Virgin in
Glory with our
Saviour (as a Child) in
Her Arms; and under it this Inscription,
O Holy Mary,
Mother of God, pray for us Sinners now, and in the hour of Death. Amen. Jesus.
12. In the Calender of the
Saints of your
Order, There is a
Figure of St.
Odilo, devoting himself to the blessed
Virgin in this
Tom. 1. Jan. 1. manner.
‘
O most Holy Virgin, and Mother of the Saviour of all Ages, receive me from this day forward as your Servant, and in all my Causes, be my most merciful Advocate. For from this time, after God, I set nothing before thee, but voluntarily deliver my self for ever to be your Possession, as your proper Servant. Amen.’ Above Him sits the
Blessed Virgin in
Glory, with our Saviour in her
Arms, holding her about the
Neck, after the manner of a little Child. Many of the like kind are there in those
Volumes; but I may not insist upon them; I will add only some of those Figures, in which the whole
Trinity are made to concur to her
Honour. Thus
[Page 147] in the
Office in the
Virgin, printed at
Antwerp. She is set forth in
Glory in
Heaven, with
God the
Father on the
one side, and
God the
Son on the other, holding a Crown over her Head, the
Holy Ghost above
overshadowing Her, and all the People on the
Earth below
Adoring.
13. I will not deny, but that these may be very good
Instructions for Father
Crasset's, or Doctor
J. C's Disciples. But I cannot see how any of the
Expounding and
Representing Party, will be able to prove such
Pictures as these, to be much for the
Edification of the People. I shall finish these Remarks, (which have already run out into a greater length than I design'd, tho I might have added much more) with the account which the Learned
Gerard Vossius gives us, of a
Picture over an
Altar in
Flanders, in which that blasphemous
Epigram is express'd of Mens doubting whether they should run to the
Blood of Christ, in which alone there is
Redemption to be obtain'd; or to the
Milk of the
Virgin. This is certainly to contradict the very Foundation of the
Gospel; and to lead the Ignorant into Error in that
Point, in which it is of all others the most dangerous to be mistaken;
viz. Whether
they ought to place the Hopes of their Salvation in the Redemption of Christ, or in the Mercy and Interest of his Mother.
14. You may at your leisure consider how to improve these things into
Helps of Devotion, and useful
Instructions for the
illiterate Populace. I might have added, what has lately been elsewhere observed, of the
Prophaness of many (in
Italy especially) in this
Point: Where the most celebrated
Madonna's, are the
Pictures of the Painters
Whores, set up in their
Churches, as Objects of the Peoples
Veneration. But this and other
Excesses of the like kind I purposely forbear, lest I should be thought to please my self in your
Impieties, which I heartily lament, and earnestly bebeseech
God to reform in you. Nor should I have said thus much, but only to shew how little Reason you had to enter on this new and most Impertinent Subject of the
Benefit of Images; and that were our
Cause to be try'd by this alone, we might even so expect to carry it against you. And this to your
first Pretence.
15. The next thing you offer in favour of your
Images, is Reply § 20.]
‘
That there is no now danger of Idolatry
in this Practice, seeing all Persons are taught that there is but one God,
to whom Adoration is only due; and therefore, that they cannot be capable
[Page 148] of erring so grosly, as to give Divine Honour
to an Image, or to think any Virtue annexed to them for which they ought to be adored. In short, it is (you say)
by the subtilty of the Devil (who hates any thing that excites Devotion) that these helps to Piety, are now branded with the horrid Note of Idolatry,
and Catholics
represented, as if they paid the Act of Adoration to the Images
themselves.’
16.
Answ.] That the
Devil is an Enemy to
Piety, and to all those things that may any way serve to promote it, I can easily believe; but that it is He, who upon this account stirs up us to oppose your
Idolatry, I shall hardly Credit, tho you should give me as good an assurance of it, as ever your
Brother the
old Monk did the second
Council of
Nice, when he told them that the
Devil himself had
confess'd to him, how much he hated your
Holy and
Venerable Images. I am sure
Tertullian was so far from this, that
De Idololatria he thought 'twas the
Devil that instigated Men to bring them into the World, and not to help to cast them out. But to overthrow at once, both your
Reflection and
Argument together, I do here roundly affirm, That what you say is so far from being true,
That there is now no danger of Idolatry in the Worship of Images, that on the contrary I will shew, that in the
Worship of them
publickly authorized and practiced amongst you, you do actually commit it. And then every Body will see what
Spirit it is that
Acts us in opposition to this
Service; and who it is that
blinds you so far, as to make you contend for that, which both the
Holy Scripture condemns, and the
Primitive Christians neither knew, nor would have endured. And this brings me to my first Proposal; wherein I am
SECT. II.
To make good the
Charge of
Image-Worship against you, and Answer those
Evasions, by which you endavour to
clear your selves of it.
17. NOW that you give Religious
Worship to
Images, has been so fully proved in that
Learned Book I have before refer'd you to, in Answer to
T. G. both from the Definitions of your Councils of
Nice and
Trent, and from the
unanimous Voice
[Page 149] of almost all the great Men of your
Church, who have written any things of this matter, that I shall need say but very little here in Confirmation of it. And therefore not to multiply
Quotations by transcribing what has been already collected as to this matter, I shall content my self with this plain, and I think unexceptionable manner of proceeding against you;
-
1st, I will propose to you the Voice of your
Church in her Definitions.
-
2dly, I will give you the
Interpretation of her
Sense in these
Definitions, from Card.
Capisucchi only; and out of that Book to which Mons.
de Meaux himself appeals.
-
3dly, I will from both vindicate the Account I have given of the
Practice of your
Church, in Conformity to these Principles.
18.
1st, For what concerns the first of these, the
Voice of
your Church, as to this
Point; the
Council of
Trent declares,
‘
That the Images of Christ, of the Blessed Virgin, and of the Saints, are more especially to be had and retained in Temples, and that due Honour
and Veneration
is to be paid
to them. Not that it should be believed that there is any Divinity
or Virtue
in them, for which they are to be Worshipped;
or that any thing is to be Asked
of them, or that any Trust
is to be put in Images; but because the Honour which is given to them, is referr'd to the Proto-types which they Represent; so that by the Images which you Kiss, and before which you uncover your Heads, and fall down; you Adore Christ,
and Worship
the Saints
which they Represent.’
19. Thus that wary
Synod; Neither determining what
Honour should be given to
Images, nor yet setting any bounds to any. But then, as it expresly allows them the
external Marks of
Divine Worship, so by fixing the
Grounds of this
Honour to be the
passing of it to the Proto-type, not only
Soto, Turrian, and
Naclantus, three great Divines concern'd in that
Synod, but also the Generality of those who have treated since of this matter, have concluded, that the
same Adoration is to be paid to the Image, and the Proto-type; So that if
Christ himself be worshipp'd with
Divine Worship, then must the
Crucifix also be worshipp'd with the very same. But this will better appear,
[Page 152] 19.
2dly, From the Account I am to give of the
Doctrine of your
Church, as to this
Worship, from
Cardinal Capisucchi.
And to whose
Book since
Mons. de Meaux has thought fit to Appeal, I am content to submit the Decision of this
Controversy to his Sentence, and shall leave the World to judg whether I have
Misrepresented, or whether the
Bishop and
You have not departed from the
Doctrine of the
Council of Trent.
20. Now that we may know precisely, what in his Opinion, that
due Honour and Veneration is, which you pay to
Images, and which the
Council so cautiously declined the telling us; we will consider first of all, what was thought to be so by them, whose
Opinions he rejects, as not fully delivering your
Churches Sense. Such were
21. First of all
Durandus;
‘Who thought that properly speaking,
Card. Capis. Controv. p. 624, 625. the
Images are not to be
Adored; but because they resemble
things worthy Adoration, which by remembrance are Adored in
Presence of the
Images, therefore the
Images themselves improperly are, and may be said to be
Adored.’ Now this he Rejects, because (says he) in truth, it takes away the
‘
Worship of Images;
Ibid. 625. and concludes it with another of your great Men,
Raphael de Tuire, to be
Dangerous, Rash, and
savouring of Haeresy; or as
Ferdinandus Velosillus phrases it,
False, Rash, and
Erroneous; but especially, since the
Definition of the
Council of Trent’
22. The next whose Opinion he Rejects, is
Vasquez;
‘Who
Card. Capis. Ibid. par. ii. p. 625. taught that the
Images themselves were no otherwise to be
Adored, but because in the
Presence of them, and about them, are exhibited the
external Signs of
Honour, such as
Kneeling, Kissing, uncovering the Head, &c. But that for the
inward Act of Adoration, this was by no means to be directed to the
Image, but to the
thing represented by the Image.’ And this too he Rejects upon the same Grounds that he did the foregoing,
viz.
‘Because that by Asserting, that the
inward Act of the
Adorer terminates
only upon the
thing represented by the Image; he do's by consequence affirm, that the Images themselves are not TRULY and PROPERLY to be ADORED.’
23. The next
Opinion which he rejects, is that whereby an
Inferior Honour is supposed due to
Images, and not an
Honour of the
Id. par. iv. p. 634, 635.
same kind with that which is paid to the
Exemplar. And this has been proposed with some variety.
Catherine and
Peresius thought that no other
Worship besides this
inferior, honorary respect, was due to
[Page 151] them.
Sanders distinguish'd, That the
Images consider'd by themselves, and without any regard had to the
Exemplars, deserved only an
inferior Honour; but being consider'd conjunctly with the
Exemplar, were to be
worship'd with the very same
Worship that the
Exemplars themselves were. And this was also the opinion of
Suarez,
‘That
Images consider'd only as
Sacred Utensils, were to have no other
Honour than was usually given to any other the like holy things; but that being consider'd as
Images, they were to have the very
same Worship with the
Proto-types whom they represented.
Lorca deliver'd his
Opinion yet more subtilly:’ 1.
‘That the
Image of Christ might by accident be
adored with the
same adoration as Christ himself; but that this was only improperly call'd the
Adoration of the
Image, it being Christ himself that alone was
truly and
properly adored. 2. That for that
Adoration which
terminates on the
Image, it is an
Adoration much
inferior to that wherewith
Christ himself is
adored. 3. That tho the
Adoration wherewith the
Image of
Christ is
adored, be in the
kind of the
Act different from that with which
Christ himself is worshipped; yet that it proceeds from the same
habit, the
virtue of Religion, from which the
Adoration of
Christ himself proceeds, and upon that account may be
called by the same
name with it. And all these Opinions the
Cardinal still rejects upon his
old principle,
‘That the
Image is adored with the very same Act with which Christ himself is adored, and by consequence must be worship'd with the same
Divine Worship.’’
24. The next whose opinion he refutes, is
Card. Bellarmine;
Capis. Par. V. pag. 636. who supposed that,
‘The
Worship which is
properly given to an
Image, is not the same with that which (for instance) is given to
Christ Himself; but a sort of
imperfect Worship, which may by a certain analogy be reduced to the
same kind of
Worship that is paid to the
Exemplar. But yet that the
Image may
by accident be
worshipped with the
same Worship as the
Exemplar, when the
Exemplar is considered as shining forth in its
Image.’ This also he refutes, utterly denying that any
inferior honour is to be given to
‘an
Image, which requires
properly, and in its
own nature the very same Worship that is paid to the
Exemplar which it
Represents.’
25. Lastly,
Cardinal Lugo's Opinion was, that the
Image and
Ibid. Par. VI. pag. 637. the
Exemplar were to be
adored as two distinct
Objects of
Adoration; as when a man sees the
Son of his
friend, he at the same time
loves both the
Son and the
Father, not together with the very
[Page 150] same
Act, yet
both directly: The
Son for the
Father's sake, and the Father
accidentally upon the occasion of the
Son's bringing him to his remembrance. Thus in the present case,
‘When a
Christian beholds the
Image of
Christ, presently he calls his
Blessed Saviour to mind, and directly
worships both the
Image for
Christ's sake, and
Christ for his own.’ And this also the
Cardinal rejects, not so much for that it does not give sufficient
Honour to the
Image; for
Lugo also held that the same
Divine Honour was to be given both to
Christ and his
Image, as because it distinguish'd the
Objects; whereas according to
Card. Capisucchi,
‘
Christ and his
Image are to be
Adored not only with the
same Act, but also as the
same Object of
Worship.’
26. Having thus rejected all those several Opinions, he finally concludes,
‘That the
true Opinion, and which
ought to be held, is,
Card. Capis. contr. par. VII p. 639. that the
worship of the
Images and the
Exemplars, is
one and the same; so that the
worship of the
Images is not distinct from that of the
Exemplars, but they are both
worshipped together.’ This he proves to be the CHURCHES SENSE by a
Cloud of
Witnesses, from St.
Thomas to this day; and shews it to be what both the second Council of
Nice, and the later Synod of
Trent designed in their definitions. And then finally, closes all with the instance of
Aegidius Magistralis, I heretofore mentioned, who having deni'd that
Divine Worship was to be paid to
Images, was forced by the
Inquisition to recant and abjure it as
Heretical; and exhorts
‘
all those to consider it who find fault with St. Thomas
for saying that the CROSS
and IMAGES
of CHRIST
were to be ADORED’
Vid. p. 649.
with SUPREME DIVINE WORSHIP.
27. And this may suffice by the way to answer your Exception against the Authority of
Aquinas; who as you see allow'd a
true and
proper worship to be paid to the
Cross as well as to
Reply, p. 29, 30, 31. Christ. And that you may not shift off this REPLY (as you have done my former Answer) only with
scorn and
derision, I must mind you, that 'tis not now
a Doctor of the Populace whom you think uncapable of penetrating into the
profound Mysteries of
Scholastick Niceties, that says this; but
Card. Capisucchi, a
Schoolman
Reply, p. 31. and
Disciple himself of St.
Thomas, and whom perhaps you will allow to have as deep a reach as your self in these matters. For
Vasquez having brought the very same interpretation of
Aquinas's Doctrine that you now insist upon against me, the
Cardinal thus roundly answers him,
‘
That according to St. Thomas
the Image of
Capis. contr. p. 630.
[Page 153]
Christ is absolutely
and simply
to be adored with the same Adoration
with which Christ
is adored.—And that therefore the same Adoration
which is given to Christ, ought to be given to his Image also.’
27. And thus have I in short laid before you the sum of this
Cardinal's Doctrine, who both approved
M. de Meaux's Exposition, and to whom
Monsieur de Meaux himself
appeals for the
Vindication of this very part of it. I have already sufficiently shewn how inconsistent these two are with one another; I will now only apply what I have here further added to my former account of this matter, to the
point before us. And,
28.
First, It may not be amiss to observe what great diversity of
Opinions there has been in stating of that
Worship which is paid by you to
Images, and what difficulty you have found to defend your
practice against that Charge of
Idolatry we have so justly brought against you upon the account of it. How the
Caution of some, and the
distinctions of others amongst you, have been branded by the rest as
Scandalous and
Erroneous; and one forced to
abjure as
Heretical, what others have set up as the only
true Exposition and
Representation of the
Churches sense. And this you will give me leave the rather to remark, because you are so often pleased to reflect upon our
divisions, which yet are neither so
frequent nor
dangerous, as among you who pretend not only to
Truth, but
Infallibility in all you believe. And if the
consequence you are wont from thence to draw against us, That because we differ in some things, therefore we have no certainty in any, be good, (as you say it is) you may now see that it will equally fall upon your selves too; and by so much the more heavily, by how much your pretences in this matter are greater than ours. But,
29.
Secondly, Tho there be then such a diversity of
Opinions amongst you as to this
Worship; yet it is to be remarked that they who have allow'd the least
Honour to
Images, have yet still confest that
some Honour was due to them.
‘
In this (says
Capisucchi)
Capisucchi, lb. pag. 605.
all Catholicks
do agree that Images
are to be worshipped,
and are rightly worshipped
by the faithful. Even Durandus
himself, who disapproves the Images of the Holy Trinity,
yet allowing both the use and Worship
of other Holy Images.’ From whence therefore I conclude, That those in this
Cardinal's opinion, are
no Catholicks who tell us that,
‘All the
Honour they have for them, is only such a
Reply, Pre
[...]. p. 17, 18.
respect as they pay to any other
Sacred Utensils. That if they seem to act in their presence some
external signs of
Veneration, this is
[Page 154] meant ONLY to the
persons whom they
represent, but NOT to the
Images themselves, which can claim NOTHING
of that KIND from us. In short, as Monsieur
de Meaux expounds it, That they
do NOT WORSHIP
the Images; No, GOD FORBID; but ONLY
make use of them to call to mind the Originals. The Council of
Trent teaches NO OTHER USE of them.’
30.
Thirdly, It may from hence farther appear, that the
Worship which this
Cardinal thought due to
Inages, was not an
improper, accidental, abusive Worship, but a
true, proper, and
real Adoration; the
Image being to be
adored in the very
same act with which the
Exemplar was. So that now according to this
Exposition, the
Cross of Christ is to be worshipped
truly and
properly with a
Supreme Divine Adoration. And that not only as to the
outward acts, but by the
inward sense of the
Soul too; all which are so to be paid to
Christ, as to terminate at once both upon
him, and upon the
Crucifix by which he is to be
adored. And this,
31.
Fourthly, We are to look upon, not as a
private opinion, or a meer
Scholastick Nicety, but as the
true and
proper sense of the
Church, and to be
held of all. So the
Cardinal expresly declares; as being the Doctrine of the Councils both of
Nice and
Trent; and for denying of which,
Aegidius Magistralis was by the
Inquisition forced to
recant, and renounce his Doctrine contrary thereunto, as
Heretical.
32. This is an
Instance which with
Card. Capisucchi I will take the liberty to recommend to your consideration. For certainly if what he says be true, you who deny
that the Cross is upon any account whatsoever to be worshipped with Divine Worship, can be no otherwise
Reply, Pref. than a downright
Heretick. And tho you are at present secure in a happy
Expounding Country, where you may safely make what
representation of your
Doctrine you please, or rather that the necessity of your
present circumstances moves you to do, without any other danger than that of losing your credit with
honest and inquisitive men, which you do not seem much to value; yet should
time and other
circumstances invite you hereafter into a hotter
Climate, you might run some worser hazards among those who have not given themselves up to follow your
Innovations. It happened not many years since, that a
French Gentleman being travelling
Relation del' Inquisition de Goa, pag. 14, 15. cap. 2, 21. cap. 3. in the
East-Indies, fell into some company at
Goa, and there discoursing about matters of Religion according to your Principles, maintain'd,
‘
That the Crucifix
was no otherwise to be adored,
[Page 155] than by reporting all the Honour to our Saviour Christ represented by that Image. And another time, he fortuned to say of an
Ivory Crucifix
which hung up at his Beds-head, that it was onely a piece of Ivory.’ For this he was clapt into the
Inquisition, and after some years imprisonment for his
Heretical Sayings, hardly escaped the fire, with this Sentence,
‘that
He was declared Excommunicate;
Ibid. cap. 27. pag. 151, 152. Edit. Leyd. 1687.
that for reparation of his fault, all his Goods
should he confiscated;
Himself banish'd
the Indies;
and condemn'd to serve in the Galleys
(or publick Prisons) of Portugal
five years; and further accomplish those Other Penances
which should more particularly be enjoin'd Him by the Inquisitors.’ As for his Crime, it is thus set forth in the Preamble to his Sentence,
‘
That he had said that we ought NOT
to ADORE IMAGES;
and had BLASPHEMED
against that of a certain Crucifix,
by saying of a Crucifix
of Ivory,
that it was a piece
of Ivory.’
33. This was plain dealing, and a sensible convicton that it is not meerly a
Scholastick Nicety with the
Fathers of the
Inquisition,
‘that the CROSS is to be
worshipped with DIVINE WORSHIP.’ The truth is, the contrary Opinion of
Durandus, Holcot, Mirandula, and some others, (and who allow'd all the
Acts of
external Honour to be paid to them, only they deni'd them that
inward Veneration which makes it properly a
religious Worship) has been always esteemed as
false and
scandalous, and
savouring of Heresie; and is expresly censured as such by those great Men,
Suarez, Medina, Victoria, Catherine, Arriaga, Cabrera, Raphael de Turre, Vellosillus, and many others at large, collected by Cardinal
Capisucchi on this occasion, as Abettors with himself, of a true
Divine Adoration to be paid to the
Holy Cross, and other
Images of
God, and the
Blessed Trinity. I go on finally from these
Principles,
34.
Thirdly, To vindicate the Account I have heretofore given of your
Practices in consequence to this
Doctrine.
And first, I observed that in the
solemn Procession made at the
reception of the
Emperor, the
Legat's
Cross is appointed by the
Pontifical to take place of the
Emperor's Sword, because LATRIA or DIVINE WORSHIP is due to it.
35. This you cannot deny to be faithfully quoted out of your
Pontifical: but you say there
‘
is some kind of impropriety in the
Reply, p. 31.
Speech;’ and we must understand it so, not as if
Divine Worship were due to the
Cross, but to
Christ crucified upon it. A strange
[Page 156] liberty of interpreting this, which turns plain
Affirmatives into downright
Negatives; and this contrary to the
sense, not only of your greatest
Authors, (as I have shewn) but in their opinion contrary to the
sense of your
Church too. These all say with the
Rubrick,
‘
that a Divine Worship
is due to the Cross; you declare 'tis no such thing;
No, God forbid. Such
Worship is upon NO ACCOUNT WHATSOEVER to be given to the
Cross, but only to
Christ represented by the
Cross.’ I will not desire you to consider what wise arguing you make of what your
Pontifical here says; That the
Cross must take place of the
Emperor's Sword, because
Christ is to be
worship'd with
Divine Worship: It shall suffice me to leave you to the
Censures of your own
Learned Writers and
Inquisitors, who have already pronounced this
Exposition to be
false, scandalous, and
savouring of Heresie. Only let me once more caution you to remember the hard fate of poor Monsieur
Imbert, of
Aegidius Magistralis, and the
French Traveller I just now mention'd; For however it may be safe enough to dissemble with us here, yet will it behove you to take great heed that you alter your tone, if ever you should chance to fall into
those Parts, where the
Old Popery Doctrine is still the measure of the
Inquisitors Proceedings.
36. My next
Instance was from your
form of
blessing a
New Cross: To your
Cavil about my omitting some words, I have said enough heretofore; but the dear
Calumny must be continu'd, tho not only those
two words were added, but so many more set down, that you seem as much dissatisfied with my
length here, as you pretended to be with my
brevity before.
37. You pray,
‘That the
Wood of the Cross which you bless, may be a
wholsome remedy to mankind: a strengthner of Faith; an increaser of Good Works; the Redemption of Souls; a Comfort, Protection, and Defence against the Cruel Darts of the Enemy.’
‘You
incense it; you
sprinkle it with
Holy Water; you
sanctify it
in the name of the Father, Son,
and Holy Ghost; and then both the
Bishop and People devoutly ADORE it, and Kiss it.’
38. This is in short the
sum of that
Ceremony; In which you desire to know
what is Amiss? I answer; That take this whole
Office together, with the
Ceremonies, Prayers, and other
Circumstances of it, and it is
Superstitious and
Idolatrous; and I shall not doubt once more to repeat, what before so much offended you, That the
Addresses you here make, look more like
Magical Incantations, than Christian Prayers. For,
[Page 157] 39.
First, If we enquire into the design of this
Ceremony; it is to
Consecrate a piece of
Wood or
Stone, that it may become a fit
Object of
Adoration: which being directy contrary to the
Second Commandment, cannot be done without a very great
Sin.
40.
2dly. To this End, secondly, you pray that several benefits may proceed from this
Wood of the Cross; and if those words signify any thing, whereby you beseech
God, that it may be
a wholsome remedy to Mankind, a strengthner of Faith, &c. We must then look upon it, that you do believe, that by this
Consecration there is a
Virtue, if not residing in it for all these purposes, yet at least proceeding from it; which your
Council of
Trent confesses was one of the things that made the
Worship of
Images among the
Heathens to be
Idolatrous. Nor will your little Evasion here stand you in any stead; that
‘
you pray only that the Cross may be a means for
Reply, p. 32.
the obtaining all these Benefits; and that this is no more than a Preacher may desire for his Sermon, or the Author of a good Book for what he is about to publish:’ For, 1. A piece of
Wood or
Stone, carve it into what
Figure or
Shape you please, is not certainly so proper a
means for the conveying of such
Benefits to men, as a good
Book or a good
Sermon are: And therefore what may be very
naturally desired for the
One, cannot without great
Superstition be
applied to the
Other. I may, and I heartily do
pray, that what I am now writing may be
a saving remedy to you, by
correcting your
Faith, and
encreasing your
Charity; because I am perswaded here are
Arguments proper to such an End, if it shall please
God to dispose you impartially to consider them; but now, I believe, you would think me very
Extravagant, should I pray to
God to
sanctify the
Paper on which 'tis
printed, or my
Bookseller's Sign that sells it, as you
pray to
God to sanctify the WOOD of the
Cross; that as often as you see the
leaves of this
Book, or look upon the
Rose and Crown in St.
Paul's Church-yard, these good
effects may be wrought in you.
41. Again, 2. As the thing it self is not a proper
means of producing these
Effects in us; so the
manner by which you pray it may be done, renders it yet more
Superstitious. To get
instruction by
hearing or
reading; to have ones
Faith confirm'd, or
Charity enlarged, or
Zeal heightned, by
pious Considerations, or
powerful Motives, all this is very natural; and we may therefore lawfully pray to
God for to bless them to us in order to these Ends. But to
pray to
God, that by
bowing our selves down before a
Cross, we may find
health of
Soul and
Body; to
sanctify a
piece of
Wood, that by ITS
[Page 158] MERITS it may
free men from all the
Sins they have
committed, this must be more than a
natural Effect, neither the thing nor action being proper to produce it; and whether such
Requests be not more like
Magical Incantations than
Christian Prayers, I shall leave it to any indifferent person to consider.
42. But
3dly, That this which you pretend, is not all that your
Church designs by those
Prayers, is evident, in that this Exposition cannot possibly be applied to several of those things which you ask of
God in those Addresses. For instance, you pray,
‘
That the blessing of the Wood
upon which our Saviour hung, may be in the Wood
of the Cross
which you consecrate; and that by the Holiness
of that, he would Sanctify
this; that as by that Cross,
the World was delivered from Guilt,
so by the Merits of this,
the devout Souls who offer it, may be free from all the Sins
they have committed.’ Now tell me in Conscience, if you dare speak the truth; Is not all this somewhat more, than to
pray that the Cross may accidentally become a means of working good Effects in you, by putting you in mind of the price of your Redemption? Do you not
Reply p. 32, 33. here see somewhat, which your
Council of
Trent calls the
Idolatry of the
Gentiles? viz. an encouragement to
Worship the
Cross, as if some
Divine Virtue were in it, for which it ought to be
Adored. For, so certainly he must do, who believes that by these
Prayers, the
blessing of that Cross, on which our Saviour hung, is in this which he Worships; and that bowing down before it, he shall find Health both of Soul and Body. Nay, but
43.
4thly, I must once more ask you that
Question, I before proposed on this Occasion; and which, tho you heartily
rail at, yet you
shift it off without answering one wise word to it. If you design no
real Virtue to proceed from the
Cross which you thus
consecrate, nor allow any
Adoration to be
paid to it, but intend it meerly for a
memorative Sign, and no more: To what purpose all these
Prayers, and
Sprinklings, and
Smokings, and
Blessings, and other
Ceremonies for the
Consecration of it? As to your
Question, why we dedicate our
Churches to God? I will then allow it to be a
Parallel, when you can prove that we pray that
God would
Sanctify the
Walls or
Seats of them,
That they may become a wholesome Remedy to Mankind, and by their Merits free us from all the Sins we have committed. In the mean time it shall suffice to tell you, that as all we design in those
Ceremonies, is no more than a solemn setting of it apart for
Prayer and
Devotion to
God only;
[Page 159] so all we desire, is, that
God would vouchsafe favourably to accept our Offering of
that Place to his
Service, and give a
blessing to those
Holy Offices that are from thenceforth to be peformed in it.
44. But
5thly; and to conclude this
Point; He that would know what your Intention in
these Prayers is, need only consider what
Prayers you make in behalf of other things of the
same Nature: And in which you so evidently desire a
Divine Virtue may proceed from the very things themselves which you
Sanctify, that there is no doubt to be made of it. I shall give but one
Instance of this,
viz. the
Prayer you make at the
Consecration of your
Agnus Dei's; in which you thus Address your selves to
God.
‘
Do thou vouchsafe to Bless ✚, Sanctify ✚,
and Consecrate ✚
Sacrar. Cerem. Lib. I.
[...]. de Consecr. Agn. Dei.
them, that being sanctified by thy liberal Benediction, they may receive the same Virtue against all diabolical Subtilties, and the deceits of the evil Spirit; that for those who carry them devoutly about them, no tempest may prevail against them, no Adversity may get the Dominion over them, no pestilent Breath, no Corruption of the Air, no Falling-sickness, no Storm at Sea, no Fire, nor any Iniquity may overcome them, or prevail against them.’
45. Such are the admirable
Virtues which you desire may proceed from these little
Images; and by the
Prayers you make at the
Consecrating of these, we may easilly understand how to interpret your
Addresses for the same purpose in the other. But now to make your Practice exactly parallel with the
old Heathen Superstition; I must observe,
‘That it is not enough that you carry these
Agnus Dei's devoutly about you, but they must be
Worshipped too;’ For so your
Prayer of
Consecration says;
‘Bles ✚,
and Sanctify ✚
these blessed things, that through the VENERATION
and HONOUR
of them, the Crimes of us thy Servants may be blotted out.’
And now I shall leave it to you, to try once more your gift of
Expounding, and see if you can bring all this to your
new Sense: And for your Encouragement in it, I will promise you if you can, to give you something more of this matter, which will be
more difficult, and which I forbear at present to insist upon.
[Page 160] 46. I should now go on to the next
Instance; but I must intreat the
Reader's excuse, if I stop one moment to follow your rambling Discourse in two
Points, as little to your purpose, as the handling of them will appear to have been for your Reputation.
47. I. The first is concerning the
Use of
Holy Water.
Reply]
‘
Which you tell us was established by Pope Alexander
the I.
Reply p. 33.
An. 121. and is good for dispelling Incantations
and Magic Frauds,
rather than introducing them; and has been famed for sundry Miracles,
which God
has been pleased to work thereby in several Ages.’
48.
Answ.] For the
Antiquity of this
Usage, I wonder you should stop at Pope
Alexander I. when had you but look'd into the
Clementine Constitutions (a much more authentick Piece than
Lib. VIII. cap. 35. your
Decretal Epistle) you might have found St.
Matthew to have been the
Author of it. And the one would have been as easily believed as the other.
49. Nor have you been less defective in setting out the
Benefits of it, than you were in your account of its
Antiquity. And therefore to
spare your
Modesty, I will help to publish them for you.
‘
Holy Water then (if all be true that is in
Print) is good, not only to
drive away
Evil Spirits, but more over to
cure Infirmities; to
wipe
See Domenico Magri Notizia de Vocaboli Ecclesiastici in aqua Benedicta. Marsilius Columna Hydragiolog. Sect. 3. c. 2. out
Venial Sins; to
cleanse the
Pollutions of
defiled Consciences; to
cure Distractions; to
elevate the
Mind, and
dispose it for
Devotion; to
obtain Grace, and dispose Men for the
Holy Sacrament. It
cures Barrenness, preserves the
Health, purges the
Air from
Pestilential Vapours; besides a great many other good things that are not so fit to be named.’ All the mischief is, that it is nor certain it do's any of these things; because (as
De Cultu
ss. l. 3. c. 7. p. 2226. B.
Bellarmine well observes) there is no Promise of
God made to it; but yet being
sanctified by the
Prayers of the
Church for these ends, you may as securely believe it, as many other things that have no better a Foundation.
50. And are not these now rare Follies for a Man to force us to publish whether we will or no? Did ever any
Mountebank set out his
false Ware with greater
Vanity, than those of the
Church of Rome have here done theirs? And indeed was there ever less reason to believe his
Remedies, than in this
Case there is to Credit your
Pretences? In short, seeing you
sanctify Water in the
[Page 161]
Name of God, by
Prayer for these
Ends, either shew us some
Promise, some
Warrant at least from the
Holy Spirit of
God so to do; or all reasonable Men will look upon this after all you have said for it, as none of the least both of your
Follies, and of your
Superstitions.
II. The other thing you mention is your
Incense.
51. And this is indeed to
our purpose; and I shall presently shew you how little you consider'd your own interest in the mention of it. I pass by your pretended
significations of it, as impertinent in a
Discourse where
Truth only is sought. For the
Antiquity of it you refer us to
Dionysius and St.
Ambrose; in which you again shew your skill in
Church-History. The one of these being an
Author that lived not till the latter end of the Fourth Century, and the other probably much later. But now the use of
Incense, in the
Greek Church especially, was of a much earlier date. The
Apostolical Canons speak expresly of it: And if that
Oration of
Hyppolitus about the
End of the World, be truly his, as from St.
Jerome's mentioning of it in his
Catalogue it seems to be; we have then two considerable instances to assure us that it was in use in the
Greek Church even in the Third
Century. You see how far I am from detracting any thing from the force of your Argument: But yet now after all, without fear of censuring
Primitive Antiquity in this matter, whose
Innocence I as freely
acknowledg, as I heartily
honour its
piety; I shall not doubt to say that the present usage of it in your
Church is so far from being
innocent, that it is in truth
Superstitious and
Idolatrous.
52.
First, it is
Superstitious. For indeed what else can we make of your
praying to
God, (as in this very
Ceremony of
Consecrating a
Pontifical. Rom de Benedict. Nov. Cruc.
Cross you do)
that,
‘
He would Bless ✚,
and Sanctifie ✚
this Creature of Incense,
that all weaknesses and infirmities, and all the snares of the Enemy perceiving its smell, may flie and be separated from his Creatures; that they may never be hurt by the biting of the Old Serpent, who have been redeemed with the precious blood of his Son.’
53. Now if you make this
prayer in
faith, that it is pleasing to
God, and have a confidence that it shall be accepted by him, you must then shew us some grounds, some security in the
Word of God for it. But if you cannot do this, what is it but
Superstition, that is, a
vain and
fond service, to intreat the favour of
God in the
[Page 162] usage of a thing to which he has neither
annexed any
promise, nor for the doing whereof has he any where given us the least encouragement. But,
54.
Secondly, The
Use you make of this
Incense, is yet worse than the
Consecration of it. You offer it up to
Creatures, nay to the very
Images which you worship; and in doing of which I do not see how you will excuse your selves of being guilty of
Idolatry. That the
burning of Incense was part of that
Religious Worship under the
Law, which
God was pleased to
appropriate to Himself
only, is not to be denied. It was indeed a more peculiar
act of
Divine Worship, than that of bloody
Sacrifices themselves. And therefore both the
Altar on which it was
offer'd was covered with
Gold, and it stood in a more Holy place than that of the
Burnt-offerings; and is in a more singular manner said to be
‘
Most Holy unto the LORD, Exod. XX. 8, 10.’ Hence it was that
Exod. XX. 8, 10. 2 King. XVIII. 4. Bellarm. de SS. Beatit. l. 1. p. 2026. c. 13. D. Vasquez. in 3. Vol. 1. q. 25. Disp. 104. Art. 3. c. 5. p. 735.
King Hezekiah immediately brake to pieces the
Brazen Serpent, as soon as he consider'd that the
children of
Israel burnt Incense before it. And yet if we enquire into the use that is made of it in your
Church, we shall find it
offer'd not only to the
Saints, but even to their very
Images and
Reliques. Vasquez ingenuously confesses, that the
Israelites gave no other
Worship to the
Brazen Serpent than what you give to your
Images at this day; and that
Hezekias therefore commanded it to be broken in pieces, not that he thought the people
adored it as a
God, but because he saw such a
Divine Worship paid to it. It is one of the chief things remarked by your own
Writers in the
Life of a great
Saint of your
Order, St.
Gerard Bishop of
Chanade in
Hungary, whom you Commemorate
Vie des Sts. Calend. Ben. ad Sept. 24.
Septemb. 24. That he caused a
Church to be built in
Chanade, His Episcopal See; and in it
‘
dedicated a
Chappel to the
Honour of the
Blessed Virgn; where having set up her
Statue, He every day
offer'd Incense to the
Figure, and took care by an
Ordinance which He made, that Her
Altar should never be without fine
Odours upon it, which should continually smoke to Her Honour.’
55. Now this being the undoubted
Practice of your
Church, and such as you cannot deny to be contrary to the express Command of
God under the
Law; insomuch, that Cardinal
Bellarmine
Bellarm. de Imag. SS. l. 2. c. 17. p. 2144. freely confesses it would have been Criminal in a
Jew to have
offer'd Incense to any besides
God only; either you must evidently prove to us, That those
Acts which were then
appropriate Acts of
Divine Worship, are not so now, but remain indifferent to be paid
[Page 163] to the
Creature, as well as the
Creator; or you must give us leave to conclude, that you do in this, attribute that
Honour to an
Image, which
God has reserved as
peculiar to
Himself; and are by so doing, guilty of
Idolatry.
56. And thus have I dispatch'd the
two Things you called me, without any Provocation of mine, to examine; and which it may be you will now begin to think you might as well have let alone: I return to my
Defence, in which I am next to consider, what you have to except against my third
Argument, which I brought to shew, that you do
truly and
properly Adore the
Cross; and that was from your
Good-Friday Service.
Reply.] To this you Answer,
‘
That you bad here also shown my
Reply p. 35. UNSINCERE TRICKS,
in adding and diminishing Words, to make your Church
speak as I would have it. And you pronounce me once more a CALUMNIATOR,
for saying, that this proves that your Church
do's Adore the Cross, in the utmost propriety of the Phrase.’
57.
Answ.] These are
hard Words; but I have always observed, that men are most
uneasy when Truth
touches them to the
quick. If you are not yet sensible that it was indeed a
pitiful Cavil to pretend I had
false translated your
Service, by what I have offer'd in my
former part from Mons.
Imbert's Case, and who for opposing that
Interpretation of those
Words which I deliver'd, was used after the manner that I have declared; I am confident you are the only
Person even of your own
Church, that needs to be convinced of it. In all the
French Translations of your
Missal, I have ever seen, it is render'd in the very words that I gave it,
Behold the Wood of the Cross, come let us Adore IT: And particularly in that of Mons
Voisin, approved by those of your
Church, even to excess, you will find it in these express terms,
Voila le Bois de la Croix, R. venez Adorons LE.
58. In the
Missal of
Salisbury, the Determination of that Address to the
Cross, is undeniably evident. The
Priests uncover the
Cross, and sing the whole
Antiphone,
‘
Behold the Wood of the Cross, come let us Adore; to which the Quire
kneeling down, answer;
We adore thy CROSS, O Lord.’ And I cannot but observe, that when
Jo. Aegidius Canon of
Sevil (of whom I have so often spoken) was forced to
retract, as
Heretical, his denial of
[Page 164]
Supreme Divine Worship to the
Cross; Ludovicus de Paramo tells us,
Lud. de Par. de Orig. S. Inquis. l. 2. tit. 3. c. 8. n. 19. that the
Fathers of the
Inquisition convicted him of his
Heresy, especially by this Argument, taken from your
Good-Friday Service; viz.
That the Church on that solemn day did truly and properly Adore the Cross, when it said,
We Adore thy CROSS, O Lord.
59. And this may by the way suffice, to shew how falsely you
Reply p. 37, 38. expound even those Words, not to signifie the
Cross of Christ, but his
Passion. Which besides, that it is foreign to the
Ceremony of
Worshipping the
Cross, which you are then about; and not a little
Nonsence into the bargin; is here interpreted, not only by me, but by the
Fathers of the
Inquisition, of the
Cross properly so called; and whose
Authority I presume you will not care to despise. And now I shall leave it to any
Jury that you please, to judg of my Translation; and what
Character you deserve for your
Reply p. 38. little Reflection upon me. And I do assure you withal, that I will never from henceforward so far distrust my
Reader's Memory, as to say the same things again, tho you should give me the same occasion.
60. For the other
Point; That this do's plainly shew, that your
Church Adores the Cross in the utmost propriety of the Phrase; If you will allow those great Men I before quoted, to understand the
Sense of your
Church in this
Point, then 'tis plain, that my
Assertion must stand good. You see they freely confess it; nay, what is more, they pronounce you a
Heretick for denying it. As for your applying of this
Worship to our
Saviour Christ; if you mean thereby to signify that
Christ only is worshipp'd in this
Ceremony, exclusive to the
Cross; it is evidently false, seeing the whole
Action, as well as
Words, shew, that the
Cross is at least
worshipped together with him; or rather (to speak more precisely)
Christ is
worshipped together with the
Cross. Nor will Cardinal
Bellarmine, to whom you direct me, stand you in any stead. For even he allows the
Cross to be
improperly and
accidentally Worshipp'd with the same
kind of
Worship that Christ himself is. And if you please to let me send you to another
Cardinal, and who being
Card. Capis. ib. ub supr. & par. XVI. pag. 670. both a great
Schoolman himself, and
Master of the Sacred Palace, may be presumed to know somewhat of your
Churches Sense; he will tell you, that your Cardinal
Bellarmin was too wary in his
Distinctions: And that he ought without any of those softning Limitations, freely to have asserted, That
the Cross was truly and properly to be worshipped with Divine Adoration. And that I think, is much the
[Page 165] same with what I said,
That you do Worship the Cross in the utmost propriety of the Phrase.
61. But you have here two singular
Arguments to excuse this Service from the
charge of Idolatry, and which ought not to be forgot. For,
Reply.]
‘
First, St. Paul (you say)
lookt upon it to be no Superstition,
Reply p. 38.
to fall on our Face in the assembly, and Worship GOD, 1 Cor. XIV. 25.’
Answ.] Ergo (ô Lepidum Caput!) If St.
Paul may be Judg, 'tis no
Idolatry in you to fall on your Faces in the
Assembly, and
worship the CROSS. What would
T. G. have given to have met with such a
Consequence in his
Learned Adversary? But indeed we needed not this Proof to convince us (in that
Gentleman's Phrase) that you never look'd over
Aristotle's
Threshold, however your ill
Genius has prompted you to become a
Controvertist.
62. Well,
[...]t if St.
Paul wont do, yet at least you are sure the
Primitive Christians were on your side. And you prove it by an
Instance most fit to keep company with the foregoing
Argument. The Case in short is this.
Reply.]
‘
St. Athanasius
relates how some Jews
in his time, in
Reply p. 38.
the City of Berthus (Berytus)
in Syria,
used great Indignities to a Crucifix,
which a Christian had accidentally left behind him, when he removed from his Lodgings. And you desire your Antagonist
to answer you this Question:
Whether I would have excused those Jews,
because they did those Actions to an inanimate Being; or would not rather have interpreted their Intention, as passing from the Cross to our Blessed Saviour.’
63.
Answ. This is indeed a most melting
Argument, and which as I remember, set all the good Fathers of the second
Council of Nice, a
crying. But
Sir, be not you too much affected with it, for I will venture to give you that
Consolation, which one of your
De la conformitè des merveilles anciens avec les moderns,
Par. 1. Ch. 25. P.
Brethren once did his
Congregation in
France; when having preach'd in a most Tragical manner about the
Passion, not of a
Crucifix, but of our
Blessed Saviour himself, insomuch, that the whole Assembly was in Tears at it; the good Father bid them not weep, for that, after all,
it may be it was not true. For
[Page 166]
1st, As to the Book which you cite for this goodly
Story, 'tis certain it was written above 420 years after
Athanasius was in his
Grave, and is of no manner of Credit among the Learned.
2dly, As to the Story: It was invented in the time of
Irene the Empress, when all the World was set upon
making and
finding out
Fables and
Miracles, for establishing the
Worship of
Images.
3dly, All the Authority we have, that ever there was any such thing done, and that it was not a meer Invention (as were many others of the like kind at that time) is that of
Sigebert, whose
Chronicle besides, that it was written yet another 400 years after this supposed Insult upon the
Crucifix, was also an
Bell. de Scrip. Eccles. p. 283. Author whom
Bellarmin himself confesses, is not to be credited in every thing he says. And especially, when in all probability he had no other Warrant for it, than the
Acts of the
Council of
Nice, and the pretended
Treatise of St.
Athanasius, which you quote for it. So unlucky a thing is it for you to meddle with
Church-History.
64. But whether the Relation be
Truth or
Fable; The Question is put, and must be Answer'd:
Would I not have thought that these Jews
hereby intended to affront our Saviour Christ? I answer, Yes; No doubt they did. And
‘
why then (say you)
should I not in like manner interpret this Service of yours to terminate not upon the Crucifix, but to tend to him who suffer'd upon the Cross?’ I answer, 1. That had you put your Question as you ought, you should have ask'd, Why then we do not look upon
your Intention to be to
Honour, not the
Cross, but
Him that suffered upon it. Now there is a very great Difference between these two. And however your Friend
T. G. supposes,
That Actions must necessarily go whither they are intended; yet I think both he and you ought by this time, to be satisfied of the falseness of that
Maxim? And therefore should we allow your
Intention to be only to
worship Christ, and not the
Cross, yet it do's not thence follow that all your worship must by the Interpretation of
Gods Law terminate upon him. But now, 2. I have shown, that for all your Pretences, it is not your Intention that your
Worship should so
terminate upon Christ, as not to
terminate also upon the
Cross together with him. 3. If it were, yet for all your intention you would nevertheless be far from Honouring Christ: seeing that to
worship Christ by an
Image is a
prohibited Act; and
God cannot be
Honour'd in the very same
Act in which he is
disobey'd. And though an
intention to
dishonour
[Page 167] Chris
[...], by abusing his
Image, is sufficient to do it, (as in all other
Cases, one
ill Circumstance will make the whole Action to be Evil;) yet a
good intention alone is not sufficient to make an
Act good, nor by consequence for the
glory of
God, unless that
Intention it self be also govern'd by the
Rules of His Commandments. For otherwise a man might do the worst things with a
Good intention, and that should be sufficient to
sanctify all his Villanies. So far have you hitherto been from producing the least shadow of an
Answer to overthrow the force of my
Allegations. My Last Instance was:
65.
Fourthly; From the
Hymns of your
Church. In which I
Reply, p. 39. shewed that you address your selves to the
Cross, and beg
spiritual Graces of it; and that you could not say the
Cross was here put by a
Figure to signify
Christ crucified upon it; because the very words of the
Hymns shew, that 'tis the
Material Cross as distinguish'd from
Christ, of which they speak.
66. And here you are in a great distress; you catch at every thing that comes near you; but for the most part without considering whether it be to any purpose or no. As for instance: You observe,
First, That I am
brisk and confident, and have a mind to
‘
expose your Literature
as well as your Idolatry.’ But, Sir, may I beg leave to ask you on this Occasion the very same
Question that
Ib. p. 40▪ you do Me. Who is it you mean, when you say, I have a mind to expose
YOUR Literature? If you understand that of your
Party, I must tell you I am so far from
exposing it, that I shall presently shew you that they are the most Learned Men of your
Church whom I follow in the
Application of that
Hymn I alledged. But if by
YOUR Literature you meant your own, you have then made a most unlucky piece of Work of it, in joining
your Literature and
your Churches Idolatry together; and I doubt your Brethren will have but little cause to applaud the Comparison. For do but grant it to be as easie to
Prove the
One, as it is to
Expose the
Other, and I will never desire a fairer Advantage against both, than you have here offer'd to Me. For,
67.
Secondly, You say I must confess that your
Churches Hymns were made by
Poets, unless I will be so great a
Hypocrite as to deny that
Prudentius and
Fortunatus were Poets. I suppose
Prudentius and
Fortunatus clubb'd together to make the
Hymn that I refer to: Only the mischef is, that the One lived in the End of the
IVth, the other not till about the middle of the
Vth Century.
[Page 168] Nay, but what now if neither of these were Author of that
Hymn? I am sure
Gretser, a very inquisitive Man in these matters, speaks very doubtfully of it, and leaves it in Question, whether
Venantius
Lib. 1. de Cruce, c. 35.
Fortunatus, or
Theodulphus Bishop of
Orleans, was the Author of it; and He lived yet later, about the beginning of the
IXth Century. But to let this pass; and consider,
68.
Thirdly, How you prove these Men to be
Poets, for indeed it is very remarkable. You tell me, that if I will but look into the
Corpus Poetarum, I shall find them to have had a place among the
Poets. A most undoubted way this, to find out whether an
Author were a
Poet or a
Schoolman; And I dare say you were beholden to no man's
Literature but your own for this Remark.
69. Well, but to grant that which I perceive you do not know very well how to go about to prove, that the
Author of this
Hymn, whoever he was, was a
Poet; what will follow? Why then you say,
Fourthly, I shall presently find the
Figure he there uses; his
Title being not
‘
Of the CROSS, but of the PASSION
of our LORD.’ And then you take a great deal of pains to prove, what no man ever deni'd,
‘that the
Cross in Holy Scripture is oftentime put to signify, the
Force, Effects, and
Merits of
Christ's
Death and
Passion.’ Now if this be any thing to the purpose, as all that drops from a Person of your
Literature must be supposed to be; then I must conclude, that seeing the
Title of that
Hymn is
‘Of the
Passion of our
Lord,’ whereever I meet the word CROSS in it, I am to understand it not of the
Material Cross, but of
Christ's PASSION. This you must mean, or else all this ado is meer
Reverie, and
Impertinence. Now then let us see what mad work we shall according to this new
Exposition make of that
Hymn.
The PASSION
of our King comes forth; The mystery of the PASSION
shines; upon which PASSION
the Maker of our Flesh was hanged in the Flesh.
Beautiful and bright PASSION!
Adorned with the purple of a King. Chosen of a fit Stock
to touch
such sacred Members.
Blessed PASSION!
upon whose Arms
the price of the World hung.
Hail, O Passion!
our only Hope; In this time of the PASSION,
increase righteousness in the Godly, and give pardon to the Guilty.
70. Now this I am confident a man of so much
Literature as you are, will not allow to be a proper
paraphrase of this
Hymn: And if instead of the
Passion, you put
Christ for the
Cross, this will yet
[Page 169] more increase the
Nonsense and
Confusion. In short; If all the
Corpus Poetarum were alive, and should lay their
Heads together with you, they could not find out any of their
Figures that would do the business; but must have some new
Ecclesiastical Figure found out to make the
Cross signify
Christ and
his Passion, at the
same time, and in the
same place in which it distinguishes
both from the
Cross. And such a Figure I do say would be as Great a
Mystery, in
Verse, as
Transubstantiation is in
Prose. And I desire you, if you can, to give me but one parallel
Text of
Scripture, in which the
Cross is at once taken both
literally for that
Cross on which
Christ suffer'd; and
figuratively, for
Christ and his
Sufferings upon it.
71. In the mean time it shall suffice me Once more to mind you of what I perceive you have nothing to say to;
viz. That
Aquinas and his
Followers, who have been sometimes reckon'd men of
Literature in your
Church, have understood this
Hymn according to the
plain and
literal meaning of it: and that so confidently as to conclude from it, that your
Church holds
Divine Honour to be due to the Cross.
‘
We ought to worship the Images
themselves (says
Soto) for the
Church doth not say, We
worship THEE,
O Christ;
Soto de Just. & Jure. l. 2. q. 3. Art. 2. Cathar. de Cult & Ador. Imag. p. 133.
But, We adore
thy CROSS,
O Christ.’ And again,
‘
O CRUX AVE, &c.
We direct our Words and signs of Adoration to the Images, (says
Catherine) to which
likewise we burn Incense:’
as when we say to the CROSS,
O Crux Ave. And to the same purpose,
Marsilius ab Ingen; Ludovieus de Paramo; Philippus Gamachaeus, &c. See Dr.
St. Answer to
T. G. Part 2.
72. But if all this will not yet satisfy you, but you are still resolved to adhere to your
new Figure, I will then give you another
Instance, and which I believe may be
Prose, for I do not remember I ever saw it in the
Corpus Poetarum, though this I shall leave to your
Literature to determine: And I pray be pleased to send us the
Paraphrase of this
Antiphone, according to your New
Method of
Expounding:
‘
O CROSS!
brighter than all the Stars; famous in the World;
Breviar. Rom. May 3. p. 797. Paris 1643.
exceeding amiable to Men; more holy than all things; which alone hast been thought worthy to bear
the weight of the World. Sweet Wood!
bearing the sweet Nails, and sweet burdens; SAVE
the present Company gathered together this
day to THY PRAISE.’ And this may serve for the
Second Point; which was, To make good the
Charge I had brought against you, of giving
Divine Worship to
Images. I proceed now finally to shew;
SECT. III.
That the Church
of Rome
thus Worshipping
of Images
is truly
and properly
guilty of Idolatry.
73. THERE is nothing in all our Disputes with those of the
Church of
Rome that seems so much to offend them, as this Charge. They think it not only unreasonable to suppose that
men in the clear light of Christianity should be capable of falling into
Idolatry, but even destructive of the very nature of a
Church, and by consequence contrary to all those Promises of
Christ in his
Gospel,
‘
That the Gates of Hell should never prevail against it;’ And indeed were our
Notion of
Idolatry the same with what some of their late
Advocates have set forth as
the true and only Notion of it, I should not
Reasons for Abrogating the Test, p. 80, 81. at all wonder at their resentments; but rather confess that we had justly deserved all those
Reproaches which their intemperate
Pens have of late bestow'd upon us.
74. But whatever their opinion of the
true and only Notion of Idolatry be, yet common equity should have taught them to confess, that we mean no more in our
charge of it against them, than this, That those of the
Church of Rome, in their
worship of the
Host, of
Saints and
Images, do give that Honour to the
Creature, which ought to be given only to
God. We do not pretend that you have either renounced the
Worship of the
Supreme Deity; or that you do adore either the
Sun, Moon and
Stars; or even
Angels and
Saints as such. And therefore howsoever you may dislike our
Notion of
Idolatry, yet you ought not to revile us for fixing a
false Charge against you, but to shew that we give an
ill Name to a true Charge. And because I now desire not to be mis-understood, I do first of all declare, that by my
present Conclusion I intend no more than this,
‘That you do give the
proper Acts of
Divine Worship to
Images, as I have already shew'd you do to
Saints; and that this is
truly and
properly Idolatry.’
75. To discharge therefore this
last part of my Undertaking as I ought to do; I will proceed distinctly upon these two things,
Ist. To fix our
Notion of
Idolatry, against those New
Idea's that have of late been given of it.
IIdly. To shew, that according to the
true Notion of it, the
Church of Rome in her
Worship of
Images is guilty of
Idolatry.
I. POINT.
I. Of the true
Nature of
Idolatry.
76. This is what you desire me to
reflect upon, and I hope it
Reply, p. 29. will not be thought amiss if I here with all imaginable tenderness communicate my
Reflections to you.
Reply, p. 28.]
‘
Three things (you say)
there are required to make that Honour
which we do pay to any thing, become Idolatrous.
1st, The Understanding
must acknowledge an Excellency in the Object truly Divine, and worthy of Adoration in the strictest sense, where really there is no such Excellency. 2dly, The Will
must have a propension and inclination to it as such, and pay that Honour to it. And Lastly, the Body must pay the exterior Obeysance, of bowing, kneeling, prostrating, kissing, &c.
in pursuance of this interior Love and Knowledge.’
77.
Ans. That is to say, that no One is an
Idolater, but what takes somewhat to be
God that indeed is not so, and upon that account gives the Worship due to the
Supreme God to a
Created Being. And this explains what you had said before;
‘
that you wonder how it
Reply, p. 27.
could enter into the Minds of Men of common sense to conceive it possible, that in the clear light of Christianity, where all Persons are taught there is but One God to whom Adoration is only due, they should yet fall down and Adore a Stock or a Stone, and pay divine Honour to it. That the Idolatry
of the ancient Jews
and Heathens
consisted in believing
Ibid. p. 28.
a plurality of Gods, and adoring them as such:’ So that in short, let men but keep to the Knowledge of the
One true God, and not
worship Saints, or
Images, as such; and then there is no danger of
Idolatry for any Other
Worship that may be paid to them.
78. And now let
Idolatry be as
stabbing and
cut-throat a
word as
Reasons for Abrogating the Test, p. 71,
&c. it will; Be its
punishment, if it were possible, greater than what a
Reverend Author has lately told us is its least,
Death and
Damnation; If this be the only
Idolatry, viz. to
worship somewhat else besides
God, as
supposing it to be very
God; I dare confidently affirm in behalf of all those
Popular Divines that have ever used that
scolding word, That the
Church of Rome is not
Idolatrous in the worship of Saints or Images, nor has it in this
sense ever been charged by us
[Page 172] as such. But to shew the
Vanity of this Pretence; and yet more clearly express what we mean by this
Charge, I will now very plainly examine these two things:
I. Whether, according to the
Scripture-Notion of
Idolatry, those may not be guilty of it, who yet both
Know and
Worship the
One true God?
II.
How such
Persons may become
Guilty of it?
I. Whether, according to the
Scripture-Notion of
Idolatry, those may not be guilty of it, who yet both
Know and
Worship the
One true God?
79. And here it is not my design to enter on any large
Discourse about the
general Nature of
Idolatry; but still remembring the
particular Point before me, to prove it only in such
Instances, as are more immediately applicable to it. And such are especially these two:
-
1st, The
Idolatry of the
Golden Calf.
-
2dly, Of the
Calves of
Dan and
Bethel.
80. As to the
former of these, it has of late been suggested,
Reasons for Abrog the
Test, p. 85. That it was made by
Aaron as the
Symbol of the
Egyptian Apis or
Osyris; and to whose
Idolatry the
Israelites now return'd in the
Worship of it. But this is indeed a very weak Suggestion; and whosoever will but consider the
Circumstances of what was done by that
People on this occasion, will presently see, that they design'd that
Calf to be the
Symbol not of any
Egyptian Deity, but of the
true God, whom accordingly they worshipp'd in presence of it. And this will appear;
81.
1st, From the
occasion of this
Idolatry; which was not any Infidelity as to the
true God, or that they had now any better Reasons given them for the Worship of others besides him; but
because Moses
delayed to come down from the Mount, therefore they urged Aaron
to make them a God,
that might go before them. They had now
Exod. XXXII. rested a long time in that place, and were impatient to go on towards the
Land of Promise. But having now no
Moses to enquire of
Gods Pleasure, they wanted an
Oracle to consult upon these Occasions. And therefore they cri'd out unto
Aaron, Up, make us Gods
that shall go before us, for as for this Moses
the man that brought us up out of the Land of Egypt,
we wot not what is become of him.
82. Now that this was all they intended by it, will appear,
2dly, From the
Character which the
People presently gave to the
[Page 173]
Calf, as soon as it was made:
This is thy God; or as the
Chaldee
Ibid. ver. 4. Paraphrast renders it,
This is thy Fear, O Israel, which
brought thee up out of the Land of Egypt. For sure the People were not so stupid as to think it was either that
Image which had brought them up out of
Egypt; or that the
Gods of
Egypt had
plagued their own People for their sakes, and with a high hand deliver'd them out of their Power. No, doubtless they understood by it their
God,
Exod. XX. who but just before at the delivery of the
Law, had assumed this as his own peculiar
Character, I am the LORD
thy God, which have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt,
and out of the house of Bondage. And this naturally Suggests to me a
third Evidence of this Truth.
83. From the Title which
Aaron himself gave to that
God, of which this
Calf was the
Symbol. Ver. 5.
‘
And when Aaron
saw it,
Ibid 5.
he built an Altar before it; and Aaron
made Proclamation and said, To morrow is a feast unto the LORD.’ This was the peculiar and incommunicable name of the
God of
Israel, which he assumed unto himself,
Exod. VI. 2. when he renew'd his
Covenant with them; and we do not find any one place in all the
Holy Scripture, where it has ever been attributed to any other.
84.
4thly, Had the People hereby designed this to be the
Symbol of the
Egyptian Deities; how comes it to pass, that (as we read in the next Verse)
they offer'd Burnt-offerings, and Peace-offerings unto
Ver. 6.
it. For this, both the
Scripture tells us, was an
Abomination to the Egyptians; and a late
Advocate for you, freely confesses, that
Reasons for Abr. the
Test, p. 114,
&c. they esteem'd
Bullocks and
Rams to be
Sacred Animals, and therefore never offer'd any of them to their
Gods.
85. Lastly, The Scripture plainly distinguishes this
Idolatry from that of the
Egyptians, and makes the one to have been the Punishment of the other. It is confess'd, or rather contended for by the
Author I but now mentioned, that the
Egyptian Idolatry consisted in worshipping the
Sun, Moon and
Stars, as the
Supreme Deity: Now, this St.
Stephen tells us, that
God afterwards permitted them to fall into, and therefore it must have been some other
Idolatry, which in this
Case they were
Guilty of; For speaking of their setting up the
Golden Calf, Acts VII. 41. He thus goes on, ver. 42.
THEN God turned, and gave them up to worship the Host of Heaven.
86. As for the other Instance I proposed to consider; The
Calves of
Dan and
Bethel; the Occasion of their making, was this.
[Page 174] When the ten Tribes had thrown off
Rehoboam from being their
King, and had chosen
Jeroboam to Reign over them; This new Usurper, fearing lest if the People went up at the yearly
Sacrifices to
Jerusalem, where
Rehoboam still Reigned over the other
two Tribes, it might in time occasion their falling away from him, set up two
Calves in
Dan and
Bethel, and made
Altars before them, and perswaded the People, saying,
It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem:
Behold thy Gods,
O Israel,
which brought thee up out
1 Kings XII. 28.
of the Land of Egypt.
87. Now that
Jeroboam intended these
Calves to be
Symbols of the
God of Israel, appears,
1st, From most of those Reflections I before made. He gives them the same
Character by which they constantly understood the
God of Israel; Behold (says he)
thy God,
that brought thee up out of the Land of Egypt. He offer'd Sacrifies before them, and consecrated the
Priests that Ministred unto them, with a
young Bullock and seven Rams. All which is exactly agreeable
2 Chron XIII. 9. to what
God required of them, but was utterly inconsistent with the
Idolatry of
Egypt. But
88.
2dly, We have some more peculiar
Proofs of this matter. I speak not now of the
readiness of the People in complying with him, which it is not imaginable they would so easily have done, had he intended to lead them to the Worship of
strange Gods. Nor will I insist upon the danger, which so sudden an
Innovation might have brought to this
new King, and who was not so little a
Polititian, as to attempt such an Alteration at a time when he was hardly yet well establish'd in his new
Usurpation. These are indeed great Probabilities, but such as this Cause needs not; seeing it has the Evidence of
Holy Scripture fully confirming it; It being certain that the
Idolatry of these
Calves did not take them off from the
Service of the
true God. Let us examine all along the History of the
Kings of
Israel; we shall find them constantly worshipping the
Jehovah, the
God of Israel. Jehu was zealous for him; he destroy'd the
Idolatry of
Baal out of his concern for the
Lord; and had the Kingdom by
Gods own immediate Promise setled upon his Posterity for his so doing. And yet it is expresly said of him,
Howbeit from
2 King. X. 29.
the Sins of Jeroboam,
who made Israel
to Sin, Jehu
departed not from after them, viz.
the Golden Calves
that were in Bethel,
and that were in Dan.
89. Who was it but the
true God for whom
Elijah appear'd so zealous? 1
King. XVIII. when he enter'd into that famous trial
[Page 175] with the
Prophets of
Baal; If the Lord
be God, follow him; but if Baal,
than follow him. And the Fire came down from Heaven, and burnt up the Sacrifice, and all the people confest, saying,
‘
The
Ibid. 39. Lord
he is the God;
The Lord
he is the God.’
90. Hence it is, that when
Ahab fell into that other kind of
Idolatry which consists in worshipping of
false Gods, he is represented as much more heinously offending
God, than the other
Kings of
Israel, who worshipp'd the
Calves of
Dan and
Bethel,
1 King. XVI. 31. 1
Kings XVI. 31.
‘And it came to pass, as if it had been a light thing for him to walk in the sins of Jeroboam the Son of Nebat, that he went and served Baal, and worshipped him.’
91. By all which it undoubtedly appears, that in both these cases, they design'd by those
Calves to worship the
true God; and then seeing it is confest they did commit
Idolatry in that service, it must remain that men may know, and serve the
true God, and yet by
worshipping him in this prohibited manner, may in the interpretation of the
Divine Law commit
Idolatry.
92. I shall conclude this with that Confession which the
Evidence of truth in this
matter has extorted from
Cardinal Bellarmin and and some
others of your
own Communion; where answering this objection, that when the
Golden Calf was set up,
Aaron proclaimed a Feast not to any
other strange God but
[...] to the
LORD, to the
Jehovah,
It is (says he) the
solution of Abulensis
Bellarm. lib. 2. de Imag. c. 13. p. 2130, 2131.
and others,
that there were two sorts of Idols among the Hebrews.
One without the name of any certain God, as that of Micha,
Judges XVII.
and perhaps the Golden Calf which Aaron
made, Exod. XXXII.
and Jeroboam
renew'd, 1 King. XII.
for the Scripture does not call the Calf the God Moloch,
or the God Baal,
These are thy GODS, O Israel. The other sort of Idols had a certain name; as Baal, Moloch, Ashtoreth, Chamos,
&c. as is plain, 1 King. XI. &c.
They say therefore, and that not improbably,
that it may be admitted of the former kind,
That the Jews
did think that in the Idol
THEY WORSHIPPED THE TRUE GOD.
93. And now tho this might suffice to shew how consistent the guilt of
Idolatry is with the acknowledgment of
one true God, yet will I add a reflection or two more, for the farther confirmation of it. For,
First, Were such a
Notion as this of
Idolatry to be admitted, it would serve no less to excuse the Heathens than those of the
Church of Rome of the guilt of it. For however they worshipp'd
[Page 176] other
inferior Deities, as these do
Saints and
Angels with a lower degree of
Religious Honour; yet even they too acknowledged
one supreme God, who was over all, and to whom the highest
Worship and
Adoration alone was due. This has been so largely proved
Defence of the Disc. of Idolatry, par. 1 by
T. G's
worthy and
learned Antagonist, not to mention any others who have occasionally treated of this Argument, that I shall not need to enter on any particular induction in order to the asserting of it.
94.
Secondly, It cannot be question'd but that this new
Notion of
Idolatry, set up on purpose to excuse you from that Imputation, is utterly repugnant to the Principles of the Ancient
Fathers, who certainly charged those with
Idolatry, who yet believed and worshipp'd the very same
God with themselves. Thus St.
Athanasius charges the
Arrians with
Idolatry for
adoring Christ,
‘whom they
Athanas contr. Arrian. Orat. 1. p. 286. esteem'd to be a
Creature. He tells them, that no
supposition of any Excellencies whatever in him, altho derived from God, would excuse them. But that if they thought him a meer man, and yet adored him, they would be found worshippers of men for all that.’ Nay he doubts
Ib. 387. not to parallel them with the
Gentiles, and to compare the service they paid to
our Saviour upon this supposition, with that which the other gave to their
inferior Deities. And the same was the opinion of all the rest of those great men,
Gregory Nazianzen, Nyssen, Epiphanius, &c. and whose words are so well known, that I shall not need to transcribe them.
95. But now that I have mentioned
Epiphanius, I may not forget another sort of
Idolatry exploded by him, and yet more near our purpose than the foregoing. I mean that
Worship which some
Superstitious Women in his time paid to the Blessed
Virgin by offering a
Cake to her. Now this that
Holy Father condemns as downright
Idolatry, and the device of the
Devil. And to shew how consistent the charge of
Idolatry is with the
worship of
one God, he gives us a similitude that would almost imply a necessity of acknowledging the
one true God to compleat the nature of it:
‘
Idolatry (says he)
comes into the world through an Adulterous inclination of the mind, which cannot be contented with one God alone:
Like an Adulterous Woman
that is not satisfied with the chast embraces of one Husband,
but wanders in her lust after many lovers.’ So possible did those
Ancient Fathers think it to be for Men in the
clear light of Christianity, and retaining the
acknowledgment of the true God, nevertheless to commit
Idolatry.
[Page 177] 96. I might add here the
Exhortations of the New Testament, where both S.
Paul and S.
John, among other Cautions to the Christians of their Times, place that of
fleeing from
Idolatry; and this in such a manner, as evidently supposes them very capable of continuing the Profession of Christianity, and the
Knowledg and
Worship of God, and yet of falling into it. But I shall content my self, lastly, to
close up this with the
Confessions of Learned
Romanists themselves, who have acknowledged
Idolatry to be consistent with the
Worship of the
true God.
97. S.
Thomas defines
Idolatry to be a Sin, whereby the singularity
22dae q. 94. Ar. 3. resp. ad 2. Cajet. pag. 340
of God's Dominion is taken from him: And
Card Cajetane in his Notes upon this same
Question, supposes that a
Christian may commit
Idolatry, and yet be so far from renouncing the true
God, as not to violate any part of his Faith in him.
Gregory de Valentia, says 'tis
Idolatry;
‘
Whensoever a Man intends
Lib. 1. de Idol.
to apply to a Creature, either by Words or by Actions, any estimation which is proper unto the Majesty of God, whether it be done directly or indirectly.’
Vasquez reckons those to be
Idolaters,
Vasquez in 3. T. 1. p. 721. who give to an
Image the Service due to God; and defines an
Idol in general to be,
Whatsoever is worshipped as God that is not truly so. Now all these either manifestly
suppose the Knowledg of the True
God, or at least do not
exclude it.
98. But what need I insist upon Generals, seeing if we may believe those of your own
Communion, you are not only capable, for all your
Christianity, of falling into
Idolatry; but in this very Point of
Image-Worship, are
actually guilty of it. For,
1st, Cardinal
Bellarmine disputing against that which I have
Bellarm. de Imag. Ss. l. 2. c. 24. p. 2153. C. shewn by such a number of Witnesses to be the
True Doctrine of your
Church, viz.
‘That the
Image of Christ is to be worshipp'd with proper Divine Worship;’ doubts not to say this is
Idolatry; And therefore argues in this manner against it:
‘
That this Worship is either given to the Image for it self, or for the sake of another. If for it self, it is plainly IDOLATRY; if for another, it is not proper Divine Worship, because the very Nature of that is to be given for it self. Again; Either the Divine Worship (says he)
which is given to the Image relatively for another, is the same with that which is given to God, or it is an inferior Worship. If it be the same, then the Creature is equally
[Page 178] worshipped with God, which CERTAINLY IS IDOLATRY. For Idolatry
is not only when GOD IS FORSAKEN, and an Idol
worshipped, but when an Idol
is worshipped together with God.
If it be an Inferior Worship, then it is not the proper Divine Worship.’
99. So that now then the Point is reduced to a fair issue. Either we must pay the
same Adoration to the
Image that we do to the
Original, and then
Card. Bellarmine pronounces us
Idolaters; Or we must give it only an
Inferior Honour, and then
Card. Capisucchi, and the
Inquisition, damn us as
Hereticks. Nay, but there is
Idolatry committed go which way you will. For
Vasquez, another Learned
Jesuit, and whose Works have been
In 3. T. 1. p. 778. no less approved than
Card. Bellarmine's, tells us;
‘
That if a Man give inferior Worship
to an Image,
distinct from that which is given to the Thing represented by it, he thereby incurs the guilt of IDOLATRY, because he expresses his submission to a meer inanimate Thing,
that hath no kind of Excellency to deserve it from him.’ And now seeing there is so much danger of
Idolatry, whatever the
Honour be that is given to
Images, I hope we may be the easier excused, if admonished by these
Confessions, and directed by
God's Commandments, we refuse to give them any
Honour at all. And thus much be said to the first Point,
‘That a Man may be capable of falling into
Idolatry, though he continues both to know and worship the
One true God.’ My next Business is,
2dly, To shew, How
this may be done by him.
100. I shall mention only two ways, and which I have already before infinuated;
[...]iz.
- 1. By worshipping the
True God after an
Idolatrous manner.
- 2. By giving
Divine Worship to any
other besides Him.
1. By worshipping the
True God after an
Idolatrous manner.
101. This was the
Case of the
Israelites, in the Examples I have before mention'd, of the
Calves of
Aaron and
Jeroboam. They directed their
Adoration to the
JEHOVAH, the
[Page 179]
LORD their God that brought them up out of the Land of Egypt. To him they
proclaim'd the Feast, and offer'd Burnt-
Offerings and
Sacrifices upon their
Altars. Yet because they set up a
Symbol of him, contrary to his Command, and worshipp'd him after an
Idolatrous manner, they are expresly charged as
Idolaters in
Holy Scripture; and the Worship that was intended by them to
God, is represented as given to a Molten Image.
102. And the same was the Case of that other Image which
Card. Bellarmine joins with these,
viz. the
Teraphim of
Micha, Judg. XVII. that these were designed for the Service of the True
God, is plain, seeing both his
Mother is said to have consecrated the Silver of which they were made
[...] to the
JEHOVA, Vers. 3. and
Micha himself hired a
Levite of the LORD's to be his
Priest, Vers. 10, 11. And he comforted himself upon this consideration,
Vers. 13.
‘
Now know I that the LORD will do me good, seeing I have a Levite to my Priest.’ And again,
Chap. xviii. 5.
The Priest asked Counsel of GOD; for some of the
Danites that enquired of him, and GOD, or the JEHOVA,
gave them a true Answer. It is supposed by some in favour of this
Micha, that being a Religious Man, and the publick Service of
God being very much obstructed by the miserable Violence of those Times, he made himself a little
Oratory, and placed in it all the Furniture of the
Tabernacle, with these
Teraphim to resemble the
Cherubims of the
Ark, whose Figure S.
Hierome and others suppose them to have had. But whatever becomes of this Fancy, that which I have to observe now is, that what the
Original Hebrew stiles
Teraphim, the old
Vulgar Latin calls
Idols; and in that famous Passage, 2
Sam. xv. 23. they are both join'd in the same rank of Ilness with one another;
‘
For Rebellion is as the Sin of Witchcraft; and to transgress an Idol
and a Teraphim:’
[...], so
Symmachus rendèrs it; and so both the
[...] and
[...] in that place must undoubtedly be understood. And indeed
Card. Cajetan
Comm.
Jude 17. Vers. 2. himself confesses as to the very Point before us, that the whole Work (however
Micah intended it) was in
God's estimation without question
Idolatry: And to whose Opinion we have already seen
Card. Bellarmine to have agreed; not to mention
Tostatus and others whom he refers to as acknowledging the same likewise.
[Page 180] 103.
2dly, As for the other way by which a Man may commit
Idolatry, who yet both
acknowledges and
worships the
True God, viz. by giving
Divine Worship to any other together with him; I have already offer'd Instances of that in the
Cases of the
Arrians and
Collyridians; the one of which for worshipping
Christ, whom they supposed to be but a
Creature; the other for offering a
Cake to the
Virgin Mary, are charged by the Ancient
Fathers as
guilty of
Idolatry. Nor is this without foundation from the
Holy Scripture. For besides, that first of all we find there
‘
all Religious Worship appropriated to God only;’ and therefore to give such Worship to any other, must be practically to set up
another God. To say nothing,
2dly; that if any such Worship has at any time been offer'd any Holy
Men or
Angels, they have not only constantly refused it as a great Abomination, but have still given this Reason for it, that they were
Creatures, and by consequence not to be
adored: Stand up (says St.
Peter to
Cornelius) for I also am a Man. Sirs, Why do
Acts 10. 26. Acts 14. 15. Rev. 22. 9.
ye these things? (says St.
Paul to the Men of
Lystra, who would have
offer'd Sacrifice to him)
We are also Men of like Passions with you. See thou do it not, (says the
Angel to St.
John) for I am thy fellow Servant: worship God. All which sufficiently shew, that to
worship any
other besides
God, is to raise them above the
state of
Creatures, and in effect to make
Idols of them. We may observe,
3dly, That to give even the least part of that Service which is due only to
God to any
Creature, is expresly called
Idolatry. Thus because we ought to
trust in
God only: Covetous Men who (as St.
Paul tells them)
trust in uncertain
Colos. 3. 5. Ephes. 5. 5.
Riches, are in the
New Testament called
Idolaters. And sure those do not less deserve this
Character, who trust in the Blessed
Virgin and the
Saints, or by any other
Act of
proper religious Worship, such as
Prayer, and in one word all those other Instances of
religious Adoration I have heretofore mentioned, shew that they divide the
proper Service of
God with
them.
104. Let us add to this,
4thly, That
Cardinal Bellarmine
Bellarm. L. C. §. 98. supr. himself confesses that Idolatry is committed, not only when
God is forsaken and an
Idol worshipped, but when an
Idol is worshipped
together with him. And this he proves from
Exod. XX. 23.
Ye shall not make WITH ME Gods of Silver, &c.
[...]
i. e. says your Learned
Vatablus, to worship them
‘
together
Vatabl. in L
[...]c.
[Page 181]
with Me: For I will that ye should worship
ME ALONE, and not joyn any
Companion WITH ME.’
105. I shall finish this with the Consideration of that Charge which S.
Paul brings against the
Gnostick Hereticks, and in which he plainly argues against their
Idolatry, Rom. 1. 25.
‘
That they changed the Truth of God into a Lie, i. e. says
Theodoret,’ they gave the name of
God to an
Idol: and worshipped or served the Creature
[...]
besides, but yet
togethér with the Creator, who is blessed for ever, Amen.
‘
For whereas (says the same
Father) they ought to have worshipped the true God, they gave Divine Worship to the-Creature; To the same Accusation are they subject, who calling the only begotten Son of God of a Creature,
do yet worship
him as God.
For they ought in their Divinity either not to rank him among the Creatures,
but with God
that begat Him, or if they will have Him to be a Creature,
they ought not to give Worship
to Him as a Deity.’
106. Hence
Athanasius calls this
‘
the folly of the Arrians
and
Tom. 1. p. 385. C. Greeks:
to worship the Creature,
besides or with the Creator.’ And again,
‘
The Apostle (says he)
accuses the Greeks that they worshipped the Creatures,
seeing that they served the Creature
besides the Creator;
seeing then the Arrians
say that our Lord is a Creature,
and serve him as such, wherein do they differ from the Greeks
or Gentiles?’ And lastly, S.
Jerome in answer to the charge of
Vigilantius, who accused them of
Idolatry for worshipping the
Reliques of the
Martyrs, utterly renounces the Charge upon the same Foundation:
‘
But as for us (says
Jeronim. Epist. ad Ripar. T. 3. Erasm.
fol. 54. he)
so far are we from adoring the Reliques
of the Martyrs,
that we do not worship the Sun or the Moon, not any Angels or Arch-angels, not the Cherubims nor Seraphim, nor any Name that is named either in this World or in that to come, lest we should serve the Creature
rather than the Creator,
who is blessed for ever.’
107. And thus have I endeavour'd in as short a compass as I could, to clear the
general Nation of
Idolatry, as far as concerned the
Point before me, and in which I suppose you to have erred more for your
Churches sake, than for any great difficulty there is in understanding the
nature of this
Sin. It will now be an easie task from these
Principles to infer, (which is my
next Point.)
[Page 182] II. That your
Church in the
Worship of Images is
truly and
properly guilty of it.
And this I shall shew according to what you desire;
-
1st, With reference to those who hold that
Images are to be
worshipped with the
same Worship as the
Things which they
represent.
-
2dly, As it concerns their Opinion, who denying
this, yet allow an
inferiour Honour to them.
First, That they are
guilty of
Idolatry, who
worship Images with the
same Honour as the
Things which they
represent.
108. Where first I must observe, that this, however of late opposed by you and the rest of our
new Representers, is yet not only the most general received Doctrine of the
Roman Church, but so esteem'd to be the sense of your two Councils of
Nice and
Trent, that
Card. Capisucchi produces a long
Catalogue of your greatest Writers who have look'd upon it as savouring of
Heresy to oppose it. And not only Monsieur
Imbert in
France, but also
Aegidius Magistralis, and the
French Gentleman, whose Case I before represented, will assure you, that in the
Inquisitions of
Italy, Spain, and
Portugal, 'tis somewhat more than a
Scholastick Nicety, or a
probable Opinion, which may without danger be opposed by you. And therefore, tho to make good my promise, I shall also dispute this
Point with you too upon your
own Principles; yet I must needs declare that 'tis here I esteem my self truly to oppose the
Doctrine of your
Church in this particular.
109. Now that they who hold this sort of
Image-worship are thereby
guilty of Idolatry, is so evident that your own
Card. Bellarmine could not forbear reproaching them with it: And whose words I will once more produce, not more for the
Authority than the
Weight of them; where maintaining this
Conclusion,
‘That
Images of themselves and properly are not to be worshipped with the same Worship with which the Exemplar is worshipped, He thus argues against the contrary Opinion:
Either that Latria
or Divine Worship
which is given to the Image,
[Page 183]
for another is the same
with that Worship which is paid to God,
or it is some inferiour Honour:
If it be the same,
then the Creature
is equally worshipped
with God himself,
which is certainly Idolatry;
For it is Idolatry,
not only to forsake God
and worship an Idol,
but to worship an Idol
together with God.
As it is written, ye shall not make
Gods of
Gold or of
Silver together with Me. Thus this great Writer.’ And tho I ought not to expect such free Declarations from you, whose business it is to dissemble, and soften, and accommodate things all you can, yet have you plainly enough insinuated the very same. For when you lay down this Position,
‘
That the Image
Reply, Pref.
pag. 18.
of our Saviour Christ, or the Holy Cross, is upon no account whatsoever
to be worshipped with Divine Worship,
that Worship
being due only to God:’ All you have to say for the other Opinion is,
that it MAY, nay that's not enough, it
MAY POSSIBLY be defended, which is, I think, a tacit Confession, that, to say the truth, you doubted it
could not. 'Tis true, you afterwards grow more confident, and improve your
POSSIBLY into
EASILY;
‘
I say these Expressions of the Schools
MAY be EASILY defended;’ but then you add, that it must be done by
‘
interpreting them so as not to shock this first Principle,
That God alone
is to be worshipped;’ That is to say, by
changing the
Conclusion; and whereas they say,
‘
That the Cross
is to be worshipped
together with Christ with Divine Worship; you give it the new turn, That not the
Cross, but
Christ in presence of the Cross is to be worshipped with
Divine Worship. For otherwise you had before told us, that
the Holy Cross
it self must upon no account whatsoever
be worshipped with
Divine Worship;’ and again here, this first
Principle (say you) must not be shock'd,
‘
That God alone
is to be adored with Divine Adoration.’
110. It appears by this how uneasy you are in this
Case, and it is not a little Confirmation to us of the Security of our Condition, to see that you whose concern it so much is to be very well assured of what you do, yet cannot agree among your selves what
Honour is to be given to
Images. But one Party thinks that cannot be maintain'd without
Idolatry, which the other declares may not be deny'd without
Heresie. As for the
Images of the
Blessed Virgin and the
Saints, that those commit
Idolatry who worship them with the same
Religious Worship that
[Page 184] they pay to the
Exemplars, will follow from what I have before said of your worshipping the
Blessed Virgin and
Saints themselves. For if it be
Idolatry to give
Religious Worship to the
Prototypes, it must then be much more so, to pay it to the
Images.
111. For your other
Images, those of our
Saviour Christ and the
Holy Trinity, I shall need no other Argument than that of
Card. Bellarmine before-mention'd, to shew the
Worship of those too to be
Idolatry. It being evident that to give
Divine Adoration to any
Creature, that is, to worship any Creature as
God, is to make an
Idol of it, and therefore the Service that is thereby paid to it must be
Idolatry. Now that this is the
Case of those who hold this Opinion, if what I have already cited from them be not sufficient to show, and especially where they declare (as we have seen) that not only
Christ, but the
Image it self too is to
terminate the
Divine Worship which is paid to
Christ by it; I am sure the
Reason which they bring to establish their
Conclusion will be more than enough to do it: viz.
‘
That the same Indivisible Act
is at once
and indivisibly
Card. Capis. de cult. Im. qu. ii. par. 9. pag. 650.
the Worship
both of the Image,
and of Christ
represented by the Image. And if the Image
of Christ be adored with the same indivisible Adoration
with which Christ is adored, that Adoration
must be the supreme Divine Adoration,
seeing with such only Christ
is to be adored.’
112. But how then do's the
Cardinal excuse this from being
Idolatry. He answers,
‘
That it is not Idolatry,
because the
Ibid. par. 18. p. 677. Image
as an Image
is in that respect Christ himself.
For in this respect (says he)
the Image
of Christ is not consider'd PRECISELY as it is a CREATURE, but as it is a Divine Thing,
and Christ himself
by Representation.’ And then he dogmatically concludes,
‘
That it is not at all inconvenient
that a CREATURE as it is a Divine Thing,
and after a certain manner one
with God,
should be honour'd
with the very
Ibid. 679.
same Divine Honour,
with which God himself
is honour'd.’ In short, he confesses that the
Images of
Christ, upon the account of their being so, may be
adored with the
very same Adoration that
Christ himself is; and that in such a respect it is not at all
inconvenient for the
Creature to have
Divine Worship paid to it. He looks upon
Idolatry to be then only committed when the
Image is worshipped
exclusively to
God, but that it
[Page 185] is none to worship
God by an
Image, or to worship an
Image together with
God. But yet since he confesses that
Images consider'd as
Images, in their
Representative Natures, are still but
Creatures, and to worship any
Creature with the Worship due
only to God (whatever the pretence be for the so doing) is in effect to set up another
God, which must needs be
Idolatry; It will remain that no pretence of
Scholastick Niceties will be able to excuse this great Man from
Card. Bellarmine's censure of
Idolatry;
‘
Seeing (as he truly tells us)
it is Idolatry
not only to forsake God
and worship an Idol,
but to worship an Idol
together with God.’ But all this will more evidently appear from the other Consideration, in which I am to shew,
Secondly, That even those who deny this
Supreme Divine Honour to
Images, are yet guilty of
Idolatry in what they allow to them.
113. The truth is, the case of these Men is, I think, rather more inexcusable than that of the other kind, because that (in S.
Paul's words) Rom. 1. 32.
‘
Knowing the Judgment of God that they which commit such things as these are worthy of Death, they
not only do the same, but
[...].
They assent to those who do them.
[...],’ so
Theophylact; they
defend and
patronize them:
[...]. As
Theodoret very well observes upon this place.
114. Now that this is indeed truly your
Case appears,
1st, In that at the same time that you assert in express terms,
that you do not worship Images,
God forbid: That the Cross
is upon NO ACCOUNT WHATSOEVER to be worshipp'd with Divine Worship; you nevertheless comply with those others before mention'd in all the most forbidden
Instances of
Divine Adoration. You
incense them, you carry them
solemnly in
Processions, you
consecrate them for this very end that they may be
worshipped, you
prostrate your selves before them in the
Church of God, and in the
time of
Prayer, you
desire several
Graces to accrue to you by your
serving of them, nay you
address your very
Prayers to them, which your own
Aquinas makes use of to
prove that a
proper Divine Adoration is due to the Cross; for having laid down this
Conclusion, that the
Cross is to be adored
[Page 186] with the same Adoration that Christ himself is; He immediately subjoins,
‘
And for this cause it is that we speak
to the Cross,
and pray
to it as to Christ himself. Where you must observe’ (says
Aqu. 3. p. qu. 25. ar. 4. in Corp.
Card. Cajetan in his
Notes on that Passage) that S.
Thomas
‘brings
our speaking to the
Cross as an
effect of the same
Adoration with which Christ is adored. For because we
speak to the
Cross as
Christ, 'tis a
sign that we
recur to the
Cross as
to Christ.’ By all which it appears that you are in this matter
[...], or
self-condemned: If you believe this Worship to be lawful and yet deny it, of
Hypocrisy towards us; if you think it to be
Idolatrous, and yet comply with it, of a great Sin towards
God.
115. And that which yet farther confirms me in this is, to consider what wretched
Evasions you make use of to excuse your selves in these Particulars. Can any thing be more pitiful than the
Expositions you have here offer'd, of your
Consecrating of Crosses, of your
Good-friday-Service, and of the
Hymns of
your Church, which I had alledged as Instances of that
Worship you give to
Images? Do not these plainly shew a
desperate Cause: and that you are but too sensible that your
old Practices are not to be reconciled with your
new Pretences.
116. If while I am endeavouring to convince you of
Idolatry, I do by the way discover your Insincerity, 'tis what I cannot help. But all the use I shall make at present of these Remarks shall be to observe, that even those among you who pretend the most to deny a
Divine Worship to Images, yet must allow such
Acts of it as these I have here recounted. Now that even this will involve you in this
Guilt, is evident from the
Scripture-Notion of
Idolatry before establish'd. For I desire you to tell me, if you can, what did those
Israelites do when they worshipped the
Golden Calf, that you do not at this day practise in the very same manner? Was it, 1. that they
worshipped God by an
Image? But if this be
Idolatry, you cannot deny but that you do the very same. Or, was it, 2. that they did not refer their
Worship finally to
God, but
terminated their
Adoration upon the very
Image it self? Nay, but
Aaron in express terms
proclaim'd a Feast unto the Lord; and to whom can we suppose that they
offer'd their
Burnt-offerings and their
Peace-offerings, but to the
same LORD to whom the
Feast it self was proclaim'd?
[Page 187] 117. To conclude; There is nothing in that whole
History to make us doubt but that they design'd that
Calf only as a
Symbol of the
God of Israel: And their
Idolatry by Consequence was no other than what the most moderate Men of your
Church must confess themselves to be guilty of,
viz.
‘That, contrary to
God's express
Command, you set up
Graven Images as
Representations of our
Saviour Christ and the
Holy Trinity; and
worship the
infinite and
incomprehensible God,’ in a Figure made like unto a Mortal Man: Which
God himself has warranted us by his holy Word to call
Idolatry.
118. It remains therefore upon the whole, that either you must shew us to be mistaken in our
Notion of Idolatry; or you will never be able to acquit your selves of the
Charge of it. And when you have done this, we shall then only tell you, that you commit a
Sin in this
Service, that you violate
God's holy
Law which forbids it; but for the
denomination of it, we shall leave it to you, whose
Sin it is, to give it what particular
Name you your selves think fit.
Of RELIQUES.
119. IN the Point of
Reliques you offer only two things in
Reply,
p. 42, &c. answer to all that I had said upon that
Subject, viz.
Reply] First,
‘That the whole of my Discourse proceeded upon verbal Dispute, what we are to call that Honour which you give to them, and which you deny to be properly
Worship. Secondly, You once more egregiously
cavil about the
Translation of that Part of the Council of
Trent which concerns this Subject, and deny that you seek to the sacred
Monuments or
Reliques of the
Saints for the obtaining of THEIR Help and Assistance.’
120.
Answ.] For answer to which Pretences, because I as little
love to prolong Disputes at any time, as you do when you
Reply, ibid. have no more to say in order to the carrying of them on; I will lay aside
words, and bring the Issue to the things themselves,
[Page 188] and shew how miserably you have prevaricated in this
Point too, as wellas in the foregoing, by proving,
- I. That you do
properly worship the
Reliques of your
Saints.
- II. That you do seek to them for
Help and
Assistance.
And when this is done, I shall not need say any thing to prove that you here also commit
Idolatry; seeing you allow the
Cases of
Images and
Reliques to be the
same; and the
Council of
Trent makes this to be the very difference between
Reply, p. 44. the
Heathens and
them, and that by which they hope to escape the Censure of
Idolatry, viz.
‘
That they do not believe any Divinity
or Virtue
in Images for which they ought to be worshipped,
or that any thing is to be asked of them, or any trust to be put in them.’ Tho how truly they
declare this, the account I have before given of your
consecrating both of
Crosses and
Agnus Dei's will sufficiently show.
I. That you do
truly and
properly worship the
Reliques of your
Saints.
121. This is a
Point that in any other
Age, or
Country but ours, would have needed no
Proof. And it is not the least Argument of an
innovating Spirit in you, that no
Words or
Expressions are of any
value with you, as often as you are minded to give us what you call the
Churches Sense. Let your Writers use never so many Phrases to assure to us their Opinion that
Reliques are to be
worshipp'd, all this signifies nothing, they meant no more by it than an
‘
Honour or Veneration due to the sacred Remains
Reply, p. 42.
of those Saints who were once the Temples of the Living God; and not a Worship
or Adoration
taken in its strict Sense.’ There is hardly an
Expression that can signifie a
proper Worship which your own Authors have not made use of to declare the
Service they thought due to them.
‘
I ADORE, WORSHIP, embrace
the Reliques
of the Saints, said one in the second
Council of Nice, and the whole Assembly resolved, Act. IV.
That their Bones, Ashes, Raggs, Blood, and Sepulchres,
should be ADORED, only Men should not offer Sacrifice
unto them.’ Card.
Baronius speaks of it as an Honour done Him by Pope
Annal. ad. Ann. 821. §. 14.
Clement VIIIth, that tho most unworthy of so great an undertaking,
[Page 189] he was yet sent by him to examine and ADORE the
venerable Body of
S. Cecilia. And though the cautious
Synod of
Trent said only that
Reliques should be VENERATED, yet seeing it neither condemned the Opinions of those who taught they were to be
worshipped, but rather allow'd the
Acts of
proper Divine Service to be paid to them. What can we conclude, but that they made use of a
loose Expression to satisfy the more moderate Party of your
Communion, at the same time that they resolved by their
practice to favour the
Superstition of those who
properly adored them?
122. Now that this was truly the
Case, will appear,
First, From what I have before said, concerning the
Holy CROSS; which is consider'd by you in a double
Capacity, both as an
Image and as a
Relique; and is upon both accounts declared to be worthy of the very SAME ADORATION that
Christ himself is; And I hope that is a
proper Worship in the strictest sense. For thus St.
Thomas argues;
‘
If we speak of
Aquin. 3. Par. Qu. 25. Art. 4.
the very Cross
upon which Christ
was crucified,
it is to be worshipped with Divine Worship,
both as it represents Christ, and as it touch'd the Members of Christ, and was sprinkled with his Blood. And for this Cause we both speak to the Cross
and pray
to it, as if it were Christ Crucified
upon it.’Where note, (says
Cajetane)
‘
That our speaking
to the Cross
is here produced
Cajet. in Th. Ibid.
as an Effect of the same Adoration
with which Christ
is adored.’ This I think is plain enough, and may serve to shew both with what sincerity you deny that properly speaking you do
worship Reliques; or that 'tis not the
Cross, but
Christ Crucified upon it, to whom you speak in these
Addresses; and which I have before vindicated against your
Cavils.
123. Now this is the more to be consider'd, in that here you cannot say, as you do in the
Case of
Images, that the
Figure and the
Proto-type are in a manner united
together, and that therefore the
Image in its
representative Nature is in some sort
very Christ: The reason of this
Worship being only a
former Relation to our
Saviour; because (says
Aquinas) it
heretofore
Aquin. loc. cit.
touch'd his Sacred Members, or was sprinkled with his Blood. Upon which single account
Cardinal Capisucchi doubts not to affirm,
Paragr. Appendix. p. 690.
‘
That the Wood
of the Cross
is so sanctified and consecrated by
[Page 190] Christ, that every the least Particle
of the Cross
divided from the whole, and from the other parts do's remain Consecrated and Sanctified; and therefore that every the least piece
of the Cross
is to be adored with the very same supreme Divine Adoration that Christ
himself is.’ So truly have you told us, that you do not allow
Relicks a
Worship or
Adoration taken in its
strictest
Reply,
p. 42.
sense.
124. And what I have now said of the
Cross, will in the next place no less hold for the
Nails, Lance, and other Instruments of his Passion. Upon which account, as we have
Vid. Card. Capisuch. l. c. seen
that you address to the
Cross, so you also do to the
Lance;
‘
Hail O triumphant Iron!
Happy Spear!
Wound us with the Love of him that was pierced by thee.’ It is possible you may find out this too in the
Corpus Poctarum; and by the same
Figure that the
Cross signifies at once both the Material Cross, and our Saviour that hung upon it, may make the
Spear here signify at once both S.
Longinus's
Spear, and the
Body of
Christ that was wounded with it. And that you may see how much it will be worth the while to have such an
Ecclesiastical Trope invented. I will add one Instance more of another
Relique that has an
Address made to it altogether as much wanting it as either of the foregoing. The
Relique I mean is the
Veronica, or Cloth which our Saviour
Christ wiped his Face, and left the Impression of his Visage upon it. And to this you thus
pray;
‘
Hail Holy Face of our Redeemer, printed upon a Cloth white as Snow; purge us from all Spot of Vice, and join us to the Company of the Blessed. Bring us to our Country, O happy Figure! there to see the pure Face of Christ.’ This is I suppose a plain Instance enough what kind of
Honour you pay to
Reliques. And that this
Cloth might never want
Votaries to
worship it, your Pope
John XXII, has vouchsafed no less than Ten thousand Days
Indulgence to every repetition of this
Prayer. I might add other Instances of this kind of
Superstition: But I go on,
125.
Thirdly, To another
Instance of your giving
religious Worship to
Reliques; and that is your allow'd practice of
swearing by them. Now that to
swear by another, is to give that thing by which you
swear the
VVorship due to
God only; both the nature of an
Oath, which implies a
calling of God to witness,
[Page 191] and therebly acknowledges him to be the
Inspector of the Heart, and the just
Avenger of the falshood of it, and the
Authority of
Holy Scripture plainly declare;
‘
Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God, says
Moses, Deut. vi. 13.
and shalt serve him only, and swear
by his Name. How shall I be favourable unto thee? says
God by the Prophet
Jeremy, Chap. v. 9.
Thy Children have forsaken me, and sworn
by those that are no Gods.’ But now the
Catechism of your late
Synod of
Trent allows you to
swear
In 2. praec. decal. p. 267. by the
Cross, and
Reliques of your
Saints; and there is nothing more common among you than so to do. When the
Emperor comes to
Rome to take the
Imperial Diadem at his
Holiness's Hands, he thus swears:
‘I King of the
Romans SWEAR—By the
Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost; and by the
VVood of the
Cross, and by these
Reliques of the
Saints, &c.’ In which we find the Holy
Trinity join'd in the same rank with the
Wood of the
Cross, and with the
Reliques of the
Saints.
126. Nor am I here concern'd in those Pretences that are sometimes brought to excuse this,
viz. that you hereby intend no more than to
swear by
God, seeing it is plain that you do it at once both by
God and
Them. And again; That you do not believe that thereby any strength is added to the
Oath which it would not otherwise have; for allowing this, yet still you do
swear by them; and if there be neither any
reason for it, nor
benefit in it, you are never the less
culpable, but the more
inexcusably so upon this account. But indeed you do expect a
benefit by this
swearing; and suppose that the
Saints do hereby become
Sureties with
God to you to see the
Oath fulfill'd, and to punish the
Perjury if it be not. And so you not only
swear by the
Reliques as well as by
God, but ascribe all the
reason and design of an
Oath to the
Saints in common with
God. I will
illustrate this in one of your own
Instances, which will clear this
Matter to us. It happen'd that one of your
Saintesses, S.
Guria, was married to a
Goth, a Souldier in the
Roman Army, that was sent to deliver the City
Edessa from the
Hunns. The Siege being raised, and the Army recall'd, the
Souldier required his
Wife to go home with him. Her
Mother could not bear this; but being forced to comply, she brings the
Souldier and her
Daughter to an
Altar, under which were buried the
Bodies of three
Saints. And being there, she thus spake to him;
‘
I will not give thee my Daughter,
unless laying thy hand upon this
[Page 192] Tomb,
in which are contain'd the Reliques
of the Holy Martyrs
of Christ,
thou shalt swear
that thou wilt treat my Daughter
well.’ This he readily did: But yet soon after, without any regard to his
Oath, he used her very ill. It were too long to recount all the Circumstances of her Misfortunes, or her miraculous deliverance out of them, by the
aid of these Holy
Martyrs. I observe only as to my present purpose, that being reduced to the utmost degree of despair, the
Saint now, as her last refuge, puts the Holy
Martyrs in mind of her
Husband's swearing by their
Reliques, and how they were thereby become SURETIES to her
Mother for her good Entertainment, and ought not to suffer her to be thus abused. Immediately, the
Martyrs spoke to her, and told her, that as FAITHFUL SURETIES they would deliver her: and straightway she was miraculously brought out of a
Coffin under Ground (for her Husband had buried her alive) to the very place where their
Bodies lay, and where her Husband had
sworn to her. And then they once more spoke to her to this effect:
‘
We have now satisfied our SURETISHIP,
Go to thy Mother.’ It was not very long after this, that the War breaking out again, the same
Souldier came back to
Edessa, where he was surprised to find his
Wife alive; and being prosecuted for the Injuries he had done her, and for the Perjury he had committed, was condemn'd to be
hang'd for it. But,
127.
Fourthly, And to conclude this
Point. I will to these add those
Superstitions which are your
common practice; and of which every one that has lived any time among you, must needs have been
Eye-Witnesses. Such are your running to visit the Shrines of your
Saints upon their Solemn
Festivals; which with what devotion you do it, all
Paris on the
3d of
January every Year is sufficiently sensible. Your carrying them in
Procession is indeed very remarkable; and of which I shall leave those who have ever known a dry time in the City I last mention'd, to consider what they have then seen. But because I must not expect to be credited by some Men in any thing that can possibly be deny'd; I will leave these
Matters of Fact to those who have been
Spectators of them: and for the satisfaction of those who have not, will give a short extract of the
[Page 193]
form of
Procession, with which you bring the
Reliques of your
Saints into a
New Church.
128. First the
Bishop with his
Clergy leads the
Procession to
Pontific. Roman. de Benedictione Ecclesiae, p. 119, &c. the
place where the RELIQUES were lodged the Night before; When they are come to it, they sing this
Anthem, Move your selves, O ye Saints
of God from your Mansions, and hasten to the place which is prepared for you. Then the
Bishop uncovering his Head before the RELIQUES
prays thus.
Grant unto us, O Lord,
we beseech thee, that we may worthily touch the Members
of thy Saints
that are more especially dedicated
unto thee.
Then the
Incense being prepared with the
Cross, and
lighted Candles leading the way, and follow'd by the
Clergy, singing their
Anthems, the
Priests appointed take up the
Carriage, and one going by them all the way
incenses the
Reliques. The
Bishop and
Clergy singing, among others, this
Anthem, Rise up ye Saints
of God from your Habitations; SANCTIFY the PLACES; BLESS the PEOPLE, and KEEP us sinful Men in PEACE.—
Walk O ye Saints
of God; Enter into the City of the Lord,
for a Church
is built unto you, where the People may adore the Majesty of God.
Being come to the Door of the
Church, they make a stop whilst some other
Ceremonies are performed. Then the
Bishop crosses the
Door with Holy
Chrism, and bids it be
Blessed, and
Sanctified, and
Consecrated, and
Consign'd, and
Commended, in the
Name of the
Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost. And so they carry in the
Reliques, the
Bishop and
Clergy singing as before.
This is the
Order of that Solemnity. What Name it deserves I shall leave it to others to say. But sure I am, that all this is somewhat more than such an
Honour and
Respect which you pretend is all that you give to them. Let us see,
IIdly, Whether you do not
seek to these
Sacred Monuments for
Help and
Assistance?
129. It is indeed a hard Case that we must be forced now to prove that which is a known practice of daily experience amongst you. The Council of
Trent it self confesses,
‘
That by
[Page 194] them many Benefits
are bestow'd by God
upon Men;’ and then I am confident it will not be thought at all improbable, that it should encourage Men to
recur to them for their help. But here you have a notable evasion.
‘You do not deny but that
Full Answ.
pag. 6. Men go to these
Sacred Monuments and
Reliques to receive Benefit; but this you say will not justify my
Translation unless when they come there they pray to the
Reliques, instead of desiring the
Saints, whose they are to
pray for them.’ And to make this look like a Rational Answer, you change the
Terms of the
Question; which was not (as you
falsly insinuate) whether the Council of
Trent directs you to
Full Answ.
Ibid. IMPLORE
the Aid of the Monuments or Sacred Reliques; But whether it do's not condemn those who say that for the
See Expos.
p. 17. Defence,
pag. 25. OBTAINING of THEIR
Help the Memories of the Saints are in vain frequented. And though they do not PRAY to the
Reliques; yet if for the OBTAINING their
Help your People do recur to them, which you cannot deny but that they do, the presumption offer'd in
vindication of my rendring that Passage of your
Council is still good; and you have shewn nothing but your own
falseness in this new
Answer to it. If it were necessary to prove that you do
pray to
Reliques, you may see by what I have already offer'd, that even so you would not have secured your self from having made your self a false
Translation, where you charge me with One. But you have chosen your
Jury, and I accept of it; and only for their better direction, I must desire them to look the words in the
Council it self, and not in your Transcript of them; who have purposely omitted all the
Antecedent to which the
EORUM refers; that so they might be sure to see no more than what made for your Purpose. Should I have done this, I should have found all the variety of
hard words muster'd up against me,
Mutilation, Falsification, False Imposition, wilful Prevarication, wilful Mistake, unsincere Trick, &c. that either your
Margin could have contain'd, or your
Malice have
invented; And the Truth is, I should have deserved them. But I shall leave this also to your
Jury to judg of: And for all your good assurance, I dare venture all my
little Learning, against all
your Little, that the
Verdict is brought in against you; and that you are concluded in this Matter
[Page 195] to have been either very
blind, Aut illud quod dicere nolo.
130. For what concerns the thing it self; Whether you do not seek to the
Monuments of the Saints for the obtaining the
Help of their
Reliques; this is what will need no proof to those who are but never so little acquainted with your
Superstition: And have seen with what Zeal you touch your
Beads and
Psalters at the very
Shrines in which they ae contain'd, to
sanctify them thereby. How upon all occasions they are brought forth by you: To
cure your
Sickness; to preserve you from
Tempests at
Land, and in
Storms at
Sea; but especially to drive away
Evil Spirits, for which they are the most beneficial. The
Messieurs du Port Royal, have given us a
Reponse à un Ecrit publié sur les Miracles de la
Ste Espine.
p. 15. Pag. 18, 22. whole Volume of the
Miracles wrought by the
Holy Thorn. There you may see how
Sister Margaret, one of the
Nuns, being ill of the
Palsy, was carried to ADORE the
Holy Thorn. How another being sick, recurr'd to it for its help, and found it too; having no sooner ADORED the
Holy Thorn, and kissed it, but she was well of her Infirmity. Infinite Examples of the like kind might be produced, but I shall content my self to shew what Opinion you have of the Power of your
Reliques, from the very
Prayer that
Pontific. Ro
[...] pag. 164, 165. you make at the
blessing of those little
Vessels in which they are put.
‘
We most humbly beseech thee Almighty God,
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
that thou wouldst vouchsafe to bless these Vessels
that are prepared for the Honour of thy Saints through the Intercession of the same Saints: That all those who shall venerate their Merits, and humbly embrace their Reliques [may be defended]
against the Devil
and his Angels,
against Thunder, Lightning
and Tempest;
against the Corruption
of the Air,
and the Plagues
of Men
and of Beasts;
against Thieves
and Robbers,
and Invasions of Men,
against evil Beasts,
and against
all the several kinds of Serpents
and creeping things,
and against the wicked Devices of evil Men.’
[Page 196] Here I hope are benefits enough to invite a Man to seek to them, and if they can
help in all these
Cases, we need not doubt but they shall have
Votaries enough to
recur to them for it.
131. But that which is most admirable is, that in all these
Cases, false Reliques are every jot as good as
true ones; and which makes somewhat for the Opinion of
Vasquez, that provided a Man do's but think 'tis the
Relique of a
Saint, he may securely
worship it, tho it may be 'tis no such thing. We have before heard what mighty Cures were wrought at the
Monument of the famous
Bishop and
Martyr VIARUM CURANDARUM: And whether the Council of
Trent prescribed it
See above
[...]. 3. or no,
Ressendius assures us, all the
Country round about did come to the
Monument of this pretended
Saint, for the obtaining
Help and
Assistance, and fancied at least that they found it too. Tho it afterwards appear'd that 'twas an
old Heathen Inscription, and those words far enough from signifying either the
Name of a
Man, or the
Character of a
Bishop. Many have been the
Cheats of the like kind, and which ought very much to lessen the Credit of those
Miracles that you pretend are wrought in your
Church: But I shall finish all with one so much the more to be considered, in that it was the happy occasion of undeceiving a very great Person, and disposed him to receive that
Truth he afterwards embraced: And may it please
God, that the recital I shall here make of it, may move those who are yet in
Captivity to these
Superstitions to deliver themselves from the like Impositions.
132.
Prince Christopher, of the Family of the
Dukes of
Radzecil, a Prince much addicted to the Superstitions of your
Church, having been in great Piety at
Rome to kiss his
Holiness's
Drelincourt Response à M. le Landgrave Ernest. p. 348. §. lx. Feet; the
Pope at his departure presented him with a
Box of
Reliques, which at his return soon became very famous in all that Country. Some Months had hardly pass'd when certain
Monks came to him to acquaint him that there was a D. Man
possess'd of the
Devil, upon whom they had in vain try'd all their
Conjurations, and therefore they humbly intreated his
Highness that for his relief, he would be pleased to lend them his
Reliques which he had brought from
Rome. The
Prince readily complied with their desires, and the
Box was with great
Solemnity carried to the
Church, and being applied to the Body
[Page 197] of him that was possess'd, the
Devil presently went out with the
Grimaces and
Gestures usual on such
occasions. All the beholders cry'd out, A
Miracle! and the Prince himself lifted up his Hands and Eyes to
Heaven, and blessed God who had favour'd him with such a
Holy and
powerful Treasure.
It happen'd not long after that the
Prince relating what he had seen, and magnifying very much the
Virtue of his
Reliques: One of his
Gentlemen began to smile, and show by his
Actions how little Credit he gave to it. At which the
Prince being moved, his Servant (after many promises of Forgiveness) ingenuously told him, that in their return from
Rome he had unhappily lost the
Box of
Reliques, but for fear of being exposed to his Anger, had caused another to be made as like as might be to the true one, which he had filled with all the little
Bones, and other Trinkets that he could meet with, and that this was the
Box that his
Monks made him believe did work such
Miracles.
The Prince the next Morning sent for the
Fathers, and enquired of them if they knew of any
Demoniaque that had need of his
Reliques: They soon found one to
act his part in this Farce; and the
Prince caused him to be
exorcised in his presence. But when all they could do would not prevail, the
Devil kept his
Possession, he commanded the
Monks to withdraw, and delivered over the
Man to another kind of
Exorcists, some
Tartars that belonged to his
Stable, to be well lash'd till he should confess the
Cheat. The
Demoniaque thought to have carried it off by horrible
Gestures and
Grimaces, but the
Tartars understood none of those Tricks, but by laying on their Blows in good earnest quickly moved the
Devil, without the help of either
Hard Names, Holy Water, or
Reliques, to confess the truth, and beg Pardon of the
Prince.
As soon as Morning was come, the
Prince sent again for the
Monks (who suspected nothing of what had pass'd) and brings their Man before them, who threw himself at the
Princes Feet, and confess'd that he was not
possess'd with the
Devil, nor ever had been in his Life. The
Monks at first made light of it, and told the Prince it was an
Artifice of the
Devil who spoke through the
Mouth of that
Man. But the Prince calling for his
Tartars to
exorcise another
Devil, the
Father of LIES, out
[Page 198] of them too, they began presently to relent, and confess'd the
Cheat, but told him they did it with a
good Intention to stop the Course of
Heresy in that Country.
Upon this he dismiss'd them, but from that time began seriously to apply himself to read the
Holy Scriptures, telling them that he would no longer trust his
Salvation to Men who defended their Religion by such
pious Frauds, so they called them, but which were indeed
Diabolical Inventions. And in a short time after, both
himself and his
whole House made open
Profession of the
Reformed Religion. Anno 1564.
And thus much be said in
Answer to your
IVth Article.
FINIS.