- g V' |^ij ■ B u Cornell University Library BR 45.B21 1792 Eight sermons preached before the Uniyer 3 1924 026 429 344 fyxntll Wmwwtig |ptat:g BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME FROM THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND THE GIFT OF licnrg W. Sage 1891 / 1 A &££££. * € /*/.?£..... 0. ft^uf.K. H. X £^&J;£. fott. ■ ^<-£ $m\ E.|| Cornell University %B Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924026429344 A VIEW OF OUR RELIGION, WITH REGARD TO ITS SUBSTANCE, WITH REGARD TO ITS HISTORY, WITH REGARD TO THE ARGUMENTS BV WHICH IT IS CONFIRMED, AND WITH REGARD TO THE OBJECTIONS BY WHICH IT IS OPPOSED. EIGHT SERMONS i PREACHED BEFORE THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD, IN THE YEAR MDCCXCII, AT THE L £ C T\; tfr R- B FOUNDED BV THE LATE i, REV. JOHN BAMPTON, M. A. CANON OF SALISBURY. BY JOHN EVE LEIGH, D.D. PROVOST OF ORIEL COLLEGE, AND PREBENDARY OF ROCHESTER. OXFORD, SOLD BY J. COOKEj AND BY B. WHITE AND SON, AND F. AND C. RIVJNGTON, LONDON. 3*? Bay IMPRIMATUR, JO HAN. COOKE, Vice-Can. Oxon. cad. Mar. 20. 1792. TO THE UNDERGRADUATES OF THE UNIVERSITYOF OXFORD THESE LECTURES are addressed; and an habitual attention to the great topics, enlarged upon in them, is most earnestly recommended BY THEIR VERY FAITHFUL FRIEND AND SERVANT .THE AUTHOR. E XT R ACT FROM THE LAST WILIf AND TESTAMENT OP THE LATE R E V. JOHN BAM PTON, CANON OF SALISBURY. *. — ~ " I give and bequeath my Lands and «* Eftates to the Chancellor, Matters, and *?. Scholars of the Univerfity of Oxford fbi* *« ever, to have and to hold all and Angular *« the faid Lands or Eftates upon truft, and to '* the intents and pqrpofes hereinafter men- " tioned; that, is to fay, I will and appoint,* ** that the Vice-Chaneellor of the Univerfity v of Oxford for the time being mail take and " receive It ( ii ) receive all the rents, iflues, and profits there- of, and (after all reparations, and neceflary " deductions made) that he pay all the re- " mainder to the endowment of eight Divinity *' Lecture Sermons, to be eftablifhed for ever " in the faid Univerfity, and to be performed " in the manner following :' *' I direct and appoint, that, upon the firft ** f uefday in Eafter Term, a Lecturer be yearly " chofen by the Heads of Colleges only, and «' by no others, in the room adjoining to the " Printing-Houfe, between the hours of ten " in the morning and two in the afternoon, to " preach eight Divinity Lecture Sermons, the ** year following, at St. Mary's in Oxford, be- " tween the commencement of the laft month «« in Lent Term, and the end of the third " week in Act Term. " Alfo I direct and appoint, that the eight «* Divinity Lecture Sermons mall be preached " upon either of the following fubjects — to " confirm and eftablifh the Chriftian Faith, " and ( Hi ) " and to confute all heretics and fchifmatics — " upon the divine authority of the Holy Scrip- " tures — upon the authority of the writings of " the primitive Fathers, as to the faith and " practice of the primitive Church — upon the " Divinity of our Lord and Saviour Jefus " Chrift— upon the Divinity of the Holy Ghoft " — upon'the Articles of the Chriftian. Faith, " as comprehended in the Apoftles' and Ni- *' cene Creeds. " Alfo I direcl:, that thirty copies of the eight " Divinity Ledture Sermons mall be always " printed, within two months after they are " preached, and one copy fhall be given to the " Chancellor of the Univerfity, and one copy " to the Head of every College, and one copy " to the Mayor of the City of Oxford, and " one copy to be put into the Bodleian Libra- " ry •, and the expence of printing them fhall " be paid out of the revenue of the Land or " Eftates given for eftablifhing , the Divinity '* Lecture Sermons ; and the Preacher fhall "not ( iv ) " not be paid, nor be entitled to the revenue, " before they are printed. " Alfo I dired: and appoint, that no perfon " mall be qualified to preach the Divinity Lec- " ture Sermons, unlefs he hath taken the De- " greeof Mafter of Arts at leaft, in one of the v two Univerfities of Oxford or Cambridge ; " and that the fame perfon fhall never preach " the Divinity Ledture Sermons twice." S E 15, M O N I. •*m I PET. III. 15. lie ready always to give an anpwer to every may, th#t ajketh you a reafon of the Jlo^e . that i$Jn you. IT is a diitinguifhing property of our Re- ligion that it not only admits of a rational inquiry into its truth, but alfo incites its pro-- felTors to this inquiry in the mpft forcible manner, making it a part of their religious duty. We are commanded in the text io be ready always to give an anfwer to every man, that afketh us a reajfon of the IJope that is in us : or, in other words, we are commanded tq> fatisfy ourfelves univerfally of the truth of our Religion, fo as to be prepared on all occasions to affign our reafons- for believing in it. Our Religion may be confidere^ with regard to its fubftance, with regard to its hiftory, with regard to the arguments by which it is con- firmed, and with, regard to the objections by which it is oppofed. Thefe four great topics include the principal circumftances, which affecT: our Christian Faith : under them we B have 2 SERMON I. have ample means of fatisfying both ourfelves, and others, concerning the Hope that is in us.' And many are the reafons, which ought to induce us on -occafions, like the prefent, to prepare ourfelves by a general difcuffion of thefe great topics to comply with the com- mand of the text. In an age when the real fubftance of our' Religion is' niifreprefen ted by men of the moft oppofite characters and in- tentions ; when the manner} in which it has been received and conveyed down to us, is traduced by the moft infidious and unfupporte$i infinuations; when the arguments in its de- fence are ftudioiifly disjoined from each- other and frittered away hy fucceffive detractions of many of their moft convincing parts ; and when the whole body of old objeftions againft our Religion is recalled, and enforced by new ones, which are every day fuggefted by an adventurous and fceptical philofophy ; in fu'cb. an age it is confpicuoufly our duty to fortify our minds by the information, comprehended under the general topics of Chriftian Theology which I have above enumerated. DifcourfeS alfo on fuch general topics may well be inter- fperfed among others on the particular parts of our religious profeflion, which the founder of this Ledlure has wifely marked out, as fub- jefts of our difcuffion. Thus interfperfed, they VERMONT., 3 they will conduce, on an extended fcale, to fimilar good purposes with thofe reflexions at large on any human fcience ; which, in the progrefs of difquifitiohs on particular branches of it, enable us from time to time to form fuch adequate conceptions of the whole, as are found to be eflential to a full comprehenfion of the inftrudtions,, which are communicated even' on jfis Vmoft detached and minute divi- fions. Such general information, moreover, cannot fail of being eminently ferviceable to the younger part' of my audiences, for whole benefit this Institution was peculiarly calcu- lated. Since without it early improvements in religious knowlege will be fo defultory and imperfect, as to afford little reafbn to expect, either that Theological ftudents will be fuffi- ciently inftructed to qualify them in future life to teach others, or (what ought never to be an object of lefs ferious concern) that young and unexperienced minds in general will them- felves be effectually guarded againft that moft exterifive fpecies of infidelity* which, is founded on ' ignorance of the real circumftances of our a " From the feveral eonverfations which it has been my " chance to have with unbelievers I have learned' that igno- " ranee of the nature of our Religion, and a difinclination to .** ftudy both it and its evidences are to be reckoned among the " chief caufes of infidelity. " , Beattie>s Evidences, Vol. I. p. 6. B 2 -Religion, 4 SERMON I, Religion, and is conftantly betraying, itfelf by Infigriificant and impertinent objections againft its truth, arid by that fenfelefs blafphemy whidh fo often mOcks the ears of good men in private converfation. Truth, indeed, has on all ocpa^qns fo much force, that, when clearly propofedi it fhuft command attention and re- fpecl:.: but the truths of Chriftianity are, far- ther, fo admirably calculated to fatisfy the hopes of the beft men, and to allay the peni- tential fears of the world -, that, wherever they are early and thoroughly understood, prejudice, inftead of exerting itfelf againft them, muft co-operate with reafon in their favour, and fecure for them fuch influence on an uncor- rupted heart, as the opposition of ignorance Will irt vain attempt to deilroy. Since, then, a general difcuffion of the great topics, under which I have diftributed the consideration of our Religion, and which are of extent fufficient to enable us to comply with the command of the text, is well fuited to the prefent times, is expedient at proper intervals amidft the particular fubjedts pre- ferred for this Lecture, and, moreover, is likely to be of the moft important fervice to the younger part of my audience ; I fhall con- fine myfelf to it in the following difcourfes^ and, without any apology for calling your at- tention SERMON t £ tention to truths of which you mult, often be- fore have heard the greater part, of any farther iritr6du<5fion, I Ihall propofe it iri general terms as my delign to Hate, what' our Religion is, what the manner . in which it has been re- served .and conveyed down to us, what the arguments by which its truth is defended, and what the objections with which it is aflailedl Or, to propofe' my defign with its particular limitations, I ihall endeavour— Firft, to ftate regularly the fubftanCe of our Religion from its earlieft declarations in the Scriptures of both the Old and hew Teftament to its com- plete publication after the refufredtion of Chrift ; — Secondly, to give a fketch Of the hiftory of our Religion from itsl complete pub- lication after the refurrection of thrift to the pfefeht times j confining, however, this {ketch* towards the cohclufion to the particular hiftory of our own Church ; — Thirdly, to ftate in a fummary manner the arguments adducible in proof of the truth of our Religion; — And Fourthly, to point out the general fources of objection againft it, and to (hew that a forcible removal of thefe offences by divine interpo- fition would be inconfiftent with our Religion itfelf ; concluding the whole with a particular account of thofe objections, which are ad- vanced againft our Religion from the preten- tions of philofophy. B 3 Ta 6 SERMON I. Z •- ^ -•- -.- - To begin, then, with ftating regularly the fubflance of our Religion from its earlieft de- clarations in the Scriptures of Both the old and new Teftament to its complete publication af- ter the refurre&ion of Chrift. The declarations of Scripture, which form the fubftance of pur Jteligion, afcend in their earlieft references to that fupreme Being, who exifts without beginning of days. They in-^ form us that from b everlafting, from a dura- tion, which,, numbers have no powers to exprefs and the mind of men no faculties to comprehend, is God : that he - is a c Spirit, is d ponefl"ed of life in himfelf, and is infinite in perfection; but incompreheniible in his nature : and, moreover, that through his own free goodnefs he originally created and continually preferves whatever elfe befides himfelf has ex- igence both in heaven and in earth. The firft intelligent beings, created by him, are fometimes in Scripture called fpirits from the refined conftitutioii of their nature: at other times they are called angels from their mi- niftration in the divine economy. Various are b Pf. xc. 2. c John iv. 24. d John v. z6. " Jehovah" or " I am," the Scripture name of God, is immediately derived from his inherent life. And by an oath, referring to this diftinguifhing property of the Godhead, was the Almighty often pleafed to confirm his promifes : " As I live faith the Lord." Num. xiv. 21. Rom. xiv. n. the SERMON t 7 the * paffages of holy writ, : which : aflure us that tfcfey were created upright j while at the fame time the fall of fome among them moft unhappily demonftrates that they were created alifo free: agents and capable of fin. Why they lhould be permitted thus to fall, and why when fallen they fhould farther be permitted to tempt other creatures to involve themfelves in a fimi- liar fete* are circumftances left among the fe- cret things of God. Nor lefs unrefolved by Revelation are the queftions, " whether any part of matter was created at fo early a period as the" firft intelligent creatures; and whether thofe creatures were clothed with material bo- dies ?" Revelation, while it draws arguments for our inftruclion from the conduct,, Condition, and agency of fuperior beings, informs us, in- deed, concerning particular circumftances 6f angelic Jbiftory j but, to the utter difappoint- ment of vain curiofity, it fays nothing profef- fedly with regard to this hiftory. Deftined for human ufe, it confines itfelf to human concerns. After a full, but indefi- nite, affertion, that f " in the beginning God created the heaven and the earth," it confines its profefied information concerning the mate- rial creation to fuch circumftances, as particu- lary relate to man and the fyftem which he in- e Johnvjii. 44. Judevi. f Gen.i. 1. B 4 habits: £ &E R M ON r. habits : inftru&ing- us, that' all the yarioji* objects, which we perceive and adnaif e af ourid us, were originally produced, and have fince been preferved, by the all r perfecT: God ; and moreover; that among the productions of the material world this all-perfe& Being/ haviaTg formed" man's body, from the duft of the; earth* was pleafed, in a diftinguiflring marmerito breathe into his noftrilsthe breath of life.. .Tfou* animated with & fpirk of Heavenly rex&atfam* man was faid to be formed in the Image jfei" God, was conftitut^d : fovereign of this lower world, and was invejPted with the g©od things of it. To prove* however, his grateful obe- dience under thefe blefH-ngs: arid to fit him (as we may„ 8 ; prefume) for greater in another and eternal ftate," conditiortsiof trial were impofed Trfpon him. Like the angels,; man was created upright and a free age*tf. t By- the wifdom of God obedience to a pofitive' precept was enjoin- ed him; and by the fame wifdom the feilen an- gels were permitted to fuggeft temptations to the contrary. His 6Wn choice kd him to difobedience, and fo death, the predicted con- feqQence, And this eonfequenceji it might be feared, Would contain under it not merely a * See Bifhop Bull, concerning the firft covenant and the~ftate of man before the fall, in the third volume of Ms Sermons and Difcourfes, 8vo. P. 1079, 1091. &c. privation SERMON i 9 privation 6f animal-Iifd here, called temporal deatfij but (what in the regular coUrfe of things muft be expected to follow froiri t&e guilt of free and corrupted agents) that privatieft W© of $foe enjoyments of eternal life hereafter, which is called, the fecond or eternal death: But, the univerfal progenitor of mankind having thfufe fallen through the temptation of fapgridr finfl malicious beings, and having alfo entailed 6pon his .poffcerfty a depraved and infirm nature ; man was not left doomed to thofe endlefs evils, which. might have been dreaded as the unavoi*- dable punifliment of each invidual's voluntary and ufrekpiated fin. His" great ereatdr graci- oufly and immediately interpofed to provide a remedy fbphis fall. But, fo much did it coft Co redeem his foul, that the remedy riiuft afto- Irifli every rational creature. The h eternal fori of God (one of thofe Perfbns Whole eoexift- ence in nature with the Father forms part of the incomprehenfibility of the Godhead) was in procefs of time to take upon him the nature of man. In that nature, united with his own in the fame Perfon, he was to give mankind whatever l inftrudtion was neceffary for them; h Ifaiah ix. 6. Zech. xiii. 7. Rom. viii. 32. s Deut. xviii. 18. 1 Cor. i. 30. Even the Samaritans appear to have been fully convinced that when tbe Meffiah came " he ihould tell them all things." Johniv. 25. and io SERMON I. and by the meritorious fufferings of that nature; thus intimately connected with the divine, he was to make k atonement for their fins and to provide them with the moil extenfive means ©f; efeaping thofe dreadful confequences of their, corruption, which threatened to involve them in death eternal : with means ' as exten- five, as the influence of the firft man y s fall. «« As by one. man's difobedience m many were made finners; fo by. the obedience of one many were to b^ made righteous.." «.« Chrift. was to tafte death; for "every man." " He was to give himfelf a ranfom for * all." It is not, however, declared in Scripture to be neceflary that all men fhould be made ac- quainted with the circumftances of this Re- demption to qualify them for a participation of its bleffings. Millions have partaken of corruption through Adam in different ages and degrees without knowing the fource of their corruption. And millions may partake fc See concerning the atonement made for us, Afts xx. 28 ; Rev. i. 5 ; and the whole of the 5 3d Chapter of Ifaiah, and of the 9th and 10th Chapters of the Epiftle to the Hebrews. 1 " God promifed our firft parents immediately upon the fall that the feed of the woman fhould bruife the ferpent's head: and by virtue of this Promife all truely good men were favsd by Chrift from the beginning." Sherlock on Providence, p. 225, 226. m Rom. 5. 19 — " of sroMoi" in both parts of this verfe ought to be rendered *' the many" or " mankind in general." n Heb. ii. 9. ° 1 Tim. ii. 6. of S E,R MO N I. n qf, Redemption through Chrift in equally dif- ferent ages and degrees, notwithftanding their ignorance of him. in this life. God, we are r e2fprefsly told, is " the Saviour of all men j" though we are told at the fame time, that he is fo " efpecially 9f thofe that believe.'' Thefe merciful defigns, indeed, were not all revealed at once to any body of men : they are. collected from (different parts of Scripture and from the completion of the whole. The intimation of a Redemption, whicfy was given to .the origi-r nal tranfgrelTors, ( was fufficient to enppijrage hope;, and more appears not to have been in r tended by it. But, from the declaration that * the feed of the woman mould bruuethe fer- pent's head to the, triumphant afcenfipn of the Prince of life, the fame merciful deiigns are purfued with an uniform direction to their great and final completion. Indeed, we find on this occafion fo uniform and wonderful a whole, that infidelity might be tempted to fufpeft fome preconcerted plan of human con- trivance -, were it not that many of the r in- fpired penmen appear not to have underftood their own predictions on the fubjedt, and * i Tim. iv. 10. i Gen. iii. 15. ' Dan. xii. 8. 2 Pet. i. 10, 11, 12. 2 Pet. i. 20, 21. See on this fubjeft Burgh's Scripture Confutation, id edit. -8°. F- 33*34- much i* SEftMOJl I. much lefs to have had a connected knowlegi of the different parts of the 1 edifice, which they were Contributing to erect. But, whatever deliverance from future fevil might be defigned for mart, no fxix. — . C elude ia SERMON L elude all pomble fufpicion of impofture and to convey the moft durable inftrudlion to pof- terity. At the fame time the precaution alfo, with which the divine conjmands were de- livered* ferved to prove their great and lafting importance. For, to prevent as much as pof- fible that intermixture of human error, which might arife from the contracted duration of men's lives ; the Mofaical inftruftions were not, like former Revelations, left to the con- veyance of tradition, but 9 written and engra- ven by the iinger of God. And well are they worthy of our attention on account of their excellent morality -, but, particularly ought we to obferve the manner, in which they are cal- culated to confecrate a peculiar people to the fervice of the true God by the prohibition of intercourfe and intermarriage between them and their idolatrous neighbours, (that fatal caufe of the corruption of the old world, when the ' fons of God went in to the daughters of men) and by numberlefs precepts, which were defigned to create in them a fettled abhorrence of the s advocates for Heathen fuperftition, i Exod. xxxi. 1 8. lb. xxxii. 16. ' Gen. vi. z. " That the Jewifti laws are fingularly favourable to ftrangers, as fuch, is abundantly evident from Lev. xix. 34. — xxiii. 22. — xxiv. 22. — xxv. 35. — Num. xv. 15, 16.- — Deut. i. 16. — x. 17 — 19. — xxiv. 14— 17. — xxvii. 19. Had Mr. Gibbon been- acquainted with thefe and many other fuch parts of the Jewifh law j he would not have aflerted in the molt unqualified manner SERMON h ig and which to forhe refined moralifts favour too little of universal charity. How effectually thefe injunctions operated in forming the Jews into a feparate tody from the reft of mankind is exceedingly remarkable. To this very day, like the well-cemented ruins of fome old fort- refs, they exhibit proofs of the moft durable contexture -, and, however their original ufe be fuperfeded, adhere together with undimi- nished force* Nor did it contribute in an or- dinary degree to promote the great ends of the Mofaical difpenfation, that the rewards and punifhments of it were immediately distri- buted j and that the Jews were left to difcover, by ' other means, the dodtrine of a future ftate. For, how could this people be fo Strongly guarded againft the temptations to idolatry, manner on account, perhaps, of fome few paflages of the old Teftament which he did not thoroughly underftand, " that the " moral attributes of Jehovah may not eafily be reconciled *', with the ftandard of human virtue." Hiftory of the decline and fall of the Roman Empire, Vol. V. p. zo2. But, what- ever fuch men may prefume to affert, we know, on the autho- rity of one wifer and better acquainted with the fubjeft, " that *' no nation had ftatutes and judgements fo righteous as all the " law which was fet before the Jews." Deut. iv. 8. 1 With regard to the doftrine of a future ftate both the Jews and the Gentiles appear univerfally to have derived traditional information on this important fubjeft from fome original Re- velation, communicated to mankind in the early ages of their hiftory : that of the Jews, however, continued very much more pure in confequence of the inftruftion, conveyed to them by the defcriptions of God and the promifes of Redemption, which are every where found in their Scriptures. C 2 which 20 SERMON I. which were ever folieiting their fenfes from prefent objects ; as by the contrary affurance of prefent gratifications ? Or by what other fo effeftual a method could they be made to look forward with, interested confidence to that great Lawgiver, whom Mofes himfelf * com- mands them to obey in language the moft ex* plicit and fblemn ? Under fuch influence if the Law did not, by its fpiritual defign, as a * fchool-mafter bring them to Chrift j their zealous attention from temporal motives to every particular, relative to him, would make them inftruments of univerfal falvation. Ex- clufive, indeed, of fuch considerations, had the Mofaical covenant propofed to its par- takers future and eternal rewards without full information that thefe were not to be obtained through works of the law, unlefs fandtified by Faith in their promifed Redeemer ; it would apparently have fuperfeded the neceffity of this Redeemer. And fince the Divine Mercy did not think fit to propofe explicitly the condi- tions of our eternal life before the great facri- fice for fin had heen actually offered ; we can- not enough admire the wifdom, by which the neceffary temporality of the Mofaical fandtions was employed to prepare the way for a better covenant. u Dent, xviii. t ' 9, 25. k Thefe prophefies were known not only to all the Jews, but alfo to the Heathens, as it appears from Virgil and other Heathen writers. made: SERMON I. ft 9 made : and the fttlnefs of time came. After the Jewifh Scriptures had been clofed for an awful period of nearly four hundred years, the birth of the great Saviour was announced by a multitude of the heavenly hoft. And well, in- deed, might the important meffage be declared to contain tidings of great joy to all people. From the firft fall of mankind fin had reigned in their mortal bodies : and the wages of it had befti continued mifery. Of this the Heathen philofophers were fo far fenfible, that they recommended perfecl: ' virtue, as the only folid foundation of happinefs. But they could * no where find this virtue, and were at a lofs where to find their happy man. By requifitions, better fuited to human infirmity, Revelation, from the firft introduction of human mifery, had been preparing a renovation of happinefs for mankind : obfcurely and typically, often, in the beginning j but not fo, when Chriftia- nity was finally propofed as the completion of all former revelations. The Chriftian cove- nant began not with the moft diftant requilition of Stoical apathy, or unattainable perfection. The voice of him, that cried in the wildernefs,, required no fuch qualifications in mankind. It 1 See the fifth book of Cicero's Tufculan Qiieftions. 01 " Nemo fine vitiis nafcitur " is a truth uniyerfally ad- mitted by the wifeft Heathens. addrefied 3 o SERMON I. "addrefled itfelf to them, as finful creatures, and exhorted them to repent. With the fame exhortation the Redeemer alfo himfelf " en- tered upon the publication of his Religion; and the fame was the introductory do&rine of his p difciples and deftined fucceffors . The firft ftep towards the reftoration of mankind to divine fa- vour was repeatedly pointed out in an humble confeffion of their own un wor thinefs . Nor were the fubfequent means of counteracting the bad effedts of their depravity left either to be difco- vered, or to be regulated by themfelves. By* in- ftrudtions* delivered iri his own and his Father's 'name from his mouth who fpake as never man fpake, and by his all- perfect example and s atonement who was tempted in all points like as we are yet without fin, was made fuch pro- vifion for our affiftance and acceptance in the performance of our duty towards God, our neighbour, and ourfelves ■, as at once is calcu- lated to reftore our nature to its proper perfec- tion, and to ' proportion to our abilities the a Mat. iii. 2. • Mat. iv. 17. Mark i. ij. * Mark vi. iz. * See more concerning this inftruftion in the fifth Sermon where it is urged, under the internal evidences of our Religion, as an argument in its favour. * Matt. 5th, 6th and 7th Chapters, John v. 43. 5 2 Cor. v. 21 . See alfo the parts of Scripture above refer- red to concerning this Atonement. ' Matt. xxv. 14 — 23. obedience S E R M O N I, 3 i obedience required from us. During the mi- nistry on earth of this wonderful Perfonage, he was engaged either in thus inftructing his fol- lowers with regard to their duty, and in pro- viding the merciful means of their prefent and future happinefs ; or in evincing, by difplays of the moft aftonifhing miracles and by comple- tions of prophefies, the reality of his preten- fions and divine miffion. During his miniftry on earth, whatfoever had been written in the Law, or in the Prophets, concerning the office and character, concerning the birth, life, death, refurreclion, and afcenfion of the great Re- deemer received in Jefus of Nazareth its perfect accomplishment. From the moment that the glorified Jefus, having arifen from the dead, was inverted with his office of Interceflbr for mankind and was openly announced as their fu- ture judge, their promifed Redemption was completed. A new covenant between God and man commenced. A covenant, into which all " nations were to be admitted by Baptiim ; and in which they were to be fupported and perfected by fblemn w commemorations of the great facrifice, which had been offered for their fins. A Covenant, which, though comprehenfive in its efficacy of the firft man u Matt, xxviii. 19. w Luke xxii. 19. and 32 SERMON I. and x all his descendants, difclofed itfelf with various degrees of light j and fhone not forth in all its fplendor before the refurreftion of its great mediator. From that time God was pleafed explicitly to y inform mankind concerning their ftate of trial in this life, and concerning the conditions of their future judgement : that, though they rouft here remain fubjecl to temptation from the world, the flefh, and the Devil, and at length to death itfelf j they were provided with abundant means of efcaping that mifery hereafter, which is to be the certain and dread- ful confequence of wilful perfeverance in Irre- ligion, and which is called death eternal ; that, through the infinite atonement made for them by his blefied Son, he would affift their infir- mities by the preventing and continued influ- ence of his Holy Spirit, would pardon their fins, and reward them with peace here and eternal glory hereafter j provided, on their part, that they would embrace thefe his gra- cious offers with that determined Faith in th& dodtrines revealed by him, which proceeds, under the evidences of their truth, from hum- ble reliance on his infinite perfections; and * See concerning the univerfality of Chriftianity the paffages pf Scripture above cited, and alfo what is faid on the fubjeft in the fixth Sermon. y This information may be collected from the univerfal tenor •f the Apcftolicul writings. / with SERMON I. 33 with that obedience to his precepts, which demonftrates a fincere and universal defire to obey them. The Apoftles and others were appointed to announce this covenant : while the perfons, to whom it was announced, be- ing in poffeffion of the free will, which their original parents, and their, more immediate anceftors, the Gentiles and Jews, fo obfti- nately perverted, had full power to accept or reject it. It was foretold that preachers mould Continue in future ages to propofe the fame terms, and that mankind mould continue to be inverted with the fame powers of accept- ance, or rejection. But in Chriftianity every offer of divine mercy was to be completed. No farther covenant was ever to be propofed : nor this withdrawn. If even an angel from heaven were to teach any other doctrine, he was to be * accurfed : while at the fame time all the r feoffs of the latter days and the x gates of hell itfelf were never to prevail to the era- dication of this holy Religion. Such is the fubftance of our Religion from its earlieft declarations in the different parts of Scripture to its complete publication after the refurrection of Chrift. Such, therefore, was our Religion at the time of its original com- pletion : and fuch alfo it continues to be to * Gal.i. 8. * 2 Pet. iii. 3. * Mat. xvi. 18. D this 34 SERMON I. this day -, the grand fcheme of man's redemp- tion having been fuUy perfected by the accept- ance of the atonement made by Chrift for human fin, and admitting in itfelf of no vari- ation from fubfequent circumftances of time or place. As to the difplay of miraculous powers with which our Religion was at firft publifhed j and the infallible manner, in which it was fo re- corded for the permanent ufe of mankindi as to enable them with certainty to collect for themfelves in every age thofe conditions of their future and eternal happinefs, which have been above ftated ; thefe are circumftances of which the relation will fall under the next head. SERMON II. PET. III. 15. Be ready always to give an anfwer to every man* that ajketh you a rtafon of the Hope that *> in ym* HAV J NG ftated regularly the fubftance of our Religion from its eartieft decla- rations in the fcriptures of both the old and new Yeftamerit t6 its complete publication af- ter the refurreftiOn Of Chrift, I am now to give a fketch of its hiftOry from this publication of it to the prefent times -, and thus to point out the anfwer, which we may give concern- ing the hope that is in us, as far as relates to the manner in Which our Religion has been re- ceived and conveyed through fucceffive ages down to our Own times. This head is fo extenfive, that, compendi- ously difcuffed, it will furnifh matter for three Difcourfes : the firft will carry us from the publication of our religion after the refurrec- tion of Chrift to the eftablifhment of it by Conftantine ; the fecond from its eftablifhment D 2 by 36 SERMON II. by Conftantine to the commencement of the Reformation; and the third from the com- mencement of the Reformation to the prefent times, or to the prefent ftate of our own Church. To begin, then, wifh the firft. The Apoftles* who were commiflioned by our blefled Saviour to publifh his Religion, were men deftitute of every worldly advantage ; but they were men, who had been " with him from the beginning, and, together with their great perfecutor and future afiociate, were diftinguifhed by an in- genuoufnefs of difpofition, which in all ages has been required as a necefiary preparation for the reception of divine Truth. St. Peter's repentance, St. Thomas's confeffion, and St. Paul's converfion, are eminent difplays of this difpofition. At firft the Apoftles, like their great Mafter, confined their inftrudtion to that na- tion, which had hitherto been the more im- mediate object of divine Revelation. But, they foon learned that the God, whom they preached, was the God not of the Jews only, but of the Gentiles alfo. The miraculous ef- fufion of the Holy Spirit by degrees opened and enlarged their underftanding on this im- portant fubjecY; and his various gifts raifed their feeble powers to the ability of executing * John xv. 27. the SERMON II. 37 the tafk of preaching the Gofpel to the whole world, to which they had been commiffioned by their great Matter. It was impoffible that our Saviour fhould hirhfelf in his human ca- pacity be every where prefent before his fuf- ferings to preach his Gofpel: and,' as the Jewifh nation had been particularly calculated for his reception, and Judasa was to be the theatre of his mighty works, it was k neceflary that the ©ofpel fhould foe fir ft preached unto the Jews. But, from the commencement of this falvatioh the Gentiles were not unapprifed that they alfo were to' partake of its bleffings. No fooner did the Saviour of mankind appear in the flefh, than the wife men of the Eaft were conducted by the leading of a ftar to the habitation of this king of Ifrael. And no fooner again was the falvation of mankind ef- fected, than the partition between the Jewifh and Gentile worfhippers was removed : the veil of the temple was immediately rent in twain from the top to the bottom : St. Paul alfo was fobn after called to be the Apoftle of the Gentiles : Cornelius's prayer was heard : the Holy Ghoft fell upon him : and that Gof- pel, which had hitherto been the peculiar glory of Ifrael, became a light to lighten the Gentiles. k A6ls xiii. 46. D 3 In 3* SERMON II. In the Ads of the Apoftles we have a con- cife account of the inceflant ardor, with which the preachers of Chriftianity went on, after the communication of the Gofpel to the Gen-* tiles, to make known to the whole world ths glad tidings of their miniftry. Their zeal carried them by different routs into diftant countries : fupernatural powers every where raifed for them the attention of mankind: i and the fan&ity of their lives and do&rines improved this attention to the advantage of their new Religion. How far they actually extended their progrefs has been the fubjetft of curious, and often of fceptical inquiry. It is perhaps impoflible, it certainly is unnecefiary, to determine this queftion in the prefent age. The natural bleffings of any Country are effaced by indolence or difafter j and both the advan- tage and remembrance of religious improve- ments are done away by the neglecl:, or the perverfion of religious obligations. But, not* withftanding every infinuation to the contrary, we may reft allured from good authority that the firft preachers of Chriftianity not only " vifited all the diftinguiflied countries of the old worlds but alio that their zeal carried them * beyond the regions, into which either ambi- e See Srillingfleet's Orig. Britan. p. 37, 38. * Tertullian fays " Britannorum inacceffa Romanis Ioca, Chrifto vero fubdita" — adverfus Judsos,c. 7. Eufebius- SERMON II. 39 tion or avarice had in thofe days extended the geographical difcoveries of Roman feienee. The prediction was fully accomplished, which declared that before the deftru&ion of jerufa* lem • « the G&fpel fhould be preached in aH the world, for a witnefs to all nations:" and St. Paul had the joyful opportunity of affuring the Coloffians that" ' the Gofpel was come unto them, as it was alfb in all the * world." The Apoftles in their firft preaching of Chriftianity contented themfelves with deli- vering' by oral communication the great and fimple truths of their Religion. The extent of their perfbnat induftry was the extent alfb of their inftru&ion. This induftry, however, was indefatigable: and its fuccefs was foon followed by other means both of dineminating and fup- Eufebius aljb fays concerning our Saviour's original difciples, " Kyqvrleiv Si (aulas) «; nutlets to xa I» Kj 'T£fB{ <"te{ toj ax.tu.tot •aa^thSlut ait Ta; xK^SjUEva; SferRcaneti mires." Eufeb. Demonf. Evangel. 1. iii. p. 1 12. edit. Par. 1628. e Matt. xxiv. 14. f Col.i. 6. 5 See Origen againft Celfus, 1. i. c. 7. and l.ii. c. 13. Pa- ris 1733. Correfpondently with this propagation of our Religion Arno- bius fays, " Quod fi falfa ut dicitis hiftoria ilia rerum eft, unde " tarn brevi tempore mundus ifta religione completus V Adv. Gentes, l.i. p. 33. Ludg. Bat. 165 1, D 4 porting 40 SERMON II. porting the truth. Within a h fhort time after the defcent.of the Holy Spirit it pleafed the divine Providence that St. Matthew fhould publifh an account of the life, doctrines, death, refurredtion, and afcenfion of his great Mafter. Thus was a foundation laid for fimilar and fupplemental writings, which enfued in their refpe&ive feafons. About twenty years after the publication of St, Mathew's Gofpel, ' St, Mark, the difciple of St. , Peter, abridged (as it appears) in many inftances the Gofpel of St. Mathew, and by the addition of fome par- ticular circumftances adapted it more fully to general ufe, A farther interval of a few "years h *.* Poftea enim quam furrexft Dominus nofter a mortuis et " T induti funt fupervenlentis Spiritus Sanfti virtutem ex alto, de '* omnibus adimpleti funt et habuerunt perfe&am agnitionem, " et exierunt in fines terras ea qus a Deo nobis bona funt evan- " gelizances, et coeleftem pacem hominibus annunciantes, qui *' quidem omnes pariter et finguli eorum habentes Evangelium *' Dei. Ita Matthaeus fcripturam edidit Evangelii, &c. Irenzus adv. Hay. 1. iii. c. I . edit. Maffuet. I might mention different opinions concerning the time when the Golpels were written : but, for the fake of precifion, I lhall mention only that of Townfon, who is among the lateil approved writers on the fubject. He fnppofes, with Cofmas of Alexan- dria, that St. Matthew wrote his Gofpel about the Time Of the Persecution upon St. Stephen's Death ; Difcourfes on the Gof- pels, p. 25. And again he fays p. 1 1 3. "we may reft fecure ■*' that St. Mathew's Gofpel was written by the year 37." 1 Townfon fays that St Mark's Gofpel was written about the end of the year 56, or of the year 60, Difcourfes, p. 168. * With regard to St. Luke's Gofpel, Townfon fays only that it was written after St. Mathew's and St. Mark's, and that St. Luke had feen thofe Gofpels, p. 200. fucceeded, SERMON IL 41 fucceedcdi before St. Luke, the beloved com- panion of St. Paul, undertook to write on the fame fubje&j arid finimed- his Gofpel to the particular .advantage of the Gentile world; 'putting into it the doctrines: preached by St. PauL In the mean time the more diftinguiihed among the Apoftles were labormg inceflantly in the great work of converting mankind : and being, ordained, like thcEvangelifts/to teach men of evejy country, and. every age, they were •perpetuating in common with them the various inftrudtions, hy which they were to build up the Church of God. In the Ads of the Apoftles, written by St. Luke, and in the va- rious Epiftles .ftill extant, and written by St. Paul, St. James, St. Peter, St. Jude, and St. John we may admire the m contempt of danger with which thefe Holy men attefted the truth of what they had heard and feen : we may ad- mire the zeal, with which they went on to im- prove their difciples : we may admire alfo the Mercy of God, who has furnifhed pofterity through their means with the moft perfect in- '. See Jren^us adverf. Haer. 1. iii. c. 14. See alfo Bp. Horf- ley's Tiafts, 8 V °. 1789. p. 326. 01 " As far as ecclefiaitical hiftory can afcertain us of it, all the Apoftles but John (and that to make good the prediction of Chrift) fufFered violent deaths by the hands of thofe that perfe- cted them merely for their do&rines". Stiliingfleet's Orig. Sac. p. 275. 4to. edit. 1680. flru&ions 42 SERMON II. ftra&ions In righteoufnefe But there is one circumftafflce* which regards the writing* of the new Teftament, and which particularly calls for our grateful admiration. It was appointed by the Providence of God that ikefe writings fhould be fubmitted to general examination, and be left to make their different impreffions on good and bad men, before the jdeftined finifher of them was removed from the world. At an interval of not £b little as a 50 years after the publication of St. Matbew's Gofpel, St. John is faid to have fanfrioned by his " ap- probation) the three firft Gofpels, to have fup- phed their p deficiencies in his own, and to have refuted in it fbme * heretical opinions * Tewnfon fays, p. 109,. that St. John's Gofpel was published after the taking of Jerufalem : And again, p. zi i, that the fe- veral cireumftances as to the writtng-of it are ftrongly in favour of its late publication. * Eufebius fays of St. John, " tiKof h Ein m* yp«pi)» eX9ei» toi- " acrh %uyw curias' fur mftuxtayqafpivluv rgMW in tnearcti n^i *«> ei; " avion iiuh^ofj.itur aTrooi^acr^ai pit cpa.cn, a.\r,§ely whatever could be wanted ej&e? to- edify, or to conibtej the Chriftiaa believer till ithe conformation of all things s thus before he was admitted to the joy of his kprd, was he to facilitate the progrefs of others to the fame happinefs. Various and decifive are the arguments, by which thefe Scriptures of the new Teftament, as 'Ewifebius has afcertained their number and as we have them at prefect, come recom- mended to our 'acceptance. A correfpondence ' Hift. Eccl. l.iii, c. 25. * Mofheim fays that the books of the New Teftament were «he gwateij: part of them received in the Church before the middle of the fecond Centpry — Vol. I. p. 108. — Englflft Tranflation, 8vo. 1782, The Canonical, books axe fiippofed not to have beea.. finally and authoritatively fixed before the Council of Laodicea, to- wards the end of the fourth century. But Lardner fays that the Canon may juftly be faid to have been fettled before that time. Works, 8ro. 178*. Vol. VI. p. 29. with 44 SERMON II. with the oldeft verfions, and a coincidence with the earlieft citations, eftablifh beyond a poffibility of doubt the general authenticity of our modern copies. That the writings them- felves were alio given by Infpiration ought not to be doubted by any one, who admits the truth of the dodtrines contained in them* For, if the Holy Spirit was to dire£t the Apoftles in their addreffes to the ' adverfaries of our Religion ; we cannot fufpeft that his infallible aid would be witholden, when they were addreffing themfelves to the perfons,' for whofe fake thofe adverfaries were to be re- futed, and that too in words, which (whether it were known immediately or not) were to be recorded for the inftru&ion of all ages. If, befides, the Holy Spirit interfered particularly to control and diredt the Apoftles with regard to the u places where they were to preach ; he could not, we may affure ourfelves, be lefs attentive to the do&rines which they preach- ed, and efpecially to thofe among their doc- trines, which were to be of the moft extenfive and lafting importance. And if, moreover, it was foretold that the Holy Spirit mould * teach the Apoftles all things and bring all things to their remembrance, whatfoeverChrift * Luke xxi. 15. u Afts xiii. 2. Ibid. jcvi. 6, 7. T Johji xiv. 26. had SERMON II. 45 had faid unto them, and exprefsly that he fhould * guide them to all truth ; doubtlefs, we have abundant reafon to prefume that their writings muft have been delivered under his infallible direction. With regard to the firft part of the facred writings, which is contained in the Jewifh Scriptures, our blefled Saviour * declares concerning the Law that it was eafier for Heaven and Earth to pafs away than that one tittle of it ihould fail : we are in- formed alfo on the y authority of the New Teftament that prophefy came not in old time by the will of man, but holy men of God fpake as they were moved by the Holy Ghoft : and, befides, that David z fpake by the Holy Ghoft. And if this is the cafe with regard to the different " parts of the Jewifh Scriptures ; what fhall we fay concerning the Scriptures of the new and eternal covenant ? What fhall we fay concerning thofe difcourfes of our blefled Saviour, recorded in the Gofpels, of which he himfelf fpeaks more forcibly, than * John xri. 13. x Luke xvi. 17. ' 2 Pet. i. 21. * Markxii. 36. a A particular account of the books of the old Teftament is given by Eufebius from Jofephus, and from Origen. See in Eufebius's Eccl. Hift the account from Jofephus, 1. iii. c. 10 j and from Origen, 1. vi. c. 25. Thefe Books of the Old Tefta- ment were divided into the Law, the Prophets, and the Hagio- grapha : the laft of thefe three divifions includes the Pfalms, Proverbs, &c. Of 46 $ E R M a JJ ~I& of the Law* declaring * " thai Heaven and Earth ihall pafs away, but hfe word ihall not pafs away ■?" What flaall we Ay concerning thofe paflages of the Epiftles which are ex* prefsly faid to have been fpokett by the Lord ? And what ooftcefiikg littttibtrtefe other paf- fages both in the Gofpel*-and EpUtiea, whieh are ufldiftinguiifeed from the *eft>- and foretell things to come or relate things paft wk& d precifion, for which it is kftpeflible to ac- count, except by afcribing it to that Divine Spirit who was to teach the Apoftles and bring to their remembrance remote occur* rences ? But, we muft not confine ourfelveS to particular paflages of the New Teftament; St. Paul c aflerts that " all Scripture was giveri by Infpiration." St. Peter * cMeS St. Paul*$ writings among the Scriptures j and fays they were delivered e " by the wifdom given unto him." And if this wifdom> or " the f Spirit of truth was" (according to our Saviour's pro- mise) " to abide for ever with his Difciples j" how fhall we not fay of all their writings, what St. Paul fays of his own, " that they are E the commandments of the Lord :" and what exceptions dare we make to the univerfal " Mark xiii. 31. « 2 Tim. iii. 16. * z Pet. iii. 16. ' 2 Pet. iii. 15. f John xiv. 16, 17. si Cor. xiv. 37. Infpiration SERMON II. 47 Inspiration of the fubjedfc-matter at leaft of Scriptures, delivered under fiich circumftances, fave thofe which the writers themfelves have made? On this immoveable h foundation of truth and divine Infpkation Chriftianity ere&ed k- felf and went on to increafe. Communities of Chriftians were forced ; regulations were inftitutedfor their internal government j and i! Bimops immediately appointed and provifion * From Ignatins's Epiftle to the Philaddphians (c. 7.) it ap- pears that the extraordinary Inspiration of the Holy. Spirit in the firft ages of Chriftianity was not confined to the writers of the new Teftament exclufively. He fays, when extorting them to adhere to their Bifhops, their body 'of Prefbyters, and their Deacons, " Oi ■etteo-cwtej (forfitan wrcotntvaants) pa as tirfottiorx- •tot ftegHTfiov rum Xeytw rctvret' pafrvi; h j*oi iv a hSepai on arm c-ufxos a.i5fwmms «x lytm. To h vnevfn.ce. imiqvirm \tym Va.lt' x t A. , In the fame manner he fays to the Ephefians (Epift. c. zo.) that: he would inftrult them in fome points, " jmcAis-b tut Kofws p,w 1 Clemens Romanus, the Fellow-labourer of St. Paul, fays, *' Kai 01 a7roroXot vfMit tyyumv a/st ts Kupis ij/tm Iuca Xpirtf oil tpi " trtti fnw evo/tasTOf Ti)f snwxojnif. Aia tautr,!/ utvnv «iti«» «jof- " taru utaitpotif nteiur xartrvcrm teq eon ttn St nun ypa - " Jlan km rut Tali an/j.nut rr,t mrw m Xiyofitu irapxopiBa.." Horn. 6. in 1 Cor. 2. p. 276. Tom. III. Eton. So likewife St. Auguftin fays, " Accepimus majores noftros " eo gradu fidei, quo a temporalibus ad sterna confcenditur, " viiibilia miracula (nee enim aliter poterant) fecutos effe : per " quos id attum eft ut neceflaria non effent pofteris." De vera Religiorie, c. »jv Paris 1679. by SERMON II. 51 by fupernatural adlions. It was, perhaps, ne- ceflary alio that we mould have means of pro- ving farther that the ApoAles, who were the witneffes of his-refurredion and afcenfion, at- tracted the tefpecl and commanded the belief of mankind by the power, with which they were endued from on high. But, no reafon has ever been affigned, why we mould be enabled to prove that miracles were performed by Chriftians in any fucceeding age, which will not apply aho to the pre&nt itimes. Not that it is my intention to queftion any au- thentic fadts of this nature, which are record- ed j much lefs to give up, as fiftipns of piqus fraud, all the relations of fubfequent miracles. It is my intention merely to affert that thefe miracles are not at prefent q efTential to the vindication of Christianity : and if we have not fufficient arguments to eftablifh the credit of thofe among them, which are genuine ; it ought to be referred to the expiration of the period for which they were defigned. They were defigned to make up for the want of general information concerning the nature and evidences of our Religion, which muft have , < " With any other miracles" (than thofe of Chrift and his Apoftles) " however numerous, however confidently afTerted or " plaufibly fet forth we have nothing to do. There- may have •* been ten thoufand impoftures of this fort." Hurd's Lincoln's Inn Sermons, Vol. II. p. 79. E 2 been SZ SERMON II. been in an eminent degree the irremediable misfortune of numberlefs individuals in its early ages : they were defigned alfo to comfort and fupport the Chriftians of thofe ages W&& under their peculiar circumftances of diilrefs. Being to us, therefore, in both thofe rxfpects unneceffary; they have for that reafon de^ fcended with a lefs decifive weight of evidence. But whatever were the afliftances. afforded to the early Pallors of the Church, they ap- pear to have made an active ufe of their powers, whether natural or infpired. They converted great numbers r every where to the Faith : and r Juftin Martyr tells Trypho, " ovje tv yarg oXw? ej-i to ye»o{ cu- " Shiran, cRi fi&f£ct%ur, flic E*u*w», silt ctirhut aiTiHovn MSfcari ■nrpoo'- ** a-y^i-jouivw, n apu^tiQiUV r t etoixuv )ia\ov^.tvwv, 9) tv a-K-zivccii xlrtvolfio- $uv cixo'-vWv, tv ots pr) oia. tu ovafMt\o% Ttf rctveuvivloi; \*fi xai iswterit vfm thuv yf»o»T«i," p. 345- £dit. Par. 1615. An enumeration of the nations by which ChrilHa- n'ity was received in Tertullian's Time may be feen in his Trea- tile adverf. Judseos, c. 7. which he concludes in this very re- markable manner. " Chrifti autem regnum et nomen ubique *' porrigitur, ubique creditur, ab omnibus gentibus fupernume-. " ratis colitur, ubique regnat, ubique adqratur, omnibus ubique *' tribuitur aequaliter : non regis apud ilium major gratia, non '" Barbari alicujus inferior laetitia, non dignitatum aut natalium '" cujufquam difcreta merita, omnibus aqualis, omnibus rex, *' omnibus judex, omnibus Deus et Dominus eft." Eufebius fays on the fame fubjeft that Chriftian Churches were erecHed *' ex tv a^r,Xan ©8 y.ai afarun (rowois, { Te T»? Aiywrrs, " xat AtSvv;, Efpwmjs re xa> Acrtaq, tv re KvpaK TE xxi ^»jai{, xat " -munoiois eSko-i - Dem. Evang. 1. iii. p. 138. See alfo the citation above made from p. 112. of the fame work. Arnobius likewife fays, " Vel hsc faltem nobis faciant ar- *' gumenta credendi quod jam per omnes terras, in tarn brevi " tempore SERMON II. 53 if the unaffedted piety and zeal of fuch con- verts to Chriftianity in the three ' firil centu- ries, and the want of thefe qualities in its fubfequent profeflbrs, be confidered ; it will, perhaps, not be thought a violation of charity to doubt whether there was not more Chrif- tian virtue in the world before the expiration of thofe centuries, than detractors from the number and integrity of the early profeflbrs of our Religidh can prove to have exifted at any future period. But let not the fuggeftion of fuch a doubt be fuppofed to carry 1 with it any insinuation that the early Chriftians were ex- empt from all the bad confequences of the depravity of human nature. Both the cenfures and the exhortations of the Apoftolical Epiftles prove the contrary, even with regard to the Apoftles' own age. And the fame appears to " tempore et parvo, immenfi nominis hujus facramenta diffufa " funt, quod nulla jam natio eft tarn barbari moris qtis non ejus " amore verfa molliverh." Adv. Gentes. 1. ii. p. 44. With regard to Heathen authorities concerning the exte'nfives propagation of Chriftianity in its early ages fee the paflages ad- duced by Dr. Powell from Suetonius, Dio, Julian, Tacitus, Pliny, &c. Sermon X, p. 154 — 162. See, moreover, on this fubjett Stillingfleet's Orig. Britan. p. 54. s See concerning the characters of the Chriftians in the firft ages what Cave fays in the fourth chapter of his " Primitive Chriftianity ;" and what he urges at large, in the remaining parts of this work, on the manner in which they difcharged their Duty towards God, themfelves, and their neighbours. E x have 54 SERMON II. have been the cafe in an incireafing and ' alarm-* ing degree, as we advance nearer to the reign of Conftantine. However, it was by no means the cafe in any degree, to be compared with the habitual profligacy, which has fince pre<- vailed among Chriilians, and difcovered itfeif by continued prevalences both of iraaiduknt fuperftition and of fceptical indifference. Nor were the early paftors iefs anxious to defend, than to enlarge, their care. On all fides grievous wolves entered in, not fparing the flock. " Perverfe brethren di&raQed the minds of the weak : and cruel adverfaries from without affaulted not only the Faith, but alfo the lives of thofe who called on the name of Chrift. While, however, the common enemy was ready to deftroy every profeflbr of Chrif- tianity j it was not probable that there mould be many pretended converts to this Religion : and among its fincere members lefs was to be feared from diflention of Opinion. Though, therefore, the fpiritual paftor was not exempt * Eufebius fays of the Chriftian Church about the year 300, *' us tx. Tti; £"■! -shim Aev&tfms em yfommtca, *ou ic&piett ra uttSt' d- " xm pww&y} yijxuv ainut lawn; ■BrfooTro;\£ftif»TW» « KTU TV- " j^ot, km Sagccai tois ota Xayuf afxprrm te ctexp&t wporpysywvTuii , " km hawt £iri AaB; Kararavia^otlut." Eccl. Hift. 1. viii. c. I . u See Eufebius, Hift. Eccl. 1. iv. c. 22. See alfo in the fame Hift. 1. v. c. 20. an account of Irenasus' ,«eal in refuting herefies. from SERMON IL 55 from much anxious labor in fecuring his flock from internal herefy; it muft at this early period have been his principal care to guard it againft the foreign enemy, Accordingly, at- tempts were made at different times to obviate the flander, and to difarm the malice, of the Heathen world by tranflations of the Scrip- tures, and by reprefentations, in numerous f apologies, of the true principles of Chrifti- anity. Thefe exertions did, indeed, at par- ticular times produce the defired effect : but the ceffation of perfecution, which they pro- duced, was ufually of very fhort continuance. It was * inferred before the commencement of w Quadratus and Ariftides wrote apologies for the Cliriflian Religion and addreffed them to Adrian. Eufebiits, Hilt. Eccl. I.iv. c. 3. Various other apologies were written at different times on the fame fubjeft. Thofe of Athenagoras and Melito compared with the apologies of Tertullian and Juflin Martyr have greatly the advantage. Jortin fays the latter are the performances of very clowns compared with the former — Note an his Rem. on Eccl. Hift. Vol. II. p. 85 * Sulpicius Severas, who died about the beginning of the fifth century, feys "Etenim facris vocibus decern plagis mundum amciendum pronunciatum eft." Sac. Hift. 1. ii. c. 48. p. 370. 8"°. Ed. 1665. Auguftine and Orofius, according to the opinions of their times, refer for Scriptural prefigurations on the fubjeft either to the ten plagues of Egypt or the ten oppofitions which Mofes encountered from the Egyptians. Auguftine enumerates the dates- of ten perfections of the Chriftians before the Time of Con- ftantine and fays : " plagas enim ^gyptiorum quoniam decern " fuerunt antequam inde exire inciperet populus Dei, putant " ad hunc intelleftum effe referendas, ut noviffima Antkhrifti " perfecutio fimilis videatur undecimse plaga? qua iEgyptii, dum E 4 " hoftiliter 56 SERMON II. the fifth century from figurative and fanciful explanations of Scripture that ten general per- fections were to befall the Church. Hence persecutions have been magnified or extenu- ated, as might beft ferve to mark out with diftin&ion the number which was to be com- pleted. And hence alfo modern Sceptics have been led to queftion the reality of every, fuch extraordinary perfecution. But the confe- quences, which have enfued from injudicious inferences of the profeflbrs of our. Religion in its degenerate days, cannot warrant us in re-* jecting the true hiftory of its beft and moft y difinterefted members ; or in giving up the ■ argument, which arifes in its favour from the extenfive fufFerings of its early profeflbrs. That there were general and grievous perfe- *' hoftiliter fequerentur Hebrajos in mari rubro,— perlerunt." De Civitat. Dei, l.xviii. c.52. Orofius recounts the ten perfe- cutions after Auguftine and fays explicitly, " Decern ibi con- tradictiones adverfus Moyfen, hie decern edi&a adverfus Chrif- tum," 1. vii. c. 27. p. 533. Ed. Haverchampi. Befides the part of Scripture, thus referred to by Auguftine and Orofius, others refer, but without better foundation, to Rev. xvii. 1 2-— 14. See on this fubjedt Moftieim, Vol. I. p-72. y S. Severus fays, p. 368. " Certatim in gloriofa certamina " ruebatur, multoque avidius turn martyria gloripfis mortibus " qua?rebantur, quam nunc Epifcopatus pravis ambitionibus " appetuntur." x " The wonderful behaviour of the ancient Chriftians may " juftly be accounted a proof of the truth of our Religion ; and f we thould deferve to be blamed and defpifed, if we parted " with it and gave it up tamely on account of a few objections."' Jortin's Remarks on Eccl. Hift. Vol. II. p. 149. cutions SERMON II. 57 cutions of the early Christians the * beft-in- formed writers declare. Thefe perfecutions alfo continued in a greater or lefs degree from their firft b commencement to the civil efta- blifhment of Chriftianity. Intolerance, once raifed among Heathen nations to the extrava- gance of inflidting the mod cruel death on the peaceable profeffors of a Religion, the moft pure, and the moft ftridt in requiring its fol- lowers to abftain from the rites of idolatrous worShippers, and to endeavour by every means to convert them to the fervice of the living God, could not be expecled to fubfide for any considerable time, while the civil power con- tinued in oppofition to the truth, and the fame difference of religious opinion was zealoufly maintained. It might, indeed, at times be reftrained by the interposition of humanity, or the juftice of public authority. But Super- stition, being always ready to crufh its enemies by force in proportion as it is unable to defend itfelf by reafon, would eagerly embrace every opportunity of returning to peirfecution. Ac- cordingly, we find that it was not fufficient a Tacitus, Suetonius, Pliny, and others, whofe names may be feen in the Prolegomena to Cave's Hift. Liter, p. 38. See alfo on this fubjeft at large Eufebius Eccl. Hift. 1. viii. c. 1 — 14. and Cave's Primitive Chriftianity, Vol. J. p. 195. 3d Ed. b The perfecutions of Chriftians commenced under Nero — S. Seyerus, p. 350. for. 58 SERMON II. for the Roman Emperours on particular occa- sions to repeal the laws enacted agakift Chrif- tians ; they were compelled ' farther to decree fevere penalties againft their accusers. So for- ward was the zeal of Polytheifm to bring to punifbment the dcferters or the defpifers of its public hiftitutions. Brat it was only for Short intervals that the accusation of an innocent Chriftian was deemed criminal. During die reign of foine of the mo& celebrated Empe* jours it was regarded, as highly meritorious. And though from the extraordinary blaze of particular perfecutions, fome countenance may be given to a numerical partition of them j yet it may fafely be ■afler ted that Christianity was in a d general ftate of persecution from the days of Nero to thofe of Conftantine, and that this cruelty was rather remitted at particular times, than the toleration of our Religion dif» turbed by any number of temporary perfecu- tions. Nor fhall we have any doubt that it may be fafely thus aSTerted, when we confider the influence of large bodies of men, and that the Roman e Senate as a body was never fa- e This was done by Adrian and Antoninus Pius. Eufeb. Hilt. Eccl. l.iv. c. 9. 13. See alfo S. Severus, p. 365. d See Stillingfleet's Orig. Britan. p. 56. 1 " Marcus Aurelius and other Emperort not void of good " qualities oppreffed the Chriftians to gain the efteem of the ** Senate ; who, as a body, were never favourable to Chriftia- " nity." Jortin'sRem. Vol. II. p. 172. vourable SERMON II. 59 vourable to Chriftianity. The fufpenfion of thefe perfecutions, upon reprefentations of the real principles of Chriftianity, proves that theit violence was often owing to the malicious and ignorant flanders of its enemies j and towards the conclufion, of none, perhaps, more than of Celfus. But, however much we may deplore the diftreffes in which the early Chriftians were in- volved from the prevailing ignorance of their Religion j there were other evils derived from the fame fburce, which ought not in the pre- fent times to be patted over, lefs noticed, or lefs lamented. It has been infultingly afked by modern f unbelievers whence it happened that fo many of the wifeft and moft virtuous Heathens of thofe early ages remained uncon- verted to Chriftianity ? Thefe Heathens paid no ferious attention to the evidences of our Reli- gion. The Chriftian fed! {as we are g informed fey an inhabitant of Rome) was every where fpoken againft : and from thence its preten- fions were not fairly examined. " The reli- ** gious tenets of the Galileans or Chriftians," Mr. Gibbon h declares, " were never made a «« fubjecl: of punifhment nor even of inquiry." And farther he himfelf * allows the Chriftians ' See Gibbon's Hift. Vol. I. p. 516. B Afts xxviii. 32. * Hiftory Vol. I. p. 537. * Ibid. p. 537. to 6o SERMON II. to be " the friends of mankind j" though' Tacitus * informs us that the Romans con- fidered them in a diametrically oppofite light : : " that the Romans condemned them not fo " much for the crime of fetting fire to the "city, as for their hatred of mankind." Ta- citus, therefore, at once fupplles us with a proof of the ignorance of the Romans with regard to the Chriftians, and with a prefurftp-' tive proof alfo of fuch a prejudice* in this people' againft them from their- fuppofed hatred of mankind, as miift effectually indifpofe all, who were influenced by it, for any proper inquiry into their Religion. In reality, the Jews and Chriftians were either ' confounded together k Annal. 1. xv. c. 44. • ■ 1 This appears from what Suetonius fays of the expulilon of die Jews (or Chriftians) from Rome : " Judaeos, impulfore " C'hrefto, affidue tumultuantes Roms expulit." In Vita Claii- dii, c. 25. The fame appears to have been the cafe alfo with regard to the Jews and Egyptians. Mr.Hume afferts (Note on his Effays, Vol. II. p. 461) " that ancient writers of the greateft genius " (Tacitus and Suetonius) were not able to obferve any difference " between the Egyptian and the Jewifh Religion." li fo ; how miferably ignorant m'uft they have been on the fubjeft ? And what opinion muft Tacitus have had of the Chriftians, whom he probably did not feparate from the Jews ; when he joins the latter with the Egyptians and fays — " Adlum et de " facris Egyptiis Judaicifque pellendis ; fa&umque patrum " Confultum ut quatuor millia libertini generis ea luperftiiione *' infefta, queis idonea anas, in infulam Sardiniam veherentur " coercendis illic latrociniis, et ft ob gravitatem cceli internment, " vile damnum : Caneri ced.erent Italia nifi certam ante di^m "profanos ritus exuiffent ?" Ann. 1. ii. c. 85. at SEH'MON II. 6t at this period, or at fartheft thought feds of the fame Religion : and the charge of igno- rance and fuperftition, with which the Jews had ever .been.- branded, was indifcriminately Applied to both. It was, therefore* thought needlefs by Heathen pride to examine into the evidences of a£Religion,which it was every where taken for granted was falfe. And the fame contemptuous m indifference with regard to the difputss of Jews and Chriftians about words, and. names, and their law ; which .Gallio, "Seneca's brother, openly profeued .when he was Deputy of Achaia, was the com- mon method of 'treating Chriftianity among .the philofophers of thofe days. We have a remarkable proof of this in the younger Pliny's well-known Epiftle to Trajan. ,No mention occurs throughout the whole of any inquiry, which had been made into the foundation of the Chriflian Religion. Nothing farther had at all been inquired into, than the behaviour of its profeflbrs. Of this Pliny was called upon to take cognizance, as a civil magiftrate. Even to have examined into the general pre- tenfions of their Religion might have appeared to admit the pbffibility, at leaft, of its truth : a cohceffion, humiliating to the pride of a " Att&xviii. 15, a Tacit, Annal. 1. xv. c. 73. philofopher, 62 SERMON II. • philofopher, and dangerous to the interests of a dependant on a Heathen court. Without any fuch examination, therefore, he profess at once « r that he had not the leaft doubt, " that, whatever were their confeffion, their *' ftubbornnefs and inflexible obftinacy ought *' certainly to be punifhed." Indeed, the very names, by which the Heathen writers diftin- guifh Chriftianity afford abundant proof of their ignorance of it. Who, that knows any thing of the real nature of our Religion, can think when * Pliny calls it ** Superftitio prava ** et immodiea," r Tacitus " exitiabilis Super- <« ftitio," and Suetonius «* • Superftitio nova ** et malefica ;•" that they had at all enquired into the Religion, which they thus malevo- lently and erroneoufly ' characterize ? And what reafonable man can join with the unbe- lievers above alluded to in " expecting that the miraculous appearances of nature, recorded in the Scriptures of our Religion, mould, if true, c See Bp. WarburionV Julian,, p. 22. f Neque dubitabam, qualecunque effet quod faterentur, per* vicaciam certe et inflexibilem obitinationem debere puniri." i Epift. 1. x. Ep. 97. r Annal. 1. xv. c. 44. * In Nerone, c. 16. ' See, concerning die different calumnies, which were thus propagated with jegard to Chriftianity and its profcffors, the paflages cited at large from the Apologifts and various other early writers in the four firft chapters of Cave's " primitive Chriftianity." » See'Gibbon's Hift. V. I. p. 518. be SERMON II. 63 be mentioned by fucb writers ; any more than that they fhould themfelves become its con- verts ? Efpecially too, as we know that thefe are not the only remarkable circumftanges of * Eaftern hiftory, which European writers have paffed over in fllence. We know that they fey nothing even of the * exigence of cities of Syria the moft magnificent that ima-* ginaiicm can conceive. But, indeed, what comparison can there ever be between the fi- lence of remote and inattentive philosophers and the pofitive teftimony of eye-witnefles ? If any adfcual enquiry into thefe and the other miracles of Chriftianity be fuppofed to have heen made by the writers in queftion ; w The darknefs at our Saviour's crucifixion appears to have been a circumftance confined to Eaftern hiftory. For the y» (Matt.xxvii.45 .) oyer which it was fpreadj does not neceffarily include more than the land, of Judaea. And there alio it was by jio means total ; fmce, at the time when the miracle was wrought, it j*t t&jumt »ya9o», $vtan' ay S«»*to» a»»a£ti.«-T.Ji." Juftin's tft Apol.p«5©. edit. Par. 1615. See alfo Ladantius de Juftit. 1. v. c. 13. F and {$ ,$fE R 14 Q N jrIL ignd >* jfA/tft .enquire into. &? -foundation ff (this Vi#pj*feaJ ^omtnde. And jheir enquirifi^ -thus luitifliaff ly 4jrecl:ed to lh© miraculous evi- -^nees?cf)fj^Sr &ehgiQiv often «nded in a pro- ,feflk>» !Qf^5§B F^th/and a diiplay of the feme fcfi&tgdei. ' Such wag jthe converfjon of •Tertullian 5 ^d fucl^ was k 4he cpnverfion and ... Fjjonti iMpefc^djed, of thefe converts ato^ ^yils of jjie iT^p^rferious confequence to Chrif- rt»fc»ty ? The prejudices, incident to human na- , ture, firf&red not all the new, and pfaucdonhical believers jft our Religion to facrifxce the learning l^fthejr feh$olg to its fblernn, but fimple, truths . Hence numerous ;fe£ts of both'Gnoftic and Platonic ^hrjftians, or of Chriftians whoming- kd human knewlege of different kinds with divine Revelation in (their religious tenets : hence Reyefatkm was wrefted to fupport fan- jcful conjectures, { herefies were introduced, e Tertulfian fays of die Offerings of 'Chriftkns, " Quis emm " non contemplatione ejus Coneutftur ad inquirendum quid &»- "tus in re ' fi\ r Quis non, ubi requifirit, accedit? Ubiac- 'ceffit, pati exopfet ? Apbl. ad foiem. d See an accouijt,of Juftin Martyr's death in Enfebius, ffift. Eccl. l.iv. c. 1 6. e Mr. Bingham ftys that the tertn " 'Gnoiric" was wrigteafly applied in a good feme to Chriftians, as to fhofe who were pot fcifed of the beft knowledge ; but that it was afterwards aped and abufed by others. Antiquities, b. i, c. 1. Sect. 3. f Jortin obferves that molt of the ancient herefies Were a mixture of philofophy, Greek or Oriental, and Chriftiaraty— Remarks, Vol. II. p. 266. And again, " the philosophers who " raffed SERMON ill. ty the peace of the infont Church difturbed, and A foundation laid 4br. thefe numberlefs diflet^ tkws, which added -(is was before remarked) to the ? ahxiety of Ghiiftiaii Paftors during the timtr of perfeoutfoitj ri and prevented them in future ages fiiom enjoying the fcappy effe&s of toleration and e&aMjfkment. -■ That a very cohfidemble fpc^wtibn of the converts to -Cfariftiahib/ durihg the three firft xreritupef cenfifted, notwithftanding, of men of illiterate education can be no difcredit to that Religion, of which it was a diftlnguifli- tug-mark that *f die; poor had the Gofpel preached unto thou." The Apoftfes and their iticcefibre, in general, were men of this fort. They were, in general, remarkable neither hr their learning* nor for their eloquence. Tfaeyexprefs the mod pious fentiments in the moftiimple language, and the rnoft important truths without ornament. But, the piety of Jheir fentiments ind the : truth of their doctri- nes were fufficient under Providence to make their Religion prevail : and, in fpite of all ©ppoiition, it continued in lucceffive ages to prevail with the mafs of mankind by the con- " paffed from Judaifm and Paganifm to Chriftianity corrupted " tfre firiiplicity of the Go^l, turned it into a contentious JRe- " ligion, and filled it with uhedifying fpeculatibns." Vol. II. p. 273. F 2 viclioh 6.3 5 E R M O N lh vi&ion of *honeft arid humble ^attention* '*3f thofe .great men, who were f not to be allured by, its own excellence, found it expedient from worldly- motives Jo come-' over to its fide j being influenced in this moft important of all concerns by the conduct of an illiterate multi- tude, and not by. the difcoveriesi of their owa fuperior. * wifdom. This is .>the great ^aigu- ment, which is inferred in favour of our Re* iigion from its peculiar mode of propagation. The argument is hot inferred from any: num- ber of wife, or powerful men, who embraced .Chriftianity in this or that place at any givea time i but * from the triumph which it ^ob- tained over the wifdom and power of the world by a procefs, contrary to what was ever obferved in the fuccefs of any other inftitution. The foolifh things of the world were chofen ' to confound thcwife and r the weak to con- found the mighty. . But, in reality, the truth of Chriffianky; and the fatisfadtion refulting from a conviction of that truth, are very little concerned in the enquiries, which at prefent form a confiderable part of ecclefiaftical hiftory during the firft ages of our Religion : in enquiries concerning * See the Introduction to Bp. Warburton's Julian, p. z6. h See the fame, p. 2j. * i Cor. i. 27. the SERMON II. 69 the miracles ufcribed to the fucceffors of the Apoftles, concerning the extent of the early propagation of our Religion, the extent of the perfecution of its profeflbrs, and the reafons "from 'the beginning why it was not generally received by men of learning and why uni- verfal mention was not made by them of its miraculous proofs. Thefe are fu'bjeds, on which the enemies of our Faith have been able to 'avail themfelves of the errors, the 'drm-ffions, and other imperfections, of its friends as well as foes. With them, there- fore, thefe are favourite topics of declamation j and from thence they necefTarily make a part of thofe fubfequent obfervations on the hiftory of our Religion, which are intended to vindi- cate its truth. It is fufficient with regard to the original propagation of Chriftianity ; at leaft, indeed, it is fufficient for our fatisfadtion, as far as the foundation of our Faith is concerned in this important part of our hiftory; if we are in- formed — that the publication of our Religion was entrurred, after the afcenfion of its great Author, to poor and illiterate men, who had been his Difcipies and witnerTes from the be- ginning: — that thefe men were enabled by fu- pernatural means to confirm the truth of their doctrines, and to preach the Gofpel to all F 3 nations : — 70 . S E R M N II. nations :- — that their induftry was proportioned to the importance of their commiffion, and to their means of overcoming the difficulties by which they were oppofed : — .that numbers were converted by their preaching :- — that, : by the miracles performed before the expiration of the apoftolical age, by the writings of the New m addition to thofe of the Old Teftament, and by infHtutions appointed for the public profeffion of our Rejigion, pro virion was made for its re.- gular and permanent maintenance among its converts, and for the converlionof men of every age to its belief, without the aid and in. oppo- fition to all the efforts of human power and hu- man wifdom : — and that all thofe, who were thus employed at firft to publifh and confirm the dodtrines of Chriftianity, having before given up every profpedt in this world for its fake, at length, when brought to the k trial> chearfully laid down their lives in atteftation of its truth ; leaving to lateft pqfterity the moft unequivocal aflurance of the reality of the mi- raculous events, recorded by them in the New Teftament, which had been the objects of their fenfes and the original foundation of their faith. Few as thefe circumftances are, they comprehend in reality all the information con- k Every one of them was a&ually brought to the trial, ex- cept St. John. See the paffage above cittd from Stillingfieet's Orig. Sac. p. 275. cerriing S-fi RM'd^- If, 71- ceniirig 1 the firf! ppopagalioft 1 61" ourReligieny which jjeafomable men : can 4gf#i&£lRxy for the coiifirmatioa of its tru$v ; ' A & fb> all ' other miratlesi befides ''iftbfe'-wMft'&e recorded itt Holy #ri*, iftey are not ~*« fee^rSdeonted (as> hath been fully declared^ among the prefent proofs of our Refigibh. Aftd ifeough ftoohg*' arguments may be drawh in< fts^favetarJ frbB* tile extent of 1 its early propagation; and from! tiheextent df the persecution^ %Melv it ever^ »T«v «p%ao-t" before the reign of Conftantine, Hill. Eccl. 1. viii. c. 1 . the SERMON' UK the. fountains* &om which Cttfiftknity ft>ts«d being corrupt we , cannot Wenjigr if thfe doe* tHnes, which were. propagate4 Lanier its autfyo* rity, (hould henceforth be imjwBSo -Befidw * deficiency in enforcing moral; 4uli©8T etwn.re* l^giqus 4o&rines were per;veffed ; „wdi made matter of party violence, 1: f Herefiefc of the moft pernicious tendency Weff!-pe@J0igate4widi oc»el perfections, of the contrary Faith t while on the other hand E little differences of opinion were at length, eonftruei into ; damhahJk he* defies. • t.-v ■.■ .'•' '1' .:. ' ;,'.- ,. ./ This fpirit of contention in ,the rwlefs.of the Church found r no final! eneouragenaerat and fupport in the teaming of the times. It hath been " before remarked that many phi* lofophere were found among, the. early converts to Christianity . More fiiccee^ed them in iiibr fequent ages. In the do&rine of the Trinity, and in the other doctrines of Revelation, which relate to the fall of man and the operation of f Arianifm was enforced in this manner under Coriftantius, Valens, &c. And, as Bp. Sherlock obferves, it yielded as fe- vere trials to Christians as they had ever before experienced. Sermons, Vol. III. p. 358. See on this fubjedl Sozomen, Hift. Eccl. 1. vi. c. 18. and Sot- crates, 1. iv. c. 16. * See the objections urged by Michael Cerularius againft the Latin Church, Mofli. Vol. II. p. 556. * See the laft fermon. evil SERMON 1IJ. 79 evil fpirits, thefe philofopher^s found a ' re- femblance to the tenets of their refpe&ive fchools. Wljen, therefore, they erribraced Chriftianity, they did not think it neceffary to relinquifh the 3 language of their former tenets; if, indeed, they feUnquifhed k all the tenets themfelves. From a ftudioufiiefs to reconcile , fuch language with their new Religion, much curious and typical reasoning was introduced. This reafoning at firft ferved to fhelter the prejudices of individuals. It was afterwards regarded as a creditable dirplay of ' literary 1 Philo, an Helleniflic Jew of Alexandria, who lived at the fame time with the Apoftles, and who is {aid by fome to have been an apoftate Chriftian, prepared the way, by his ingenious but fanciful combinations of the Jewifli Scriptures with die Pla- tonic philofophy, for fimilar corruptions of Chriftianity . Pho- dus fays, that he was the writer " i| a x*i trot « u»»ry»( •"•* rr >< " y$sc$rif it m&wmu >\vyes typt afp^ii M-gbuwi." ■ See the part of Photius prefixed to the Paris Edit, of Philo. See alfo what Bilhop Bull fays of Philo : Englifh Works, Vol. III. p. 1 1 26, 8vo. j Biftiop Horfley's Traces, 8vo. 1789. p. 68. fe See what Bifeop Warburton lays on this fubjeft in the in- troduction to his " Julian," where he deduces the corruptions of our Religion in die dark ages " from the adulterate oma- " ments which die fucceffors of the Apoftolic fathers brought " from the brothels of philofophy to adorn the fan&ity of Re- " ligion," p. 24—34. 1 Clemens Alexandrinus compofed his " Stromata" from the Scriptures and Heathen Writers. His own words with regard to his work are very remarkable : " oripwfetri it ei Trfuftcvmi am- " iujA.tyfi.tnit Ttit aXr^etat toi« piWopia? iayjiourt' futXkn tyxtxa- " Xvppkvnt xoti stny.mf vppiniv, neAain^ ta Jsarvfu To c £vfc/w» T« »»- «'{««," 1. i. C I. Tertullian fays, " Ipfe denique haerefes a philofophia fubor- " nantur :" and again at the conclufion of the fame chapter, " viderint So "S"E R M O'N" IIL .attainments/ And, &s it had been' adopftedT fey r men of known "attachment to. Chriftianity, it was generally' thought to detradt nothing from the Chriftian cliara; et ! -Dialeaicum Chrif- t y. tianifmum protulerint." Adv. jljlsf. :c 7. . In what manner the philofbpner/ 'of the' -early"- ages ftudie'd •Chrilfiahity may bV/iriferred alfd frotfi [whzC Cave' fays, of them at the Nicene Council,- " a4, htmc conventum venifle quof- " dam phiio'fbphos fivediale&icbs* de" rebus theologicis fubtili- *' ter difputiturds, > ' Hift. .Liter. V6L L p. 3 5 1 . m Suqh as Clemens Alexandrinus; Cyprian himfelf was fb fond of ihyrfical interpretation, that Cave (fairs it " t&e .argument " which that good man produces as his warrant to knock down " a cdntroverfy, whe'n And even Ammonius, the mailer of Origen, is faid to have Jived and dyed a Chriftian. ' StiUingfleet's Orig. Sac. p. $pw 1 1 The Gnoflic feet, which began' in the days of the Apottles, was extended in the fecond century by.BafiUdes. He (as Mo- fheim fays, Vol. I. p. 223.) has. generally obtained the fipft place among' the Egyptian Gnoftics : and is called by Cave " Gnofticorum antefignanus" (Hift. Lit. Vol. 1. p. 49.) He was followed by Valentine, Theodotus the tanner, .and many others ; among whom Manes " was fo adventurous " (to; ufe the words of Molheim) " as to attempt a coalition of the doc- ** trine of the Magi with the Chriftian fyftem or the explication *' of the one by the other. '■' Vol. I. p. 296. Nor did Origen, who was the leader of the platonizing Chrif- tians, derive his fpeculations from a matter, who had been lefs adventurous in the corruption of Chriftianity than. Manes him- felf. See Molheim, Vol.1, p. 169 — 174. Under Origen the platonizing Chriftians foon eclipfed their Gnoflic brethren. " A prodigious number of interpreters both in the third cen- tury and in the following times purfued the method of Origen; nor could the few, who explained the Scriptures with, judge- ment and a true fpirit of criticifm, oppole the torrent of Alle- -gory which was overflowing the Church.',' — " Origen illus- trated the greateft part of the doctrines of Chriftianity, or to . fpeak more properly difguifed them under the lines of a vain philofophy." Molheim, Vol.1, p. 278, 279. our SERMON III. 81 our Religion to human fyftems, and for fuch explanations of its particular doctrines, as be- fore its civil establishment had blended almoft every tenet pf it with the reveries of philofo- phical fpeculatifts. After its civil eftablifh- ment thefe fubjedts of abufe went on to " in- creafe. Philosophical Divinity was enlarged : and the ftudy of philofophy, which was ne- ceffary before this Divinity could be under- ftood, was» for that reafon, thought effential to Chriftianity. And though the Platonic fyftem, which it had been the fuccefsful aim of ages to incorporate with Chriftianity, and ° Molheim fays of the fourth century : " Origen was the *• great model, whom the moft eminent of the GhrifHan doftors ** followed in their explications of the truths of the Gofpel, " which were of confequence explained according to the rules of " the Platonic philofophy, as it was corre&ed and modelled by " that learned father." Vol.. I. p. 369. Under this cenfure he includes Jerome, Hilary, Eufebius, Ephraim the Syrian, Cryfoftom, Athanafius, and Didymus. And fo prevalent in thefe ages was the cuftom of difguifing or fecreting the doftrines of Chriftianity that Cave tell us, Cryfc- ftom, in fpealring of the myfterious parts of our Religion, ufes the words " uramt 01 pipm/Atm" at leaft 50 times in his writings. Prim. Chrift.'Vol. 1. p. 213. See alfo on this fubjeft Bing- ham's Antiquities, b. x. c. 5. feci:. 8. In the following ages the moft learned commentators did in general nothing more than tranfcribe the Divinity of their pre- deceffors. " The greater part of them reafoned and difputed " concerning the truths of the Gofpel, as the blind would argue " about light and colours," &c. Mofh. Vol. II. p. 128. Ac- counts of them may be feen in different parts of Mofheim's fe- cond and third. Volumes. See alfo Jortin's Remarks, Vol. VI p. 152. G which U S ERMO N III. 'which had'obfcured the philofophy adopted by the Gnoftics, was difcredited by the con- demnation of fome of its principal advocates, and was at length abolished by Juftinian ; yet did it only make way for the Ariftotelic, a philofophy better calculated to promote and regulate theological difputations. The effects of the intermixture of philofophy with Chris- tianity were not eafily to be done away. Men had not merely availed themfelves of the af- fiftance of human fcience in the explication of Christianity ; but they had confounded both together, and had produced a jargoft of phi- lofophical Divinity, which tended irrefiftibly to deftfoy all diftindt ideas of each, confidered as a Separate and independent fludy. Their minds had been called off from a fimple con- fideration of the dodtrines of Revelation : and, however their fyftem might be diverted from v Plato to Ariftotle, and from Ariftotle to St. * Auguftine, to Peter r Lombard, or to any f As late as the middle of the 15th century there was a con- teft whether the dodtrines of Plato or Ariftotle fhould be pre- ferred : and Jortin fays," I much fear it would be doing no wrong " to the literati of thofe days to fuppofe they had no other -efo- " teric Religion, than what they drew from Plato or Ariftotle." Rem. Vol. V. p.. 490. 1 Mofh. Eccl. Hift. Vol. II. p. 424. r Dean Tucker in his letters to Dr. Kippis fays, "It is an " undoubted faft that Peter Lombard's fumma fententiarum was " in fuch high vogue for feveral ages, as to eclipfe the. Scrip- " tures themfelves." P.81. other S P R M O N III. $3 other fether or do&or of the Church;, their attention was with difficulty- afterwards; to be attached to ,the holy Scriptures, and to the pure Religion which they teach. This cer- tainly was an eiTential caufe of thofe faults, which may be difcpvered in the venerable writings of the uninfpired prafeflbrs of our Religion , in its early ages* and of the -various herefies, and the general corruption of Chrif- tianity fiiom the days of Ammonius and his fcholar Origen down to that .fcholaftic Theo- logy, whofe jargon did fo much mifchief in the Church during the latter, part of the dark ages. The profeiTors of Christianity * forfook * In the prolegomena to Cave's Hift. Lit,, p. 2, we are in- formed " Sacrarum 'Scfipturarum ftddium' cbnteniptui habitum, " negladlum, et in lingua valgari prplflbjtum. Biblia facra ra- " ro vifa, rarius, traftata, adeo ut femel iterumque teftatur " Erafm'us fe producere poffe qui' annum egreffi b&bgefimura " tantum aetatis in hujufmodi tricis (fcilicet Theologia fcolafti- " ca) perdiderint, nee unquam contextum evangelicum evol- " verfait i idque fe propria experientia quin et ipfis etiam fa- ■' tentibus comperiffe." Stafford of Pembroke Hall in Cambridge is faid in 1524 to have been the firlt, who publickly read leftures out of the Scrip- tures, whereas before they read only the fentences. Strype's memorials, ', Vol. I. p. 48. Confiftently with this Erafmus fays, " Ante annos ferme triginta nihil tradebatur in fchola Canta- " brigienfi praeter Alexaridrum, parva logicalia (ut vocant) et " vefera ilia Ariftotelis diftata, Scoticafque q&asftiones."— -Jor- tin's Life of Erafmus, p.' 49, '50. What books were at length ufe,d in common life infiead of the Scriptures may be inferred from hence. " Englifhnien" (we are told in No. '47.' of the collection of records, Vol. II. Collier's E'ccl. Hift.) "'have in their hands the holy Bible " and the New Teftament in the Mother Tongue ihftead' of the. G 2 "old H SERMON III. the living fountains, and hewed out for them- felves cifterns, which could hold no water. Had they confulted the Scriptures inftead of the expofitions of philofophers, and the l per- plexed reafonings of prejudiced men -, it would have been impoflible that the do&rines, which engaged the ftudy of their lives, mould have formed any part of their creed. -But, the men of authority in the Church (as I have above remarked) were contending for worldly pre- eminence, and in a manner which was not to be defended upon Gofpel- principles. It ought not, therefore, to be matter of wonder that they mould rather u avail themfelves of the learning of the times, than recall men of learn- ing to the ftudy of genuine Chriftianity : it ought not to be matter of wonder that they fhould not command philofophers to bring their difcordant opinions to the teft of infallible truth. It was, on the contrary, certainly part " old fabulous and phantaftical books of the Table Round, " Launcelot de Lake, Huou de Bourdeux, Befy of Hampton, " Guy of Warwick, and other fuch ; whofe impure filth and " vain fabulofity ths light of God has abolifhed." « Peter Abelard and his followers in the 12th century ex- plained nothing, but obfured the cleareft truths by diftuuftions and fubdivifions. Jortin's Rem. Vol. V. p. 262. u Theophilus, Bifhop of Alexandria, confecrated Synefius, a learned Platonic philofopher, Bifhop of Ptolemais ; tho' he declined the Bifhoprick, declaring that he was a Platomft and could not receive fome of the doctrines of Chriftianity. Jortin s Rem. Vol. IV. p. 243, 244. of SERMON III. 85 of the artifice of the Romifli Church to v pro- hibit the ufe of the Scriptures in the vulgar tongue and the ordinary expofition of them : a fatal artifice, in which, as well as in many others, it was equalled by the w Greek Com- munion, which taught that the Patriarch of Conftantinople and his brethren were alone authorifed to explain the declarations of Scrip- ture. Human, learning fufFered little lefs in the end from this confufion of facred and profane knowlege, than the ftudy of the Scriptures. Before the expiration of the fourth century it was decreed in a public x council that Bifhops were not to read the books of Heathen writers. In the fixth century the teaching of philofophy at Athens was abolifhed by Jufti- nian. And in procefs of time the pureft Greek v See in " Stillingfleet's council of Trent examined and dif- proved" an account of the fteps by which the ufe of the Scrip- tures in the vulgar tongue was denied to the people. Having been partially reftrained by particular Popes, it was publickly forbidden by the Lateran council under Innocent the third, and at length finally and folemnly prohibited by the council of Trent, p. 51 — 58. And though Pius the 4th afterwards permitted the ufe of the Scriptures in the vulgar tongue ; yet was this per- miffion foon recalled by Pope Clement the 8th. See the preface to King James's Bible, p. 3. w Mofheim's Eccl. Hift. Vol. IV. p. 249. * The 1 6th canon of the 4th council of Carthage held in the year 398 orders that " Epifcopus gentilium libros non le- gat :" on which Jortin remarks that " the Bifhops foon began to relifh this good advife, and not to trouble their heads with literature." Remarks, Vol. IV. p. 165. G 3 and 8^ SERMON III. and Latin Claffics were erafed to farnim ma- terials for . tranfcribing legendary tales^ made up of the raoft incongruous mixture of facred and profane fp'eculations : till at length it was maintained that polite y literature ought to he ftigriiatized and baniihed, as the fountain of all herefy. To thefe internal caufes of ignorance and corruption, which, though not univerfal, were at leaft general in their operation, if we add the accumulated weight of all thofe z foreign invafions, general conquefts, and general im- portations of favage laws and favage manners, •, which rendered the times, of which I am fpeaking, the moll unfortunate period of hu- man exiftence j we mall not be furprifed at finding that the means of mental improvement were at length fo extensively "deflroyed, as to leave feveral different monafteries or fchools y Erafmus fays, " Lovanii quidam non femel publicitus dix- it apud populum Hnguas et politiores literas efle fontem omnium hsrefion, et ob id earum profeflbres fuftibus ejiciendos ex aca- demia ;" and adds what is well worthy of our notice, " et ta. men inter illos nullus erat qui vel hifceret adverfus Ecclefiae de- creta." Vol. IX- p. 531. Edit. Pet. Vander, Ludg. Bat. 1706. z Of the Goths, Vandals, and other barbarous conquerors Burnet fays, " Thefe new conquerors being rude, and ignb- " rant, and wholly given to.fenfible things ; and learning being " univerfally extinguilhed ; grofs fuperftitions took place." — Hift. of Ref. Vol. JI. p. 63. And Jortjn fays, that " an effeft of the government of the barbarians in .the Weft was that- the Bifhops and the Clergy be- came hunters and fighters." Remarks Vol. V. p. 98. of SERMON' III*. dp of learning, in poffeflion of no more than* two or three books for their common ufe,; and we mall eafily be able to account for the word evils of thefe times, and for the want of fuc- cefs, which attended all the well-meant b ex- ertions that were made to difperfe the im- pending cloud of ignorance and fuperftition. . Thefe obfervations, joined to otheis.on what may be confidered as the effects of fuch a ge- neral ftate of the Chriflian. world,; — -on the rife and eftablifhment of the pretentions of the Romifli t Ghurch,, of which we formed a de- pendent part, and which confpicuoufly pre- ferved and tranfmitted the regular profeffion, while-it corrupted in many inflances the pu- rity, of Chriftianity ; — on the Eaftern Church, which was feparated through thefe pretentions from weftern Chriftendom, and the influence of this feparation on both communions ; — and on as much befides of the internal and external ftate of the Ghurch, as is contained within a mort view both of the doctrines of * See the fecond differtation prefixed by Warton to his hifto- ry of Englifh poetry. In it he fays, that " one fingle copy of the Bibje, St. Jerome's EpiiUcs, and fome volumes of Eccle- ciaftical hiftory and martyrology often ferved feveral different monafteries." The libraries of the religious houfes in Syria are at prefenfr of nearly the fame extent. Volney's Travels, Vol. It. p. 448. Engl. Edit. b By Alfred, Charlemagne, William the Conqueror, &c. G 4 our « S E R M ON III. our Religion which it particularly defended or corrupted, and of the oppofition which it en- countered from foreign enemies ; may perhaps give us an imperfedT: Sketch of the religious hiftory of this period : they certainly will con- tribute to free pure Chriftianity from) cenfisre, and enable us to giv& an anfwer to every man, that aiketh us a reafon of the Hope that is in us j as far as this Hope, is connected with the part of religious hiftory under our prefent con- fideration. '" That enormous aggregate of power, which was pofleffed by the Bifhops of Rome in the times immediately preceding the reformation, was the effedt in a great degree of the caufes above ftated : but, it was not the production of a fingle age, nor indeed the entire produc- tion of the ages which fucceeded the time of Conftantine. It founded its prefumptuous claims on the authority, which St. Peter was fuppofed to poffefs and to tranfmit to his fuc- ceflbrs. Whatever be the meaning of the * words, which our Saviour addrefied to St. Peter when this Apoftle confefled that he was the Son of God -, as they proceeded from one who had declared that his Kingdom was not of this world, they could not mean to confer c Matt. xvi. 1 8. temporal SERMON III. 89 temporal power on the Apoftle : nor is it pro- bable that they were defigned to confer any fpiritual fuperiority, much lefs any aflurance of infallibility on him. Our blefled Saviour, as if to caution his Difciples beforehand againft the evils, which would arife from difputes among the future rulers of his Church " who mould be greateft," exprefsly d forbad fucli difputes among them : declaring, that he who defired to Jbe.firffc mould be laft of all, and recommending to their imitation the unaflum- ing fimplicity of a little child. It is impof- fible, therefore, -that he mould fet up one of his Difciples- to be the fpiritual head of all the others. He himfelf was to be the fpiritual e Mafter, to whom they were to look : and the Holy Ghoft was to compenfate for the want of his immediate and perfonal appearance by extraordinary gifts in the firft ages, and by the infpired writings, which were an effect of thole gifts and were to fupply their place in future times. Confidently with this, St. Peter appears to have had no precedence in the council of the Apoftles at Jerufalem. St. Paul alfo declares that f " in nothing was he behind d Mark ix. 34, &c. e Matt, xxiii. 8. r z Cor. xii. 11. Again when St. Paul mentions (Gal. ii. 9.) James, Cephas, and John, who feemed to be pillars, he makes no diftin&ion in favour of Cephas (or Peter) nor does he mention him before the others, the 9<% S E R.M.O N.i III. the very chiefeft Apoftles :". and he withftood §t. Peter to the face for a reafcn, which de- ftrpys every idea of his infallibility : 8 " be- cause he was to be .blamed*" .Befidies, St. Paul ha,d the Gofpel of the h uncircumchion com- mitted to him in the fame mamaer, as: that of the circumcifion was to St. Peter : and both he and the other Apoftles appean at all times to a& independently of every other fpiritual head, than,Ghrifb, But of. whatever nature St. Peter's authority and pre-eminence might be i they ought in reality toconfer nothing of either on the Bifhops of Rqme. * " It i& " doubtful whether St. Peter ever was at " Rome, but that he fixed his chair there is " a very idle and groundlefs imagination." Eufebius, indeed, fays that St. Peter came -to Rome in the days.of Claudius : but, he "feems * Gal. ii. ii. * Gal. ii. 7. * Bp. Bull's vindication of the Church of England, 8'°. P- '39- . i3 i. Archbifhop Cranmer alfo fays it was not certain that St. Pe- ter ever was at Rome. Burnet's Hill, of the Reformation, Vol. I. p. 175. Stillingfleet in his Orig.,Britan. fpeaks nearly to the fame effeft , concluding at length with an approbation of Laftan- ' tius's opinion that St. Pester certainly did not come to Rome till the reign of Nero, nor long before his martyrdom, p. 45 — 48. k Bp. Bull's vindication of the Church of England, p. 139. See, concerning- the credulity of Papias, Bufebiushimfelf : Hift. Eccl. 1. iii. c. 39. Eufebius, however, appears not to have been lefs hafty, in what he admits upon report- concerning the con- verfion of the Emperour Philip, L vi. c. 34. to SERMON III. 91 to have received this from the authority of Papias, who was a credulous writer. How- ever, in procefs of time, as the dignity no lefs than the opulence of cities attaches itfelf to the perfons of thofe, who fill important Na- tions in them ; and as the Church of Rome > was the ' only Weftern Church, which afpired to the credit of Apoftolical foundation -, the Biftiops of Rdme began to be regarded with peculiar refpecl:, and a m titular kind of pre- eminence was tacitly allowed them. St. Peter alfo, once prefnmed to have been the firfb Biihop of that See, was allowed in fucceedirig" times to have been fo without contradiction. And as appeals were made in civil matters from different parts of the Empire to the Im- perial city j fo they were alfo made in matters refpecling Chriftianity. Probably too, thcfe latter were made the more frequently in the 1 See Waterland's Lady Moyer's Sermons, p. 326. m Moftieim's Eccl. Hift. Vol. I. p. 264. That this preemi- . nence was only titular may be inferred from hence : it was de- clared by the general council at Nice that " the Patriarchs of Alexandria and Antioch had the fame authority over the coun- tries round them, that he- of Rome had over thofe that lay. about that city." Burnet's Hift. of the Reform. Vol. I. p. 138. . And this titular preeminence the Greeks were to the laftdifpo-- fed to admit, viz. " Paparn ordine, non dignitate praecedere." Cave's Hift. Lit. Vol. II. Saec. Synod, p. 234. T. Smith alfo in his account of the Greek Church admit* • (p. 2) a pnority of Dignity in the See of Rome ; though he aflerts (p. 80) the perfeft equality of the Patriarch of Con- ftantjnople with the Pope. early 92 SERMON 5 III. early ages j becaufe, notwithftanding the cor- rupt ftate of the Romifh Church in fubfequent times, it is notorious that me was p Angularly free from the early herefies. The fuppofed fucceflbrs of St. Peter foon availed themfdves of the power, which thefe proofs of refpecl; appeared to acknowlege in them ; and pro- ceeded to ifTue directions and menaces to dif- tant parts of Jthe Chriftian world. Thefe- in- terpofitiohs were by no means received with approbation, or with filent acquiefcence... As early as in the fecond century, they excited the refentment and cenfure ' both of Irenaeus, and Poly crates. And in the third century r Cyprian t Sozomen, Hift. Eccl. l.iii. c. 6, and 13. andl.vi. c. 23. Reading's Edit. . Stillingfleet's Orig. Britan. p. 226. Waterland's Lady Moyer's Sermons', p.327. Horiley's Tra&s, p. 39. 9 Eijwaios AvySew nit £» Ta\Ma nrierxovof ra Bistlof 05 °» EOTro- AlJJ ySMCtUJS XftTEOpa&jEAEV fASfAT^etfJiiVOS O.VTH TflV ^E^OTJjTa, x. t. A. Socrates, Hift. Eccl. 1. v. c. 22. Reading's Edit. .Polycrates expreffed a fimilar difapprobation of the conduct of the Bifhop of Rome, and on the fame occafion. Heylyn's Re- form, juftified, p. 270. ' Cyprian fays on the fubjedt, " Statutum fit omnibus nobis " et aequum fit pariter ac juftum, ut unius cujufque caufa illic " audiatur ubi eft crimen admifium ; et fingulis paftoribus por- " tio gregis fit adfcripta, quam regat unufquifque et gubernet, " rationem fui aftus Domino redditurus : oportet utique eos " quibus prsfumus non circumcurfare nee epilcoporum concor- " diam cohaerentem fua fubdola et fallaci temeritate collidere, '* fed agere illic caufam fuam, ubi et accufatores habere et teftes " fui criminis poflent." Epift. 55. Edit. Paris. 1726. p. 86. And again he fays, " habet in ecclefiae adminiftratione vo- " luntatis fuse arbitrium liberum unufquifque prspofuus, ratio. " nera SERMON III. 93 oppofed with great refolution the incroach- ments of the Bifhbps of Rome ; refufing as Bifhop of Carthage to defend himfelf in an- fwer to an appeal, which had been received at Rome againft him; and declaring that all Bifliops were equal in power. But remon- ftrances, and repeated decrees of early * coun- cils, were not fufficient to counteract a power, which . was fure of being fupported by the paffions and interefts of mankind. Even Atha- nafius, when obliged to leave Alexandria, ' re- tired to Rome and contributed to aggrandize the Bifhop of that See by appealing to him. Indeed, it may be remarked of both the n Eaftern and the w African Clergy, that, whenever they were unable to fupport either themfelves or their doctrines, they were al- " nem aftus fui Domino redditurus," Epift. 72. p. 129. ad fi- nem. Hence J.ortin fays of St. Cyprian, " if his authority be any " thing, the Pope's authority is nothing : he hath cut it up from " the root by eftabliftiing the parity of bifliops." 2d Charge, Sermons, Vol. VII. p. 394. *' Of the fecond general council and that at Milevis — See Burnet's Hift. Vol. I. p. 138—9. Collier's Eccl. Hift Vol. I. p. 27 and 128. Cave's Hift. Lit. Vol. I. p. 560. and Bing- ham's Antiquities, b. ix. c. 1. feft. 13. * Sozomen fays in his Eccl. Hift. " «pixofMK>» h as sura«> " A&avaritit right of interfering and Riding univerfally in both civil and religious concerns ; yet Papal inference feems to have extended it- felf under his fucceflbrs in the 9 following cen- turies, and was not carried to its extreme height till the Pope's boafted ' infallibility was The latter were fuppofed to contain the decrees of fixty Bifhops from Clement to Siricius. Blondel has molt fully proved the forgery of them and it is confeffed by Steph. Balu.. zius — Cave's Hift. Lit. Vol. II. p. 21. It is even confeffed by Baronius. Annal. ad an. 865. Thefe forgeries, however, were not fully detected before the Reformation. ' Molheim gives fome account of the Diftatus Hildebrahdi- iri, or what may be fuppofed to have been Gregory's principles of Papal Government, Vol. II. p. 491. 1 Particularly in the thirteenth century under Innocent the Third, &c. r Gelafius, who was Bifhop of Rome in the fourth century, had the effrontery to claim infallibility for himfelf and his See. Jortin's Rem. Vol. IV. p. 315. But, this infallibility was firft publickly and explicitly allowed by the council of Trent. It may be thought ftrange that it mould be done at a time when the Papacy was fo rudely attacked by the reformers : but the Church of Rome afted about this time in the fame impru- dent manner with regard alfo to its other claims. In the year 1556 the Pope declared " he would change Kingdoms at his " pleafure, that he had made Ireland a Kingdom, that all *' Princes were under his feet, and that he would allow no " Prince to be his companion, nor to be too familiar with " him." Burnet's Hift. Vol. II. p. 342—3. Thus like- wife Cardinal Pole in his Book " De unione ecclefiaftica" very SERMON III. idi it length propofed and acknowleged in a pub- lic council. It would be eafy to add more obfervations on the conduct of particular Bi- fhops of Rome, by which the Papal power was eftablimed : but the truth with regard to thofe" Bifhops is, that all of them labored to extend their jurifdiction and uniformly carried on the fame fcheme. One * encroachment fol- lowed another; till at length, aided by the circumftaifces above mentioned and Various others, they were enabled to opprefs all Wefl- ern Christendom* and to crufh for many ages every attempt to revive a fpirit of moderation in the rulers of the Church, and the true knowlege and practice of Chriftianity among its different members. The corruption and ignorance, which enfued, were in the end fuch ; that, as we are * told, " the world was " poffeffed with a conceit that there was a «« trick for faving fouls befides that plain me- very much deprefles the royal, and exalts the Papal authority. Indeed, Bp. Jewell ftates that the proportion, afferted about this time to fubfift between the Emperour's and the Pope's power, was as one to feventy feven. Jewell's Apology for the Church of England, p. 73, and elfewhere. And, to complete the whole, Cardinal Bellarmine afferts that the only reafon why the early Chriftians did not depofe Nero, Djocleiian, and Julian was becaufe they wanted means to effeQ. it. 'This is mentioned and well refuted by Cave in his " Pri- mitive Chriftianity." Vol. N. p. 349 — 351. ■ See Jortin's Rem. Vol. V. p. 349. * Burnet's Hift. Vol. II. p. 74. H 3 " thodj lo-z SERMON III. " thod, which Chrift had taught ; and that " the Priefts had the fecret of it in their " hands." Whatever friendly agreement there might be between the Bifliops of Rome and other Bifliops in the commencement of their power j no agreement could at length be maintained with the Romifh Church,, except by fubmif- fion. And various reafons contributed to hinder this in the Clergy of the Eaft. The want of juft foundation in the Papal power could not be unknown to the Patriarchs of Conftanti- nople : and thefe Patriarchs were not the lefs ffcrenuous to u retort the anathemas, by which they were feparated from the Romifh com- munion, and to defend their own power, be- caufe {as is w remarked of them) they were Jingularly tolerant in the exercife of it. The. vicinity of the Imperial court alfo, which hindered the Bifliops of Conftantinople from acquiring civil power, contributed in no fmall degree to protect them againft the arbitrary encroachments of other Churches. Befides, the * fplendour itfelf of this court created in all, who lived within its influence and protection n This was done by Acacius, Photius, and Michael Cerola- rius. Mofheim, Vol. II. p. 84, 351, 555. w Socrates, Hiffi. Eccl. 1. vii. c. 11. x The account which ftiay be collected from Cryfoftosn's works of this fplendour almoft exceeds belief. f ' " H . - fuch SERMON III. 103 fueja a pride, as was little inferior- to that of the Romifh Church, and would fubmit to the dictates of no foreign Ecclefiafric. There was, moreover, a fixed contempt, with which the Greeks affected to treat their lefs learned brethren of the Weft, which irrefiftibly pre- vented their fubmiffion in matters of religious, controverfy. The Greek Clergy, though in- volved, in nearly a common y ignorance of true Chriftianity„with the whole Chriftian world, were certainly more learned in other refpedts, and more grave than thofe of the Latin com- munion. - Some few, indeed,* of the dignified Clergy among the Latins were in no refpecl inferior to the moft celebrated of the Greeks, but thefe furpaffed-.the other members of the Weflern Church * beyond ajl comparifon. The prejudices, arifing in the minds of the Greeks from all thefe cirCumftances, made them amidft their diftrefs repeatedly refift the fo- licitations of a thofe among their Emperours, 7 The Greeks and Latins feem to have agreed in the darker ages that the effence and life of Religion confifted in image- worlhip, in honcring dead faints, in collecting relidls, in en- riching the "Church, and other fuch exertions of piety. Mofheim* Vol, II p. 417. And Jortin calls the Bi'fhops at tha fecond council of Nice, who reefc? N bliftied image-woTfhip in the Eaft in the 8th century, "' the moft lying and fenfelefs blockheads upon the face of the earth." Remarks, Vol. IV. p. 466 1 This was remarkably true in England in the 13th. and 14th centuries. See- the fecond diflertation pj-eftxed to Warton's Hif- tory of Englifh poetry; * This happened both £0 Michael and John Palasologus, . . .Ji H 4 " who 1*4 SERMON III. who wifhed to purchafe the affiftance of the Franks by the dependence of their Church : and joined to other prejudices, excited by the oppreflive b Reign of the Latins in Confianti- nople and by mutual perfection, made them to the very laft; even in the extremity of their liege, difdain to hear of fuccour, which was to be obtained byfubmimon to the Roman Pontiff. The influence, which this fituation of the tWo Communions muft have had on their doc- trines, is very obvious. I have before remark- ed that one pernicious confequence of difputes between the Rulers of the Church was the want of purity, which thenceforth prevailed throughr but the Chriflian world. The pretenfions of the Latin and Greek Churches, and the parti- cular c dodtrines, in which they oppofed each b For the fixty years, during which the Crufaders kept pdf- feffion of Confiantinople. x The fatal confequences of this ftate of the ChrilBan Church fhewed themfelves Icon after the days of Conftantine. The dottrines of Arianifm, which prevailed at Confiantinople under Conftantins and fome of his fucceflbrs, were fo powerfully im- prefled on Ulfilas, when he came thither on an embaify from the Goths, and were fo fuccefsfully propagated by him among his countrymen ; that the Arian herefy maintained itfelf much longer among them, and, through their means, among other Northern nations, than ia any other communities. Theodoret in his Eccl. Hilt, fays of Ulphilas's converiion to Arianifm, 4C -Kur sxenion 8e tm x,('"" OvMpiDiaf avrat (Tar&at fcilicet) rawxowcf " nr, a j/.a.\a. nre&ono, nat th? wh»« \ayns aximTUf wn*M/ji£moti " .HojUK' t«to» xai Aoyoi; xarasMiXixraf Eu&|io{ xcu %fnpcci?i iaitufat " issetaau •BUfeov.tvaa't rut Bap£apa; rnv fiaaiXzui; xoiwviar attraraa 1 - " Sai' eitnai * 9reid))Wo> yap ei; to. pxlura to Mini tzvy^avov wxofgec- tfiu Ti yiiopitu tut) ^g.8o%u OvXQfra,, ra .. d Bulgaria, Hungary, Bohemia, Saxony, Denmark, Nor- way, Sweden, Poland, and Ruffia. Mofheim charges Boniface the Apoftle of the Germans with an exceffive zeal for increafing the Honors and pretentions of the facerdotal order and -a profound ignorance of many things, of which the knowlege was abfolutely neceffary in an Apoftle ; and particularly of the true nature and genius of the Chriftian Religion, Vol. II. p. 207. See alfo in Cave's Hift. Lit. a Letter from Joannes Smera Polovecius, giving an account of the corruptions of the Latin and Greek Churches ; and addreffedto the King of the Ruf- fians, when he and his Kingdom were converted to the Greek Church. Vol. II. p. 113. Chriftianity io6 SERMON III. Chriftianity was propagated among many of thefe nations j and that this mould finifh in " Lithuania the converfion of northern Europe in the fourteenth century. However, though' the contefts between the Weftern and Eaftern Chriftians were produ&ive of many evils; they produced alfo fome confiderable good. They hindered all parties from corrupting the Scrip- tures through fear of detection. They kept alive fome literary enquiries j and the fpirit, with which they were carried on, powerfully urged the different difputants to exert at times their utmoft abilities. Befides, the unfucceff- ful attempts, which were made to fupprefs thefe contentions and to effect an union of opinion among Chriftians, that there might be an union of operation alfo among them againft their common enemies, were productive of excellent confequences. The embaflies fent by the Greek Emperours into the Weft, and their journies thither at three different times, tended effectually to recall the attention of the Latins to f Greek literature ; and, by difperf- - e This may be conceded to Mr. Gibbon, without giving him the leaft advantage over real Chriftianity. See his Hiftory, Vol. V. p. 577. f The Greek language had been exiled from Italy upwards of 700 years, when Emanuel Cryfoloras (who had been fent by John Palasologus Emperour of Conftantinople to implore the affiftance of the weftern Chriftians) fet about the reftoration of it in that country. See Port. Royal Greek Grammar, Pref. p. 9 and 12. ing S E R M O N III. toy Jag among them the .means of attaining it, prepared the way for that Reformation, which was to fucceed and remedy- the evils of this unhappy period. The doctrines, which declare the internal ftate of the Church, and which were particu- larly defended or corrupted during the ages, which fill up the long period from Conftantine to the Reformation, confift either of^thofe fundamental doctrines of our Religion, which refpeft the Trinity, the perfon and natures of j our Saviour, and other fuch important articles of faith, which are received and profefled by ourfelves at prefent ; or of thofe corruptions of Chriftianity, which became .in fubfequent times the fubjecT: of our Reformation. The former fhew the effects of the degeneracy of the Chriftian world by the manner, in which they were defended : the latter by their very nature and Exigence. The former had the advantage of being finally eftablifhed in the earlier and lefs darkened part of this period. And certainly we have reafon to blefs God that they were then eftabliftied ; whatever the enemies of our Faith may E infinuate to the contrary, and whatever caufe we may have to difapprove of the manner in which it was done. The great do&rines of our Religion were de- * See Mr. Gibbon's Hifr. Vol.'fWehap. 47. livered io8 SERMON Iir. livered in the infpired writings with a precifion, which was abundantly Sufficient for the in- ftrudion of thofe, who were difpofed rather to obey the Word of God, than to look out for difputable matter in it. When fubtlety and vifionary fpeculation were afterwards in- troduced, the foundation was laid for he- refies, which embittered the minds of Chris- tians towards each other during the times of perfecution, and which, being afterwards in- creafed, made them endeavour to reftrain fuch duTentions by public decifions of the Church, as foon as the civil magistrate was ready to lend his affiftance on the occafion and to con- vene ecclefiafiical affemblies. We know what were the confirmed decifions of fuch affemblies before the end of the feventh century : we know alfo on what authority of Scripture thefe decifions ought to have been made. As to the concomitant circumftances with which they were adtually made, if thefe favour much of the corruption of the times, it is no more than we might expedt. If the decifions of different councils on the herefy of Arius, no lefs than on other fubjedts relative to the dodirines, above mentioned, of the Trinity and of our bleffed Saviour's Perfon and natures, were made in a tumultuous manner by men of ambitious views and of little perfect knowlege of Christianity, and S E RM OTST III. 109 fciid were alio enforced by the h fword ; it is no more than we might expedt from the ge- neral tranfa&ions of thofe times, and is a proof, in addition to numberlefs others fupplied by hifrory, that the Almighty is often pleafed to bring good out of evil. A1U that is efTential to our purpofe, is to know that the dodtrines in queftion, which are profefled by us at pre- fent and which after thefe deciiions were uni- verfally received before the end of the eighth century, are * Warranted by Scripture. While we have means to convince us of this, we have reafon to blefs that God, who did not fuffer his Church to fall into errors with regard to the great dodtrines of our Religion, which it, might afterwards have been unfpeakably more difficult to do away, than thofe palpable corruptions which were the fubjecl of our Re- formation : and, efpecially too, might this have been the cafe amidft the effervefcence of new opinions foon after the commencement of the Reformation -, when Socinus and his fol- lowers were found to furpafs every former fedr. of heretics in prefumptuous and degrading af- h The Arian perfuafion prevailed longeft among the Goths in Italy and the Vandals in Africa, and is faid to have been fuppreffed among them both by the fWord of Belifarius. * See an attempt to prove this at large in two Sermons preached before the Uniwrfity of Oxford- 'by the author — in J79I. fertions no Sermon in. fertions concerning the perfon of Chrift* and the nature of ouf redemption 1 . ! -" As to the corruptions, which were the fub- "je£b of our Reformation, niariy of thefe began foon after the civil eftablifhrnent of our Re- ligion: but they went on increafihg afterwards in- 1 a rapid proportion; uniting themfelves as they advanced to new and fimilar corruptions, ■and forming at length that rriafs of impiety, which difgraced the Chriftian profeflion and totally eradicated all devotional Religion, till it was diftinguifhed from true Chriftianity and feparated from it. Among thefe the worfhip of faints and images and the whole confequent train of idolatry may be faid to have k com- menced with that fubordinate worfhip of mar- tyrs, which ' Eufebius and other well-meaning rulers of the Church approved and promoted in the days of Conftantine. The' abfurd ve- k Cave fays, " nullum pro imaginibus citari teftem quarto " feculo anteriorem." Hift. Lit. Vol. I. p. 650. In the fourth century, however, fuch kind of idolatrous wor- fhip appears to have introduced itfelf : iince Epiphanius in his epiftle to the Bilhop of Jerufalem fays that coming into a ' Church, " inveni ibi velum pendens in foribus ejufdem ecclefee " tindtum atque depiftum, et habens imaginem quafi Chrifti " vel fan&i cujufdam. Non enim fatis memini cujus iniago " fuerit. Cum ergo hoc vidifTem in ecclefia Chrifti cqntra *' au&oritatem fcripturarum hominis pendere imaginem, fcidi "illud,"&c. Jerome's Works, Tom. ii. p. 161. Bafil 1565. 1 Jortin's Rem. Vol. III. p.,11 and 289. Cave's Hiit. Lit. Vol. I. p. 650. neration SERMON III. hi iteration of the crofs began with m Helena, mother of Coriftantine : and that of reli&s with his fuccefior Conftantius, who firft dif- tinguifhed himfelf by the removal of them- , Even n Jerome and Ambrofe gave their uiv , qualified fan&ion to injudicious ° mortifications and to the long train of articles of will-wor- fhip, which enfued, by declaiming againft mar- riage and by recommending monaftic vows under the jmoft p injurious circumftances. The fatal cbnfequencest which proceeded, in the progrefs of more than a thoufand years, from thefe and Other fuch unhappy commence- ments, may all be faid to have ultimately arifen from two principles, totally repugnant to the •dodfcrines of Revelation : the one, that lyes are m S. Severus, p. 370 — 374. Rufinus, Hift. Eccl. 1. i. c.}. Ed. Grynaei 1587. Socrates, Hift. Eccl. I.i. c. 17. Reading, n Jortin's Rem. Vol. II. p. 289. It may be obferved in general that, when external perfe- cutions ceafed, Chriftians began to vie with each other in in- flicting voluntary punifhments on themfelves. f " Jerome drew a noble matron the mother of many chil- dren away from Rome with him, and was the means offending her about to vifit the different Monks of the Eaft, and to fquan- der the fortune of her family upon them." "_ Ambrofe was fo violent a declairher in favour of virginity, that he exhorts young girls in one of his treatifes to enter into Nunneries even againft the advice of their parents." Jortin's Rem. Vol. IIL- p. 37 and 40. Jortin makes Erafmus fay in a fimilar manner of the Monks themfelves, " thefe men fay that you muft follow Jefus Chrift, " though you were to trample upon the bodies of your father ,f and mother." Life of Erafmus, Vol.1, p. 71. admiffible ii2 s e a:m on in. -admiffible in defence of truth j the other, that mental imperfection is to f be - remedied by bodily fufiering. Principles, whicJh many of the q Fathers of the Church contributed to eftablifh, r Hence all the fictitious miracles, which gave faixSion to the worship of * Saints, their images, and relicts: which gave this worfhip a general and firm footing before the end of the J fixth century, made it triumph over all the oppofition of the Eaftern Empe- rours- in the eighth century, and made it tri- umph ultimatejy over the moderation with which the principal "Kingdoms of Weilern Europe for fome ages received it. Hence alfo the diversified difplay of monaftic inftitutions, the celibacy enforced on the Clergy, the doc- trines of purgatory and of prayers for the dead, the fantaftic penances, the crufades, persecu- tions, difpenfations, and indulgences j to fay nothing of the ceremonies, which difgraced Chriflianity during thefe times. As to the corruptions relative to the Sacrament^ thefe had a late origin. Communion without a i Ambrofe, Hilary, Auguftine, Gregory Naziajizen, and Jerome. See jortin's Rem, Vol. IV. p. 19, 20. ' See Jortin's 3d Charge, Sermons, Vol. VII. p. 410— 415. 5 And particularly of the Virgin Mary. * Gibbon's Hift. Vol. V. p. 9;. 1 France, England, Spain, and Germany. Gibbon, Vol. V. p. 131. See Collier's Eccl. Hift. Vol. I. p. 139 — 142. participation S-E R MO N III., 113 * participation of the cup, * tranfubftantiation, audi all the circumftances relative to the r ado- ration of the Hoft, (of which many were the effects of trivial and accidental fuggeftions from the ignorant * populace) can pretend to no early eftablifhment. The a refufal of the Scrip- w Pope Pafchal in the 1 2th century ordered the Sacrament to be adminiftred under one kind only. But the Laity in En- gland had it in both kinds. for zoo years after the Conqueit. Collier's Eccl. Hilt. Pref. p. u. and Vol. I. p. 489. * Though •tranfubftantiation' was broached by-Radbertus in the year 818; (Jortin's, Rem. Vol, IV. p. 484.] yet it was not eftablifhed before the time or Innocent the third who lived in the ijth century. Moiheim, Vol. III. p. 243. and Cave's Hift.Lit.Vol.il. p. 276. f " The- hanging up and adoring of the Hoft was but lately, •* fet up, fays Cranmer, by Pope Innocent and Honorius." Burnet's Hift. Vol. II. p. 116. "' This was the cafe with both the Proceffion and the Feftival of the holy Sacrament. Jortin's Rem. Vol.V. p. 472. And Moiheim, Vol. III. p. 261. a See an account of this in a preceding note, v p. 85. I may add that the Romanifts not only attempted to bring the Scrip- tures into difufe, but alfo into difcredit. Wickliff's followers urged againlt the preaching Friars that they laid blafphemous imputations on the Scriptures, and charged them with herefy. Collier's Eccl. Hift. Vol. I. p. 579. Moiheim fays, " the Popes permitted their champions to " indulge themfelves openly in reflections, injurious to the dig- " nity of the Scriptures, and by an excefs of blafphemy almoft" " incredible to declare -publickly that the edidls of the Pontics " and the records of oral tradition were fuperior in point of " authority to the exprefs language of Scripture." Vol IV- p. 213. To the fame eiFeft Bp. Jewell fays, •' Indulgentis *' (inquit Pierias) auttoritate Scripture non innotuerunt nobis, " fed au&oritate Romanae EccleiisRomanorumque Pontijficum, " quae major eft. Pighius etiam non dubitet dkere injuffu Ro- " manae Ecclefias ne clariffimse quidern fcriptura? credendum." Apol. pro. Eccl. Anglic, p. 121 And fuch at length was the confequence of the early corruptions introduced into Chriftianity I fc y r*4 SERMON III. tuires to the people, in the common lan- guage, which, with fome of the corruptions juil ftated, has been mentioned as a political confequence of the ufurpations of the rulers of the Church, was accompanied at length with a fimilar refufal of all the different parts of religious b worfhip and e inftru6tion. Such prohibitions, however, muft be confidered not only as a confequence, but alfo in fubfequent ages as an additional and aggravating eaufe, of the perverfion of our Religion. But, in whatever manner they are confidered, they ferve confpicuoufly to withdraw pure Chrifti- anity from the difgraceful fcenes of this un- happy period, and leave the profligacy of the by philofophy and of the attempts afterwards made to conceal and vilify the Sriptures ; that, after the Lutheran controverfy had been long carried on, many of the Monks in Scotland were fo ignorant of their contents, as to charge Luther with being the author of that wicked book, called the New Teftament. Jortin's Life of Erafmus, Vol. I. p. 126. See alfo on this fubjeft Cave's Hift. Lit. Vol. II. Append, p. 158. k The Latin form of worlhip, which had for many ages be- fore been ftrongly recommended by the Popes, was at length enforced in all the Weftern Churches by Gregory the feventh. Molh. Vol.11, p. 573. c Our Homily againft Rebellion (part the 6th) fays, " very " few of the moft ftmple people were taught the Lord's prayer, " the articles of faith,- or the ten commandments, otherwife " than in Latin." But Burnet goes much farther* and fays of the beginning of the reign of Hen. VHIth. " If any taught " their children the Lord's prayer, the ten commandments and " the Apoftles' Creed, in the vulgar tongue; that was crime " «nough to bring them to the ftake." Hift. Ref. Vol. I. p. 3 1 . profefiars >1 sermon: hi. ii 5 -proieflbrs of our Religion to be imputed moft exclufively to themfelves. All thefe erroneous doctrines and ufages ap- pear to have been maintained, with very few exceptions, by both the Romanifts and Greeks. The infignificancy of the e charges, which Michael Cerularius urged againft the Latins in the eleventh century, while it proves the finifter zeal of the difputant who urged them, proves alfo that the great corruptions of Chriftianity at that period were common to the whole Chriftian world. Even when the difference between the Weftern and Eaftem Churches was afterwards reduced to f four d Among thefe one of the principal exceptions is, that the Greeks did not refufe the, cup to the Laity. * That they ufed unleavened bread at the Lord's Supper : — that they did not abftain from tilings ftrangled and from blood : that the Monks ate lard, and permitted their infirm brethren to eat flefh : that the Bifhops adorned their fingers with rings, as if they had been bridegrooms : that the Priefts were beardlefs : and that in baptifm they ufed only one im- merfion. Mofh. Vol. II. p. 556 — 7. f The four articles refpefted the proceffion of the Holy Ghoft, the ufe of leavened or unleavened bread in the facri- fice, the do&rine of purgatory, and the authority of the Pope". The difputants for the two Churches appear not to have differed elTentially in their tenets concerning purgatory ; though they could come to no decifive conclufion concerning it. bee Du Pin's Hift. of the controverfies of the 1 5th century, p. 37. Eng. Ed. But though formerly the great corruptions of the Koinifh Church were in general chargeable on the Greeks, and the dif- ference between the Creeds of the two Communions was not important ; yet the confeflion of Faith, which was publilhed by the Greeks in the laft century, proves that they differ con- I 2 fiderably tx6 SERMON III. articles, that only, which related to the Pro* ceffion of the Holy Ghoft, was a do&rine of •Faith, on which they appear to have really and eflentially differed. With regard to the external ftate of the Church during this period, it has been E re- marked that Chriftianity was fo much altered and defaced after its civil eflablifhment, as to ftand in need of the protection of the civil power j and had it not enjoyed this protection, Paganifm itfelf (if refined and new-modelled) might have had too many advantages over it. The remark is entirely juft. And this un- happy . alteration in our Religion might well render the evils, to which it was expofed from foreign enemies, a fubjedt of terror to all thofe among its profeflbrs, whofe apprehenfions were not relieved by a confideration of its divine origin, and of the aflurances which have been given us of its ftability and perpetual duration. The invafions of the Goths, and of various other nations from the North, who, purfuing the fame rout after the Goths, overwhelmed in fucceffive ages all the civilized kingdoms of Southern Europe, were fo deftrudtive during fiderably at prefent from the Romanifts in many refpedb. It appears, however, that their tenets in thefe refpedb are unfor- tunately different alfo from thofe of other Chriltian focieties. Mofh. Vol. IV. p. 250. « Jortin's Rem. Vol.11, p. 337. thofe SERMON III. 117 thofe times, and have fince produced fuch lafting effects j that they form the principal part of our hiftory during the four centuries which immediately followed the Reign of Con - ftantine. But, the danger, which they feemed to threaten to the eftablifhed profeflion of Chriftianity, was of very fhort continuance. The Northern invaders conquered, indeed, at different times all the different parts of the Roman Empire, except that which immedi- ately h furrounded Constantinople; and often obtained forcible poffeflion of Rome. But, in juftice to their moderation it has been infifted that they did very little injury to the monu- ments of art or to the ' religious edifices, which adorned the old Capitol of the world. And the danger, which their invafions might at firft threaten to the profeflion of our Re- ligion, was fully done away by the readinefs and permanency, with which they themfelves became its converts. The greater!: evils, which Chriftianity had to expect from, foreign enemies, were to be feared from thofe, who every where declared themfelves not lefs hoftile to its difcriminating doctrines, than to the perfons of its profeflbrs. h Socrates, Hift. Eccl. l.v. c. 1. et 1. vi. c. 6. Sozomen, Hift. Eccl. 1. vi. c. 39. 1 ■ Sozomen fays that Alaric, when he took Rome, had fuch reverence for St. Peter that he permitted his Church to be ah Afylum. Hift. Eccl. 1. ix. c. 9. I 3 » About ii$ S E R;M O N ill. , About thf beginning of the feventh century thofe k Churches of Alia, which had been the diftingukhed care of the ApoJftles and peculia* objects of divine Revelation, were funk into a grofs degeneracy both of Faith and practice. About the &me time alfo the ' Perfians, Ro-? mans, and northern Barbarians fe.em to, have reached their period of greater!: profligacy and 4ifof$er, A 1 this feafonabie junclajre Maho^ met, the, artful and warlike impoffcor of Arabia, arofe to delude, and perfecute mankind. Aware of his own fraud, and of the neceffity of con-^ ciliating the minds of men, he accommodated his dodtrines to the " prepofleffions of all around hirn in a manner totally different from whatever has been obferved in the Revelations of the God of truth. He not only endeavoured, by the affiftance of the Jewifh and Chriftian "Scriptures to form a Religion, which might be k Evagrius defcribes the Churches of the Eaft, as being in 3 miferable ftaje pf confufion even in the fifth century. Hift. Eccl. 1. iii. c. 30. Reading. 1 Gibbon, Vol. V. p. 281. m Jortin has remarked, that without this he never could have made five converts. Rem. Vol.JI. p. 278. n Jortin fays that " Mahotnetifm is a borrowed Syftem, " made up for the moft part of Judaifm and Chriftianity ; and '.'if it be confidered in the moft favourable view, might pof* " fibly be accounted a fort of Chriftian herefy. If the Gofpel " had never been preached, it may be queftioned whether Ma- " hometifm would have exifted. Its author was an ignorant " knave and fanatic, who had neither feill nor genius to form " a religion out of his own head." Firft Charge, Sermons, Vol. VII. p. 369. received SERMON IIJ. 119 received by both Jews and Chriftians as confif- tent in fome degree with their own, and which might flatter the prejudices of his countrymen who hoafted of &eir defcent from Abraham-^ but farther alfo he dared to plead Divine au- thority for indulging the impurity of his fol- lowers in this life, and for promifing them „a continuance of their impure gratifications in the regions of eternal happinefs. The cfr- cumftances of the times, or the juft indig- nation of the Almighty gave fuccefs to the impoftor.; while at the fame time fucb. marks of imposition were left on bimfelf and his Religion, as might for ever make known the real characters of " both. Though It is not -from Prideaux and other writers of former times only, that we are to feek for fevere condemnations of both Mahomet and the Koran. Volney', who is among the lateft and molt intelligent travellers into the Eaft, fays, " It certainly " may be afferted fafely that of all the men, who have ever ** dared to give laws to nations, ;Mahomet was the moft igno- " rant; of all the abfurd compofitions ever produced, none is *' more truely wretched than his book." Vol. II. p. 397. Engl. Edir^ And Mr. Whitaker afferts in his " origin of Arianifm dif- clofed" that Mahomet " betraved his ignorance in a form fo " very palpable and grofs upon his very Koran, as feems to be " intended for the mint-mark of God himfelf in order to mow *' the falfityof his infpiration to every eye," p. 336. In fup- port of his aflertion he then gives many particular inftances of this ignorance and expofes the weaknefs of the attempts, made by Sale and the Mahometans, to palliate its abfurdiyes, p. 336 — 360. Afterwards in the fame chapter, he ftigmatizes thp grofs obfcenity both of the Mahometan Prophet and Religions and of Mr. Gibbon who is.their. advocate ; expofes the. perjury fanftioned by the example of Mahomet ; and fatisfaftorily fhews I 4 that, i2o SERMON III. p three out of his four immediate fucceflbrs fell by the hands of aflaflins -, yet fuch fuccefs attended the zeal with which the profeflbrs of his Re- ligion fought, that all the provinces both of Alia and Africa, which bordered on Arabia, foon became fubjecT: to them. And fo widely did their conquefts extend % that they fubdued alfo a confiderable part of Europe, and made 'fuch advances towards the conqueft of the re- maining parts, that the entire conqueft of them is faid to have been hindered by a defeat, which Mr. Gibbon afcribes fo exclufively to the valour of an 9 individual, as to declare that the Clergy are indebted for their exiftence to his fword. That fuch, indeed, was the ftate of our Religion both with regard to its pro- feflbrs and its doctrines, that neither the Eaft- «rn nor Weftern Chriftians oppofed to the in- that, though he was affifted in the composition of his Koran by an excommunicated Chriftian, his principal affiftance came from the Jew, Abdia Ben Salon ; fo that Mr. Whitaker, p. 396. calls Mahometanifm " a kind of Jewiih herefy, " which we have juft before feen called " a fort of Chriftian herefy" by Dr Jortin. As a confequenc of the fanftion, juftly faid by Mr. Whitaker to be given by Mahomet to perjury, I {hall produce the fol- lowing fa£l on the authority of Mr. Gibbon. " Four thonfand citizens of Herat of a grave character and mature age unani- mously fwore that an idolatrous fane," which they had juft burnt, " never exifted," By this meritorious oath (as it was thought) they and their city efcaped all punifhment for the outrage. Gibbon's Hift. Vol. V. p. 384. ■* Omar, Othman, and Ali. Abubeker the firft of his fuc- ceflbrs reigned only two years. 9. Charles MarteJ. See Mr.. Gibbon, Vol. V. p. 41 2. roads SERMON III. 121 roads of Mahometan enthufiafm the infinite advantage^ which the fuperior purity of their Religion ought to have afforded them, may readily be confefled. But, notwithstanding the unworthinefs of Chriftians, we cannot &> readily confefs that the Almighty ought to be excluded from fome particular fhare in the 1 defeat here referred to. We need go no far- ther than to this hiftorian's own words to prove the contrary. After the feventh day's conteft, which (as the Saracens had ftill the undifturbed pofTeffion of their camp) appears by no means to have been irrecoverably deci- five, he fays — «« In the diforder and defpair " of the night the various tribes of Yemen *' and Damafcus, of Africa and Spain, were " provoked to turn their arms againft each " other : the remains of their Hofl were fud- " denly difTolved, and each Emir confulted " his fafety by an hafty and feparate retreat." Surely, this refembles * defeats, which Chrif- tians want no human authority to refer folely to God. But, this is not the only occurrence of the fort with regard to fuch enemies of our Faith, which is worthy of our notice, and which is ' Gibbon's Hjft. Vol. V. p. 411. ' See the 8th Chapter of Judges, and the 7th Chapter of (he iecpnd book of Kings. recorded 322 .SJE R/M O N Ilf. recorded by the feme hifiorian. The manner, in which Rome was l preferved from a formidf able attack of the Saracens by She difperfion and total deftrudtipn of their fleet ; the pre~ Xeryation of CQaftaostiWjple from alarming and repeated attacks of the feme enemies in fheir early hiftory by the apparently accidental dif* je#*ery qfa moil deftru^ifve u fire $ the prefeF- Tiataon of it alfo from the meditated attack of ." Zengis Khan ; the y difprdar,, by which B&- jazet's fury againft the Christians wa,s fufpend^ ed ; his * defeat and defbouStion by Timour 5 .and the fortunate r efeape of Constantinople from the victorious * Timour himfelf -, all thefe remarkable circumftaaces are admitted by our hifiorian and well known. It is pre- fumptuous and often fallacious to reafon from events in human hiftory to the eftablifhment ' Gibbon, Vol. IV. p. 441. " Gibbon, Vol, V. p. 399— -405. This fire was difcoverefl by Callinicus an Egyptian in 'the 7th century, and called by the Greeks " vypoi wup." Bp. Warburton's Julian, .p. 234. See alfo Jortin's Rem. Vol. IV. p. 430. x Gibbon, Vol. VI. p. 308. y Ibid. p. 323. Mr. Gibbon's words in this paffage are well worthy of our notice: " His progrefs, ;feysr Mr. G. was check- " ed, not by the miraculous interpofiuon of the Apoftle (St. " Peter), not by a crufade of the Chriftian powers, but by a "long and painful fit of the gout." Doubtlefs, the hiftoriaji might have fpared his reflections on the occafion ; as Bajazet's diforder, at this critical juncture, might, notwithftanding all ,that he infinuates to the contrary, have ftill been eminently pro- vidential. > z Gibbon, Vol. VI. p. 330. ' . a Ibid. JM. VI. p. 357. Of S E R M O N: HE 123 of particular and immediate interpofitions of Providence. But, the moft moderate eftimate of thefe circumftances, as conne&ed with our Religion, ought at leaft to exclude all boaftings of infidelity, and all farcaftic reflections con- cerning the means by which we now have an opportunity in this * our feat of learning to demonftrate the truth of the Chriftian, rather than that of the Mahometan Religion. Through thefe c deliverances "Weftern Eu- rope and Constantinople were refcued from the power of the Mahometans and of all the b Gibbon, Vol. V. p. 409. c Such obfervations, however, muft be confidered as oppofed to the fneers of our adverfaries, rather than as employed in the elucidation of events on which the exiftence of our religion can be thought to have ever depended. For it is falfe in fact that a Religion, fo founded as Chriftianity, muft be extirpated, or effentially endangered, if it fhould ceaie to be eftablifhed by civil authority. Chriftianity has no neceffary dependence upon earthly power. We know that it flourifhed under the perfecu- tion of the Roman Emperours, and in the end converted its perfecutors. We know that it afterwards converted the favage conquerors from the North. And we know from authority, which we cannot doubt, that it muft at length convert its Ma- hometan >oppreffors. In the mean time alfo we are aflured that all the cruelty and all the perfidy of the Mahometans have not been able to extirpate it in any of their dominions either of Europe or Afia. Indeed, the authority of 'Mr. Gibbon him- felf may be brought to prove, that the Northern coaft of Africa is the only land where the light of the Gofpel has been totally extinguiihed after a long and perfect eftahlifhment. (Vol.'V. p. 386). And even this extinction of it, if referred to its pro- per caufe, muft be referred to the devastations of the plague, of famine, and the fword ; which laid wafte this country not long before its conqueft by the Saracens, (Gibbon's Hift. Vol. IV. p. 276. 3 3 1 . &c.) and not to the Religion, or to the power pf unbelievers. external 124 SERMON III. external enemies of Chriftianity, till the Chnf- tians of Weftern Europe had eftahlifhed their powerful Kingdoms j Kingdoms, which con- fpicuoufly partake of the iron afcribed to theni in Daniel's d prophenes : till learning had be-r gun to flourifh in theft Kingdoms by an * im- portation from Constantinople of all the means of cultivating it .-, and its perpetuity alfo had been infured by the art of printing ; till a Re-; formation of Chriftianity was about to com- mence : and till, from the united influence of all thefe caufes, fuch barriers were formed for the fupport of our Religion, as have fince raifed it far above all apprehenfion from ex- ternal enemies. Such are the outlines of the Chriftian hif- tory from the time of Conftantine to the Re- formation ; as far in general as relates to the degeneracy of the rulers of the Church, to the confufion of facred and profane learning, to the invafions of favage conquerors ; and to the effects produced, under thefe leading princi- ples, on the Romifh and Greek Communions, on the doctrines of the Church, and on its d Dan. ii. 41,42. See Lowth's Commentary. e Not only were great numbers of very valuable books im- ported into Weftern Europe by different Greek Emperours on their journeys thither ; but, farther, Conftantinople had been taken, pofll-ffed fixty years, and exhaulfcd of many of its Jite- rrsry treafures by the Weftern Chriftians before it was taken by the Turks. fituation SERMON III. 125 fituation with regard to external enemies. And fo little reafon is there for the farcafms, which are levelled againft our Religion in confequence of any corruptions of this period ; fince it ap- pears that thefe corruptions all proceeded, in reality, from the depravity of our nature, and the want of a proper application of Chrifiia- nity to counteract and fubdue it. ' Indeed, the corruption of the antidiluvian world under the Revelation originally given to mankind, of the Heathen world under the precepts of Noah and the light of nature, of the Jews under the Mofaical covenant, and laftly of the Christians under the fecure and eftablifhed profeflion of the Gofpel, all tend to prove the fame great truths : they tend to prove incontrovertibly both the inveterate de- pravity of our nature, and that the God of all the nations of the earth has univerfally ordained that the bleffings, deducible -from the religious information which he affords them, fhall de- pend in an eminent degree upon their own vo- luntary and regular ufe of it. SERMON IV. i PET. III. 15. Be ready always to give an anfwer to every man, that ajketh you a reafon of the Hope that ts ill you. HAVING given a fketch of the hiftory of our Religion from its complete pub- lication after the refurredtion of Chrift to the commencement of the Reformation, I mall now proceed to ftate a few general obferva- .. tions concerning the Reformation, and then confine myfelf (according to the plan which I have laid down) to the particular hiftory of our own Church. The corruptions, charged on the profeflbrs of our Religion in the darker ages, mull not be fuppofed to have paued, even in the worft times, without cenfure or without many un- fuccefsful attempts towards their reformation^. The Church of Chrift has always had feme faithful members, who have zealoufly borne * witnefs to the truth. In the Eaft thofe who ; * See Bp. Newton on the Prophefies, Vol. IK. p. 147 — 197. oppofed 128 SERMON IV. oppofed the prevailing corruptions were often b called by general and ambiguous -names Maf* feliani or Euchitae ; as thofe of the Weft were called Waldenfes or Albigenfes. The former were confounded with wild and irrational c he- retics of various defcriptions ; and this was the cafe alfo with many of the latter. Men, who fmarted under their cenfures, would certainly attempt by every means to leffen their credit : and fuch men, it muft be confeffed, often had good foundation for the charges which they retorted upon their cenfurers. For, it cannot be matter of wonder that the profefibrs of Chriftianity, who condemned the abufes of it in thofe ages, mould often have wanted know- lege and * coolnefs of judgement to point out a proper remedy for the exorbitant evils, qf which they complained -, or that they mould often have contradicted each other in matters of the greateft confequence. But, however thefe friends to reformation might differ in other refpedts, they were ' unanimous in affert- ing that the vulgar Religion was falfe, and b Jortin's Remarks, Vol. V. p. 215. c Concerning the Mafl"aliani or Euchitse fee Cave's Hilt Lit. Vol. II. p. 199 : and concerning the Waldenfes or Albi- genfes fee the fame work, Vol. II. p. 182. — Bp. Newton on the Prophefies, Vol. III. p. 171, &c— And Jortin's fourth Charge, Sermons, Vol. VII. p. 436, 437. *, Collier's Eccl. Hift. Vol. I. p. 625 and 697. e Jortin's Remarks, Vol. V. p. 386. that SERMON IV. 129 that the Popes were ufurpers. And however ignorant and injudicious fome of them may appear to have been ; yet there were in the midft of the dark ages men, who were advo- cates for a s rational profeffion of Chriftianity, and who knew the proper means by which it was to be promoted. While g Arnold of Brefcia difplays the moft diftinguiihed zeal and learn- ing in oppofition to the corruptions of the twelfth century; Bifhop h Grofthead, Wick- liff, and Hufs prove in the ' three centuries, which immediately followed, that fuch zeal and learning were, moreover, united at times with judgement in fupport of true Chriftianity long before the fuccefsful commencement of any reformation in its public profeffion. It was hot before the means of acquiring juft and f See Bp. Jewell's Apology for the Church of England, p. 93—96. s Arnold preached in the 1 2th century for many years with great fnccefs in Rome itfelf againft: the fecular power of the Pope and the Clergy. He fell, however, at length an un- happy victim to his zeal, being burnt in the year 1 155. Mo- fheim, Vol. III. p. 119. See alfo with regard to Arnold Bp. Newton on the Prophefies, and the Authors cited by him on the occafion, Vol. III. .p. 169. h A fate fimilar to Arnold's would certainly have befallen our learned Bifhop Grofthead ; if the Pope had not been afraid to proceed to extremities againft him. Jortin's Rem. Vol. V. p. 365. See alfo concerning Grofthead Collier's Eccl. Hift. Vol. I. p. 460 — 2, and Bp. Newton on the Prophefies, Vol. III. p. 181. 1 Grofthead flourifhed about the year 1235 : Wickliff about 1360 : and Hufs was cited to anfwer for his Opinions in 41 1. K diftincT: I jo S E R, M ON IV. diftinft notions of facred and profane learning' had been fupplied, nor before fuch notions had been widely diffufed, that any general refor r mation of our Religion was undertaken with fuccefs. The " fchifin of the Antipopes and other internal caufes of decay certainly ihook the Papal throne ; but the whole foundation of Papal tyranny was undermined by the pre- valence of found and difcriminating learning. Chriftianity had been urfl propagated in an age of fuch learning, and was again to revive with it : though not, indeed, before true Re- ligion had once more experienced the worft efFe&s from fuperftition. The evils, which had flowed from the fuperftition and idolatry of the Heathen world, were again experienced under the corruptions of Chriftianity. ' Pro- tagoras, Diagoras, and others among the an- cientsliad been made Atheifts by the wretched k It was during this fchifm that Wickliff efcaped in Eng- land, by the interpofition of the nobles, from two different attempts, which the Archbifliop of Canterbury and the Clergy made to deftroy him. Fuller's Hift. Cent. xiv. p. 136. 1 Stillingfleet's Ofig. Sac. p. 10. Sherlock fays in his difcourfe on Providence, " The univer- " fal deluge and the confufion of languages had fo abundantly " convinced mankind of a divine power and Providence ; that " there was no fuch creature as an Atheift, till their ridiculous "idolatries had tempted fome men of wit and thought rather " to own no GoJ, than fuch as the Heathens worftiipped." P. 204. idolatry SERM ON IV. 131 idolatry of their country : and m fchools of Atheifin are faid to have been actually opened in Italy towards the clofe of the dark night of Chriftian idolatry. Or rather this may be deduced in both inftances from the application of ah unfound philofophy to the devices of a moft degenerate fuperftition. And indeed it is an effect too fenfibly experienced at prefent in countries, diftinguifhed by fuch philofophy and fuch fuperftition. But accuracy in human learning and a knowlege of true Chriftianity were at length to be united and to prevail. No fooner did the ftores of literature, which in the 13th, 14th, and 15th centuries had been imported from Conftantinople and even under n Papal patronage multiplied by the arts of Weilern Europe, excite a ° general zeal m Jortin's Rem. Vol. V. p. 500. Paracelfus, Rabelais, and Montague iffued from this School. And, probably, thofe Epicurean Atheifts of whom Erafmus obferves that none ex- claimed louder againft Luther's errors ; (Jortin's Life of Eraf- mus, Vol. I. p. 283.) and of whom he appears to fpeak when he fays, " Ego Roma; hifce auribus audivi quofdam abominan- dis blafphemiis debacchantes in Chriftum, et in illius Apoftolos : idque multis mecum audientibus, et quidem impune. Ibidem mukos novi qui commemorabant fe di&a horrenda audiifle a quibufdam facerdotibus auls Pontificiae miniftris, idque in ipfa mifia, tarn clare ut ea vox ad multorum aures pervenerit. Jortin's Life of Erafmus, Vol. I. p. ,507. " That particularly of pope Nicolas the 5th. Molh. Vol. III. p. 391. The education, which Henry the 7th (who was an illiter- ate Prince) gave to his Son Henry the 8th, and which Henry the 8th gave not only to his Son Prince Edward, but alfo to K 2 both 13? SERMO N IV. among the Latins for the Jftudy of the learned languages, and particularly of the original f Scriptures ; than Luther arofe at the com- mencement of the next century not only to declaim, like his predeceflbrs in reformation, againft the corruptions of the Romifh Church; but alfc to feparate a confiderable part of Weftern Chriflendom from it. How far * fei- parations may warrantably be made from the eflablifhed Religion, it is eafy enough at pre- fent to determine. When we have eflential objections to oppofe to fundamental articles of it i we are justifiable in deferring it. Prior and •both his Daughters Mary and Elizabeth, *nd the learning of King J ames may ferve to mow .the 7&A excited at this time in favour of the learned languages. f The Scriptures, faid the Bp. of Hereford in fupport of Cranmer, were commonly JtadiesL by the i.aity in the original languages, and, therefore, it was in vain to think they could be governed by the arts, which in the former ages of ignorance had been fo effectual.' Burnet's Hift. of the Ref. Vol. I. p. 214. Among thofe who were diftinguifhed about the time of the Reformation as the great revivers of literature both facred and profane, Erafmus Hands foremoft. 'He, as was commonly faid of the Reformation, laid the egg, and Luther hatched it. Bp. Stillingfleet exprefsly fays, " It was not Luther or Zuinglius, *' that contributed fo much to the Reformation as Erafmus, ef- *' pecially among us in England. For Erafmus was the man " who awakened men's underftandings, and brought them from " the Friar's Divinity to a .relifli of general Learning." It is remarkable that Erafmus's Edition of the Greek Tefta- ment was publifhed in 15 16, the year before the commence- ment of Luther's Reformation. Before this .publication Stil- lingfleet fays there was not above one Greek Teftament to be found in all Germany. Jortin's Life of Erafmus, Vol.11, p-64. 1 See on this fubject Chillingworth's Safe-Way, &c. Folio, 4th Edit, i 674. p. 1 96— 240. invincible SERMON, IV. 133 invincible obligations to truth demand foch conduct from us. That it was difficult for men to determine this queftion in ages of ig- norance, fuperftition, and perfecution, is ex- ceedingly probable : that it was both dange- rous and difficult to effedt any religious repa- ration under fuch circumstances cannot be doubted. r Luther, however, fucceeded in the arduous attempt. Early in the 1 6th century this learned advocate for religious liberty and truth dared publickly to arraign both the ty- ranny and fuperftition of the Romifh Church. Whatever were his original motives of aclion> it is certain that he was the great inftrument, which Providence was pleafed to ufe in the reformation of our Religion, and that through his * unparalleled courage and perfeverance r See a fliort and excellent account of him in Cave's Hilt. Lit. Vol. II. p. 249—250. Append. * " Luther had as much courage as Alexander and Julius " Casfar put together." Jortin's Life of Erafmus,Vol.I. p. 258. He was, as Cave fays, " vir fi quis alius invi&i atque imperj- territi animi." Hill. Lit. Vol. Tl. App. p. 250. Though he had the perfidious and cruel treatment of Hufs before his eyes, he ventured to defend his caufe in an open difputatiori with the Romanifts. What his danger on the occafion was, we' may in- fer from the reproaches, with which the Emperour Charles load- ed himfelf for having fuffered him to retire afterwards under the folemn engagement, which had been made for his perfonal fafety. When the affairs of the poor Proteftants about the year ,1550 were fo bad in all appearance, that Melanfthon was quite dejected and overwhelmed with forrow, Jortin fays (Life of Erafmus, Vol.1, p. 500) that Luther, who had more cou- rage, wrote him many excellent letters of confolation. It may be remarked even with regard to the violence, which appears K 3 to 134 SERMON IV. thofe nations of Northern Europe, which had been converted to Chriftianity by the ' fword, were among the firft who had an unreftrained accefs to the holy Scriptures. From his time Chriftianity began to affume its genuine ap- pearance. And fo much were mankind pleafed with the profpedt, which now opened upon them, that Luther did not long ftand forth the fole adverfary of Papal corruption. He was foon joined by adherents, fufficient in number and influence to enfure, under Provi- dence, the fecurity of his perfon and the fu- ture fuccefs of his caufe. And though thefe, like former advocates for reformation, might differ from each other in particular tenets ; yet, like thofe alfo, they univerfally agreed in the neceflity of pulling down that fabrick of pride and fuperftition, which had fo long been venerated in the See of Rome. Were it poffible within the limits of the prefent Difcourfe to inveftigate the progrefs of the Reformation, which enfued in different to have been the confequence of Luther's undaunted fpirit, that it was really neceffary under his circumftances. He could not have been fupported againft the Church of Rome, except by an open breach and force of arms. Had he fallen in with the mild and timid meafures, fo often recommended to him by Erafmus ; the Reformation in Germany would foon have been ftifled by a bloody inquifition, as it was in Spain and other Countries. * See the Iaft Sermon. countries ; SERMON IV. 135 countries ; the investigation would certainly furnifh us with much ufeful entertainment. It would fumifh us, however, at the fame time with difcoveries, humiliating to the pride of man. We mould find that fome of the worft paffions of our nature were exerted by injudicious zeal in the propagation of truth j and that perfecutions of the moft cruel kind were ufed to influence religious Faith, in a greater or kfs degree, by every " reformed Communion. We mould find alfo (to fay nothing of the enormous opinions of r Socinus u Dean Tucker,, in his Letters to Dr. Kippis, fays, (p. 31 .) " ftrange as it is to tell, there was not a man of all the numerous " Setts of Proteftants at their firft feparation from the Church of " Rome, who fo far entered into the fpirit of the Reformation, " or was fo far confiftent with his own principles, as to allow " to others the liberty which he claimed to himfelf." And p. 32.) he. fays farther, " the idea of being a confiftent Pro- *' teftant never entered into the head of any man for upwards " of feventy years after the Reformation began." Even Me- lanfthon j unified the burning of Servetus for herefy or blafphe- my, as he calls it. Jortin's 4th Charge, Sermons, Vol. VII. p. 440: We know in our own country that heretics were not only put to death in the time of Henry the 8th, Edward the 6th, and Elizabeth ; but alfo fo late as in the 9th year of James the firft. Fuller's Hift. Cent. xvii. p. 64. , Our law for burning heretics was firft made in the Reign of Hen. 4. Fuller. Cent. xv. p. 158. It was repealed in the year 1677. The repeal was moved for by the Duke of York. Collier's Eccl. Hift. Vol.11, p. 897. v Lselius and Fauftus Socinus were the founders of the Sett, which bears their name. Laelius, having conceived a difguft againft Popery, and difapproving of many of the dottrines of the Church, left Tufcany (his country) in 1 54.7 ; about thirty years after the commencement of Luther's Reformation. And, K 4 having 136 SERMON IV, and his followers which were propagated on this occafion) that many of the bright orna- ments of the Reformation were not able to difengage themfelves from error in w important dodtrines of our Religion ; and that this was by no means effected even by Luther himfelf. But my defign will be accomplifhed and the limits of the prefent difcourfe filled up i if, after this notice of the Reformation in general, I confine the following obfervations to our own Church, and confider its condition at the com- mencement of the Reformation, and the manner in which this Reformation was fo introduced and perfected among ourfelves, as to deliver down the profefiion of our Religion to us with all thofe peculiar advantages, under which we have received it. > having pa/Ted four years in vifiting France, England, Holland,. Geneva, and Poland, he at length fettled at Zurich in Switzer- land; where he died in the year 1562 and in the 57th year of his age. Although he adopted the Helvetic confeffion of Faith and profefled himfelf a member of the Church of Switzerland ; he entertained doubts with regard to certain doftrines of Reli- gion, which he communicated to fome learned men whofe judgement he refpefted, and in whofe friendfhip he could con- fide. However his fentiments were propagated in a more pub- lic manner after his death ; as Fauftus his nephew and heir is fuppofed to have drawn from the papers, which he left behind him, that religious fyfterh, upon which the feet of Socinians is founded. See Chambers's Dictionary — Socinians. And with regard to the doftrines of the Socinians, fee what Waterland feys in his Lady Moyer's Sermons, p. 13. w Concerning the Eucharilt, and Predeflination. As SERMON IV. 137 As error generally increafes in proportion to its diftance from its fountain, and to the num- ber of channels through which it is conveyed; it is reafonable to exped; that England mould not only have partaken of all the Romifti cor- ruptions in common with the reft of Weften* Chriftendom, but alfo that it mould have ex- perienced more fenfibly, than other countries, the burden of Papal fuperftition and oppreffion. And " this appears, in reality, to have been at length the cafe. Our anceftors were not in- volved in equal corruptions of their Religion- with the other members of the Romifh Com- munion in the early parts of their Hiftory : but they appear to have furpaffed all others in this unhappy refpecT: during the three y hun- * Burnet in the preface to his hiftory of the Reformation fpeakfs of the Church of England as a Church, " which, being ,r fubjefted to the See of Rome, had been more than every " other part of Europe mod tame under its oppreffions, and was " moft deeply drenched in its fuperftition." P. 9. Bp. Newton fays in his Differtatiohs, Works, Vol.11, p. 6 19. 4x0. " Eng- " land was once the paradife of Priefts; here they (warmed and ** fixed like locufts : but the Reformation has freed us from "" that yoke." And' Jortin aflerts that " of all Proteftant na- " tions there is perhaps not one which hath ifuffered fo much " from Popery as ours, nor one which hath more reafon to " d,read and abhor that Religion. England for fome centuries " before the Reformation was the moft Pope-ridden country in " Chriftendom," &c. 3d Charge: Sermons, Vol. VIJ. p. 406. * England had for above 300. years been the tamelt part of " Chriftendom to the Papal Authority, and had been accord- " ingly dealt with." Burnet's Hift. of the Ref, Vol. I. p. 1 1 . dred 138 SERMON IV. dred years which immediately preceded the Reformation. Chriftianity was profefled at a very 2 early period by trie Britons, and " flourifhed for many ages among them without b dependence on any foreign Church, till Auguftine the Monk was fent from Rome in the c fixth cen- tury to convert the Saxons. Before that time the Britons of both North and South Wales were diftinguimed by eminent d feminaries of Ghriftian education, and, as it appears, of genuine Chriftianity. The ' Arian herefy had 1 See Stillingfleet's Orig. Britan. p. 35 — 48. Towards the end of this part of his work he produces arguments to prove that the Gofpel was planted in Britain by St. Paul. The fame is infilled on by Jewell — Works, p. 11. a Stillingfleet's Orig. Brit. p. 74. and Jewell's Works, p. ii, 12. b See Stillingfleet's Orig. Brit. p. 108 — 144, and p. 356— 364: and alfo Bingham's antiquities, b. ix. c. 1. feft.. 11. c As is commonly fuppofed in the year 596. Johnfon how- ever in the preface to his didtionary places it in the year 570. Hift. of the Engl. Lang. p. 1 . d Bangor in North Wales and Caerlion in South Wales were the two grand feminaries of Chriftianity in the 6th century. To thefe many of the learned at that time reforted for inftruftion. Fuller's Hift. Cent. vi. p. 40. Stillingfleet fays of Bangor " that men were bred up in it to learning' and devotion toge- " ther ; and fo it more refembled our colleges than the Egyp- " tian Monafteries." Orig. Brit. p. 205. c See Stillingfleet's Orig. Brit. p. 175. Fuller's Hift. Cent. v. p. 27. and Collier's Eccl. Hift. Vol. I. p. 37. Though Bede fays, 1. i. c. 8. that Arianifm had infefted Bri- tain, as well as other places ; yet Smith in his Note on the paf- fage fubjoins, " E teftimoniis Conftantini, Athanafii, Hilarii, &c. abunde patet epifcopos Britannia fldei orthodox* femper adhsfiffe." Smith's Edit, of Bede, p. 47. been SERMON IV. 239 been foon fuppreffed among them. And on Auguftine's 'arrival the poor Britifh Christians were found enjoying God, the Gofpel, and their mountains, neither regarding nor ac- quainted with the ceremonies, which this miffionary had brought with him. When he affembled a council of the Britifh and Saxon Bifhops ; the former E difclaimed all knowlegc of the Bifhop of Rome and all dependence upon him. » Their religious inftitutions alfo were rational and Simple : they had the ufe of the pure h liturgy of the old Gallican Church ; had no ' image- worfhip ; and no k Monks, but f Fuller's Hift. Cent. vi. p. 57, &c. s Fuller's Hift. Cent. vn. p. 61. The anfwer of the Abbot of Bangor to Auguftine is well worthy of our particular atten- tion both on account of the Spirit of Chriftian charity, and the fpirit of independence, which are confpicuous in it. " Notum " fit et abfque dubitatione vobis quod nos omnes fumus et qui- " libet hoftrum obedientes et fubditi ecclefise Dei et Papa: Ro- " mi, et unicuique vero et pio Chriftiano ad amandum unura- *' quemque in fuo gradu in perfefta charitate ; et ad juvandum " unumquemque eorum verbo et fafto fore filios Dei : Et aliam «' obedientiam quam iftam non fcio debitam in quern vos nomi- " natis efle Papam, nee effe patrem patrum, vindicari et pof- " tulari, et iftam obedientiam nos fumus parati dare et iolvcre " ei et cuique Chriftiano continue" Spelman's Concilia, Tom. i. p. 108, log. . h See Stillingfleet's Orig. Britan. from p. 216. to the end of the fourth Chapter. 1 Image worfhip was not introduced into England before the 8th century : and then it was fubjefted to reftraints. See Spel- man's Council, Tom. i. p. 218. Collier's Eccl. Hift. Vol. I. p. 122, and 214. See alfo in the laft Sermon what is faid on the manner in which England, France, &c. received this worfhip. k In Fuller's Hift. B. vi. p. 267. may be feen a declaration very elegantly compofed and figncd by thofe four great men, Robt. Ho S E R M O N IV. fuch as were all of the moft ancient and tem-i perate order. Even their Saxon conquerors appear to have partaken in fome degree of the liberty and purity of the Britifh Chriftians. The venerable J Bede paid no implicit fubmif- fion to the Romifli Pontiff. And in the ioth and 1 1 th m centuries, when hardly any traces of Britons were left in England, the Papal power was received with limitation among our an- ceftors, the Scriptures were generally read by them (notwithftanding what is faid to have been the n original and contrary intention of the Romifh Miffionaries) and our Religion was lefs corrupted in various refpedts, than that of the neighbouring Kingdoms. William himfelf, though he conquered under the ban- ners of the Church, refufed to fubmit to any adl: of fealty to the Pope : indeed, he is faid Robt. Cotton, John Selden, Hen. Spelman, and Wm. Camden, in wbich they maintain that there had been only two orders of Monks in England.one the Egyptian which flouriflied before the 1 time of Auguftine, the other the Benediftine which flouriflied afterwards. Of the Egyptian Monks Eufebius fpeaks very highly. Eccl. Hift. 1. ii. c. 17. Sozomen alfo fays of them that they were remarkably ftrenuous in their Oppofition to Arianifm. Eccl.Hift. ]. vi. c. 20. 1 Bede, though often fent for by the Bifhops of Rdme, never went to them, which is a proof that he neither thought it necef- fary to obey thofe Bifhops, nor that there was any particular fanftity in Rome. Fuller's Hift. Cent. vm. p. 98. ra See Cave's Hift. Lit. Vol. II. p. 110. Fuller's Hift. p. 149. and Bp. Newton on the Prophefies, Vol. III. p. 166. " See extract from Fleury in Jortin's Rem, Vol. V. p. 1 74. to SERMON IV. 141 to have gone £0 far, as to " regukte the power both of the Archbifhop of Canterbury and the Pope. In the' fucceeding Reigns alfo the Pope's power among us was often retrained by interpositions of the civil authority. But, though our early anceftors were exempt from religious corruption beyond the common ftan- dard of their times ; and though temporal pro- tection was not wanting in later periods to fupport both our Church in p general, and alfo many of its * particular members, who were laboring to promote the interefts of true Chriftianity ; yet did the power of the Romifh Church universally prevail at the conclusion of our different contefts with it after the tragical end of ' Becket's violence : and its ' corrup- c Fuller's Hift. Cent. xi. p. 4. Collier's Eccl. Hift. Vol.1, p. 238; and Mofheim, Vol.11, p. 473. 496. r By the conftitutions of Clarendon under Hen. II. the fta- tute againil forestalling prefentations under Edw. Ill, and the praemunire annexed to it 16 Ric. II. ■9 Wickjiff, when twice fummoned by the Archbifhop to an- fwer for his do&rines, was refcued from condemnation by the interpofition of the nobles, and having finifhed his tranflation of the vulgate Bible died in peace. Fuller, Cent. xiv. p. 136—7. Under the protection of Lord Berkeley, John de Trevifa tranflated alfo the Old Teftamentin the 14th century. Fuller, p. 151. and Cave's Hift. Lit. Vol. II. Ssc. Wickl, p. 58. 1 Erafmus in his Epiftles feems to afenbe the great power and wealth of the Englifh Ecclefiaftics to the death of Thomas ofBecket. Jortin's Life of Erafmus, Vol. I. p. 37. And the exorbitant influence of the Papal power among us may be pro- perly ; dated from the fame event. 8 See Strype's Memorials, Vol. I. p. 46. and p. 382. tions 14% SERMON IV. tions of every kind went on encreafing among us to fuch an enormous degree, as to give our anceftors in the days of Luther peculiar reafon to rejoice at the prbfped:, which now opened upon them of a reformed and pure Religion. However, at the commencement of the Reformation, the forward and l repeated zeal> with which u Henry the Eighth undertook the defence of the eftablifhed fuperftition, and the v literary as well as x religious credit, which he acquired from thence, left little reafon to hope that his Kingdom would derive any diftinguifhed advantage from the new and pre- vailing fpirit of religious inquiry. But the Almighty, who bften makes the felf-interefted deiigns of men redound to his glory, foon un- expectedly opened the King's eyes with regard to the ufurpations of the Romifli Pontiff. The ' The King wrote two letters to Luther. Strype's Mem. Vol. I. p. 58. The fecond letter was a haughty reply to Lu- ther, when he apologized for the offence given by a letter written in anfwer to the King's firft. Jortin's Life of Erafmus, Vol. I. p. 395. 11 Erafmus difcuffes the queilion, whether Hen. VIII. was really and " proprio marte" the author of the Book againft Luther, and he inclines to the affirmative : not denying, how- ever, that he might have had the affiftance of fome learned men. Jortin's Life of Erafmus, Vol. I. p. 486. w Erafmus pays Henry VIII. very high compliments on his genius. Strype's Append, of Rec. Memorials, Vol. I. p. 274. * Burnet fays K. Henry was brought to fancy his book was written with fome degree of infpiration. Pref. Hift. Ref. Vol. I. p. 6. refufal SERMON IV. 143 refufal of a difpenfation to himfelf foon led the difappointed Prince to enquire into the Pope's right to grant fuch favours. And enquiry, once fet on foot, found too much encourage- ment to be eafily dropped, or to be confined to a fingle article. This and the other foreign claims of the Romifh Church were difcovered, on particular examination, to be deftitute of fupport from either reafon, or revelation. On this occafion nothing lefs than a total difavowal of the Papal power and the Romifh commu- nion might immediately have been expected ; if thofe prejudices of Henry, which at firft had well-nigh prevented all reformation among us, had not now interpofed for ufeful purpofes ; if they had not interpofed to reftrain the ardor and vehemence to which religious innovations are eminently liable, and thus laid the foun- dation of our prefent Church eftablifhment. It muft be confefTed, indeed, that many cir- cumflances in the three next Reigns contri- buted to ftrengthen and confirm the religious fyftem, which was adopted by the Church of England at the commencement of the Refor- mation i and that our reformers had an in- valuable y advantage in choofing their doc- trines from not having been engaged in per- y See Dean Tucker's Letters to Dr. Kippis. fonal 144 SERMON IV". fonal alternation with the chief champions for either the Romanifts or their opponents. But, it is no lefs true alio that the particular mode of our Reformation is principally to be afcribed to Henry's determined prepofiefnon, to the very laft, in favour of the Romifh tenets. While the fix articles, which were enforced by him with fo much cruelty, proved deci- fively that this King's efforts and wifhes for an alienation from the Church of Rome went no farther than was conducive to his own power or profit ; they operated at the fame time as the moft effectual reftraint on all hafty avowals of new opinions in Religion. It is a juft obfervation that extremes gene- rate each other : and never was the obfervation more literally Verified, than in the reformation which commonly took place in z foreign coun- tries. Men had been hindered by the moft cruel oppreffion from enquiring into the Scrip- tures. When, therefore, the light of truth broke in at once upon them, its glare was too ftrong for their fight. The full religious li- berty, to which they were at once admitted, led them to exceffes as fatal as thofe of the Church of Rome, though in the oppofite ex- * A full and admirable account of the principles and pro- ceedings of thefe reformers may be feen in the preface to Hooker's Eccl. Pol. from p. 19. to p. 22. Works, Folio 1 Ed. 1666. treme. S E R M O N IVi 145 treme. Every thing, which bore a refemblance to that Church, was at a length aboliftied as Antichriftian. Nor were inftitutions tried by their own intrinfic merit, but by the affinity which they bore to the Romifh ufages. I fpeak not of thofe wild Fanatics, who* under the name of Anabaptifts, did fo much injury to the caufe of the reformation about the time of its commencement, and who doubtlefs ought not to be ranged under any clafs of reformers. Even b Luther had often to lament the enthu- fiaftic errors *of his followers ; and c Galvin was himfelf fo intemperate, that he particu- larly cautions Bucer againfl middle or moderate councils. While, therefore, d others went on with en- thufiafm and with immoderate exeefs in their » " Every later Church endeavoured to be certain degrees " more removed'from conformity with the Church of Rome than " the reft before had been." Pref. Hooker's Eccl. Pol. p. 2. *> Molheim, Vol. IV. p. 315. Luther alfo cannot be fup- pofed to write concerning the Anabaptift or Merinonite affo-. ciates of Munzer, but men of his own communion ; when he requefts of Frederic, Duke of Tiifcany, that the enthufiafts, concerning whom he writes, " might be favourably dealt with " and fpared: for that, (their error excepted) they feemed '* otherwife right good men." Hooker's Eccl. Pol. Pref. p. 21 . c Calvin warns Martin Bucer in a letter fent to him, before his comjng into England, " againft being the author or advifer *' of middle councils ; by which words he plainly ftrikes at the *' moderation obferved in the Englilh Reformation." Wheat- ley on the Common Prayer, 8vo. p. 112, 4 See, on this fubjeft in general, Hume's Hill, of England, Vol. III. p. 1 22, &c. 4to. Ed. L reformation 5 $ 4 6 SHMO N IV. reformation j Henry's prejudices and overbear* ing difpofition feafonably interpofed in England to counterbalance any fuch fpirit, and unin- tentionally produced among us an unprece- dented ' calmnefs of deliberation on fubjecls of" religious controverfy. The f principal points* eftablifhed and * enforced againft the Romifh Church in his Reign, after the diffolution of thofe monaftic bodies which had for many ages been powerful means of fupporting the Papal pretenfions, Were the dhavowal of the Pope'9 fupremacy in thefe Kingdoms, and of his in- fallibility ; the acknowlegement of a right in every national Church, with the concurrence of its head, to examine into and reform all religious errors and corruptions, whether in Dodlrine or Difcipline : and, what might be defigned to operate as the means of vindicating thefe infringements on the former government of the Church, the permiffion of the Scrip- tures in the vulgar tongue. But, whatever might be the political deiign of this permiffion of the Scriptures, it operated to the beft reli- c Burnet's Hift. Ref. Vol. I. p. 255 and 289. f Burnet's Pref. to his Hift. Ref. 8 In the Reign of Hen. 8th many of the errors of popery were laid open, and condemned in the " Pia et Catholica Inili- tutio," or, as it was called, when republifhed fix years after, " the Kings Book" or " the neceffary Erudition ;" but none were obliged toaflent to it. Burnet on the_ Articles, Fol. p. 5. Stry- pe's Eccl. Memor. Vol. I. p. 378 and 381. gious SERMON IV. u 7 gious p»frpofes» It was the one great thing wanted in the darker ages ; and, joined to the permuUon, which was alfo fuperadded in the fame Reign* of feme of the h principal parts of the Liturgy in the vulgar tongue, effectually promoted both the knowlege, and the practice of true Chriittanity* From thefe points, * efta- blUhed and enforeed by the moft k determined Authority, a general reformation Was foon to be expected* The abfurdities and impieties of the Romifh Church cannot long remain undifcovered by thofe, who have accefs to the Scriptures, and who are at liberty to ufe their own judgement in the interpretation of them. The fucceeding Reign, being an entire mi- nority, happily required in the Regents much deliberation before any great alterations were to be made in the old Religion. Happily alfo the influence of the regal power was fufficient to reftrain the effects of any l contrary incli- * See Wheatley on the common prayer. And Burnet's Hifh Ref. Vol. I. p. 226 and 249. 1 " Many attempts were made by Gardiner and others to induce the King to deprive the people again- of the ufe of the Scriptures. But Henry the 8th was fully refolved to go through with it." Burnet's Hift. Ref. Vol. I. p. 314. k It has been remarked that Hen. 8. refembled Luther in the firmnefs and inflexiblenefs of his mind. No other frame of mind could have fupported them in the different reformations which they attempted. • ; 1 There were among our countrymen in the days of Edw. 6. many who wimed to run into the excefles of foreign reformers : but they appear to hsve been neither violent nor troublefome, when compared with others of the fame principles in fubfequent times. , L. 2 nation H* SERMON IV* nation in others. At the time, therefore/ when the rulers of our Church were moft en- gaged in its reformation, and moft expofed to danger from the m advice as well as the exampla of foreign reformers, they made no " rafh ad- vances. The dodtrines of the Romifti Church, which had been much and difpaffionately ° can- vaffed in the preceding Reign, were again ex- amined by men of learning, of judgement, and of candor : and thofe among them, which were inconfiftent with genuine Chriftianity, were gradually rejefted : tranfubftantiation, which was among the lateft corruptions of the Romifti Church, and which had made the moft durable m See, as before, Wheatley on the common prayer, p. nz. Svo. ■ It was deligned by Cranmer and his friends to carry on the reformation by flow degrees, not hazarding too much at once. Burnet's Hift. Ref. Vol. II. p. 25. See a proclamation againft thofe who ftiould rafhly innovate, or perfuade people from the old accuftomed rites. Burnet's Hift. Ref. Vol. II. p. 59. Strype's Mem. Vol. II. p. 83. The preachers alfo were urged to ufe caution and moderation : not to fet the people on to make innovation : and for things not yet changed to wait patiently. Burnet's Hift. Ref. Vol. II. p. 61, 64, 65. But it is impoffible that the principles of the Englifh refor- mation ftiould be better defcribed than they are by Bp. Jewell in his admirable Apology for our Church : " Nos quidem (fays " he) uti diximus de mutanda religione nihil temere aut info- " lenter, nihil nifi cunftanter et magna cum deliberatione feci- " mus," &c. p. 155. They had many learned men among them who had been '* examining thefe matters many years." Burnet's Hift. Ref. Vol. II. p. 26. impreflion SERMON IV. J49 impreflion on the minds both of men of p learn- ing and of the * people in general, being re- ferved for the ' laft objedt of our reformation. In the mean time alfo the ' oppofition, per- mitted in the Romanifts at home, was of no inconfiderable fervice to the caufe againft which it was levelled. Since alterations were not made, till the reafonablenefs and neceffity of them had been fully and openly proved. And if, under fuch circumftances, • our re- formers were obliged to contend for every ftep, as they advanced 1 they and their fuc- ceilbrs derived this advantage at leaft from the laborious contention, that the ground, thus gained, was more eafily tenable in future times » While the Englifh Reformation was thus, gradually matured, the fuperintenders of this. P Luther was a conftant advocate for tranfubftantiation, or at leaft for confebftantiation. Crann\er and Ridley were themfejves in the dark concarning the corporal prefence, till Bertram's book firft convinced Ridley. Burnet's Pref. to Hift. Ref. Vol. I. p.. 10. * Bumet fays that on account of the prejudices of the people it was neceifary to open the doftrine of" tranfubftantiation fully before any change was made in the dofrrine of the Church. Hift. Ref. Vol. II. p. 104. Again he fays, " as to the corporal prefence in the Sacrament '* there were difpujes for a year together in K. Edward's, time " before there was any determination made." Hift. Ref. Vol. II. p. 267. See alfo p. no. * Hume fays it was the laft do&rine of Popery which was Wrholly abandoned by the people ; affigning the reafons why it was fo. Hift. of Engl. Vol. III. p. 319. 4to. Edit. *. Strype's Memor. Vol. II. p. 84 and zo8. Buret's, Hift. Ref. Vol. II. p. 105. L 3 gfea* i 56 SERMON IV. great work Were careful to make known the different parts of their new eflablimment. Having finally feparated themfelves from thd Church of Rome, through which they traced back their origin to the apoftolical age ; it Wa4 fteceffary that they ftiould prove themfelves to be a vifible Church j and, agreeably to the * precepts of the Apoftteg and the practice of all Chriftian focieties, that they fhould infti- 1 tute rites and ceremonies, a public form of Wor'fhip* and particular modes of inftrudfcion. And, fince the Scriptures are not fo explicit in> all points, as abfolutely to preclude all per-* nicious doctrines, and the authoritative inter-* pretations of the Church of Rome had been difclaimed ; it was neceflary alfo that certain doftrinal expofitions and decifions fhould be fet forth to direct the confciences and to gUard the faith of the members of their com- munity. Somewhat of this fort had been u publickly done by the foreign Proteflants in the Aufburg confeffion. In the Church of England it was done by the w Liturgy, the » t 1 Cor. xiy. 40. u Moftv Vol- IV. p. 92. There were alfo many other con- feffions of the foreign Proteflants : but, that of Auihurg was made known to the world in the mqlr, public manner. w Our Liturgy may be faid to have commenced in the year . J 537, when Henry 8. permitted the Convocation to fet forth the Lord's Prayer, Ave Maria, the Creed, the ten commandments, and the feven facrarhents in the vulgar tongue. Many of the additions, made to cpmplete it, which are erroneoufly iuppofed S E R M O N IV, i 5 t * Catechtfm, r the Homilies, and the "Articles, which were authoritatively fet forth in the Reign of Edward the Sixth. By means of all thefe whatever appeared to be expedient to an eftabliflied and national profeffion of our Re- ligion, in addition to the unreftrained ufe of the Scriptures, was abundantly fiipplied. The great duties and principles of Chriftianity were laid down ; and the important errors, as well, of the Romanifts as of the more violent Pro- teftants both at home and abroad, were parti- cularly guarded againft. At the fame time the Epifcopal government, which had prevailed from the earlieft ages of Chriftianity, was pre- to have been taken by the reformers from the Romanifts, were, at Stillingfleet fays,, adopted by both the Romanifts and our reformers from the old Gallican Liturgy. Orig. Brit. p. 231.' And from Cave we may learn that our Service for the Sacra-, ment of the Lord's Supper is nearly the fome- in fiibftance, as. that which was ufed. in the primitive Church. See Cave's Prim. Chrift. VoL I. chap. 1 1 . Our Liturgy was not completed in any degree- before the year 1 547, when it was publifhed under Edward the VI. See a par- ticular account of the Alterations fince made in it, &c.inWheat~ ley. See alfo concerning it Strype's Memor. Vol. II. p_ 85. * See Strype's Memor. Vol. II. p. 32, 368, 420. We axe not, however, to fuppofe that the original Catechifm containei all that is found in our Catechifm at prefent. With the e-xpofi.- tion of the Lord's Prayer " ended the Catechifm in all the com- '* mon Prayer Books before that of K.James the firft, who after* " the Conference a,t Hampton Court ordered this latter part *' concerning the Sacraments to be added." See Dr. "NichoU's. on the common Pr.ayer in loc. y See Burnet's Hift. Ref. Vol. II. p. 27. * See the fame, p. 209. of the Records. L 4 ferved 152 SERMON IV. ferved inviolate : and our reformers confpicu-* oufly difplayed their moderation by retaining various parts of the old Liturgies, and as many of the more important ufages and ceremonies ef the Church, as were innocent and condu- cive to order and decency. A moderation, which at once reft rained the ardor of inno- vation among their own countrymen, and proved to all mankind that they were deiirous to retain whatever was venerable in ecclefiafti- cal antiquity, and to join with the Romanifts not only in effential. doctrines of Chriftianity, but alfo in a all thofe matters of Church wor- fliip, which are in any refped: ufeful and de- corous. Our reformation) haying proceeded thus, far in the reign of the fixth Edward, was foon after checked in its progrefs, The reign of Mary was diftinguifhed by a re-eftablifhment of Pppiih fuperftition. But, the continuance of her reign was too fhort to root out the zeal for religious purity, which had fo widely ex- tended itfelf among us. Short however as it was, it involved our Church in many imme- diate evils, and laid the foundation of number- a See the Rule which the reformers laid down to change no« thing for novelty's fake. Burnet's Hift. Ref. Vol. II. p. 73. See alfo an excellent account and vindication of the proceed- ings of the Church of England in thii refpeft ir» Hooker's Eccl. Pol. B.iv. c. 14.. left SERMON IV. 153 lefs others which we were afterwards to ex- perience. The bloody perfecutions, which raged at that time, were without doubt moft fenfibly felt during their continuance. But, the moft extenfive evils of thofe cruelties will be difcovered in their remote confequences : in the alteration made in the opinions of fome of our Englifh divines concerning predeftina- tion, and other concomitant and important dodtrines ; and in the invincible averfion from our Church, which afterwards prevailed among many of its former members. Our Liturgy, Catechifm, and Homilies, the treatifes drawn up for the inftruction of the people and the reformation of the ecclefi- aftical laws under the authority of Hen. VIII. and Edward VI. and the private writings of our original reformers themfelves, all prove decifively, that they - lided with Erafmus and b Bifliop Bull fays, " a Calvini cum difciplina turn doftrina (qua parte ipfe a Melan&hone aliifque inftaurati purioris Chrif- tianifmi magiftris antiquioribus abierit) prorfus alienos fuifle re- formationis noftra au&ores fatis conftat, &c. Apol. pro Harmon, p. 57. And the paraphrafe of Erafmus, who wrote againft Lu- ther on the doftine of predeftination, is known to have been placed in our Churches for the inftruftion of the people by both Edward the fixth and Elizabeth. What Moftieim fays on the fubjeft ought to be applied to our full reformers : for, it was by them that the doftrine and difcipline of our Church were mo- delled. " If we confider, fays he, the genius and Tpirit of the " Church of England during this period (the beginning of the *' 17th century) we fhall plainly fee that the doftrine of the *' Gomarifts concerning predeftination and grace could not f meet there with a favouiable reception j fince the leading " do&ors 154 SERMON IV. Melan&hon, and not with Luther or Calvin," in the do&rines which relate to the divine de- crees. And, indeed, our Articles, which have not been c materially altered in this refpecT:, prove alfo the fame. For whatever little conceflion appears to have been made con- cerning predeftination in the 17th Article; it is immediately after withdrawn by the con- cluding claufe of the fame Article. A e claufe* which undoubtedly is not to be conftrued in a Calviniftic fenfe, and which from the begin- ning has been juftly deemed to convey the determination of the Church of England on " do&ors of that Church were zealous in modelling its doftrines " and difcipline after the fentiments and inftitutions, that were " received in the primitive times ; and fince thofe early fathers* " whom they followed with a profound fubmiuion a had never " prefumed before Auguftine to fet limits to the extent of the " divine grace and mercy." Eccl. Hift. Vol. V. p. 369, 370, See alfo Collier's Eccl. Hift. Vol. II. p. 645 and 648 : and for the whole of the queftion concerning the Opinions of our firft reformers on the divine decrees fee Heylyn's Hift. of the Quinquarttcular controverfy. Trails, p. 541—^588. See, moreover, able Vindications of our firft reformers on the fijb- jecl before us-in Dr. Nowell's Reply to Pietas Oxonienfis, Dean, Tucker's Letters to Dr. Kippis, and Dr. Winchefter's Difler- tation on the 17th Article. e See Burnet's Hift. Ref. Vol. II. Records, p. 209. s This was made principally to gratify Bucer and Peter Martyr. e It refers immediately to a paragraph in the Saxonic confef- fion published by Melandthon in the fame year, in which our Articles were firft publilhed, which paragraph is proved deci- fively to be Arminian by the words which follow. See the Sax- onic Confeffion, p. 84. in the " Corpus et Syntagma Confeffio- num." Gene< SERMON iVi conform in all refpefts to the ufages of foreign Proteftants, and proceeding by degrees to a rage for innovation which was fcarcely ex-* ceeded by the wildest enthufiafm of antecedent reformers. To guard, therefore, that moft invaluable moderation, with which we were fo peculiarly blefled at the commencement of our reformat tion, it was found neceflary after the reite- ration of our Church under Elizabeth to u provide it with new barriers againft the en- thufiafm of innovation. This was done by alterations made in the Articles, by the Canons which were enforced during the Reign of w Elizabeth, and by the x requifition of a ftridt conformity to the ecclefiaftical eftablimment. The y alterations, made at that time in the Articles* were not fucceeded* like z thofe made at the fame time in the Liturgy, that other diftinguiihed part of our fyftem, by new alte- - " The fteps, taken by Q;. Elizabeth to reftore and perfect the reformation among us, were condufted by the fame kind of de- liberation, which prevailed in her Brother's Reign. See what Camden fays very particularly on the fubjeft — Life of Eliz< P* 3 1, See alfo Burnet's Hift. of Ref. Vol. IL p. 376, 378, 381, 407^ w Gibfon's Codex, Pref. p. 10. * Camden's Life of Eliz. p. 191 — z and 288. y Thefe alterations were made by learned and moderate di* vines. Camden's Life of Eliz. p., 16. a See an account ,of the fabfeguent alterations of the Litur- gy in Wheatley. rations SERMG^ IV. i6i rations at fuhfequent periods, in order to ad- vance our eftablifhed forms to their prefent ftate of excellence : but thefe Articles have* thenceforward remained the fame * unvaried Compendium of our national Faith. As Bp. * Bull fays, *« they are not propofed as efTen rials " of Religion, without which no man can be " feved : thefe are fuppofed to be contained in *' the old Creeds, and therefore the old Creeds " are made parts of our Liturgy, and are to " be joined in by all." We are to confider the Articles, as a fummary of bur Religion, "calculated to preferve union and peace among all the members of our Church, and to afeer- tain and regulate the belief and doctrines of thofe among us, who are intrufled with the care of public inftrudtion. As thefe Articles are the great medium, through which, under the Scriptures, our Religion is delivered down to us, it may form an ufeful part of the prefent plan ; if I endea- vour to represent in a connected manner the general fubftance of them : fince fuch a repre- sentation of their contents muft at once evince that they in reality comprehend n6thing more, than the dodtrines of Scripture, expreffed fo a Burnet's Hift. Ref. Vol. II. p. 195. b Bull's Vindication of the Church of England, 8vo. p. 217. c Burnet on the Articles, Fol. P. 6—8. M as 1 6a SERMON IV. as to afcertain our own Faith, and guarded by particular declarations againft the dangerous ^opinions of others. They begin with the principal of thofe great doctrines of our Religion, which were pre- ferved entire during the darker ages ; they begin with * aflerting not only that all things were created and are preferved by one all-, perfect God,- but alfo that three Perfons are comprehended under the Unity of the divine nature : they then e go on to aflert that the. Son or fecond Perfon is really God, being be- gotten of the Father by an eternal generation ; that to redeem us from our fallen condition he vouchfafed to aflume human nature into the fame Perfon with his own ; that our Re- deemer or Chrift, being thus compounded of the divine and human nature, died for our fins, f defcended to the regions below, and afterwards g rofe again and afcended into Hea- ven, there to remain till he returns to be our judge : that the Holy h Ghoft or third Perfon, by an incomprehenfible derivation of exiftence, different from the generation of the Son, pro- ceeded from the two other Perfons of the God- head, and is alfo himfelf really and eternally God. Going on to the Scriptures, that great A Art. i. c Art. 2. f Art, 3. * Art. 4. h Art. 5. repofitory SERM ON IV. 163 repofitory of our Religion, which was now happily laid open again for general ufe, our Articles infill on the fufficiehcy of ' Scripture to falvation, to the exclufion undoubtedly of all intermixture of philofophical fpeculation, no lefs than of all Romifh tradition : they ftate feparately the Canonical and the other books j and are careful not to diminifh, with the Church of Rome, the authority of divine In- fpiration byuextending its infallibility to. the Apocryphal writings : they then affirm the k confiftency of the Old Teftament with the New, with regard to eternal life no lefs than other dodtrines ; and the eternal obligation of its moral precepts. Having adopted the fame three ' Creeds with the Romifh Church, our Articles proceed to the great reafon, which made a Redeemer neceffary for us, and to the parts of our Religion which are intimately connected with it. In mentioning the fall of Adam they fay nothing of any guilt immedi- ately derived to us from it : they fay, only, that human nature being in confequence of this fall inherently m corrupt, and fuch as would of itfelf merit the wrath and n damnation of 1 Art. 6. k Art. 7. ' Art. 8. m Art. 9. " As the corruption, here fpoken of, is faid to extend to every man born into the world ; our article only aflerts that it merits the wrath and damnation (or condemnation) of God j and not, as it is expreffed in the confeffions of Aufourgh, Saxony, and Wirtemburgh, and implied in all the other Proteltant Confeffions M 2 on 164 SERMON IV. Go&; the grace of God, to be derived to us through the merits of Chrift, is neceffary to excite in us, and to co-operate With our own ° will in perfecting, fuch a faith and conduct, as will render us acceptable to God : that, as far as relates to ourfelves, the fole p caufe of this our acceptance, or juftification, is faith ■in the merits of Chrift ; a faith, notwithftand- ing, which does not exclude, but on the con- trary q neceffarily produces and fandtifies, good on the fubjett," his eternal damnation." See " Corpus at Syn- tagma ConfelSonum" publifhed at Geneva in the year 1612. D6ubrief9, it was not without very particular defign that the word " eternal" was here omitted by our reformers : as we muft infer alfo with regard to every fimilar omiffion, where a doftrine has been long can varied and the force of any queftion concerning it depends upon the part which is omitted. This obfervatirin applies not lefs powerfully to our 17th than to our 9th Article. ° Art. 10. r Art. 11. 1 Art. 12. The fervor, which led many of the more violent reformers to the oppofite extreme from the Church of Rome in other doftrines, had the fame effett with regard to juMficatkm. In oppofition to what was commonly taught of the meritof works in the Romifh Church thefe reformers infilled fo entirely on jus- tification by faith alone, as to exclude any confequeni: neceffity, of geod works. The learned and judicious Dr. Redmayn was commanded by Cranirler to enquire into this fiibjeft, and to write a treatife on it. In this treatife Dr. R. fays, " that in *' thofe Scriptures, where it is faid we are juftified by faith, we " may not think we are juftified by faith, as it is a feperate " virtue from hope, and charity, fear of God, and repentance ; " biit by it is meant faith, neither only nor alone but with the " forefaid virtues coupled together, containing obedience to the " whole doftrine and Religion of Chritt^But for the definition " of faith, which fome propofed as if there was a certainty that " one was predeftinated, they found nothing of it either in the " Scriptures or the Doctors, and thought that it could not be " known." Burnet's Hift. Ref. Vol. I. p. 287—8. See alfo con- SERMON IV. 165 worksun us : that, however, thefe good' works, feeing perfected in their principle and' rendered acceptable to God only through this faith in Chrift, are without fuch fakh to be confidered as partaking of fin: that works of' fapereroga- tion are arrogant conceits ; fince, even if we do all that is commanded us* we are unpro- fitable fervants, and Chrift 'only has done what was commanded : that our fins, as well u after as before baptifm, are pardonable -, man being at all times expofed to fin, and through the grace of God capable of repentance and refor- mation. Our Articles then fay nothing of re- probation : they fay concerning w predeffinati&n to life, that it is the determination of eer taint concerning j unification the, Auricles drawn up ia Hen.. yUIth's; Reign — Apendix to Strype's Mempr. Vol. I. p. 301 : and the 4th Article concerning juftificatian' r Strype's Memor. Vok III. p. 141.. $ee, moreover, the Homily on Salvation which muA bjj re- ferred to justification. Indeed, that the Englilh reformer^ meant to reprefent the. neceffity of good works ia the moll forcible) manner appears from hence, that they i'et up the Creed and the ten Commandments in the Room of the Romifh Pixis. Dean Tucker fays in his Letters to Dr. Kippis : " this inftance of the *' creed and ten commandments being fet up over the altar is I " think' peculiar to our Englilh Church." It was, however, at a very early period introduced with the Englilh. reformation into Ireland. It is ftated in a citation from Archbilhop Ulher that George Brown Archbilhop of Dublin in the jeign of Hen. VHIth having removed all fuperftitious relicks and images from thetwo Cathedrals ia Dublin and from all the Cbjirches in his Diocefe " caufed the ten commandments-, the Lord's " prayer, and the creed to be placed in gilded frames about " die altars." Molh. Eccl. Hift. Vol. IV. p. 127. r Art. 13. s Art. 14. ' Art. 15. ■ Art. 16. w Art. 17. M 3 perfons 166 SERMON IV. perfons to eternal happinefs through Chrift by a decree of God, which is kept fecret from us, and which may refult (confidently with whatever our Church has here aflerted), from his fbfe-knowlege of their compliance with the conditions, of the Chriftian covenant ; that the confideration of this doclxine, though comfortable and ufeful to fome, may be at- tended with dangerous confequences to others ; and that from x thence we are to receive the promifes of God, as they are generally fet forth to us in Scripture : moreover, that we can be faved byno name whatever, but that of 'Chriftj to^the exclufiori of other Religions from equal powers of procuring falvation with the Chrif- tian, and to the exclufion alfo of all corrup- tions of Chriftianity by the adoration of ficti- tious interceflbrs. After this, our Articles declare, with regard to the Church, that, though compofed of true believers, it is liable to * err, whether it be the Church of Rome ? or any other : that the 'power of the Church ex- tends to rites and ceremonies, and the regu- lation of difputable matters in controverfies of * See ,what is before faid to prove that the doftrine of the Church of England on predeftination is contained in this con- cluding claufe. See alfo Dr. Winchefter's able diflertation on the 17th Article, publifhed at Oxford in the year 1773 : in which it is very fully proved concerning the Article in general,, that it was not drawn up comformably to the do<5hine of Calvin. 1 Art. 18. z Art. 19. 8 Art. 20. faith ; SERMON IV. 167 faith j but that it is not to be oppofed to the Scriptures, nor placed on a level of enacting authority with them : that b general councils themfelves are compofed of fallible members, atid that thefe ought not to be affembled with- out the confent of the civil power : that the Romifh Church (however authorifed by general councils) has erred in whatever it has taught concerning c purgatory, indulgences, the worfhipping* of images and relicts, and the invocation of Saints. Our Articles then main- tain, with the injunctions of the Romanifts* that minifters in the Church are to be lawfully appointed ; but they condemn that great fource of corruption in the darker ages, the ufe of e unknown languages in their miniftration. With regard to the Sacraments, they- agree with the Church of Rome in fome refpects and differ from it in others : they agree with it that f bad men are rather to expect a curfe than a bleffing from a participation of the holy Supper ; that the adminiftration of the Sacra- ments by £ unworthy minifters does not take from their efficacy -, that Baptifm is to be ad- miniftered to h infants ; and that both Baptifm and the Lord's- Supper are not only external ' figns of our profeffion,, but likewife means b Art. 21. c Art. 22. d Art, 23. e Art. 24. f Part of Article 25 and 29. s Art. 26. b Part of Art. 27. l Part of Art. 27 and of Art. 28. M 4 of 168 SERMON IV. of internal Grace. Our Articles differ, how- ever, from the doctrines of the Romanifts with regard to the k number of the Sacraments $ 1 condemn their refufal of the cup to the laity, their dpftrine of m tranfubftantiation, and jts conferences, the carrying about and wor-: {hipping of the confecrated elements, as if they were Chrift's real bodj j and declare at length, in oppofition to all the doctrines of the Romifh Church to the contrary, that the atonernent made for the fins of the world was "perfected by Chrift's oblation of himfeif, once offered. After the account of the Sacra- ments, which clofes the doctrinal parts of Chriftianity in our Articles, as it clones alfq at prefent the religious inftruction given us in our Church Catechifm j we have eight Ar- ticles, independent of ?ach other, and, in ge-* neral, defigned to fecure us againft pofxtions of pur adverfaries, whether Romanifts or- Sectaries, ^hefe contain a condemnation of the injunction of "celibacy on the Clergy; an, aflertion that v excommunicated perfons are not to be confidered as Chriftians j that * ce- remonies, though no^ neceffarily the_ feme in. all places, are, however, not to be wantonly k Part of Art. 25. ' Art. 30. ro Part of Art. z8. » Art. 3.1. Art. 32. ' p Art. 33. '; « Art. 34. violated, SERMON IV. i6 9 violated, and that they are fubjedt to no regu- lation, except that of the particular Church by which they are appointed- They contain alfp an enumeration and adoption of our Church ' Homilies : an aflertion, that our ' ordinations and confecrations are valid j that the governour of the 'ftate is governour alio of the Church, but that his ecclefiaftical go* vernment is confined to the externals of Re-* Jigion ; that fhe Bifhop of Rome has no juris- diction in England, ; that the civil power may punifh Christians with death ; and that Chrif- tians may, at the command of that power, parry arms and ferve in war. Of the two laft of the eight independent Articles one declares, that the goods of Chriftians are not u common : the other that w oaths may be adminiftered oq lawful occafions. Such is the general fubftance of the thirty- nine Articles of our Church. That they mould convey to us fo excellent a compendium of our Religion, and be fo little calculated to give offence* even in the parts where they are im- mediately directed againft our adverfaries, may appear furprifing to thofe, who confider the offence and calumny, with which they have been received. ' Art. 35, » Art. 36. ' Art. 37. u Art. 38. w Art. 39. It 170 SERMON IV. It is obvious that they are principally in- tended to afcertain and deliver down thofe ef- fential doctrines ■ of Chriftianity, which may be collected from the general account that I have above given of the fubftanee of our Re- ligion. The remaining parts of them are as obvioufly directed againft the ' dangerous opi- nions of our different adverfaries-. Thati which is omitted in them on this latter head, was fiipplied in a confiderable degree under Eliza- beth by the Canons, which fhe enforced dur- ing her Government. It has fmce been more permanently provided for by the body of * Canons, which were enacted in the firft year of her fucceffor's reign ; and which at prefent defcribe and enforce the different parts of our ecclefiaftical fyftem. * Towards the end of the Reign of Hen. VIII (after the bufinefs of the Reformation had been a long while fufpended) a commiffion was grante.d to 3 z perfons to revife the Canons and ecclefiaftical laws. In Edward the fixth's time 8 out of thefe 3 2 were empowered to prepare this work for the infpec- tion of the others. What thefe eight drew up was infpefted accordingly, and was publiihed in Latin under the title of " reformatio legum." What is the general fubftance of this work, and why it was not enforced, may be feen in the 2d Vo- Inme of Burnet's Hift. Ref. p. 195 — 202. See alfo on this fub- jeft Strype's Memor. Vol. II. p. 341 and 497, and Fuller's Church Hift. Cent. xvi. p. 420. Our Canons, now in force, were made in the firft year of James the firft. They are 141 in number : and many of them are the fame with tbofe enforced by Elizabeth during her Reign : (Gibfon's Codex, 1 Pref. p. io;) There were Canons afterwards drawn up by Archbifhop Laud: but,, thefe were cenfured by Parliament, and, therefore, not enforced. Thefe SERMON IV. 171 Thefe are intended to fupply the place of the 1 Canons and Decretals of the Romifh Church : but, with a fpirit effentially different from that of the Romifh Communion, they profefs to ^originate from the civil power. Though they- were particularly defigned for the z enforcement of the db€r.rines, Liturgy, and ceremonies of our Church ; yet all, who know with what mildnefs and with what un- limited forbearance they have been a&ually applied to this purpofe, muft ever acknowlege that the application of them has been well fuited to the toleration a fanclioned in time by our civil government, and to the moderation, 1 Strype (in his Memor. Vol. I. p. 1 30.) fays that the Con- vocation appears to have fubmitted to malce no more Ordinan- ces or Conftitutions without the King's affent or licenfe in the year 1530. Collier fays that the Clergy were reftrained from making new Canons without the confent of the Crown in the year 1532- Eccl. Hift. Vol. II. p. yo.. See the opinions of the two chief Jullices, which were given 8 James I, againft the power of the Clergy to make Canons without the King's licenfe in Dean Wake's State of the Church and Clergy of England in their councils. Fol. P..534. Bp. Sherlock fays the difienters do not give fuch power to the civil Magiftrate with regsrd to themfelves. In this refpeft, therefore, they agree with the Romanilts. Sherlock againft the repeal of the Teft-Aft. P. 33. * Thofe, who are difpofed to complain of the coercive au- thority of our Church, would do well to enquire into the dif- cipline of the primitive Chriftians. Of this they may fee a. concife Account in the laft chapter of Cave's Primitive Chrif- tianity. 3 By the toleration-aft pafled in the firft year of William and Mary, &c. which V]% SERMON IV. which fo eminently diftinguifhes the other parts of the ecclefiaftical eftablifhment, which they are calculated to defend and complete. But under fuch circumftances i of univerfal toleration we muft not wonder if there are among us Diflenters of very different origins from that, which I have above mentioned. Wherever men enjoy an unlimited freedom of puhlifhjng their thoughts on religious fubje&s* there, will be an endlefs variety of religious profeffion. We muft not wonder that the A**or# tenets of the different Se&aries, which have diftradted foreign nations, fhould at times be adopted by our countrymen - x nor that he- refies and fchifms of the raoft malignant and obdurate nature fhould every day originate among ourfelves. Situated alfo as our Church is, at an equal diftance from fuperftition and enthufiafm, we, moreover, muft not wonder, if it has from the beginning been expofed to b repeated af- faults from both thefe extremes. Immediately after its final eflablifhment, during the Reigns of Elizabeth and James, it experienced the effe&s of the malicious combinations and dark. b ** The Fwieftani Church, of England has enjoyed but little *' peace from its firfl eftablilhment." Sherlock againft the re- peal of the Teft-Aft. p. 25. aflaffination SERMON IV. 173 afFaflination of Romifh fupetftition. Ill the fucceeding Reign it fell for a feafbn a factifice to the mad s erithufiafm of our own Diflenters, One Reign only intervened, and that certainly not favourable to true Religion, before it again experienced the malice of the Romifti Church. From fuch afiaults it would be ungratefully impious not to confefs that the hand of Pro- vidence delivered us during our diftrefs ; and that it has alfo preferved us unhurt, though not unalarmed, by them during the laft hun- dred years. And however this reftlefs male- volence of our enemies may have called forth particular tefts for our fecurity, and ftill render it neceflary that we mould fupport them, as we hitherto have done, wkh un- fhaken refolution ; yet, amidft all oar exer- tions in our own defence, has it not in any degree leflened the moderation of our Govern- ment, either civil or ecclefiaftical, fo as to reftrain it from every day more widely extend- ing its toleration to all thofe, who differ from us in religious belief. May God grant that we may ever continue to imitate our prede- ceffors both in courage and wifdom to main- c See in the Preface to Hooker's Eccleikftical PoKty, the real origin and foundation of this enthufiafm; as they were defcribed by that excellent man at a time when he could hardly think this, enthufiafm would ever proceed to that excefs of ntadnefs, by which it was afterwards fo eminently diftinguilhed. tain *74 SERMON IV. tain the invaluable eftablifhment, under which our Religion has thus been delivered down' to us, and in Chriftian virtue to forgive and to- lerate our moil uncharitable opponents ! Such, then, are the great outlines of the hiftory of our Religion from its complete pub- lication after the refurre&ion of Chrift to our own times. Having been preached by the Apoftles under the miraculous affiftance of the Holy Spirit, and provifion having been made for its permanency and integrity, it appears from that time to have been left in an eminent degree to our own reafon and our own free will. Accordingly its reception and influence in the early ages were fuch, as we might expe therer- " fore, that they can never reafon* but only f< confidently deny, or affirm"* By the original Caufe, however, whofe felf-exiftence is thus evinced* I do not mean one who gave exiftenee to himfelf '. that would make action antecedent to exiftence: but one, c This dependence on afferrion is evident in all thofe trite afliimptions in favour of Atheifm, which are repeated in Mr. Hume's Dialogues : p. 5; — 70, 94, 115, 125, 130* 166, 189, 196, 215, 238 &c. It is eminently the cafe alfo with the objec- tions advanced by him agaittft miracles, and the proofs of the being and attributes of Qod which are drawn from thence. Thefe obje&ions reft for their principal fuppof t upon this fingle! circinnftance, «* that fuch miracles are contrary to experience." *-»»Seehis eflay on miracles. — They reft, therefore, upon this af- fumption, " that God, who is the freeft of all poffible agents, Jhuft, if he have once adted in an extraordinary manner, go rt» to ait fo ; even when, perhaps* the reafona for fuch extraordi- nary agency have entirely eeafed." Mr. Hume is fo fond of this gratuitous reafoning (if I may fo call it) from our want of experience ; that he not only ufes it to difprove the truth of miracles, but alfo in his dialogues (p. 1 30) to raife doubts concerning the being of God ; arid in his Eflay on the immortality of the foul (p. 38) to eftablifh its mortality. d See Sherlock on Providence, p. 15. izmo. Ed. 1776. '« ' wh.9 i*4 SERMON V. who emphatically *f hath exiftence in himfelf/' or whofe inherent and neceffary attribute it is *' to exift". That this great Caufe alfo cannot be a material fubftance is evident; fince he muft be both an active, and an intelligent Prin- ciple. Without activity nothing can be produ- ced ; and, without intelligence, nothing which carries with it defign and final intention. He muft, therefore;: be poffefied of a fpiritual being : and, by whatever name he may fome-*- times be called,, he muft ever be defcribed as an immaterial or fpiritual fubftance. It muft be confeiTed, indeed, that the ideas which we can form for ourfelves, of this felf- exiftent Spirit, or of God, .as we commonly call him, are exceedingly defective : but, this by no means evinces that we are not abfolutely certain that there is fuch a Spirit. There is an immenfe difference between the proof of his exiftence, and the inveftigation of the na- ture under which he exifts. With regard to the former the loweft and moft imperfect of rational creatures may abundantly fatisfy him- felf: but the latter cannot be attained by the higheft: no creature can ever be fuppofed ca- pable of difcovering the effencc of a felf-exift- ent Creator. That among thofe, who have denied the exiftence of God, fome have con- fefledly been men of icicnce, detracts not in the #E R M Q N V. .1% the fmalleft .degree from the certainty of his exigence. 1 1 is an okl observation, .that e " nothing is fo abfurd, but thatfome phi- Mlofopher has averted. it.". There have been philofophers in. our own age, who have endea- voured f at the fame time to difprove the exis- tence of both matter and fpirit : and who, as far as their principles go, -have difowned the ^eftimony of all thejr fenfes. Befides, it is well knowa.. that perverfenefs and affectation of Angularity ofte,n make men qf varipus de- scriptions bold enough to advance , and main- tain opinions, which their own reafon fecretly difavows. . , ,j As proofs of the being of. God are deducible from the works of the creation j fb likewife are proofs of his attributes. The power and wifdorn, which are every, where, difplayed in the different parts of creation, prove him to be poffefTed in fuch an infinite degree of the natural perfections, which are commonly afcribed to him ; and the final intention, dis- coverable in them, enables us to conclude likewife fo irrefiftibly in proof of his moral, as well as his natural attributes ; that we need only open our eyes and inquire into the things e Nihil tam abfurdum eft quod non dixerit aliquis philofo- phorum. Cic. de Nat. Deorum. f Sea Hume's Treatife of human nature, or what is faid of it in Eeattie's Eflay on Truth, p. 258, &c. around i86 SERMON V. around us to be convinced of his infinite and univerfal perfection. Indeed, mankind of E every country and every age appear to have been Co fully convinced both of the exiftence and per-, fedtion of God; that, if this conviction be not allowed to have arifen from traditions or im- preffions derived from himfelf, and, in either cafe, decifive in our favour; it muft have arifen from the works of creation, and muft add krefiftible weight to fuch arguments as thofe which have been above ftated. It is unneceflary, therefore, for me td dwell longer on this part of my fubjedl, and to en- counter the danger of weakening or of obfcu- ring the plain and unanfwerable inferences in proof of the being and attributes of God, which are h deducible from the works of crea- tion, by metaphyfical and difputable reafbntngs 8 " Ut porro firmiflimum hoc afferri videt&f cur decs efle " credamus, quod nulla gens tarn fera, nemo omnium tam fit " immanis, cujus mentem non imbuit deorum opinio. Multi " de diis prava fentiunt : id enim visiofo more effici folet ; " omnes tamen effe vim et naturam divinam arbitrantur. Nee " vero id collocutio hominum aut confenfus effici t : non inftitu- " tis opinio eft confirmata, non legibus. Omni autem in re " confenfio omnium gentium lex naturae putanda eft. Cic. Tufc. Qusft. lib. i. c. i j, Mr. Hume fays in the zd Vol. of his EiTays, p. 4*9 : " The* " only point of Theology in which we mail find a confent of " mankind almoft univerfal is that there is an inviftble intelli- ' " gent power in the world." h Archbilhop Seeker's Lefture on tills fubjeft is well wor- thy of our pcrufal, See Left. 6th. a priori. S'E R"M O N V: 187 a priori. Imperially too, as the l enemies of our Religion in the prefent age generally con- fult their own character • fo far, as to admit thefe truths and even to magnify their extraor- dinary and unqueftionable evidence ; thinking, perhaps, to acquire from thence the appearance of candour at leaft and impartiality, if not of piety. Now that this all-perfedt Creator mould form the world, Vhich we inhabit, without fome 1 Mr. Hume commences the general corollary at the conclu- fion of his Eflays (Vol. II. p. 482.) with thefe words : " Though " the ftupidity of men barbarous and uninftrufted be fo great ** that they may not fee a fovereign author in the more obvious " works of nature, to which they are fo much familiarized ; " yet it fcarce feems poffible that any one of good underftand- " ing lhould rejedt the idea, when once it is faggefted to him. " A purpofe, an intention, a defign is evident in every thing ; " and when our comprehenfion is fo far enlarged as to contem- " plate the firft rife of^this vifible fyftem, we muft adopt with " the ftrongeft conviction the idea of fome intelligent caufe, or " author." And again, (p. 484) " What a noble privilege " is it of human nature to attain the knowlege of the fupreme " being, and from the vifible works of nature to be enabled to '• infer fo fublime a principle as its fupreme Creator ? " Even after Mr. Hume appears in his dialogues on natural Religion to have endeavoured to weaken, if not to fubvert, our belief in the exiftence of an infinitely perfeft Creator and go- vernour of the univerfe by a repetition of all the gratuitous af- fumptions of Atheifm, he makes his principal fpeaker profefs : (p. 228) " that no one has a deeper fenfe of Religion impref- " fed upon his miivd, or pays more profound adoration to the " divine being as he difcovers himfelf to reafon in the inexpli- " cable contrivance and artifice of nature. A purpofe, an in- " tendon, a defign ilrikes every where the moil carelefs, the *' moft ftupid, thinker, and no man can be fo hardened in ab- " furd fyftems as a^ all times to rejeft it." propofed i88 SERMON V. propofed end is a moft unreafonable, and a bhfphemous fuppofition. Every particle of matter, with which we are converfant, is found to be calculated for fome ufeful purpofe : and can we conceive of the whole lefs fuitably to the perfection of its wonderful Author? Infinite power and goodnefs never exert themfelves, but under the direction of infinite wifdom. And, therefore, each of thefe attributes muft cooperate with the others in every work of Providence. The world, then, which we inhabit, muft have been created for fome pur- pofe, as worthy of infinite wifdom, as its for- mation was of infinite power and goodnefs- And if it was, what can this purpofe be ? Doubtlefs, not that all the different parts of it fhould rife, flourifh, decay, and perifh, in the fleeting order in which we fee them daily pafs before our eyes. There is nothing (as far as we can perceive) in a fucoeffive rotation of cor- ruptible matter, capable, on its own account, of pleafing an eternal and immutable Creator. Nor does the moral world, as it ftands at pre- fent, offer to our contemplation any thing worthy of fo great an Author. A confufed fcene of intemperance, injuftice, and irreligion cannot pleafe his eyes, which are too pure to behold iniquity. It muft argue a thorough ig- norance of mankind, or very unworthy notions of SERMON V. 189 of the Deity to fuppofe that he could poflibly create a race of beings merely to ad: on a fleet- ing ftage the inconfiftent and flagitious charac- ters, which are k commonly difplayed inhuman life, and then to vanifh for ever. Indeed, it exceeds the higheft powers of man's wifdom to "account for the introduction and permiflion of moral evil ; much lefs can it reconcile this evil with the defignation of an all-perfecT: Creator. Befides, whence can it arife that the Deity beholds oppreffed virtue and triumphant vice, and lets them pafs at prefent unnoticed by his Omnipotence ? For, though it be al- lowed that the actions of the beft men are Co imperfect, as not to merit any reward ; yet there is an eflential difference in the conduct of different men, which requires at the hands of an all-perfect Governour a proportionable difference in their allotment of happinefs. The fame reafon, therefore, which affures us of the being and attributes of God, affures alfo that he rnufr. have created the world at firft, and now i preferve it in exiflence, for fome other fc Thucydides, while he fully and admirably defcribes the ini- quity and profligacy of every kind, which broke forth in the Pelbponnefian war, fays very juftly of thefe evils : " ye»o/*E»« pt» xat an stroptva cu; at i\ earn (pvo-is utSfumit v." Duker's Edit. L. iii. c. 82. p. 217. 1 That the Preferver is th2 fame with the Creator of the world is a truth of natural Religion, which may fafely be taken fpr granted. For, whether the Prefervation of it be afcribed to qualities, 190 SERMON V. purpofe, than what appears to receive its ac-* complifhment in this life. To attempt to determine by the light of na- ture what this purpofe muft be, is neither an indication of a weak, nor of a prefump- tuous mind. For, though the original circum- stances, and therefore moft undoubtedly the original defign, of man's creation can never be known, except by means of Supernatural Revelation ; yet the defign of his exiftence, under the circumstances in which we now lee him, may be proved, from the m promifcuous distribution of good and evil in this life, to be no other than to make it preparatory to Some future State of recompenfe. For, however confiftent any contrary fuppofition may be with the other attributes of God, this alone will at the fame time vindicate his infinite goodnefs, and juStice in the moral government of the world. And if to confecrate (as it were) this un- hallowed mafs to a purpofe worthy of its great Author, and to vindicate at the fame time the qualities, impreffcd upon it originally or at fubfequent times ; ths effett muft ultimately be ai'cribed in either cafe to the lame great Creator : and, as he is perfeft in fore-knowlege no lefs than in power, the effeft muft alfo in either cafe be itfelf pre- cifely the fame. m This argument conftantly recurs in Bilhop Sherlock's ad- mirable fermons. retributive SERMON V. 191 retributive perfections of God, fome ftate of rewards and punifhments muft be defigned hereafter for tike human race ; doubtlefs, we may expert to be informed of an event, in which we are £o eflentially concerned, and of the means requifite to convert it to our future happinefs. To this end, indeed, our reafon, in addition to what has been above flared, may fuggeft arguments drawn from the nature of the human f8ul and from various other fources$ and may urge, as proofs of the information concerning a future ftate afforded by fuch ar- guments, the hopes of reward and the fears of punifhment after death, which n every where indicate in the minds of men the ftrongeft per- fuafion of a future judgement. It may diredr us alfo to virtue, as the only means of fecuring our acceptance with God at that folemn period. But, -T- if the Religion recommended by human rea- fon (or natural Religion, as it is called,) can af- ford us no information with regard to the cir- cumftances either of our original or our future ftate, no means to difcover and enforce a regular code of human duty, and no afTurance that man's beft, becaufe imperfect, endeavours will at laft be accepted by God -, — if, alfo, it admits not of thofe external and divine proofs of its truth, " See Robertfon's Hift. of Amer. Vol. II. p. zoz„ 8vo. Ed. And Seeker's Left. 121110, p. 133. which. 192 S'E R M O N V," which, though reprobated by ° modern unbe- lievers when urged in favour of Chfifrianity, have p univerfalljf'of 'old been deemed effential to Religion, arid have ever had the moft deci-" five influence on the "minds of men; — -and if, befides, it is confined to the' wife and the great ; who will think fo urifatisfa&ory and partial a guide" the beft, which ought to be ex- pected by us in that which of all others is infi- nitely the moft important of our concerns ? And farther if, over" and above all that has hitherto been faid, or, indeed, that can be faid of the fame kind, 'We fuppofe that fince human reafon was firft given for man's direction his under- ftanding has been darkened and his will ' cor- rupted by fome great deviation from his ori- ginal uprightnefs ; we (hall at once account' for the fubfequent deficiency of. natural Reli- gion, and be juftified in entertaining ardent, though humble, hopes, that the Deity would be pleafed to "communicate to us from himfelf fome s Revelation on this' moft' important fub- ° See what Mr. Hume fays. on this fubjeft in his EfTay on miracles : and fee.alfo the yejy able reply made. to hiro in the text and notes of Dr. White's {eVeiitii Bampton-Lefture Ser- mon. : -.-..■ '''. ->^ . - - - • p This appears from the attempts made by different Heathen legiftators to give fariftion totheirreligtous fyftsms by pretend- ed proprieties and miracles. i Mr. Hume himfelf declares at the conclufion of the religi- ous doubts difperfed through his dialogues : ." That the moit " naturaj fentiment, which a well difpofed mind will feel with "■ regard SERMON V. 193 jefty adapted to our ignorance, and infir- mities. Now, that fuch a Revelation has actually been communicated, thofe very Heathen na- tions, from which the infufficiency of natural Religion is inferred, may ferve to prove. Al- moft ' every one of them has at fome time or other afpired to the importance of having been thus highly favoured by the Deity. And, however, from the number of thefe falfe pre- tenfions, the real Revelation may appear to lofe of its credit ; yet thefe ferve rather to prove the truth of 'fome one, than to prejudice the general caufe : fince, wherever we meet with a counterfeit, we naturally conclude that there was an original. Befides, there is no danger of not being able to diftinguifh between them, when compared together. For, that no Re- velation, except the Chriftian (of which the " regard to the firft Caufe is a longing defire and expectation " that Heaven would be pleafed to diffipate, at leaft alleviate, " this profound ignorance by affording fome more particular " Revelation to mankind and making aifcoveries of the nature *' attributes and operations of the divine object of our Faith." Dialogues on Nat. Rel. p. 263. ' In Valerius Maximus — capite zdo. — de fimulata religione, among the pretenders to a divine Revelation, are mentioned Numa Pompilius, Minos, Pififtratus, Lycurgus, Zaleucus — &c. * If the pretentions to a divine Revelation among the Hea- thens are not to be afcribed to their acquaintance; with the writings of Mofes ; they mull have originated from traditions concerning the Revelations communicated to Noah and the Patriarchs. See Cave's primitive Chriftianity, Vol. I. p. 23,24. O Jewifh 194 SERMON V. Jewifh is the commencement), has the marks, requifite to authenticate a divine cdmmifiion, has been often proved; and it is, indeed, a truth which modern unbelievers readily admit. They contend that all alike want this recommen- dation. But, if it can be proved, that Chriftianity carries with it a remedy for the deficiencies, above pointed out in natural Religion; if it can be proved, — 'Firft, that Chriftianity is cal- culated to lead mankind to future happinefs by the complete knowlege, which it conveys to them of themfelves, of their duty and its ob- ligation, and of their attainable acceptance with God ; — Secondly, that it was accom- panied with external and divine atteftations of its truth; — and Thirdly, that it is diftinguifhed by its univerfality; — if thefe three articles can be proved with regard to Chriftianity, then greater aiTurances of its truth ought not to be required, fince greater cannot be given : both the internal and external evidences of our Re- ligion will evince it to be a divine Revelation; both the moral and natural attributes of God will youch for its truth. To prove the firft of thefe three articles we need only have recourfe to thofe books, in which the doctrines of our Religion are con- tained. We ihall there find fuch information given SERMON V. 195 given concerning mankind, fuch rules laid down for their direction, and fuch provifion made for their happinefs ; as muft abundantly fupply all their deficiences of knowlege in thefe important refpeets : and fuch, as their own wifdom in its . deepeft refearches could never fhadow out. Without any parade of philofophy, without any deductions from fallible reafoning, 'the creation of man, his trial, difobedience, and corruption are unfolded in the holy Scriptures with the moll instructive plain nefs. In the fame Scriptures alfo, and with the fame un- adorned excellence, the intention of his prefent exiftence, and the general circumftances of that ftate, in which he is to exift hereafter, are awfully imprefled upon us. Such intuitive knowlege (if I may fo call it) is difclofed con- cerning all that relates to mankind, as Omni-' fcience alone could poiTefs : and fuch unaffected fimplicity is difplayed in the narration, as be- longs to him only; who is uninfluenced by the little vanities of finite wifdom. Nor does any lefs manifeftation of the fame divine excellencies characterize, and qualify for general ufe, thofe dictates of our Religion, which are calculated to reform the human mind by directing it properly with regard to * See the firft Sermon. O 2 its 196 SERMON V. its duty. To difcover a few truths amidft a variety of errors appears to have been the ut- moft proficiency of reafon : and a fingle wife faying, notwithstanding a thoufand inconfif- ttncies and contradictions, has been enough to conftitute a philofopher. But in Chrift Jefus there is no variablenefs nor fhadow of turning. In his inftructions all is alike the refult of un- erring excellence. Being poffefied of all the c treafures of wifdom and knowlege, and being, moreover, himfelf the great example propofed for the imitation of mankind, he neither drew his instructions from any difputable realbnings, nor from any oftentatiou? difplay of virtue in. others ; but, from his own univerfal perfect- ion. Knowing whence thbfe things proceed which defile a man, he made not human duty to depend upon outward appearances; but pre- pared for it a folid foundation in w internal pu- rity, and a reward eflentially different from every human motive: x " Blefied, fays he, are " the pure in heart for they mall fee God". A reward, to which enlightened reafon muft ever look forward, as to the higheft perfection of created beings : but, which was to be pro- pofed by him only who came forth from the bofom of God. Accordingly, that internal ■ Col. ii. 3. * Matt. xv. 10—^0. Luke vi. 45. * Matt. v. 8. purity SERMON V- r 97 purity, which immediately leads to the perfect- ion of man's duty with regard to himfelf, is explicitly enjoined him and is made alfo the T foundation of his duty with regard to his neighbour and his God. Our great Redeemer and Lawgiver was not content merely to regu- late the a£tions of mankind towards each other. * Every felfifh, arrogant, and revengeful pafllon, for which either civil policy or vicious cuftom had procured a fandtion, was added to the Chriftian catalogue of fins. It is from thefe tumultuous impulfes, as experience convinces us, that all our vices and mifery arife. But thefe the light of nature had not penetration or courage enough openly to arraign. While, therefore, the caufe remained in full force, it ought not to furprife us that the effedt was not diminished. In their room Chriftianity com- mands us to fubftitute " univerfal love, hum- blenefs, and forgivenefs of injuries; as difpo- fitions beft fuited to our own infirmities, and moft acceptable in his fight, " who bringeth " down the mighty from their feat and exalteth " the humble and meek." Such inward virtues, unknown or untaught by natural Religion, Chriftianity lays down as the foundation of i Matt. xv. 18,19- James iii. 17.. z Matt, v. 22, &c. 1 John iii. 15. 1 Luke vi. vj, Sue. O 3 happinefs io& S,ERMON V.: happinefs. to the human foul; and commands us to practife them univerfally. It commands us to learn of him, who was "meek and lowly ia: heart, and we mail find reft to our fouls. \ It commands us, after his great ex- ample, to extend our benevolence to all man- kind ; to c love even our enemies; to blefs thofe, thatjcurfe us; to do good to fuch, as hate us ; and to, pray for thofe, who defpite-- fully ufe and perfecute us : teaching us by a new commandment that the great ;caufes of doing ill to others were to be fupplanted by a principle of unlimited benevolence ; and that all injurious diflinctions of different countries, interefts, and affections,, were to be done away by extended and univerfal charity. The unlearned fori of a carpenter (as his countrymen infultingly ftiled him) not only at once lays a folid foundation for the moft perfect fyftem of morality : but, a Jew (felfifh as the Jews were efteemed) is the firft to teach the philanthropists of the Heathen world leffons of univerfal love. Rea>- fon, indeed, may now affure us that no other principle can make men happy here, or qualify them to enjoy their own and each other's hap- pinefs hereafter. But, God is love, and the original propagation of this doctrine proceeded from him alone. To fpecify all the great and b Matt. xi. 29. c Matt. v. 44. particular S E R"M 0:N*I T.' rap particular duties with, regard to d God and his fervice, no lefs than with regard to man, which are enjoined as effects of the purification of our hearts ; the occafions, on which they are. inculcated; the exadnels with which they are proportioned to our * abilities ; and the condefr cenfion, with which they, are impreffed upon the underftandings of -the £ poor and ignorant, [ would perhaps at prefent rather confound than inform- the mind, and call off •< its attention from -the wonderful iimplicity, with which, they are all made to center in a few rules of: eaiy recollection and univerfal application. ! The Chriftian's religious duties are all fummed < up in that fincere love of God ; which origi- nates in internal purity, difplays itfelf towards him in Faith and devotion, and is exerted with g all our heart, with all our foul, with all our mind, and with all our ftrength. And with regard to our neighbour we are enjoined, by an appeal to our own inmoft defires, to Move him as ourfelves. On thefe two commands ' hung all the law and the prophets : and on thefe the Chriftian's duties are exprefsly made to depend. d John iv. Z4 — James iv. 8. ' Luke xxi. 3. f See the whole of our Saviour's Sermon on the mount. 8 Luke x. 27. h Matt. xxii. 39. l Matt. xxii. 40. And 2P0 SERMON V, And as the Gofpel-rules of human duty were not the refult of any difpu table reafon- ings } £o likewife the obligation, by which they are enforced, is not expofed to the vain cavils of man's wifdom. The obfervation of them was not recommended from the fitnefs of things, that eternal fubjedt of difpute among philofbphers. Confiftent with whatever can properly be conceived to conflitute the £xed and unalterable laws of virtue and vice, they are, notwithstanding, k enjoined as the com- mands of an all-perfedt God j and are to be 1 obeyed by us for his fake, and with a view to his glory : a Motive, which fandtifies our whole conduct, and at the fame time extends its influence to our inmoft fouls, bringing un- der the cognizance of Omnifcience thofe fecret thoughts, which are the fources of all our actions, and which it is the great defign of the Chriftian law univerfally to purify and di- rect to that fupreme being, who is to be their firft, their principal, and their unceafing objedt. k " Thus faith the Lord" is the authority, under which the writers of the OldTeftament delivered their inftruftions. In the New Teftament alfo our blefled Saviour either fpeaks authorita- tively in his own name, as in Matt. v. and other parts of his fermon on the Mount, fee Matt. vii. 29 ; or in the name of the Father, on the doing of whofe will our falvation is explicitly made to depend : fee John v. 43, and Matt, vii. 21. - 1 1 Johniii. 17. 1 Cor. x. 31. And SERMON V. 201 And while the terrors of almighty and eter- nal vengeance are denounced in the moft ex- plicit language againft obftinate Irreligion j mch m rewards are iniured in a future ftate to fin- cere, though imperfect, obedience, as the heart of the wifeft and beft man cannot adequately conceive. And if there be any one circum- ftance in Chriftianity beyond all others, which requires our grateful admiration of the divine goodnefs ; it fhines forth in the provifion made by this holy Religion for the future, and eter- nal happinefs of mankind, and in the af» ffurance, which it conveys to us of our at- tainable acceptance with God. Human reafon (as I have endeavoured to mow) may adduce- irrefragable arguments in proof of the Being and Perfe&ion of God, and of .the certainty of a future ftate : but, it can afford us no fatis- fadtion concerning the means, by which fallen and, notwithftanding their beft endeavours, linful creatures can be rendered fo pleafing in the fight of an all-holy Judge, as to be ac- cepted by him and made heirs of eternal life. Our fatisfa&ion in this important refpecl: mull he entirely derived from the Chriftian Reve- lation. Under Chriftianity the fame all-per- fecl: Redeemer, who has vouchfafed to diredl us in the fulleft manner with regard to our " I Cor. ii. g. duty 202 SERMON V. duty, has * vouehfafed alfo to provide a coun- terpoife to all the temptations of our fpiritual- enemies in the influence of the Holy Ghoft, and a refuge for our imperfections in his own merits. Through his all-powerful atonement and interceffion we are thus both afitfted in the performance of our duty, and at all times affured of acceptance and eternal happinefs with our offended God upon that fincere repentance and faith, which necefiarily carry with them a re- formation of life. Our reafon may admire; but it has no powers of its own either to inveftigate, or to confirm, fuch an amazing proof of the riches of the goodnefs of God. Infidels too may feoff at their Redemption, and in their own perfons evince how un- worthy man may be of fuch tranfeendent mercy : but the more they deride this act of mercy, the more fully do they prove,, that what fo far exceeds man's reafon could never have originated in his invention. Of the fame perfect kind, however, with this inftance of divine mercy are all the other Scriptural reprefentations of the divine attributes. And, though unbelief and the deceitfulnefs of fin may harden men's hearts -, yet they, who come to the perufal of the holy Scriptures with the : ordinary feelings of humanity, will find, ■ See the firft Sermon. among S/E R M O N V. 203 among the. means ufed by the inijpired writers to inftruft and reform mankind, fuch endear- ing evidence of God's goodnefs, fuch alarming inftances of his juftice, and defcriptions of him, in every refpedt fo corroborative of the moft perfect ideas; which we can form for our- i$lyes of the Divine Being and fo tranfcend- ently fuperior to, them* as, .from a mixture of pleafure, awe, and reverence, cannot fail to convey to 'the mind a mod Satisfactory proof of the divine origin of Chriftianity ; and fuch as cannot fail at the fame time to convince every candid inquirer, that there is nothing either in the mercy or in the judgement, difcoverable in the Scripture-account of the atonement made for man's tranfgreffion, which does not en- tirely coincide with that idea of the all-perfecl God, which Revelation fo varioufly and fo confidently fupports. That this defcription of the internal consti- tution of our Religion is not exaggerated, the converfion of " unbelievers into zealous defend- ers of Chriftianity from the fole force of its internal evidences may ferve to prove. From other unbelievers, lefs capable of conviction and who had perhaps lefs impartially Weighed the fubjecT:, the fame evidences have extorted confeffions, which reflect as much difgrace on c See Soame Jenyns's internal evidences. their 204 SERMON V. their own unbelief, as credit on our holy Re- ligion. " I will confefs " (fays a celebrated r foreigner in his treatife on education) " that " the majefly of the Scriptures ftrikes me f with admiration, as the purity of the Golpel *' hath its influence on my heart. Perufe the " works of the philofophers with all their " pomp of diction, how mean, how contempt- " ible are they, compared with the Scriptures? " Is it poffible that a book at once fo fimple " and fo fuhlime mould be merely the work " of man ? — It is more inconceivable that a " number of perfons mould agree together to " write fuch a book, than that one only mould " furnifh the fubje£t of it. The Jews were ** incapable of the diction and ftrangers to the " morality contained in the Gofpel : the proofs " of whofe truth are fo ftriking and inimitable " that the inventor would be a much more " * aftonifhing character, than the hero." What ftronger proof can we have of the in- confiflency of man's wifdom, and of the im- c Roofleauin his Emilius, Vol. III. p. 136, and 159. Engl. Edit. 1767. q RoufTeau here afcribes that very characteristic to the in tern al evidences of our Religion, without being convinced of its- divine origin, which Hume fays would command his Faith in- its mi- racles : " if, fays the latter, the falfhood of the teftimony would *' he more miraculous, than the event which it relates ; then, <' and not till then, can it pretend to command my Faith." Effays Vol. II. p. 130. poffibility SERMON V. 205 poffibility of converting a felf-fufficient phi- lofopher, than fuch declarations from a profef- fed unbeliever ? Who would not rather expect that a Religion, which contains within itfelf fuch unqueftionable evidence of its divine ori- gin, mould not have any one learned adverfary*. than that the author himfelf of the above de- clarations fhould be of that number ? We have feen, then, that Chriftianity was calculated to lead mankind to future happinefs by the complete knowlege, which it conveys to them of themfelves, of their duty and its obli- gation, and of their attainable acceptance with God. In the next difcourfe I fhall proceed to the consideration of the two remaining articles by which I was to prove that our Religion is a divine Revelation. SERMON VI. i PET. III. 15. Be ready always to give an anfwer to every man, that ajketh you a reafon of the Hope that is in you. IN fpeaking concerning the arguments addu- cible in proof of the truth of our Religion, and confequently concerning the anfwer, which we may give from thence with regard to the Hope that is in us, I was to content my- felf with attempting to ftate compendioufly, in the two difcourfes appropriated to this part of my fubjedt, fuch among the more important of them, as commencing with the being and at- tributes of God are fufficient regularly to prove the credibility of a divine Revelation, and to fhow that Chriftianity by its internal and exter- nal evidences evinces itfelf to be in reality fuch a Revelation. Accordingly, in the firft of thefe difcourfes, having finifhed what relates to the being and attributes of God and the credibility of 208 SERMON VI. of a divine Revelation, I propofed to prove that Chriftianity is fuch a Revelation by mowing that it carries with it a remedy for thofe deficiencies in natural Religion, which fer- ved to eftablifh the general credibility of a divine Revelation ; namely, by mowing — Firft, that Chriftianity is calculated to lead mankind to future happinefs by the complete fcnowlege, which it conveys to .them of them - ielves, of their duty and its obligation, and of their attainable acceptance with God; — Se- condly, that it was accompanied with external and divine atteftations of its truth; — and Thirdly, that it is diftinguifhed by its univer- sality: and having propofed this, I at the fame time went through the. firft of thefe articles. I ftiall now, therefore, proceed to the two re- maining articles : and when I have fhown that Chriftianity was accompanied with external and divine atteftations .of its truth, and-alfo that it is diftinguimed by its univerfality, I ihall finifh thisliead with the conclufion, which naturally follows from the different parts of it, and with a few fuitable obfervations, The external and divine atteftations, to be expected in confirmation of a divine Revela- tion, can be no greater, perhaps no other, than prophefies and miracles. In the difplay of thefe the attributes of Omnifcience and Omnipotence are exerted. With SERMON VI. 209 With regard to the proprieties, recorded in the Scriptures, they refpedl contingencies too wonderful for the powers of man to conjecture, or to efFecT:. Many of thofe, which are found in the Old Teftament, foretold unexpected changes in the diftribution of earthly power. And whether they foretold the fall of flourifh- jng cities, or the ruin of mighty empires -, the ' event has minutely corresponded with the prediction. Nor were they delivered with that latitude of expreffion, which characterized, and flickered from detection, the impofitions of Heathen oracles. Some of them on the contrary were fo particular, and fo remarkably pointed to their objedr. ; that Porphyry, by a new method of aflaulting Revelation, fet him- felf to prove the literal accomplifhment of Daniel's prophefies j and from their circum- ftantial minutenefs boldly inferred that they muft be the forgery of fome b later age, in opposition to all the demonstrative proofs of their antecedent exiftence. So differently did Porphyry think of Scripture-prophefy from the modern hiftorian, who farcaftically attempts to difcredit the evidences of our Religion by a See Bifhop Newton on the prophefies. b See Grotius de Veritate Chriit. Rel. E i. c. 17. — Pri- deaux's Conneftions, Vol. 1. p.iz8. Fol. and Lardner's Jew- ilh and Chriftian teftiraonies, Vol. III. p. 133, &c. — 4m Ed. P calling ? io SERMON VI. calling a prediction of Utf r, times ' " a rare " prediction, beeaufe the ftyle was unambi- " guous and the date unqueftionable." But, the great objedt of the prophefies of the Old Teftament is the Redemption of mankind. This, as foon as Adam's fall had made it neceffary, the mercy of God, was pleafed to foretell. And, as the time for its accomplishment drew nearer, the predictions concerning it became gradually fo clear and determinate, as to mark out with hiftori- cal precifion almoft every d circumftanee in the life and character of infinitely the mofl extra- ordinary Perfonage, that ever appeared among men. Any one of thefe predictions is fufheient to indicate a prefcience more than human. But the collective force of all taken together is fuch, that nothing more can be neceffary to prove the interposition of Omnifcience, than the eftablifhment of their authenticity. And this, even at fo remote a period as the prefent, is placed beyond all doubt. The books, in which they are contained, are known to have been tranflated into different languages and difperfed into different parts, long before the coming of Chrift. It is abfurd, therefore, to fuppofe that any forgery with regard to them, « Gibbon's Hiftory, Vol, V. p. 570. * See -the firft Sermon. SERMON VI. an if attempted by the firft Chriftians, fhould not havfe been immediately detected : and ftill more abfurd, if poffible* to fuppofe that any paf- fages thus forged fhould afterwards have been admitted univerfally into their Scriptures by the Jews themfelves, who, from the firft appli- cation of thefe prophefies to our bleffed Saviour, have endeavoured by every ' method to pervert their meaning. Surely, had the prophefies in queftion not been found at that time in the Wri- tings, to which the firft propagators of Chrif* tianity appealed; the Jews needed only produce thofe Writings to refute the impofition : and fince no refutation of this kind was then at- tempted, it was a demonftration to the men of that age j and the fame prophefies, being uni- verfally found there now without the poffibility of accounting for it if they were forged, con- vey in all reafon as forcible a demonftration to ourfelves at prefent ; that they were written there from the beginning, and unqueftionably ' Among other methods they have even dared to mutilate and corrupt various paffages- of their own Scriptures. Of thefg I may mention Zach. xii. 10. and Pf. xxii. 16 : in the firft of which paffages Jehovah fays in Zachariah," they fhall look upoil me whom they have pierced," and in the kit the Pfalmift lays in the perfoh of the Meffiah, " they pierced my Hands and my feet ;' ! and both have been altered by the Jews fince the appli- cation of thera to our bleffed Saviour. See on this fubjeft, and on the fixteen other places which were altered by the Scribes, Pearfon on the Creed p; 201 . 5th Edit. Pa by 212 SERMON VI. by no other than the finger of God. Nor are the proprieties of the NewTeftament Jefs evidently the infpiration of Omnifcience.To fay nothing of our blefTed Saviour's predictions concerning himfelf and the propagation of his Religion, nor of thofe which relate to the fu- ture condition of the Church; the predictions, which refpect the Jews, and which are com- mon to the New as well as to the Old Tefta- ment, of which fome have long fince been accomplifhed and others are every day receiving their accomplifhment before our eyes, abun- dantly prove the divine origin of the Goipel- prophefy. The deftrucHon of Jerufalem with its unparalleled circumftances of horror is not more clearly recorded by Jofephus, than it is foretold by Daniel and by our blefTed Saviour. Nor did our blefTed Saviour foretell only in the moft 'definite language the deftrudtion of Je- rufalem, and particularly that not one 8 ftone of the Temple fhould be left upon another; he exprefsly foretold alfo that Jerufalem thus de- frayed fhould be h trodden down of the Gen- tiles, till the time of the Gentiles be fulfilled : while the Jews themfelves were to be carried away captive into all lands ; and, according to the denunciation, of their great lawgiver, were f Matt. xvi. 28. £ Mark xiii. 2. h Luke xxi. 24. to SERMON VI. 213 to become an ' aftonimment, a proverb, and a bye- word. Now that this has a&ually been the cafe with the Jews without intermiffion from the days of Titus and Adrian to the prefent time, every hiftorian informs us : that ft is fb now, we fee and know. Nor is this all. Whatever their own diftinguifhed af- fection for their Religion and country could fuggeft, and whatever infidelity and hatred of Chriftianity CDuld help forward in their fa- vour, was in vain tried to defeat thefe proprie- ties. The apoftate Julian, an emperour qua- lified for the attempt in riches, power, and blafphemous audacioufnefs, collects this vaga- bond people from all countries, and leads them on by his favourite Alypius to rebuild their temple. Every human power cooperates with them, every difficulty appears to have vanished. When on a fudden the work was broken up with terror and precipitation : and an enter- prife, of which the execution was fo zealoufly defired and fo powerfully fupported, was at once deferted. As the influence of human means was entirely engaged in its favour ; the mifcarriage of it muft be afcribed to fuperna- tural interpofition. , What this was we are in- formed by k contemporary and other writers, 1 Deut. xxviii. 37. k See in Whitby's general preface an enumeration of the ear- ly authors who have written on this fubjeiS, p. z&. F 3 Sozomen, 214 S E R M O N . VI. and particularly by Ammianus Marcellinus* whofe teftimony, as a Pagan, a philofopher^ and a bofom-friend of the apoftate Prince, in- fidelity would readily and fully ' admit, were it not before-hand apprifed of its contents. He decUres that m " horrid balls, pf fire, break- " ing out near the foundation with frequent Sozomen, after a particular relation of the miraculous defeat of Julian's attempt, fays of this defeat, " *ai tbto ■Erpos tnnrruv '•' ahui hthrca te x«i mrtvenu, x«i See Jenkin's Reafonablenefs of Chriftianity. Vol. T. c. 6. ' See Shuckford's Connexion, Vol. HI. p. 350—399. 5 This captivity was not extended to all the people of the Jews for any period ofmore than fifty years together. . in SERMON VI. 21$ in reality, the Jews were fo far from being (what they were generally accounted by the Heathen world) the moft credulous of 'all na- tions j that they appear to have been the re- verfe. It cannot be matter of wonder that men, who had debafed their natural notions of Religion by the moft fuperftitious idolatry, fhould charge every worfhipper of the invifible God with credulity. But if we confult the hiftory of the Jews, where alone we can ex- pedl to meet with their true character; we fhall find them to have been the moft ftirF- necked people, and that from the beginning they always refifted the Holy Ghoft. This obftinacy might, probably, be one reafon why tile miracles, calculated for the confirmation of their Religion, were performed in a manner fo public and unexceptionable. But, certainly, we have at the fame time to acknowlege ano- ther moft gracious reafon for the publick noto~ riety of the miracles, recorded both in the Pentateuch, and other 'parts of the Jewifh Scriptures : fince it has fupplied fucceeding ages with irrefragable arguments ' in vindica- tion of the divine origin of our Religion. * Particularly thofe performed by Jofhua, Samuel, and Eli- jah ; and the continued miracle exhibited by the Cloud which refted over the Mercy-Seat in the old temple. See, concerning this cloudj Prideaux's Conneftion, Vol. I. p. 119. Fol. Edit. Of 220 SERMON VI. Of the fame incontrovertible notoriety alfd Were the miracles of the New Teflament. They were not done in a corner. Every one had full liberty to pry into their genuinenefs : and yet the moft malicious enemies of our Sa- viour and his Apoftles never pretended at the time of their performance to difcover any im- pofition in them.' Nor was the teftimony of thofe, who afterwards flood forth to vouch for their truth lefs publick, or lefs unexception- able, than the miracles themfelves. Every martyr, among the fir ft preachers of Chrift- ianity, demonftrates their reality by his death. For what, but the known truth of thefe won- derful events, made them lay down their lives for a Religion, of which thefe were an effential fupport ; and often the immediate u caufe of their own fufferings ? That they were com- petent witneffes on the occafion, however poor and illiterate, their fituation with refpect to thefe miracles and the nature of the tranfactions themfelves fully evince. Thefe miracles were all objecls of fenfe, and required no depth of learning or ingenuity for a proper obfervation of them. Of whatever abilities the obfervers were, they mufl know whether they had heard the dumb fpeak, had feen the blind » See the paflage cited from Stillingfleet's Oiig. Sac. in the notes, p. 41. reftored S E R M O N VI. 221 reftored to fight, the lame walk, and the dead raifed again to life : ' they muft know whether their Lord's crucifixion, at which they were prefent, was attended with the miraculous cir- cumftances which they relate ; and whether they were allured by their fenfes that he was again alive after his paffion. We believe in thefe refpe&s only what the difciples of Chrift declare that v they had heard, had feen with their eyes, had looked on, and their hands had handled of the Word of life. Doubtlefs, men, who could hear, fee, and feel, were as good witnefies in thefe matters of fenfe ; as the moft learned and acute : and men, who laid down their lives in atteftation of fa£ts, thus indubitably known to them, cannot be fufpedled of any want of ve- racity on the occafion; and muft ever with candid enquirers w unexceptionably eftablifh r i John i. i . w The miracles of Chriftianity appear In reality to have all thofe requisites, which Mr. Hume fays are not to be difco- vered in any miracle, found in hiftory. He fays " there is not " to be found in all hiftory any miracle attefted by a fufficient " number of men of fuch unqueftionable good fenfe, educa- " tion, and learning, as to fecure us againft all delufion in "-themfelves 5 of fuch undoubted integrity, as to place them " beyond all fufpicion of any defign to deceive others ; of fuch " credit and reputation in the eyes of mankind, as to have a "great deal to lofe in cafe of being detected in any falihood ; " and at the fame time attefting falls performed in fuch a pub- " lick manner and jn fo celebrated a part of the world, as to " render the detection unavoidable. 1 All which circumftances *' are requisite to give us full affurance in the teftimony of men." Effays, Vol. II. p. 130. The education of St. Paul and the writings of him and of the othc^ 222 S'E R M ON VI. their trutfe. For, however it may be urged j that the truth of the Chriftian miracles is not proved by the fufferings of Chriftians for their faith under future perfections ; — the fufferers might be deceived, and through well-meant zeal ky down their lives in defence of an error ; — however this may be urged ; yet it applies not in the fmalleft degree to the firft teachers of Chriftknity, who atteft on fuch occafions nothing but what fell within their own abfo- lute and fenfible knowlege. But, the merciful God, who has left us ir- refragable proofs of the authenticity of the prophefies, which refpecl: our great Redeemer, in the unbelief of the Jews, has alfo fupplied us with arguments in fupport of the miracles of our Religion from the different ways them- ielves in which they have been oppofed by our adverfaries* While the fafts were too recent to be difputed * Celfus, Porphyry, and Hiero- cles admitted their reality, but denied the di- vine commiflion of the agent and the confe- quent truth of that Religion which they were wrought to eftablifh. In modern times, When other authors of the New Teftament, their univerfally unifli- peached chara&ers, their unanimous furrender even of their fives: in defence of the truth of the miracles which they relate, the notoriety of thefe miracles, and the confpicuous fituation of _ Jerufalem and other places where they were wrought, all con- tribute to refute the affertions of this daring philofopher. x See Mr. Moyle's Letters concerning the Thundering Le- gion, Works 8 vo— Vol. II. p. 353. the SERMON VI. 223 the confequence of their admiflion is better known ; and there are few, if any, who are not convinced that fuch credentials befpeak an am- baffador fent from God (especially too when the purport of the ernbafly does not y contradict the great truths demonftrable by natural Reli- gion,) unbelievers have prudently thought fit to ftiift their ground. But, unhappily for them, a denial of the Chriftian miracles at prefent comes too late : fince the fkdts of this kind which infidelity has long fince admitted upon- earlier and better information, will for ever re- main a teflimony of the truth of Chriftianity and of the perverfenefs of modern unbelief. The univerfality of our Religion, which forms a part both of its internal and external evidences, is the third and laft article, by which I propofed to prove its divine origin'. y Sfse Stillingfleet's Orig. Sacr. l.ii. c. v. p. 172. Let it not be thought that the argument here revolves at all in a circle, from internal to external evidences and vice verfa^- For, as Bilhop Sherlock fays, " Men do- not diftinguilh be-, " tween the doftrines, which we prove by miracles, and the ** doftrines by which we try miracles : for they are not the " fame doftrines. Gad never wrought miracles to prove the; ** difference between good and evil : and I fuppofe that if any " man were afked how He proves temperance or chaftity to be- " duties, murder or adultery to be fins, he would not recur to " miracles for an argument. Thefe and the like duties are en- " forced by the Gofpel : but were always truths and duties be- " fore our Saviour's coming :„ and we are in poffeflioji of them' " without the help of miracles or Revelation. And thefe are" " the doftrines, by which we try miracles. But the doftrines, " which are to be proved by miracles are the revealed" doftrines " of Chriitianity, &c." Sermons, Vol. I. p. 303. This- 224 SERMON VI. This universality was before infifted upon, when I treated of the fubftance and of the in- ternal evidences of our Religion. Whatever may be commonly underftood by it, we cer- tainly ought not to eftimate it primarily from the effe&s, which our Religion has produced on mankind. Thefe, except in regions placed beyond the poffibility of the Chriftian's reach, have from the beginning depended eflentially, upon ourfelves. Chriftianity from the begin- ning addrefled itfelf to us, as free agents : and, what ought ever to be urged in its favour, it was Co publifhed, as to leave us, amidft all our prejudices from worldly wifdom and worldly attachments of every kind, at full liberty, to accept or rejedV it, and to obey, or not, the* injunctions which it gives concerning its future propagation. The univerfality of our Religion- confidered as an argument in its favour, ought therefore primarily to be eftimated from its general defign and other circumftances within itfelf: and if fecondarily from its effe&s -, from thefe, however, no farther, than as they are confidered under the influence of our own free will. Its general defign may immediately be col- lected from its general fubftance. This (as we have * feen) evinces that Chriftianity com- * In the firft Sermon. menced SERM ON VI. 225 menced with the- creation of mankind; that it has regularly been brought down through the different ages of their hiftory; and that, while it joins together and unites the whole human race by the moft comprehenfive and intimate connexion, it alfo accounts for and remedies thofe univerfal evils in human exiftence, which man's unenlightened reafon could neither ex- plain, nor in any considerable degree alleviate; While mankind are deduced by Chriftianity from the fame common ftock, and involved in the fame confequences of their firft parent's voluntary guilt; they are taught to what caufe they are to afcribe the introduction of all their fin and mifery. They are no longer left vainly to attempt with philofophy to reconcile their diverfified crimes and fufFerings with the ori- ginal appointment of divine goodnefs. Chrifti- anity from one comprehenfive caufe traces out and explains the whole. Like the true fyftem of the natural world, it accounts in the raoft -Ample and intelligible manner for intri- cacies and irregularities, which long con- founded the fubtlety and baffled all the in- genuity of conjectural philofophy. Having referred man's fin and all its deftructive con- fequences to the fame original perverfion of free will, Chriftianity goes on to provide as comprehenfive a remedy for thefe evils. The Q^ Heathens, ?26 SERMON VI, Heathens, indeed, could fee and deplore the " corruption of human nature : but, as they knew not its b caufe j fo were they ftill more ignorant of its proper ' remedy. They were too confcious of the guilt of fin, not to be convinced of the punifhment, which it de- ferred at the hands of infinite juftice : and at the fame time too fenfible of its influence over the beft men, to fuppofe their actions could merit reward, much lefs eternal happinefs, from an all perfect God. They were, there- fore, induced through fear either to counter- ad: their general apprehenfions and to deny a future ftate of retribution, or to d adjuft it to their own infirmities and demerits. The idea of an all-perfe£r. Redeemer and of univerfal fanctification and acceptance through him, however revealed to their forefathers , yet when corrupted by idolatry and loft in fuper- * See Stillingfleet's Orig. Sac. p. 509 — 514. b See the fame, p. 476 — 500. c .Porphyry is made to fay by St. Anguftine : " nondum re- " ceptam unam fectam quae univerfalem viam anima? contineat " liberandas." De Civit. Dei, 1. x. c. 32. * We may learn from Homer of what fort the future life was which the Heathens expefted. Achilles is defcribed by him as faying to UlyfTes in the regions below, Mi) u.01 SaraTon yt •ma^miba. tyauhp. Obvtssai" AtJji craj' xx\r,fu a fun (2iotc; . Odyff. .<*'. 1. 487. ftition, SERMON VI. 227 fHtion, was not to be recovered by the moft daring effort of human conjecture. But, what man could not conceive, mufl lefs expedt, Chriftianity had from the beginning ordained, was gradually preparing, and at length accom- plifhed in the Gofpel- covenant. Infinite jus- tice and goodnefs, having been vindicated with regard to the commencement of man's imper- fections, are reconciled in his pardon by the merits and interceflion of the fecond Perfon in the Godhead. By thefe means eternal hap- pinefs is again offered to mankind, and the road to it is opened by an univerfal atonement for thofe imperfections of human nature, which were an invincible ftumbling-block to every other fyftem of future rewards. e " God fpared " not his own fon, but delivered him up for «« us all." Such, and fo comprehenfive is Chriftianity in its general defign. Its other internal and particular parts are not lefs ' univerfally calculated for the in- ftruction and happinefs of all mankind. No- thing is to be found in its precepts, adapted to one .ftate or people, and not to all. In Chrift Jefus there is no difference between Jew and Greek, bond and free, male and fe- male. He, by whom all the nations of the e Rom. viii. 32. 0^2 earth 228 SERMON VI. earth were at firSt feparated from one family/ again unites them as brethren under the fame laws and into the fame communion. And that no one might he debarred of acceSs to the Religion, which was thus deSigned for the happinefs of all^ the New Te'ftament was evidently calculated by its plainnefs and Sim- plicity for the instruction of the loweft and moit illiterate in every age and nation : herein remarkably differing not only from the doc- trines of unaSESied reaSbn, which are not to be investigated: in their different relations without the learning and labor of philosophy; but alSb from the antecedent parts of Revelation. As thefe latter were the obfcure f commencement of Chriftianity and as they were intended par- ticularly for the Jews, they often abound in fublime and figurative reprefentations -, which, perhaps, can thoroughly be understood by thofe Oriental nations only, whofe Study and delight they were. But the language of the New Testament, like its doctrine, is univer- fal. Every one is enabled without difficulty to partake of its benefits. Every one alfo is invited to partake of them. 8 " Come unto me " all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and 1 f " The ancient Patriarchs" (fays Cave after Eufebius) " were the Chriftiansof the old world." — Primitive Chriftianity, Vol. I. p. 2Z. b Matt. xi. 28. " will SERMON VI. 229 " will give you reft/' was the Redeemer's af- fectionate addrefs to mankind. h " Go ye into " all the world and preach the Gofpelto every «« creature " was the commiflion, with which he fent forth his difcipleS. A commiflion, which the Very exiftence itfelf of the New Teftament proves that they executed, under the influence of the Holy Spirit, in fuch a manner, as to leave their fucceffors abundant means to make the Gofpel known in pfocefs ef time to every individual throughout the world. J have above faid that the effects, produced on mankind by Chriftianity, will as long as we are free agents depend effentially upon our* felves : and that its univerfality ought not to be eftimated from thefe effects any farthefy tharl as they are confidered under the influence of man's free will. But, even under this mode of consideration, they will afford convincing proofs; of the unlimited extent of our Religion. Though Chriftianity was fo propofed to man- kind from the beginning, as to leave them at full liberty to accept or reject it j yet, on its firft publication, if was immediately embraced by multitudes. In facceeding ageS it wa» eftablifhed in the moft eivilafced and moffc powerful empires. And ifo our own time we h Mar. xvi. »$. Q^3 know 230 SER MO'N' VI. know that it is the Religion of all thofe, wh6 are juftly ranked among the enlightened nations of the earth. That it is not profeffed at pre- fent by more of the unenlightened inhabitants of our globe is to be afcribed, in the countries placed beyond our reach, to fimilar difpenia- tions of Providence with thofe, which withheld for fo many ages the coming itfelf of the Re- deemer : in the countries, acceffible to us, it is to be afcribed, not to our Religion, but, to our own imperfections -, to our want of Chriftian zeal to propagate it among diftant nations, or rather, perhaps, to our want of Chriftian vir- tue to recommend it by our conduit to their acceptance. It has, however, widely extended its falutary influence among thofe who are not its adtual profeffors. It has improved the morality of both ' Mahometans and Pagans : it has alfo improved their religious creeds. And certainly our modern unbelievers would not exceed the moft fubtle of Heathen philofo- phers in the principles of natural Religion ; if they had not accefs to that Gofpel, which they affect to defpife. This diffufion of our Reli- gion, under all its various and peculiar difadvan- tages from its firft propagation to the prefent hour, has not only been deemed by k men of 1 Seeker's Sermons, Vol. II. p. 257. k See Jortin's Remarks, Vol. II. p. 149. Mr. Moyle SERMON VI. 231 the beft historical information fufRcient to free it from all objection in this refpect ; it has, moreover, been ever infifted upon by them, as a powerful proof of its truth. But there is one effect, which we are encouraged to expecl: from Chriftianity, and which (though it is it- felf alfo under the influence of man's free will) will more than make up for any deficiency, which can poffibly be fuppofed in the pre- ceding effect confidered as proofs of the uni- verfality of our Religion. We are ' encouraged humbly to expecl: that the atonement of our great Redeemer will be as extenfive as the in- fluence of the firft man's fall, and that no one will be excluded from fome at leaft of its be- nefits, but fuch as wilfully fhut their eyes againft the truth, and, either from the pride of human reafon or the luft of fenfual plea- fure, rejeft fo great falvation. In this manner does Chriftianity carry with it a remedy for the deficiencies above pointed out in natural Religion; — Firft, it is calcu- lated to lead mankind to future happinefs by the complete knowlege, which it conveys to Mr. Moyle fays on this fuhjefl :" The progrefs of Chriftianity, " coniidering it's late rife and the conftant opposition it met *' with, is even on my moderate computation prodigious and " to be accounted for by nothing but the divine Providence.'* Works, 8vo, Vol. II. p. 327. 1 See the firft Sermon. them, 232 SERMON VI. them, of themfelves, of their duty and its ob- ligation, and of their attainable acceptance with God ; — Secondly it was accompanied with ex- ternal and divine atteftations of i(:s truth; — and Thirdly it is diftinguifhed by its univerfality. If thefe things, then, are certain ; if natural Religion evinces that there is an all-perfe£k God, the Creator and Preferver of all things j if it evinces alfo from the prefent circum- ftances of our exiftence that there will be a future ftate of retribution -, if at the fame time this Religion is effentially deficient in its in^ ftruction, in its proofs, and, as a fyftem which, is too difficult for the inveftigation of "■ common capacities, in its extent ; and if, under thefe circumftances, any Revelation fhould be fet forth, confirming what is evinced by natural Religion and remedying what is deficient in it ; then we muft either confefs the truth of fuch a Revelation, or (what is the worft blaf- phemy) fuppofe God himfelf to have favoured an impofition upon mankind : efpecially too, when we recollect that one of the deficiencies m The Religion of the great bulk of mankind in the heathen world has ever been ultimately derived from that ftate of na- ture (fo called in contradiftin&ion to a ftate of pure Revelation) in which man was left after the fall and after the deluge, and in which he was affifted by tradition and divine Grace no lefs than by his own reafon. But the natural Religion, concerning which' I am here Ipeaking, whatever may be its real foundation, is fuppofed to depend entirely upon human reafon. of S E R"M O N VI. tH of natural Religion, remedied by the fuppofed Revelation, is the want of external and divine proofs. For, what reafon to the utmoft ex- tent of its abilities recommends and fuch proofs confirm, is unquestionably the voice of God, fpeaking diftin&ly to every intelligent creature. ' Thus I have attempted to ftate in a fum- mary manner the arguments, adducibte in proof of the triith of our Religion, and con- sequently in vindication of the anfwer which may be given from thence concerning the Hope that is in us. In juftice, however, to a caufe, which has been defended in the ableft and fulleft manner, I muft repeat the obfervation, with which I entered upon this part of my fubjeft, " that it '* is impoffible to comprehend within a fmall *' compafs a regula? compendium of the whole, «« or even of the more important part, of the *« arguments by which the truth of our fooJy " Religion may be proved." The- repetition of this obfervation cannot but be neceffary in an age when Superficial vindications of our Reli- gion are found to do as much injury to the ca,ufe, which they defend ; as the writings, againft which they are commonly levelled. Since many, even of thofe who think their Religion worthy of ferious attention, content- ing themfelves with fuch curfory treatifes, are 234 SERMON VI. are naturally led to impute their imperfedriofts to the fubjeft itfelf : and, becaufe fome parts are pafled over in filence and others very briefly handled, they conclude at once either that nothing, or that very little, can be faid in their behalf. But, if men are really in earneft and wifh to give the arguments in favour of Chrifti- anity a fair examination j let them attentively perufe the difcourfes delivered at Mr. Boyle's Leclure. Or if this mould be thought too laborious an undertaking, let them read and thoroughly digeft what n Bifhop Pearfon has written on the creed j and they will find, especially in the former cafe, fb many reafons affigned for the truth of every part of our Re- ligion ; that neither the infinuations of its enemies, nor the injudicious zeal of its friends will ever after be likely to fhake their Faith. The importance of the enquiry rauft convince every fenfible man that his time could not be better employed. And the confequence of it to every ° well-difpofed man will be fuch a full ■ They, to whom Bilhop Pearfon's writings on the creed may appear too abftrafted, will find a molt perfpicuous and fatisfac- tory collection of the arguments in defence of our Religion in Biftiop Burnet's very valuable expofition of the 39 Articles. Swift in his Letter to a young Clergyman goes fo far as to fay, " There is one obfervation which I never knew to fail, and " I defire you will examine it in the courfe of your life, that ** no gentleman of a liberal education and regular in his " morals did ever profefs himfelf a free-thinker." Mifcell. Vol. I. p. 285. affurance SERMON VI. 235 afiurance of the truth of our Religion, as muft infpire him with that fettled p peace of mind, and pleafing confidence with regard to futurity, which alone can conftitute the hap- pinefs of a rational being. Since to conclude the prefent head with the words of an admired modern ? writer : " What true Religion and " true philofophy dictate of God and Provi- " dence and man is fo charming, fo confonant «« with all the finer feelings in human nature j " that every man of tafte, who hears of it, " muft wifh it to be true : and I never yet " heard of one perfon of candour, who wifhed " to find the evidence of the Gofpel fatisfac- " tory and did not find it fo." ' Nothing can exhibit a more ftriking contrail to the joyful expectations, derived from pure Religion, than the miferable confequences of Scepticism. The latter are well exemplified in the feries of Mr. Hume's writings. After he has endeavoured to wreft from us all the pleafing confidence, which we might derive from Chriilianity, by his treatife of human nature, his eflays, and his Dialogues ; he concludes his fceptical works with a defence of fuicide and an attempt to prove the mortality of the foul. After depriving his admirers of the moft valuable confolations of this life, he furely makes them but poor amends by telling them at laft that they may cut their throats and fafely depend upon eternal annihilation. * See Beattie on truth, p. 447. 8vo, 5th. Edit. SERMON VIL i PET. III. 15. Be ready always to give an anfwer to every man, that ajketh you a reajbn of the Hope that is in you, HAVING finished the parts of my defign, which relate to the fubftance, hiftory, and evidences of our Religion, it remains that I fpeak concerning the objections which are urged in oppofition to its truth. This laft topic unhappily furnifhes abundant matter for our confideration. For, as fuperfti- tion and bigottry have ever attempted to pre- clude a difcordancy of opinion with regard to Chriftianity by difcouraging enquiries into its evidences -, fo contrary prejudices have uni- formly led to the oppofite extreme, and this moft benevolent of all inftitutions, inftead of fecuring the refpedt by providing for the wel- fare of mankind, has been treated with the moft licentious freedom. •• Whatever be the caufe 238 SERMON VII. caufe of thefe prejudices againft our Religion, the effect of them is indifputable." Offences in Revelation have been induftrioufly fought af- ter : and the objections, in which they are urged, direct themfelves againft every article that comes recommended by its authority. To expofe the futility of each particular among thefe objections has furnifhed the learning of ages with ample employment. - According to the plan, which I have laid down, I am to content myfelf under the pre- fent head with pointing out the general fources of fuch objections, and with mowing that a forcible removal of thefe offences by divine interpofition would be inconfiftent with our Religion itfelf : concluding the whole with a particular account of thofe objections, which are advanced againft our Religion from the pretenfions of philofophy. Thus limited, however, the prefent head, no lefs than the preceding ones, will fuggeft irrefragable rea- fons, by which we may fatisfy both our- felves and others, concerning the Hope that is in us. As this head will fupply fufficient matter for our confideration at two different times ; I fhall make what relates to the general fources of objection the fubject of our imme- diate confederation, and referve for the next opportunity SERMON VII. 239 opportunity the particular objections with which I am to conclude. It hath * already been remarked " that the " whole Strength of Atheifm confifts in con- ** tradicting the univerfal reafon of mankind : " that Atheifts have no principle and can *' have none, and therefore that they can ne- " ver reafon, but only confidently deny or af- " firm." I fhall, therefore, not attempt to trace from any more immediate fources thofe objections againft the being and attributes of God, which muft all ultimately be referred either to the want of due attention to the ob- jects which furround us, or to a fpirit of un- supported contradiction j and, without farther notice of them, fhall proceed to the different objections, which are advanced againft our Religion by men who admit both the exiftence and infinite perfection of God. By fome of thefe it is thought abfurd that Revelation, or our Religion as it is contained in the Holy Scriptures and derived from an all-perfecl: author, fhould be at all the fubjcdt of offence j and that emanations from the fountain of truth fhould furnifh the moil pre- judiced fceptic with even an appearance of error. But fuch men would do well to confider a In the fifth Sermon. the H Q SERMON VII. the imperfections of human nature, and to en-* quire whether all the objections againft Reve- lation ought not in reality to be afcribed to thefe imperfections, as to their proper fources. We know in the firft place that the pureft ftream may be rendered foul by the channel* through which it pa-ffes : and if we view man in his rnoft enlightened ftate ; we mail have no reafon to wonder that instructions, committed to writing and- conveyed in fuccemve ages through his hands, fhould b lofe much of their original purity. Befidesi it appears neceffary from the imperfections of mankind that Re- velation mould be attended with a variety of circumftances > which will give rife to objec- tions, more extenfive than are drawn from mere errors in the conveyance; and which will contribute in an eminent degree to render be- lief in its truth a matter of faith and not of demonftration. For, as containing a body of written instructions for the information and di- rection of its profeffors, at whatever time Re- velation Were given j its antiquity in fubfequent ages would render many of thofe parts, which depend upon the conftruCtion of language and * However, it has happened, whether our advertaries will allow it to have happened providentially or not,, that the cor- ruptions of the facred Text have neither been fo numerous, nor of fo great importance, as might have been expe&ed. the SERMON VII. 24* the cuftoms of mankind, obfcure at leaft and uncertain. And where the obfcurity and un- certainty of writings require at times the af- fiftance of conjecture, it is well known that no original perfection can fecure them againft all the different kinds of contradiction and af- perfion. Exclufive alfo of thefe general ap- pendages on human imperfe&ion, which are fo common to all the very ancient writings, as to be allowed by men of candour to furnilh no reafonable objection againft any ; there are numberlefs circumftances, arifing from the in- competency of human judgement, which will affecT: fuch a fyftem as the holy Scriptures un- fold and bring unmerited cenfure upon it. A narrative, which commences with the creation, which relates during the progrefs of nearly four thoufand years the moft extraordinary occur- rences of hiftory, and which abounds with the greateft variety of matter, will be expofed to charges of mifreprefentation ; when it is fub- mitted to readers, incapable of being furnifhed- with' an abfolute and univerfal knowlege of fadts. For, in a fucceffion of many different things, it is * probable that fome will happen contrary to probability. Efpecially too, will c Ariftotle cites from Agatho thefe lines ; T<*% a»-Ti; £1X05 auTo tbt eivai Pkeyoi BjOTencfi lao&a, Tvyxpvuv sit eixoTa" ' and R 242 SERMON VII. this be the cafe where things natural and fu- pernatural are intermixed with each other. Even the latter, though referred for their ori- gin to the immediate interpofition of the Deity, will, notwithstanding, leave beings of con- tracted and fceptical minds peculiar occafions. of offence. Miracles, though related by eye-, witneffes, will, as fadts of a Angular kind, be d eminently expofed to every doubt, which can be infinuated againft human testimony. And prophefies, which mean not to deftroy free- agency, cannot at times efcape the moft inju- rious fufpicions, which arife from intentional obfcurity. Moreover, as we are unacquainted with the effence of God and the general econo- my of his moral government; thofe parts of Re- velation, which ought, perhaps, to be thought the leaft expofed in themfelves to plaufible ob- aud remarks on them "yiyvnat yap to taapa to eixos* urt sixo; xou '• to »« mi/jiSaniitt ^otoij. 11 " Suppofe for inilance that the fa&, which the teftimony '' endeavours to eftablim, partakes of the extraordinary and " the marvellous ; in that cafe the evidence refulting from the " telHmony admits of a diminution greater or lefsin propor- " tion as the facl is more or lefs unuiual." Hume's ElTays, Vol. II. p. 1 27. je&ion, SERMON VII. 243 jedtiori, will not on that account be lefs confi- dently aiTailed by our adverfaries. Thus the myfterioufnefs of parTages in a difpenfation, which, proceeding from God, muft fometimes refer to the incomprehenfible effence of its au- thor, will from our inability to judge in thefe matters be conftrued into abfurdity. And, as the reafons of God's dealings with man are paft our finding out j according to our different concep- tions of what he ought to do, objections will be urged againft the time and manner, whenever or whatever it be, in which Revelation was firft introduced and propagated in the world, againft the kind of evidence by which its truth is con- firmed, and againft the means by which its pro- pofed happinefs is to be obtained. In the fame manner, as we are unacquainted with the effences of every part of creation, no lefs than of the Creator himfelf, and are ever ready to fupply the want of knowlege by a variety of conjec- ture } different kinds of objections will arife from a comparifon of thefe different conjec- tures with Revelation : fince the fame unfa- vourable conclusion may be fuggefted againft its truth, whether it contain more or lefs than Was expected, and whether parts of it are mif- underftood or gratuitoufly contradicted by its opponents. To the fources of obje&ion here enumerated, and which are all immediately, R z derived 244 SERMON VII. derived from human imperfection, we may fiibjoin the efFe&s of this imperfection on the manner in which our Religion has been ex- plained, received, and defended, by Chriftians themfelves j and the unmerited e farcafms, to which it has been expofed from the pious and interested artifice, no lefs than from the fenfu- ality and ignorance of its profeffors. And if, at length, in addition to all thefe circumftances, we take into our account the, active influence of thofe corrupt and powerful mptives, which will induce many to fearch put and extend to the uttermoft all fuch means of difcrediting divine Revelation ; we ihall not want fources to which we may refer the num- berlefs objections advanced againft our Re- ligion. How far it would be poffible for Omnipo- tence itfeif to remove all thefe pccafions of of- « The farcafms of this kind, to which our Religion has ben e*riofed do not proceed from Mr. Gibbon and Voltaire orJy The pbllofophical Mr. Hume has founded a very confiderable. par! o P f Hsobjeaions againft miracles on the fiftions concern- FS the Abbe Paris and others. The inferences wbch he draw S fiftitious miracles, and from our want of experience a tXh extraordinary events (fee the notes on the fifth Sermon) eonftltut* almoft the whole of his bold inveawe againft the mi- raculo s prpofs ,of our Religion. And what h, thus ^ urge, , againft miracles he applies without vanauonto prophefies alio. J-See.his Effays Vol. II; p- H7- . . ... m „, n Or* fo .weak a foundation reft the writings, which are often found to unfettle the Faith and deftroy the peace of unguarded reade " ! " fence, SERMON VII. 245 fence, and to reduce our Religion to an indif- putable and permanent certainty, without a previous annihilation of all the imperfections of our nature, I am rtot concerned at prefent to enquire. This queftion has been difcuffed, and the negative of it ingehioufly maintained, by a ' modern writer on the origin of evil. I am here engaged to prove that if the Deity were thus to interpofe his almighty power j it would be inconfiftent with our Religion itfelf. But, before I proceed to this, I may ob- ferve, by way of general illuftratfofl, that the interpofition, here defcribed, would be evi- dently inconfiftent with that courfe of things^ which is univerfally eftablifhed and approved in. the natural world. If we confult the common appearances which furround us -, we fhall every where find circumftances fimilar to thofe complained of in Revelation. The conftitu- tion of things prefents to our imperfect reafori fo many difficulties and uncertainties ; as to demonstrate that in the natural world it is by no means the defign of Providence to fubmit the propriety of his difpenfatioris to our judge- ment, or to force us into action by any more* perfuafive motives, than rational probabilities. In the common and hourly occurrences of this ' Soame Jenyns. R 5 life, 246 SERMON VIL life, we cannot foretell the certain confequence of the raoft vigorous exertions, nor enfure the fuccefs of the beft principles. To have ex- cluded, therefore, with the poffibility of ob- jection all appearance of uncertainty from Re- velation would in reality have been to form the world, as B fome partial obfervers of the divine difpenfations infift it is formed, upon one plan and the Religion for it upon another,, But fuch an enforcement of truth would not only be inconfiftent with the courfe of nature (as hath been proved at large by Bifhop Butler in his invaluable " Analogy ", a work, which can never be recommended with too much ear- neftnefs to the Chriftian phuofopher) but it would be inconfiftent alfo, as I am to prove; with our Religion itlelf. To prove this nothing more will be necef- fary than to call your attention to the infor- mation, which Chriftianity gives us concern- ing itfelf and the fubjecl: before us. The mif- fortune of moft fincere unbelievers is, that they confider the Chriftian Religion in a very erroneous point of view. They confider it merely as a covenant made at fome particular time between God and man without reference to any former tranfadtions : and from thence 8 See Soame Jenyns's Internal Evidences. they SERMON VII. 247 they proceed to fettle the* degree of certainty, which they require of its truth. This, how- ever, is not to conlider Chriftianity, but a con* Ceit of their own. No fyftem was ever denied' the privilege of explaining its own nature and lirhiting its extent : and according to that ftandard alone, which itfelf propofes, can it be fairly eftimated. Chriftianity pretends not to be a covenant between two equal parties, nor even between a Creator and his creatures limply : but between an all-juft and all-merciful God and fallen degenerate man. As fuch it h in- forms us of the caufe of man's fall, and of the conditions, required on his part, to reinftate him in God's favour. In the perverfion of free will it points out the fource of human mifery : and, in the regulation of the fame principle, a remedy for this mifery through the merits of an all-perfect interceflbr. For the privilege of free will, though wrefted to the corruption, was ftill to be, according to its original defign, the ultimate perfection of human nature. To this great foundation, therefore, of all rational and moral excellence was every precept, and every evidence of Chriftianity to be accommodated. The Sa- viour, who was . fent from heaven to make * See the firft Sermon. atonement z& SERMON VII. atonement for man's original fin, while he promifes the affiftance of the Holy Spirit ta his weaknefs, pardon to his frailties, and even remiflion of his greateft crimes upon that re- pentance and faith, which carry with them a reformation of life j ftill leaves the fincere obedience, which was to procure all thefe bleffings, in man's own power. And thofe emphatical words in the lsift chapter of that hook, which clofes the whole revealed will of God, ' " he that is unjuft let him be unjuft " ftill, and he that is filthy let him be filthy " ftill," convey the manifeft intention of every part of Scripture with regard to thoie, who are determined to perfevere in difobedience. Correfpondently with this, fuch arguments only are offered to eftablifh the Faith of man- kind, as are fufficient to convince difpaflionate enquirers. Befides, we are exprefsly informed by one of the Apoftles that there were k " fome " things in St. Paul's writings hard to be un- " derilood, which they who are unlearned and " unftable wreft, as they do alfo the other «' Scriptures, to their own deftru&ion." In the fame manner our blefied Saviour is called " a ' ftumbling-ftone and a rock of offence :" and fo far from compelling men to receive his 1 Rev. xxii. it. k 2 Per.iii. 16. ' Rom. ix. 33. dodtrines SERMON VII. . 249 doctrines, he himfelf explicitly m declares that to thofe, whofe hearts were waxed grofs,,whofe ears Were dull of hearing, and who had clofed their eyes, the myfteries of the kingdom of God were reprefented in parables ; that feeing they might fee and not perceive, and hearing they might hear and not underftand. And, however often tempted, never did he conde- fcend by any more convincing proofs of his divine mimon,*than thofe which he had be- fore given, to win their attention, who like the deaf adder flop their ears. Indeed, the infide- lity of his audience often made him withdraw the means defigned for their conviction inftead of adding to them. Thus we are told of his own countrymen that " " he did not many ** mighty works among them, becaufe of their " unbelief." Or, as another Evangeliir. ex- prefies it, °" he could not do any mighty work "among them," for that reafon. Nor need we wonder at the expreffion : fince the whole tenor of Revelation required fuch a promulga- tion of our Religion, as mould leave thofe at liberty to reject it, in whom the God of this world had blinded their eyes. For, though divine mercy had interpofed to roufe mankind from the lethargic fecurity of continued fin ; m Matt. xiii. 11 — 15. " Matt. xiii. 58. • Mark. vi. 5, 6. and 250 SERMON VII. and had engaged through the merits of a Re- deemer both to fupply them with fupernatural means of refitting the corruption of their fallen nature, and to procure acceptance for their fincere, though imperfedt, fervices ; yet is no- thing farther any where propofed by their Re- demption. Man's ftate at firft was only pro- bationary : to no better, therefore, can we poffibly expedt that he mould be advanced by the forfeiture of his innocence. Befides, if the fallen angels, thofe dreadful examples of almighty vengeance, all perifhed ; how would it have been confiftent with the fame infinite juftice that any other fallen creature mould at once be pardoned and inverted with eternal happinefs ? Or, what is the fame, that his adtions mould be determined by fatal neceflity, or his Faith conftrained by irrefiftible demon- ftration, to a conformity with fuch duties or dodtrines, as would unavoidably lead in their confequences to eternal happinefs ? Thofe angels, indeed, as we may infer, fell each fe- parately by his own prefumption. But what elfe will they do, who perim under the Gof- pel-covenant ? Had God condemned all, that were in Adam's loins, to eternal punifhment for the fin of their firft parent ; his mercy might, perhaps, have been called in queftion with fome appearance of reafon. But he has more SERMON VII. 251 more than vindicated this his darling attribute. Of his own will he has redeemed mankind from their firft fall : and it is to himfelf alone that each man muft impute his fecond. To reftore.the human race even to this capacity of happinefs was not effe&ed without a facrificej tranfcendently dignified by partaking of the fame Perfon with the Son of God. To have done more for them would have required a fa- crifice of a very different kind : the facrificc (if it may be fo called) of divine juftice. In-> Head, therefore, of the bleflings of eternal life being forced upon us by the removal of ob- jections from our Religion, it is Angularly and awfully remarkable in what manner reftraints are every where, on the contrary, withdrawn from our Faith. In the natural world, he, that filleth all things with his prefence, has condef- cended for a feafon to retire (as it were) from this fcene of probation, or jn the p Scripture- language to hide himfelf; and to leave mankind to themfelves and the conclufions of their own reafon, fave that he every moment fupports the profligate fenfualifts, who, becaufe they do not fee and hear him, dare deny his exiftence. And, under the Chriftian difpenfation, the light of the glorious Gofpel is left to our own » Job. xxiii, 8,9. Ifaiah, xlv. 15. difcovery 252 -SERMON VII. difcovery and application -, though at the fame time it diffufes its fplendor around thofe very unbelievers, who are itudious to retort every ray of divine illumination againfl the great luminary itfelf from which it iffues. Nor do any of the arguments, drawn from the crea- tion, more fully prove the infinite perfe&ion of its author, than this his government of the moral world, explicitly declared in Revelation, and uniformly experienced in human life. Having, through Chriirianity, again prepared the means, and propofed the conditions of happinefs for mankind, he determined to leave the ultimate reception and operation of this Religion to that free will, by which they were from the beginning to ftand or fall. And this, once refolved by a being of infinite perfection, none of thofe paflions and refentments, which difturb and fruftrate the councils of man, have ever been able to invalidate. " His'righteouf- " nefs ftandeth like the firong mountains, and " his judgements are like the great deep." At the fame time alfo left unbelievers mould prefumptuoufly conceive, that, by deriding, they moreover defeat the councils of the great Au- thor of Revelation ; he has exprefsly foretold, in addition to all the other information which « Pf. xxxvi. 6. he S£RMON VII. 253 he has given us on the fubjedt, not only that " it muft * needs be that offences come," but alio that " there fhould come in the laft days '• ' fcoffers, walking after their own lufts :" men, who, we may prefume, were to refemble thofe, defcribed by the excellent ' Hooker, and " bear the title of wife men and fcribes and " great difputers of this world ; who .are no- , " thing indeed lefs, than what in mew they " mofl appear ;*and who, being addicted unto " their own wills, ufe their wit, their learn- " ing, and all the wifdom they have, to " maintain that which their obftinate hearts " are delighted with, efteeming in the frantick. " error of their minds the greateft madnefs in «« the world to be wifdom, and the highefL « c wifdom foolifhnefs." The feoffs, of unbe- lievers, therefore, thus foretold, inftead of de- feating the councils of the great author of Revelation, ferve on the contrary to difplay the veracity of his predictions : and the long- fuffering,, with which they are permitted to perfift in oppofition to the truth, proves only that the perverfenefs of man cannot prevail to. annul the merciful offers of that all-perfect. Being, who has declared, " " I am Jehovah,, r Matt, xviii.' 7. 8 2 Pet. iii. 3. ' Eccl. Pol. b. iii. c. viii. p. 75. Edit. 1666. a Mai. iii. 6. "I a$4 SERMON VIL " I change not : therefore, ye fons of Jacob " are not confumed." Whatever, then, unbe- lievers may fay, or immoral men do ; it is not confiftent with what our Religion declares of itfelf, nor with the requifitions and predictions which it holds forth to its profeffors, that any force fhould be applied to reftrain the princi- , pies of the one, more than the practice of the other. Chriftianity has engaged to fave nei- ther without his own w voluntary concurrence: and furely its truth cannot be affe&ed by per- mitting, what on the refufal of fuch concur- rence it has moft folemnly denounced, the eter- nal deftruction of both. Such are the fources from which the ob- jections againft our Religion are drawn ; and fo inconfiflent with it is any forcible removal of thefe offences. But, left any one fhould imagine that the method of reafoning, here purfued, might be extended to juftify the abfurdities of any reli- gious fyftem whatever, it may be a proper caution, before I difmifs thefe general obfer- vations on the objections againft our Religion, to remark at large, that I have been attempting * Erafmns very juftly fays in his paraphrafe on St. Matt, xxjii. 37. O Jerufalem, jerufalem, thou that killeft the pro- phets &c. " Cui femel data eft arbitrii libertas, invitus fer- " vaii non potelt." to SERMON VII. 255 to account for the endlefs variety of thefe ob^p jections, and not to apologize for them, as charges which can be dire&ed againft our Re- ligion and which are founded in truth. Chrift- ians are as ready as their enemies to confefs that the Deity can never be fuppofed to reveal any thing contradictory to reafon : and Chrift- ianity needs not the affiftance of fubterfuges, However many of its parts may have been controverted; -no part of it was ever proved to be falfe or irrational. The numberlefs abfur- dities not only of the beft-fancied hypothecs of Deifm, but of every other pretenfion to Revelation, befides that of the Holy Scrip- tures ; even of the pretenfions of Jews and Chriftians themfelves, when they defert the written word and defcend to oral tradition ; immediately difcover a fallibility of human ori- gin. But, the difficulties, attending Chriftianity, are of a very different kind and prove only that it does not mean to counteract, with re- gard to itfelf, the natural confequences of our imperfections; but leaves thofe confequences to form that efTential part of our trial, which re- quires a "good difpofition, as previoufly ne- ceiTary, that we may know of the doctrines of our Religion whether they be of God: and x John vii. )j. which 256 SERMON VII. which requires, above all, a fpirit of invefti- gationi the reverfe of that, which betrays it- felf on fubjedts of fceptical difpute. For, " 7 thus faith the high and lofty one, that in- *' habketh eternity, whofe name is holy, I «* dwell in the high and holy place; with him " alfb that is of a contrite and humble fpirit." In conformity with thefe requisitions, which are fb flrongly infifted upon in the holy Scrip- tures as to be made the fources of predeftina- tion to eternal life, affent is enjoined without demonftration and the Chriftian's Faith is made an indication of a well-diipofed and humble mind, as well as the deduction of an unprejudiced judgement. To an affectation in our firffc parents of being wife, as Gods, Re- velation afcribes our prefent mifery : and from a modeft ufe of that reafon, which was de- figned for man, does this gracious difpenfation encourage us to hope for a reiteration to hap- pinefs. To this reafon it appeals, command- ing us to * fearch the Scriptures and as a wife men to judge for ourfelves ; but fo to judge, as to remember that the Chriftian's Faith muft ever be a virtue. And as it cannot, con- fiftently with this appellation, require demon- ftrative conviction (for where then would be y If. lvii. 15. z Johnv. 39. » iCor.x. 15. its SERMON VII. 257 its pretention to virtue?); fo neither can it, conformably with that reafon, by which, as the candle of the Lord, we are to examine Revelation itfelf, be' founded on abfurdities or inconfiftencies. As the Chriftian's Faith does not admit of demonftration j fo neither will it acquiefce in enthufiafm or fuperftition. It rifes ftill more above thefe latter, than it falls fhort of the former. It requires all the evi- dence, which* the nature of the thing itfelf fuggefis ; but, no more. It requires that a Revelation, fent from God for the benefit of mankind, fhould be commenfurate with all the real wants with regard to belief as Well as practice, which can be alleged by well-difpofed and humble men, and that it fhould through- out be confident with the glory of God. It does not require that Revelation fhould carry with it fuch irrefiftible proof of its truth, as to remove every offence and flop the mouth of infidelity. This would deftroy free will and render human life no longer a ftate of proba- tion. What our Religion is in its fubflance, its. hiftory, and its evidences, we have feen. It hath appeared in all thefe refpects not only to be fuch, as to confirm in the higheft degree the defcriptipn here given of the Faith required of us ; but fuch alfo as will abundantly fatisfy every expectation of the well-difpofed and S humble 2 S 8 SERMON VII. humble inquirer, and preferve him, under the influence of this Faith, unmoved by all the attempts of infidelity. Filled with pious gra- titude for the afFurances, afforded him of the truth of his Religion, he willconfefs both the origin and the irremediable nature of the ob- jections advanced againft it •, and will adore that infinite wifdom, which has fo diipenfed to mankind its gracious communications, as to enable them by voluntary obedience here to cooperate with their great Redeemer in fe- curing for their inheritance that perfect hap- pinefs, which is defigned to be their everlafting recompenfe hereafter. Having faid thus much (according to my original propofal) concerning the objections in general which are advanced againft our Reli- gion; and having, moreover, added a caution with regard to the manner in which I have treated of them, I fhall proceed in the next difcourfe to the particular objections with which I am to conclude. SERMON VIII. i PET. III. 15. Be ready always to give an anfwer to every man, that" ajketh you a reafon of the Hope that is in you. THERE are no obje&ions among all thofe, which are comprehended under the fources enumerated in my laft difcourfe, againft which Christians of an inquifitive mind will require that more care fhould be' taken to guard their Faith and to fupply them with reafons in vindication of the Hope that is in them ; than thofe, which are to be the fubjed: of our prefent confideration. The objections to our Religion, urged immediately in favour of fenfual gratifications, are notoriouily the offspring of a vicious difpofition and retain few formidable advocates. But thofe, which are drawn from philofbphy, aflume the form of rational enquiries -, too often under this fpe- cious appearance difcrediting our Religion with S 2 the 260 SERMON VIII. the followers and admirers of human feiencc. To hold forth cautions, therefore, againft the delufivenefs of philofophy is one of the moft zealous concerns of the "infpired penmen: and, as nothing more powerfully diffuades men from error, than an expofition of its real principles ; I cannot, perhapsj more effectually cooperate with thefe cautions in the prefent difcourfe, than by endeavouring particularly to point out in it the origin and foundation of the objec- tions, which are thus advanced againft our Religion from the pretentions of philofophy. It has been obferved by a celebrated b critic, that there is no fource of excellence in writing,, which will not produce the contrary effed: in fuch as are forward to diftinguifh themfelves by fome unufual difplay of genius. If this obfervation be accommodated to our prefent fubject ; we fhall ceafe to wonder that the ftudy of philofophy, which has fupplied humble en- quirers with fo many arguments in fupport of Revelation, mould fupply men of an oppolite character with objections againft its truth. And if we reflect that abftradted reafonings, no lefs than immediate difcoveries in nature, form a part of philofophy, and that both may equally be directed againft Revelation j we fhall far- 1 Col. ii. 8. b Longinus, Se&. v. thcr SERMON VIII. 261 ther ceafe to wonder that thefe obje&ions mould at length become innumerable. Thofe, which are drawn from abftra&ed reafonings extend themfelves to every part of our Religion. For, as, from the variety of caufes to which effedts may be referred, or to which, through our ignorance of the effences of things, they appear capable at leaft of being referred, there is no occurrence in common life, which will not afford pleas for affigning it to fome falfe caufe ; fo there is no fubjedt, accounted for in Revelation, which has not furniflied arguments to prove the poffibility of its reference to fome other caufe, than what is fuggefted in the in- fpired writings j and which has not at length , been fludioufly Wrefted from its true origin by an ViHogical dedu&ion of the agency of that other caufe from the exiflence of the general efFedt. — Thus the creation, formation, and government of the univerfe have been afcribed to neceflity, or chance ; as it difplays more, or lefs, order to fceptical examiners. — Matter it- felf, as it exifts under certain modes perceivable c By the pofition, as it is called in hypothetical reafoning, of the antecedent from the pofition of the confequent. Ariffotle mentions this, as a thing which is very natural, but very falla- cious : " Onncu yctf atSfuirat, orav TB& ovtoj r, yr.ofji.eni to^i ysnrat, " n to vngot sn, xai To crfoTEjiov £iia» >) yu/i&M' thto h er' •4 /Et, ^ J «-" Poet. c. 24. S 3 only 262 SERMON VIII. only by the fenfes, has been referred for the fource of this its difputed exiftence to mere perceptions ; while thefe again have been * con- founded with ideas. — Spirit alio, as it partakes with the body of fimilar imperfections in in- fancy, of fimilar gradations of improvement in advancing years, and of the fame, even fometimes incapacitating, fenfations through- out life, has been denied any other exiftence than what it has been faid to derive from the precarious harmony of bodily organs. — By as fophiftical a method of referring things to new and fuppofitious caufes, the motives, from which the moft common of men's actions pro- ceed, have been erected into principles of'he- ceflity and inverted with the abfolute control of the human mind. — Nor have there been wanting philofophers to afcribe the contradic- tory opinions of different ages and nations on the fame fubje&s, and even on moral virtues, to the impoflibility of any criterion of truth and to a total want of moral difference in men's actions. — While others, with an equally flattering remedy for the confcioufnefs of guilt, have boldly aflerted, becaufe men are affaulted by different degrees of temptation and en- dowed with different powers of refiftance, that, * See Beattie's Effay on Truth, p! 242, &c. therefore, SERMON VIII. 263 therefore, whatever is called virtue in mankind proceeds either from circumftances of fitua- tion, or from natural frame and conftitution. Attempts having been thus made to fubvert the principles of Revelation, and indeed of all Religion, by affuming, as the real caufes of things, thofe which (to indulge fceptifm in its mod * abfurd pofitions) are no more than the poffible caufes of them ; it is linneeeflary to fhow that the lame has been the cafe alfo with regard to all the remaining and appropriate parts of Revelation. The truth is ; things, if they exift at all, muft exift under fome circumftances : and, while thefe circumftances may be referred through ignorance or artifice to fictitious caufes, the mind of man, when ambitious to fupport the credit of human fufEciency, will acquiefce in any extravagant fiction, fooner than accede to the doctrines of Revelation. To expofe, therefore, the want of founda- tion in objections againft Revelation, derived from fuch an origin, it is by no means re- quired to prove it to be impoffible that the caufes, affitmed in them, fhould produce the affigned effeftS; From the poflibility no logic can ever infer the reality of fuch a production. e That neceffity and chance may be caufes of things, &c. Befides, 264 SERMON VIII. Befides, proofs of the irnpoffibility of it can T not be univerfally and decifively adduced with- out a knowlege of the efTences of things. To expofe the want of folid foundation in the ob- jections before us, it is required only to mow that the caufes, laid down in Revelation, are fufficient to account for the appearances of things: or, that if Revelation be true ; things will exifr, under thofe very circumstances, from which new caufes are perverfely inferred and directed to difprove its truth : — that (with regard to the particulars above inftanced) if an allwife God did create the univerfe ; it would be governed by regular laws : and that even this regularity in the operation of fome parts of the creation would, from the inter- ference of other as well regulated parts of it, produce at times effects, which may appear to be devoid of all regulation and order : — that if matter were produced by Omnipotence for the ufe of beings endowed with fenfe ; it is reafonable to expert that it mould be fubjedt to their perception by means of the. organs of fenfe, and this too in proportion only as thofe organs are employed about it: — that if the fpirit of man were defigned for an exiftence, as progreffive at leaft in improvement as his body j its original flate may well be as pro- portionably imperfect, and its proficiency in attainments SERMON VIII. 265 attainments as gradual as that of his body : and that if bodily enjoyments and fufferings be fo many trials of the fpirit j it will be af- fected by all thefe fenfations, and amidft di- verfities of probation the corruptible body will in different degrees prefs down the foul : — that if human adtions be left to the guidance of reafon j they cannot, though abfolutely free, be a mere effect of the will, but require to proceed from fome motives and to be directed to fome ends : — that if mankind be endowed with freedom of thought, and be reduced to a ftate of general corruption ; it may be expected not only that individuals, but alfb that com- munities, fhould differ in their opinions of things i and that thefe differences, when wi- dened by the contrary operation of ignorance on the one fide and enlightened knowlege on the other, fhould at length terminate in con- tradictions of the greatefl importance : — laft- ly, that if men have different talents allotted them ; their trials, or degrees of temptation, will be as different : and if one deffa'ned con- fequence and reward of virtue in another life be an exemption from all temptation ; it is confiftent with the analogy of things that the fame caufe fhould in fome degree produce the fame effect in this life, and that good men fhould 266 SERMON VIII. mould find the leaft difficulty in controling their paflions. When it has been thus mown that the ap- pearances of things, or the circumftances un- der which things exift, are accounted for and (morally fpeaking) neceflary, if the dodtrines of Revelation be true j no additional argument can be wanted to enfure for us a lafting tri- umph over the f preceding and fimilar attempts of metaphyfical fophiftry : fince, our Religion itfelf both requires and explains that very ftate of things, from which objections againft- its truth are thus perverfely drawn ; and it is well known that the finft rule of philofophizing explicitly declares, " that more caufes of things " are not to be admitted, than are both true " and fufficient to explain their phenomena." But, furely, we ought not to wonder, if the enemies of our Religion have been able to em- ploy the fuppofitions of abftradted philofophy to its prejudice -, fince fuch metaphyfical fub- tleties are fo thoroughly adverfe to divine truth, that even attempts to reconcile them have been attended (as we have E feen above) with ppr- f All thefe objections are of the fame kind with that, which Ariftotle calls "*twis qa.mp.im, aM*.' bx. a^Srs a-a" and pro- ceeds to obferve concerning it, " a yap on ax sixos ta>» o £wr«f*«- " »o{, oWi'