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A41812 An historical account of the antiquity and unity of the Britanick churches continued from the conversion of these islands to the Christian faith by St. Augustine, to this present time / by a presbyter of the Church of England. Grascome, Samuel, 1641-1708? 1692 (1692) Wing G1572; ESTC R17647 113,711 112

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Coleman first to relate upon what Grounds he Relied The Summe of whose Answer is this That he had Received the Tradition from his Forefathers who had all unanimously observed it That herein they followed St. John the beloved Disciple of our Saviour and the Churches which he Governed And that they had also on their side the Authority of Anatolius Now considering how Eusebius relates Matters to have been long before Adjusted by Polycarp and Anic●tus viz. That Charity and Christian Communion being preserved each might follow the Ancient Customes of those whom they succeeded Any one would think this so fair a Plea that it might deserve both a Civil and a Satisfactory Answer Yet Wilfrid then but newly made a Priest with a Roman Modesty puts the Fool upon the Good Bishop Coleman and his whole Party His Answer is Related by Beda with all Advantage in which some things are true some false But it is Observeable That he never tells them of any Missionaries from Rome either to the Britons Irish Scots or Picts He never tells them that they had received the Faith by means of the Roman Church He never Charges them so much as with Ingratitude or to have fallen from what they had received Nay he doth not deny such a Tradition amongst them but impugnes it as a too early Tradition as more Ancient then he pretended to or ought to be followed And that they were ignorant of what was established-in the Church after the Separation from the Jews And herein lies the main strength of his Plea But of all things insisted on by Welfrid nothing was so luckily urged as that St. Peter had the Keyes of the Kingdom of Heaven For the King in no small fear that he might be lock'd out if he displeased the Porter presently gives the matter on Wilfrids side But all this nothing moved Coleman who chose rather to abandon his Bishoprick then forsake his Ancient Customes and seem to betray the Rights of those Churches and Bishops who had Ordained and sent him thither And accordingly he Retires into his own Countrey with many others who were of the same Persuasion And no doubt but Wilfrid and the Romanists were well pleased that they had all to themselves XV. These Considerations amongst Others do with Me not a little shake the Credit of those Stories that tes● us how Phaganus and Deruvianus or by what other Names they are Called for they have not less then Twenty between them were sent by Pope Eleutherius to King Lucius Palladius and St. Patrick by Celestine to the Irish or of any other Persons pretended to be sent before Augustines time I do not deny but that there were such Persons who were famous in their Generation and did eminent Service in the Church of God But the Assertions of all our Moncks and as many more will not half perswade Me that these Men were Roman Missionaries For who can believe That these Men should come with Instructions from Rome and yet every one of them should Agree to Establish such Rites as were not only different from the Church of Rome but such as the Bishops of Rome were particular Enemies to If any Man say that these Rites in opposition to each other had not clearly obtained even in Rome it self so early so far as Relates to Easter that early Contest between Polycarp and Anicetus confutes it But if it be said that though such Usages were setled at Rome yet they were not averse but that Others might be Taught and Practised in other Countreys then that b●stle which Victor made over all the Christian World will not suffer us to believe this But that those very Men who were sent by the Popes to Convert the Britons should Establish those Rites and Usages which they knew he would never endure is such a Riddle as wants a better Oedipus then Me to unfold it And it is somewhat strange that in all the Contests-between Augustine and his Followers with the Britons and Irish not one of these Men should be Objected to the British Irish or Scots that they should never be Check'd with Ingratitude to his Holiness that it should never be said that they had been taught otherwise and were fallen from their first Principles and Converters It is very Rare that the Romanists forget themselves so much or are meal-Mouth'd in such Cases And therefore it is not unlikely that the Pope in process of time becoming the bold Man who Challenged the Command over all the Moncks of after-times oweing their Privileges and unjust Exemptions from their Bishops to him in Requital made him that busie active Man who had ever done all And therefore when they heard or read of any People Converted by any Person imagining that he must have Authority from the Roman See they without scruple plainly Asserted that he was sent thence And their Fictions must now pass for Historical Testimonies And then as to the Persons pretended to be sent Deruvianus though Trim'd for Sound sake and set off with a Latine Termination carries the plain Marks of a Brittish Name and some write him Dwywan which the Criticks may if they can make Latin at their leisure If it were lawful to Guess in this Case I should think his Name was Durwan The like might be said concerning Phaganus but I pass it by But then after the Conversion of Lucius h●w these Men should so readily find their way in Insulam Aval●●i● Glassenbury where had been a Retreat for the Religious ever since the Gospel had been Preached in this Isle is somewhat strange Perhaps it was by Miracle but it seems more probable that upon Encouragement they came forth or were sent from their Monastery and having Accomplished their Work either for Reasons to us unknown or as a thing usual in those times retired thither again As for Palladius from whence soever he came it is certain he died too soon to effect any thing Considerable And for St Patrak though there is no sma●l striving for him yet the best Reasons Conclude him a B●iton And though some sell him to the Irish some to the Brit●●s yet it is most likely that he was Conveyed away young to the Irish like Joseph into Egypt where in his Affliction learning their Language he was the better Fitted for that great Work to which God had designed him These Men all left the Brittish Rites in force and made further Emprovem●nts upon the Stock of Chri●●ianity form●●ly pl●nted in this Island which things considering also that they all along C●aimed to derive from St. John are a strong Evidence That this Illand was both of Early and Eastern Conversion And perhaps that may be some Rea●on that there are so many Greek words in the Brittish Tongue and in the same Signification in both Languages it being very likely that they might receive them from those who first Converted Then to Christian●ty XVI This Digression will not casily be pardoned by some And yet I shall Adventure to follow
stand seized of as good Authority to interpret Scripture as any they can justly pretend to And that we use it more duely and rightl● may appear hence That we not only diligently use all lawful Means to come to the Knowledge of Truth but Condemn all those ill Arts which obscure or corrupt it We have no Index Expurgatorius to Expunge or Alter any Passages in the primitive Fathers or any other honest Authors if they do not please us yet by this one base unpaidonable A●tifice the Romanists whilst they have been undermining the sufficiency of the Scriptures have shaken the Authority and weakned the Evidence of Tradition and so difarmed the Church of her best Weapons of Defence for certainly a Tradition is best proved by those who lived in or near those times when it was delivered But how shall we believe their Testimony when their Writings are daily Curtail'd Changed and Falsified at pleasure And had not that God who takes Care of his Church caused the Chear to be discovered it would have done more Mischief then all the diligence and pains of all the Romanists in the World could ever have made a just satisfaction for But this it is for a particular Church to set up for Infallibility which is a point that can never be gained without putting out the Eyes of all at present living and stopping the Mouths of all that went before them For though I beleeve that God will never de●ert his Church in all parts of it in Matters necessary to Salvation yet he has not given her any Power over the Faith but She is Tied to that and that alone which was at first delivered to the Saints And if the Roman or any other Church or an Angel from Heaven should teach any other doctrine then what we have received they ought to be so far from being regarded that if we follow St. Paul they ought to be Accursed That we Adhere to the Scriptures th● Romanists cannot justly blame us because they themselves Acknowledge their divine Authority For see the Council of Trent doth Sess 4. decret de Can ' Script ' but they accuse us as too strict Scripturists upon two Accounts First because we Admit not Tradition to be of equal Authority with the Holy Scriptures Secondly because we receive not several Books as Canonical or of unquestionable divine Authority which they have thrust into the Canon As for Tradition and its Authority I shall Treat of it more distinctly in the next Paragraph and there answer this Accusation As for the Canon of Scripture we own the very same and no other which the Church of God hath Handed down to us after the Canon of Scripture was Compleated As for those Books Called Apocrypha which the Council of T●ent first made Canonical it is Apparent That we do not by that Title utterly Condemn them but rather Repute them of an Inferiour or Ecclesiastical Authority because we Read them in our Churches for Instruction of Manners and inciting to good Living And sometimes use them for the Illustration of Doctrine but never to Introduce or Found any Doctrine upon and this is as much as the Ancients allowed them The Jewish Church was the Keeper and Preserver of the Canon of the Old Testament as much as the Christian is of the Old and New now But they had none of those Books in their Canon And therefore if any Assert that those Books do belong to the Canon the Consequence will be That the Jewish Church did not preserve the Canon of Scripture entire and true and for the same Reason any one may suspect the Christian and so render the Authority of the whose dubious So injurious are the Romanists to the Faith it self whil●st they set up their own Authority against the whole Church of God Besides if they will not own that we received the entire Canon of the Old Testament from the Jewish Church they ought to tell us from whom ●e did receive it and to whose Custody it was Committed till the time of Christ and his Apostles But whoever will be at the pains to read the Scholastical History of the Canon of Scripture Written by our Learned Dr. Cosins Bishop of Dures●ne will be abundantly satisfied that the Tridentines under pretence of Tradition have Enlarged the Canon of Scripture contrary to the Tradition of the Church of God in all Ages even to their own time Thus when Modern Mens bare word must be allowed a sufficient Authority to Vouch a Tradition a Pretence of Tradition is set up against the truth of it and so Tradition it self rendred doubtful or useless And therefore I shall not trouble my self to pursue those many particular s●uffling pleas which they use to Justify themselves in offering violence to the Sacred Canon But if you would know the true Reason which it was their Business to Conceal I believe Spalato hath Hit on it Suas non poterant N●nias ex Sacrâ Scripturâ verè Canonicâ probare ideoque noluerunt permittaere us 〈◊〉 aliae Scripturae etiam non Canonicae eriperentur quo suas qualescunque ●aberent ●●●retras unde spicula desumerent ac praeterea viderent ac praeterea ne viderentur ●ein aliquâ Protestantibus cedere a●t consentire maluerunt etiam falsa tueri 〈◊〉 de Repub. Ecc. lib. 7. cap. 1 Num. 28. XLIV He that doth believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God must of course believe their Sufficiency or that they contain all Matters necessary to Salvation for they give this Testimony to themselves And he that believes them to be the Word of God must believe the Testimony they give either of themselves or others St. Paul saith They are able to make Man wise to Salva●ion 2 Tim. 3. 15. 16. But that cannot be so unIess they contain at least all things necessary thereto But though the Scriptures be thus sufficient and contain a certain Sense in themselves yet by reason of the distance of time when they were Wrote through Unskilfulness in Oriental Customes and Phrases where they were Wrote through Ignorance of some particular Tenets which some Argumentative part of Scripture is Levelled against and ●uch like Causes But above all through the Perverseness of evil Men and Seducers it so falls out That those Scriptures which are of a certain Sense yea plain in themselves are made obscure to us and we either become doubtful of their Meaning or follow a wrong Meaning For what is or can there be so plain and easie which some wi●ked Men have not or cannot render intricate and perplexed especially to weak Judgements and faciIe Tempers Now for the Discovery of the true Sense of Scripture in this Case true and genuine Tradition is possibly the best Help and surest Refuge and to Wrest the Scriptures out of the Hands of Hereticks and Restore the Rule to its true Force right Use and proper Meaning perhaps there is not a surer nor more effectual way for our Blessed Saviour Himself Wrote