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A70046 Reason and judgement, or, Special remarques of the life of the renowned Dr. Sanderson, late Lord Bishop of Lincoln together with his Judgement for setling the church, in exact resolutions of sundry grand cases very seasonable at this time. D. F.; Sanderson, Robert, 1587-1663. Judgment in one view for the settlement of the church. 1663 (1663) Wing F10; ESTC R224352 48,079 100

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REASON and JUDGEMENT OR SPECIAL REMARQUES Of the LIFE Of the Renowned Dr. SANDERSON Late Lord Bishop of Lincoln Together with his JUDGEMENT FOR SETLING the CHVRCH In exact RESOLUTIONS Of sundry grand CASES very seasonable at THIS TIME LONDON Printed by J.C. for H. Marsh at the Princes Arms in Chancery-lane 1663. Imprimatur Ex AEdib Sab. Feb. 24. 1662. Geo. Stradling S.T.P. Rev. in Christo Pat. D. Gilb. Episc. Lond. à Sac. Domest TESTIMONIES CONCERNING The Renowned Dr. SANDERSON Dr. Prideaux NOne States a Question more punctually Resolves it more satisfactorily Answers all Objections more fully then that clear and solid man Mr. Sanderson Bishop Vsher. And I Proposed the Case to the Judicious Dr. Sanderson who Grasped all the Circumstances of it and Returned that happy Answer that met with all my Thoughts satisfied all my Scruples and cleared up all my Doubts Dr. Hammond That staid and well-weighed man Dr. Sanderson conceives all Things deliberately dwells upon them discreetly discerns Things that differ exactly passeth his Judgement rationally and expresses it aptly clearly and honestly Mr. Baxter I do not intend by this Character such Episcopal Divines as the Reverend Dr. Sanderson whom I honour for his Learning Judgement Moderation and Piety Dr. Fuller Amongst the Modern Worthies of this Colledge still surviving Dr. Robert Sanderson late Regius Professor moveth in the highest Sphere a no less plain and profitable then able and profound Casuist a Learning almost lost amongst Protestants Bishop Reynolds There is no mention of it in that Table of the several Opinions drawn up by a Learned man of our Church Dr. Sanderson Bishop Hall Alas why do I wade further into the deep and large search of Cases of Conscience wherein I hear so far a progress is made by the excellent Dr. Sanderson the most exact and faithful Casuist living REASON and JUDGEMENT OR SPECIAL REMARQUES Of the LIFE Of the Renowned Dr. SANDERSON Late Lord Bishop of Lincoln Together with his JUDGEMENT FOR SETLING the CHVRCH In exact RESOLUTIONS Of sundry grand CASES very seasonable at THIS TIME Oxford Printed by J. W. for Will. Thorne 1663. Bishop Sanderson's second Sermon ad Populum Page 211. E. THere is a Warning for us to take consideration of the loss of good or useful men and to fear when they are going from us that some evil is coming to us The Prophet complaineth of the too great and general neglect hereof in his time The righteous perisheth and no man layeth it to heart and merciful men are taken away none considering that the righteous is taken from the evil to come Esay 57.1 When God sendeth his Angel to pluck out his righteous Lots what may Sodom expect but fire and brimstone to be rained down upon them When he plucketh up the fairest and choicest flowers in his Garden croppeth off the tops of the goodliest Poppies who can think other then that he meaneth to lay his Garden waste and to turn it into a wilde Wilderness When he undermineth the main Pillars of the house taketh away the very props and buttresses of Church and Commonwealth sweepeth away religious Princes wise Senators zealous Magistrates painful Ministers men of eminent ranks gifts or example who shall be secure tha either Church or Commonweal shall stand up long and not totter at least if not fall God in mercy taketh such away from the evil to come we in wisdom should look for evil to come when God taketh such away REASON and JUDGEMENT OR SPECIAL REMARQUFS Of the LIFE Of the Renowned Dr. SANDERSON Late Lord Bishop of Lincoln In a Letter to the Reverend J. W. D. D. P. L. SIR I Am equally sorry that I cannot satisfie your just desire in the Remarques of our Renowned Diocesan's Life as that I must comply with your sad fear in the too true report of his Death that I must assure you we have lost the man and what was mortal in him and yet cannot help you to his vertues and what was immortal in him that when I must write you the news that he is dead to the world I cannot draw a character wherein he may live with the good and vertuous for ever The wise the holy and the good live more nobly in their vertues and graces in the hearts of others then they did in their own bodies His modesty wrapped him in that privacy and his place kept him at that distance that I cannot take his portraicture nor recount his memorials so exactly as I could wish and you may expect yet though for no other cause then for this That Posterity may know we have not loosely through silence permitted things and persons to pass away as in a dream there shall be thus much extant concerning this excellent person for his own honour and the honour of the Church he was bred in That he was a Bishop and a man of most sound Judgement of most deep Learning of a vast Apprehension of an holy and unspotted Life of an unsuspected Integrity a great Friend a faithful Servant a valiant Champion of the Church More particularly there shall be extant 1. His Education 2. His temper of body and minde 3. The great instances of his Life 4. His Person and Aspect 5. His Works or Writings 6. His Sufferings 7. His Rewards and Preferments And lastly and chiefly his Judgement and Resolution of those Cases of Conscience that concern the Discipline or Worship of our Church wherein you will observe something admirable many things imitable all things commendable VVhen his Parents observed that he was capable of advancing the VVorshipfulness of his Birth by the excellency of his Parts his pregnant Wit his large and capacious Understanding his fixed Judgement his faithful Memory and his hopeful Seriousness they took care that his youth and first years of reason should not be lost but being hardly recovered if neglected be carefully improved in all good Learning of which he was not onely capable but comprehensive in a severe and exact Grammar-School where by an unwearied diligence a silent sedentary and astonished way of following his Book a seriousness beyond his years Oh how would he steal away from his Companions follies to his severer tasks and privacies he made his way thorow all things on which he could fix to an exactness in Greek and Latine which he retained to his dying day And he would observe That an exactness in School-learning was a great advantage to our higher studies as the miscarriages of School are not easily recovered in the University the errours of the first Concoction being hardly rectified in the second At School he observed he learned an art of memory When he was enjoyned to learn what he understood not which was then an ordinary miscarriage in Grammar-Schools he was compelled to make use of similitudes c. and to remember those things he knew not to think upon something like them he knew As he had many excellent Observations touching Schools which he would say were the