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A44455 Animadversions on Mr Johnson's answer to Jovian in three letters to a country-friend. Hopkins, William, 1647-1700. 1691 (1691) Wing H2753; ESTC R20836 74,029 140

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Church would readily set aside twenty such Titles as Iulian's to secure their Religion His pretence that Iulian's illegal Oppression of the Christians was the cause of that rough treatment they gave him together with his Insinuation that nothing but their Weakness kept them from taking up Arms against that Apostate to do themselves Right Mr. Dean hath confuted by more arguments than Mr. Iohnson thinks fit to take notice of And that one at which he nibbles is quite too hard for his Teeth Iovian saith Iulian did persecute Legally because all the Emperors Orders and Decrees how unjust soever were Legal He was an Absolute Sovereign who govern'd by purely Regal Power and whose Pleasure howsoever signifi'd whether by Letter or word of Mouth was a Law This is made out abundantly out of the best Authors both Historians and Lawyers and 't is a miserable shift to despise all these Citations as shreds of Civil Law not worthy the least consideration If these Citations are misapplied why doth he not shew it at least in one or two Instances Verily his Readers are too kind if they take his word for it and if any be so rude as to demand better satisfaction Mr. Iohnson is resolv'd to be even with them for their Curiosity They must go many a weary step on his Errand who will trot all the Town over from Shop to Shop till they meet with Gothofred's Vlpian But I confess it was done like one who is his Craft's-Master to refer them to a Book which scarce one in a thousand is ever likely to see But this one Argument is by no means the Substance of what Mr. Dean offers against this new Hypothesis That illegal Oppression and Tyranny was the cause of the Christians rough behaviour towards Julian For he sheweth that other Emperors some of them Christians too were treated as coursely as Iulian particularly Constantius by Hilary Athanasius and Lucifer from whom Mr. Iohnson cites several such passages in his Answer to Constantius the Apostate as are far ruder than any thing in the Third Chapter of his Iulian. So that the Phaenomenon he would solve by this Hy●othesis is not Real Fact but a mere Fiction The Christians were not more rough in their behaviour towards Iulian than elder Christians had been towards several of his Predecessors not only Pagan but also Christian Princes Again He shews that Iulian had the malice of a Devil against our Saviour and his Religion in which he persisted against the plain Evidence of Miracles and in spite of many remarkable Judgments of God upon his Uncle and other blasphemers of Christ and persecutors of his Church So that the Christians might reasonably conclude him Irrecoverable and past Repentance and treat him the more severely on that account nay believing him so they might possibly pray for his destruction as the only probable means of the Churches deliverance and yet it followeth not that they would have lifted up their hand against him or been the Instruments of that destruction they prayed for Again he proves if Iulian were guilty of Illegal Oppression and Tyranny so were other Persecuting Emperours before him particularly Galerius so that there was nothing singular in the case of Iulian's Christians nor can he infer from their Example that Illegal Oppression will warrant Subjects to take Arms against their Lawful Prince to do themselves Right In the next Page we find Mr. I. in a very peevish humour quarrelling with Iovian for what he himself said in effect over and over 'T is only the Phrase moves his Choler viz. the main ground of their displeasure was that he did not formally persecute them nor put them to Death enough Mr. Dean explains himself sufficiently the Christians desired rather to be persecuted in the old Decian and Dioclesian way i. e. to have Their Religion made their Crime and Death their Punishment This the Authours referred to in the Margin plainly evince and the instances of Iuventinus and Maximus and Romanus and his fellow Souldiers shew that some under Iulian were as ambitious of the Crown of Martyrdom as the Elder Christians who sought it by voluntary Confession and provoked their Pagan Rulers to persecute them with the utmost Cruelty Mr. I. it seems thinks them too free of their Passive Throats and if they were so fond of Martyrdom they might even as well have hang'd and drown'd themselves and saved their Persecutors the trouble I know not what he can mean else by reviving the Sarcasm of a Pagan Bloody Persecutor Arrius Antoninus who thus reproached voluntary Confession with the desire of Martyrdom Were there no Halters or Precipices in the Roman Empire P. 161. Mr. I. buckles closer to his work and pretends accurately to state the Case of Passive Obedience and saith he and Iovian are perfectly agreed 1. That the King's Person is sacred and Inviolable 2. That Inferiour Magistracy acting by the King's Authority according to Law may not be resisted I am glad to see that the peevish humour hath somewhat spent it self and that he can agree with his Adversary in any thing I presume when he saith that the King's Person is Sacred and Inviolable he means by those fine words he may not be resisted and if so it may deserve considering how well he agrees with himself For in his former Book he quoted a shrewd saying of a worthy Person That one single Arm unresisted may go a great way in massacring a Nation Every one knows whose single Arm is meant and no Man who praises that saying can agree that the King's Person may not be resisted How fairly he states the difference between himself and Iovian I have in some measure shewn already Impartial Readers though but of an ordinary Capacity who will be at the pains to compare the Book with this Answer may observe without my help that a great part thereof is employed in confuting his own slanderous Fictions For where doth Iovian assert any of the things imposed upon him as that by the Imperial Laws a Popish Prince may send Forces to murther his Liege People That a Soveraign can Authorize his Forces to do any Act of Illegal Violence Where doth he give the King Boundless Power Or the whole Legislative Power I am sure Mr. I. can shew no such Assertions in the Book he pretends to Answer And therefore how unconscionably doth he abuse both his Adversary and his Reader for almost forty pages together And how impertinently doth he swagger with Citations out of Bracton the Miroir Fortescue Judge Ienkins and King Charles the First of Blessed Memory to disprove what Iovian no where affirms It would indeed have signified something could he have produced but one clear Passage out of all those Authours in which any of them declares it lawful for Subjects to raise but a single Regiment or Troop to resist Forces legally Commissioned even in illegal and uncommissionated Acts of Violence And till he can
at least shew this in our Law-Books he hath no right to call Mr. Dean a Proteus of Passive Obedience or reproach him as not consistent with himself It is no Contradiction to allow Subjects the Liberty of Private Resistance when illegal Violence is offerred to them and yet to deny them Power to raise Forces and to wage a Defensive War against those who as Mr. I. maliciously supposeth will murther in Troops I hope he will not be so hardy as to say that a single Captain can be made or that one private Souldier can be listed according to our Laws without Their Majesties Commission or that in their Realms and Dominions and besides Their Majesties is vested with Legal Authority to grant Commissions to levy Forces Tho' the Laws secure mens Lives and Properties against Arbitrary Power yet they do it not by giving Subjects the Power of the Sword By this you may see Sir how mean Judges your Neighbours are who discern not how gross a Fallacy Mr. I. puts upon them when he insinuates that his Adversary is so sensless as to allow That 't is lawful to resist a single Cut-throat and yet makes it a damnable sin to resist Cut-throats as also to hold that the Sovereign can Authorize Forces and great Numbers tho' he cannot single Persons to do Acts of illegal Violence Sir you know the Author of Iovian is as far as Mr. Iohnson himself from believing that Numbers are Sacred or can Legitimate Oppression or that the Sovereign can give a Valid Commission to his Forces to outrage or Murther his Liege People and render them unaccountable for such Acts of Violence He no where denieth Subjects the Liberty of making a Legal Defence against any number of Thieves and Cut-Throats how great soever and by whomsoever Commissioned Nor doth he in the least insinuate that the damnableness of resisting lies in that they are Forces But he makes it to consist in raising Forces without lawful Authority to resist with and in defending themselves in such a manner as casts off Subjection and is a manifest and dangerous Usurpation upon the Legal Rights of an English Sovereign He makes that Law the measure of the Subjects Power as well as of the Kings and this it seems is his great Crime If Subjects be allowed to defend themselves at discretion the King must hold his Crown but during pleasure Some of Mr. Iohnson's Friends will complain that their Throats are in danger and will never think them safe till they have the King's Throat in their Power They have made so good advantage formerly of what he calls Legal Defence against the Vnauthoriz'd Illegal Violence of Subjects that I do not wonder that they would fain be at the same Trade again But I cannot forget that they held the King's Person as Sacred as Mr. Iohnson doth and were as clamorous Zealots for Religion and Property who notwithstanding brought their Majesties Royal Grand-Father to the Block subverted the Ancient and Excellent Constitution of this Noble Realm both in Church and State and enslaved the whole Nation Neither you nor I can have while to entertain our selves with so diverting a Spectacle as Mr. Iohnson's Triumphs over an Adversary of Straw of his own making and therefore leaving him for some time at that Sport by himself bateing a few strictures here and there I shall say little till I meet him p. 201. Among several things worthy of Censure the first I shall note is the rude treatment of a very Eminent Protestant Writer where having impertinently cited two passages out of Bracton and K. Edwards Laws for they contradict nothing in Iovian he concludes in these words These I hope are better Authorities in this matter than Sam. Bochart our Author's French Oracles c. Certainly Mr. I. is the first man who ever mention'd that great Name without some Addition of Respect not to say with scorn and contempt And that Epistle which he so much vilifies hath ever been in great Esteem with all sorts of men It is in effect an Apologetick Declaration of the whole Protestant French-Church professing their just abhorrence of the great Rebellion which ended in the most execrable Murther of the King In a word the Memory of Mr. Bochart will ever be precious whilst the world pretends to retain any degree of Honour for eminent Piety and Learning In the next page he chargeth Mr. Dean with attributing to the Sovereign the whole Legislative Power and by his answer it is plain he accuseth him of giving the Kings of England that vast Power I marvel how Mr. I. hath disposed of his Conscience if he ever had any or with what face he can obtrude so gross a slander It is very evident that no such thing can be intended in the place he refers to For 1. Mr. Dean is speaking of All proper and compleat Sovereigns as well States as Monarchs and not in particular of our Kings 2. He doth not ascribe to such Sovereigns the Whole Legislative Power The word Whole is added by Mr. I. who could not otherwise have found any thing to cavil at 3. In those words which respect an English Sovereign he ascribes no more to him than the influence of a principal Efficient viz. to give our Laws their last form to give life and soul to Bills prepared by others And who dares deny that the Royal Assent gives those Bills which pass both Houses the Name Essence and Authority of Laws and that they are as Iovian speaks but a dead Letter without it How honestly Mr. I. calls this giving the Sovereign the whole Legislative Power I need not observe for you P. 171. Mr. I. will needs have Iovian to have founded his distinction of Imperial and Political Laws upon a perverted passage of Fortescue who distinguisheth Dominion into Imperial and Political and mixt of both But if he would have pleas'd to consider the Book he pretends to Answer he might easily have observ'd it that his Adversary fram'd that distinction upon quite another ground and useth the Terms in a sense far different For as our most eminent Lawyers and the Laws themselves call this Realm an Empire and the Crown an Imperial Crown and the King an Imperial Sovereign that is as Sir Orlando Bridgman and Mr. Dean both expound the Term a Free Independent and Vnconditional Sovereign so the Laws which secure the Rights of the Sovereign are aptly by him call'd Imperial Laws And Arch-Bishop Cranmer cited in Iovian useth the Term tho' not precisely in this sense to signify those Laws of the Realm which secure the Royal Prerogative against the Usurpations of the Pope But neither Mr. Dean nor Sir O. Bridgman ever intended hereby to give the King Imperial Power i. e. Absolute and Arbitrary Power but both declare the contrary I will cite the words of the latter It is one thing to have an Imperial Crown and another to govern absolutely What is an Imperial Crown It is that which
to which he hath given no sort of answer to let you see how little reason his Admirers have to magnifie this Reply in which he declines medling with the most considerable Arguments urged against him which stand in full force against his first Book notwithstanding the Shew he makes of defending it To avoid being tedious I purposely omit the mention of many other considerable things in Iovian of which he takes no notice And having shewn that he hath given no full Answer to that Book I shall proceed to shew that this Reply is not a fair one but full of fallacy and deceit 1. As he doth not consider many of Iovian's Arguments so when he vouchsafes to Reply to others he frequently misrepresents them or co●cealeth the Reasons and Authorities which support and inforce them and shams them off with a Droll Which is very unbecoming a fair and generous Adversary and unworthy I will not say of a Christian or Divine but even of an honest Man and a Scholar though a meer Pagan I will not trouble you with particular instances of such foul dealing because they will frequently occur in my Remarks on several passages of his Book such as the shuffle he makes to exclude Procopius from the Flavian house the account he gives of the distinction of Laws in●o Imperial and Political 2. His main Authorities are Rhetorical Amplifications and flourishes in Panegyricks and Invectives in which the Orator doth not tie him strictly to truth and the proper use of words so that there is no arguing from the literal sence but abatements must be made for Hyperbolical Speech on both hands for lofty strains of Complement in Panegyrick and for heavy and Tragical Aggravation in the Steliteutick or Invective This deceitful artifice is the Masterpiece of our Popish Adversaries when they pretend the Father's Authority for the Doctrine of Transubstantiation Invocation of Saints c. they ransack their Declamatory pieces for lofty Expressions touching the dignity and benefits of the Holy Eucharist and take Metaphors and Metonymies in a proper and literal sence They urge this very Apostrophe of Gregory Nazianzen to Constantius whence Mr. Iohnson would infer the Doctrine of Exclusion as a notable Testimony for the Invocation of Saints and for my part I think it proves the one as much as the other This foul play his Adversaries have sufficiently complained of but cannot prevail with him to leave it he is conscious that he needs such advantages and dares not let them go For having made such a wild assertion as that the Empire was Hereditary and being hard pressed by his Answerers and withal resolved not to bate them one syllable in his whole Book he is forced to outface plain History with strains of Rhetorick in which the Orator frequently allows fancy as licentious flights as the very Poets and nay even to stretch Hyperboles too by an advantageous Translation Now this argues great want of Ingenuity an unchristian and wrangling temper and that he contends not so much for the love of truth as for Glory and Victory Whether he hath obtained it or not will be further seen in the particular Remarks to which I am proceeding His Intimation that Mr. Dean waited to see the other Answers to Iulian and then gave the substance of them in his Book scarce deserves any notice It is well known that Iovian was written currente prelo and great part of it Printed before those Answers appeared The expectation of it made my self and divers others never look into them and quite spoiled the sale of Mr. Long 's Book as the Bookseller concerned hath complained to many It is more material for me to enquire whether Iovian hath given us an outlandish notion of a Soveraign for if he hath not the deceit will lie at Mr. Iohnson's Door If his Notion be supported by the joint Authority of the Common and Statute Laws it is great injustice to call it an outlandish one Now Iovian doth not set up an English Soveraign furnished with an Arbitrary and boundless Power like that of the French King or Grand Seignior He acknowledgeth him to be under the direction of the Law though he ascribe to him a Supremacy over all Persons within his Dominions which let Mr. I. say what he pleases is the formal notion of a Soveraign unless the word be taken in an improper sence This Supremacy he proves to belong to an English Soveraign by many Statutes and the Testimony of our most eminent Lawyers both Ancient and Modern against which Mr. Iohnson hath not one word to reply He proceeds to a particular recital of the Essential Rights and Properties of a true Soveraign viz. to be unaccountable to have the sole power of the Sword to be free from Coercion and Military Resistance He sheweth these Prerogatives to be the King 's due by express Statute Law which Statutes do not vest any new Right in the Crown but only declare what always hath been the Ancient and Fundamental Law of this Realm in those Cases So that Iovian's Soveraign is an English Soveraign for ought Mr. I. hath proved to the contrary and therefore his Jest of a Dutch Scale in a Map of Middlesex is both false and impertinent For though the Miles of several Countries have no formal Conceptions in which they all agree as Individuals of the same Species yet all proper Soveraigns have viz. Supremacy from which the foremention'd rights are inseparable Nor will his doughty Demonstration from an Act of Parliament which useth the Term in a lax and improper sence convince Mr. Dean or any Man else that the Notion of a Soveraign implies nothing in it but Superiority For at that rate there will be no fixing the formal Conception of any thing if it must be stretcht so wide as to take in whatsoever though improperly bears the same name The sence of the Term Soveraign with respect to a civil Society is so very well known and agreed upon in the World that upon the very hearing it every body forms a conception in his mind of somewhat more than Superiority and understands thereby such a superiour as is above all and hath none above him which imports Supremacy and Mr. I. might as well have argued that the formal conception of a Baron of England doth not imply Peerage with all the R●ghts Essential to a Peer of this Realm because the Baron of Kinderton the Barons of the Cinque-Ports and the Barons of the Exchequer are not Peers and have none of those great Privileges The next material thing in his Preface is his quarrel against the Distinction of Imperial and Political Laws Now let us first ●ee how Iovian explains this Distinction and then what work Mr. I. makes with it He calls those Imperial Laws which ascertain the Rights of the Soveraign and those Political which secure the Rights of the Subject That there are Laws of both sorts I presume Mr. I. will not
deny in this and all other Kingdoms and so I see no reason for his fury against any person who invents Terms to distinguish them But Mr. I. represents this Distinction most disingenuously and quite contrary to the Authour's Mind As though it set up a new sort of Law never heard of in this Nation Authorizing our Kings to do all manner of Injustice nay to commission others also to Murder Plunder and commit all manner of outrage and ●o indemnifie them when they have done it And that he may the more effectually delude his Reader into this belief he fraudulently confounds Imperial Power by which Fortescue cited by him understands Absolute and Arbitrary Power which is no where given by Iovian to our Kings with Imperial Laws and then deduces from it the most odious consequences he could devise Now I defy him to shew where Mr. Dean ascribes to our Kings Imperial Power in Fortescue's sence or pretends that the Imperial Laws of this Realm allow them to Act or Authorize any of those outrages he talks of Where doth he deny that the Advisers or Instruments of such Oppressions are accountable and punishable or pretend that any Commission will warrant and bear them out Therefore all his odious consequences vanish into smoke and his tedious citation out of Fortescue is wholly impertinent since Iovian no where gives our Kings absolute and Imperial Power though he say that the Imperial Laws of this Realm forbid Subjects all Military Resistance when their Soveraign strains Prerogative beyond its legal bounds Mr. Iohnson in his former Book demanded in case we are persecuted for Religion under a Popish Successor by what Law we must die And he supposes his Adversary devised this Distinction to answer that question Admit it to be so he saith by the Imperial Laws we must die Yet it is plain he doth not pretend that those Laws authorize the Popish Successor to persecute or give him power to subvert the established Religion or condemn and execute its Professors against Law All he saith is that those Laws forbid me in those circumstances to save my Life by Rebellion Had I been to answer his Book I would have turned the question upon him and have demanded by what Law I am allowed to draw the Sword and raise Forces against my Soveraign for self defence Those Laws which give him the sole power of the Sword and condemn a defensive War against the King whether levied by the body Collective or body Representative of the people do in effect require me to submit to be murthered and in that case he himself will admit that I must die my time is come If splitting this same Law of the Land into Imperial and Political displease him it is because he was in a peevish humour for I never yet have learned that 't is a faulty distinction which divides the whole into its parts However you see he grants the Imperial as well as Political Laws to be the Law of the Land and if they be so let the World judge whether he hath shewn the Charity of a Christian or the Candour of a generous Adversary in thus representing the Distinction I will not reckon his Allusion to the words of the Devil Iesus I know and Paul I know but who are ye among his profanations of Holy Scripture But he is a very sorry Exorcist who will be gravelled with his Question Common Law we know and Statute Law we know but who are ye For the Imperial and Political Laws are both common and Statute Law and by his own Confession the Law of the Land If his suggestion were true that Passive Obedience as it is taught by his Adversaries is Popery established by a Law by which he only means that it would be an encouragement to a Popish Prince to set it up without Law an irresistible temptation to persecute the Reformed Religion and to commit all manner of Lawless Oppression I say if this were true it is no Argument that the Doctrine of Passive Obedience is false because ill Governours may take occasion to abuse it Is our Saviour's Passi●e Doctrine on the Mount either false or foolish because Iulian was thence encouraged to oppress Chri●tianity and becoming his own Chaplain Preached it himself This is the very fallacy a non causa which he unjustly in another place of this Preface chargeth upon his Answerer If the Laws oblige us to non Resistance and allow no pretence of levying defensive War and this liberty denied will as surely establish Popery as 10000 Political Acts o● Parliament let him arraign the Laws and not this poor innocent Distinction or Iovian who only teacheth obedience according to Law But I pray you may not ill Men make as wicked and dangerous advantages of the con●rary Doctrine why may not the Doctrine of civil liberty as well as Christian Liberty be made a Cloak of maliciousness It is notorious that it hath been so abused yet I would urge no Man to renounce his interest either in the one or the other on that account Are not Subjects as apt to be clamorous and turbulent as Princes to be Arbitrary are not the former as apt to claim undue Liberties as the latter undue Prerogatives Is it an unhappiness peculiar to Princes only to be haunted with Flatterers Have not the People also Parasites and Sycophants about them both Divines and Lawyers who ●latter them into an opinion of a boundless English as much unknown Liberty to our Ancestors as boundless Power in the Prince And have not these Sycophants as much the temptation of interest and as fair a prospect before them in working confusions and revolutions as the other Parasites● can have in the hopes of Court favours To conclude is not Arbitrary Subjection and an ungovernable humour in the people as destructive to Society as Arbitrary Government If then the Inconveniencies which may arise render a Doctrine foolish or wicked the Doctrine of Resistance is full as much in danger as the slavish Doctrine of Passive Obedience and the mischievous consequences I fear are not altogether so accidental to the former as to the latter Oh! but Iovian owns the consequences of Non-Resistance and saith expresly p. 242. In all Soveraign Governments Subjects must be Slaves as to this particular that is of their lives and liberties and he would fain know then in what particular they are Freemen Is Mr. I. sure Iovian saith so or is he sure that life and liberty are the particulars as to which he saith Subjects must be Slaves I doubt he is guilty of a mistake or a worse fault The passage as torn from the context and expounded by Mr. I. sounds very harsh● but I will set it down intire and then a very ordinary Reader will understand the measure of his Candour and Honesty in representing Iovian The passage runs thus Therefore to cut off Resistance in the English Government the three Estates have declared against all Defensive as well as Offensive
Book he seems to have read nothing of but in Julian's Answer I see Implicite Faith hath large Dominions lying without the Pale of the Roman Church and that Persons of the most refined Wits and even Sceptical Curiosity too frequently submit to its Yoke I know it is not the particular infelicity of this Noble Person but an unhappiness incident to all great Men that their circumstances and more● weighty employments will not allow their Personal examination of many things which come before them They are forced to see with other Mens Eyes and to hear with other Mens Ears and so long as they trust none but Persons of Iudgment and Integrity they suffer little thereby But it hath been Sir R's ill Fortune to use the Observations and Collections of some Men who either for lack of sense or honesty have shamefully abused his confidence in them I cannot out of respect to him believe that if Sir R. had read Jovian through he would have failed to observe the vast difference between calling the Laws which secure the Rights of the Crown Imperial Laws and ascribing to our King 's Imperial Power or that he would have stained his Honour by that unjust Charge on Dr. Hicks saying That Imperial Power may make a lawless attempt or prosecution lawful But he had that and several other invidious reflections on the Doctor out of the excellent Mr. Johnson who made Collections out of Jovian for him and deserves very ill of him for doing it with so little fidelity His Collection of Protestant Writers which favour the Doctrine of Resistance was made by a no less trusty hand The Authorities of Zuinglius Calvin and some others are borrowed from Philanax Anglicus a Iesuit whom Dr. Du Moulin excellently answered where he met with the rest I know not I cannot be so injurious to the Honourable Authour as to believe that he made the Collection himself since upon examining two or three of the Citations I find such errours as I am perswaded it is impossible for him to commit What he cites from Calvin on Daniel 6. ver 7. is not there nor yet hath the place to which Philanax refers either the words or sense of what we read p. 16. Peter Martyr on Judges c. 3. hath not a word of the Parliaments Proceedings against King Richard the Second and considering how he determines the Case of Resistance there I very much question whether he approved them Again he calls the Authour of the Book of Obedience Thomas Goodman whom both the Title Page of the Book and Whittingam's Preface call Christopher The mistake I confess is of no moment but it sheweth the negligence of the Person who made the Collection I wonder for what reason Sir R. brings afresh on the Stage such passages as these which our Romish Adversaries have for above a hundred years cast in our Dish as Seditious and our own Divines have vindicated the Reformed Churches partly by condemning some of them and partly by shewing that others are maliciously wrested or impertinently alledged But I know not how such Collections make for their Majesties Service and the Honour of the Reformation it 's possible this Noble Authour doth I think he is as little obliged by a third Person who eased him of the drudgery of turning the Bible for Scripture Examples of an Original Contract For had Sir R. used his own Eyes in that search he would have seen that the Instances of David and Jehoiada are no proofs that there were pacta conventa between the Iewish Kings and their People as there are in Poland or that the former were accountable to the latter Peter Martyr on the third of Judges teaches the quite contrary And whoever reads the two places in the Chronicles cited to prove a Contract between David and his People and compareth them with the parallel places in Samuel and Kings will hardly think them satisfactory David's Covenant with the Elders of Israel was a plain Treaty of Peace and Submission to David after a long and unsuccessful defence of the Title of the House of Saul It was first concluded by Abner and upon his Murder renewed and solemnly ratified by the Elders of Israel See 2 Sam. Ch. II III IV V. But you read of no Covenant made with the Men of Judah who Anointed him King immediately on Saul's Death The Instance of Jehoiada making a Covenant 2 Chron. XXIII 16. signifies as little As it is related 2 Kings XI 17. it appears indeed that a Covenant was made between the King and People as well as with the LORD And as the tenour of the latter was That after their Apostasy to Idols under Athaliah they should become the Lord's People so probably the tenour of that with the King was That after Athaliah's Vsurpation they should become Subjects to Joash their rightful King He was but seven years old and at that age incapable of contracting for himself and it appears not that Jehoiada made any conditions for him the breaking of which should absolve them from their Allegiance And now we are upon Scripture Collections you shall see how unfortunate he is in an instance or two more To prove that all wrongs done by wicked Kings are not unquestionable in this World he alledgeth the case of Ahab who forfeited his Succession for Tyranny Now I do not find that after the Prophet Elijah pronounced the Sentence the People deposed him or altered the Succession but waited till God by express Revelation● transferred the Crown to another Family and sent the Prophet Elisha to anoint Jehu I believe neither Jovian nor any other of our Passive Doctors ever said That God may not call wicked Kings to an account in this Life but the contrary and that he usually doth it And his other instance if it be possible is less to the purpose He saith Samuel medled not till God saw good to reckon with him For God had given a special Commandment to Saul to destroy the Amalekites and spare none which Command Saul not executing the Prophet did it with his own hand I ever thought Agag's losing both his Kingdom and his Life was part at least of his account with God You see Sir how dangerous it is to trust to other Mens Collections unless you are well assured of their Fidelity Yet I must confess Sir R. H. had as much temptation as any man could have to trust He formerly met with an honest Sorbon Doctor who obliged him with a true Account of the various Decrees for and against Aristotle in the Vniversity of Paris which makes as handsome an appearance as any thing in this whole Book He deserved his acknowledgements and praise much better than Mr. Johnson tho' I do not yet find that they are any where paid him I believe Dr. Hicks is not ill pleased with this Noble Authour for suggesting that Jovian was written by a Club and takes it for a great Honour that he esteems him the
since it is so I shall make two or three Observations from his Advertisement and proceed to consider the Book it self And first I cannot but take notice that during the Interval between the Printing and Publishing of this Book Mr. Iohnson had seen his scandalous and malicious suggestions against the Assertors of the Succession and Passive Obedience abundantly confuted It is manifest to all the World that those worthy Persons were not more mistaken in the good hopes they had of a Popish Successor that he would be moderate just and religiously observe his Promises to maintain our Religion and Liberties than he was mistaken in the ill Opinion he had entertained and the Calumnies he had published of them He had traduced them as Persons weary of their Religion Betrayers of their English Liberties and had particularly accused Dr. Hicks of fitting the notion of Passive Obedience on purpose for the use of a Popish Successor to render us an easier prey to the bloody Papists It is evident the Papists themselves had no such opinion of his kindness since he hath been baited for Iovian by all their Pamphleteers and by their procurement was in his own Cathedral in an Assize-Sermon levelled at the Test and Penal Laws most rudely and impudently reviled It is well known how early and zealously the Doctor appeared both in the Pulpit and in Print for the defence of the Protestant Religion that he was one of the first Divines I believe the very first whom King Iames Closeted for Preaching against Popery and animadverting on the Royal Papers Mr. I. is not ignorant that Dr. H. and his Friends who durst not by force of Arms resist a Popish Prince defended their Religion and civil Rights against him with an invincible Courage and repulsed all his attempts upon both as a brave strong Wall would the Batteries of a sorry Engine That neither Bribes nor Menaces could induce them to afford him those assistances in undermining the foundations both of Church and State which many violent Excluders offered him in their Addresses made publick in our Gazettes If Mr. I. had either ingenuity or shame he would not have published this Reply without acknowledging his Errour and retracting his slanderous Insinuations as also he would have made some reparation to the Clergy and Universities whose unsteadiness he sli●y forebodes from the Example of Queen Mary's Reign All this might have been done without either much trouble to himself or expence to Mr. Chiswell The reverse of the Title Page or the back side of the Lord Russell's Monument would have afforded him room enough and such a piece of Ingenuity and plain dealing would have gotten him more reputation with good Men than all his Book besides Secondly It is also observable that during the same ●nterval was Published Sir George Mackenzie's Ius Regium in which he vindicates the Scotch Succession and confutes the story of Robert the Second and Elizabeth More as it is related from Hector Boethius and Buchanan by Mr. Hunt Mr. Atwood and Mr. Iohnson He proves against them that from Robert the Second the Crown descended on the next Lineal Heir viz. Robert the Third Eldest Son of the said Elizabeth More who was his first an● lawful Wife Married to him solemnly A. D. 1349. and died before his Marriage with Eupheme Daughter of the Earl of Rosse This he supports by Authorities more credible than those which garnish Mr. I's Margin so that till the story be better supported and what Sir George hath said against it be disproved it must pass for a Fiction Now I blame neither him nor his Friends for reporting it after such Authours but since he would not let a mistake in History which he saith is not material escape him without advertising the Reader I understand not the ingenuity of letting so gross a mistake in story and so very material pass without adding one line more to warn him of it or offering better proof to maintain it Thirdly Mr. I's reason for suppressing his Book five years together may serve for an answer to your clamorous Neighbours who expect Mr. Dean should reply to this Book and conclude him baffled because he hath not answered it almost before he can have read it But if he never answer it let them know that Victory doth not always attend him who hath the last word and if the times which would not bear it salved Mr. I's honour whilst his Book lay dormant why may not Mr. Dean be allowed to use the same discretion I doubt not but he will consider this Reply and be ready to defend himself against the most formidable Arguments in it if he find it expedient but I conceive he stands no way obliged to take notice of this thing called an Answer to Iovian having declared in the close of his Preface to that Book that if instead of a fair close and substantial Answer he should only nibble shuffle and prevaricate and take Sanctuary in cavil satyr and scurrillity he would pass over such kind of replies with silence and con●empt This you will find the exact Character of this celebrated performance of Mr. I's and therefore he deserves not to be considered by his Learned Adversary That Man must have an unreasonable partiality for the cause of Exclusion and Resistance who will allow this to be a full Answer to Iovian wherein nothing is said to a great part of that Book neither is there any notice taken of many Arguments levelled against his two darling notions viz. That nothing is more plain than that the Empire was Hereditary and that it is lawful to resist a Prince by force of Arms if he persecute against Law as Julian did To disprove the former of these Mr. Dean hath shewn that the Succession to the Roman Empire was Elective Casual and Arbitrary and to make it out hath been at the pains to give a succinct account from all the Writers of the Imperial History both Greek and Latin how every Emperour from Iulius to Iulian came to the Throne from which account it appears that although many Princes endeavoured to secure the Succession in their own Families yet none esteemed the Empire to be their Inheritance or made claim to it by a right founded in proximity of blood but on the contrary pretended upon the nomination of their Predecessors or the choice sometimes of the Army sometimes of the Senate and sometimes of both and that when it continued some while in the same Family no regard was had to the next lineal Heir but adopted Sons have been preferred before the natural the more remote Kindred before those who were nearer and the Empire hath been divided between two or three Augustus's at once All which and a great deal more which may be true for ought he knows by his own Confession is utterly inconsistent with an Hereditary Succession as that of England is whose Laws do not allow our Kings to disinherit a Son or prefer the Issue of a
War it being impossible for the Soveraignty to consist with the Liberty of that pretence Just as among t●e Romans it was inconsistent with the Soveraign unaccountable Power which the Masters by Law had over the Slaves for them to have a liberty of rising up against them on the pretence of Self-defence In all Soveraign Governments Subjects must be Slaves in this particular they must trust their Lives and Liberties with their Soveraign You see what this particular is in which Subjects must be Slaves not the particular of their Lives and Liberties but they may not levy War against their Soveraign under colour of Self-Defence And though he saith they must Trust their Lives and Liberties with their Soveraign it will not follow that he makes them to be wholly at the Discretion of their Prince If Mr. I. and his Friends will think themselves inslaved because they may not be allowed what he calls just and necessary Defence when grieved and oppressed by the Government I know no Country in the World in which they may enjoy their freedom I am sure that Prince would purchase their good opinion at too dear a rate who would allow them that liberty for they would never want pretences which they would esteem just and necessary occasions to use it and quickly make him know that Kings are only Servants and Trustees and hold their Crowns and Lives too at the Peoples Discretion To his Zealous Cant which fills the next four Pages of his Preface I shall say nothing since they contain nothing of Answer to any part of Iovian Indeed he hath answered it all himself in his first Book in this Proposition That Christianity destroys no Man's Natural or Civil Rights but confirms them for if the Law of the Land make the Soveraign unaccountable and irresistible and declare that the People in whatever capacity considered have no Authority to levy a Defensive War against him Christianity by his own Confession confirms those Rights to the Prince as well as the Civil Liberties to the People And whoever he is who asserts a liberty of rising up against him for Self-Defence is guilty of removing the ancient Land-marks and the Nation have reason to Curse him He takes the liberty over and over to call Passive Obedience the Doctrine of the Bow-string and Turkish Doctrine but till he hath proved as well as asserted that Martyrdome is only suffering according to Law that our Saviour only forbids the Resisting of legal violence That St. Paul only forbids resisting the higher Powers which govern according to Law as we are to suppose Nero did and till he shall have answered the ninth Chapter of Jovian to which he hath not returned one word and shewn us that in all the ten Persecutions the Emperours and their Officers inflicted no illegal punishments upon the Martyrs and Confessors but that whatever Imprisonments Tortures or D●aths they suffered all was warranted by the Roman Laws and had it been otherwise they would not have so tamely submitted to their Murtherers I say till all this be done Mr. I. hath no right to call the Doctrine of Non Resistance the Slavish Doctrine of the Bow-string nor yet will he in the judgment of Indifferent Persons have fairly vindicated himself from the charge of burlesquing the Doctrine of the Cross. There is but one thing more in his Preface to be considered and that is whether Iovian be guilty of that cheat which the learned call the fallacy of non causa pro causa in asserting that Self Defence doth more mischief than the most outragious and bloody Oppression This he saith is repeated often but I cannot find it so much as once It is true Iovian saith That there is some inconvenience in the Doctrine of Non-Resistance but the inconvenience of Resisting the Soveraign is ten times worse and that it is a remedy against Tyranny worse than the disease And he hath largely proved it by reasons by instances and by the Authority of a Book which Mr. I. pretends to honour next his Bible The Book of Homilies and to all this he vouchsafes not the least Reply Only Rebellion is with him Self-Defence Drawing the Sword without Authority must be righting ones self and the natural and necessary consequences of this illegal Defence must be accidental only and then 't is an errant fallacy to say the Inconveniencies of Resistance are greater and worse than those of Passive Obedience though ten thousand Lives and Fortunes are destroy'd in an Illegal Defensive War for ten that would be lost by the Arbitrary stretching the Prerogative beyond its legal bounds This is fallacy all over but Mr. I. and his Friends have a notable faculty of charging innocent Men with their own faults and I fear were they entrusted with the liberty of Self-Defence they would quickly make a very offensive use of it They would invade other Mens Lives and Liberties by way of Precaution They would make sure of giving the first blow without expecting an Assault And Mr. Iohnson's just and necessary defence would be a much more destructive murthering piece than Iovian's Turkish Slavish Bow-string Cut-throat Doctrine of Passive Obedience And thus I have done with his Preface My Observations have swelled to a much greater bulk than I designed when I began them and instead of half a Letter I have written a little Book Having this opportunity of conveying them to you by Mr. R. who goes out of Town to Morrow I shall break off in the middle and what remains you may expect unless I can find some safer hand to entrust therewith at furthest by the Carrier this day Fortnight I am Feb. 2. 168● Dear Sir Your most affectionate Servant The Second LETTER Dear Sir HAving in my former Letter given you a general view of Mr. Iohnson's work and a particular account of his Preface I shall now proceed to the Book it self I shall say nothing either to Iulian's Arts or his Answer to Constantius as being no part of the task you were pleased to impose upon me though by the way there are two things which I cannot but observe 1. First that he is guilty of a strange omission in enumerating Iulian's Arts to extirpate Christianity in not allowing one Chapter to a very considerable Stratagem of his which very well deserved to have been more plainly and largely insisted on This Stratagem was the granting an unlimited Toleration to all Sects and Heresies whatsoever this Mr. I. durst only intimate obscurely and in short hints for fear of disgusting those who best relish his writings For as things have since fallen out it is plain he would have lost your good opinion for ever If he durst have adventured on the Argument it is impossible for him to have avoided observing the mischievous ●onsequences of that State-Engine of the Papists falsely called Liberty of Conscience nor have we reason to think he would have baulkt so diverting a subject as the Donatists Address to Iulian in
Christ. If Mr. I. be immoveably resolved as to Iulian that he will not abate one syllable in the whole Book yet I hope he will take more modest resolutions touching the defence of it and upon second thoughts retract this irreverent and profane Allusion Thirdly He answers to the instance of Iovian's Son Varronianus who was passed by and a Stranger Elected whereas the younger Valentinian at four years old was Created Emperour That the setting aside the former signifies nothing but the Case of Valentinian is a greater Argument that the Empire was Hereditary than the setting aside of Ten at that Age is to prove the contrary I would know for what reason besides Mr. I's will and pleasure the making Edgar Atheling's Case parallel is meer amusement For besides that his Father before him was excluded by the Power of the Danes and himself by the Friends of Harold and after by the Conquest of William the greatest Friends to the Succession will not undertake for a strict Hereditary Descent of the Crown in the Saxon times But the reason why Varronian was passed by and Valentinian the Younger in the like Nonage was made Emperour is very obvious Iovian reigned not long enough to oblige the great Men in the Senate and Army he was forced to make a Peace upon such Terms as he could get with the Persians and his short Rule gave him neither time nor opportunity by any glorious Atchievements to recover his Credit and endear himself to the Army and People Whereas Valentinian Reigned gloriously twelve Years and was very Popular had Merobaudes his firm Friend who was a wise Man and by his Policy the younger Valentinian was Created Emperour Not that the Hereditary Right of the Valentinian House would otherwise have been usurped upon for Valentinian the Father was the first Emperour of that Race and left his Brother Valens and Elder Son Gratian in possession of the Imperial Throne but as Ammi Marcell intimates for fear lest on Valentinian's Death the Legions in Gaul who very well knew the Empire was not Hereditary should create another Emperour perhaps Sebastianus who was for that reason sent far enough out of the way A second Reason for the Title Iovian was his being a Confessour for his Religion under the Apostate who is said to have persecuted against Law and yet Iovian demeaned himself quietly To this he replies that if Iovian were quiet Valentinian was not so when he struck the Priest nor the Caesareans who destroyed the Temple of Fortune But what is this to the Point did they offer to take Arms against Iulian or to Rebel against him that persecuted their Religion against Law The impertinence of these instances Mr. I. was aware of and for that reason intimates somewhat which if true would be more to the Purpose viz. that Iulian durst not trust Iovian himself nor leave him behind lest he should rebel during his absence in Persia. This is the plain meaning of what Mr. I. doth not speak out He cannot imagine what necessity Iulian should have of Iovian's Company in the Persian War for that he was in no Post where his service could be considerable but a Pikeman not intrusted with any Command so much as of a Serjeant being no more than a common Foot-Souldier Here is Fiction upon Fiction without the least Authority to give it colour What a pregnant fancy hath our Authour who can manage a slight hint to ●uch advantage and improve a single word into so formal a story He doth not quote his Authour for this who was Themistius He had reason to conceal him lest his Reader should take pains to consult the place and find no such thing but a plain intimation to the contrary as you shall see anon and I wonder how he adventured to cite Socrates who flatly contradicts his groundless Assertion that Iovian was no more than a common foot Souldier I will cite the entire passage according to the Translation of Valesius Iovian being a Tribune when Iulian gave the Souldiers their option by a Law either to Sacrifice or be cashier'd chose rather to lay down his Commission than to obey the Command of that ungodly Prince Nevertheless Iulian being constrain'd by the necessity of the approaching War retain'd him among his Commanders So Valesius more fully expresseth the true importance of the greek word than Mr. I. who renders it had him among his Commanders This place manifestly implies that Iovian notwithstanding his refusal to Sacrifice continued in the same Command for though he chose rather to lay down his Commission than Sacrifice yet Iulian chose rather to dispense with his own Edict than part with such an excellent Officer So then Iovian was neither cashier'd nor reform'd as neither were Valentinian nor Valens upon their refusal to Sacrifice For Socrates in the beginning of the next Book relating the Election of Valentinian and how steddy in their Religion both he and his Brother Valens were expresly saith that though they both chose rather to lose their Employments than to Sacrifice yet the Emperour Iulian knowing them to be very serviceable to the Commonwealth removed neither of them from their military stations nor yet Iovian who Reigned after him And it is further evident that Valentinian was not dismissed his Command from Theodoret's relation of his striking the Priest for which he incurred Iulian's displeasure The Historian tells us that he was a Tribune and Captain of the Life-Guards which kept the Apostates Palace whereas if he had been cashier'd he would not have been obliged to have attended Iulian to his Pagan-Worship and by consequence would have had no provocation to strike the Priest for which he was Imprisoned But to return to Iovian Ammian Marcell saith expresly that he was Captain of the Domestici or Life-Guards and St. Hierome in his Continuation of Eusebius saith the same and sure Mr. I. is a bold Spark who undertakes to perswade the World that Iulian intrusted him with no Command no not so much as that of a Serjeant and insinuates a suspition in the Apostate that Iovian would prove false to him had he been left behind when so good Authours assure us that he trusted his Life in his hands I verily believe that Mr. I. took this hint of Iovian's being a Pikeman from the words of Themistius cited by Valesius in his notes on Ammian Mar. and if so it was disingenuously done to wrest them against the express testimony of that Historian as also of Eutropius and St. Hierome both cited in the same note but if he took it at the first hand from Themistius it is evident in the same page that by using the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Orator had no design to represent Iovian as an ordinary Pikeman and no more than a common foot Souldier as Mr. I. pretends but to shew from what rank of Military dignity Iovian rose to the Imperial Throne viz. Captain of
be wiser than his Authour Sir Simon Dewes and make the Bishops Authours of a Paper which as Iovian observes Sir Simon supposeth to have been drawn up in the House of Commons 2. He accuseth the justly admired days of Queen Elizabeth of most horrid Duncery when he professeth to believe That few besides the Bishops in those days were able to pen such a Piece I presume he will allow Serjeant Manwood or Mr. Mounson were some of those few and if so the Reasons might be framed in the H. of Commons Thirdly He will not allow the paper to be called Anonymous although though not signed by one hand I have heard that in a Parliament a paper hath been rejected as such though entituled the Humble Petition of the Gentlemen and Freeholders of the County of Middlesex because not subscribed by them But what tho' the Bishops be mentioned in the Body of the paper what though it talks of Godly Bishops ● may it not nevertheless be composed by a Scotizing Prebyterian Hath Mr. I. forgot the good Protestant Religion of our Good Church in Coleman's Declaration or will he say that neither Coleman nor any Papist could be the Authour they would have talked of black Swans as soon as of the Good Protestant Religion Sure the matter and scope of any Writing discovers the Authour's principles much more certainly than a single phrase perhaps design'd for amusement Fourthly He hath found out a new priviledge of Parliament viz. That the Bishops and I presume any Member of either H. for the same reason may urge false and unconcluding Arguments because there is f●l● Authority to enact their Conclusions Iovian hath shewn in this Paper gross Mistakes in Divinity and Church-History and the inconsequence of several Arguments Yet saith Mr. I. There is nothing in those Reasons but what was fit ●or Bishops to urge in Parliament to urge I say in Parliament where there was full Authority to have enacted their Conclusions No matter whether the premises will inferr the Point in debate The Authority of King Lords and Commons is sufficient to purge all defects and maketh the Conclusion valid in Law which was not so in Logick Fifthly It is very pleasant to see a Man who saith his Adversary hath raised Objections thick and threefold against this Paper challenge him to write against and threaten to answer him if he doth and yet not offer one word of Answer to what he hath already said against it I have the Charity to believe whatever Mr. I. in an heat may say that he will not stand by those Principles which are the Foundation of a great part of that Paper which he calls the Bishops Arguments I cannot believe he thinks the Political Laws which God by Moses delivered to the Children of Israel are still in force and ought to be received in all Christian Governments That all Crimes punishable with Death by those Laws ought to be Capital in all Christian Realms and on the contrary That it is not lawful to punish with Death any Crime which was not made a Capital Offence by the Law of Moses This Principle runs through that Paper or a worse viz. That all the Scripture Examples of good Men are at least imitable if they have not the Force of a Precept If Mr. I. will undertake the defence of these Principles I am sure he will be justly chargeable of making wast Paper of most Acts of Parliament Though Mr. Dean may in part he mistaken in the Instance he makes to prove it yet he is not mistaken in saying That though there was one good Argument why the Queen 's good Subjects might urge her Majesty to put the Queen of Scots to death viz. That She sought the Queen's Life yet the question remains whether she could be excluded from the Crown There is no Conse●uence from the Justice of punishing Treason according to the known Laws of the Realm with Death to the Excluding the next Heir from the Crown meerly for being a Papist And therefore Mr. Dean adds that those who addressed for preserving the Succession and were against Excluding the D. of Y. would upon sufficient Proof that he sought the Life of his Brother have been willing to Exclude him out of the World This fully answers Mr. I. and therefore with his usual discretion he takes no notice of it but falls upon the Instance of the Hebrew First-born who Mr. Dean saith might not be dis-inherited for cursing or smiting their Father though they might be put to death The Instance indeed holds not where the First-born had other Brothers but in case of the onely Son it is true for Mr. Selden in the Chapter to which Mr. I. refers limits the power of the Father in making his Heirs to one of his Sons if he have several Sons He may dis-inherit the Eldest Son if he have a Second or Third to make his Heir but he may not dis-inherit an onely Son or all his Sons and make a Brother his Heir because a Brother was not by Law a Co-heir with a Man's Sons or Daughters So that the Instance is not wholly mistaken I am confident did Mr. Dean think fit to vindicate Iovian which you see it were very easie for him to do he would readily acknowledge this or a greater Mistake he hath not Mr I's Forehead he hath more Humility and Modesty than to boast that he will not abate one syllable in his whole Book as Mr. I. doth To his flout as to Mr. Dean's Skill in Jewish Learning I shall only say That when Mr. I. shews as much of that Learning and to so good a purpose as Dr. Hicks hath done in his Peculium Dei I will forgive him all the Blunders and Prevarications of Iulian and this Defence of it Page 135. Mr. I. chargeth his Adversary with three things of which I shall easily clear him 1. That Iovian talks of Statutes against King Iames's Succession and whereas he saith If our Authour can shew me but one of those many Statutes whereby King James stood Excluded I will yield him the Cause I doubt he will hardly stand to his word What are the 35 H. 8. which impowers the King to devise the Crown by Will and the Act of Recognition 1 Eliz. which confirms the 35 H. 8. but Statutes against the Succession of K. Iames For K. Henry made a Will in which next his own Daughter he limits the Crown to the Daughters of his second Sister the French Queen by Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk passing by the Scotch Line I know very well what was said against that Will of K. H. 8. by Mr. Maitland in favour of the Queen of Scot●and in a Letter to the Lord Cecil publish'd in the Collection of Papers in the end of the first Volume of Dr. Burnet's History of the Reformation but what he saith to invalidate the Will was never proved and this Paper lying unknown could not if true influence
as to the coercive part is subject to no man under God The King of Poland hath a Crown but what is it At his Coronation it is conditioned with the People That if he shall not govern them according to such Rules they shall be freed from their Homage and Allegiance But the Crown of England is and always was an Imperial Crown and so sworn not subject to any Humane Tribunal or Judicature whatsoever God forbid I should intend any Absolute Government by this c. In like manner Mr. Dea● making all such Princes as the King of Poland not to be Proper Compleat and Imperial Soveraigns tells you what he means by an Imperial Soveraign viz One who is supream in his Dominions next under God who hath full perfect and entire Jurisdiction from God alone and all others in his Dominions by Emanation from him But though he asserts the Kings of this Realm to be true proper and Imperial Soveraigns yet he is as far as Mr● I. from asserting an Arbitrary and boundless Power in them For he at the same time declareth that to be Arbitrary is no way of the Essence of an Imperial Soveraign and though after Sir Edw. Cook he cites the Titles of Edgar and Edward it is not to prove that the Saxon Kings were Arbitrary and Absolute but to shew that they were Compleat Unconditional and Independent Soveraigns the Natural Consequence of which is that they are unaccountable free from Coercion of force and not to be resisted Therefore Mr. I. needed not to have taken all that pains he hath done p. 183. to prove it Nonsence to say that Boundless Power may be limited in the Exercise His Adversary saith nothing like it But only asserts that a King under the Direction of Laws may nevertheless be a proper● Compleat and Imperial Soveraign And his Illustration of the matter by the similitude of a Fountain is clear and apposite and what nobody but Mr. I. will deride The Essence of Soveraign Power is not destroyed or changed by this limitation it receives from Concessions and Civil Contracts though the extent of it may be somewhat lessened It is still Supream Unconditional and Independent and the Prince who enjoys it though he be bound in Conscience to govern according to such Laws and Compacts yet may not be call'd to an account or punish'd by any save God his only Superiour for violating those Laws and transgressing the Legal Bounds of his Power His Answer to Mr. Dean's other Illustration of the Point viz. That being confin'd in the Exercise doth not destroy the Perfection of Soveraign Power because then the Power of God himself could not be Soveraign c. is not at all satisfactory I confess what he saith would be pertinent and considerable if God were confin'd only from such things as are evil in themselves and therefore inconsistent with the Perfection of the Divine Nature But we all know that the free Counsels of his own Will have set such bounds to the Exercise of his Almighty Power as render many things neither impossible in themselves nor yet repugnant either to the Wisdom Holiness or Goodness of God impossible for him to do For Example No Man will presume to deny That God if he had so pleas'd might have left faln Man to have perished without a Saviour and that without the least impeachment of his Wisdom Justice or Goodness And yet God having determined and declared that he will save all that believe in Jesus Christ it is impossible for him to suffer all Mankind to perish If Mr. I. please to consult the old Schoolman whom Fortescue cites as the Authour de Regimine Principum He will find a Distinction of God's Power into Absolute Power by which God can do every thing which implies no contradiction in it self or imperfection in him and Ordinate Power by which he can do nothing but what is agreeable to the Counsels of his own w●●l This distinction plainly shews that being limited in things implying neither Contradiction in themselves nor defect in God is no impeachment of the Truth or perfection of God's Soveraignty and therefore being limited by Rules of Government doth not destroy the Essence of Humane Soveraign Authority Princes cease not to be Supream in their Dominions by reason of their Concessions and submitting their Government to the Regulation of Political Laws● even as God ceaseth not to be the Supream Governour of the World● by reason of his Gracious Purposes and Promises reveal'd in Holy Scripture though ●t be impossible for him to act any way contrary to those Declarations The twelfth Chapter of Iovian wherein the Authour shews what security Subjects have of their Lives Properties and Religion under a Popish Prince notwithstanding the Doctrine of Non-Resistance is a rational grave and pious Discourse and deserves to be consider'd after another fashion than Mr. I. hath done He was pleas'd to droll it off but whosoever shall with sobriety and a mind void of prejudice weigh what hath been said on both sides will find a better sort of reasoning a better Spirit and a deeper sense of Religion in Iovian's Discourse than appears in this Answer It is certain that an Absolute Security against Rebellion on the one hand or against Arbitrary Government and Oppression on the other neither Prince nor People must expect For this cannot be had till either the People be so effectually inslav'd as to render them as little able to serve and assist their Prince as they are to disturb and dethrone him or till the Prince hath so little Power left him that he will be equally unable either to protect or oppress his Subjects And in such a state both King and People will be in a most desperate condition So that whether the one or other compass their ends for the present and obtain that absolute security which they affected they will enjoy it but a little while for both will inevitably hereby become the Subjects of Foreign Tyranny and Oppression A Moral security therefore must ●erve the turn and both Prince and People must acquiesce therein and trust each other with such a measure of Power as if abused may be of very ill consequence But vain and unreasonable Fears on either part must not be regarded or provided against If what he saith be not satisfactory to some of Mr. I's Friends we are the less to wonder seeing some of them profess to think that God hath not given so satisfactory an assurance of his own Being and Providence and of the Truth and Authority of the Holy Scriptures of the last Judgment and a future State of Rewards and Punishments as they expect All Men confess that the measures of the Jesuits who during the last Reign had too great an Influence on Publick Affairs are utterly unaccountable And the Credit that Order had with King Iames carried him to Undertakings as contrary to his own Interest as to those of the Nation and by consequence a
hath given the true sense of the Greek cited at large in the Margin he was not bound to give a literal Translation I wonder Mr. I. is not asham'd here to accuse him of forging and foisting in words at pleasure as he had charg'd him before with Falsifications nay a whole heap of them without being able to as●ign one single fraud He might as well have accused him of Bulglary or Horse-stealing and he hath equal Evidence for them and a pack of Readers prepared to swallow any Calumny I acknowledge that it was the Historian's design in this Chapter to shew that Iulian's destruction was from God for laying waste his Church and that account of the Prayers of Didymus for the Apostate's Conversion dropt from him on the by we should never have heard of them but for the miraculous Revelation of Iulian's Death But this doth not impeach its Truth nay it is a fair ground to believe notwithstanding the silence of Historians that many other Christians did the same However I can by no means grant that the miraculous Answer to his Prayer was a strong Proof that Didymus prayed for Iulian's destruction or that his breaking Fast upon the News gives the least support to the conceit The express words of Sozomen ● shew the contrary And the miraculous Revelation proves no more than the Historian designed viz. That he fell by the just Judgment of God for making havock of his Church Didymus had the Answer of his Prayers in the Churches Deliverance which God if he had seen meet was able to have accomplished by Iulian's Conversion as easily as by his Death and his breaking Fast upon the News only shews his firm belief that the Dream was Divine and the Revelation true The occasion of his Fasting was now over God had deliver'd his Church and Iulian was incapable of receiving benefit by his Prayers Mr. I. might as reasonably have concluded that David fasted and pray'd for the Destruction of his Child because assoon as he heard he was dead he call'd for meat and fell to eating Pag. 208. I perceive that Mr. I. is very loth to quit the honour of his notable discovery that Iulian narrowly scap'd a kicking from old Gregory tho' he be not able to answer any one of Iovian's proofs of the vanity of that conceit Yet he stands in it that the words of Gregory will bear no other sense 1. He saith it was Iulian in person and not the Captain of Archers for Elias Cretensis expounds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by ille impius I grant it but then neither Elias nor Billius ever dreamt that Iulian led those Souldiers to Nazianzum but say only he sent them against that and other Churches● And probably the Greek Elias Cretensis and some other MSS. of Nazianzen read in this place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so the Transubstantiation Soloecism is avoided But trusty Mr. I. conceals this which is really a fraud and falsifieth the Author● whose Testimony he produceth 2. Whereas Iovian saith it could not be Iulian but the Captain because he came 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with Orders Mr. I. saith the Greek words are falsely rendered with the Emperor's Orders and that they signify in an Imperious way I believe Billius was not of his mind but by pro imperio jussis meant according to his Orders and instructions I doubt not in the least but by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gregory meant the Edict for demolishing Christian Churches which in all probability the Officer carried with him The Emperours Edicts are commonly styled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Iulian calls his own Edicts So they are styled by Sozomen frequently and by Nazianzen himself in this Invective where this particular Edict for demolishing of Churches is so called This is a much more natural and easie sence of the words than that which Mr. I. would force upon them Lastly whereas Iovian sheweth out of Phavorinus that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth to suffer and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implies the Feet to be the Subject hurt not the Instrument offering that Violence of which Mr. I. will have the Apostate in danger and so renders the words though he was ill of his Feet Mr. I. takes occasion to despise his Adversary's Grecianship and will not take notice that Mr. Dean was not the first who took the words in that sence but followeth Bilibaldus Perkeymer a great Master in the Greek and Restorer of Learning who had thus rendered the words above an hundred years before Mr. Dean was born Nor is it at all necessary that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should signifie being beaten with a Club on the soles of the Feet as Mr. I. drollingly insinuates Being foundred or foot-sore with a hard March may far more easily be reconciled with Elias Cretensis who renders it pedibus contusus than his device of drubbing Thus you see Sir that here is no evidence of Iulian's being at Nazianzum or receiving any affront in Person from the old Bishop nor yet of his imminent danger of being kick'd which he scap'd by a seasonable retreat Were it either necessary or worth while I am confident a Man might from Ammianus Marcellinus and the date of his Edicts in the Theodosian Code give such an account of Iulian's Residence from his leaving Constantinople till he left Antioch to march against the Persians as would prove it scarce possible for Iulian to have been in person at Nazianzum We have no account that Iulian with all his Zeal against Christianity ever went in person to see this Edict put in Execution and there is no reason to doubt but if he had done it Nazianzen who omits no circumstance that may aggravate Iulian's Crimes and the Historians would have recorded it as an instance of his devilish Spite against Christ Jesus In the next page he tells us that his Adversary's Inconsistencies and Contradictions would fill a Book If he had such choice Mr. I. was much to blame that he did not pick out more evident and palpable Instances of it than those two he produceth I cannot see that inconsistence in them he pretends The Roman Empire he saith was Elective Well! What then Iulius Caesar left no Sons but died and the Monarchy with him For Octavius did not take the Empire upon him till long after Caesar's death he did not as an Adopted Son claim it by Hereditary Right in Vertue of that Decree which no Author but Dio ever mentions And this Decree if ever it had the force of a Law was abrogated by contrary Usage being never put in Execution or so much as once mention'd in the long Succession of Emperors down to Iulian. The other Instance hath as little of Contradiction in it Yet pag. 240. he acknowledges That in SPARTA the King had not the Sovereign Power which was Radically and Originally in the People And again that the Magistrates in Switzerland
derive their Power from the People I am not able to discern the Contradiction he talks of All Power is not Radically in the People i. e. The People have not the Sovereign Power in all Nations In England they have not in Spain and France they have it not But in Sparta they had and in Switzerland they have it Ay but he calls this principle Atheistical and what is Atheism in one Country is so all the World over True But Mr. I. now and then meets with Gentlemen who so assert All Power to be radically in the People as to give St. Paul the lie and make Government to be no Divine Institution but a pure Humane Invention and with respect to them Iovian calls this Principle Atheistical as may appear by the latter Assertion added to explain the former that the King is their viz. the People's Minister and not GOD's This Mr. I. fraudulently omitted These are notoriously the sentiments of most of our English Republicans and they are Atheistical every where as well in Popular Governments as in Monarchies And it would be no less Atheistical to assert that All Power is radically and originally in the King so as to exclude its derivation from God But if the consistency of the propositions be only cons●d●red the bare denial That all Power is radically in the People● doth not infer that Sovereign Power is no where in the People The opposition of Mr. Dean's two propositions set at variance by Mr. I. is neither contradictory nor contrary but what the Logicians call Sub-contrary concerning which every Freshman hath learnt this Rule that such propositions are consistent and may be both true together But Mr. I. is a happy man he hath so candid Readers that they will overlook the greatest mistakes in Logick History Law or any thing else that he can either ignorantly or wilfully commit The King's recommendation of Mr. Hooker's Ecclesiastical Polity doth not make the Authour infallible nor yet imply his Majesties Assent to every Proposition in that Excellent Work I am sure the passage he cites could never obtain his Majestie 's Approbation And Mr. Baxter who cannot be supposed to have any design to advance Arbitrary Government hath at large solidly confuted Mr. Hooker's notion Though when All 's done what Mr. I. cites out of Mr. Hooker is nothing like the Propositions condemn'd in Iovian He doth not make the King the People's Minister nor doth he allow them to resume the Power which by mistake he supposeth to have been once derived from them or any way else favour the Doctrine of Resistance The last matter of Fact is Simson's Case who killed the Pursuivant Mr. Dean accuseth Mr. I. with the fraudulent concealing that according to Brownlow it was found Homicide or Man-slaughter and Mr. I. with most wonderful scorn replieth That Brownlow's Reports were writ for those who understood the word Homicide which among other things is Chance Medley or se defendendo I confess the word Homicide as a common genus includes them and so it doth Murther also yet by Mr. I's leave in Verdicts and where Jurors doubt in the Opinions of Judges it must have a more strict Notion and imports Man-slaughter in the Law-sense as it 's oppos'd to all other kinds of Homicide So that this scurrilous ●lout● is an unjust as well as a rude Reflection But sure Mr. I. made this Answer without ever looking into Brownlow who doth not use the word Homicide but saith it was found Man-slaughter Homicide in Iovian was added as a synonymous Term by Mr. Dean on the Authority of Iudge Crook cited in the Margin So that Mr. I. hath no reason to insult or yet to enter a Caveat against the forfeiture of his Integrity by another Man's ignorance I very much fear that it is already forfeited and for faults not so pardonable as Ignorance I find that the Lord Coke in that report to which Mr. I. refers in this Answer saith it was found se defendendo and I shall not take upon me to Umpire the matter between him and Brownlow Nor do I think it necessary to Apologize for Iovian's Ignorance of this Report it being unreasonable to expect that a Divine should be able to Cap Cases with the whole Post of Republican Lawyers But admitting Lord Coke to be in the Right Mr. Dean put a close Question which Mr. I. evades like a Jesuit instead of answering 'T is whether he would make the Law the adaequate rule of his Actions The plain meaning of this Question is Whether a Man may with a good Conscience take the utmost liberties of self-defence which are out of the reach of the Law Instead of an Honest and Categorical Answer he cites a Case out of Bishop Hall quite of a different nature and insinuates that the Law gives a Man less liberty of self-defence than he may honestly use Now Sir he is a very mean Casuist who knows not that a Man may not with a safe Conscience do many things which will not bring his Neck into danger and that Tyburn is not the only way to Hell I need not tell you how great a Stranger I am to the Law-Books but my desire to serve you in the only thing wherein you could need my help the Examining of Citations in Books you could not consult in the Country oblig'd me to look into Judge Crook's Reports where I found a Case by accident much to the purpose of Mr. Dean's Question Sir H. Ferrers Baronet being Arrested some in his own Company kill'd a Bailiff and Sir H. was brought to a Tryal He pleaded that the Bailiff had no Authority to Arrest him because the Warrant was by the name of Sir H. F. Knight and he was never Knighted It was held by all the Court that it was a variance in an Essential part of Name and they had no Authority to arrest Sir H. F. Baronet So it was an ill Warrant and the Killing an Officer in the Execution of it could not be Murder Would Mr. I. take or approve taking advantage of a Misnomer to kill a Bailiff and escape If he durst take such a Liberty of Self-defence he hath not that tender regard to Mens Lives which he professeth and if he durst not I wonder for what reason he cites Simson's Case Such Ghostly Fathers as he are sometimes out in their Law and encourage Men to exceed the Legal bounds of Self-Defence and so cheat Men out of their Lives as well as their Salvation But if they are not you know Sir as well as I that those are none of the honestest or safest Spiritual Guides who teach Men how near to sin they may adventure without danger and having remov'd all rubs out of the way send Men to Hell with a quiet Conscience Sir my readiness to oblige you hath put me under a necessity of having too much to do with a Casuist of whom I now most joyfully take leave and after the performance of so ungrateful a