Selected quad for the lemma: religion_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
religion_n scripture_n sense_n true_a 4,624 5 5.7921 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A46761 The reasonableness and certainty of the Christian religion by Robert Jenkin ... Jenkin, Robert, 1656-1727. 1700 (1700) Wing J571; ESTC R8976 581,258 1,291

There are 57 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

others it seems probable that the highest degree of Excommunication among the Jews being styled Shammatha which is the same with Maran Atha Sham signifying Lord as † Vid. Grot. Ham. ad 1 Cor. xvi 22. Maran also doth in the Syriac and other Languages and Atha signifying cometh Atha might either Ignorantly or Maliciously be mistaken for Athon which signifies an Ass And it is likely that this Calumny might be first raised by some Body who had been Excommunicated and turned Apostate It would be a very wrong inference from what has been said to conclude that there is no certainty in the Greek and Latin and other Heathen Historians For the Circumstances of the Relation and the Consent of divers Authors may put most parts of History past doubt But it ought to be considered that those which have been mentioned are exceptions to which the Sacred Historians are by no means liable they do not charge one another with Falshood nothing can be discovered of Partiality in their Writings but they tell the most disgraceful Truths of their Ancestors and of themselves and the History it self has so many publick Circumstances that they clear it beyond all suspicion of Deceit If the Names of some Men be omitted upon particular occasions in the Scriptures we find them mentioned there upon others And there is evident Reason that the Names of infamous Men should in some Cases be omitted and should not be inserted in Genealogies and enrolled in the Registers of Honour But when the Memory of Persons and Actions is totally supprest this must extreamly abate the Credit of any History The Jews are the only People in the World that have had their Antiquities by an uninterrupted Tradition delivered down and preserved in an Authentick Book unanimously asserted by the whole Nation in all Ages which they have never changed nor altered but have in great numbers sacrificed their Lives in Testimony of it If the Heathens in divers things contradict the History of the Jews they contradict one another as much in the Accounts of their own Antiquities and what they relate of the Jews is upon uncertain and contrary Reports If they conceal what concerns the Jews it was their Custom to stifle that which did not please them The Histories as well as the Religion of most other Nations were kept secret and not communicated to the People no Book of History among them was ever put into the hands of a whole Nation with a strict Charge to every one to read and study it as the Books of Moses were when the Principal and most Memorable things related were within the knowledge and Memory of all that read them The Jews were under a necessity of preserving their Genealogies with all imaginable Care and Exactness if they would make good the Claim and Title to their Inheritances so that the meanest among them could with the greatest certainty derive his Line from Adam whereas the Persian Kings as we learn from (r) Herod lib. vii c. 11. Herodotus could boast but of a short Descent and the Kings and Emperours of the Romans and of other Nations to advance their Pedigrees were forced to have recourse to fabulous Reports And the Heathen Accounts of the Original not only of particular Families but of the several Nations of the World are acknowledged to be Fabulous or at the best but very uncertain by the most accurate Historians The Account of the Prophecies and Miracles contained in the Scriptures was impossible to be mistaken at first and it has been transmitted with all the certainty that any History is capable of to Posterity And the Writers of the Old and New Testament all agree in the Account of the Creation of the Deluge of Abraham and the other Patriarchs of the Bondage of the Israelites in Aegypt their Miraculous Deliverance from thence and their Journying into the Land of Canaan they all frequently assert suppose or imply the Truth of these things there is a continued Series and Line of Truth observable throughout the whole Scriptures But among Heathen Writers it is otherwise they contradict one another in Matters of any considerable Antiquity if they agree in some material Passages it is commonly with much variation in the Circumstances and with great Uncertainty and Doubtfulness and the things in which they most agree are such as have been taken from the Scriptures which compose a Book that if it were but for the Antiquity and Learning of it is the most valuable of any Book in the World and nothing but Vice and Ignorance and that which is the worst sort of Ignorance a Pretence to Learning could make it so much despised II. If the Histories of Heathen Nations be so little to be relied upon their Philosophy will appear to be worthy of no more Regard which for any thing of Truth and Usefulness there is to be found in it depends so much upon Historical Traditions That Poetry is the most antient way of Writing is not only asserted by Heathen Authors but may with great probability be made out from the Scripture it self Poets were the Chief upholders of the Religion and the Philosophy in use among the Heathens both these were at the first taught in short Maxims which that they might be the better received and the more easily retain'd in Memory were put into Verse without any farther Ornament than just what was necessary to give a clear and full Expression to their Notions and Precepts (s) Xenoph. Conviv Memorab lib. 1. Socrates and the Philosophers of his time had a value for the Verses of Theognis and those which go under the Name of Pythagoras are at least as antient as (t) Apu● A Gell. lib. vi c. 2. Chrysippus who alleg'd their Authority Solon himself wrote Elegies whereof some Remains are still preserv'd This gave the Poets a mighty Reputation and we find not only Solon but others of them quoted and appeal'd to by Demosthenes and Aeschines in the Courts of Judicature as well as by Philosophers in their Discourses But the Poets for the more delightful Entertainment of the People not only indulged themselves in that antient and useful way of Instruction by Fables for he (u) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plat. Pl●et was hardly esteem'd a Poet who had been the Authors of none but they became the Promoters of all manner of Superstitions and Idolatrous Worship the Oracles were delivered in Verse every Poet wrote something in Honour of the false Gods and (w) Plat. ●b Socrates himself during his Imprisonment made a Hymn in praise of Apollo By which means the Original Notions of Religion and Vertue were so obscured and corrupted that it was impossible in any Humane way to provide a sufficient Remedy Plato complain'd of the Fictions of Poets but when he set himself to recover Men to a true Sense and Notion of things by the help of some antient Traditions which he had met withal he fell into very absurd and sinful
Moses's time or after it p. 206. Of what Consequence the Proof of the Divine Authority of the Pentateuch is towards the proving the rest of the Scriptures to be of the same Authority p. 214. CHAP. VII of Joshua and the Judges and of the Miracles and Prophecies under their Government Joshua the Author of the Book under his Name p. 215. The Book of Judges written by Samuel p. 216. The Waters of Jordan divided p. 217. The Males circumcis'd at the first coming into Canaan and thereby disabl'd for War contrary to all Humane Policy p. 219. The Walls of Jericho thrown down and the Prophecy concerning them ib. The Integrity of Joshua p. 220. of Eli p. 221. of Samuel p. 222. CHAP. VIII Of the People of Israel under their Kings From the Revolt of the Ten Tribes an Argument for the Truth of the Law of Moses Prophets in the Kingdoms both of Israel and Judah p. 223 CHAP. IX Of the Prophets and their Writings The kinds of Prophecy among the Jews p. 224. The Freedom and Courage of the Prophets and the Reverence paid to them even by bad Princes p. 226. They laid down their Lives in Confirmation of their Prophecies p. 227. Many of their Prophecies fulfill'd during their own Lives p. 228. Their Prophecies committed to writing ibid. They as well as the Law were carefully preserv'd during the Captivity in Babylon p. 229. The Books of the former and of the latter Prophets the Books of Samuel by whom written p. 231. The Books of Chronicles and of Kings by whom written ibid. Of the Psalms Moses and the Prophets comprehend the whole Old Testament p. 233. The Hebrew Tongue sufficiently understood by the Jews when they return'd from Babylon ibid. The Scriptures could not be corrupted afterwards p. 235. CHAP. X. Of the Prohecies and Miracles of the Prophets Josiah Prophesy'd of by Name long before his Birth the Circumstances of that Prophecy p. 236. The f●●filling of Elijah's Prophecies p. 238. The Confession of Julian the Apostate p. 240. Divers other Prophecies and Miracles ibid. Cyrus prophesy'd of by Name long before his Birth p. 241. Jeremiah's Prophecies of the Destruction of Jerusalem p. 243. The Contradiction which was then thought to be betwixt the Prophecies of Jeremiah and Ezekiel a manifest Proof of the Truth of the Prophecies of them both p. 245. Other plain Prophecies fulfill'd p. 247. These Prophecies and Miracles manifestly true p. 249 CHAP. XI Of the Dependance of the several Parts of the Scriptures upon each other and that the Old Testament proves the New and the New again proves the Old as the Cause and the Essect p. 252. CHAP. XII Of the Person of our Blessed Saviour Our Blessed Saviour's undeniable Innocence and Holiness of Life p. 257. Judas himself gave Testimony to it p. 259. The Prophecies concerning the Birth of the Messias fulfilled in him p. 265. The Prophecies concerning his Life fulfilled p. 277. The Prophecies concerning his Death fulfilled p. 280. And those concerning his Resurrection and Ascension p. 286 CHAP. XIII Of the Prophecies and Miracles of our Blessed Saviour Our Saviour foretold the Treachery of Judas and the manner of his own Death p. 287. The Destruction of Jerusalem with the circumstances of it and the Prodigies attending it ibid. His Miracles verified the Prophecies which had been concerning the Messias p. 290 CHAP. XIV Of the Resurrection of our Blessed Saviour The Resurrection of our Blessed Saviour prophesied of and typified p. 293. The Apostles who were Witnesses of our Saviour's Resurrection could not be deceiv'd themselves in it p. 295. They would not deceive others p. 306. They alledged such Circumstances as made it impossible for them to deceive p. 307 CHAP. XV. Of the Apostles and Evangelists The Apostles were Men of sufficient Vnderstanding to know what they testified p. 312. They had sufficient Means and Opportunities to know it p. 313. They were Men of Integrity and truly declared what they knew for they had no worldy Interest to serve by their Testimony but suffered by it and had a certain prospect of suffering p. 315. There are peculiar marks of Sincerity in all their Writings p. 319 CHAP. XVI Of the prophecies and Miracles of the Apostles c. Of their Prophecies p. 328. Of their Miracles p. 330. The Miracles wrought by the Apostles themselves p. 331. A Power of working Miracles communicated by them to others p. 336. Their supernatural Courage and Resolution p. 342. This likewise was communicated to their Followers p. 351 CHAP. XVII Of the Writings of the Apostles and Evangelists The History of our Saviour's Life and Death contains so notorious and publick circumstances that it was an Appeal to that Age whether the things related were true or not p. 354. The other Books of the New Testament are explicatory and consequential to the Gospel or History of Christ and besides these likewise contain many memorable and publick Matters of Fact p. 361. The Gospel and other Books of the New Testament cited by Authors contemporary with the Apostles and owned for genuine both by the Jews and Heathens p. 363. Many of the Eye-witnesses to the Miracles of our Saviour and his Apostles lived to a great Age p. 364. The chief Points of the Christian Religion were testified in Apologies written from time to time to the Heathen Emperors ibid. CHAP. XVIII Of the Doctrines contained in the Holy Scriptures The Christian Religion teacheth an universal Righteousness both towards God and Man p. 368. The Scriptures propound to us the only true Principle of Holiness p. 370. The Christian Religion proposeth the most effectual Motives to Obedience and Holiness of Life p. 372. It afferdeth the greatest Helps and Assistances to an Holy Life p. 374. It expresseth the greatest Compassion and Condescension to our Infirmities p. 374. The Propagation of the Gospel has ever had great effects towards the Reformation and Happiness of Mankind p. 376. The highest Mysteries of the Christian Religion are not meerly speculative but have a necessary relation to Practice for the advancement of Piety and Vertue amongst Men p. 382 PART III. THat there is no other Divine Revelation but that contained in the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testament p. 385. CHAP. I. The Novelty of the Heathen Religions The Pretences of the Aegyptians to Antiquity examined p. 387. Of the Chaldaeans ibid. Of the Chinese p. 389. CHAP. II. Of the Defect in the Promulgation of the Heathen Religions The Heathen Religions never extant in Books to be publickly read p. 392. Every Country had its peculiar Deities They prevailed only by the Temporal Power Though the Heathens more in Number yet the Religion of Christians more promulged p. 392 CHAP. III. Of the Defect of the Prophecies and Miracles of the Heathen Religions Of the Oracles of the Heathens p. 394. That they were uncertain and ambiguous p. 396. But they could not be all counterfeit p. 398. The cessation of Oracles gradual p. 399. Their Miracles never
worought to confirm any sound and useful Doctrine The Confession of the False Gods when they were adjur'd by Christians p. 401. CHAP. IV. The Defect in point of Doctrine in the Heathen Religions The Theology of the Heathens absurd p. 403. Their Religious Worship wicked and impious p. 405. Humane Sacrifices customary in all Heathen Nations p. 406. No Body of Laws nor Rules of Good Life proposed by their Oracles p. 402. But Idolatry and Wickedness approved and recommended by them ibid. CHAP. V. Of the Philosophy of the Heathens The Heathen Philosophy very defective and erroneous p. 411. Whatever there is of Excellency in the Philosophy of the Heathens is owing to Revelation p. 423. If the Heathen Philosophy had been as certain and as excellent as it can be pretended to be yet there had been great need of a Divine Revelation p. 429 CHAP. VI. The Novelty and Defect in the Promulgation of the Mahometan Religion p. 436. CHAP. VII The want both of Prophecies and Miracles in the Mahometan Religion p. 439 CHAP. VIII The Alcoran is false absurd and immoral p. 441 CHAP. IX Of Mahomet That he was Lustful Proud and Cruel appears from the Alcoran it self p. 443 PART IV. CHAP. I. THat there is as great Certainty of the Truth of the Christian Religion as there is of the Being of God p. 447 CHAP. II. The Resolution of Faith The Scriptures considered 1. As Historically true 2. As to their Doctrine which concerns Eternal Salvation p. 451 452. From both these Considerations it follows that they are infallibly True p. 455. In many cases there is as much cause to believe what we know from others as what we see and experience our selves p. 456. And thus it is in the present case concerning the Resolution of Faith p. 460. The Evidence of Sense and of Humane Testimony in this case compared p. 462. The Certainty of both ultimately resolved into the Divine Veracity c. ibid. An Objection from Joh. xx 29. answered p. 467. The Truth of the Christian Religion evident even to a Demonstration p. 470 Newly Publish'd CHristian Thoughts for every Day in the Month with Reflections upon the most Important Truths of the Gospel To which is added Prayers for every Morning and Evening Price 1 s. A Course of Lectures upon the Church Catechism By Thomas Bray D. D. The Third Edition Price 5 s. Very proper to be read in Families A Minister's Counsel to the Youth of his Parish when Arrived to Years of Discretion Recommended to the Societies in and about London By Francis Bragge Vicar of Hitchin Hertfordshire Price 2 s. THE REASONABLENESS AND CERTAINTY OF THE Christian Religion BOOK I. PART I. IN Discoursing of the Reasonableness and Certainty of the Christian Religion I shall use this Method I. I shall shew That from the Notion of a God it necessarily follows That there must be some Divine Revelation II. I shall enquire into the Way and Manner by which this Revelation may be suppos'd to be deliver'd and preserv'd in the World III. I shall shew That from the Notion of a God and the Nature and Design of a Divine Revelation it follows That the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament are that Divine Revelation IV. That no other Books or Doctrines whatsoever can be of Divine Revelation V. I shall from hence give a Resolution of our Faith by shewing That we have the same Evidence for the Truth and Divine Authority of the Scriptures that we have for the Being of God himself because it follows from the Notion of a God both that there must of necessity be some Divine Revelation and that the Scriptures are that Divine Revelation VI. Having done this I shall in the last Place endeavour to clear such Points as are commonly thought most liable to Exception in the Christian Religion and shall propose some Considerations which may serve to remove such Objections and obviate such Cavils as are usually rais'd against the Holy Scriptures CHAP. I. That from the Notion of a God it necessarily follows that there must be some Divine Revelation IN the first Place I shall shew how Reasonable and Necessary it is to suppose That God should Reveal himself to Mankind And I shall insist the rather upon this because it is not usually so much consider'd in this Controversie as it ought to be for if it were it certainly would go very far towards the proving the Divine Authority of the Scriptures since if it be once made appear that there must be some Divine Revelation it would be no hard Matter to prove that the Scriptures are that Revelation For if it be prov'd that there must be some Revealed Religion there is no other which can bear any Competition with that contain'd in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament My first Business therefore shall be to shew from the Consideration of the Attributes of God and of the Nature and State of Mankind that in all Reason we cannot but believe that there is some Revealed Religion in the World There is nothing more evident to Natural Reason than that there must be some Beginning some first Principle of Being from whence all other Beings proceed And nothing can be more absurd than to imagine that that wonderful Variety of Beings in the Heavens and Earth and Seas which all the Wisdom of Man is not able in any Measure to understand or throughly to search into should yet be produc'd and continu'd for so many Thousand Years together without any Wisdom or Contrivance that an unaccountable Concourse of Atoms which could never build the least House or Cottage should yet build and sustain the wonderful Fabrick of the whole World that when the very Lines in a Globe or Sphere cannot be made without Art the World it self which that is but an imperfect Imitation of should be made without it and that less Skill should be requir'd to the forming of a Man than is necessary to the making of his Picture that Chance should be the Cause of all the Order and Fortune of all the Constancy and Regularity in the Nature of Things and that the very Faculties of Reason and Understanding in all Mankind should have their Original from that which had no Sense or Knowledge but was meer Ignorance and Stupidity This is so far from being Reason and Philosophy that it is down-right Folly and Contradiction From a Being therefore of infinite Perfection must proceed all things that are besides with all their Perfections and Excellencies and among others the Virtues and Excellencies of Wisdom Justice Mercy and Truth must be deriv'd from him as the Author of all the Perfections of which the Creatures are capable And it is absurd to imagine that the Creator and Governor of the World who is infinitely more Just more Wise and Good and Holy than any Creature can be will not at last reward the Good and punish the Wicked For Shall not the Judge of all the Earth do Right
and of seducing and Apostate Spirits without any sufficient Means afforded them to undeceive and rescue themselves Can we suppose that God of Infinite Majesty and Power and who is a Jealous God and will not give his Honour to another should suffer the World to be guilty of Idolatry to make themselves Gods of Wood and Stone Nay to offer their Sons and their Daughters unto Devils and to commit all manner of Wickedness in the Worship of their False Gods and make Murther and Adultery and the worst of Vices not only their Practice but their Religion Can we imagine that the True God would behold all this for so many Ages among so many People and yet not concern himself to put a stop to so much Wickedness and to vindicate his own Honour and restore the Sense and Practice of Vertue upon Earth I shall in due place prove at large That Mankind have in all Ages had the greatest necessity for a Revelation to direct and reform them and That the Philosophers themselves taught abominably wicked Doctrines who yet were the best Teachers and Instructors of the Heathen World And we have no true Notion of God if we do not believe him to be a God of Infinite Power and Knowledge and Holiness and Mercy and Truth and yet we may as well believe there is no God at all as imagine that the God of Infinite Knowledge should take no notice of what is done here below that Infinite Power should suffer it self to be affronted and despised without requiring any Satisfaction that Infinite Holiness should behold the whole World lie in Wickedness and find out no way to remedy it and that Superstition and Idolatry and all the Tyranny of Sin and Satan for so long a time should enslave and torment the Bodies and Souls of Men and there should be no Compassion in Infinite Mercy nor any Care over an erroneous and deluded World in the God of Truth Would a wise and good Father see his Children run on in all manner of Folly and Extravagancy and take no care to reclaim them nor give them any Advice but leave them wholly to themselves to pursue their own Ruine And if this be unworthy to suppose of Natural Parents how much more unreasonable is it to imagine this of God himself whom we cannot but represent to our selves with all the Compassions of the tenderest Father or Mother without the Weakness and Infirmities that accompany them in Humane Parents How unreasonable is it to entertain such a Thought of Almighty God infinite in Goodness and Mercy as to suspect that he would suffer Mankind to make themselves as miserable as they can both in this World and the next without putting a Stop to so fatal a Course of Sin and Misery or interposing any thing for their Direction to shew them the Way to escape Destruction and to obtain Happiness The Fall of our First Parents is known to us only by Revelation and therefore is not to be taken into Consideration when we argue upon the meer Principles of Reason But I consider Mankind as we find it in Fact setting aside the Advantages of Revelation Wicked and abandoned to Wickedness in the Snares of the Devil taken captive by him at his will unable to work out their own Salvation lost and undone without Power or Strength without any Help or Remedy And in this State of the World however it came to pass is there no Reason to believe that infinite Goodness should take some Course and not disregard all Mankind lying in this Condition The great Argument of the Scoffers of the last Days St. Peter tells us would be this That all things go on in their constant Course and that God doth not meddle or concern himself with them Where is the Promise of his Coming For since the Fathers fell asleep all things continue as they were from the Creation 2 Pet. iii. 4. And if no Promise had ever been made they would have had some Reason in their Arguing For that which rendred the Heathen without Excuse was That they did not make use of the Natural Knowledge that they had of God to lead them to the Knowledge of his Revealed Will which they had frequent Opportunity of becoming acquainted withal and had many Memorials of it amongst them in every Nation but they did not like to retain God in their Knowledge And this is the Force of St. Paul's Argument Act. xvii Rom. i. unless this latter Chapter were to be understood as Dr. Hammond interprets it of the Gnostick Hereticks That the Gentiles ought not to pervert and stifle those Natural Notions which God had implanted in their Minds but from the Law of Nature to proceed to find out the Written Law and for this Reason the Bounds of the Habitation of other Nations were determin'd and appointed by God according to the Number of the Children of Israel that they might seek the Lord and might be able to find and discover the True Religion and Way of Worship among that People to whom he had reveal'd himself Deut. xxxii 8. Act. xvii 26 27. They might have been less vicious than they were without the Knowledge of a Revelation and therein they were inexcusable that though they could not free themselves from the Power of Sin yet they might not have given themselves so wholly up to it as to become excluded from the Grace and Salvation to be obtained by the Revealed Will of God And when God has revealed himself all who will not use the Means and by a due Improvement of their Reason endeavour from Natural Religion to arrive at Revealed become inexcusable for their Negligence and Contempt of God and the Abuse of those Talents and Endowments which God has bestowed upon them For when God has once given Men warning and directed them in the way of Salvation and they will not regard it they must be wilfully ignorant if they will not consider that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day and it is Argument of his Patience and Long-suffering that he doth not bring speedy Vengeance upon a disobedient and rebellious World The Lord is not slack concerning his promise as some men count slackness but is long-suffering to us ward not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night Now this is very well consistent and exceedingly agreeable with all the Divine Perfections that he should give Men Warning of the Evil and Danger of Sin and afterwards leave them to their own Choice whether they will be Righteous and Happy or Wicked and Miserable and then that he should not take the first Opportunity to punish them nor lay hold of any Advantage against them but give them time for second Thoughts and space for Consideration and Repentance but if they abuse so much Patience and Loving-kindness that he should at last come
to the Simplicity of the Gospel and to the universal Design of it For they are equally adapted to awaken the Attention and command the Assent of Men of all Conditions and Capacities they are obvious to the most Ignorant and may satisfie the wisest and confute or silence the Cavils of the most Captious or Contentious And this is what all the World ever expected That God should Reveal himself to Men by working somewhat above the Course of Nature All Mankind have believ'd that this is the way of Intercourse between Heaven and Earth and therefore there never was any of the false Religions but it was pretended to have been confirm'd by something miraculous We may appeal to the Sense of all Nations for the Authority of Miracles to attest the Truth of Religion For whenever any thing happen'd extraordinary they always imagin'd something supernatural in it they expected that Miracles should be wrought for the Proof of any thing that had but the Name of Religion and no false Religion could have gain'd Belief and Credit in any Age or Nation but under the Pretence of them The only Difficulty therefore will be to know how to distinguish True Miracles from False or those which have been wrought for the Confirmation of the True Religion from such as have been done or are pretended to have been done in Behalf of False Religions But here it must be observ'd That it is not necessary in this Controversie that we should be able to determine what the Power of Spirits is or how far it extends and what Works can proceed only from the immediate Power of God It is sufficient that we know that God precides over all that Good Spirits act in constant Subjection and Obedience to him that Evil Spirits act for Evil Ends that Good Spirits will not impose upon Men and that he will not suffer the Evil to do it under any Pretence of his own Authority without affording Means to discover the Delusion And the Question here is not concerning any strange Work whereof God is not alledged to be the Author but concerning such as are wrought with a profess'd Design to establish Religion in his Name Suppose then that there have been many Wonders wrought in the World which exceed all Humane Power and which yet we know not to what other Power to ascribe This makes no Difficulty in the present Case because here not only the Works themselves but the Design and Tendency of them is to be consider'd For Instance Whether the Miracles reported to have been done by Vespasian were true or false by a Divine or a Diabolical Power they are of no Consequence to us he establish'd no new Doctrine and pretended to no Divine Authority but doubted the Possibility of his working them And supposing them true and by a Divine Power the most that can be said of them is that as God mention'd Cyrus by Name to be the Deliverer of the Jews so he might by Miracle signalize this Prince who was to destroy them But the Miracles of our Saviour and his Apostles were wrought with this declar'd Purpose and Design That they were to give Evidence to the Religion which they were sent from God to introduce as necessary to the Salvation of Mankind Having premis'd this I must resume what was before observ'd concerning the Means by which false Prophecies might be detected It has been already prov'd from the Notion of a God that there must be some Divine Revelation and it has been shewn That Prophecies and Miracles are the most fit and proper way of Revelation and that way which Men have ever expected to receive Revelations by If then there have been False Prophecies and Miracles they must be suppos'd to have been either before or at the same time or after those Prophecies and Miracles by which the True Religion was deliver'd if before or at the same time then the same Divine Wisdom and Goodness which obliges God to reveal his Will to Mankind must oblige him to take care that the Impostures of those false Prophecies and Miracles by some Means might have been discover'd But there is great Reason to believe that true Revelations should be first made to Men before God would suffer them to be tempted with false ones and if the false were after the true Revelations then the true Revelations themselves are that by which we ought to judge of all others But to speak more particularly of Miracles which are the present Subject It is inconsistent with the Infinite Truth and Honour and Goodness and Mercy of God to suffer Man to be deluded by false Miracles wrought under a Pretence of his own Authority without any possibility of discovering the Imposture And therefore if we should suppose there had past any time before the Discovery of his Will to Mankind he could not suffer Men but through their own Fault to be impos'd upon by such Miracles but either by the false and wicked Doctrines which they were brought to promote and establish as Idolatry Uncleanness Murders c. or by some other Token of Imposture they might have been undeceiv'd and both in the Old and New Testament God has given us Warning against false Miracles Deut. xiii 1. Mat. xxiv 24. Gal. i. 8. so that we may be assur'd that we are to give no Credit to any Miracle that can be wrought to confirm any other Doctrine than what we find in the Scriptures and if we can but be certify'd that they were true Miracles which gave Testimony and Evidence to them we need concern our selves about no other And the Miracles by which the Scriptures are confirm'd and authoriz'd must be true because there is no precedent Divine Revelation which they contradict nor any immoral or false Doctrine which they deliver nor any thing else contain'd in them whereby they can be prov'd to be false And in this Case that which all the Wit and Understanding of Men cannot prove to be false must be true or else God would suffer his own Name and Authority to be usurp'd and abus'd and Mankind to be impos'd upon in a thing of infinite Consequence without any Possibility of discovering the Imposture which it is contrary to the Divine Attributes for him to permit but either by the Works themselves or by the End and Design of them or by some Means or other the Honour and Wisdom and Mercy of God is concern'd to detect all such Impostures If Miracles be wrought to introduce the Worship of other Gods besides him whom Reason as well as Scripture assures us to be the only True God if they be done to seduce Men to immoral Doctrines and Practices if they be perform'd to contradict the Religion already confirm'd by Miracles in which nothing of this Nature could possibly be discover'd if never so astonishing Miracles be wrought for such ill Designs as these they are not to be regarded but rejected with that Constancy which becomes a Man who will act according to the
Principles of Natural Reason and Religion But when Miracles were perform'd which both for the End and Design of them as well as for the Manner and Circumstances of their Performance had all the Credibility that any Miracle could have if it were really wrought by God's immediate Power to confirm a Revelation if these Miracles have been foretold by Prophecies as on the other side the Prophecies were fulfill'd by the Miracles if they were done publickly before all sorts of Men and that often and by many Men successively for divers Ages together and all agreed in the same Doctrine and Design if neither the Miracles themselves nor the Doctrines which are attested by them can be discover'd to have any Deceit or Defect in them but be most excellent and divine and most worthy of God in such a Case we have all the Evidence for the Truth of the Miracles and of the Religion which they were wrought to establish that we can have for the Being of God himself For if these Miracles and this Religion be not from God we must suppose either that God cannot or that he will not so reveal himself by Miracle to the World as to distinguish his own Revelation from Impostures Both which Suppositions are contrary to the Divine Attributes contrary to God's Omnipotence because he can do all things and therefore can exceed the Power of all finite Beings and contrary to his Honour and Wisdom and Goodness because these require both that he should reveal himself to the World and that he should do it by Miracles in such a manner as to make it evident which is his Revelation But if he both can and will put such a Distinction between False Miracles and True as that Men shall not except it be by their own Fault be seduc'd by false Miracles then that Religion which is confirm'd by Miracles concerning which nothing can be discover'd to be either impious or false must be the true Religion For we have seen that there must be some Reveal'd Religion and that this Religion must be reveal'd by Miracle and we have the Goodness and Truth and Justice of God engag'd that we should not be impos'd upon by false Miracles without being able to discern the Imposture And therefore that Religion which both by its Miracles and Doctrine and Worship appears to be Divine and could not be prov'd to be false if it were so must certainly be true because the Goodness and Honour of God is concern'd that Mankind in a Matter of this Consequence should not be deceiv'd without their own Fault or Neglect by Impostures vented under his own Name and Authority Upon which account the Sin against the Holy Ghost in ascribing the Miracles wrought by Christ to Belzebub was so heinous above all other Crimes this being to reject the utmost Means that can be us'd for Man's Salvation and in Effect to deny the Attributes and very Being of God The Summ of this Argument is That though Miracles are a most fit and proper Means to prove the Truth of Religion yet they are not only to be consider'd alone but in Conjunction with other Proofs and that they must necessarily be true Miracles or Miracles wrought to establish the true Religion when the Religion upon the account whereof they are wrought cannot be discover'd to be false either by any Defect in the Miracles or by any other Means but has all the Marks and Characters of Truth Because God would not suffer the Evidence of Miracles and all other Proofs to concur to the Confirmation of a false Religion beyond all Possibility of discovering it to be so 3. How Divine Revelations may be suppos'd to be preserv'd in the World It is reasonable to suppose that Divine Revelations should be committed to Writing that they might be preserv'd for the Benefit of Mankind and deliver'd down to Posterity and that a more than ordinary Providence should be concern'd in their Preservation For whatever has been said by some of the Advantage of Oral Tradition for the Conveyance of Doctrines beyond that of Writing is so notoriously fanciful and strain'd that it deserves no serious Answer For till Men shall think it safest to make Wills and bequeath and purchase Estates by Word of Mouth rather than by Instruments in Writing it is in vain to deny that this is the best and securest way of Conveyance that can be taken So the common Sense of Mankind declares and so the Experience of the World finds it to be in things which Men take all possible Care about and it is too manifest and much to be lamented that Men are more sollicitous about things Temporal than about Eternal which affords too evident a Confutation of all the Pretences of the Infallibility of Oral Tradition upon this Ground That the Subject Matter of it are things upon which the Eternal Happiness or Misery of Mankind depends Now go write it before them in a table and note it in a book that it may be for the time to come for ever and ever Isa xxx 8. 4. It is requisite that a Divine Revelation should be of great Antiquity Because upon the same Grounds that we cannot think that God would not at all Reveal himself to Mankind we cannot suppose that he would suffer the World to continue long under a State of Corruption and Ignorance without taking some Care to remedy it by putting Men into a Capacity of knowing and practising the Duties of Vertue and Religion 5. Another requisite of a Divine Revelation is that it should be fully promulg'd and publish'd to the World for the general Good and Benefit of Mankind that it may attain the Ends for which a Revelation must be design'd THE Reasonableness and Certainty OF THE Christian Religion PART II. FROM what has been already Discours'd it appears That these Things are requisite in a Divine Revelation I. Antiquity II. Promulgation III. A sufficient Evidence by Prophecies and Miracles in Proof of its Authority IV. The Doctrines deliver'd by Divine Revelation must be Righteous and Holy consistent with the Divine Attributes and suitable to their Condition to whom it is made and every way such as may answer the Design of a Revelation CHAP. I. The Antiquity of the Scriptures AS it is evident from the Divine Attributes that God would not so wholly neglect Mankind as to take no Care to discover and reveal his Will and Commandments to the World so when there was so great a Necessity of Divine Revelation in order to the Happiness of Mankind both in this World and the next it is not to be believed that he would defer it so long before he made known his Will as till the Date of the first Antiquities amongst the Heathen It cannot be deny'd that some Books of the Seripture are much the Ancientest Books of Religion in the World for it were in vain to pretend that the Works in this kind or indeed in any other of any Heathen Author can be compar'd with
of the World had the true Religion brought home to them by the Patriarchs who were sent from place to place to sojourn to be a Pattern and Example to the rest of Mankind And Men who travell'd so far and conversed with so many Nations and were so zealous for God's Honour and had such frequent Revelations and the immediate Direction of God himself in most of the Actions of their Lives and who were so Great and Powerful and so Numerous must needs mightily propagate Religion where-ever they came and leave the Idolaters without excuse and it cannot be doubted but that they had great success in all places for even out of Aegypt where they endured the greatest hardship and were in such contempt and hatred yet a mix'd multitude went up also with them besides the Native Israelites Exod. xii 38. And as Chaldaea and Aegypt were famous for Learning and Commerce and proper Places by their situation from whence the Notions of Religion might be propagated both towards the East and West to other Parts of the World so I must again observe that God's Mercy was particularly manifested towards the Canaanites before their Destruction The Example of Melchizedeck who reigned among them and the sojourning of Abraham and Lot and Isaac and Jacob not to mention Ishmael and Esau with their numerous Famllies afforded them continual Invitations and Admonitions for their Instruction and Amendment especially the Judgment upon Sodom and Gomorrah and the miraculous Deliverance of Lot was enough to strike an Awe and Terrour into the most Obdurate But when they would not make any due use of these Mercies when they persisted still in their Impieties and proceeded in them till they had filled up the measure of their Iniquities God made them an Example to others after they would take no Warning themselves yet still executing his judgments upon them by little and little he gave them place of repentance not being ignorant that they were a naughty generation and that their malice was bred in them and that their cogitation would never be changed Wisd xii 10. How much the true Religion prevailed by these Dispensations of Providence among other Nations besides the Hebrews we have an illustrious Instance in Job and his Friends who were Princes in their several Dominions they had knowledge of the Fall of the Angels Job iv 18. and of the Original Corruption of Man which is expressed with this emphasis that he cannot be clean or righteous who is born of a woman because by Eve's Transgression Sin came into the World Job xiv 1. xv 14. and xxv 4. Adam is mention'd chap. xxxi 33. the Resurrection is described chap. xiv 12. and it appears that Revelations were vouchsafed to these Nations chap. xxxiii 15. It appears that the Fundamentals of Religion were known Doctrines amongst them and are therefore mention'd both by Job himself and by his Friends in as plain terms as may be and as fully as can be expected in a Book which is Poetical the nature whereof requires that known things should be alluded to but not so particularly related as in History And there is no doubt but the Propagation of Religion in other parts of the World would be as evident if the Scriptures had not occasionally only and in the Course of other things but of set purpose treated of this matter as me may gather from the footsteps to be found in Heathen Authors of what the Scriptures deliver to us and from the several Allusions and Representations in the Rites and Ceremonies of their Religions expressing though obscurely and confusedly the chief Points of the Scripture-story as has been shewn by divers learned Men. 2. In succeeding Ages after the giving the Law when the Jews by their Laws concerning Religion and Government may seem to have been wholly separated from the rest of the World and the Divine Revelations confined to one Nation there still were sufficient Means and frequent Opportunities for all Nations to come to the Knowledge of the Truth And here I shall shew 1. That the Law of Moses did particularly provide for the Instruction of other Nations in the Revealed Religion and that the Scriptures give frequent Commandment and Encouragment concerning it 2. That the Providence of God did so order and dispose of the Jews in their Affairs as to offer other Nations frequent Opportunities of becoming instructed in the true Religion and that multitudes of Proselytes were made of all Nations 1. The Law of Moses did particularly provide for the Instruction of other Nations in the Revealed Religion and the Scriptures give frequent Commandment and Encouragement concerning it The Strangers or Proselytes amongst the Jews were of two sorts for either they were such as became Circumcised and obliged themselves to the Observation of the whole Law of Moses who were styled Proselytes of Righteousness or of the Covenant or they were such as believed in the True God and professed only to observe the Precepts given to Noah which comprised the Substance of the Ten Commandments and these were called Proselytes of the Gates because they were permitted to live amongst them within their Gates these are the Strangers in their Gates mention'd Deut. xiv 21. who might eat of such thing 's as the Israelites themselves were forbidden to eat of If any would be Circumcised and undertake the Observation of the whole Law they had full liberty and the greatest encouragement to do it At the first Institution of Circumcision not only Abraham and his Seed but his whole Family and all that were bought with money of any Stranger were to be circumcised Gen. xvii 12 27. and at the Institution of the Passover the Stranger is commanded to observe it as well as the Natural Israelite Exod. xii 19. God made no distinction in the Institution of both these Sacraments between the Jews and those other Nations that dwelt amongst them and were willing to conform themselves to the Observation of the Law but first to Abraham when he appointed Circumcision and then to Moses when the Passover was instituted particular Order is given concerning Strangers or Proselytes who would betake themselves to them one law shall be to him that is home-born and to the stranger that sojourneth among you Exod. xii 49. Deut. xxix 11. And as the receiving the Seal of Circumcision was an admission into Covenant with God and implied an Obligation to observe the whole Law and a Right to the Privileges of it which was confirmed and renewed by their partaking of the Passover so it is to be observed not only that God did in general admit Strangers and Aliens to the same Worship with the Jews but that throughout their whole Law frequent mention is made of them and care taken for their Reception and Behaviour for though what is but once said in Scripture is a sufficient Proof of the Will and Pleasure of God in any matter yet when a thing is often mention'd and every where inculcated it is an
Areopagite Sergius Paulus Simon Magus Felix King Agrippa Tertullus Gallio and others were Names of too great Note and Fame to be used in a false story in which they are so much concerned And all their Proceedings in the Courts of Judicature were kept upon record and therefore could not be pretended without being discovered by those who always had so many Adversaries The Miraculous power bestowed upon the Apostles was chiefly employed in curing Diseases and for the health and preservation of Mankind but they had a power of inflicting Diseases likewise and death it self upon just occasions as in the case of Ananias and Saphira Act. v. of Elymas the Sorcerer Acts xiii and the incestuous Corinthian 1 Cor. v. And when this was done by private men and divulged to the world with the names of the persons who inflicted diseases and death it self and of those on whom they were inflicted this is an evidence both of the truth of the matter of Fact and of the power by which it was done for no Author could think to serve his Friend or his Cause by relating things of this nature unless they had been evidently done in a miraculous manner and by a Divine Commission and Authority The Conversion of St. Paul was a thing so memorable both for the manner of it and for the business he was going about and the persons that employed him and for his known zeal at other times in persecuting the Church that St. Paul appeals to King Agrippa as one who could not be ignorant of a thing so notorious Acts xxvi 26. and it was the great providence and wisdom of God that a man so well known and esteemed by the Pharisees and Chief Priests before his conversion should be the greatest instrument both by his Preaching and writings for the propagation of the Gospel and both his Epistles and the other Books of Holy Scripture have the same proof from the observations already mentioned concerning the names and characters of persons and other circumstances And they were always read in the Assemblies of Christians and were appointed to be read in them Coloss iv 16.1 Thess v. 27. And the writings both of him and of the Evangelists and the other Apostles are cited by Authors contemporary with the Apostles by Barnabas an Apostle himself and by Clemens Romanus Ignatius Polycarp c. and they have been acknowledged to be the genuine works of those whose names they bear both by Jews and Heathens and particularly by Tryphon the Jew in his Dialogue with Justin Martyr and by Julian (e) Apud Cyril lib. x. the Apostate It is enough in this place to observe that excepting some very few Books of which an account shall elsewhere be given the Books of the Scriptures of the New Testament have been received as genuine from their first appearance in the world during the Lives of their several Authors and have been delivered down for such through the several Ages of the Church In the main they have been so unanimously received and so fully attested by Christians that the Jews and Heathens themselves never denied them to be genuine nor ever pretended the principal matters of Fact to be false or doubtful Euseb lib. iii. c. 29. Many of the Eye-witnesses to the Miracles of our Saviour and his Apostles lived to a great Age St. John himself above an hundred years and he Preached the Gospel above seventy years Simeon the Son of Cleopas lived to an hundred and twenty years and Polycarp the Disciple of St. John to fourscore and six of whom (f) Id. lib. v. c. 20. Iraenaeus in his Epistle to Florinus a Marcionite declared that he remembred exactly what he had heard Polycarp discourse concerning the account of the Miracles and Doctrine of our Saviour which he had received from St. John and others who had conversed with Christ and that it differed in nothing from the Scriptures And besides the inspired Writings the chief points of the Christian Religion were testified in Apologies written from time to time to the Heathen Emperors themselves (g) Euseb Hist lib. iv c. 3. vid. Irenae lib. ii c. 56 57. Qudaratus Bishop of Athens in his Apology to Adrian declared that persons who had been healed by our Saviour and others that had been raised from the dead by him were still living in his time Aristides presented an Apology to the same Emperor Justin Martyr wrote two Apologies the first dedicated to Antoninus Pius and his two Sons and the Roman Senate the latter to M. Antoninus and the Senate (h) Euseb lib. iv c. 26. Melito Bishop of Sardis and Apollinaris Bishop of Hierapolis likewise wrote a Vindication of the Christian Religion to M. Antoninus Athenagoras offered his Apology to M. Aurelius and Commodus (i) Euseb lib. v. c. 17. Meltiades to Commodus or to the Deputies of the Provinces (k) Hier. Catai Euseb lib. v. c. 21. Apollonius a Roman Senator made a publick defence of the Christian Religion in the Senate of Rome and Tertullian presented his Apology to the Senate or to the Governors of the Provinces And the Apologists did not dwell only upon generals but descended to such particulars as to appeal to the publick Records for the truth of what they delivered concerning the place of our Saviour's Birth and the manner of his Death and his Resurrection so that the principles and foundations of the Christian Religion were from the beginning asserted in publick Writings dedicated and presented to the Heathen themselves who were most concerned and most capable of disproving it if it had been false (l) Euseb lib. ix c. 5. 10. And though the Acts which were forged under the Emperor Maximin and pretended to be Pilate's were by his command sent into all the Provinces of his Empire and published in all places and ordered to be taught Children and to be learnt by heart by them yet all this malicious care and contrivance was ineffectual to the suppressing the Truth of the History of our Saviour which wa● so well attested and so fully published amongst all sorts of men that it was impossible to extirpate the belief of it And this Emperor himself as I before shewed was by miraculous Diseases inflicted on him forced to retract by a publick Edict his practices against Christianity and to acknowledge that his sins and blasphemies against Christ were the just cause of his Punishment CHAP. XVIII Of the Doctrines contained in the Holy Scriptures THE Scriptures must be acknowledged by all considerate men to contain excellent Rules and Precepts for the Government of our Lives and it cannot be denied that it is to these we owe the Peace and Happiness we enjoy even in this world It is therefore the interest of every good and prudent man to wish the Christian Religion true though it were not so and there can be no cause to wish it false but our own sin and folly And this of it self is a good argument that
it is true because it is for the benefit of Mankind that it should be so and upon that account it carries the visible Characters of Divine Wisdom and Goodness in it for it is certain that the Religion which God has established in the World must be of this nature that none but wicked men can dislike it and that all sober and good men must be well satisfied with it and mightily enclined to believe it nay even the worst men must be forced to confess that they owe their own safety and protection to the Doctrines of it And that such is the nature of the Christian Religion will be evident if we consider that I. It teacheth an universal Righteousness both towards God and Man II. It layeth down the only true Principles of Holiness III. It proposeth the most effectual Motives IV. It affords the greatest helps and assistances to an Holy Life V. It expresseth the greatest compassion and condescension to our infirmities VI. The propagation of the Gospel has had mighty effects towards the Reformation and Happiness of Mankind VII The highest mysteries of the Christian Religion are not merely speculative but have a necessary relation to Practice and were revealed for the advancement of Piety and Virtue amongst men I. The Christian Religion teacheth an Universal Righteousness both towards God and Man It teacheth us the nature of God that he is a Spirit and therefore ought to be worshipped in Spirit and in Truth and gives us an account of the Power and Wisdom and Goodness of God in the Creation of the World and in the various dispensations of his Providence in the preservation and Government of it and especially in the wonderful work of our Redemption God is represented in the Scriptures as slow to anger and great in Power and who will not at all acquit the wicked Nahum i. 3. and we are required to love and serve him with all our Abilities both of Body and Mind Deut. vi 5. Matt. xxii 37. The Duties of men towards one another are no less strictly enjoyned than our duty towards God himself For the Scriptures oblige all men to the Conscientious performance of their several Duties in their respective capacities and relations They teach Wives and Children and Subjects and Servants Obedience not only for Wrath but also for Conscience sake and they teach Princes and Husbands and Fathers and Masters a proportionable care and kindness and affection they check and restrain the rich and powerful from violence and oppression and command them to relieve those that are in want and to protect all that are in distress and to root up the very seeds and principles of Vice in us they regulate our desires and give Laws to our words and looks and thoughts they command an universal Love and Charity towards all Mankind to hurt no body so much as in a Thought but to do all the good which is in our power they oblige men to do as they would be done unto in all cases to consider others as men of the same nature with themselves and to love and respect them accordingly upon all occasions I may add what Grotius has not omitted that more favour and equity is extended to one half of humane kind by the Christian Religion than ever had been by any other for among Infidels Women are esteemed but as slaves to the Lusts of men who may have as many Wives as they please and change them as often as they think fit II. The Scriptures propound to us the only true Principles of Holiness For they teach us to perform all Duties both towards God and Man upon Principles of Love and Charity which are the only Principles that can make men happy in the performance of their respective duties and that can cause them to persevere in it What men do upon Principles of Love they do with delight and what men delight in they will be sure to do but fear hath torment and men will use all Arts to get rid of their fears and of that sense of Duty which proceeds only from an apprehension of Punishments and therefore is perpetually grievous and burthensom to them Rewards themselves may become ineffectual by proposals of contrary Rewards for smaller advantages which are present and in hand may be more prevalent than never so much greater which are future and looked upon only at a distance But a sense of Love and Gratitude and Charity can never fail of its effect because this brings its reward with it and makes our duty a delight He who loves God will certainly obey him and he that does not love him never can truly obey him as he ought but will be ever repining at his Duty and will be for seeking all pretences to excuse himself from it He who doth not love his Neighbour will be for taking all opportunities of pursuing his own advantage against him but he who loves him as himself will never do him any injury He that loveth another hath fulfilled the Law For this thou shalt not commit adultery thou shalt not kill thou shalt not steal thou shalt not bear false witness thou shalt not covet and if there be any other commandment it is briefly comprehended in this saying namely Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self Love worketh no ill to his neighbour therefore love is the fulfilling of the Law Rom. xiii 8. The Love of God and of our Neighbour comprehends the whole duty of man which is a Doctrine no where to be met withal but in the Holy Scriptures all the Wisdom of Philosophers could never discover this Doctrine which sets before us the only infallible principles of obedience And it must be a most gracious and wise Law which makes Love the Principle and Foundation of our whole duty both towards God and Man III. The Christian Religion proposeth the most effectual motives of Obedience and Holiness of Life The moral Reasons and Arguments for a vertuous Life are so great and evident that those who live otherwise are generally convinced that they ought not to do it but because the Arguments from Reason are to faint and lifeless to oppose to sense and passion therefore the Christian Religion is purposely fitted to every faculty and presents us with greater objects of fear and love and desire than any thing in the world can do And as God will be served by us upon no other Principle but that of love so the chiefest Motive to our Obedience express'd throughout the Scriptures is the Divine Love They represent to us all the methods which God has been pleased to use as necessary to reclaim the world by his mercies and his judgments by sending his Prophets at sundry times and in divers manners and at last by sending his own Son He saw the fondness that men have for this World and for the pleasures and sins of it how subject they are to Temptations and how prone to comply with them and therefore he has been pleased to pursue
a higher Principle than they did It is impossible for the wit of man to contrive any thing so admirably fitted to procure the happiness of Mankind as their Doctrines are no precepts can be more righteous and holy no rewards more excellent nor punishments more formidable than those of the Gospel and which is above all no Religion besides ever afforded nor could all the reason of Mankind ever have found out such powerful Motives to the Love of God which is the only true principle of Obedience Our Religion contains no dry and empty speculations but all its Mysteries are Mysteries of Love and Mercy Others may fear God but it is the Christian only that can truly love him and trust in him and in all conditions in Life and in death look up to him as his Father his Saviour and Comforter This Religion places men in the presence of God and entitles them to his peculiar favour and care it declares God to be their Friend and Protector here and their everlasting Rewarder after Death it promises and assures us of all the happiness both in Body and Soul that we are capable of which is the utmost that can be expected or wished for from any Revelation and the proper and peculiar reason why God should establish Religion in the World It appears from this whole discourse that nothing is wanting in the Books of the Old and New Testament which can be expected in any Revelation They are of the greatest Antiquity and have been Preached throughout the World and have abundant evidence both by Prophecies and Miracles of their Divine Authority and the Doctrine contained in them is such as God must be supposed to reveal Mankind having visible Characters in it of the Divine Goodness and Holiness and having exceedingly conduced to the reformation of the world THE Reasonableness and Certainty OF THE Christian Religion PART III. That there is no other Divine Revelation but that contained in the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testament THat there is no other institution of Religion besides that delivered in the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testament which has all things necessary to a Divine Revelation may be shewn in the several Particulars necessary to a Divine Revelation as that no other Religion ever was of like Antiquity or had equal Promulgation that no other had sufficient evidence of Miracles and Prophecies in proof of it and lastly that there never was any other which did not teach many Doctrines that are unworthy of God and contrary to the Divine Attributes and therefore impossible to come from Heaven This I shall prove first of the Religions of the Heathens secondly of the Mahometan Religion CHAP. I. The Novelty of the Heathen Religions THE Novelty of the Religions amongst the Heathens whom we have any certain account of from their Writings in respect of the Scriptures is so notorious having been so often proved by learned men and is so generally acknowledged that it is needless to insist much upon it The Heathens generally were strangers to every thing of Antiquity and therefore must be unable to give any proof of the Antiquity of their Religions The pretences which the Egyptians made to Antiquity so much beyond the times recorded in the Scriptures proceeded from their reckoning by Lunar years or (a) Diodor Sic. lib. i. Plutarch in Numa Var. apud Lactant. de Orig. Error lib. ii c. 12. months but they had so different accounts however of Chronology that as Diodorus Siculus says some of them computed thirteen thousand years more than others from the Original of their Dynasties to the time of Alexander the Great And the Solar year in use among the Egyptians who were most samous for Astronomy was so imperfect that they said the Sun had several times changed (b) Herod Euterp● his Course since the beginning of their Dynasties imputing the defect of their own computation for want of intercalary days to the Sun's variation or else affecting to speak something wonderful and extravagant The earliest Astronomical observations to be met with which were made in Egypt are those performed by the Greeks of Alexandria less than CCC years before Christ as (c) Mr. Wotton's Reflections upon ancient and modern Le●r●ing c. 23. Mr. Halley has observed (d) Vitru● 〈…〉 4. The Chaldaeans supposed the Moon to be a luminons Body and therefore could have no great skill in Astronomy besides they wanted Instruments to make exact observations ' All we have of them says the same learned (e) I● Mr. 〈◊〉 Reflect ib. Astronomer is only seven Eclipses of the Moon and even those but very coursely set down and the oldest not much above DCC years before Christ so that after all the fame of these Chaldaeans we may be sure they had not gone far in this Science and though Calisthenes be said by Porphyry to have brought from Babylon to Greece observations above MDCCCC years older than Alexander yet the proper Authors making no mention or use of any such renders it justly suspected for a Fable So little ground is there for us to depend upon the Accounts of Time and the vain boasts of Antiquity which these Nations have made He farther observes that the Greeks were the first Practical Astronomers who endeavoured in earnest to make themselves Masters of the Science and that Thales was the first who could predict an Eclipse in Greece not DC years before Christ and that Hipparchus made the first Catalogue of the fixt Stars not above CL. years before Christ According to that known observation (f) Censorin de Die Natali c. 21. of Varro there was nothing that can deserve the name of History to be found among the Greeks before the Olympiads which were but about twenty years before the building of Rome And whatever Learning or Knowledge of ancient times the Romans had they borrowed it from the Greeks For they were so little capable of transmitting their own affairs down to Posterity with any exactness in point of time that for (g) Id. c. 23. some Ages they had neither Dials nor Hour-glasses to measure their days and nights for by common use and for three hundred years they knew no such things as hours or the like distinctions but computed their time only from Noon to Noon so that it is no wonder that their Calendar was in such confusion till Caesar regulated it The pretensions of the Chineses to Antiquity appear equally vain and upon the same grounds For they understood little or nothing of Astronomy or else the Missionaries by their Skill in that Art would not have been able so much to insinuate themselves with the Emperors of China Indeed the Chineses themselves (h) Martin Hist Sin lib. i. ii Atl. Sinic Praef. Philip Couplet in Confuc Proen Declar. Praef. ad Fab. Chronol Sinicae Monarchiae Le Compt's Memoirs p. 64. 71. 464. confess that their Antiquities are in great part fabulous and they acknowledge
Modern way of using them together with a short View of the Nature and Period of Diseases in which they are proper and some Cautions relating to the Disorders they sometime occasion the Medicines are rang'd in their proper Classes according to their Vertues and drawn up in Tables for the Readers conveniency with their just doses Annex'd Written Originally in French by M. Tauvry M. D. Member of the Colledge of Physicians There is in the Press and will speedily be Publish'd Howell's Abridgment of his History of the World Epitomiz'd by himself Sub praelo Compendium Michaclis Etmulleris opera Medica tam praxis quam Chimia Cui Subjiciuntur Institutiones Medicae The History of Polybius the Megalopolitan containing a General Account of the Transactions of the whole World but principally of the Roman People ●uring the First and Second Punick Wars Translated by Sir H●nry Sheers and Mr. Dryden In Three Volumes The Third Volume never before Printed A Mathematical Companion or the Description and Use of a new Sliding Rule by which many Useful and Necessary Questions in Arithmetick Military Orders Interests Trigonometry Planometry Stereomerry Geography Astronomy Navigation Fortification Gunnery Dyalling may be speedily resolved without the help of Pen of Compasses By William Hunt Philomath Reflections upon Ancient and Modern Learning By William Wotton B. D. Chaplain to the Right Honourable the Earl of Nottingham The Second Edition with large Additions With a Dissertation ugon the Egistles of Phalaris Themistocles Socrates Euripides c. and Aesop's Fables By Dr. Bentley An Italian Voyage or a compleat Journey thro' Italy In Two Parts With the Character of the People and Description of the chief Towns Churches Monasteries Tombs Libraries Palaces Villa's Gardens Pictures Statues and Antiquities as also of the Interest Government Riches Force c. of all the Princes with Instructions concerning Travel By Richard Lassel Gent. The Second Edition With large Additions by a Modern Hand THE REASONABLENESS AND CERTAINTY OF THE Christian Religion BOOK II. Containing Discourses upon such Subjects as are thought most liable to Objections By Robert Jenkin Chaplain to the Right Honourable the Earl of Exeter and late Fellow of St. John's College in Cambridge LONDON Printed for Peter Buck at the Sign of the Temple near the Inner-Temple-Gate in Fleet street 1700. THE PREFACE THERE never appeared I believe among Christians so general a Disaffection as in the present Age to the Christian Religion in Men pretending at least to Reason and Learning and Natural Religion and Moral Vertue And tho' I could have little Encouragement to hope that I should write any thing which might much prevail with Men of these Accomplishments yet I was persuaded that so good a Cause tho' but in weak Hands could not fail of some Effect upon all that would be at the pains to consider it And to this Purpose I thought the best way would be not to read Lectures as it were of Anatomy upon the several Parts of it and represent it Piece-meal like a lifeless Carcass divided and dissected tho' I had been able to shew never so much Skill in the Operation but to give an entire View of the Grounds and Reasons of Christianity the connexion of its Parts between themselves and the Preference which it has to all other Religions from whence I knew it must appear in as true a Light and with as much Life and Force as it could do under the Disadvantages which might be expected from no better a Pen. There is an Excellency in every Part of our Religion separately consider'd but the strength and vigour of each Part is in the Relation it has to the rest and the several Parts must be taken altogether if we would have a true Knowledge and make a just Estimate of the Whole But that which I made my more particular Care and which I thought the more requir'd my Pains because I had not observed it to be much insisted upon by others was to shew the Necessity of a Divine Revelation the insufficiency of Natural Religion and the Imperfections and Errors of Philosophy as well as the manifest Falshood of the Religions both of the Heathens and of the Mahometans and moreover to prove that besides all other Things requisite to a Divine Revelation the Religion delivered in the Old and New Testament has received a full Promulgation in all Parts of the World From these Foundations thus laid and secur'd we have no less than a Demonstration for the Truth of our Holy Religion We are often told by those that are no Friends to our Religion that we must by all means take great Care of not being deceived through the Prejudices derived from our Education but I believe it would be found upon Enquiry that such Men are so far from being prejudiced in Favour of our Religion that their Prejudices lie extreamly against it For besides the Corruption of Humane Nature always inclining to Error and Vice tho' they had the Principles of Christianity instill'd into them in their tender Years yet they could learn them then only as confest Truths to be receiv'd for Articles of Faith and Rules of Life But the first thing probably to which they have set themselves with any Application was the reading of Heathen Authors and when perhaps they have studied Philosophy and other Humane Learning for many Years but never considered Divinity as a Science and have searched into it no farther nor have any other Notion of it than what they were taught in their Childhood or Youth they look back upon their first Instructions as groundless and fit only for Children because they find little or nothing of them in those Authors with whom they have been so long conversant and whom upon many Accounts they have so just Reason to admire This seems to be the Case of many who have read antient Heathen Authors without the Regard which ought always to be had to That which is acknowledg'd by All who have made any due Enquiry into these Things to be the best Learning and of greatest Antiquity and is no where to be had but from the Scriptures Others there are who have often heard of the Names of Socrates Plato and Aristotle and of Tully Seneca and other Famous Writers they find them frequently quoted and commonly with Commendation seldom to discover any Fault in them unless it be in their Notions of Natural Philosophy where Religion seems to be less concerned They have heard too of the Greek and Latin Historians and these for any thing that they know or consider may be as Faithful and as Antient as the best But tho' all these Authors have indeed very many Excellencies yet we must not so far mistake as to think all things Excellent which they deliver I shall therefore besides what I have already observed make some farther Reflections in this place both upon the History and upon the Philosophy of Heathen Nations and then I hope I may be allowed to expostulate with
upon any Subject and then they trample with wonderful Scorn and Triumph upon that which they conceive is so miserably overcome but alass the Victory is over themselves nothing is either the more or the less true for their believing or disbelieving it and Religion is always the same how profanely soever it may be spoken of We have no design to impose upon any Man's Faith but if there be Reason in what we say it may well be expected from Reasonable Men that they should hearken to Reason Religion is Reason and Philosophy as the Fathers often speak the best and truest Philosophy And I am persuaded how much soever I may have failed in the performance that the Christian Religion is capable of being proved with such clear and full Evidence even to ordinary Understandings as to make all Pretences of Arguing against it appear to be as ridiculous as they are impious THE CONTENTS CHAP. I. Of Humane Reason THE Divine Authority of the Scriptures being proved in the First Book such Points are cleared in the Second as are thought most liable to exception in the Christian Religion But before Men venture upon Objections against the Scripture it is fit for them to consider the strength and compass of their own Faculties and the manifold Defects of Humane Reason p. 1. In some things each side of a Contradiction seems to be demonstrable p. 4. Every Man believes and has the Experience of several things which in the Theory and Speculative Notion of them would seem as incredible as any thing in the Scriptures can be supposed to be p. 12. Those who disbelieve and reject the Misteries of Religion must believe things much more incredible p. 24. CHAP. II. Of Inspiration ALL motion of Material things is derived from God and it is at least as conceiveable by us that God doth Act upon the Immaterial as that He Acts upon the Material part of the World and that He may act more powerfully upon the Wills and Understandings of some Men than of others p. 28. Wherein the inspiration of the Writers of the Scriptures did consist and how far it extended p. 31. Such Inferences from thence as may afford a sufficient Answer to the Objections alleged upon this Subject p. 41. The Inspiration of the Writers of the Scriptures did not exclude Humane Means as information in Matters of Fact c. p. 42. It did not exclude the use of their own Words and Style ibid. Tho' somethings are set down in the Scripture indefinitely and without any positive Assertion or Determination this is no proof against their being Written by Divine Inspiration p. 43. In things which might fall under Humane Prudence and Observation the Spirit of God seems to have used only a directive Power and Influence p. 46. This infallible Assistance was not permanent and Habitual P. 49. It did not prevent Personal failings p. 50. No Passage or Circumstance in the Scripture Erroneous p. 51. CHAP. III. Of the 〈◊〉 of the Holy Scriptures THE Grammatical Construction and Propriety of Speech p. 53. Those whch are look'd upon as Defects in the Scripture-Style were usual in the most approved Heathen Authors p. ib. Metaphors and Rhetorical Schemes and Figures p. 57. The Style different of different Nations p. 58. The Titles of Kings p. 59. What Arts were used by Orators to raise the Passions p. 60. That they sometimes Read their Speeches p. 62. The Figurative Expressions of the Prophets and their Types and Parables were Suitable to the Customs of the Places and Times wherein they Liv'd ibid. Several things related as Matter of Fact are only Parabolical Descriptions or Representations p. 64. The Prophetick Schemes of Speech usual with the Eastern Nations p. 66. The want of Distinguishing the Persons speaking has been a great cause of misunderstanding the Scriptures p. 68. The Antiquity and various ways of Poetry p. 69. The Metaphorical and Figurative use of Words in Speaking of the Works and attributes of God p. 71. The Decorum or Suitableness of the matter in the Style of Scripture p. 79. The Method p. 86. Some Books of Scripture admirable for their Style p. 89. Why the Style not alike excellent in all the Books of Scripture p. 93. CHAP. IV. Of the Canon of the Holy Scriptures ANy Controversy concerning the Authority of some Books of Holy Scripture no prejudice to the rest p. 96. The uncontroverted Books contain all things necessary to Salvation p. 97. The Dispute concerning the Apochrypha falls not here under consideration p. 99 No Suppression or Alteration of the Books of the Old Testament by Idolatrous Kings c. p. 100. The Book of the Law in the Hand-Writing of Moses found in the Reign of Josiah p. 102. No Books but those which were Written by Inspiration received by the Jews into their Canon p. 103. What opinion the Ten Tribes had of the Books of the Prophets c. p. 105. Neither the Samaritans nor the Sadduces rejected any of the Books of the Old Testament p. 106. Of the Books whereof mention is made in the O. T. p. 106. Why the Books of the Prophets have the Names of the Authors exprest and that there was not the same Reason that the Names of the Authors of the Historical Books should be exprest p. 108. A wonderful Providence manifest in the Preservation of the Books of the O. T. for so many Ages p. 109. The New Testament confirms the Old p. 111. The Caution of the Christian Church in admitting Books into the Canon ib. The Primitive Christians had sufficient means to examine and distinguish the Genuine and inspired Writings from the Apochryphal or Spurious p. 113. The Gospel of St. Matt. in Hebrew how long preserved p. 115. The Greek Version of it p. 116. The Canon of Scripture finished by St. John and the Books of the other Evangelists c. reviewed by him p. 117. The Testimony of the Adversaries of our Religion ib. Copies of great Antiquity still extant p. 118. How it came to pass that the Authority of some Books was at first doubted of p. 119. The Canon had been fix'd and confirmed in Councils in Tertullian's time p. 121. The Canon of Scripture generally received by Christians of all Sects and Parties p. 124. CHAP. V. Of the various Readings in the Old and New Testament AN extraordinary Providence manifest in the preservation of the Scriptures from such Casualties as have befaln other Books p. 126. The Defect in the Hebrew Vowels and the late invention of the Points no prejudice to the Authority of the Bible p. 127. The change of the old Hebrew Characters into that now in use is no prejudice to the Authority of the Hebrew Text p. 130. The Keri and the Ketib no prejudice to it ib. The Difference between the Hebrew Text and the Septuagint and other Versions or between the Versions themselves no way prejudicial to the Authority of the Scriptures p. 132. It is confessed by the greatest Criticks both Protestants and
for what Book is there without 'em or what Book of the same bigness and of any Antiquity has so few various Lections as the Bible and what Book can be Transcribed or Printed but it is liable to have mistakes made in it IV. No difference between the Hebrew Text and the Septuagint and other Versions or between the several Versions themselves is any prejudice to the Authority of the Scriptures nor can prove that the Hebrew Text was ever different in any thing material from what it is now The Translation of the Septuagint * Id. Prolegom ix s ●2 x. s 8. as it hath been observed from St. Jerom and others is in many places rather a Comment or Paraphrase than a strict Version and gives the sense rather than the words of the Hebrew Texts Many times there is supposed to be a difference where there is none for want of a sufficient knowledge of the Original as † Pocock Append. ad Por● Mos c. 1 2 3 4. Pears Praef. ad Septuag Edit Cantab Is Voss de lxx Interpret Walt Proleg ix 46. Dr Pocock has shewn in divers Instances and Bp Pearson in others besides what has been written by Isaac Vossius to this purpose and one very skilful in the Oriental Tongues had undertaken to shew the agreement between Hebrew and and the Septuagint throughout and had made a considerable Progress in the work as Bishop Walton informs us Other differences proceed from the mistakes of Transcribers as it must needs happen in Books of which so many Copies have been taken in all Ages and from the rashness of Criticks in making unnecessary alterations or by inserting into the Text such Notes as were at first placed only for explication in the Margin In some things of less consequence the Translators might be mistaken or they might follow a different Copy The Authority of the Text of Scripture is greatly confirmed from the citations of the Greek and Latin Fathers from whence it appears that in the several Ages of the Greek and Latin Churches the Copies which they made use of had no such variations from those we now use as to be of any ill consequence in matters of Religion As to the Imputation that was charged upon the Jews by some of the Fathers that they had corrupted the Scriptures in such places as according to the Translation of the Septuagint and the sense of their Ancestors must prove the Truth of the Christian Religion against them this is to be understood of the Versions of Aquila Symmachus and Theodosian who being all either profest Jews or Judaizing Hereticks designed their Translations to countenance their own errors especially Aquila who undertook his Version purposely to oppose that of the Septuagint For it is now generally agreed that the Jews never deserved the Censure of having corrupted the Hebrew Text tho they perverted the sense of it and where there were various Readings chose to follow that which was most favourable to their own pretences tho it were in contradiction to the Judgment of their Forefathers as well as the Christians Philo in a discourse cited * Euseb Praepar Evang. lib. viii c. 6. by Eusebius who thereby owns the Truth of it said that for the space of above two thousand years there had not been a word altered in the Law but that the Jews would chuse to dye never so many deaths rather than they would consent to any thing in prejudice of it And † Contra Apion lib. i. Josephus declares of the whole Old Testament that it had suffered no alteration from the beginning down to his own Time * Antiqu. Eccl. Orient Epist 38. Morinus himself whatever he hath elsewhere said to the contrary declares in a Letter to Dr Comber Dean of Carlisle that he supposes no man can doubt but that the Jewish Copies caeteris paribus are to be preferred before any Copies of the Samaritans which he in his Writings so highly magnifies It must be acknowledged that the numbring of the Verses and Words and Letters and the observing which was the middle Letter of every Book could signify little to the securing of the Hebrew Text entire because there may be the same number of Verses and Words and Letters in different Books and the same Number of Letters may make up different Words and the same Words diversely placed and apply'd may express a very different sense nor could there be any charm in a word that stood in the midst of a Book to keep all the rest in their proper places But this scrupulous and even superstitious diligence of the Jews in little things is an evidence of their constant study of the Scriptures and of the great value and reverence they had for it so that they would neither corrupt it themselves nor suffer it to be corrupted by others but were careful and zealous to preserve every ever letter and tittle and as I observed before from Josephus they were so well acquainted with it that he thought he could not fully enough express their skill and accuracy but by saying that they knew it better than their own names V. It is evident and confest by the Criticks that neither by these nor by any other means any such difference is to be found in the several Copies of the Bible as to prejudice the fundamental Points of Religion or weaken the Authority of the Scriptures All relating to this controversy has been eagerly debated by contending parties who yet agree in this whatever they differed in besides that the various Lections do not invalidate the authority of the Scriptures nor render them ineffectual to the end and design of a Divine Revelation inasmuch as all the various Lections taken together are no preiudice to the Analogy of Faith nor to any Points necessary to Salvation * Non minus ex ijs quae supra disputata sunt planum est id quod statim libri primi initio monuimus saepius toto opere inculcavimus plerasque omnes quae observari deprehendi in sacris libris possunt varias Lectiones levissimi esse ac pene nullius momenti ut parum admodum intersit aut vero perinde omnino sit utram sequaris sive hanc sive illam Ludovic Cappel Crit. Sacr. lib. 6. c. 2. Ludovicus Cappellus who had studied this subject as much as any man and was as well able to judge of it after the strictest examination he could make found that the things relating either to Faith or Practice are plainly contained in all Copies whatever difference there is in lesser things as in matters of Chronology which depend upon the alteration or the omission or addition of a Letter or in the Names of Men or of Cities or Countreys But the fundamental Doctrines of Religion are so dispersed throughout the Scriptures that they could receive no damage nor alteration unless the whole Scriptures should have been changed Wherefore not only the most learned Protestants but †
Opinions of their own besides the general Prejudices which they lay under with the rest of the World And all Men of any Learning and Education studied the Books of the Philosophers and were commonly addicted to one Sect or other It must be confest that Vanity and the Praise of Men was the chief aim of many of the Philosophers as Tertullian and others of the Fathers object and therefore they were very unlikely to become Proselytes to a Religion which was looked upon in the World with such Disdain and Contempt Philosophy in general if we believe (y) Instit lib. I. c. 1. Quintilian was in his time by most used as an Artifice and Disguise to conceal the worst of Vices under a morose Look and a Habit different from that of other Men. And from such Philosophers as these we must expect that the Scriptures should be read with no manner of Candor or good and serious Intention (z) Contra Celf. lib. II. Origen gives Instances of the wilful Abuse of the Scriptures by some of his Time who cavilled at half Sentences without taking notice of the Coherence which they have of the rest And he complains that (a) Ib. lib. I. Celsus seemed never to have read the Scriptures though he pretended to a very exact Knowledge both of the Jewish and Christian Religion but understood little of either (b) Philip. Sidet apud Dodw. Append. ad Dissert in Irenae e. Cod. MS. Baroc Athenagoras who before him had read the Scriptures with more care and sincerity tho' with the same Design became converted and wrote in Defence of that Religion which he intended to oppose (c) Euseb contr Hier. Lactant. Institut lib. V. c. 2 3. De Mortib Persecut c. 16. Hierocles likewise had read the New Testament with a design to write against it but he who could believe the Miracles of Apollonius Tyaneus and prefer that notorious Impostor to our Blessed Saviour and Maximus Aegiensis Damis the Philosopher and Philostratus to St. Peter and St. Paul shews so strange a partiality as might be expected only in him who opposed the Christian Religion by his Persecutions more than by his Arguments for Hierocles was the chief promoter of the Persecution under Diocletian 2. The Gentiles looked upon the poor persecuted Condition of the Christians as an Argument against their Religion and were not only prejudiced against a New Religion which must expose them to Sufferings by that fondness which Men naturally have for their own Ease and Safety but (d) Aug. Civit. Dei lib. I. c. 29. when they saw the Christians in Distress they would upbraid them as the Psalmist's Enemies reproached him saying Where is now thy God They considered their own Religion as the Religion of their Country and of their Ancestors which was what Tully said for it when he ruined all the Grounds and Pretences in behalf of it They alleged that this had been the Religion of their Forefathers and that the Roman Empire had arrived to so much Power and Greatness under its Influence This was so much insisted upon as is to be seen in Zosimus Symmachus and others that Orosius set himself to answer it in a particular Work and St. Austin who put him upon Writing it thought himself concerned in his own Works to oppose so unreasonable but fatal a Prejudice 3. The Consequence of these Prejudices against the Christian Religion both in Favour to the Religion of their Country and in Fondness for their old Opinions and out of an Abhorrence of Afflictions and a Disregard of those who were so much exposed to them as having but small pretence to any part of the Divine Care the Consequence I say of these Errors and Prejudices was that the Gentiles despised the Christian Religion before they understood any thing of it For many Men of Learning and Observation were so little acquainted with it that they did not distinguish Christians from Jews as we see by (e) Sueton in Claudio c. 25. Suetonius They knew not so much the true Pronunciation of the Name of Christ or Christian but were wont to write (f) Nam nee Nominis certa est notitia penes vos Tertul. Apol. c. 3. Sueton ib. Lactant. Lib. IV. c. 7 Chrestus and Chrestianus This the Apologists much insist upon that they condemned and persecuted what they did not understand the Christians desired no more than a fair Hearing and if they might but be suffered to make their Religion fully known to their Adversaries they begged no further Favour 4. It was believed (g) Aug. de Civit. Dei Lib. XVIII c. 53 54. that the Heathen Oracles had delivered that the Christian Religion should continue no longer than Three hundred and sixty five Years and it is observable that Julian the Apostate died A. D. CCCLXV according to some Chronologers tho' others place his Death Two Years before It seems the Devil had some great Expectation from his Reign but at or near that very time in which he had foretold that the Christian Religion should have an end if the Computation were to be made from the Nativity of Christ he saw an end of all his hopes in the Death of that Emperor who was so zealous in his Service and had given out severe Threatnings against the Christians of what they were to expect if he had returned victorious from that Expedition in which he perished And this Prediction had respect probably to his Reign though the Greek Verses in which it was delivered might be altered afterwards or so contrived at first as to extend it to a longer time leaving it uncertain from whence the Calculation was to begin However this Oracle kept many of the Gentiles from being Christians till they saw the time past which they supposed to be meant by it as St. Austin assures us 5. The Heresies and Schisms which soon arose in the Church gave great Scandal and Offence to such as judged of these things at a distance and in the gross without examining into the Occasions of them The (h) Just Martyr Dialog Jews not only Blasphemed Christ in the Synagogues but made choice of Men on purpose whom they sent from Jerusalem into all Parts of the World to vilifie him and his Religion (i) Id. Apol. 2. And because Christians spoke of Christ's Kingdom this was understood to their Prejudice as if they had been for setting up a Temporal Kingdom by Rebellion And the evil Doctrins and Practices of divers Hereticks confirmed Men in any ill Opinion which they had conceived of Christians in general The absurd Doctrins and Heresies of the Gnosticks and other Hereticks were by the Enemies of the Gospel in their Censures and Invectives applied to all Christians without distinction and were taken upon Trust by most Men. (k) Orig. cont Celf. lib. 6 7 8. Celsus makes Objections from the erroneous and wicked Notions and Practices of the Ophitae the Valentinians the Marcionites and others This
other And as all Obliquity supposes Rectitude from which it declines so Vice supposes Vertue and Error supposes Truth and Error in Religion must suppose Truth in Religion For whatever is contrary to any thing necessarily implies the Being of that to which it is contrary and that which is not can have nothing contrary to it Nothing is more certain than it is that if there were no Vertue there could be no Vice if no Truth there could be no Error and unless there were Truth and Excellency in Religion it were impossible that there should be any such thing as Heresie or Schism which are other words for Error and Vice in matters of Religion And it hath been already observed that the worst Heresies give an occasion to the clearing those Points of Religion which are disputed against and so must be far from invalidating the Truth of it But because these are things which some will not understand or may be unwilling to acknowledge and it is generally looked upon as a sure Argument of the weakness of any Cause when those that maintain it are not agreed about it amongst themselves let us consider 1. That all Parties are agreed in the Truth of Religion in general and of the Christian Religion in particular 2. That there is nothing besides in which Men have not disagreed as well as in matters of Religion 1. All Parties are agreed in the Truth of Religion in General Even Hypocrites and Impostors so far own Religion as to believe that it is worth the counterfeiting For no Man counterfeits that which is not no nor that which has no Worth nor Excellency in it No Man will be at much pains to be thought an Atheist or an Infidel who is not such and no Man will endeavour to be thought Vicious unless he be so indeed There are few pretenders to the Shame and Infamy which in Ages have been inseparable from Irreligion but it is the natural Sense which Men have of Religion that gives it so great Credit and Honour in a wicked World that even the Shadow and Counterfeit of it has sometimes too much prevailed But farther all Sects and Parties of Christians are agreed in the Truth of the Christian Religion and the only difference amongst them is concerning particular Doctrins and Opinions that is concerning the true Meaning and Explication of it And no Man disputes about the Meaning of that which they do not at the same time suppose to be When any Point or Clause of a Law is in Dispute it would be ridiculous from thence to conclude that no such Law was ever made because all Parties must agree that there is such a Law or else there could be no dispute about it And when Differences arise in Religion it is an Argument for the Truth of Religion because there can be Difference about nothing and Men would never differ about Religion if it were not true or they did not think it to be so But Christians are not only agreed in the main that the Gospel is true but they are likewise agreed in the Sense and Meaning of it as to the Fundamental Articles necessary to Salvation This was the ancient Rule and Measure laid down by Vincentius Lirinensis of the Catholick Doctrin necessary to be believed that it had been believed in all Ages in all Places and in all Churches And the excellent Arch-Bishop Usher whose Judgment in the Case may safely be relied upon has (a) Brief Declaration of the Universality of the Church of Christ and the Unity of the Catholick Faith professed therein delivered in a Sermon before the King the 20th of June 1624. declared That if at this day we should take a survey of the several (b) This Passage was produced by Dr. Potter and defended by Mr. ●hillingworth chap. 4. §. 44 c. Professions of Christianiny that have any large spread in any part of the World as of the Religion of the Roman and the Reformed Churches in our Quarters of the Aegyptians and Aethiopians in the South of the Grecians and other Christians in the Eastern Parts and should put by the Points wherein they differ from one another and gather into one Body the rest of the Articles wherein they all did generally agree we should find that in those Propositions which without all Controversie are so universally received in the whole Christian World so much Truth is contained as being joined with holy Obedience may be sufficient to bring a Man unto everlasting Salvation Neither have we cause to doubt but that as many as do walk according to this Rule neither overthrowing that which they have built by superinducing any damnable Heresies thereupon nor otherwise vitiating their Holy Faith with a lewd and wicked conversation Peace shall be upon them and Mercy and upon the Israel of God And he afterwards says in relation to the Papists in Ireland that he had sometimes treated with those of the opposite Party and moved them that howsoever in other things we did differ one from another yet we should join together in teaching those main Points the knowledge whereof was so necessary unto Salvation and of the Truth whereof there was no Controversie betwixt us And as to particular Controversies tho' one would imagin that wise Men of all others should be least apt to fall out about Words yet it is an old Observation that when learned and wise Men disagree in Opinion the Difference is commonly in the manner of expressing themselves or however it is generally about the manner of the Existence not about the Existence it self of Things Thus what is better known by all than the Sun and yet what Disputes have there been and ever will be concerning its Light and Motion and Distance and Dimensions But it ought likewise to be considered that in the Management of the Controversies in Religion such as are otherwise good Men are wont many times to be little favourable in representing the Opinions of their Adversaries and if Men might be allowed to explain themselves and were not provoked and exasperated beyond their own calmer Thoughts and Temper the Differences in Religion would not be near so great nor so many as they now appear to be It so happens in all Cases that Differences are widened by eager and contentious Debates Men speak more than they designed and then resolve to defend what they have said so that Disputes become endless and are drawn out into Particulars without number which were never at first thought of Many Books of Controversie are half taken up in asking cross Questions which perhaps neither of the Parties can answer to satisfaction nor do they often seem to design any thing farther than to puzzle one another and to be as captious and as troublesom as they can But this ought not to be imputed to the uncertainty of the Subject but to the perversness of Men and those who upon every occasion fall into so great Heats and Contentions must needs be very
well assured of that in which they agree that is of the Truth of Religion in General and of the Christian Religion in Particular as to the Fundamental Points of it The Differences among Christians may serve to prove to us Divine Authority of our Religion and of the Scriptures which contain it since Christians agree in asserting their Divine Authority and have never been so much at unity among themselves as to be able to agree to corrupt them but have certainly delivered them down entire to us 2. It is not Religion only which Men Dispute about but there is nothing besides in which they have not disagreed It is observed that want of Experience and Knowledge of the World leads Men into more inconveniencies than want of Parts and Abilities And it is as certain that a thorough Knowledge of the Debates and Contentions in Philosophy would sooner cure most Men of their Infidelity than any Arguments could do Those who raise Objections against Religion if they would but consider that almost every thing else has as great Difficulties would be ashamed to reject Religion upon Pretences which if they hold must force them to reject all other things with it and to believe just nothing at all There have been Disputes in all Ages concerning Light and Motion the Wind and Seas and other Wonders of Nature but it would be absurd for this Reason to question whether there be any such thing as Light and Motion and whatever besides Men have disputed And yet it is more absurd if it be possible to allow that is a good Argument against Religion but against nothing else If the Sun yield his Light and Nature go on in her constant Course tho' Men differ never so much in their Philosophy about it what can Religion be the worse for their Disputes no body thinks that he sees ever the less for any Difficulties which have been urged concernning Vision and why should we be ever the less inclined to believe the Truth of Religion by reason of any Controversies in it Men may dispute any thing and there is hardly any thing but it has been disputed but nothing is the less credible for being disputed unless it can be disproved but is rather confirmed and advanced by it Truth is nevertheless Truth for meeting with opposition but is the more tried and the more approved as Strength and Courage is by the sharpest Conflicts Since then there will be Vices as long as there are Men in this World and Differences and Dissentions in Religion as long as there are Vices since they cannot be hindered but by the Omnipotent Power of God and there are great Reasons why he should not interpose to prevent them since Differences in Religion are so far from implying any uncertainty in Religion that they rather prove a Confirmation of it and are in divers respects made useful and expedient to the Edification of Christians it must be great inconsideration and weakness to produce them as an Objection against Religion There must be Heresies and the Spirit speaketh expresly that in the latter Times some shall depart from the Faith giving heed to Seducing Spirits and Doctrins of Devils speaking Lies in Hypocrisy having their Conscience seared with an hot Iron 1 Tim. iv 12. The Scripture could not be true unless these things should happen which are foretold in several Places of Scripture Behold says our Saviour I have told you before Matt. xxiv 25. it ought to be no new nor surprising thing to Christians to see Heresies arise tho' they be never so wicked and abominable because we are forewarned to expect them and they serve to give a kind of Testimony to the True Religion in fulfilling the Predictions of it They help to prove the Religion which they would destroy For if there had been no Heresies that Religion could not be True which has foretold them but since there are Heresies our Religion is at least so far true as to contain express Prophecies concerning them which we see daily fulfilled and as they evidently prove our Religion true in this particular so they invalidate it in no other Which is the (b) Just Mart. Dial. Answer that the Christians anciently returned to the Enemies of Religion when they made this Objection against it Let us follow the plain the known and and confessed Duties of Religion Humility Temperance Righteousness and Charity and when once we have no Temptations to wish Religion untrue upon the account of the plain Precepts and Directions of it we shall never suspect it to be so by reason of any Controversies in it For if Men will impartially consider things that Religion which has now For so many Ages stood out all the Assaults and Attempts with Enemies from without and Parties within could make against it and has approved it much better and more gloriously than it could have done if there never had been either Heresies or Schisms Let us therefore hold fast the Profession of our Faith without Wavering being assured that the Gates of Hell that is all the Power and Stratagems of Satan shall never be able to prevail against the Church of Christ but shall only serve to add to its Victories and adorn its Triumphs The Malice O Lord and fierceness of Man shall turn to thy Praise And the fierceness of them shalt thou refrain Ps Lxxvi 10. CHAP. XXXIII Though all Objections could not be answerred yet this would be no just Cause to reject the Authority of the Scriptures ALL Objections which can with any Colour or Pretence be alleged have been considered and answered by divers Men of Great Learning and Judgment and several Objections which have made most noise in the World as that about the Capacity of the Ark and others have been Demonstrated to be groundless and frivolous But tho' all Difficulties could not be accounted for yet this would be no just or sufficient cause why we should reject the Scriptures because Objections for the most part are impertinent to the Purpose for which they were designed and do not at all effect the Evidence which is brought in proof of the Scriptures and if they were pertinent yet unless they could confute that Evidence they ought not to determine us against them He that with an honest and sincere Desire to find out the Truth or Falshood of a Revelation enquires into it should first consider impartially what can be alleged for it and afterwards consider the Objections raised against it that so he may compare the Arguments in proof of it and the Objections together and determine himself on that side which appears to have most Reason for it But to insist upon particular Objections collected out of Difficult Places of Scripture tho' they would likewise observe the Answers that have been given which few of our Objectors have patience to do but run away with the Objection without staying for an Answer I say to allege particular Objections without attending to the main Grounds and Motives
which induce a belief of the Truth of the Scriptures is a very deceitful way of Arguing Because it is not in the least improbable that there may be a true Revelation which may have great Difficulties in it But if sufficient Evidence be produced to convince us that the Scriptures are indeed God's Word and there be no proof on the contrary to invalidate that Evidence then all the Objections besides that can be raised are but Objections and no more For if those Arguments by which our Religion appears to be True remain still in their full Force notwithstanding the Objections and no positive and direct Proof be brought that they are insufficient we ought not to reject those Arguments and the Conclusions deduced from them upon the Account of the Objections but to reject the Objections for the sake of those Arguments because if those cannot be disproved all the which can be thought of must proceed from some Mistake For when I am once assured of the Truth of a thing by direct and positive Proof I have the same assurance that all Objections against it must be vain and false which I have that that thing is true because every thing must be false which is opposite to Truth and nothing but that which takes off the Arguments by which any thing is proved to be True can ever prove it false But all Objections must be false themselves or insignificant to the Purpose for which they are alleged if the Evidence for the Truth of that against which they are brought cannot be disproved that is if the Thing against which they are brought be True To shew this in Particulars If a Man muster up never so many Inconsistencies as he thinks in the Scriptures yet unless he be as well assured at least that these which he calls Inconsistencies cannot be in any Book of Divine Revelation as he may be that the Scriptures are of Divine Revelation he cannot in Reason reject their Authority And to be assured of this it must be considered what is inconsistent with the Evidence whereby the Authority of the Scriptures is proved to us For whatever is not inconsistent with this Evidence cannot be inconsistent with their Authority In like manner as if a Man should frame never so many Objections against the Opinion commonly received that Caesar himself wrote the Commentaries which go under his Name and not Julius Celsus or any other Author unless he can overthrow the Evidence by which Caesar appears to be the Author of them all his Objections will never amount to a Proof that he was not the Author It is very possible for God to reveal things which we may not be able to comprehend and to enact Laws especially concerning the Rights and Ceremonies enjoined a People so many Ages past the Reasons whereof we may not be fully to understand and it is very possible likewise that there may be great Difficulties in Chronology and that the Text may in divers places have a different Reading And though all these things have been cleared to the satisfaction of reasonable Men by several Expositors yet let us suppose at present to gratifie these Objectors and this will gratifie them if any thing can do it that the Laws are utterly unaccountable that the Difficulties in Chronology are no way adjusted that the divers Readings are by no means to be reconciled yet what doth all this prove That Moses wrought no Miracles That the Children of Israel and the Aegyptians were not Witnesses to them That what the Prophets foretold did not come to pass That our Saviour never rose from the Dead and that the Holy Ghost did not descend upon the Apostles Or that any thing is contained in the Scriptures repugnant to the Divine Attributes or to the natural Notion of Good and Evil Doth it prove any thing of all this or can it be pretended to prove it If it cannot and nothing is more plain than that it cannot then all the Evidence produced in Proof of the Authority of the Scriptures stands firm notwithstanding all this mighty noise of the Obscurity and the Inconsistency and the Uncertainty of the Text of the Scriptures And the next enquiry naturally will be not how the Scriptures can be from God if these things be to be found in them for it is already proved that they are from God and therefore this must from henceforth be taken for granted till it can be disproved but the only Enquiry will be how these Passages are to be explained or reconciled with other Places For let us consider this way of Reasoning which is made use of to disprove the Truth and Authority of the Scriptures in other things and try whether we are wont to reason thus in any case but that of Religion and whether we should not be ashamed of this way of arguing in any other Case How little is it that we throughly unstand in natural Things and yet how seldom do we doubt of the Truth and Reality of them because we may puzzle and perplex our selves in the Explication of them For instance we discern the Light and feel the Warmth and Heat of the Sun and have the Experience of the constant returns of Day and Night and of the several Seasons of the Year and no Man doubts but that all this is effected by the approach or withdrawing of the Sun's influence But whoever will go about to explain all this and to give a particular Account of it will find it a very hard Task and such Objections have been urged against every Hypothesis in some Point or other as perhaps no Man is able fully to answer But doth any Man doubt whether there be such a thing as Light and Heat as Day and Night though he cannot be satisfied whether the Sun or the Earth move Or do Men doubt whether they can see or not till they can demonstrate how Vision is made And must none be allowed to see but Mathematicians Or do Men refuse to eat till they are satisfied how and after what manner they are nourish'd Yet if we must be swayed by Objections which do not come up to the main Point nor affect the Truth and Reality of Things but only fill our Minds with Scruples and Difficulties about them we must believe nothing which we do not fully comprehend in every part and circumstance of it For whatever we are ignorant of concerning it that may it seems be objected against the thing it self and may be a just Reason why we should doubt of it We must have a care of being too confident that we move before we can give an exact account of the Cause and Laws of Motion which the greatest Philosophers have not been able to do we must not presume to eat till we can tell how Digestion and Nourishment are made In short this would run us into all the Extravagancies of Scepticism For upon these Principles it was that some doubted whether Snow be white or Honey sweet or any
thing else be of the same Colour or Tast which it appears to be of because they could amuse themselves with Difficulties and they were too much Philosophers to assent to any thing that they did not understand tho' it were confirmed by the Sense and Experience of all Mankind They were rational Men and it was below them to believe their Senses unless their Reason were convinced and that was too acute to be convinced as long as any Difficulty that could be started remained unanswered And thus under the pretence of Reason and Philosophy they exposed themselves to the Scorn and Derision of all who had but the common Sense of Men without the Art and Subtilty of imposing upon themselves and others And it is the same thing in effect as to matters of Religion The Scriptures come confirmed down to us by all the ways of confirmation that the Authority of any Revelation at this distance of time could be expected to have if it really were what we believe the Scriptures to be Why then do some Men doubt whether they be Authentick Can they disprove the Arguments which are brought in defence of them Can they produce any other Revelation more Authentick Or is it more reasonable to believe that God should not reveal himself to Mankind than that this Revelation should be his No this is not the case but there are several things to be found in the Scriptures which they think would not be in them if they were of Divine Revelation But a wise Man will never disbelieve a thing for any Objections made against it which do not reach the Point nor touch these Arguments by which it is proved to him It is not inconsistent that that may be most true which may have many Exceptions framed against it but it is absurd to reject that as incredible which comes recommended by our Belief by such Evidence as cannot be disprov'd Till this be done all which can be said besides only shews that there are Difficulties to be met withal in the Scriptures which was never denied by those who most firmly and stedfastly believe them But Difficulties can never alter the Nature of Things and make that which is true to become false There is no Science without its Difficulties and it is not pretended that Theology is without them There are many great and inexplicable Difficulties in the Mathematicks but shall we therefore reject this as a Science of no Value nor Certainty and believe no Demonstration in Euclide to be true unless we could Square the Circle And yet this is every whit as reasonable as it is not to acknowledge the Truth of the Scriptures unless we could explain all the Visions in Ezekiel and the Revelations of St. John We must believe nothing and know nothing if we must disbelieve and reject every thing which is liable to Difficulties We must not believe we have a Soul unless we can give an account of all its Operations nor that we have a Body unless we can tell all the Parts and Motions and the whole Frame and Composition of it We must not believe our Senses till there is nothing relating to Sensation but what we perfectly understand nor that there are any Objects in the World till we know the exact manner how we perceive them and can solve all Objections that may be raised concerning them And if a Man can be incredulous to this degree it cannot be expected that he should believe the Scriptures But till he is come to this height of Folly and Stupidity if he will be consistent with himself and true to those Principles of Reason from which he argues in all other Cases he cannot reject the Authority of the Scriptures upon the account of any Difficulties that he finds in them whilst the Arguments by which they are proved to be of Divine Authority remain unanswered And all the Objections which can be invented against the Scriptures cannot seem near so absurd to a considering Man as to suppose that God should not at all reveal himself to Mankind or that the Heathen Oracles or Mahomet's Alcoran should be of Divine Revelation CHAP. XXXIV The Conclusion containing an Exhortation to a serious Consideration of these things both from the Example of the wisest and most learned Men and from the infinite Importance of the Things themselves AS Wise and as Learned Men as any that ever lived in the World have died in the Belief of the Christian Religion when they had no Interest to engage them to it and many of them have led their Lives under Pesecutions and have at last been put to Death rather than they would renounce that Faith which the Scriptures declare to us It cannot be denied but that there have been Men of as great Learning and as great Numbers of them professing the Christian Religion as have been of all other Religions in the World Indeed all manner of Arts and Sciences have been more improved by Christians than by all other sorts of Men whatsoever and all rational and solid Learning is confined as I may say within Christendom For besides the Idolotrous Worship and other Impieties notorious among them whatsoever Learning is to be found among the Chinese or other Heathen Nations their Notions of Things so far as they differ from what is contained in the Scriptures are so obscure and confused at the best and so groundless that that Christian must be very weary of his Religion who can think of changing it for such Uncertainties And no Man that profess'd and called himself a Christian ever disbelieved the Scriptures but there were visibly other Reasons for it than these which the Nature of the Christian Religion could afford It was apparent in his Life that he wished the Christian Religion were false before he endeavoured to persuade himself that it is not true Some are possess'd with that intolerable Spirit of Pride and Contradiction that meer Vanity and a Conceit of being wiser than others makes them find fault with any thing that is generally received and the greatest Fault which these Man can find with the Christian Religion is that they have been bred up in it and therefore they make heavy Complaints of the prejudices of Education and the hindrances which ingenuous Minds labour under from the influences of it in the pursuit of Truth And these Men perhaps might have talk'd as much and to as much purpose for Christianity as they now talk against it if they had not been Born among Christians and been bred up in the Christian Religion they scorn to be the better for their Education and are ashamed of nothing more than to believe and think like other Men and they might almost be persuaded to be Christians still if they could but be singular in being so For the mere Affectation of Singularity makes them dispise and dispute against any thing which others allow and esteem But it will be hard to find any learned Man of tolerable Modesty and Vertue and
World though Men will take no Warning by never so many Examples but have need of continual Advice and Exhortation to keep them from the Commission of them Is there the less Certainty in the Mathematicks because Euclid Apollonius and innumerable others of all Ages and Nations have put forth Books and Systems of Mathematicks in several Forms and Methods When many write upon the same Subject it is an Argument of the Excellency and Vsefulness of it not that they are dissatisfy'd in what has been already said by others but that they think more may be said or that some Things may be prov'd more clearly in another Method with more Advantage to some Capacities and with greater Probability of removing the Scruples of some Men. It is undoubtedly very fit that all necessary Doctrines upon which the Eternal Happiness or Misery of Mankind depends should be treated of in all kinds of Ways and Methods and they cannot be too often discours'd of nor by too many Men that no Objection may remain unanswer'd nor Scruple unobserv'd Though a little may be sufficient upon a plain Matter to wise Men yet too much cannot be said upon a Subject wherein all Men are concern'd And it is the great Assurance of the Truth of Religion and Charity to the Souls of Men that has engag'd so many Authors in this Cause Besides the Primitive Fathers and Apologists Men of the greatest Learning and Abilities in latter Ages have undertaken this Subject having made it their Study and Business to consider the Grounds of our Holy Religion And I think few will pretend to more Judgment to discover Truth or to more Integrity to declare it than such Authors who have had no particular Interest or Profession in reference to Religion but were under only the common Obligations of all Christians which if they had valu'd as little as some others they could with as much Wit and Learning have appear'd in the Cause of Irreligion as any that ever undertook it Many of the most Eminent in all Professions and Callings have been the most zealous Assertors of Religion as I might shew by particular Examples which are in every Man's Memory Indeed I believe few Men have so vain an Opinion of themselves as to think they understand their several Studies and Professions better than such Persons who have given undoubted Evidence of their unfeigned Belief of the Christian Religion Men of the greatest Sagacity and Judgment have not been mov'd with such Objections as others so much stumble at but have liv'd and dy'd the Glory of their Age and an Honour to their Religion such were the Learned Prince of Mirandula and that Learned French Nobleman Mornaeus such were Grotius Sir Matthew Hales Dr. Willis and many besides both of our own and other Nations I shall mention but one more who indeed was so Eminent that I scarce need mention him for he must be already in every Reader 's Thoughts I mean the Honourable Mr. Boyle who was as inquisitive and as unwilling to be impos'd upon and knew as much of Nature perhaps as ever any Man not Inspir'd did and had withal as stedfast a Belief and as aweful Apprehensions of Reveal'd Religion which he endeavour'd to Establish and Propagate not only by his own Writings but by the Labours of others which he Engag'd and rewarded by his Last Will and Testament 2. But Men do not always live answerably to what they profess to believe It were heartily to be wish'd that there had never been any Occasion given for this Objection For though it be very inconsiderable in it self yet it does I believe the most mischief of any because Men naturally govern themselves more by the Example than by the Judgment of others or even than by their own Reason But if we will judge aright the Example of one Man who lives according to the Doctrines of Religion ought to be of more weight with us than the Example of never so many who live contrary to their Profession Because when Men profess one thing and act another their Actions are surely as little to be regarded as their Profession And if we will not believe their Profession against their Actions why should we regard their Example against their avowed Principles and Profession It is in all other cases esteemed a good Argument for the Truth of any thing when Men confess it against themselves And the Motives and Temptations are visible by which they are led aside from their own declared Faith and Judgment this Pleasure or that Profit is the cause of it which every Man can point to But when he who lives conformably to his Principles denies himself when he loses and suffers by it he must needs be in great earnest whereas the others are apparently bribed to forsake that in Practice which notwithstanding they cannot but own in the Theory and Principles This was an old Prejudice against Philosophy That the Philosophers did not observe their own Precepts But it was rejected by wise Men as no Argument against the Truth and Vsefulness of Philosophy It is a great Objection against the Men but sure it can be no Argument against the Things themselves that they are disregarded by those who understand their worth and pretend to have a due value and esteem for them And whoever renounces the Faith or takes up Principles of Irreligion because of any ill Practices of others too plainly declares either that in Truth and Sincerity he never had any or that he is very willing to part with his Religion All Men make some pretence to Reason and those Men most of all who are so apt to decry Religion upon this account That many who profess to believe it do not always live up to its Rules and Instructions But they do not consider in the mean time That Men generally act as much against Reason as against Relgion and that therefore this Objection if it can signifie any thing must banish all Reason and good Sence out of the World If there be no True Religion because so few practise it as they ought there can be no True Reason neither because the Lives of so many Men contradict it And some perhaps would be contented that there should be no True Religion rather than that there should be no True Reason because then they must be no longer allowed to be able to Reason against Religion But if the Truth and Reality of Things depend upon the Practice of Men then the same Religion may be true and false at the same time it may be true in one Age and false in another or true in one Countrey and false in the next and must be more or less true or false in the same proportion as the Lives and Manners of its Professors are more or less vertuous or vicious Indeed this is so unreasonable and unjust a Prejudice against Religion though it be grown a very common one that methinks every Man should be ashamed of it especially Men of Reason
who scorn so much in all other cases to depend upon the Practice and Authority of others And it is hard to believe that Men who think at all can think as they speak when they make use of this Objection Will any Man suppose that Temperance doth not preserve Health tho' he should see his Physician run into excess or that Poyson will not kill tho' the Man who tells him so and advises him against it be so desperate as to take it himself But as absurd as this Objection is in it self it is most of all absurd when it is urged against the Christian Religion of which we are assured that one of the Twelve who first preached it was an Apostate and a Traytor and our Saviour declares that many who had Preached and wrought Miracles in his Name should be at last rejected by him Matth. vii 21. And therefore for any to make this cavil against Christianity is only to shew that they do not consider it or will not remember the plainest and most remarkable Points of it 3. The causes of Vnbelief amongst Christians notwithstanding the clearest Evidence for their Religion are too many to be here recounted But I shall mention some of the chief of them 1. Vicious Men are very unwilling to believe that Religion to be True which is so directly contrary to their whole course of Life and to all their Inclinations and Desires but they are very ready to catch at any Cavils and Pretences against it The Lives of too many Christians have brought a Scandal though a very unjust one upon the Religion which they profess and Men who find themselves more enclined to do as they see them do than as they hear them acknowledge they ought to do make no sufficient enquiry into the Principles of Religion 2. Divers Men have had a strange Ambition to say something new upon every Subject they treat of and in order to that have set themselves with all their Skill and Power to contradict and overthrow what has been said by others that they might make way for their own Opinions or so to refine upon the Notions of others that they might appear New and of their own Invention which has made inconsiderate Men conclude that we are always to seek in our Doctrine and have no fix'd Principles whereas Men of Learning and Judgment know that commonly what is with so much ostentation proposed and recommended to us for New has been considered and rejected of old though not perhaps in the very Terms yet in the Sence and Substance of it or else it is some True Doctrine under a different Form and Manner of Expression The Improvements which have been made in Philosophy this last Age afford a real and great advantage towards the Proof and Establishment of Religion in Mens Minds and yet there are few things which have been more abused to the Dishonour of it For when Men find it convenient to give some vent to the Philosophical Humour they bethink themselves of a fit Subject for it to discharge it self upon and this must be something Great and something that is very New and Surprising and there is nothing which answers all these Qualities so well as a New Account of the Origin of the Vniverse and then the History of the Creation in Genesis as well as the World it self must undergo all the Alterations which they are pleased to impose upon it that it may perfectly submit and comply with their New Hypotheses If this Fancy should hold New Systems of the World will be as common as New Romances They must pardon me the Expression for Des Cartes himself among his Friends gave no better Name to his System which was the first Ground and Occasion to all the rest And nothing is more easie with a Philosophical Wit than to build or destroy a World But it is to be hoped when they have wearied themselves with New Contrivances they will let us have our Old World again In the mean time these Men who have too much Philosophy to have no Religion put dangerous Weapons into the Hands of those who have neither the one nor the other and know not how to use them but to do mischief And there is nothing so plain but it may be rendred difficult and obscure to many Men by long and subtile Disputes If great numbers of Men should write concerning the Sun's Heat and Light and Motion for many Years and every one should still contradict all that went before him and strive to say something New and Strange upon the Subject the last for ought I know might pretend to prove that perhaps there may be no Sun at all Which indeed is no more than what the Scepticks have said And this Infidelity and Scepticism concerning God and his Providence and Revelation must end in the Scepticism of our very Senses if these Principles be pursued in their direct and unavoidable Consequences Others have been too bold with the Mysteries of Religion and have pretended to explain them so far as if they would endeavour to present us with a Religion without all Mystery which at the same time has exposed Themselves to Reproach and Religion to the Scorn of such as are glad to take all occasians to shew their Good-will to it The evident and declared Design of the Socinians is to retain no Mysteries but by forced Interpretations of Scripture to expound them all to their own that is to a new and absurd sence and it is but too plain that there is a combined Design carried on between Them and the Deists who are contented to pass for Christians with a Distinction and without a Mystery Anti-Trinitarian is a milder word than Anti-Christian and Unitarian is but a different Name for Deist Another sort have been very laborious in finding out Mysteries where there are none and under a pretence of reducing the plainest Doctrines to clear Principles have only am●●sed and confounded Men in the true and obvious Notions of them Thus the Duties of Love to God and to our Neighbour are plain in themselves and are as plainly set down in the Scriptures And to raise Abstracted and Metaphysical Speculations upon so plain Texts is only to tell us what we know before in other and less intelligible Terms or else to fall into the nice and rash Disputes of the School-Men or into the Enthusiastick Heats of the Mystical Divines which can have no Tendency to the Peace or Edification of the Church but gives an Occasion to the Adversary to Blaspheme 3. A Third Cause of Infidelity has been the Rashness of some Criticks For if any thing relating to Religion has been once call'd in Question by Men who have got themselves a Name by writing more boldly than wiser Men have done the Authority of such Men shall be thought a sufficient Answer to all the Arguments which can be taken from any thing which they are pleas'd to dislike Criticism when it falls to the share of a prudent
Man is without doubt a necessary and most valuable Part of Learning But it must be confess'd that there is hardly any thing more impertinent than an impertinent Critick It is a great thing if it be well consider'd to set the Bounds and fix the Territories of Learning to adjudge to every Author his own Works and say that this Book or perhaps some small Part of a Book shall be his and the other he shall have nothing to do withal This is no trivial Matter nor of small Consequence and ought not to be at the pleasure of any one who has a mind to be taken notice of for contradicting the receiv'd Opinion and being more confident than others And the less Occasion there is for these Criticks the more Danger there is from them for if there be no Work for them they will be apt to make themselves Work And what Author will be able to stand before Men whose Business and Ambition it is to find Fault But though the Jurisdiction of Criticks be very large and absolute Yet I have taken care not to come under it but have purposely avoided insisting upon any Authorities which have faln under their Disputes unless it be perhaps in speaking of the Sibyls but there I have the Consent of the best Criticks besides evident Reason on my side so far as I am concern'd for them 4. A Pretence to Miracles and Prophecies without Reason or Ground for it in behalf of some particular Errors has weaken'd the Belief of the True Miracles and Prophecies And whilst laborious Endeavours have been us'd to shew that the Christian Religion cannot be true unless those Doctrines be true which have no Foundation in it the quite contrary has happen'd to what in Charity we must suppose these Authors design'd For instead of owning their Religion to be true Men who are convinc'd of the Weakness of their Pretences have taken them at their Word and have been forward to grant them That there is no Religion True and therefore not theirs 5. I shall shew at large in due time That the many Differences and Disputes in Religion are no prejudice to the Truth and Certainty of it but they are notwithstanding a great scandal and temptation and a great hindrance to the Salvation of Men especially as they are commonly managed whilst by all imaginable Arts and Means Men of different Parties and Opinions strive to run down their Adversaries Those who are concerned would do well I should think to consider what mischief may ensue through the imprudent and unchristian management of Disputes even in a right Cause which has no need of such methods and therefore they are the less excusable who use them in defence of such a Cause If we would convince or persuade Men in any other thing we never are wont to think it a proper expedient to use them ill and give them hard words And is rough Vsage proper only for the propagation of the Doctrines of the Gospel and of a Religion of Peace and Meekness and Charity I know what Examples may be produced to countenance this Practice but those great Authors have Excellencies enough for our imitation we need not imitate their Faults Our Blessed Saviour indeed himself and his Apostles did not always forbear severe language but then they spoke with a Divine Power and Authority and knew how to speak to the Hearts as well as to the Ears of Men and fully perceived when this was the last and only Remedy to be used they could strike dead with their Words and were infallible in the use of such Expressions as were proper for the present occasion either to comfort or to terrifie Sinners and awaken them to Repentance There is no doubt but a seasonable Reproof or Rebuke though it be very severe may be not only consistent with Charity but may also be the Effect of it and if ever we may speak with the Power and Authority as well as in the meekness and gentleness of Christ we must do it when the Truth of the Christian Religion is called in question and that by Christians We live in an Age in which Men think they have done a great thing and enough for them to value themselves upon if they can but start a bold Objection against the Scriptures though it have never so little sence in it We have sufficient warrant to treat these Men as they deserve for the Apostles were commanded according to a Custom in use amongst the Jews to shake off the dust off their feet against such as rejected their Doctrine and the least we can say to them is to let them know that if they will not believe we are sorry for it but cannot help it and that they will have the worst of it Mr. Hobbs himself will allow that an Atheist ought to be banish'd as a Publick Mischief and scarce any Terms can be too severe for those who openly apostatize from the Religion in which they have been baptized and blaspheme that Holy Name by which they are called We must not so debase the Gospel of Christ as to seem to beg their Approbation which I 'm sure we have little need of in the present case I am far from thinking any thing small or inconsiderable in which the Honour of God and the Truth of Religion is concern'd but certainly a great distinction is to be made between them from whom we differ in particular Points though of great moment and consequence and those who rejct the Whole Our chief Zeal and Strength should be employed against the Common Enemies who delight in our Quarrels and sport themselves with the mutual Wounds we so freely give one another 9. We have a sort of Men amongst us who from hence have taken occasion to make it their whole Business both by their Discourses and Writings to laugh all Religion and Morality out of the World which has made our very Wit to degenerate though this be the only thing for which these Men seem to value themselves and our Poems with all their soft Numbers and flowing Style to be far from deserving Commendation for this way of Writing is as much against the Rules of Poetry as against those of Vertue and they can never answer it to their own Art whatever they may do to their Consciences but ought to be censured for being ill Poets as well as ill Men. A fine Saying a soft or bold Expression or a pretty Character is this all we have in exchange for our Reason and Religion which these Men have so laboriously decryed Some of the best Poets of our Age have been so sensible of the Dishonour hereby done to God the Disservice to Mankind and the Disgrace to so Noble an Art that they have employed their Genius a better way But the extravagant Raillery against Religion has been the more licentious and the more frequent not only because it has met with Applause from so many who are none of the wisest part of Mankind but
demure Pretenders to Humane Reason and Moral Vertue and the Enemies of Revealed Religion We are fallen into an Age in which there are a sort of Men who have shewn so great a forwardness to be no longer Christians that they have catch'd at all the little Cavils and Pretences against Religion and indeed if it were not more out of charity to their own Souls than for any credit Religion can have of them it were great pity but they should have their Wish for they both think and live so ill that it is an argument for the goodness of any Cause that they are against it It was urged as a confirmation of the Christian Riligion by Tertullian that it was haved and persecuted by Nero the worst of Men And I am confident it would be but small Reputation to it in any Age if such Men should be found of it They speak evil of the things they understand not and are wont to talk with as much confidence against any point of Religion as if they had all the Learning in the World in their keeping when commonly they know little or nothing of what has been said for that against which they dispute They seem to imagine that there is nothing in the World besides Religion that has any difficulty in it but this shews how little they have considered the Nature of Things in which multitudes of Objections and Difficulties meet an observing Man in every Thought And after all Religion has but one fault as they account it which they have been able to discover in it and that is that it is too good and vertuous for them for when they have said all they can this is their great quarrel against it and as it has been truly observed no charity less than that of the Religion which they despise would have much care or consideration for them Thus have some Men dishonoured Religion by their Lives some by an affectation of Novelty some by invalidating the Authority of Books relating true Miracles and Prophecies and others by forging false ones some again by their too eager and imprudent Disputes and Contentions about Religion whilst from hence others have taken the liberty to ridicule it and to dispute against it but so as to expose themselves whilst they would expose Religion And thus has the clearest and most necessary Truth been obscured and despised whilst it has been betrayed by the vanity and quarrels of its Friends to the scorn and weakness of its Enemies However in all their opposition and contradiction to Revealed Religion I find it asserted by these Men that Atheism is so absurd a thing that they question whether there ever were or can be an Atheist in the World I have therefore here proved from the Attributes of God and the Grounds of Natural Religion that the Christian Religion must be of Divine Revelation and that this Religion is as certainly true as it is that God Himself exists which is the plainest Truth and the most universally acknowledged of any thing whatsoever And because there is nothing so true or certain but something may be alledged against it I shall besides discourse upon such Heads as have been most excepted against In which I shall endeavour to prove the Truth in such a manner as to vindicate it against all Cavils though I shall not take notice of particular Objections which is both a needless and indeed an endless labour for there is no end of Cavils but if the Truth be well and fully explained any Objection may receive a sufficient Answer from the consideration of the Doctrine against which it is urged by applying it to particular Difficulties as one Right Line is enough to demonstrate all the variations from it to be Crooked It is very easie to cavil and find fault with any thing and to start Objections and ask Questions is even to a Proverb esteemed the worst sign that can be of a great Wit or a sound Judgment Men are unwilling to believe any thing to be true which contradicts their Vices and the weakest Arguments with strong Inclinations to a Cause will prove or disprove whatever they have a mind it should But let Men first practise the Vertues the Moral Vertues which our Religion enjoins and then let them disprove it if they can nay let them disprove it now if they can for it stands in no need of their favour but for their own sakes let them have a care of mistaking Vices for Arguments and every profane Jest for a Demonstration I wish they would consider whether the Concern they have to set up Natural against Revealed Religion proceed not from hence that by Natural Religion they mean no more than just what they please themselves or what they judge convenient in every case or occasion whereas Revealed Religion is a fix'd and determined thing and prescribes certain Rules and Laws for the Government of our Lives The plain truth of the matter is that they are for a Religion of their own contrivance which they may alter as they see sit but not for one of Divine Revelation which will admit of no change but must always continue the same whatever they can do Vnless that were the case there would be little occasion to trouble them with Books of this kind for the Arguments brought against the Christian Religion are indeed so weak and insignificant that they rather make for it and it might well be said as M. Paschal relates by one of this sort of Men to his Companions If you continue to dispute at this rate you will certainly make me a Christian I shall venture at least to say of this Treatise in the like manner as he doth of his That if these Men would be pleased to spend but a little of that time which is so often worse employed in the perusal of what is here offered I hope that something they may meet withal which may satisfie their Doubts and convince them of their Errors But though they should despise whatever can be said to them yet there are others besides the profess'd Adversaries of Revealed Religion to whom a Treatise of this nature may be serviceable The truth is notwistanding the great Plainness of the Christian Religion I cannot but think that Ignorance is one chief cause why it is so little valued and esteemed and its Doctrines so little obeyed A great part of Christians content themselves with a very slight and imperfect Knowledge of the Religion they profess and are able to give but very little Reason for that which is the most Reasonable thing in the World but they profess it rather as the Religion of their Country than of their own choice and because they find it contradicts their sensual Desires they are willing to believe as little of it as may be and when they hear others cavil and trifle with it partly out of Ignorance and partly from Inclination they take every idle Objection if it be but bold enough for an unanswerable
Argument Whereas if Chistians were but throughly acquainted with the Grounds of their Religion and sincerely disposed to believe and practise according to them they would be no more moved with these Cavils than they would be persuaded to think the worse of the Sun if some Men should take a fansie to make that the Subject of their Railery To have the more doubtful and wavering thoughts of Religion because it is exposed to the scorn and contempt of ill Men is as if we should despise the Sun for being under a Cloud or suffering an Eclipse not knowing that he retains his Light and Religion its Excellency still though we be in darkness the Light may be hid from us but can lose nothing of its own Brightness though we suffer for want of it and lie under the shadow of Death The Consideration of the Grounds and Reasons of our Religion is useful to all sorts of Men for if ever we will be seriously and truly Religious we must lay the foundation of it in our Vnderstandings that by the rational conviction of our Minds we may through the Grace of God assisting us bring our Wills to a submission and our Affections to the obedience of the Gospel of Christ and the more we think of and consider these things the more we shall be convinced of them and they will have the greater power and influence in the course of our Lives For tho' the Truth of the Christian Religion cannot without great sin and ignorance be doubted of by Christians yet it is a confirmation to our Faith and adds a new Life and Vigour to our Devotions when we recollect upon what good Reasons we are Christians and are not such by Custom and Education only but upon Principles which we have throughly considered and must abide by unless we will renounce our Reason with our Religion And what Subject can be more useful or more worthy of a rational and considering Man's Thoughts These things which are now made matter of Cavil and Dispute will be the Subject of our Contemplation and of our Joy and Happiness to all Eternity in the other World We shall then have clear and distinct apprehension of the Means and Methods of our Salvation and shall for ever admire and adore the Divine Wisdom in the Conduct and Disposal of those very Things about which we now are most perplex'd THE CONTENTS PART I. CHAP. I. That from the Notion of a God it necessarily follows That there must be some Divine Revelation THE Being of a God evident to Natural Reason p. 3. That there are wicked Spirits Enemies to Mankind p. 6. The miserable Condition of Man without the Divine Direction and Assistance and that God would not leave him without all Remedy in this Condition p. 8. The Judgment of St. Athanasius in the Case p. 15. CHAP. II. The Way and Manner by which Divine Revelations may be suppos'd to be deliver'd and preserv'd in the World The Manifestations of God's ordinary Providence insufficient and therefore some extraordinary Way of Revelation necessary p. 19. The ways of extraordinary Revelation either immediate Revelation to every particular Person or to some only with a Power of Miracles and Prophecies to enable them to communicate the Divine Will to others p. 20. I. It could not be requisite that God should communicate himself by immediate Revelation to every one in particular ibid. II. Prophecies and Miracles are the most fitting and proper Means for God to discover and reveal himself to the World by p. 29. 1. Concerning Prophecies ibid. 2. Concerning Miracles p. 33. III. Divine Revelations must be suppos'd to be preserv'd in the World by Writings p. 43. IV. They must be of great Antiquity p. 44. V. They must be fully publish'd and promulg'd p. 45. PART II. CHAP. I. The Antiquity of the Scriptures THE Antiquity of the Scriptures a Circumstance very considerable to prove them to be of Divine Revelation p. 48. They give an Account of Divine Revelations made from the beginning of the World ibid. What Moses relates of things before his own time is certainly true and must have been discover'd to be false if it had been so p. 50. CHAP. II. The Promulgation of the Scriptures 1. In the first Ages of the World the Revealed Will of God was known to all Mankind p. 58. II. In succeeding Ages there has still been sufficient Means and frequent Opportunities for all Nations to come to the knowledge of it p. 76. 1. The Law of Moses did particularly provide for the instruction of other Nations in the Reveal'd Religion p. 77. 2. The Providence of God did so order and dispose of the Jews that other Nations had frequent Opportunities of becoming instructed in the True Religion p. 90. Testimonies of the Heathen concerning the Jews and their Religion p. 115. There have ever been divers Memorials and Remembrances of the true Religion among the Heathen p. 117. Of the Sibylline Oracles p. 121. The Gospel had been preach'd in China and America before the late Discoveries p. 129. The Confessions both of Protestants and Papists as to this Matter p. 132. Christians in all Parts of the World p. 135. A Sect call'd the Good Followers of the Messiah at Constantinople p. 136. Though great Part of the World are still Vnbelievers yet there is no Nation but has great Opportunities of being converted p. 141. The Case of particular Persons consider'd p. 142. CHAP. III. Of Moses and Aaron The Sincerity of Moses in his Writings p. 146. He was void of Ambition p. 149. Aaron and he had no Contrivance between themselves to impose upon the People p. 151. CHAP. IV. Of the Pentateuch The Pentateuch written by Moses p. 152. The great Impartiality visible in these Books p. 153. The Book of Genesis an Introduction to all the rest p. 154. The principal Points of the History of the Jews confess'd by the Heathen p. 155. CHAP. V. Of the Predictions or Prophecies contain'd in the Books of Moses The Promise of the Messias p. 158. The Predictions of Noah ibid. The Promises made to Abraham p. 159. The Prophecies of Isaac c. p. 160. of Jacob p. 161. of Balaam p. 162. of Moses p. 163. CHAP. VI. Of the Miracles wrought by Moses I. The Miracles and Matters of Fact contain'd in the Books of Moses as they are there related to have been done were at first sufficiently attested p. 170. II. The Relations there set down are a true Account of the Miracles wrought by Moses and such as we may depend upon p. 188. For 1. These things could not be feign'd by Moses and Aaron and others concern'd with them in carrying on such a Design p. 189. 2. The Miracles could not be feign'd nor the Books of Moses invented or falsify'd by any particular Man nor by any Confederacy or Combination of Men after the Death of Moses p. 191. 3. The Pentateuch could not be invented nor falsify'd by the joynt Consent of the whole Nation either in
the Ammonites were descended from Lot and therefore it must be through their great Sin and Negligence if they did not retain a true Notion of Religion They had Possession given them of the Land they dwelt in by God himself by whom the former Inhabitants a wicked and formidable Race of Giants were destroyed before them as the Canaanites afterwards were before the Children of Israel Deut. ii 9 19. Our Saviour was descended from Ruth the Moabitess And the Ammonites are distinguished from the Heathen Ezek. xxv 7. But as Abraham has the peculiar Character given him of the Friend of God and the Father of the Faithful so his Power and Influence was very great He is said (i) Justin l. 36. 〈◊〉 2. Nic. Damas apud Joseph Antiqu. l. 1. c. 8. both by Justin and Nicolaus Damascenus to have been King of Damascus and the latter further adds that in his own time the Name of Abraham was famous in that City and that a Village was nominated from him being called Abraham's House or Palace He was a mighty Prince among the children of Heth and was respected as such by them Gen. xxiii 6 10. The Saracens and other Arabians were descended from Abraham and Circumcision which was practised by so many Nations being a Seal of the Covenant and a Rite of Initiation must be supposed to have some Notion of the Covenant it self communicated together with it For there is no probability that Circumcision used as a Religious and Mysterious Rite could have any other Original among Heathen Nations than from Abraham and the only Reason brought to prove that it had another beginning amongst them is because it was used upon a Natural Cause and varied in the Time of Administration but the Time might happen to be changed by some unknown Accident and it was always I think used upon a Religious account whatever Natural Causes might be likewise assigned and such the Jews themselves were (k) Philo Moimonid wont to assign as well as that of their Religion and it is possible that in some places the Religious cause of its Observation might be forgot and the Natural only retained Besides the other Sons of Abraham which were many Isaac and Ishmael must have been very instrumental in propagating the true Religion and we can suppose none educated under Abraham or belonging to him but they must have been well qualified for that purpose and must more or less retain the Impressions they had received from him this being the Character which God himself gives of Abraham I know him that he will command his children and his houshold after him and they shall keep the way of the Lord Gen. xviii 19. The Jews make particular mention of the care which both Abraham and Sarah took in instructing Proselytes and Maimonides de Idololatr l. 1. writes that Abraham left a Book behind him upon that Subject Ishmael was the Son of an Aegyptian Mother Gen. xvi 1. and his Wife was an Aegyptian his Sons were Twelve in number and of great Power being styled Princes and their Dominions were of a large extent Gen. xxv 16 18. Isaac was to marry none of the Daughters of Canaan but one of his own Kindred and a Messenger is sent into Mesopotamia to bring Rebekah from thence God directing and prospering him in his Jurney Which Alliance and Affinity renewed with the Chaldoeans could not fail of a good effect for the preservation and advancement of Religion in those Countreys But a Famine being again in the Land Isaac removes to Abimelech King of the Philistines unto Gerar and by him the Beauty of Rebekah was admired as Sarah's had been by Pharaoh in Aegypt and here by Abimelech but tho' he had said she was his Sister as Abraham said likewise of Sarah meaning in that latitude of the word usual in those Countries whereby Women were call'd the Sisters of all to whom they were nearly related yet the Providence of God so order'd it that no Attempts should be made to her Dishonour but the King of the Philistines had a great regard and reverence for Isaac and his Wife the Blessing of God was visible in all his Undertakings he became much mightier than the Philistines and therefore they envied him which occasion'd his remove to Beersheba whither Abimelech with his Friends and Attendance came to enter into a strict League and Covenant with him professing that they saw certainly that the Lord that is Jehovah the True God was with him and declaring him to be the blessed of the Lord Gen. xxvi 11 14 16 26. And for the same reason the Philistines had formerly desired to make a Covenant with Abraham saying God is in thee with all that thou dost c. Gen. xxi 22. Esau at the Age of Forty Years marry'd two Wives of the Daughters of the Hittites Gen. xxvi 34. which tho' it grieved Isaac and Rebekah who would have had him marry with their own Kindred yet must give the Hittites further Opportunities of acquainting themselves with the Religion and Worship of the Hebrews but he marries besides a Daughter of Ishmael Abraham's Son Gen. xxviii 9. which confirmed and strengthned the Alliance between true Believers Esau was the Father of the Edomites and of a numerous Off-spring of Dukes or Princes Gen. xxxvi 9. And according to the Custom and Design of the Book of Genesis the Generations descended from Esau had not been so particularly set down unless they had retained the Knowledge and Worship of the True God The Edomites as well as the Moabites and Ammonites were put into possession of their Countrey by the same Divine Power by which the Israelites became possest of the Land of Canaan and the Children of Israel were not to meddle with them Deut. ii 5. Jacob is sent to Padan-Aram to take to Wife one of the Daughters of Laban and with him he abode twenty Years Gen. xxxi 38. and all which he took in hand prospered so that there was the visible Power and Blessing of God in it as Laban confessed Gen. xxx 27. Isaac was not to leave the Land of Canaan but was forbid to remove into Aegypt when there was a Famine in the Land Gen. xxvi 2. and he was not upon any account to return into Chaldaea or to go out of Canaan Gen. xxiv 6 8. but Jacob went out of it when there were enough of Abraham's House besides to keep up a sense of the true Religion among the Canaanites Afterwards God manifested himself to the Aegyptians by a various and wonderful Providence for the Children of Israel dwelt in Aegypt Four hundred and fifty Years till at last by Signs and Wonders and dreadful Judgments by Judgments upon their First-born and upon their Gods Num. xxxiii 4. they were brought out from thence and the nations heard the fame of it and all the earth was filled with the glory of the Lord Num. xiv 15 21. Thus Chaldaea and Aegypt the most famous and flourishing Countreys in those Ages
is translated Carthage by the Septuagint Isa xxiii 6. but is supposed to be Tartessus in Spain though St. Jerom (z) 〈◊〉 in ●● c. 1. 〈◊〉 thought it to be in the Indies And Ophir was as many learned Men think in the Indies beyond the River Ganges in Pegu or at least Solomon's Merchants did traffick with the Indian that came from those Parts others have imagined Ophir to be Zephala or Cephala in Africa towards the Cape of Good-Hope some think it to be Ceylon or Sumatra some are of opinion that it was in America all are agreed that it must be in some very distant part of the World and where-ever it were the Traffick and Dealings which the Israelites had there was a great opportunity to the Heathen to become instructed in the True Religion The Traffick and Voyages by Sea and Expeditions by Land in Solomon's Reign rendred the People of Israel highly renowned and caused their Laws and Customs and Religion to be much observed and enquired into and even the Marriages of Solomon with Pharaoh's Daughter and other Strangers questionless through the Mercy of God might prove an happy occasion of divulging the True Religion and regaining many from Idolatry in Aegypt and other Parts of the World For all his Wives were made Proselytes (a) Maim●●●d de 〈◊〉 §. 1● 1● before he married them as Samson's likewise had been though afterwards they not only fell away to their former Idolatries but seduced Solomon himself into them The Gentiles were so forward to become Proselytes (b) Meim●●d 〈◊〉 in the Reigns of David and Solomon that their Sincerity became suspected and the Jews tell us that the Sanhedrim would admit no Proselytes in the days of David lest they should be induced to it by Fear nor in the days of Solomon lest the Glory of his Kingdom should have been the motive to them to profess the Religion of the Israelites Nevertheless great numbers were received privately by Baptism the Sanhedrim neither rejecting nor admitting them It is the Observation of Theodoret and of St. Jerom upon Exek v. 5. that God placed Jerusalem the Seat of the Jewish Government in the midst of the Nations that it might be a Direction to the Heathen in matters of Religion from whence as from the Centre Light might be communicated to the farther Parts of the Earth But the Divisions and Calamities of the People of Israel the Destruction of their City and Dispersion of their whole Nation contributed as much to the propagation of Religion as their greatest Prosperity could do The Division of the Ten Tribes after the death of Solomon and the erection of the Kingdom of Israel distinct from that of Judah with the many Leagues and Wars which these two mighty Kingdoms had with the Kings of Aegypt and Syria and Babylon and with other Nations could not but exceedingly conduce to the divulging the True Religion in the World and give opportunity to the Prophets to declare their Prophecies and work their Miracles among the Heathen as we find they did in many Instances One of the greatest Cities of the World was converted by Jonah's Preaching Hezekiah being distressed by Sennacherib prayed to God for deliverence out of his hand that all the kingdoms of the earth may know that thou art the Lord God even thou only and his Prayer was answer'd not only in the Deliverance but in the manner of it which was so wonderful that all must know and be astonished at it for that very night the angel of the Lord went out and smote in the camp of the Assyrians an hundred fourscore and five thousand 2 King xix 19. which was the fulfilling of the Prophecy of Isaiah delivered to Hezekiah in a Message to him from God in Answer to his Prayer and afterwards Embassadors came from the King of Babylon to enquire of the Wonder or Miracle that was wrought in his Recovery from his Sickness 2 Chron. xxxii 31. and at last the Captivity of the Jews for Seventy Years in Babylon made their Religion almost as well known there as in Jerusalem it self Jeremiah had foretold the Captivity of the Jews and the Conquest of all the adjacent Countries so long and so plainly before-hand that all the neighbour Nations must be sensible of it as Nebuchadnezzar himself also was for which reason he gave a strict charge concerning Jeremiah to Nebuzaradan the Captain of the Guard who declares the reason of their Captivity to be their sins against the Lord or Jehovah Jer. xl 3. and as the Jews say he became a Proselyte God professes that he had a regard to the Honour of his Name among the Heathen in his Mercies vouchsafed to the Children of Israel or else he had utterly consumed them Ezek. xx 9. and xxxvi 22 23 36. and the Judgments upon the several Nations prophesied against were to this end that they might know him to be the Lord Ezek. xxv 7 17. xxvi 6. xxviii 22 23 24. xxix 6. xxxv 9. xxxvi 23. xxxvii 28. I am a great King saith the Lord of hosts and my name is dreadful among the heathen Mal. i. 14. The Jews in their Captivity are commanded to make an open Declaration against the Heathen Gods and because they understood not the Chaldee Tongue the Prophet Jeremiah supplies them with so much of the Language as might serve them for that purpose Thus shall ye say unto them Jer. x. 11. that is Ye shall speak to them in their own Language and in the words which I now set down to you to bid Defiance to their False Gods Thus did he fulfil his Commission and Character who was sanctified and ordained a Prophet unto the nations Jer. i. 5. And Jeremiah was put to death in Aegypt and Ezekiel in Babylon for appearing against the Idolatry of those Places During the Captivity Jehoiachin was reconciled to the King of Babylon and in great favour with him His throne was set above the throne of the kings that were with him in Babylon 2 King xxv 28. The Jews were in great Esteem and in Places of great Honour and Trust and their Religion was extolled and recommended by Publick Edicts to all under that vast Empire The Almighty Power of God was manifested with Miracles and by the Interpretation of Dreams and Prophecies and his Majesty and Honour was acknowledged and proclaimed in the most publick and solemn manner throughout all the Babylonian Empire at the Command of Princes who were Idolaters and were forced to it by the meer convictions of their own Consciences wrought in them by the irresistable Power of God Dan. ii iii iv v vi Daniel had acquainted Cyrus as Josephus says with the Prophecy of Isaiah in which he was so long before mention'd by Name However the Lord stirred up the Spirit of Cyrus by this or some other means to accomplish the Prophecy which he had made both by Isaiah and Jeremiah concerning the Restoration of the Jews
a Venerable Man of about Sixty six Years of Age of great Prudence and Experience and withal very Eloquent whom he knew and had conversed with was one amongst others who followed Ptolemaeus Lagi after the Battle at Gaza in which he overcame Demetrius Poliorcetes He mention'd likewise that Mosollamus a Jew marching with him when the rest made a stand by reason of a Bird which the Augur said portended ill Luck to them if they should march on shot that Bird in the sight of them all and defended what he had done by Argument And indeed the Jews wanted neither Zeal nor Wit nor Courage upon every occasion to appear in behalf of their own Religion against the Superstitions and Idolatries of the Heathen This Book of Hecataeus was extant in the time of Josephus and he referrs his Reader to it and he appeals to the Letters of Alexander the Great and of Ptolemaeus Lagi and the Kings of Aegypt his Successors in favour of the Jews When Ptolemaeus Lagi (k) Joseph Antiqu. l. 12. c. 1 2. took Jerusalem he transplanted the Jews in great multitudes into Aegypt putting many of them into his Garrisons and allowing them equal Priviledges with the Macedonians by which Encouragement many besides those whom he transported voluntarily went to dwell there And the Captives of that Nation set at liberty by Ptolemaeus Philadelphus were above 110000. And besides the signal Favours and Honours bestowed upon the Jews by Ptolemaeus Philadelphus who likewise caused the Holy Scriptures to be translated into the Greek Tongue which was an exceeding great furtherance to the Propogation of Religion Seleucus Nicanor granted them the freedom of Antioch and of the Cities which he had founded in Asia and the Lower Syria and these Priviledges remained to them till Josephus's time after all which the Jews had done to deserve to be deprived of them Antiochus the Great sent forth his Letters and Edicts which are to be seen in (l) Joseph Antiquit. l. 12. c. 3. Josephus in favour of the Jews more-especially in what related to their Religious Worship And Seleucus Son to this Antiochus after his Father's Example out of his own Revenues bore the Cost belonging to the Sacrisices 2 Mac. iii. 3. Antiochus Epiphanes himself at last under the avenging Hand of God upon him for all his impious Cruelties acknowledged himself punished for his Sacrilege and other Mischiefs committed at Jerusalem 1 Mac. vi 12 13. 2 Mac. ix 17. Antiochus Pius when he besieged Jerusalem (m) Ibid. l. 13. c. 16. not only granted a Truce for Seven Days during the Feast of Tabernacles but sent rich and noble Presents for Sacrifices and the City being delivered into his hands upon honourable Conditions with regard particularly to Religion Hyrcanus accompanied Antiochus in his Parthian Expedition and the Feast of Pentecost falling the Day after the Sabbath Antiochus stopt his Army those two Days for the sake of the Jews The Lacedaemonians claimed (n) 1 Mac. viii xii xiv 2 Mac. xi Joseph Antiqu l. 13. c. 9 13. l. 14. c. 16. Justin lib. 36. c. 3. Kindred with the Jews and both They and the Athenians and Romans enter'd into Leagues with them which from time to time were continued and renewed Josephus mentions a Pillar then standing at Alexandria containing the Priveledges (o) Joseph contr Ap. l. 2. granted to the Jews by Julius Caesar And when no other Religion was tolerated except those established by the Laws of the Empire the Jews only had Allowance for a free Exercise of their Religion even in Rome it self and for this and many other Edicts and Decrees of the Senate in favour of the Jews Josephus (p) Joseph Ant. quit l. 14. c. 16. l. 16. c. 4 5 10. l. i9 c. 4 6. appeals to the Tables of Brass then extant and preserved in the Capitol and other places in which they were engraven The Sufferings and Martyrdoms under the Maccabees and the Resolution and Constancy which they shewed upon all occasions in defence of their Religion rendred the Jews renowned over all Nations and besides their Conquests were very considerable and the Advantages which accrued to Religion by reason of them In the time of Hyrcanus (q) Joseph Antiquit. l. 13. c. 17. all Idumaea embraced the Jewish Religion Aristobulus having conquered great part of Ituraea caused all their Males (r) Ibid. l. 13. c. 19. to be circumcised and to observe the Law of Moses as Strabo testifies Under Alexander Father to Hyrcanus (s) Ibid. l. 13. c. 23. l. 14. c. 3. the Jews took twelve Cities from the Arabians and became possessed of many Cities in Syria Idumaea and Phenicia all which they brought over to the Possession of their own Religion and demolished Pella for refusing to embrace it The (t) See Mr. Mede's Discourse 12. Temple built by Sanballat for Manasses who had married his Daughter was an occasion of the Samaritans leaving their False Gods And after the building of the Temple in Aegypt the Babylonian Talmud says (u) Lightf Harmon p. 205. that the Jews there were double the number of those that came out from thence under Moses The Zeal of the Scribes and Pharisees though they were Hypocrites did exceedingly conduce to the propagation of their Religion for they compassed sea and land to make one Proselyte and so far they were to be commended but then they made him two-fold more the child of hell than themselves Mat. xxiii 15. yet still they taught the necessary Points of Doctrine though in Hypocrisie and with the mixtures of Superstition and our Saviour commands his Disciples to observe and do what they bid them but not to do after their works And it was required of the Fathers of the Sanhedrin (x) Lightf Excercit on 1 Cor. xiii 1. p. 783. that they should understand many Languages that the Sanhedrin might hear nothing by an Interpreter which qualified the Scribes and Pharisees who aspired to that Dignity to be the better able to make Proselytes The Jews were dispersed all over the World but chiefly seated themselves in Rome and Alexandria and Antioch the three chief Cities of the Empire in all which they had great and peculiar Priviledges and in Alexandria they had Magistrates of their own (y) Joseph Antiquit. l. 14. c. 12. and lived under a peculiar Government by themselves Never any other Nation had such various Changes and Revolutions to mix them with the rest of the World and never any People were so industrious and zealous and so succesful in the propogation of their Religion They had their Proseuchae and their Synagogues for Divine Worship and for Reading and Explaining the Scriptures which Men of all Religions were admitted to hear in all places where-ever they dwelt and in Aegypt they had a (z) Joseph Bell. Jud. l. 7. c. 30. Temple like that at Jerusalem built by Onias which continued for the space of Three hundred and forty three Years
till the Destruction of Jerusalem by Titus and in the Synagoges the Scriptures were read in the Greek Tongue which was the most universal Language then in the World Some have affirmed that as much of the Scriptures as was written in Solomon's time was then translated into the Syriac Tongue and there is little doubt (a) Clem. Alexand. Strom. l. 1. Euseb Praepar Evang. l. 13. c. 12. but that at least part of the Bible was translated into Greek before the time of Alexander the Great but the Version of the Septuagint was soon dispersed into all hands which was made at the Command of Ptolemaeus Philadelphus to whom likewise and his Father (b) Euse b Eccl. Hist l. 7. c. ult Aristobulus dedicated an Exposition of the Law of Moses By all these means vast multitudes of Proselytes were made to the Jewish Religion in all Parts of the World What numbers there were at Rome of this Religion we know from the Roman Poets and Historians and we have as good Evidence of the spreading of it in other Places Not to repeat what has been already related nor to mention particular Persons of the greatest Note and Eminency nor particular Cities as Damascus (c) Joseph de Bell. Jud. l. 2. c. 25. where it more remarkably prevailed it is evident what numbers of Persons in all Nations professed this Religion from the incredible Treasures which Crassus found in the Temple of Jerusalem being Ten thousand Talents amassed there by the Summs of Gold sent from all Places by the Jews and such as became Proselytes to their Religion And for the Truth of this Josephus cites Strabo's Authority who says (c) Joseph Antiq. l. 14. c. 12. that the Jews were every where dispersed and every where gained Men over to their Religion and that in Alexandria they had their Ethnaychae or proper Magistrates by whom they were governed And another Proof of the multitudes of Proselytes made to the Jewish Religion may be had from the great numbers assembled (e) Joseph de Bell. Jud. l. 7. c. 17. Act. ii 5. at their Passovers and at the Feast of Pentecost out of every Nation under Heaven Thus mightily prevailed the Religion of the Hebrews till the City and Temple by a Divine Vengeance as (f) Ibid. cap. 24. pag. 979. Josephus often confesses was destroyed and the Law it self with the Utensils of the Temple was carried among the Spoil in Titus's Triumph And when the Jewish Religion had its full Period and Accomplishment the Christian Religion which succeeded in the room of it and was prefigured by it soon spread it self into all corners of the Earth and is at this day preached among all Nations But before I proceed to consider the Propagation of the Christian Religion it may be requisite 1. To produce some Testimonies of the Heathens concerning the Jews and their Religion 2. To shew That there have been always remaining divers Memorials of the True Religion among the Heathen 3. To consider the Authority of the Sybilline Oracles I. As to the Testimony of Heathen Authors it were no more an Objection against what has been alledged though they had taken no notice of the History of the Jews than it can be supposed to be an Objection against the Truth of the Taking of Troy or the Building of Rome that the Scriptures make no mention of either of them The Greek Historians were so ignorant of Foreign Affairs as (g) Joseph contr Ap. l. 1. Josephus has observed that Ephorus one of the best of them thought Spain to be but one City and neither Herodotus nor Thucydides nor any Historian of their Times made any mention of the Romans The Roman Authors are but of a very late date in comparison and the Greeks besides their ignorance in Antiquity and in the Affairs of other Nations are known to have been a vain People who despised all besides themselves accounting them Barbarians and taking little notice of Rome it self before they fell under its Power Yet many of the Heathen Writers as Josephus shews have made famous mention of the Jews though others have given a wrong and malicious Account of them whom he proves to contradict one another and sometimes themselves Some again have omitted the mention of the Jews though they had never so much occasion for it of which he gives a remarkable Instance in one Hieronymus who though he were Governor of Syria and wrote a Book of the Successors of Alexander and lived at the same time with Hecataeus yet never vouchsafed to speak of the Jews of whom Hecataeus wrote a particular Book But the Works of him and of many other Greek Authors are now lost which were written concerning the Jews the Fragments whereof are still to be seen in Josephus Clem. Alexandrinus Eusebius and others Of those whose Works remain Herodotus relating the Victory of Pharoh Necho in the Battle at Megiddo calls Jerusalem Cadytis by a small variation as (h) Light Chorog on St. Mark c. 3. §. 6. Strab. l. 16. Diodor. Sic. l. 1. Plin. Nat. Hist l. 5. c. 14. Tacit. Hist l. 15. Dr. Lightfoot has observed for Kedosha that is the Holy City the usual denomination of that City Strabo mentions Moses and the ancient Jews with commendation Diodorus Siculus names Moses amongst the chief Law-givers of ancient Times Pliny says Jerusalem was the most famous City not only of Judaea but of the whole East Tacitus himself gives this testimony of the Jews That they worshipped the Supreme Eternal Immutable Being But above all Varro (i) S. Aug. Civit. Dei l. 4. c. 31. the learnedest of the Romans much approved their way of Worship as being free from that Idolatry which he could not but dislike in the Heathen Religion And it is generally agreed by all that the Religion of the Jews was received all over the World and as Seneca (k) Ibid. l. 6. c. 11. express'd it Victi victoribus leges dederunt II. There have been always remaining divers Memorials and Remembrances of the True Religion amongst the Heathen The Flood of Noah and the Ark (l) Joseph Antiquit. l. 1. c. 3. were generally taken notice of by Heathen Historians and the Flood of Deucalion was (m) Lucia●● de Dea Syr. plainly transcribed from that of Noah Jove is a plain depravation of the word Jehovah and Diodorus Siculus said (n) Diod. Sic. l. 1. that Moses received his Laws from the God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is another variation from it And this proves the Antiquity of the Heathen Tradition concerning the True God since the Jews of latter times would not speak the name themselves much less communicate it to others Appollus Clarius being consulted to know who the God Jao was answered That he is the Supreme God of all as Macrobius (o) Macrob. Saturn l. 1. c. 18. informs us from Cornelius Labeo which both shews that the Heathen had knowledge of the God Jehovah and that
the Gospel might go into all the earth And it is observable that he found many words in the Brasilian Language taken out of the Greek Tongue Hornius (z) Horn. de Orig. Americ l. 3. c. 2. l. 4. c. 15. owns as every Man else must do that considers it that there are manifest Tokens of the Rites and Doctrines both of the Jewish and Christian Religion among the Americans as of Circumcision Baptism the Trinity the Lord's Supper c. but then he is for bringing the Jews and Christians thither his own way and will have the Jews come in company of the Scythians and the Christian Rites to be brought in with the Turks and Tartars or from Japan and China Though he likewise approves and confirms the Relation which Powel and Hackluyt give of a Colony transplanted into America by Madoc from Wales Several Usages which are observed to be among the Natives by the Missionaries both in the East and West-Indies and to have a near resemblance to their own Rites seem to prove that there have formerly been Christian Monks amongst them rather than that this proceeds as the Missionaries imagined from an ambition that the Devil has to Ape as they say what is done in God's Service or that we may conclude as some Protestants have done a little too hastily that this it self is a sufficient Argument that the Devil is the Author of such Rites because they are found amongst his Worshippers If we consider the vast numbers of Monks in ancient Times in the Eastern Parts of the World who were Men of an active and indefatigable Zeal it may well be supposed that some of them might find the way into those Countreys which have been but lately discovered to the rest of the World It is evident from the unanimous Testimony both of Protestants and Papists that there are manifest Tokens in all Parts of the World that the Christian Religion has been preached amongst them And it must in common Justice be confest that the latter Missionaries have preached the Gospel among the Indians with great zeal and success A King of Ceylon (a) Tavern Voyage de Perse l. 3. c. 4. received Baptism and was very zealous to bring over his Subjects to the Christian Faith and one of their most learned Men became a Christian at the same time but the King was deposed by his Idolatrous Subjects Some of the Kings of Congo (b) Varen de diversis Gent. Relig. id Voyage de Perse c. 14. Osor de rebus Eman. l. 3 8 10. have been converted The King of Monomotapa (c) Taver ibid. reigning A. D. MDCXXXI was a Christian And in Japan (d) Ibid. A. D. MDCXIII there were Four hundred thousand Christians who were all destroyed (e) Varen de Relig. in Regno Japon c. 11. by the Persecution raised through the Covetousness of some Dutch Merchants and their malicious Plots and Contrivances to engross the Trade of those Islands to themselves And indeed by the Accounts which we have of those Parts the Lives of the Europaeans have been so scandalous and so contrary to their Religion that besides the guilt of the sins themselves they have a great deal to answer for that hindrance which they have thereby given to the progress of Christianity among those poor People who have generally shewn a good inclination and forwardness to be instructed and in times of Persecution ●●th from Mahometans and Idolaters even Children have born all sorts of Torments (f) Varen ibid. with wonderful Courage and Patience Several Kings of Japan (g) Varen de Japan c. 6. Semed Hist of China part 2. Bell. Tartar Le Compte p. 480. have been converted And in China many of their principal Mandarines or Governors have been eminent for their zeal in the Christian Religion and though the Chineses are naturally very timorous and cowardly yet in all times of Persecution they have been observed to continue firm and stedfast in the Faith We are told that the Mother the Wife and the Eldest Son of the Emperor of China were formerly converted and that there is lately an Edict publish'd in favour of the Christian Religion in China that a Prince of the Blood is become a Christian and that the Emperor himself has caused a Church to be erected in his Palace and lodges the Missionaries near his own Person And in the West-Indies Cortes wrote to the Emperor That the People of Mechoacan (h) Jos Acost l. 5. c. 22. sent to him for an Account of his Religion being weary of their own for its cruel and bloody Rites It is observable That Christianity has been still professed in those Parts of the World where there has been most Learning and Commerce where they have been most able and have had most opportunties to instruct other Nations To which ●nd the vast extent first of the Greek and Latin and Syriac and since of the Sclavonian and Arabick Tongues has been very advantageous the Scriptures of the New Testament being written in the first and translated into all the rest And though by the Just and Wise Providence of God Mahumetans and Idolaters have been suffered to possess themselves of those Places in Greece Asia and Africa where the Christian Religion formerly most flourished yet there are still such remianders of the Christian Religion amongst them as to give them opportunity to be converted and when their sins shall not hinder to restore the Gospel to those Countries as before For by Mr. Brerewood's Account (i) Brerewood's Enquir c. 10 〈…〉 in the Dominions of the Turk in Europe the Christians make two third parts at least of the Inhabitants and in Constantinople it self he reckons above Twenty Christian Churches and above Thirty in Thessalonica where the Mahometans have or had but Three Mosques Which by (k) Ricaut's Hist of the Ottom Emp. l. 2. c. 11 12. Sir Paul Ricaut's Account of the present state of the Ottoman Empire has not been without very considerable effect For a Sect among the Turks called Haietti hold that Christ is Eternal that he was Incarnate and that he shall come to Judge the World at the Last Day The Students in the Grand Signior's Court generally maintain that Christ is God and the Redeemer of the World and this is a common Tenet in Constantinople the Professors of it are styled Chupmessahi or the Good Followers of the Messiah and some have suffered Martyrdom in maintenance of this Doctrine And the Turkish Soldiers in the Confines of Hungary and Bosnia read the Gospel in the Sclavonian Tongue It is also observed lately by (l) Doctor Prideaux's Life of Mahomet a learned Author that the Christians had better Terms from Mahomet himself than any other of his Tributaries and that there is no Mahometan Countrey where the Christian Religion is not esteemed the best next their own and the Professors of it accordingly respected by them before any other sort of Men that differ
from them In Africa besides the Christians living in Aegypt and in the Kingdom of Congo and Angola the Islands upon the Western Coasts are inhabited by Christians and the vast Kingdom of Habassia or Abassinia supposed to be as big as Germany France Spain and Italy taken together according to Mr. Brerewood's computation is possess'd by Christians And till less than Two hundred Years ago Nubia a Countrey of a great extent lying between the Aequator and the Northern Tropick continued as it 's believed from the Apostles times in the Christian Religion In Asia he says most part of the Empire of Russia the Countries of Circassia and Mengrelia Georgia and Mount Libanus are inhabited only by Christians besides the dispersion of them into other Parts under the denomination of Nestorians Jacobites Maronites and Armenians the last of which are a People exceedingly addicted to Traffick (m) Brerewood's Enquir c. 24. and have great Privileges granted them by the Turks and other Mahometans they are found in multitudes in most Cities of great Trade and are more dispersed than any other Nation but the Jews and the Jacobites are reported to be dispersed into Forty Kingdoms In the Promontory extending it self into the Indian Sea are the Christians of Saint Thomas so called because first converted by him who is believed to lie buried at Maliapour and they have continued in the Christian Religion from his time It must be confess'd that in Mengrelia and other Countries the Doctrines of Religion are much corrupted and their Practice very different from the Profession of Christians but however they retain the Gospel among them and it is every Man 's own fault if he make not a good use of those Means of Salvation which God in his Providence has afforded him Of late the New Testament in the Malayan Tongue and Grotius his excellent Book of the Truth of the Christian Religion in Arabick have been translated and printed at the Charge of the Honourable Mr. Boyle and the first disperst over all the East-Indies where the Malayan Language is used and the latter into all the Countries where Arabick is spoken He also contributed to the Impression of the New Testament which was made by the Turkish Company in the Language of the Turks In America it is notorious that the Christians are sufficiently numerous and have sufficient opportunities to instruct the Natives if they were but as careful to improve them to so good an end rather than in pursuit of their own Gain The summ of all is this Before the Flood Revelations were so frequent and the Lives of Men so long that no Man could be ignorant of the Creation and of the Providence of God in the Government of the World and the Duties required towards him And in the first Ages after the Flood God's Will reveal'd to Noah and the Precept given to him at his coming out of the Ark must be well known to all the surviving World and as soon as the Remembrance of them began to decay and Men to fall into Idolatry Abraham and the other Patriarchs were sent into divers Countries to proclaim God's Commandments and to testifie against the Impiety of Idolaters where-ever they came For to publish the Reveal'd Will of God and make it generally known in the World God was pleas'd to chuse to himself a peculiar People and to send them first out of Mesopotamia into Canaan and upon occasion back again into Mesopotamia and then several times into Aegypt and from thence after they had dwelt there some Hundreds of Years into Canaan again at what time he appointed them Laws admirably fitted and contriv'd for the receiving of Strangers and Proselytes After many signal Victories and after other Captivities they were carry'd away captive to Babylon and were still deliver'd and restor'd by a Wonderful and Miraculous Providence and had vast numbers of Proselytes in all Parts of the known World and many Footsteps and Remainders of the True Religion are found in the remotest Parts of the Earth And when by the just Judgment of God upon the Jews for their Sin in rejecting the Messias they were rejected by him from being his People they were dispers'd throughout the World for a Testimony to all Nations that Moses and the Prophets deliver'd no other thing than what God had reveal'd to them since they continue to maintain and assert those very Books which plainly foretell all that Ruine and Destruction that has befallen them for their Infidelity and Disobedience They are a standing Evidence in all Parts of the World of the Truth of the Christian Religion bearing that Curse which their Fore-fathers so many Ages ago imprecated upon themselves and their Posterity when they caus'd Christ to be crucify'd And the Gospel has by its own Power and Evidence manifested it self to all People dispers'd over the Face of the whole Earth To which might be added That the Mahometans owning so much of the Religion reveal'd both in the Old and New Testament afford some kind of Testimony to the Truth of it in those vast Dominions of which they are possess'd All the most remarkable Dispensations of Providence in the several Changes in the World have had a particular Influence in the Propagation of the True Religion Cyrus Alexander the Great divers of the Roman Emperors and of latter Times Tamerlain and several other Princes were great Favourers of it and the worst of Men and the most unlikely Accidents have contributed towards the Promotion of it If it be Objected That notwithstanding all which has been said great Part of the World are Vnbelievers Let it be consider'd 1. That there is no Nation but has great Opportunities of being converted and it is evident from what has been produc'd concerning the Chinese and the Americans themselves that the Christian Religion had been preach'd among them tho' the Knowledge of it was lost through their own Fault before the late Discoveries of those Parts of the World And as Christ came into the World in the fulness of time so in the fulness of time that is at the most fitting season he reveal'd himself to the several Nations of it God who is infinitely gracious to all and knows the Hearts and Dispositions of all Men might defer the restoring his Gospel to the Chinese for Instance till that very time when he saw them best prepar'd for it And it is remarkable That the Discovery of the Indies happen'd about the time of the Reformation that those poor People might have the Purity as well as the Truth of Religion if Christians had been as little wanting to them in their Charity as God has been in the Disposals of his Providence He stays till they have filled up the measure of their iniquities before he punishes a People and for the same Reasons of Mercy and Goodness he waits for the most proper seasons to impart his Revealed Will to them and to have it preach'd to them before would be only to encrease their
Condemnation And it is not only Just but Merciful for him to with-hold the Knowledge of his Reveal'd Will from those who he forefees would reject it and abuse the Opportunities which should be offer'd them to the Aggravation of their own Guilt and Punishment Especially if it be observ'd 2. That as to particular Persons we have reason to believe that God who by so wonderful a Providence has taken care that every Nation under Heaven might have the True Religion preach'd in it and who has the whole World at his Disposal and orders all things with great regard to the Salvation of Men we have abundant cause to think that he would by some of the various Methods of his Providence or even by Miracle bring such Men to the knowledge of the Truth who live according to their present Knowledge with a sincere and honest Endeavour to improve it When St. Peter was by Revelation sent to Cornelius he made this Inference from it Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons but in every nation he that feareth him and worketh Righteousness is accepted with him Act. x. 34 35. From whence what less can we conclude than that every Man in any part of the World who is sincerely good and pious in the Practice of his Duty so far as it is known to him shall rather by an express Revelation have the rest discover'd to him as in the Instance of Cornelius which gave occasion to these words of S. Peter than that he should be suffer'd to perish for want of a true Faith and sufficient Knowledge of his Duty And it is Just with God to punish those Heathens who sin without any Reveal'd Law for their Sins against Natural Reason and Conscience and for neglecting to use and improve their Reason and to embrace the Opportunities afforded them of becoming Christians We may likewise be certain that besides Natural Reason and Conscience God in his Goodness is not wanting to afford such inward Motions and Convictions of Mind to such of the Heathen as are not wilfully blind and stupify'd by their Vices as may prepare them for the reception of the Gospel which by his Providence he gives them so many Opportunities of becoming acquainted withal And if once they do discern the Defects and Faults of their own Religions which are so grosly against Natural Reason and Conscience they may make enquiry of Christians concerning their Religion as some of the Americans did of Cortes's and the Christians some of them at least however negligent they be in propagating it would never refuse to instruct them in it And it must be remembred that among those who have not receiv'd the True Religion yet many Points are taught and believ'd which had their Original from Revelation as is evident not only of the Mahometans but of several Heathen Nations which Points are so many Steps and Preparatives towards the Reception of the whole Truth if they be not wanting to themselves in pursuing them in their immediate Tendency and Consequences I shall not say That the Merits of Christ and the Salvation of the Gospel do extend to those who in the Integrity of their Hearts dye under an invincible Ignorance of it I believe rather that God suffers no Man so qualify'd and dispos'd to remain in invincible Ignorance But it is sufficient to vindicate God's Justice and Goodness that all Nations have had such Opportunities of coming to the Knowledge of the Truth and great Allowances may be made at the Last Day for the Ignorance and unhappy Circumstances of particular Men. It was well said That when God hath not thought fit to tell us how he will be pleas'd to deal with such Persons it is not fit for us to tell Him how he ought to deal with them But if it be difficult for us now to think how it will please God to deal with the Heathen it would be a thousand times more difficult to conceive how the Gracious and Merciful God could Govern and Judge the World if all Mankind were in the State of Heathens without any Divine Revelation What will become of the Heathen as to their Eternal State is not the Subject of this Discourse nor doth it concern us to know some of them will have more to plead for themselves in point of ignorance than others can have and they are in the hands of the Merciful Creator and Saviour of Mankind and there we must leave them But it must be acknowledged that it is much more agreeable to the Goodness and Mercy of God to reveal his Will and to give so many Opportunities to the World to be instructed in it though never so many should neglect the Means of Salvation than it is to suppose him to take no care to reduce Mankind to the sense and practice of Vertue and Religion but to let them continue in all manner of Idolatry and Wickedness without giving them any warning against it I have not spoken in secret in a dark place of the earth Look unto me and be ye saved all the ends of the earth for I am God and there is none else Come ye near unto me hear ye this I have not spoken in secret from the beginning from the time that it was there am I Isa xlv 19 22. xlviii 16. Having proved That the Scriptures want nothing requisite to a Divine Revelation in regard either of the Antiquity or Promulgation I proceed to shew That they have sufficient Evidence both by Prophecies and Miracles in proof of their Authority This Evidence depends upon Matter of Fact which concerns either the Prophecies and Miracles themselves in their several circumstances as we find them stand Recorded or the Lives and Personal Qualifications of those by whom they were performed or by whom they are related in the Scriptures For if we can be assured both that they are truly related and that if they were done as they are related they could proceed from none but a Divine Power we have all the Evidence for the Truth of the Scriptures that can be had for a Revelation CHAP. III. Of Moses and Aaron THat Moses was a very Great and Wise Man is related by several of the most eminent Heathen Writers and I think it has never been denied by any Man But it is no less evident that he was likewise a very Good and Pious Man He frequently declares his own Failings and Infirmities Exod. iii. 11. iv 1 10 13. Num. xi 10. xx 12. xxvii 14. and never speaks any thing tending to his own Praise but upon a just and necessary occasion when it might become a prudent and modest Man especially one Divinely Inspired For all the Praise of such an one doth not terminate in himself but is attributed to God whose Instrument and Servant he is and in such cases where God's Honour is concerned it was a Duty to set forth the Favour and Goodness of God towards him though some Honour did redound
Marcellin b. xxiii c. 1. Heathen Historian who was then living and wrote the History of those times and has shewn himself in no respect over favourable to the Christians but was a Soldier under Julian and had no inclination to say any thing that might seem to diminish his Character The Judgments also which befell several of the greatest Persecutors of the Christian Religion were so miraculous and so terrible as to extort a confession from some of them of God's Justice in their Punishment and to force them to re-call their persecuting Edicts and change them for others in favour of Christianity (h) Euseb Hist lib. viii c. 17. ix c. 10. Lactant de Mortib Persecut c. xxxiv 49. The Edicts of Maximianus and Maximin to this purpose are to be seen in Eusebius and (i) Hieron in Hab. c. iii. the Judgment upon Julian was so sudden and so remarkable that some of the Heathen cavilled that the God of the Christians had not shewn that Mercy and forbearance which they reported of him in it And when the Power of Miracles which came down on the day of Pentecost upon the Apostles and was continued in the Church after them thus manifested it self in opposition to the pretences both of the Jews and Heathens in such a manner as must provoke them to make all the discoveries they possibly could concerning it when it thus triumphed over all the Gods of the Heathens whilst its poor and persecuted Professors were under the feet of the Heathen Emperors and lay continually exposed to their cruelties and at the peril of their Lives proffered in publick Apologies by a miraculous Power or as the Apostle speaks by the Power and Demonstration of the Spirit to prove their own Religion true and theirs salse and its cruelest Persecutors were by miraculous Judgments forced to become its Protectors this was all that could be desired towards the fulfilling the Promise of our Saviour to his Apostles that they should become his Witnesses to all Nations But III. The Gospel could not have been thus propagated unless this Power of the Holy Ghost had been still further manifest by the courage and resolution and patience of the Apostles under their sufferings Our Saviour tells them that they should receive power after that the Holy Ghost was come upon them to become witnesses unto him both in Jerusalem and in all Judaea and in Samaria these were the places where our Saviour himself had wrought his Miracles and where he had been hated and persecuted and at last crucified and there is reason to believe that the Apostles went not from Jerusalem and the parts adjacent (k) Euseb Hist lib. ● o. 18. till twelve years after his Ascention and when they had testified his Resurrection and Preached his Gospel to the Jews their work was not yet an end but they were to be his Witnesses unto the uttermost parts of the Earth and even thither several of them went fearing no dangers and being discouraged at no sufferings There is a natural boldness and courage in some men by which they are often carried both to do and to endure a great deal more than others but it was not so with the Apostles they were naturally very timorous and faint hearted they all forsook their Master and fled when he was first apprehended and then were very backward to believe his Resurrection and when they and the rest of the Disciples were convinced of it they did not preach is to others but after he had been seen of them forty days and discoursed with them of the things pertaining to the Kingdom of God they still had mistaken notions and expectations concerning it when they therefore were come together they asked of him saying ●ord wilt thou at this time restore again the Kingdom to Israel And when Christ was taken up from them into Heaven they stood gazing up after him not knowing what to think of it till two Angels admonished them that it was in vain for them to stand looking thus any longer and after his Ascention they staid ten days before they ventured to publish any thing of what had come to pass till on the day of Pentecost in a visible and audible manner the Holy Ghost descended upon them and quite changed their temper and of the most timorous made them the most couragious and resolute inspiring them with a Divine Vigor and presence of mind For of all their Miracles few seem to have been more wonderful than that firmness and constancy of mind which men so low and mean and abject and before so fearful as the Apostles were now shewed upon all occasions When our Saviour spoke to these his poor Disciples and commanded them to go and teach all Nations Matt. xxviii 19. it was such a command as no King nor Law-giver ever presumed to give in the height of all his Power and Greatness and when God himself sent Moses to the Children of Israel only Moses feared the success and would fain have declined the Message And how might the Disciples have replyed to our Saviour how shall we Preach to the Romans and dispute with the Graecians and discourse with the most remote and barbarous Nations who have been bred up in the knowledge only of our own Native Tongue How can we compel all Nations to forsake the worship of the Gods of their several Countries and to observe all things whatsoever we are commanded to teach them With what force of Eloquence are we fitted for such a design What hope can we have to succeed in an attempt to set up Laws in opposition to the Laws established for so many Ages in behalf of their own Gods What strength can we have to overcome such difficulties and to accomplish such an Enterprize But they made no objections our Saviour had conversed with them forty days after his Resurrection and now tells them that all Power is given unto him in Heaven and in Earth and he commands them not to depart from Jerusalem but wait for the promise of the Father which saith he ye have heard of me Acts i. 4. And when the Holy Ghost was come they were endued by him with a courage and resolution almost as wonderful as the Miracles they wrought to perperform the great work which lay before them they were not in the least daunted at any dangers or torments or deaths but went on courageously in their Duty by the power and assistance of the Holy Ghost by whom they were enabled to bring the world to the obedience of the Gospel of Christ They opposed themselves to all the assaults of Men and Devils Nothing could now discourage them who before were so timorous and unbelieving the coming of the Holy Ghost down upon them wrought a mighty change in them who were to work as great an alteration in all the world besides St. Peter standing with the Eleven lift up his voice he spoke with wonderful Resolution and the rest stood by to bear witness to
they had been never so vicious and profligate before The Christians are represented as an innocent devout and charitable sort of men by Pliny Lucian and Julian the Apostate himself Plin. Epist ad Trajan lib. 10. Epist 97. Lucian de Morte Peregrini Julian Epist 44. by those who had most narrowly enquired into their Doctrines and Practices and were worst affected to them And by these means the Christians became as so many Lights in the world to guide and direct others in the ways of Vertue for by their example and doctrine they soon reformed even the Heathen world to a great degree Morality was taught by the Philosophers in much greater perfection than ever it had been before and they became so much ashamed of the grossness of their Idolatrous worship that they sought out all arts to refine and excuse it And those vices which made up so great a part of their Idolatrous Mysteries appeared too abominable to pass any longer for Religion The Oracles soon ceased and the seducing Spirits confessed that they were hindred from giving out their Answers by the Power of Christ and all that Julian the Apostate could do was ineffectual to bring the Heathen Oracles into reputation again These are things before insisted upon and so notorious in History that they cannot be denied to be solely owing to the Power and Influence of the Christian Religion I shall mention but one instance more and that is the barbarous cruelty of the Heathen Religions which the Gospel has delivered the world from For they were wont to offer up innocent Men and Children in sacrifice to their false Gods and that frequently and in some places daily and in times of great danger and upon extraordinary occasions they sacrificed so great numbers of men at once that it would be incredible if we had not the Authority of the best Historians for the truth of it And this custom of sacrificing men to their Gods prevailed not only here in Britain and in other Countrys which were accounted barbarous but all over Greece and in Rome it self It may well seem strange to us now that such a practice should so generally prevail in the world yet nothing is more certain from all History than that it did prevail and that men were with difficulty brought off from it For when Mankind was thus cruelly tyrannized over by bloody Daemons nothing but the omnipotent mercy of God could rescue them And for this purpose the Son of God was manifested that he might destroy the works of the Devil 1 John iii. 8. which he soon did Beasts and Idols were no longer worshipped and men were no longer made Sacrifices when once Christianity began to appear in its full power and efficacy in the world The plain and humble Doctrine of him that was laid in a Manger and died upon a Cross was in a short time more effectual to reform Mankind than all the Precepts of Philosophers and the Wisdom and Power of Lawgivers had ever been Those Enemies to their own Souls who are so fond of little cavils against the Gospel as if they were resolved not to be saved by it yet owe the happiness of this present Life in great measure to its influence they would not have been so safe in their Bodies and Estates nay perhaps they might have been sacrificed to some cruel Daemon long before this if that Religion which they resolve to despise but will not be at the pains to understand had not been believed by wiser and better men Of so great advantage has the Gospel been to those who will not be reclaimed and converted by it it has destroyed the works of the Devil and has dispossest him of that Tyranny which he held over mankind it has made the unconverted world less vicious and has banished all the profess'd Patrons and Deities of wickedness from amongst men it has made Idolatry less practised and reduced it to narrower bounds confining it to the remoter parts of the Earth and every where upon the first approach of the Gospel the evil Spirits are disarmed of their power and flee away before it as we learn from the History of Lapland and other Countries So general a Blessing is the Gospel of Christ that even unbelievers are the better for it in this world tho they exclude themselves from the benefit of it in the next And the Christian is the only Religion against which the common objection concerning the prejudices of Education in favour of it cannot be urged for as it first prevailed in the world by conquering all the prejudices of Education so it still maintains it self against all the opposition that corrupt nature and a vicious Education can make to it Indeed it may seem a needless thing to have been thus large in the proof the excelleney of the practical Doctrine contained in the Scriptures when God knows this is the greatest exception that most men have against them and if the precepts were not so strict and holy but they might be allowed to live in their sins half the evidence we have for the Authority of the Scriptures would satisfy them VII The highest Mysteries of the Christian Religion are not merely speculative but have a necessary relation to practice for the advancement of Piety and Vertue amongst men As there is nothing in the practical Duties taught and enjoyned by the Scriptures but what is most excellent and worthy of God and which has raised and improved the Nature of man beyond what could have been attained to without it so the speculative Doctrines have as evident Characters of the Wisdom and Goodness of God They all tend to the advancement of our Nature to make us better more wise and more happy and are not designed to gratify a vain and useless curiosity but to excite in us the Love of God and a care and concernment for our own happiness They set before us the Original and Creation of all things the innocence in which man was first created and God's love and compassion to him after his Fall how the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost are concerned in our Redemption that the Father sent his Son that the Son was born that he lived a despised and persecuted Life and at last underwent for us a most shameful and grievous death that he rose again and ascended into Heaven and there continually interceeds for us and that he sent the Holy Ghost the Comforter who supports and assists us under all temptations and dangers in our way thither and will if we be not wanting to our selves safely conduct us to Heaven there to reign with Christ in Eternal Bliss and Glory both of Body and Soul but if we will be disobedient and obstinate to our own ruine we must be eternally tormented with the Devil and his Angels The Apostles who without Learning or Philosophy taught the most sublime and useful Truths more plainly than the wisest Philosophers ever had done must derive their knowledge from
that their most ancient Books were in Hieroglyphicks which are not expounded by any who lived nearer than MDCC years to the first Author of them that the numbers in computation are sometimes mistaken or that Months are put for Years But of what Antiquity or Authority soever their first Writers were there is little or no credit to be given to the books now remaining since that general destruction of all ancient Books by the Emperor Xi Hoam ti who lived but about two hundred years before Christ he commanded upon pain of death all the Monuments of Antiquity to be destroyed relating either to History or Philosophy especially the Books of Confucius and killed many of their Learned men so that from his time they have only some fragments of old Authors left The Chinese are a people vain enough and love to magnify themselves to the Europeans which makes them endeavour to have it believed that their Antiquities are sufficiently entire notwithstanding this destruction of their Books and for the same reason they described the Emperor's Observatory as the most compleat and the best fitted for the uses of Astronomy that could be imagined but upon the view it appeared very inconsiderable and the Instruments were found useless and new ones were placed in their room made by the direction of Father Verbiest This people after all their boasts of skill in Astronomy were not able to make an exact Calendar and their Table of Eclipses were so uncorrect that they could scarce foretel about what time that of the Sun should happen And in a Petition which the Emperor of China in favour it seems to the Missionaries had privately drawn up to be presented by them to himself in publick it is said that Father Adam Schaal made it known to all the Court that the Rules of the Coelestial Motions established by the ancient Astronomers of China were all false And not only the common people of China but the chief Mandarines are so ignorant and superstitious that when they see the Sun or Moon under an Eclipse with Sacrifices and other Rites and with great noise and clamor they apply themselves to rescue them from the Dog or Dragon which they imagine is like to devour them So little credit is to be given to the pretences which the several Nations among the Heathens have made to Antiquity without any ground from History but upon wandring discourses of observations in Astronomy which they had little or no skill in And it has been made evident by divers learned men that the most ancient and the very best of the Heathen Gods were but Men whom the Scriptures mention as worshippers of the True God such as No●h Joseph Moses c. CHAP. II. Of the Defect in the Promulgation of the Heathen Religions THe Propagation of the several Religions profest among the Heathens has been very inconsiderable For they were never extant in Books to be publickly read and examined but their Mysteries were kept secret and concealed from the world and all the knowledge the people had of them was from the Priests Every Country had its peculiar Deities and ways of Worship which were seldom received or known but in those places where they were first set up The (a) Valer-Max de Peregrina Relig. rejecta lib. 1. c. 3. Romans rejected many foreign Religions as abominable and none of their Religions ever prevailed but where they had the temporal Power to uphold them And they lost ground daily by the propagation of the Gospel whilst the greatest part of the Empire made it their business to oppress it and to maintain the Heathen Religions against it It is to be observed that the Christian Religion is at this day Preached in all parts of the Heathen world and has been ever since its first propagation as the Jewish Religion was before but where Christianity has prevailed Heathenism has been never able to maintain its ground and there are hardly any but Christians excepting some few Jews to be found in Christian Countries which makes a great abatement in the disproportion that Heathenism in general may seem to have in its numbers above Christianity But if we examine the particular Religions of the Heathens there is no comparison and the only thing here to be enquired into is whether any particular Religion of the Heathens exceed or equal the Christian Religion in point of Promulgation for who ever can imagine that all or any great number of the Heathen Religions are of Divine Revelation must suppose God to reveal contradictions The Question before us is not whether Heathens are more numerous than Christians but whether any of their Religions has been as fully promulged as the Christian One Herald is enough to promulge a Law to many thousands the City of Nineve was converted by one Prophet and there is perhaps no Nation in the world but has more Christians in it than the first Preachers of the Gospel were CHAP. III. The Defect of the Prophecies and Miracles of the Heathen Religions IT cannot be denied by any man who is not resolved to reject the Authority of all History but that many wonders have been done by Magicians and that many things have been foreshown and foretold among Heathens by Dreams and Prodigies and Oracles which did actually come to pass but then all that can be gathered from hence is that there are invisible Powers and that Devils and wicked Spirits are able to do more than men can do and to know more than men can know for which reason in former Ages there was no more doubt made whether there be Spirits than whether there be men in the world for they were continually sensible of the Operations and Effects of invisible Beings which made them exceedingly prone to Idolatry but not enclined to Atheism And the case is the same now in Heathen Countries where Apparitions and Delusions of evil Spirits are affirmed by all Writers to be very frequent But if at any time evil Spirits by their subtilty and experience and knowledge of affairs in the World did foretel things which accordingly came to pass they were things that happened not long after and commonly such as themselves did excite and prompt Men to Thus when the conspiracy against Caesar was come just to be put in Execution and the Devil had his Agents concerned in it he could foretel the time and place of his Death But it had been foretold to Pompey Crassus and Caesar himself before as (a) Tull. de Divin lib. ii Tully informs us from his own knowledge that they should all die in their Beds and in an honourable old Age. Some Oracles might possibly take their Answers from the Scriptures as that of Jupiter Hammon concerning Alexander's Victories if it were not meerly a piece of flattery which proved true by chance Evil Spirits might likewise be able to inform Men at a great distance of Victories the same day they were won as it is related (b) Ib. of several and in
would recover he died while the Answers were reading that foretold his Recovery For the sins of Men against natural Conscience and the contempt of the Divine Revelations made to Mankind and so often promulged amongst all Nations God might permit the Devil to delude the World with such Signs and Predictions as either were indeed true or could not be discerned to be false but by the Doctrines and Practices which they were brought to countenance and establish There is no doubt but that evil Spirits may be able to delude and impose upon men and to do many things by their sagacity and cunning which may be above the power of man not only to perform but to understand or find out but their Miracles were never wrought to confirm any sound and useful Doctrine nor had they been plainly foretold by ancient Prophecies as the Miracles of our Saviour and his Apostles had been And the power by which our Religion was attested and established was so much superiour to any power in the Heathen Gods that when they were adjured by Christians they were forced to confess themselves to be wicked and seducing Spirits as the Primitive Christians declare in their writings and appeal to the Heathens of their own times for the truth of it and undertake upon pain of death to prove it before them This Tertullian undertakes in (n) Tertul Apol. c. 23. his Apology as I have before observed written to the Emperor and Senate of Rome or at least to the proconsul of Afric and the Governours of the several Cities and Provinces And St. Cyprian affirms the like in his Treatise to Demetrianus a Judge of Carthage or as some think the Pro-consul to the same purpose likewise speak Origen Minutius Foelix and others of the Primitive Christians And we cannot imagine that men of common sense would ever have made such publick and repeated Appeals if their pretences had been false to the hazard of their own lives and the utter disgrace and extirpation of their Religion which they endeavoured to plead for by such confident and bold discourses so easie to be disproved if they had not been true Men who have the wealth and power of the world on their side may perhaps sometimes make large boasts and high pretences when they can easily hinder others from bringing them to the Test but men that had all the power and policy of the Empire against them would never have offered any thing of this Nature in defence of their Religion unless they had been able to make it good to the faces of their worst Enemies to whom their Apologies were directed CHAP. IV. The Defect in point of Doctrine in the Heathen Religions IT is undeniable that the Doctrines of all the Heathen Religions have been wicked and contrary to the Unity and Goodness and Purity of God and to the vertue and happiness of Mankind This might be made out at large by particulars as I. The Theology of the Heathens was so confused and absurd that the only Evasion which the Philosophers could find who undertook the defence of Paganism against Christianity was to expound their Theology by Allegories but this Philo (a) E●se● praepar lib. i. c. 9 10. Biblius censures as absurd and maintains that it was a mere abuse and innovation in their Divinity in proof of which he alledges the authority of Sanchoniathan and Eusebius besides makes good the charge (b) Magnam molestiam suscepit minime necessariam primus Zeno post ●●eanthes deinde Chrysippus commentitiarum balarum red●ere rationem Ci● de Nat. Deor. lib. iii. Zeno first begun this way of Allegorizing in which he was followed by Cleanthes Chrysippus and other Stoicks (c) Tertull. ad Na● lib. ii c. ● Aug. Civ De● 〈◊〉 6. c. 5. Varro makes three sorts of Heathen Theology in the Fabulous invented by the Poets The Physical or that of the Philosophers and the Civil or Popular being such as the several Cities and Countries had set up (d) Euseb praepar lib. 4. c. 5. The Greek Theology was thus distinguished 1. God who rules over all 2. The Gods who were supposed to govern above the Moon 3. The Daemons whose jurisdiction was in the Air below it and 4. The Heroes or Souls of dead men who were imagined to preside over Terrestrial affairs which gives some account of the prodigious multitude of their Gods (e) Hesiod oper Dier lib. i. v. 250. whereof Hesiod computes thirty thousand hovering in the Air unless he be to be understood of an indefinite number Orpheus reckoned but 365 (f) Theop ad Autol. lib. iii. and at his death in his Will asserted only one (g) Tertul Apol. c. 14. Gages survey of the W. Indies c. 12. Varro reckoned up three hundred Jupiters and the Gods of Mexico as the Indians reported to the Spaniards were two thousand in number Varro Tully and Seneca and most sober and discreet men were ashamed of the Heathen Gods and believed that there is but one God to which purpose the verses of Valerius Soranus (h) Aug. de Civ Dei lib. iv c. 31. vii 9. are produced and expounded by Varro The worship of their Gods and of their Images or Idols was so gross amongst the ancient Heathen and is to this day in China and in both the Indies that one would almost think it impossible for men to be so far deluded by the Devil they worshiped not only the Ghosts of dead men but Birds and Beasts and creeping things and the Devil himself under Images of such hideous forms and shapes as are frightful to look upon The wiser Heathens were ashamed of these Idolatries (i) Aug. Civ Dei lib. iv c. 31. and Varro particularly commends the Jews for using no Images in their Divine Worship which he fays were not in use at Rome till above one hundred and seventy years after the Foundation of the City (k) Plut. in vit Numae for Numa the contriver of their Religion forbad Images which makes it the more strange that the (l) Cic. de Nat. Deor lib. iii. de legib lib. ii Romans should afterwards erect Temples and Altars to the most unlikely things to a Fever and to ill Fortune as the (l) Cic. de Nat. Deor lib. iii. de legib lib. ii Athenians did to contumely and Impudence but it is still more amazing that they should deify the worst of men the very Monsters and reproaches of Mankind and whilst the Christians suffered for refusing Adoration to their Emperors they had divine Honours paid them by the gravest Heathens such as (m) Quint Inst lib. Prooem Quinctilian not only through fear of death but out of compliment and base flattery 2. All manner of Debauchery and Lewdness made up so great a part of the Heathen Religion that it is too shameful and too notorious to relate (n) Euseb Praepar lib. ii c. ult ex Dionys Halica●● lib. ii The Romans when they received
indeed whatever the Original of the Heathen Philosophy were whether from their Gods or from themselves if the Precepts of Philosophy amongst the Heathens were a sufficient Rule of good Life there may seem to have been little or no necessity for a Divine Revelation But I shall prove 1. That the Heathen Philosophy was very defective and erroneous 2. That whatever was excellent in it was owing to the Revelations contained in the Scriptures 3. That if it had been as excellent and as certain as it can be pretended to be yet there had been great need of a Divine Revelation 1. The Heathen Philosophy was very defective and erroneous It was desective in point of Authority Socrates though he would be thought to be inspired or supernaturally assisted gave Men only his own word for it Pythagoras indeed pretended both to Prophecies and Miracles but he was a great Magician in the opinion both of (a) Xenoph Epist ad Aeschinem Plutarch in Numâ Xenophon and Plutarch and therefore whatever he did or foretold must be ascribed to that Power which as it has been before declared the Devils may have to do strange things and to know things done at a distance or some time after and his Predictions and Miracles even as they are related by Jamblichus were such as that a bare recital of them were enough to confute any Authority which could be claimed by them His Impostures may be seen in Diogenes Laertius And (b) Arist Rhet. l. iii. c. 17. Aristotle says Epimenides foretold nothing whatever others relate of him And as the Philosophers had no Divine Authority for what they delivered so their own was but of small account they were generally rather Men of Wit and Humour than of sound Doctrine or good Morals And whoever reads the Lives of the Philosophers written by Diogenes Laertius and the Lives of the Caesars by Suetonius would believe the World might have been as soon reformed by the one as the other As to the Philosophers who after the Christian Religion appeared in the World pretended to Miracles it is a hard matter to think the Writers of their Lives in earnest when they relate them For a Man may as well believe the Fables of Aesop or Lucian to be true History as the Stories in the Life of Apollonius Tyanaeus written by Philostratus or those in the Life of Isidorus written by Damascius an abstract whereof we have left preserved (c) Phot. Cod. ccxiii in Photius The Heathen Philosophy was defective likewise in point of Antiquity and Promulgaon Philosophy as far as we have any account of it was but a late thing so it is styled in Tully (d) Tull. de Divin lib. i. neque ante Philosophiam patefactam quae nuper inventa est (e) Apud Lactant. de fals sapient c. 16. Seneca computes the rise of it to be less than a thousand years before his own time but the moral and useful part of Philosophy had no ancienter Original than Socrates And Philosophy of all kinds has always been a matter of Learning and confined to learned Men There never was any one Nation of Pythagoraeans or Platonists or Stoicks or Aristotelians the greatest part of the Nations of the World never heard so much as of the Names of the most celebrated Philosophers and know nothing at all of their Doctrine That philosophy was defective in its Doctrines is notorious For as Lactantius observes the very Name of philosophy invented by Pythagoras who yet would be thought to have had some supernatural assistance implies a confession of Ignorance or imperfection of their Knowledge and a profession only to search after Wisdom And (f) Diog. Laert. in Pythag. Jemblich vit Pythag Pythagoras gave this very reason why he styled himself a Philosopher Because no Man can be Wise but God only and yet this vain Man sometimes pretended himself to be a God Socrates was the first of all the Philosophers that applied himself to the study of Morality and (*) Tull. Acad. Qu. lib. i. he who first undertook to render philosophy useful and beneficial to Mankind professed to know nothing at all certainly but to disprove the Errors of others not to establish or discover Truth In which he was followed by Plato Vid. Diog. Laert. in Pyrrhon and before him Democritus Anaxagoras Empedocles and almost all the ancient Philosophers agreed in this tho they agreed in few things else that they could attain to no certain knowledge of things So that as Tully says Arcesilas was not the Founder of a new Academy or Sect of Philosophers who professed to doubt of all things for he taught no more than what the ancient Philosophers had generally taught before him unless it were that Socrates profess'd to know his own ignorance of things but Arcesilas would not own himself certain of so much as that Indeed the notions of Philosophy were so little convincing even in the plainest matters that many of the greatest Wits took up in Sceptiscim or little better No man had studied all the Hypotheses of Philosophy more or understood them better or had better explained them than Tully and yet at last all concluded in uncertainty as he often professes the like may be said of Varro Cotta and others The Doctrine of Philosophy concerning God and Providence and a Future State was very imperfect and uncertain as Socrates himself declared just before his death but what could be certain to him that profest to doubt of every thing (g) Aug. de Civ l. 19. c. 1. Varro computed near three hundred Opinions concerning the Summum Bonum they were so far from being able to give any certain rules and directions for the Government of our Lives that they could by no means agree in what the chief happiness of men consists or what the aim and design of our Actions ought to be Plato taught the lawfulness and expediency of mens having their Wives in common and both Socrates and Cato must hold a community of Wives lawful as we learn from their Practice for they lent out their Wives to others as if it had been a very generous and friendly Act and the very heighth and perfection of their Philosophy (h) Alex. ab Alex. lib. l. c. 24. It was a practice both among the Grceks and Romans to part with their Wives to other men though Mercer thinks the Romans were divorced from their Wives before others took them because Cato is blamed for taking his Wife again after the death of Hortensius without the solemnity of a new Marriage Fornication was so far from being disallowed by the Heathens that it was rather recommended (h) Horat. Serm. lib. i. sat 2. Cic. pro. M. Coelio as a remedy against Adulteries by Cato himself Many of the Philosophers held self-murther lawful and did themselves set an example of it to their Followers The exposing of Children to be starved or otherwise destroyed was practised amongst the most civilized Heathen Nations
but as if that were not enough he has taken care to insert such particulars concerning himself as to suffer no man to be ignorant of the Spirit and Temper by which he was guided in penning it He blasphemously introduceth God thus speaking to him (a) Alcor c. xxxiii O Prophet we permit thee to know the Women to whom thou hast given Dowry the Women Slaves which God hath given thee the Daughters of thine Vnkles and of thine Aunts that have abandoned with thee the company of the wicked and the true believing Wife that shall be given thee if thou wilt marry her and that she be not the Wife of a true Believer It seems he gave himself the liberty to take away the Wives of any that were not of his Religion Thou shalt retain whom of thy Wives thou shalt desire to retain and shalt repudiate such as thou shalt desire to repudiate and shalt lye with them that shall please thee By this means his Family of Wives became pretty numerous some say they were fifteen others say one and twenty beside Concubines and therefore it was fit he should take some care to keep them true to him and so he bespeaks them after this manner (b) Ib. Oh! Ye Wives of the Prophet Such of you as shall be unchaste shall be punished doubly more than other Women this is a thing easy to God Such among you as shall obey God and his Prophet and shall do good works shall be rewarded more than other Women an exceeding great reward is prepared for you Oh ye Wives of the Prophet Ye are not like other Women of the World fear God and believe not in the discourse of such as have a design to seduce you speak with civility abide in your Houses go not forth to make your Beauty appear and to make a shew as did the ignorant of old This explains what was mentioned before of a Revelation Mahomet pretended to have concerning something that one of his Wives was to say to him he had a mind to make them believe that he knew whatever they did or said that so he might keep them in a we that they might not dare to prove false to him His Pride is evident in this which follows (c) Ib. Ye that believe enter not into the Houses of the Prophet without permission except at the hour of Repast and that by chance and without design if ye are invited enter with freedom when ye shall have taken your repast depart out of the house and tarry not to discourse one with another this molesteth the Prophet he is ashamed to tell you the truth But this is not all his number of Wives made him incurably jealous and therefore he adds you ought not to importune the Prophet of God neither to know his Wives this would be a most enormous sin The fierceness of Mahomet's Spirit may be seen by this one saying (d) Ib. ic xxii He that is angry that God giveth Succour and Protection to Mahomet in this World let him tye a Cord to the Beam of his House and hang himself he shall see if his choler will be allayed It is notorious that he set up his New Doctrine in oppressing his own Country-men who would not submit to his Imposture first and in Rebellion against the Emperor Heraclius then at War with the Persians afterwards and his Alcoran is fit only for a Saracen Camp Preaching Lust to his followers but blood and destruction towards all others This may satisfie any Man that there is nothing in the Author of the Mahometan Religion nor in the Religion it self which may incline him to believe it to be of Divine Revelation But whoever would know more of this vile Imposture may see it fully displayed in the Life of Mahomet lately published by the Learned Dr. Prideaux THE Reasonableness and Certainty OF THE Christian Religion PART IV. CHAP. I. That there is as great certainty of the Truth of the Christian Religion as there is of the Being of God FROM what has been discoursed the Truth of the Christian Religion is evident by all the arguments by which any Religion can possibly be proved to be Divine and if there be any such thing as true Religion the Christian Religion must beit and if this be made appear it is all that need be said in defence of the Christian Religion to any one but an Atheist The Scriptures are defective in nothing that is requisite in a Divine Revelation but have all that can be required in the highest degree to instance here only in Miracles and in those only of our Saviour and his Apostles Our Saviour wrought his Miracles in the midst of his Enemies and extorted a Confession from the Devils themselves of his Divine Power And if the Apostles had not been well assured and absolutely certain of his Resurrection they would never have had the confidence and the folly for it could have been no less to maintain so soon after his Death in Jerusalem the City where he was Crucify'd that he was risen from the Dead they would never have chosen that above all places to Preach this Doctrine and work their Miracles in if they had not been true at least they would never have done it at the great and solemn Feast of Pentecost to provoke the Jews to expose them to all the World for Impostors no they would have taken time to have laid their design with some better appearance and contrivance to be sure they would have avoided Jerusalem as much as they could and above all times at so solemn a Festival as that of Pentecost they would have gone rather to the remotest corners of the Earth 〈◊〉 have told their story than have run the hazard of such a discovery But when they stood the Test of all that the Jews could say or do to them when in that very City where he had been so lately Crucify'd they told the Jews to their face and before that numerous concourse of People which was then met together at Jerusalem that they were Murtherers that they murther'd their Messias but that he was risen from the Dead and that by vertue of his Resurrection they spoke those Languages and did those Works which they then saw and heard This was plain and open dealing and there could be no deceit in it if any thing of this could have been disproved they had been for ever silenced but their worst enemies were so far from being able to disprove what they said that about three thousand Converts were made on the day of Pentecost The innocent and Divine Life of our Saviour the holiness and excellency of his Doctrine the simplicity and meekness and constancy of his Disciples the continuance of Miracles for several Ages in the Church the wonderful Propagation of the Gospel by a few poor ignorant despised and persecuted Men every passage every circumstance in the whole dispensation of the Gospel is full of evidence in proof of it
But thus much in this place shall suffice all particulars having been largely insisted upon in their proper places And since as sure as there is a God there must be a Revealed Religion if any Man will dispute the Truth of the Christian Religion let him instance in any other Religion that can make a better Plea and has more certainty that it came from God let him produce any other Religion that has more visible Characters of Divinity in it and we will not scruple to be of it but if it be impossible for him to shew any such as has been proved then he ought to be of this since there must be some Revealed Religion and if that Religion which has more evidence for it than any other Religion can be pretended to have and all that it could be requisite for it to have supposing it true and which it is therefore impossible to discover to be false if it were so If this Religion be not true God must be wanting to Mankind in what concerns their eternal Interest and Happiness he must be wanting to himself and to his own Attributes of Goodness Justice and Truth And therefore he that upon a due examination of all the Reasons and Motives to it will not be a Christian can be no better than an Atheist if he discern the consequence of things and will hold to his own Principles for there can be no Medium if we rightly consider the Nature of God and of the Christian Religion but as sure as there is a God and nothing can be more certain the Gospel was revealed by him CHAP. II. The Resolution of Faith HAving proved the Truth and Certainty of our Religion I shall in the last place upon these Principles give a Resolution of our Faith which is a subject that has caused such unnecessary and unhappy Disputes amongst Christians in these latter Ages for in the Primitive Times this was no matter of Controversie as indeed it could not then and ought not now to be 1. Considering the Scriptures only as an History containing the Actions and Doctrines of Moses and the Prophets and of our Saviour and his Apostles we have the greatest humane Testimony that can be of men who had all the opportunities of knowing the truth of those Miracles c. which gave Evidence and Authority to the Doctrines as Revealed from God and who could have no Interest to deceive others but exposed themselves to all manner of dangers and infamy and torments by bearing Testimony to the Truth of what is contained in the Scriptures whereas Impostures are wont to be invented not to incur such sufferings but to avoid them or to obtain the advantages and pleasures of this world And so this Testimony amounts to a moral certainty or as it is properly enough called by some to a moral infallibility because it implies a moral impossibility of our being deceived by it such a certainty it is as that nothing with any reason can be objected against it We can have as little reason to doubt that Christ and his Apostles did and suffered and taught what the Scriptures relate of them in Jerusalem Antioch c. as that there ever were such places in the world nay we have that much better attested than this for many men have died in Testimony of the Truth of it II. This Testimony being considered with respect to the nature of the thing testified as it concerns eternal Salvation which is of the greatest concernment to all mankind it appears that Gods Veracity and Goodness are engaged that we should not be deceived inevitably in a matter of this consequence So that this Moral Infallibility becomes hereby Absolute Infallibility and that which was before but Humane Faith becomes Divine being grounded not upon Humane Testimony but upon the Divine Attributes which do attest and confirm that Humane Testimony and so Divine Testimony is the ultimate ground why I believe the will of God to be delivered in the Scriptures it is no particular revealed Testimony indeed but that which is equivalent to it viz. the constant Attestation of God by his Providence For it is repugnant to the very notion of a God to let men be deceived without any possible help or remedy in a matter of such importance And so we have the ground of our Faith absolutely Infallible because it is evident from the Divine Attributes that God doth confirm this Humane Testimony by his own III. The Argument then proceeds thus If the Scriptures were false it would be impossible to discover them to be so and it is inconsistent with the Truth and Goodness of Almighty God to suffer a deceit of this nature to pass upon mankind without any possibility of a discovery therefore it follows that they are not false Here is 1. The object or thing to be believed viz. that the Revelation delivered to us in the Scripture is from God 2. The Motive or Evidence to induce our Belief viz. Humane Testimony 3. A confirmation of that Testimony or the Formal Principle and Reason of our Belief viz. the Divine Goodness and Truth The object therefore or thing believed is the same to us that it was to those who saw the miracles by which the Scriptures stand confirmed viz. the revealed Will of God and the Ground and Foundation of our Belief is the same that theirs was viz. the Divine Goodness and Truth whereby we are assured that God would not suffer Miracles to be wrought in his own Name according to Prophecies formerly delivered and with all other circumstances of credibility only to confirm a Lye The only difference then between the resolution of Faith in us and in the Christians who were Converted by the Apostles themselves is this that tho we believe the same things and upon the same grounds and reasons with them yet we have not the same immediate motives or evidence to induce our Belief or to satisfie us in these reasons and convince us that the Revealed Will of God contained in the Scriptures is to be believed upon these grounds that is to satisfie and convince us that the belief of the Scriptures being the Word of God is finally resolved into the Authority of God himself and is as well certified to us as his Divine Attributes can render it For they were assured of this from what their own senses received but we have our assurance of it from the Testimony of others The Question therefore will be whether the motives and arguments for this Belief in us or the means whereby we become assured that the Revealed Will of God is contained in the Scriptures be not as sufficient to produce a Divine Faith in us and to establish our Faith upon the Divine Authority as the motives and arguments which those had who lived with the Apostles and saw their Miracles could be to produce that Faith in them which resolved it self into the Divine Authority And this enquiry will depend upon these two things 1. Whether
upon the preaching of the Gospel to the World the Philosophers thought it concern'd them to review all that had been formerly written to unite their Forces and select those Notions out of every Sect which were most plausible omitting such as they saw would then give Offence and it appears that they were greatly beholden to the Religion which they opposed and pretended to despise it is evident that they had read the Scriptures and do sometimes make use of Terms which they had taken from thence unknown to former Philosophers But Philosophy after all their Endeavours still retaining many Errors and wanting that Evidence and Authority which is the foundation of all true Religion could never maintain its ground against that Religion which was preach'd by those whom they contemned as ignorant Men but which in a short time wrought such a Reformation in the World as the Philosophy of all Ages had been never able to effect It is not to be denied that there were many great and eminent Examples among the Heathen but then there were always as great Enormities allow'd in the most civiliz'd Nations Philosophy was (x) Tertul Apol. c. 47 prohibited by three of the Principal States of Greece by the Thebans the Spartans and the Argives And the Romans who have set so many Famous Examples to the World were little oblig'd to Philosophy for all their Worth and Greatness was raised upon the Stock only of common Notions the Traditions that they had receiv'd with the rest of Mankind and the Laws brought from Athens which were enacted by Solon who had been in Aegypt at a time when the Jews were there in sufficient Numbers But it was a long while before Philosophers were suffered at Rome they had been (k) A. Gell. lib. xv c. 11. expell'd by the Senate Tully was the first that brought Philosophy into any Credit there and by the Apologies which he often makes for his giving himself to the Study of it we may perceive under what Prejudices it then lay among the Romans and that there was need of all his Wit and Eloquence to gain it Admission A strict Discipline both in Peace and War great Application and Industry by which they improved their common Notions and arriv'd to wonderful Experience and Dexterity in the Management of Affairs a zealous Love of their Country and an unparallell'd Constancy manifest in all their Actions and especially in the Observation of their Laws raised the Romans to that mighty Height and Extent of Empire But that which they retain'd of Truth in relation to Matters of Religion had been so abused and disguised with Fabulous Corruptions that at length it had generally lost all Belief amongst them (l) Pro Cluemio Tully made no Scruple at a publick Tryal in a Court of Judicature to deny the Punishments of the Wicked in a future State as a ridiculous Fiction which shews a strange Corruption of Principles in that Age when he could propose to himself to gain his Cause by speaking in that manner In another Oration he says (m) Pro M. Caeii● Non semper superet v●ra illa directa Ratio vincat aliquando cupiditas voluptasque rationem That this should be spoken in a publick Pleading by one of the Gravest and most Learned of all the Romans shews how little either the Philosophy which he had studied or the Roman Laws themselves could do towards the Establishment of Vertue and that the Modesty of Youth and the Vertue and Honour of Families must be secur'd upon some better Principles Afterwards he adds Verùm siquis est qui etiam meretriciis Amoribus interdictum juventuti putet est ille quidem valde severus Negare non possum sed abhorret non modo ab hujus seculi licentia verùm etiam a Majorum consuetudine atque concessis I believe there is scarce any man so far lost to all Shame among Christians that he would be willing to hear himself so defended in a Publick Court or any Judge that would admit of such a Defence which is a manifest Argument of the Excellency of the Christian Religion that it lays such a powerful Restraint upon Men. But this loosness of Manners was the fatal Fore-runner of that horrid and monstrous Lewdness which afterwards like a Leprosy overspread the Roman Empire The Conspiracies of that Time which so much endanger'd the State were contriv'd by Libertines and no greater Cruelties have ever been committed than by this Sort of Men when once they have got into Power as may be seen in Tiberius Caligula Nero c. And Tully himself perhaps might feel the Effects of these Encouragements to Vice being kill'd by a Villain whose Life he had formerly saved by that Eloquence which was sometimes employ'd as if he had been retain'd against Vertue It must be owned that Tully has in many places of his Works laid down admirable Rules of Vertue but then it is with little or no Regard to such Principles as are the only sure Foundations of a Vertuous Life viz. the Fear of God and the Expectation of Rewards or Punishments after Death aed such was the defect of his Philosophy that he could be positive and certain in nothing Seneca as he professeth has taken many of his best Precepts from Epicurus which without a due Consideration had of a God and a Providence are no better than Prudent Cautions against Temporal Evils either of Body or Mind Seneca many times diverts rather than Instructs what he says is always fine but not always Solid he dances upon the surface according to Quintilian's Censure of him but seldom descends to the depth of things and it were well if that Character which he has given of Seneca's style might not be applyed to his Sense abundat dulcibus Vitiis a luscious Poison sometimes diffuseth it self in his Writings Seneca (x) Sen. Epist 82. de Benefic lib. 1. c. 3 4. derides the subtilty and trifling both of Zeno and Chrysippus but he did it seems think himself more concern'd to expos●● them for being Teachers of ill Doctrins tho upon this account they were so very scandalous that Sextus (xx) Sext. Empir Pyrrh Hypot lib. 3. c. 24 25. Empericus endeavours to prove from their Words that there is no real and certain Difference betwixt Vertue and Vice The bare knowledge of the Christian Doctrin even without a sincere belief of its Authority has taught Men to abhorr those Crimes which were approved of by the Philosophers and Pr●ctised in the Wisest Heathen Nations and when things notoriously Evil were received and taugh● by those who did and said so many things well it is Evident that what was good was not owing so much to the strength of their own Reason as to some higher Principle I will here give but one Instance and it shall be concerning the Lawfulness of killing Infants or exposing them to be starved or destroyed This was the express Doctrine of (n) Pl●●t de Repub. lib.
Parodox that they are still for maintaining it I confess it agrees admirably with a Tradition of the Arcadians that their Ancestors were before the Moon and if any Man should pretend that this might very well be true according to the Cartesian Hypothesis by attempting to prove that Arcadia might be inhabited before the Moon of a Luminous became an Opake Body in so curious an Age he must have ill Luck if he should want his Applauders If some Object that the Originals of the Books of Scripture in the Hand-Writing of the several Authors are not still remaining doth this deserve to be answered till they can produce the Original Writings of all other Books Or at least of all or any that are as Antient as even the last written of the Books of the New Testament Would they have an Office erected to prove the Titles to all Estates by Original Deeds and upon what Period of time will they fix for the Date of them which will admit of any Comparison with the Date of the Manuscript Copies now extant of the Scriptures Some have alleged that the Sea through which the Israelites passed is not Red But they may be pleased to know that Religion is nothing concerned in what has been written on both sides upon this subject for it is not called the Red Sea in the Hebrew but the Sea of Weeds with which it abounds It has the denomination of the Red Sea from the Greeks however it came by it for the Criticks are not agreed about it and is best known by that Name which is therefore made use of by the Septuagint and in our own and other Translations which herein follow St. Luke and the Apostle to the Hebrews Men must call things by known Names if they will be understood whatever gave the first occasion to those Names As to many Objections let Men but do Moses the same Right which they would do Thucydides or Tacitus and we need desire no more tho' they should not allow for the great distance of Time between them Indeed they might live in the same Age for all that many of these Objectors know and be next Neighbours I have known divers Objections made which the looking only into the Bible would answer and many proceed from the want of being Conversant in it Some have supposed that they had great matter of Objection from Christ's Cursing the Fig-tree and causing it to wither away But never so little Reflection might serve any one to take notice how merciful a thing it was in the Son of God and how suitable to the Gospel which he Preach'd for him to shew his Power of punishing upon a Tree rather then upon a Man it was then and is at any time as easy for him to punish his Revilers as it was to Curse this Tree or as it can be for them to Revile him tho' they be never so ready at it But to manifest himself to be the Saviour not the Destroyer of mankind He Cured all manner of Diseases and raised the Dead but never took away the Life of any Man nor inflicted any Disease he spared his worst Enemies the Scribes and Pharisees and Punished their Hypocrisie in the Emblem only of a Fig-tree flourishing in Leaves before the Time and Season of Figs and thereby promising very much an Early Fruit but having none it made a show of Figs out of Season but had nothing to answer so fair an Appearance Other Objections which may seem more considerable have been confuted even to a Demonstration Cavils which have been raised concerning the (x) Tacquet Geometr Pract. lib. 3. c. 20. ●robl 2. quantity of Matter which will be required to Compose the Bodies of all Men at the Resurrection and concerning the (y) Sir Sam Morland's Vrim of Conse p. 95. Bottomless Pit have been demonstrated to be frivolous That the (z) Buteo de ●rea Noe. Kircher de Arc. No● Sir W. Raleigh Hist lib. 1. c. 7. S. 9. Bishop Wilkin 's Real Character Part 2. c. 5. Capacity of the Ark was sufficient to contain Noah and his Family with the Beasts and Food for them and that the (a) Petav. Doctr. Temp. lib. 9. c. 14. Encrease of Mankind might extend to so great Numbers in no longer a Compass of Years than the Scriptures in any Instance Assign are things which have been often proved beyond any possibility of a Confutation and whatever force there may seem to be in Objections of this Nature they are to be reckoned among the Vulgar Errors and in that Number Sir Thomas Brown has placed some of them for Learned Men have been long ago ashamed to make them and this one would think should cause others to be more Modest and Cautious in their Objections against the Scriptures when such as have the Appearance of the greatest strength in them being once brought under strict Examination prove to be evidently false And if they find they have been mistaken and are willing to be undeceived this will go so far towards their Conviction that I cannot but hope that the Consideration here proposed may be of some weight with them Thus far methinks at least I may hope to prevail upon those who will not be convinced of the Truth of the Christian Religion that they will no longer imagine it Safe or Prudent to speak lightly and profanely of it Religion is too serious a thing and of too great Concernment to Mankind to be exposed to the Scorn of every one that thinks he can make a Jest And that which is too hard for their Reason will be in little danger of their Raillery but will rather receive an additional Confirmation from it The best and most sacred things are always most Capable of Dishonour and Affronts for to Affront and Abuse any Person or Thing is to endeavour to make it appear bad and it is the security of some things and some Men that they cannot be represented worse than they are It is in any ones Power to Affront the greatest Prince and a Man of the most eminent Vertue may be be most easily abused but no Treason can be spoke against a Beggar and it is the hardest matter to find out how to disgrace him of whom nothing can be said worse than he deserves It is a kind of Testimony given to Religion and an acknowledgment paid to Vertue when Men so industriously labour to villify it For how can that be disparaged which is of no Worth or Excellency Or why should Men endeavour to bring that into discredit which hath not at present a confessed Reputation Whether this be a deserved Reputation or no they may question if they think fit but then let them make it a serious question and not to be decided by the loudest noise But here is the mischief they have no Patience to attend to the Force of an Argument or to go on with a dispute but a Cavil is soon started and Objections are more easily raised than answered
last Days of the Jewish Dispensation p. 388. The Times of the Gospel meant by the last Days p. 389. St. Paul did not suppose that the Day of Judgment was approaching in his time p. 391. There is no reason to suppose that the last Judgment must be confined to one Day p. 393. CHAP. XXIII Of Sacraments THE Nature and design of Sacraments p. 396. 1. They are outward and Visible Signs of our Entrance into Covenant with God or of our Renewing our Covenant with him ib. 2. They are Tokens and Pledges to us of God's Love and Favour p. 402. 3. They are means and Instruments of Grace and Salvation p. 404. 4. They are Federal Rites of our Admission into the Church as a Visible Society and of our Union with it as such p. 406. The Sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's Supper fully Answer the end and Design of the Institution of Sacraments p. 407. CHAP. XXIV Of the Blessed Trinity THere is no Contradiction in this Mistery of our Religion p. 412 The Distinction of the Three Persons in the Deity p. 413. The Unity of the Divine Nature p. 414. The Difference between the Divine Persons and Humane Persons 417. Other things are and must be believed by us which are as little understood as this Doctrine p. 421. The necessity of the Belief of this Doctrine explained and Defended p. 423. This Doctrine exceedingly tends to the Advancement of Vertue and Holiness and has a great Influence upon the Lives and Conversations of Men p. 427. CHAP. XXV Of the Resurrection of the Dead GOD is certainly able to raise the Dead p. 431. Bodies after their Corruption and the Dissolution of the Parts which Compose them may be restored to Life by the Reunion of these Parts again p. 436. We may rise again with the same Bodies which we have here notwithstanding any change or Flux of the Parts of our Bodies while we Live or any Accidents after Death p. 437. It is not only credible and Reasonable to believe that God can but likewise that he will raise the Dead p. 443. CHAP. XXVI Of the Reasons why Christ did not shew himself to all the People of the Jews after his Resurrection THere are Reasons peculiar to this Dispensation of his Resurrection why Christ should not shew himself to all the People after he was risen from the Dead p. 449. It had not been suitable to the other Dispensations of God towards mankind for him to have done it p. 451 Great Numbers of the Jews being given over to hardness of Heart would not have believed tho' they had seen Christ after his Resurrection p. 452. If the Jews had believed in Christ their Conversion had not been a greater Proof of the Truth of his Resurrection than their Unbelief has been p. 453. The Power of Christ's Resurrection manifested in the Miraculous Gifts bestowed upon the Apostles was as great a Proof of his Resurrection as the Personal Appearance of our Saviour himself could have been p. 454. CHAP. XXVII Of the Forty Days in which Christ remained upon the Earth after his ●●●surrection and of the manner of his Ascension MAny things in the Life of Christ before his Passion omitted by the Evangelists p. 459. And likewise after his Resurrection p. 461. What may be concluded from that which we Read of his conversing with his Disciples after it p. 463. The manner of his Ascension p. 465. CHAP. XXVIII Why some Works of Nature are more especially ascribed to God why means was sometimes used in the Working of Miracles and why Faith was sometimes required of those upon whom or before whom Miracles were wrought ALL Creatures act with a constant dependance upon the Divine Power and Influence but things may be said more especially to be done by God himself whereby upon some extraordinary Occasion his Power and his Will are more particularly manifested or his Promise fulfilled p. 469. Miracles are more peculiarly the Works of God because they are wrought without the concurrence or subserviency of Natural Means ib Means used as Circumstances to render Miracles more observable not as concurring to the Production of the effect 470. Christ had given undeniable Proof of his Miraculous Power before he required Faith as a condition in such as came to see his Miracles and to receive the benefit of them p. 471. Whether he required Faith of any before his working of a Miracle who had not already seen him work Miracles p. 481. Great Reason that no Miracle should be purposely wrought for the captious and Malicious p. 482. The case of his own Country-men was particular ib. The case of those who came to desire his Help p. 487. Our Saviour hereby signified that he requires the same Faith of those who have not seen his Miracles as he did of those who had seen them p. 489. CHAP. XXIX Of the ceasing of Proph●●●es and Miracles THe Antiquity of Prophecies adds to their force and Evidence p. 491. The Cessation of Miracles We read of no Miraculous Power bestowed upon any Man before Moses p. 492. Neither Prophecies nor Miracles in the Jewish Church for more than four hundred years before Christ p. 495. Miracles if common would lose the design and nature of Miracles p. 498. Men would pretend to frame Hypotheses to solve them p. 499. A constant Power of Miracles would occasion Impostures ib. They would occasion Pride in those that wrought them p. 501. No more Reason for Miracles to prove the Christian Religion among Christians than there is need of them to prove a God ib. A Divine Power is notwithstanding evident among Christians living in Heathen Countries p. 502. CHAP. XXX Of the Causes why the Jews and Gentiles rejected Christ notwithstanding all the Miracles wrought by him and his Apostles ASupernatural Grace necessary to True Faith p. 504. Jews and Proselytes were converted in great Numbers p. 508. Many durst not own Christ Others had their hearts hardned p. 511. They had violent prejudidices against the Gospel p. 512. The Signs and Wonders of false Prophets a cause of the Infidelity of the Jews p. 514. The unbelief of the Jews being foretold by the Prophets is a confirmation of the Gospel p. 515. Great Numbers of the Heathens converted p. 516. The cause of unbelief in the Philosophers ib. Of Epictetus and Seneca p. 518. The prejudices of the Gentiles p. 521. They would not be at the Pains rightly to understand the Christian Religion p. 522. Oracles had foretold that it should not last above 365 Years p. ib. Heresies and Schisms gave great Scandal p. 523. Many Heathens however had more favourable and just Thoughts of the Christian Religion p. 524. Of the Writings of the Heathens against it p. 528. The Writings of the ancient Jews confirm it p. 530. CHAP. XXXI That the Confidence of Men of false Religions and their Willingness to suffer for them is no prejudice to the Authority of the True Religion THe Martyrs for the Christian Religion more
numerous than the Sufferers for any other p. 531. Zeal for Falshood no prejudice to Truth p. 532. The preference for the Christian Religion before all others p. 534. The proper Notion of Martyrdom p. 535. CHAP. XXXII That Differences in Matters of Religion are no prejudice to the Truth and Authority of it Differences in matters of Religion must be unless God should miraculously and irresistibly interpose to prevent them p. 539. It is not necessary that God should thus interpose p. 544. nor expedient p. 546. These Differences how great and how many soever they may be are no prejudice to the Truth and Certainty of Religion p. 549. All Parties are agreed in the Truth of Religion in general and of the Christian Religion in particular p. 551. It is not Religion about which Men dispute but there is nothing besides in which Men have not disagreed p. 555. Prophecies are hereby fullfilled p. 557. CHAP. XXXIII Though all Objections could not be Answer'd yet this would be no just Cause to reject the Authority of the Scriptures A True Revelation may contain great Difficulties and if the Arguments in proof of the Scriptures remain in their full Force notwithstanding any Objections and no positive and direct Proof be brought that they are insufficient the Objections must proceed from some Mistake and ought to be rejected as insignificant p. 559. This is shewn in Particulars p. 561. The way of Reasoning which is made use of to disprove the Truth and Authority of the Scriptures considered in cases of another nature p. 563. Difficulties can never alter the nature of things p. 566. CHAP. XXXIV The Conclusion containing an Exhortation to a serious Consideration of these things both from the Example of the wisest and most learned Men and from the infinite Importance of the things themselves AS wise and learned Men as any that ever lived in the World have suffered Persecutions and Martyrdom for the Christian Religion p. 568. The Causes of Unbelief among Christians Immorality a Spirit of Contradiction and singularity of Opinion p. 569. It is at every Man 's own Peril if he make a rash and partial Judgment p. 570. This is too serious a Subject to jest and trifle withall p. 574. THE REASONABLENESS AND CERTAINTY OF THE Christian Religion BOOK II. CHAP. I. Of Humane Reason HAving in the former Book proved the Divine Authority of the Scriptures I proceed in this to clear such points as are commonly thought most liable to exception in the Christian Religion and to propose some considerations which may serve to remove such prejudices and obviate such cavils as are usually raised against the Holy Scriptures But before men venture upon making Objections against the Scriptures they would do well first to consider the compass and strength of their own Parts and Faculties and to observe in how many things they daily find themselves deceived how many men there are who understand much more than themselves and how much folly and ignorance there is in the wisest men Those commonly that raise objections against the Scriptures are as confident in the management of them as if they understood all things besides and therefore conclude that must needs be false which they do not understand not considering how very reasonable it is to suppose that God should command and reveal many things the Natures and Reasons of which we may not be able to comprehend This must be granted by every man who believes God to be infinitely wise but doth not think himself to be so and acknowledgeth God's soveraignty over him For as he is infinitely wise he may reveal things above our capacities and as he is the supream Lord and Governor of the world he may command us what in his infinite wisdom he shall see fitting tho we may not perceive the Reason and Design of it And yet this is the utmost that upon a due examination many of the objections against the Authority of the Scriptures amount to that there are several things in them of which some men think no clear account can be given and others which seem to them unworthy of God Now what is the meaning of this way of objecting and where lies the force of such Arguments but in this that it is not to be conceived that God would reveal or command any thing with which they are not satisfied or which they cannot perfectly understand This is all the strength of this sort of objections There is all the Reason in the world to believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God if they did not contain things which these men in their great wisdom think should not be there if they were his word which is to make their own understanding the measure and Criterion of Divine Revelation And some have turned Scepticks for as good Reasons and others have been Atheists upon the same Principles finding as much fault with the System of the World and the Order and contrivance of the parts of it as the Deist doth with the Scriptures they have renounced all belief of a God upon the same grounds upon which he disbelieves the Christian Religion To convince men therefore of the Narrowness and Weakness of Humane Reason I shallshew I. That in some things each side of a Contradiction seems to be ●demonstrable II. That very man believes and experiences several things which in the Theory and speculative Notion of them would seem as incredible as any thing in the Scriptures can be supposed to be III. That those who reject the Mysteries of Religion must believe things much more incredible I. In some things each side of a Contradiction seems to us demonstrable Several instances might be given of this I shall instance only in the divisibility of Matter Nothing seems more evident than that divisibility is essential to Matter and that therefore all Matter is divisible so that the least part of Matter is as divisible as the biggest because the least particle of Matter is Matter that is it is of the same Nature and Essence with the whole and all Matter differs only in Bulk or Figure or Place or Rest or Motion It being then of the Nature of Matter to be divisible it must ever be divisible tho it be never so often divided since it can never be so divided as to lose it own Nature or cease to be Matter On the other side it is demonstrable that Matter cannot be infinitely divisible because whatever is divisible is divisible into parts and no parts can be infinite because no Number can be so For all Number is necessarily in it self capable of being counted or numbred tho no Finite Being may be able to number it a Numberless Number is a contradiction it is a Number which is no Number therefore all Number must be even or odd and must be capable of Addition and Substraction which is contrary to the Nature of Infinite For what is less or greater has certain bounds or limits and therefore cannot be
a confirmation of the Authority of them the persons there mentioned were as so many Witnesses to attest that they were genuine For besides the general concernment of the Catholick Church and of the several Churches more especially to which such Epistles were written the persons who were saluted by name in them were more particularly concerned to take cognizance of them and to know all the circumstances relating to them And St Paul's advice to Timothy to drink no longer Water but to use a little Wine for his stomach's sake and his often infirmities 1 Tim. v. 23. was requisite to be given in that Epistle that it might remain recorded in the Scriptures in confutation of that superstition which some were guilty of in abstaining from things lawful and particularly from Wine out of an opinion of Holiness in refraining from them and of sin in the use of them 5. That infallible Spirit which assisted and inspired the Apostles and other Sacred Writers was not permanent and habitual or continually residing in them nor given for all purposes and occasions as we may observe in St Paul who acquaints us in some things that he had not received of the Lord what he writes But the gifts of the Spirit were bestowed for the benefit and edification of the Church and therefore w●re given in such measures at such times and upon such occasions as might be useful for edification We find that in a matter of great concernment and importance to the whole Church the Apostles met together in Councel to decide the controversy both because according to our Saviours promise to them they might expect a more abundant effusion of the Holy Ghost upon them when they were assembled in his name for that purpose and because the thing in debate depended upon Matter of Fact viz. that the Holy Ghost was given to the Gentiles and therefore it was requisite that many should meet together and testifie of that matter Besides several that came down from Judea to Antioch had refused to submit to the Authority of St Paul and St Barnabas and it was necessary that these men should be convinced by the unanimous and joint Authority of the Apostles who being met in a full Councel declared It seemed good to the Holy Ghost and to us Acts 15.28 that is not only to us but to the Holy Ghost to the Holy Ghost as well as to us And this was for an Example and Precedent to the Church in future Ages to determine Controversies by the Authority of Councels 6. The Gifts of the Holy Ghost were bestowed upon men who might have personal failings and were men of like Passions with us Act. 14.25 They had this Treasure in earthen Vessels that the excellency of the Power might be of God and not of themselves 2 Cor. 4.7 But they werechosen to be Apostles and Evangelists and therefore must be so far exempt from error in the execution of their Office and Ministry as not to deliver false Doctrines in their Writings which were to be read and received of all Churches in all Ages of the World for this would have defeated and subverted the design of the Institution of the Apostles and of the Mission of the Holy Ghost and therefore this God would not suffer tho they might be suffered to incur such failings as were no prejudice to the Gospel of Christ 7. There being nothing asserted in the Canon of Scripture but what has some relation to the edification of the Church tho some parts of it have a less direct and apparent tendency to this end than others if any one passage or circumstance should have been erroneous this would diminish the Authority of the Scriptures and make them in some degree less capable to promote the end for which they were written And there being so many particular Gifts the Gift of Wisdom and of Knowledge of Tongues and of Interpretation of Tongues and of discerning of Spirits and so many distinct Offices as Apostles and Prophets and Evangelists and Pastors and Teachers we cannot conceive how those Gifts and these Offices could be better employed than in preserving that Book from error which was to be the standard of Truth for all Ages or how if that Book had not been secured from error by them these Gifts and Offices had answered the end of their appointment Thus much may suffice to prove the Scriptures to be infallible in all the parts and circumstances of them But it may be observed that if the Infallibility of the Sacred Writers had not extended to the words and circumstances but only to the substantial and fundamental points of Religion this of itself were enough to vindicate the Divine Authority of the Christian Religion Nay further if the Scriptures were written only with the same certainty and integrity that is in Thucydides or in any other credible Historian which the most obstinate and inveterate Adversary can never deny yet even then no man without much unreasonableness cou'd reject it CHAP. III. Of the Style of the Holy Scriptures WHen God reveals himself to men he must be supposed to do it in such a manner as is suitable to the necessities and occasions of those to whom the Revelation is made and in such Language and Forms of Speech as that he may be understood by those to whom he reveals himself he may be suppos'd to speak in the Idiom and in the Metaphors and Phrases in use amongst them and to allude to their customs and manner of life to have regard to the condition and state of their affairs and to condescend in some measure to their weaknesses to speak to their capacities so as to be understood in his Laws and to encourage and excite men to obey them For tho the particular reason and design of every Law be not always necessary to be known yet it is necessary that those to whom they are given should know what the Laws are and that they should have their Duty prescribed in such a way as may be effectual to recommend the Practice of it to them The style of the Holy Scriptures is a subject which has been largely discoursed of by Mr Boyle and others What I intend to say upon it I shall reduce to these Heads I. The Grammatical construction II. The Metaphors and Figures and Rhetorical Schemes of Speech III. The Decorum or suitableness of the Matter or the Things themselves IV. The Method I. The Grammatical construction and propriety of Speaking It has been by many observed that there is a great resemblance between the style of the Old Testament and that of Homer the most ancient Book we have besides and it is likewise observable that those things which are by some looked upon as defects in the Scripture style as the using one Gender or one Number or Case or Tense for another the putting Participles for Verbs the Comparative or Superlative for the Positive Actives for Passives or Passives for Actives are particularly taken notice of by
the Greeks as the Scriptures mention the children of Israel and other Greek Authors say the children of the Physicians as the Scriptures say the children of the Bride-chamber and the children of Light * Grot. ad 4. Reg. 19.2 ad Ezech. initio Grotius compares Isaiah to Demosthenes a sublime but a most natural and judicious writer the same Author compares Ezekiel to Homer for the beauty and nobleness of his style † Pref. to Pindarick Odes and Notes upon Pind. Ode ●n Isai 34. Mr Cowley compares the Prophets especially Isaiah to Pindar but of Pindar he says that if a man should undertake to translate him word for word it would be thought that one mad man had translated another For which he gives this reason that we must consider in Pindar the great difference of time betwixt his Age and ours which changes us in Pictures at least the colours of Poetry the no less difference betwixt the Religions and Customs of our Countries and a thousand particularities of Places Persons and Manners which do but confusedly appear to our eyes at so great a distance and lastly we must consider that our ears are strangers to the Musick of his numbers which sometimes especially in Songs and Odes almost without any thing else makes an excellent Poet. And of David he observes that the best Translators have been so far from doing Honour or at least Justice to that Divine Poet that methinks says he they revile him worse than Shimei And Buchanan himself comes in his opinion no less short of David than his Country does of Judea Yet Isaiah and the r●●● of the Prophets and the Psalms are translated into our Language word for word as far as it is possible for one Language to be thus render'd into another and notwithstanding all the differences of Time and Place and Customs and Persons no sensible man reads them in the English Tongue but he must acknowledge that their style with all these disadvantages is truly great and excellent Whereas * Quod sicui non videtur Linguae gratiam interpretatione mutari Homerum ad verbum exprimat in Latinum Plus aliquid dicam eundem in fuâ linguâ prosae verbis interpretetur videbit ordinem ridiculum Poetam eloquentissimum vix loquentem Hieron Praef. in Chron. Euseb there are none of the Heathen Authors that are so much esteemed which if they were literally translated as the Scriptures are would bear the reading but they would appear ridiculous and impossible to be understood For the Spirit and Genius and peculiar Idioms of most Tongues being so very different one from another and depending upon the Customs and Humours of the people of several Countries it was the evident care and providence of God to cause great part of the Scriptures tho written by so many different men and at such distant times and some Books of them in the earlier Ages of the World to be penned in such a language and style as is most natural and which without any want of Art exceeds the most artificial and studied Eloquence in sublime and noble thoughts and expressions and in all the beauties and ornaments of Speech and yet which in all the necessary points of Salvation is easie to be understood under all the disadvantages of a Verbal Translation by men of ordinary capacities who live so many Ages after The Prophesies of Isaiah cannot be read or heard or thought of without being moved by them with what Life then with what Zeal and Flame must they have been delivered And what a mighty Blessing was such a Prophet to his own Age and to all succeeding Generations Of Royal Blood and of a Style and Behaviour suitable to his Birth of Divine Virtues and of Divine Eloquence He declares things which were not to be fulfilled till many Ages afterwards as plainly as if he had seen them before his eyes and would make all others to see them he speaks of Christ as clearly as if with Simeon he had had his Saviour in his arms or with the Wise men had been kneeling down before him and presenting him with more precious Gifts than any they had to offer and describes his Passion as fully as if he had followed him through every part of it and having been Crucified with him had been just entring with him into Paradice If this be thought a Digression from my subject I hope it may easily be excused for who can speak of Isaiah without a Digression when men choose the food of Swine and trample upon Pearls as things of no value as if he and the other Prophets had always the hard fate to preach to the Rulers of Sodom and the People of Gomorrha But if the style of the Scriptures be not in all places alike excellent and exact let it be considered that 1. The same stile is not suitable to all subjects and the stile and dialect is different according to the difference of the matter or of the persons for whose use it was immediately designed What concerns the Assyrian Monarchy in the Prophet Daniel is in the Chaldee Tongue and what relates directly to the Jews is in the Hebrew Part of Ezra is in Chaldee being a relation of Matter of Fact contained in the Chaldee Chronicles and Jer. 10.11 is in the same Tongue that the Jews might reject the Idolatry of the Chaldeans in their Language and openly profess their own abhorrence of it And as upon these occasions the Language of Scripture is changed with respect to the subject and the persons concerned so the style must be sometimes altered upon the same account 2. Artificial strains of Rhetorick whereby the passions are moved to the utmost heighth were very necessary to gain a present point and carrry a Cause by a violent and sudden transport before Reason could interpose But Religion being to be propounded upon reasonable motives there could be no need of Rhetorick when the evidence of those Miracles by which it was established afforded so many other more certain and powerful means of perswasion The Scriptures are not written in the enticing words of mans wisdom but in truth and simplicity and therefore might well have been without any advantages of Eloquence as needing no such helps to recommend them to serious and impartial Minds And tho God has been pleased to condescend so far to the infirmities of men as to convey very much of his Revealed Will to us in such a style as for its own sake is highly to be esteemed and admired Yet it was fit that other parts of the Scriptures should have the bare force and evidence of truth only to convince men that it might appear that our Religion was propagated not by any Arts of humane Eloquence but by its own Worth and Excellency For Eloquence was not used where it would have been most necessary if any humane means could be so in asserting and propagating the Divine Truth In the propagation of the Gospel all the
question were not only dubious but certainly spurious the remaining Books which were never doubted of are sufficient for all the necessary ends and purposes of a Revelation and therefore this ought to be no objection against the Authority of the Scriptures that the Authority of some Books has been formerly matter of controversy I shall enter upon no discourse concerning the Apocryphal Books the authority whereof has been so often and so effectually dis●roved by Protestants that the most learned Papists have now little to say for them but ●re forced only to fly to the authority of their Church which is in effect to beg the thing in question or to beg something as hard to be granted viz. the infallibility of the Church of Rome But I shall here engage in no controversy of that nature Both Protestants and Papists are generally speaking agreed that the Books of Moses and the Prophets in the Old Testament and the Writings of the Evangelists and the Apostles in the New are of Divine Authority and if this be so the Christian Religion must be true whether there be or be not others of the same nature and of equal authority These Books in the main have already been proved to be genuine and without any material corruption or alteration I shall now only propose such general considerations as may be sufficient to obviate objections The agreement between the Jews and Samaritans in the Pentateuch is a clear evidence for its Authority And tho there were many and great Idolatries committed in the Kingdom of Judah yet by the good providence of God there never was such a total Apostacy in the people nor so long a succession of Idolatrous Kings as that the Books either of the Law or the Prophets can be supposed to have been supprest or altered For three years under Rehoboam they walked in the way of David and Solomon 2 Chron. 11.17.12.1 and tho afterwards he forsook the Law of the Lord and all Israel with him his Reign was in all but seventeen years Abijam was a wicked King but he reigned no longer than three years 1 Kings xv 2. Asa the third from Solomon and Jehoshaphat his Son were great Reformers and Asa reigned one and forty years and Jehoshaphat five and twenty years 2 Chron. xvi 13. xx 31. The two next Kings in succession did evil in the sight of the Lord but their Reigns were short Jehoram reigned eight years and Ahaziah but one 2 Chron. xxi 20. xxii 2. During the interval of six years under the usurpation of Athaliah the people could not be greatly corrupted for she was hateful to them as Jehoram her husband had been before her and they readily joyned with Jehoiada in slaying her and in restoring the worship of God 2 Chron. xxii Joash the son of Ahaziah did that which was right in the sight of the Lord all the days of Jehoiada 2 Chron. xxiv 2. We are sure that he reigned well three and twenty years 2 Kings xii 6. and probably much longer for Jehoiada lived to a very great age 2 Chron. xxiv 15. Amaziah his son has the same character and with the same abatement that he did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with a perfect heart 2 Chron. xxv 2. or yet not like David his Father he did according to all things as Joash his Father did 2 Kings xiv 3. Vzziah son to Amaziah reigned well and sought God in the days of Zachariah 2 Chron. xxvi 5. and after he was seized with the Leprosie for invading the Priests office the administration of affairs was in the hands of his Son Jotham vers 21. who imitated the good part of his fathers Reign Chap. xxvii 2. Ahaz was wicked and an Idolater but he reigned only sixteen years Chap. xxviii 1. and his son Hezekiah wrought a great Reformation who reigned twenty nine years Chap. xxix 1. Manasses was much given to Idolatry in the former part of his Reign but after his captivity in Babylon he was very zealous against it Chap. xxxiii 15 16. Amon imitated the ill part of his Father's Reign but his own continued no longer than two years Chap. xxxiii 21. The next was Josiah in whose time the Book of the Law was found in the Temple which must be the Book of Moses's own hand-writing for it is evident that a Book of the Law could be no such rare thing at that time in Jerusalem as to be taken so much notice of unless it had been that Book which was laid up in the side of the Ark and was to be transcribed by every King It seems that Book of the Law had been purposely hid to preserve it from the attempts of Idolaters who it was feared might have a design to destroy it for if it had only lain by neglected the finding of it could have been no such surprizing thing because the place in the Temple was well known where it was wont to be kept in the side of the Ark and where they might have sought for it but it was probably at that time supposed to have been utterly lost and its being found in the Ruines of the Temple which was built for the observation of it and where it ought to have been kept with the greatest care as a most inestimable treasure the veneration which Josiah had for so sacred a Writing and the happy and unexpected recovery of it when it had been disregarded and almost lost through the iniquity of his Predecessors these considerations could not but exceedingly move a mind so tender and affectionately pious as that Kings when he received the Law under Moses's own hand sent him as he believed by God himself and delivered to him as it were anew from Heaven Not long after his time was the Captivity in Babylon till which there were always Prophets frequent Reformations and never any succession of Idolatrous Kings which continued for a long time together very few Kings were Idolatrous throughout their whole Reigns and those that were reigned but a short time * Book 1. Part 2. c. 6. 9. It has been proved that the Pentateuch and the Books of the Prophets written before the Captivity were preserved amongst the Jews till their return and it is acknowledg'd by those who are of another opinion that Ezra who composed the Canon did it by a Prophetick spirit or had the assistance of Prophets in the doing it * Joseph C●nt Apion lib. 1. Josephus says that their Books after the time of Artaxerxes are not of equal authority with those before his time for want of a certain succession of Prophets And since the Jews admitted no writings as inspired into the Canon after Malachi's Prophecy this shews their sincerity and exactness in examining the truth and authority of such Writings as they admitted into their Canon of Scripture The Pharisees made the commandment of God of no effect by their Traditions but never durst presume to impose them under the notion and
VII Of the Obscurity of some Places in the Scriptures particularly of the Types and Prophesies HEre it must in the first place be remembred that it has been a common and true observation that all Authors are rather perplex'd and obscured than explained by a multitude of Commentators and this is so true of no Book as of the Scriptures for as none has had so many Glosses and Comments put upon it by men of all Ages and Nations so most of them endeavour to find out some new Explication or to serve a Cause and maintain some particular opinions by their Expositions So that it is a wonder that any part of the Scriptures should be clear after Volumes have been written I may truly say upon every Text rather than that difficulties should be found in them But at the same time it must be acknowledged that we find it declared in the Scriptures themselves that there are places of difficulty in them which makes it but so much the more unreasonable that this should be urged as an objection against them For what is acknowledged and profest must be suppos'd to be with a design and for some good reason and the reason and design ought to be inquired into before this be used as an objection St Peter speaking of Christ's coming to Judgment says that St Paul in his Epistles had delivered some things hard to be understood and St Paul himself intimates that there had been mistakes concerning what he had written in this matter 2 Thess ii 1 2 3. St Peter on this occasion says that it so happened not only to St Paul's Epistles but to other Books of the Scriptures thro the ignorance and rashness of unlearned and unstable men 2 Pet. iii. 16. And it happens more especially in those places of Scripture which are concerning things of this nature or contain whatever Prophecies of things to come Therefore I shall I. give an account how it comes to pass that there are things hard to be understood in the Scriptures in general II. I shall in particular consider the obscurity of Prophecies and shall prove the certainty of the Types made use of by the Prophets and shew that there is great force and evidence in the Arguments brought from them III. I shall prove that the obscurity of some places of the Scriptures is no prejudice to the Authority of them nor to the end and design of them I. I shall give an account in general how it comes to pass that there are some things in the Scriptures hard to be understood 1. Some Doctrines which it mightily concerns us to be acquainted withal could not be delivered in so plain a manner but that they must needs have great difficulties in them as the Doctrine of the Blessed Trinity of the Incarnation of Christ of the Resurrection and of the Joys of Heaven and of the Torments of Hell There are several things which we are capable of knowing and which are necessary to be known of which yet we cannot have so perfect and absolute a knowledge but that something of them will still remain unknown to us As there is no object more visible or better known to us than the Sun is but to calculate the dimensions and the distance of the Sun from us to know how its light is communicated and suddenly spread over the face of the Earth are things of great difficulty and can never perhaps be fully accounted for In like manner what the Scriptures deliver to us concerning the Nature of God and the state of the World to come must needs have difficulties in it tho we are never so well assured that there is a God and a future state because these are things above our understandings we may perfectly understand that there are such things but can have no full and clear conception of all that may be fit to be delivered to us concerning them Nothing can be made plainer to us than we are capable of knowing it or than the Nature of it and the portion our Faculties bear to it will allow God being incomprehensible whatever is delivered concerning him can never be without all difficulty and whilst we are in this world we can never understand the state of the next so fully as we shall do hereafter And these are difficulties which must be unless the Nature of the things or our own Nature were different from what it is Nevertheless the greatest Mysteries in the Christian Religion so far as they are revealed and so far as they are required to be known by us contain no inexplicable difficulties but if we will needs know more of the Mysteries of Religion than is revealed and more than is required to be known no wonder if we meet with difficulties What is meaut for instance by the Doctrine of the Trinity is capable of being very well understood as the opposers of this Doctrine must own unless they will confess that they oppose they know not what He that says a thing is not true knows what it is which he pretends not to be true if he understands what he says The thing then is known tho there be difficulties in the explication but the explication concerns the manner of existence not the truth of it For that may certainly be and we may certainly know it to be which yet we know not how it should be And the Doctrine itself only is revealed as necessary to be believed not any particular explication of it And if it can be proved that this is the Doctrine of Scripture and it be plain to be understood what is meant by this Doctrine as it is delivered in Scripture this shews the plainness of the Christian Religion in all things necessary to Salvation tho divers things relating to this Doctrine be difficult to be explained because the Doctrine is plainly enough and intelligibly delivered so far as it is required to be understood and believed Several Arts and Sciences which are very difficult and abstruse in the Theory are easy in the Practice and a man may very well unsterstand what the Theorem itself is which is to be proved tho he be altogether uncapable of understanding the proof of it Now what God says is as certain as any demonstration can be and what he has plainly delivered is plain as well as certain and it is never the less certain or plain because we cannot make out the proof of it nor are able to understand how it can be It is sufficient that the Scriptures are plain in this Doctrine so far as we are concerned to know it it is not necessary that the Doctrine itself should be plain in all the controversies which may be raised about it when we know the meaning we must take Gods word for the Truth of it The manner of the distinction of Persons and the Unity of Essence in the Godhead is not required to be believed but the Thing and we know the Thing to be so because God himself has said it tho
might not suffer a Book written by his own Appointment and Authority to be encumbred thro' length of Time and the frailty and negligence of Men with insuperable Difficulties if it be supposed still to retain the visible Marks and Characters of a Divine Original in all the Evidence necessary to prove it from Matter of Fact and in the Doctrines delivered by it For as long as these two things are secured all the rest tho' it be of never so great Use and Excellency yet cannot be necessary in order to the ends of a Divine Revelation And therefore a Book of Divine Revelation might be permitted by God for the Sins and by the Fault and Ignorance of Men to become perplext with abundance of divers Readings and even with Contradictions in the Chronological and less material Points of it For so long as it cannot be proved Defective as to the ends and purposes of a Divine Revelation either for want of evidence to make it appear to be such or thro' defect of the Matter and Doctrine contained in it all other Difficulties will never prove it not to be of Divine Authority because so long as there is no Defect but what might be in any Book tho' we suppose it to be of Divine Authority CHAP. IX Of the Creation of the World and the Preservation of it BY Creation in the Book of Genesis is understood not only the Production of the World out of Nothing but the Formation and Disposal of the several Parts of the Universe But there has an Opinion of late years prevailed very injurious to Religion and repugnant to Reason and the Judgment of former Ages That God only created Matter and gave it Motion to be performed under certain Laws by which all the Phaenomena of Nature both in the Creation and Preservation of Things are brought about without any farther immediate Divine Power or Concourse than what is just necessary to continue this Matter and Motion in Being that is God created Matter and put it into Motion and then Matter and Motion do all the rest in a settled Course and by established Laws without any need of the Divine Aid or Direction This Notion indeed can never be reconciled to the Scriptures but then it is as little befriended by Reason and Natural Religion In proof of which I shall consider I. The Creation of the World II. The Preservation of it and shall shew that neither of them could be performed in this way I. As to the Creation we may consider both the Time and the Manner of it And by the Time of the Creation we may understand either the Time when the Creation of the World began or the Time which was taken up in the Creation of it But this latter sense will come under what is to be said of the Manner of the Creation 1. The Time of the Creation of the World as that signifies the Beginning of Time or of the Worlds Duration must be wholly Arbitrary and absolutely at God's Sovereign Pleasure and Disposal For there could be nothing in eternal Duration to fix the Creation of the World more to one Time than another or to determin why it should begin sooner or later And since it is impossible that the world should be eternal it is evident that the Time of the Creation whenever it was can be no good Objection because tho' the World had been created never so long before there must necessarily have been as much a Pretence for such an Objection For there must have been some Period of Time when the World had existed no longer than it has done now and no beginning of the World can be supposed so long ago but still it might with the same Reason be ask'd why it was not created sooner 2. In considering the Manner of the Worlds Creation I shall prove 1. That there is no Reason to suppose the World to have been at the first made by Mechanical Laws tho' it were preserv'd according to such Laws 2. That there are sufficient Reasons to be given for its Creation in that Manner which we find related in the Book of Genesis 1. There is no Reason to suppose the World to have been at first made by Mechanichal Laws tho' it were preserved according to such Laws whereas I shall afterwards prove that it is not preserved according to them There is no Reason that the World should be first framed according to the Laws of Motion which are established for its Preservation and Government in its fixt and settled State The Origin of the Universe was by the immediate hand of God before the Appointment of the several Laws which afterwards were to take place and we may as well endeavour to reduce the working of Miracles to the standing Laws of Nature as the Creation of the World For certainly of all Miracles the Creation of the World must be the greatest not only as it signifies the Production of Matter and Motion out of Nothing but as it was the putting things into such Order as to make them capable of the Laws of Motion ordained for them It is not yet agreed nor is it ever like to be what these Laws of Motion are which the Philosophers so much talk of and there being such a mutual Connexion and Combination of Bodies and such a Dependance of every Body upon so many others in every Motion it is impossible to know how any two Bodies would act upon each other if they were separate from all Bodies besides or were out of that State which they now are in It is reasonable therefore to imagine that the several Parts of the World must be ranged and settled before these Laws could take place and to reduce the Creation of the World to the Laws of Motion which now prevail in it is to suppose a Creation antecedent to that by which the World was made This is as if an Indian should attempt to give an Account of the making of a Watch by the several Motions which he sees performed in it after it is made and should imagine that the Materials moving in such a manner at last arrived to the exact frame of a Watch. 2. There are sufficient Reasons to be given for the Creation of the World in that manner which we find related in the Book of Genesis It is great Presumption in Men to be too curious and inquisitive about the Reasons of God's Actions for whatever he delivers of himself we ought entirely to believe both the Thing it self and the manner and Circumstances of it Where wast thou when I laid the Foundations of the Earth declare if thou hast Vnderstanding Job xxxviii 4. But this must be said to the Glory of God and to the Shame of all such as Censure and Cavil at his Word that even by Men such Reasons may be given of his Actions as all his Adversaries shall not be able to gain-say God hath ordered all things in Measure and Number and Weight Wisd xi 20. And as to
to make known his Name and Truth among the Gentiles In the time of Moses this People it self was uncapable of that pure and Spiritual Worship which the Messiah was to appoint and stood in need of a Ceremonial Law and Service to restrain them from Idolatry and to preserve the sense and remembrance of the Promises and Laws deliver'd to Adam and Noah And this Ritual Service was unworthy that the Messiah should come purposely to appoint it who was indeed himself the principal thing signified and typified by it and the Types and Figures of himself could not be Instituted by himself in Person for then they would have been insignificant and there could have been no use or occasion for them But the most Excellent and Divine Institution was reserv'd for his Appointment to which all the rest was but preparatory The Law was added because of Transgressions till the Seed should come to whom the Promise was made Gal. iii. 19. After the Revelation of God's Will and Commandments had thro' the great neglect and wickedness of Mankind become ineffectual God sent all his Servants the Prophets daily rising up early and sending them an expression setting forth his great care and watchfulness over his People for their good yet they hearkned not unto him nor enclin'd their ear but hardned their neck Jer. vii 25 26. To Cure this strange stubbornness and their proneness to Idolatry God sent this People into Captivity for Seventy years which wrought so thorough a Reformation in them that they were never afterwards given to Idolatry but endur'd all extremities of Torments rather than they would be brought to any compliance with the Heathen Worship and therefore there could be no longer such necessity that the Ceremonial Law should be continu'd to them to keep them from the Worship of Idols But in other respects their Provocations were still very great And as the Lord in the Parable first sent his Servants and last of all his Son saying they will reverence my Son and thereby left those wicked Men without excuse and manifested the Justice of his Vengeance upon the Murtherers of his own Son So God first sent his Prophets and when the Jews who had been train'd in the knowledge and worship of him and were to conveigh it to other Nations would not be reclaim'd by them but revil'd and destroy'd them and then set up their own Traditions in opposition to their Doctrines he sends his Beloved Son before he would utterly take away their City and Nation and effected that by the death of his Son whom they Crucified which the experience of so many Ages had shewn could be effected no other way God reveal'd himself at sundry times and in divers manners and in his Infinite Wisdom proportioned the ways and measure of his Revelations to the capacities and the necessities of the several Ages in which they were made till at last he hath spoken unto us by his Son Heb. i. 1 2. When we were Children we were in bondage under the Elements of the World but when the fulness of the time was come God sent forth his Son made of a Woman made under the Law Gal. iv 3 4. 2. The Reception of Christ and his Gospel in the World would have been much more difficult if so many Prophets in so many several Ages had not foretold his coming Our Saviour himself and his Apostles after him appeal to Moses and the Prophets for the truth of their Doctrine this was the great Argument which they us'd to the Jews in Confirmation even of their Miracles themselves they prov'd that the Prophets had foretold that Christ should come at that very time when he came and that he should work those Miracles which he wrought and should empower his Disciples to do the like his Death and Resurrection and Ascension and the descent of the Holy Ghost were all Prophesied of and Prophecies thus foretelling the Miracles and Miracles fullfilling the Prophecies and both mutually confirming and supporting each other afforded all the Evidence that could be given for Prophecies and Miracles are all the ways by which God can be supposed to reveal himself to Mankind And therefore thousands of the Jews were convinc'd out of the Scriptures that Jesus is the Christ and were Converted to the Christian Faith And the Prophecies concerning the Messiah are still an unanswerable Argument in vindication of our Religion which Argument we must have wanted if our blessed Saviour had come so much sooner as not to have been Prophesied of so many Ages beforehand And those who reject the Gospel now would have thought they had had much more Reason on their side than they can now pretend to have for there had then been so much less means for their Conviction So that the coming of our Saviour was deferr'd to give the greater Evidence and the fuller conviction of his being the Christ It would have been hard to believe that the Son of God should come into the World with little or no notice given of it beforehand and few or no Prophets sent to foretell his coming and prepare his way But when he had been so long before Prophesy'd of even from the beginning of the World thro' the several Ages of it when there had been a general expectation of the Messiah to be born and the Time and Place and Tribe and Family and Person of whom he was to be born by degrees and at several times had been foretold when Mens hopes and desires to see him were thus from Age to Age awakened and alarmed this was a Solemnity worthy to introduce and attend the Son of God into the World and a Method which would prove a standing Evidence of his being come into it 3. The time of Christ's coming may depend upon things which we are uncapable of knowing For it may depend upon the duration of the World and it is impossible for any Man to know how long that shall be The Scripture speaks of the times of the Gospel under the Phrase of the last Days but this is to be understood in relation not to the continuance of the World but to the Christian Dispensation which is the last means of Salvation that God will vouchsase to Mankind and with regard to the Jewish Church and Government which was just then at an end as I shall shew in the next Chapter Now if the World may continue as long under the dispensation of the Gospel as it had done before it and no Man can tell but it may we shall find little cause to wonder that Christ was not sooner born into the World For we find that the Faith and Zeal of Christians decays as we are at a farther distance of time from the Incarnation of our Saviour and the first propagation of his Gospel and the length of the time it self proves a temptation to some to disbelieve it for men are apt to give less credit to what happened long ago and to think themselves less concern'd in it
unwilling to find the Christian Religion true which puts such a check to all Licentiousness and to their beloved and long accustomed Vices Vice would be sure to make a strong defence and an eager Plea and nothing could be difficult for it to discover when it had such a number of such subtle and devoted Advocates In this Conjuncture of time the Saviour of the World appears and he appears in a mean and low Condition despised by his own People who soon became as much despised themselves by all the World besides The Prince of Peace is Born in a time of setled and Universal Peace when Men had most leisure and opportunity to examine and consider things and when by the Establishment of the Roman Empire under Augustus in its full power and extent there was an open and free Correspondence between all Nations and the Apostles and their Followers by this means might find a like admittance to preach the Gospel in all Countries but to be alike hated and persecuted in all parts of the World The Religion of Christ was not to make advantage of any Troubles and Confusions in the Empire as that of Mahomet afterwards did but to recommend it self by its own worth and efficacy to the most serious and impartial Minds and under all these disadvantages it soon made its way into the Emperor's Court where Craft and Luxury and every thing that is most contrary to the purity and simplicity of the Gospel reigned St. Paul had his Proselytes in Caesar's Houshold and his Bonds in Christ were manifest in all the Palace and in all other places at Rome Phil. i. 13. iv 22. The truth of the Gospel approved itself to the most prejudiced Judgments it stood all the Trials and Conquer'd all Opposition that Wit and Learning and Vice it self could make For by the leave of the Atheists and Deists of our own Age the Christian Religion found the subtilest and most dangerous Adversaries at its first propagation The Epicureans and the Stoicks encountred St. Paul at Athens and these last especially were inferiour to no other Sect of Philosophers either for their obstinacy in adhering to their own Opinions or for their Art and Skill in Disputation And it appears from the several Apologies made afterwards in vindication of our Religion that all was at the very first alledged against it which can with any pretence or colour be objected Thus was Christ Born in the fulness of time when all the Prophecies concerning his coming were fulfilled and when the World was in expectation of him and had such general notice of his coming in a time the most unlikely for an Imposture to pass undiscover'd and therefore the most seasonable for Truth to manifest it self since that must needs be true which neither Learning nor Prejudice nor Vice nor Interest could prove to be false The accomplishment of Prophecies and the Conversion and Martyrdom of such numbers of Men in such an Age recommends the Gospel to us with all the advantage which any Juncture of Time could give CHAP. XXII Of the last Days and of the last Day or the Day of Judgment BY the last Days in the Scriptures must be meant either the last Days of the World or the last Days of the Jewish State and Government or the Days of the Gospel Dispensation which are the last Days in respect of the Means and Opportunities of Salvation vouchsafed to Mankind I. The last Days of the World are seldom mention'd directly and in express terms but under such Resemblances as were fit to represent them in the description of other Events For it was a known thing among the Jews that their whole Dispensation being Typical whatever happened to them under their Law and Government must afterwards be fulfilled in a more eminent manner under the Oeconomy and Dispensation of the Messias and therefore the last Days of Jerusalem must be Typical of the last Days of the World For the Destruction of Jerusalem at the Conclusion of the Jewish Dispensation was only a Type of the final Destruction of the World at the consummation of all things when Christ shall deliver up the Kingdom to God even the Father 1 Cor. xv 24. For which Reason our Saviour makes use of such words Matt. xxiv as are applicable to both of these events and oftentimes more fitly to the last Judgment that after the Destruction of Jerusalem it might appear that the rest remains still to be accomplished at the Day of Judgment But there are likewise such Expressions used as evidently shew that the Destruction of Jerusalem is the thing immediately designed in the Prophecy This will appear if we consider several Verses of that Chapter Then let them which be in Judea flee into the Mountains ver 16. and that with the greatest hast for let him which is on the house top not come down to take any thing out of his house v. 17. Neither let him which is in the field return back to take his Cloaths v. 18. But the Condition of such would be very miserable who should be unfit for flight And woe unto them that are with Child and to them that give suck in those days v. 19. But pray ye that your flight be not in the Winter neither on the Sabbath Day v. 20. There will be no flying from the general destruction of the World but the Disciples are here warned to fly from the destruction of Jerusalem and escape into the Mountains and they are commanded to pray that their flight might be hindred neither by the season of the year nor by the Sabbath on which the Jews were permitted to travel but a very little way Which supposes that the World was to last after the Tribulation there spoken of and that therefore the final destruction of this material World is not the thing there immediately meant And except those days should be shortned there should no Flesh be saved but for the Elects sake those days shall be shortned v. 22. If this Destruction should have raged long in that manner no Man of the Jews could have survived it but it was to be so abated and so soon over that the converted Jews might be preserved from it which Promise was very remarkably and wonderfully fullfilled to the Christians at the Siege of Jerusalem who made their escape into the Mountains and retir'd to Pella For wheresoever the Carcass is there will the Eagles be gathered together ver 28. which is a plain allusion to the Roman Eagles or the Standards of their Armies Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall the Sun be darkned and the Moon shall not give her light and the Stars shall fall from Heaven and the Powers of the Heavens shall be shaken ver 29. This was in some respect litterally fulfilled at the Destruction of Jerusalem But it is usual with the Prophets by these Figures to describe the Destruction of Nations and the false Teachers are styl'd by St. Jude ver 13. wandring
bring to our remembrance the Body and Blood of Christ offer'd upon the Cross for us to make us Partakers of them and to be Pledges of all the Benefits which we receive thereby And as the Eucharist was appointed by Christ in the room of the Paschal Supper so Bread and Wine were in use among all Nations in their Religious Worship and nothing can more fitly express our Communion with God and with one another than to be entertained together at God's Table So that since there must be Sacraments or External Rites and Ordinances they could neither be fewer nor more suitable to the simplicity of the Gospel and to the Wants of Christians than the Sacraments of Baptism and of the Lord's Supper are CHAP. XXIV Of the Blessed TRINITY I Am not here to prove the Doctrine of the Trinity from the Scriptures but to suppose this to be the Doctrine which the Scriptures teach and to shew that no reasonable Objection can be brought against the Christian Religion upon that Account And indeed this was supposed to be the Doctrine of the Scriptures and objected against by (k) Lucian Philopatr Heathens long before the Council of Nice Which is a strong proof for the Truth and Antiquity of this Doctrine when it was so well known even to the Heathens that they upbraided the Christians with it in the second Century and in all probability from the very beginning for we find it then mentioned as a known and common Reproach Supposing then this to be the Doctrine of the Scriptures that the Father Son and Holy Ghost are but one God I will shew I. That there is no Contradiction in this Mystery of our Religion II. That other things are and must be believed by us which we as little understand III. That the Belief of this Doctrine doth mightily tend to the advancement of Vertue and Holiness and hath a great influence upon the Lives and Conversations of Men. 1. There is no Contradiction in this Doctrine We are ignorant of the Essences of Created Beings which are known to us only by their Causes and Effects and by their Operations and Qualities and our Reason and Senses and Passions being continually conversant about these our Notions are formed upon the Ideas which we frame to our selves concerning the Creatures and this makes us the less capable of understanding the Divine Essence besides the infinite Disproportion between the Nature of God and Humane Faculties When we say that God is an Infinite and Incomprehensible Being we speak the general sense of Mankind and no Man cavils at it but because the Scriptures represent this Incomprehensible Being to us under the Notion of Father Son and Holy Ghost that is Matter of Cavil and Dispute Whereas God being essentially Holy and True we must believe him to be what he declares himself to be in the Scriptures and he being Incomprehensible we may not be able to comprehend it If God be infallibly True why do we not believe what he delivers concerning himself And if he be Incomprehensible what Reason can be given why the Divine Essence may not subsist in Father Son and Holy Ghost These are styled Three Persons because we find distinct Personal Acts and Properties attributed to them in the Scriptures and we may suppose Three Persons in the Unity of the Divine Nature without any appearance of contradiction This will be evident if we consider 1. The Distinction of the Three Persons in the Deity 2. The Unity of the Divine Nature 3. The Difference between the Divine Persons and Humane Persons 1. The Distinction of the Three Persons in the Deity The Divine Nature is in Three Persons the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost in the Father Originally without either Generation or Procession in the Son as communicated to him by the Father not in any such way as Sons amongst Men have their Nature derived to them from their Fathers but yet in some such manner as is best exprest to our Apprehensions by styling him the Son of God tho' the manner of his Generation is altogether incomprehensible to us The Holy Ghost has the Divine Nature communicated to him from the Father and the Son not in the same way whereby the Son has it communicated to him from the Father but in some other different incomprehensible manner whereby he is not begotten but proceeds both from the Father and the Son The Divine Nature is communicated by the Father to the Son by Eternal Generation and by the Father and the Son to the Holy Ghost by Eternal Procession We have nothing further revealed to us of the Generation of the Son but that he is begotten or received the Divine Nature from the Father in some such way as for want of a fitter Word we can best understand by the Term of Generation and the Scripture teacheth us no more of the Procession of the Holy Ghost but that he is not begotten of the Father as the Son is but proceeds from the Father and the Son some other way and not by Generation But as he that would Discourse to a Man born Blind concerning Light must use many very improper expressions to make himself tho' never so imperfectly understood so it is here we have no words that are proper but these are sufficient to teach us all which we are capable of knowing at least all that is necessary for us to know of the Godhead 2. The Unity of the Divine Nature To say that Three Gods are one God or that Three Persons are One Person is a manifest Contradiction but to say that Three Persons are not One Person but One God is so far from a Contradiction that it is a Wonder how it should be mistaken for One by any who understand what a Contradiction means The Father is God the Son is God and the Holy Ghost is God and yet they are not Three Gods but One God For neither of these Three Persons is God distinct and separate from the rest but they all are but One God One Lord Jehovah not Three distinct and separate Lords and so not Three Eternals nor Three Incomprehensibles nor Three Uncreated nor Three Almighties distinct and separate from each other but all the Three Persons together are One Eternal Incomprehensible Uncreated Almighty Lord God It is Matter of Dispute what is the Principle of Individuation in Men or what it is which causes one Man to be a different Individual Person from another and it is still more difficult to find out the Principle of Individuation in Beings which are purely Spiritual and have nothing of Material Accidents to distinguish them But whatever the Principle of Individuation in Men may be it is certain that the Consequence of it is that two Men may exist separately both as to Time and Place and that one may know more or less than the other they may live at a distance the one from the other and can never at once sill the same Numerical Place nor
could not deny the Evidence of the Fact supposing the thing possible but they would not own it possible that such a thing should be and upon that account rejected all the Evidence that could be produced as tending only to prove an Impossibility and so not to be regarded I shall therefore shew the possibility of the Resurrection of the Dead and that it is unreasonable to think it incredible that God should raise the Dead If it be incredible that God should Raise the Dead it must be upon one of these Two Accounts either because he cannot or because he will not do it For what God both can and will do is so far from being Incredible that it is a most undoubted Truth Therefore I shall First Prove that God is certainly able to Raise the Dead and Secondly That he certainly will do it 1. That God is certainly able to Raise the Dead is a thing credible in it self and therefore ought to be esteemed incredible by no sort of Men whatsoever tho' they have no Knowledge of any Revealed Religion if they have but right Apprehensions concerning God No Man can have a true Notion of God but he must know that God is a Being of Infinite Power and Wisdom that he made the World and all things therein that he preserves and sustains all Creatures and that all things are wholly at his Will and Disposal to do with them as he pleases that nothing can oppose or resist his Will or give him the least hindrance in any thing which he is pleased to undertake How then can it seem incredible that God should raise a Dead Man to Life again when he at first gave him his Life And is it not as easie to restore it to him as to give it him at first Might we not as well dispute that it is impossible for a Man to be Born as that it is impossible for him to be Raised from the Dead if our own experience did not convince us of that but not of this God who gave all that Power and Ability which Natural Causes have to produce their Effects may if he pleases produce the same Effects immediately by himself For it is not because he stands in need of any help from Natural Causes that he has appointed them but because it seemed best to his Infinite Wisdom to appoint this Course and Order in the World And it is evident even to Natural Reason that there must have been some who were immediately Created by God and were not born of others as Men are since that there must have been some First Parents some who had no Parents themselves but were of Gods immediate Creation that there must have been some who were the First of all Mankind and therefore could be born of no others Since then Man must of necessity have been first formed by God himself and not have come by a Natural Birth into the World it is evident that God might have made as many Men and Women after this manner as he had pleased and he who is the Author of our Nature may act without it and as much beyond and above any Natural Powers and Faculties in his Creatures as it seems best to him And it may as well be thought incredible that God should at first make Man as that he should be able to raise him up again after Death for Death is only the End of Nature's power of working not of the Power of God himself who as he originally made the Race of Mankind so he appointed the Nature of Things and gave it a stinted Power which it cannot exceed but his own Power is Infinite and no Bounds can be set to it When a Man is once Dead Nature has done with him and can never recover him to Life again for God ordained at first that according to the Course of Nature he should only be born and live here a while not that his Life should be restored again to him after Death But he is not so confined himself that he cannot give Life to the Dead but has reserved this as his own Prerogative and above any thing in Nature's Power God who formed Adam of the Dust of the ground might have formed all Mankind so if he had pleased and he can as easily raise all Mankind to Life again out of the Dust as he made the first Man out of it And the Atheist one would think has of all Men the least pretence to scruple the Resurrection of the Dead who must suppose that Mankind at first sprung out of the Earth as Plants do by a Spontaneous Production and for him to pretend that the Bodies of Men cannot be raised to Life again by an Almighty Power is as unreasonable as any thing in Atheism it self can be When at certain Seasons every Year we see things receive a New Life as it were according to the Course of Nature we may well conclude that if so strange an Alteration can proceed from Natural Causes then surely God is able to effect that which is much more wonderful and to raise even these Bodies of ours after they are dead and rotten in the Grave to Life again And since the Corn which is Sown in the Earth is not quickned except it die and will not revive and grow again and come to perfection unless it be first buried in the Ground and undergo great Alterations there it is a foolish thing as the Apostle argues to doubt of the Resurrection of the Dead because we cannot understand the way and manner of it Let Men Answer all the Difficulties in Nature and it will be time enough afterwards to dispute with them about a Resurrection but when we are at a loss about the most common and obvious things it must be great Presumption to deny the Resurrection because we cannot comprehend it when alas what is there besides that we are able to comprehend Will we presume to say that God can do nothing but what we understand how it may be done when every thing we see may inform us that his Wisdom is Infinite and his ways past finding out Indeed if we understood every thing else there might be some pretence to scruple the Resurrection because we do not understand how it shall be But when our Ignorance is so notorious in all other things it is the heighth of Folly and Perverseness to think our selves competent Judges of such a Mystery as this So far are we from being able to make any Estimate of God's Power and so far is the Resurrection from being Incredible because there may be Objections made about it which may seem unanswerable that if no other Answer could be given this would be sufficient that God can do more than we can have the least Thought or Conception of and that it is no Argument that he cannot do what we cannot conceive how it should be done so long as there is nothing contrary to the Divine Nature in it nor which implies a Contradiction the
immediate Influence of the Divine Power but in Miracles this Power manifests its self in an extraordinary manner above and contrary to the Established Laws or Rules which God has in all other cases prescribed for the producing Effects II. Men would fancy to themselves some kind of Scheme or other and would frame some Notions and Conceits to give an Account of Miracles or they would imagin them to return of Course at certain Periods or upon some Accidents if they saw them frequently done or perhaps they would suppose them to proceed from some Defect in the Nature of Things which could not always keep its course but made many Deviations from it But when Miracles were wrought only in some Ages for peculiar Reasons this shews that they were done by an immediate Divine Power with a particular Design which could be no other than the Confirmation of Religion since they ceased both under the Law and the Gospel when both were fully declared and confirmed III. A perpetual Power of Miracles in all Ages would give occasion to continual Impostures which would confound and distract Mens minds and would make the true Mircles themselves suspected We see now that the Dreams of every Enthusiast and the Pretences of every Impostor are apt to startle weak minds tho' we have so much Reason not to expect Miracles or Revelations But if we were in constant expectation of True Miracles the False would be much more likely to mislead many and to make others reject the Belief of any Miracles at all If Prophecies and Miracles had been frequent in the Jewish Church to the coming of our Saviour his Prophecies and wonderful Works had not so well distinguished and manifested him to be the Christ But when after so long an Intermission they were again revived in him this shewed him to be the great Prophet and Messias who was expected And it is very observable that as Miracles had been discontinued for a long time among the Jews so St. John Baptist who was more than a Prophet and one of the greatest of all the Men that had been before him yet wrought no Miracles that he might be the better distinguished from the Messias and that there might arise no doubt in the Minds of any which of them was the Christ And when our Saviour had been acknowledged to be the Christ in all Parts of the World it was fit that Miracles should cease to preserve the Authority due to the Miracles wrought by himself and his Disciples it being more for the Honour of Christ that the Miracles wrought in his Name should cease when his Religion had been fully Established than that Men should be tempted to doubt who was the true Christ and which was the true Religion upon the account of false Miracles wrought in opposition to the True IV. Another Reason why the Gift of Miracles has been with-held in latter Ages may be this because since there has been a general depravation of Manners among Christians it would have proved a great occasion of Pride and Vain-Glory to those who had possest it as we find it was to some even in the times of the Apostles 1 Cor. xii xiv And our Saviour saw it requisite to give Caution to his Disciples Notwithstanding in this rejoice not that the Spirits are subject unto you but rather rejoice because your Names are written in Heaven Luke x. 20. It must be an eminent and truly Primitive Piety that could bear the having of such Gifts with an humble and Christian Temper of Mind V. It is an Observation of (f) Advan of L●arn l. iii. c. 2. my Lord Bacon's That there was never Miracle wrought by God to Convert an Atheist because the Light of Nature might have led him to confess a God But Miracles are designed to Convert Idolaters and the Superstitious who have acknowledged a Deity but erred in his Adoration 〈…〉 Light of Nature extends to declare the 〈◊〉 and true Worship of God For the same Reason when once the true Religion is confirmed in such a manner as to have the same Evidence for it which there is for the Existence of God himself Miracles are no more to be expected to convert an Infidel than to convert an Atheist Among Men of Learning and Reason there ought to be no more doubt of the Truth of the Gospel than of the Being of a God and they without the help of Miracles may instruct others (g) De Procur Indor Salute Lib. ii c. 9. Acosta enquiring into the Cause why Miracles are not wrought by the present Missionaries for the Conversion of Heathen Nations as they were by the Christians of the Primitive Ages gives this as one Reason because the Christians at first were ignorant Men and the Gentiles learned but now on the contrary all the Learning in the World is employ'd for the Defence of the Gospel and there is nothing but Ignorance to oppose it and there can be no need of farther Miracles in behalf of so good a Cause when it is in the Hands of such able Advocates against so weak Adversaries However though there be no such change as was wont formerly to be wrought in the visible Course of Nature in Confirmation of our Religion yet there is still a Divine Power evident among Christians living in Heathen Countries For the Devil who tyrannizeth over the Heathens has no Power over Christians dwelling among them of which the Indians have taken great Notice and have (h) Lerii Histor Navig in Brasil c. 16. declared the Christians happy in being freed from the Tortures of Wicked Spirits by which they find themselves often seized on the sudden in a terrible manner and stand in perpetual fear of them (i) Capt. Knoxe 's Hist of Ceylon Part iii. c. 4. Christians they do acknowledge have a Prerogative above themselves and not to be under the Power of these Infernal Spirits It is so generally related by Travellers of all Professions both Protestants and Papists that the Devil exercises a manifest Tyranny over the Heathens but is able to do nothing to the Christians abiding amongst them that this cannot be denied to be a plain Argument of a Divine Power discovering it self in Confirmation of the Christian Religion though not by such Miracles as were formerly wrought because there is no longer any need of them CHAP. XXX Of the Causes why the Jews and Gentiles rejected Christ notwithstanding all the Miracles wrought by Him and his Apostles THough the Christian Religion be most certain in it self yet there is a Supernatural Grace required to make us throughly and effectually convinced of the certainty of it No Man can come to me says our Saviour except the Father which hath sent me draw him and this is declared to be the Reason of the Infidelity of such as were offended at his Doctrin and departed from him But there are some of you that believe not for Jesus knew from the beginning who they were that believed not
caused the Christians in their Apologies to press earnestly for a fair and impartial Hearing of their Cause beseeching their Enemies that they would not be so injurious to the Truth and to themselves as to despise and condemn what they did not understand They were desirous to undergo any Tryal if they might but be admitted to be heard 6. Yet many who did not actually become Christians had more favourable and just Thoughts of the Christian Religion (l) Ael Lamprid. in Alex. Severo Alexander Severus had the Effigies of Christ in his Chappel and had designed to erect a Temple for the Worship of him and to insert his Name among the Heathen Gods As it is reported that Adrian likewise with the same Intention had commanded Temples to be built without Images in all Cities but was dissuaded by some who consulted the Oracles about it which gave out that all Men would then become Christians and the other Temples would soon be forsaken This which is related concerning Adrian has been by some supposed to be a mistake because the Fathers say nothing of it But Ael Lampridius or rather Spartianus who mentions it being a Heathen might perhaps have it from the Gentiles for it was only in Adrian's Intention to set up the Worship of Christ which might be unknown by the Christians of his time the design being laid aside upon consulting the Oracles It was certainly reported in the Historian's time as he declares and yet this Objection lies as well against the Report as against the Reality of the thing For it is strange that a Report of this nature should be mentioned by no Christian Writer though there had been no Truth in it (m) Euseb Hist lib VII c. 11 Aemilianus the Prefect of Egypt asked Dionysius Bishop of Alexandria when he was brought before him why if he whom the Christians Worshipped be God they could not Worship him with the other Gods Many admired the Doctrin and were convinced of the Truth of the Christian Religion who could not free themselves from the Prejudices of their Education they would have been willing to have it taken in among others but could not bring themselves to relinquish all their old Religions for it The Calumnies raised against the Christians had caused the popular Odium and Rage against them but they were Vindicated by (n) Plin. lib. X. Epist 97. Just Mar. Apol. 2. Eus Hist lib. IV. c. 8 9 13. Pliny in an Epistle to Trajan by Serenius Granianu● Proconsul of Asia in his Epistle to Adrian by Adrian himself in his Rescript by Antoninus Pius in his Epistle to the Common Council or the Community of the Estates of Asia though some ascribe this Epistle to M. Antoninus not to mention his Epistle to the Senate of Rome (o) Just Martyr Dial. Trypho the Jew likewise frees them from the Crimes commonly laid against them and owns the Excellency of their Precepts contained in the Gospel And it is observable that those Crimes which had been wont to be objected against the Christians by their former Adversaries were not mentioned by Julian in Discourses written to oppose them who (p) Epist 49. Fragm Epist p. 305. elsewhere speaks of them in such a manner and so much to their commendation as shews the mighty force of Truth which could extort it from him But the Fear and Shame of Men hindred divers from embracing the Christian Religion who had a truer Notion of Things than to approve of their own (q) Aug. Civit. Dei lib. VI. c. 11. Seneca exposed the Heathen Worship and express'd himself with bitterness against the the Jews but being able to find nothing to blame in the Christian Religion nor daring to commend it for fear of giving Offence to the Heathens he made no mention of it at all These and such as these were the Occasions of the Unbelief of the Jews and Gentiles Though it must be confessed that there is nothing more difficult to be accounted for than the Notions and Actions of Men it is as hard to give an Account how (r) Senec. de Ira. lib. I. c. 25. Plut. in Lycurg Seneca and Plutarch should allow of the Murdering or Starving of poor Infants as they certainly did as why they were not Christians No Phaenomena in Nature can be more variable and uncertain in their Causes than the Opinions and Practices of Men which differ according to their Tempers and Capacities and Circumstances it is sufficient if we can find out any probable Solution and have several to offer which might take place according to several Cases But the Writings of such as opposed the Christian Religion were very slight and frivolous containing a Confession for the most part of the principal Matters of Fact upon which our Faith is established and raising only some weak Cavils which never came up to the main Cause or undertook to disprove the Truth of the Miracles and Prophecies upon which it is founded They could not deny the Miracles upon which our Religion is established and then let any Man judge what Reasons they could have for their Infidelity And indeed the prevaling of the Christian Religion under all manner of Disadvantages as to Humane Means shewed that the Adversaries of it had little to say against it For they must be but poor Arguments which could not dissuade Men from becoming Christians when they must incurr all the Dangers and Sufferings of this World to be so The Books of the first Heathen Writers against the Christian Religion are frequently cited by St. Jerom and St. Austin and other Authors of their Time as commonly known and probably they were extant long after So that their Arguments were baffled and destroyed long before the Books themselves and they had Time and Opportunity enough to do all the Mischief that they were capable of And their Writings are not yet so far lost but that we still know their Principal Arguments which the Christian Writers have not concealed but have given them their full Force and commonly in their own Words Origen was so careful to omit nothing considerable which Celsus had alleged that he was often forced to make Apologies for mentioning the same things over again rather then he would seem to let any things pass which was Material that his Adversary had said without taking Notice of it (s) Ambr. lib. 2. Epist 11. Aug. Epist 43. And some Pieces are preserved entire as the Petition of Symmachus among the Epistles of St. Ambrose and the Epistle of Maximus Madaurensis among those of St. Austin The Arguments of Julian are set down at large by St. Cyril and we Learn from (t) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vid. Spanhem in Julian oper Praefat St. Chrisostom that the Books of the Philosophers against the Christian Religion were neglected and despised by the Gentiles themselves and were scarce to be found but among the Christians before the Edict of Theodosius Junior to prohibit them There
was a long Succession of Philosophers and Sophists who made it their business to oppose the Christian Religion The Shool of Platonists which continued at Athens for some Ages would revive or reinforce any Arguments that had been used by their Predecessors in Opposition to Christianity Proclus and Damascius who were of this School lived about the middle of the Sixth Age and the Writings of Damascius were extant (u) Phot. cod CLXXXI CCXLII. LXXVII in Photius's time in the middle of the Ninth Age the History of Eunapius was then likewise extant and is (x) Voss de Graec. Hist said to be preserved at Venice We have the Abridgment of it by Zosimus and a sufficient Specimen of his malicious Invectives in his other Writings And it is probable that these and many other Books of the like nature which are now lost continued much longer than any Accounts which we have now remaining of them mention Of about Thirty Answers (y) Holstein de Vit. Script Porphyt c. 10. which were written to Porphyry by several Authors not one of them is now to be found When the World was satisfied of the insufficieny of his Objections the Answers to his Books were as little regarded as the Books themselves but underwent the same Fate with them The Jews who from the beginning of Christianity before but especially since the Destruction of Jerusalem have in vast Numbers been spread all over the World and have ever been the most implacable Enemies of the Gospel had the greatest Opportunity to detect any falshood in it and have never omitted any Advantage of improving and enforcing the Arguments against it and and therefore would be sure to retain any thing considerable which had been objected by their Fore-Fathers or by the Heathens with whom they conversed The Jews have been a perpetual restless Enemy in all Parts and Ages of the World and nothing material in this Case would escape their Observation But out of the Writings of the Ancient Jews which are still extant many things have been alleged by many Learned Men of our own and other Nations in confirmation of our Religion from the Confession of the Jews themselves The Unbelief therefore both of the Jews and Gentiles of those Ages is no material Objection nor altogether so unaccountable as the Unbelief of too many now who were born among Christians and have had their Education in the Christian Religion The Truth is Example is always the weakest Argument in any Case and can be of no Force or Authority against the clearest rational Evidence CHAP. XXXI That the Confidence of Men of false Religions and their Willingness to suffer for them is no Prejudice to the Authority of the True Religion THE Christian Religion doth infinitely surpass all others in the Number of its Martyrs of both Sexes of every Age and Nation and Rank and Condition Mistaken ignorant Zealots may often have suffered for other Religions but Men of the highest Station and Worth and inferiour to none in the Knowledge and Experience of every thing that the World esteems Excellent have renounced all and upon choice and after a full consideration of the Merits of the Cause have laid down their Lives for the sake of the Gospel Tyrants of the greatest Power and Cruelty have made it their Aim and Ambition by all sorts of Tortures to extirpate the Christian Religion they esteemed their Persecutions matter of Triumph and a fit subject for the (a) G●uter Inscript p. 238 280. Inscriptions of Monuments erected to their Memories But the invincible Patience and glorious Sufferings of the Christians prevailed against all the Rage and Force of their Enemies If the Martyrologies of all Religions were to be compared there would soon appear so manifest a difference between the Christian Martyrs and the Sufferers for other Religions that nothing would be needful to be said upon this subject But remembring with whom I have to deal I am resolved to take every thing at the lowest and argue with them upon their own Terms Let us for a while set aside whatever of this nature might be said in preference of the Christian Martyrs and suppose the Numbers and Zeal of the Martyrs for so we must call them at present of other Religions to have been as great as can be imagined yet the Cause it self makes a plain difference between them An ignorant Zeal in a wrong Cause is no Argument against the Goodness of any Cause which is maintained and promoted by such a Zeal as is reasonable and proceeds upon sure Grounds Indeed it were very hard and very strange if that which is true should be ever the less certain or the less to be regarded and esteemed because there may be other things that are false of which some Men are as firmly persuaded and are as much concerned for them as any one can be for the Truth it self And yet this is the wisest thing that many have to pretend against the certainty of the Religion in which they were Baptised that there are many Impostures in the World and none is without its Zealots to appear in Vindication of it I am confident no Man ever parted with any thing but his Religion upon so weak a Pretence A false Religion is not the only thing for which Men are wont to have an undeserved Value but their Country their Friends and themselves they are commonly as much mistaken in and do as highly overprize Is there then no real difference or solid worth in any of these Some of the most unlikely Countrys in the World have been admired by the Natives as if they were the Garden of Eden and the Place of Paradise Though there is nothing easier than to make a distinction concerning different Countrys And it is as easie to distinguish between the Elysium of the Heathens or Mahomet's Paradise and the Kingdom of Heaven and between the Ways which lead to them There is nothing especially if it be of any Moment and Consequence to them for which Men have not shewn themselves passionately concerned and it is not to be expected that they should be so much more infallible in Religion than in other things or should be so much less in earnest about it as not to discover the same Frailties and the same Affections which are visible in all the other Actions and Business of their Lives It is often seen in most Cases that some are as earnest and zealous in a false Cause as others are in a True but doth this prove that there is no difference between Falshood and Truth When two Men of opposite Parties are equally confident of the Goodness of their Cause it is certain that but one of them can be in the right and it is as certain that one of them must be at least so far in the right as he contradicts the other because as the two Parts of a Contradiction cannot be both True so they cannot be both False If then a confident and zealous
Persuasion doth not determine Right and Wrong True and False the remaining difficulty is how to distinguish them and that must be by the proper Evidence and the intrinsick Goodness of the Cause And our Evidence in behalf of our Religion is plain matter of Fact as the Death and Resurrection and Ascension of our Blessed Saviour and the Miracles wrought by him and his Apostles And if our Religion has sufficient Proof of what we assert in matter of Fact and other Religions have not sufficient Proof of that Authority to which they lay claim this must determine the Point though a Mahometan or Pagan should be as zealous for his Religion as a Christian can be It is commonly and truly said that it is not the Suffering but the Cause which makes the Martyr and if Men of False Religions have never so much Confidence of the Truth of them and have no Ground for it this can be no Argument against the Grounds and Proofs upon which the Evidence of the Christian Religion depends Other Religions may have their Zealots who offer themselves to die for them but the Christian Religion properly has the only Martyrs For Martyrs are Witnesses and no other Religion is capable of being attested in such a manner as the Christian Religion no other Religion was ever propagated by Witnesses who had seen and heard and been every way conversant in what they witnessed concerning the Principles of their Religion no Religion besides was ever preached by Men who after an unalterable Constancy under all kinds of Sufferings at last died for asserting it when they must of necessity have known whether it were true or false and therefore certainly knew it to be true or else they would never have suffered and died in that manner for it no other Religion was ever attosted from its first Propagation for several Hundreds of Years together by Men who had either seen the first Preachers themselves or had been acquainted with others who had seen them or had wrought Miracles and seen others work them no other Religion is contained in Books which were written at the first Propagation of it and dispers'd into all Countries in all Languages amongst all sorts of Men and especially amongst those who were most concerned and most able and desirous to disprove it if it had been false no Religion besides has by so weak and unlikely means prevailed over all the Power and Policy of the World none is in its Doctrin so agreeable to Reason and so worthy of God for its Author and none has been delivered down with so clear a continued and uninterrupted Testimony through all Ages and conveyed by a succession of Testimonies to this present Age And therefore no other Religion can have Martyrs who can die in confirmation of such a Testimony as this or who can be Martyrs and Witnesses to it by assuring the World at their Death that they have received the Religion thus testified and confirmed for which they die It is not the bare asserting a thing boldly and then dying for it which makes a Martyr but the Qualifications necessary in a Witness are necessary in him that is that he should have all Opportunities needful to know the Truth as well as no Temptation to speak the contrary Which Qualifications were evident in the Apostles and first Martyrs whose Testimony is that upon which the Proof of our Religion is founded and the Martyrdoms of latter Ages are additional Testimonies which without the former would be insignificant but supposing them are all the Testimony that can be given to any matter of Fact at this distance of Time and are as much beyond the Sufferings in behalf of any other Religion as the Evidence of the Christian Religion is beyond the Evidence for all others It is not merely Zeal though it proceed even to Death and Martyrdom upon which we build our Faith but the Reasons which Christians have for their Zeal Divers Nations have been as earnest Assertors of their Fabulous Antiquities as others can be of theirs which are known to be true but are these ever the less or those ever the more true upon that account We insist upon it that we have Books to shew and clear Evidence to produce for what we maintain and these have been examined by many Men in every Age and compared with what is to be alleged in behalf of contrary Religions and Men of the greatest Learning and Judgment and Prudence have chosen to die rather than to renounce this Religion for any other after the nicest and most impartial Examination they could make Whereas the Zealots and Martyrs for the Religions which are contrary to Christianity must be acknowledged to be Men that understand nothing of Antiquity but are ignorant of the History of their several Religions and take all upon uncertain Report and absurd Traditions without any Proof or Possibility of it and even against manifest Reason and the Evidence of undoubted History So plain is it that the Zeal and Confidence of Men of false Religions and their willingness to die for them can be no prejudice to the Authority and Certainty of the true Religion The Enthusiasms and vain Notions and Conceits of some Zealots can be no more a Prejudice to the Truth and Reality of our Religion than it is an Argument against the Truth and Certainty of Human Reason that there are so many Fools and Madmen in the World CHAP. XXXII That Differences in Matters of Religion are no Prejudice to the Truth and Authority of it THere is nothing which has proved a a greater Snare and Scandal to weak Minds nor which gives the Enemies of Religion greater Advantage as they think against it than the Dissentions amongst Christians and the different Sects and Parties into which they are divided This makes some willing to conclude that there is no certainty on any side when they see equal Zeal and equal Confidence in Men of all Persuasions that contend for their several Opinions But St. Paul writes to the Corinthians that there must be not only Divisions but Heresies also and not only that they must be but that they are not without their use and expediency in the Church They are so far from being any real Prejudice to the Truth and Certainty of Religion that they do indeed conduce to manifest the Excellency of it and the Sincerity of those that profess it For there must be also Heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you 1 Cor. xi 19. From whence I shall shew I. That Differences in matters of Religion must be among Christians unless God should miraculously and irresistibly interpose to prevent them II. That it is not necessary nor expedient that God should thus interpose III. That these Differences how great and how many soever they be even the worst of Schisms and Heresies are no prejudice to the Truth and Authority of Religion I. That Differences in matters of Religion must be among
Christians unless God should miraculously and irresistibly interpose to prevent them There must be also Heresies among you The miraculous Power and Demonstration of an infallible Spirit in the Apostles themselves could not hinder the rise of them It must needs be says our Saviour that Offences or it is impossible but that Offences will come but wo unto him through whom they come Matth. xviii 7. Luke xvii The Church can by no means be free from Offences Scandals and Divisions unless God should forcibly restrain Men from running into them The Tempers and Capacities of Men are very different and therefore in many Cases they will make a different Judgment of Things Much Attention and Thoughtfulness and an exact Knowledg of Antiquity is requisite to make a true Judgment in divers Controversies and few Men are willing to be at that pains which is necessary to inform themselves aright in lesser Difficulties they are contented to take up with the Appearances of things which first offer themselves or to which by Custom and Education they have been most used There is so much Difficulty to get rid of Prejudices so much Labour and Study is in many cases required in the search after Truth that few can prevail with themselves to undergo it Few Men examine the Ground of things and fewer do it to any Purpose most Men follow as they are led without any further Care or Thought and die in the Religion in which they were brought up without much troubling themselves whether it be true or false but taking all upon Trust if they happen to be in the Right it is by chance and more than they know or are able to prove if they be in the Wrong they know as little of it but Right or Wrong they follow the Example of others of whom they have conceived a favourable Opinion or who have some Authority with them to influence them they profess their Religion as they practise other things for no better Reason than because they see others have done it before them and they stand up for it only as they do for all Customs which by long use are become familiar and almost natural to them but may be worn out by a different Practice and Custom And when the Generality of Men are thus careless and unconcerned to examine the Grounds and Principles of their several Religions this gives a mighty Opportunity and Advantage to Men of ill Principles and ill Designs to infuse and spread their Opinions For if by the Plausibleness and Importunity of their Insinuations or by the Profession of a more than ordinary Zeal and Strictness in some things that are most popular they can but gain a few Persons of Note and Interest who may influence others a Party is made and a Sect set up which may perhaps continue for some Generations and a fondness for Novelty and a Personal Dislike and Prejudice against some Men and an Esteem and Admiration of others and several Accidents as they fall in with the several Tempers and Inclinations of Men may make great Additions to a Sect that is once formed Men who thought themselves disobliged amongst the Jews were wont to go over to the Samaritans and Deserters in Religion are as usual as in War upon any great Discontent or upon hopes of great Advantage And these Men to Testify their Sincerity are observed commonly to be most Violent however they serve to make a Number and to strengthen a Party Most Schisms and Heresies have been begun by Men of ill Designs who under pretences of Godliness gratified their own Passions of Ambition or Covetousness or more Scandalous Vices This was the Original of the Heresies in the Apostles days and it has been observable in the first Authors of them ever since An Affectation of Singularity of Popular Fame and Preeminence have been the Occasion of great Mischieves in the Church Some Men are as fond of their own New Opinions as others are of Honours or Wealth or Pleasure and can bear no Contradiction but contend for a kind of Empire in Knowledge and shew a mighty Zeal to gain Proselytes because this is to extend their Conquests and enlarge their Dominion over Mens Faith Some that devoured Widows Houses have for a pretence made long Prayers Matt. xxiii 14. And it is a shame and Horror even to speak of those things which have been done by others not only in secret but openly and in the View of the World under the most solemn and Zealous Professions for the Glory of God and the Good of Souls And the Errors of Men of no ill meaning but of great Zeal with little Knowledg have sometimes found a strange Acceptance in the World for the sake of that Integrity and Sincerity which appeared in their first Authors Now when all the Passions and Infirmities and Vices of Men thus contribute to produce and promote Differences in Religion it is no greater Wonder that there are such Differences than that there are Frailties and Vices amongst Men that some Men are vicious and ready to seduce others and that others are easy to be seduced St. Paul complains of false Apostles deceitful Workers Transforming themselves into the Apostles of Christ and no Marvel says he for Satan himself is Transformed into an Angel of Light therefore it is no great thing if his Ministers also be Transformed as the Ministers of Righteousness whose end shall be according to their Works 2 Cor. xi 13.14.15 Satan himself strives to appear like an Angel of Light and Sin is forced to take the disguise of Religion Vice is a thing which few Men care much to own how fond soever they be of it Numbers in other cases are wont to bring things into Reputation but it is not so in most Vices which tho' they have been practised by great Numbers of Men in all Ages yet have been always nevertheless infamous and this shews the detestable Nature of Vice and Irreligion that they could never become creditable in a vicious and irreligious World but bad Men are ashamed of them and endeavour to conceal and hide them under some colour of Religion and Vertue But since every Vice and every Passion and Interest of Men may conduce to the raising and somenting of Differences in Religion it is as impossible that they should not be in the World as that Sin it self should not be in it which can never be wholly prevented unless God should force Men to be Good and therefore it is impossible that there should be no Differences in Religion unless the same Force and Necessity should restrain Men from them II. It is not necessary nor expedient that God should miraculously and irresistibly interpose to prevent Differences in Matters of Religion Because it would contradict the very Design of all Religion for God thus to interpose The Design of Religion is to Direct and Command Men what to Believe and what to Do upon such Terms as may prevail with them by reasonable Arguments
Papists that no difference is to be found in the several Copies of the Bible which can prejudice the Fundamental Points of Religion or weaken the Authority of the Scriptures p. 135. No less may be said in behalf of the New Testament than of the Old The great care and Reverence which the Primitive Christians had for the Books of it Hereticks could not corrupt the Text and pass undiscovered to the Orthodox or even by other Hereticks p. 140. CHAP. VI. Of the Difficulties in Chronology in the Holy Scriptures THe uncertainty of Chronology in general p. 142. Differences in Chronology do not infer uncertainty in the Matters of Fact themselves p 143. They do not infer that there was any Chronological Mistake made by the Pen-men of the Holy Scriptures p. 145. The total Term of Years is not always exactly distinguished from all the Particulars of which it is composed and this has been the occasion of Mistakes in Chronology p. 146. Another occasion of Mistakes has been that sometimes the Principal Number is set down and the odd or lesser Number is omitted which is added to the Principal Number in other places p. 147. Sometimes an Epocha is mistaken by Chronologers p. 149. The likeness of two Words may occasion Variations in Chronology p. 150. The Numeral Letters were easily mistaken by Transcribers ib. Some Alterations of the Septuagint from the Hebrew seem to have been made with design p. 151. The Terms of Time sometimes taken inclusively and at other times exclusively p. 154. CHAP. VII Of the Obscurity of some places in the Scriptures particularly of the Types and Prophecies HOw it comes to pass that there are some things in the Scriptures hard to be understood p. 157. Some Doctrins are difficult in themselves p. 158. The Learning and Wisdom of ancient Times consisted in Proverbs and Parables p. 161. Many places of Scripture which are obscure to us were not obscure in the Ages when they were written p. 164. The main scope and design of Parables is to be observed and not every word and circumstance to be insisted upon p. 168 The Obscurity of Prophecies and Types considered p. 170. Differences in the interpretations of Phrophecies no Argument for the uncertainty of them ib. It is evident and agreed by Interpreters that Prophecies have been fulfilled tho' they differ about the Time when they were fulfilled p. 171. Some Prophecies purposely obscure and why p. 172. Some Prophecies had never been conveyed down to Posterity unless they had been obscurely written p. 175. Others could never have been fulsilled ib. If Prophecies had been plainer it would have been thought that they had been fulfilled only by design and contrivance p. 177. Men would have committed Sin in many cases to fulfill Prophecies ib. They may sometimes be obscure in Mercy to Men p. 178. And at other times for a Judgment upon the Obstinate p. 179. The obscurity of Prophecies designed to abate the Confidence and exercise the diligence of Men p. 180. Some Prophecies plainly delivered by all Prophets those which are not so delivered of great use even before the Accomplishment This shewn of the Revelation of St. John p. 182. The Nature and Certainty of Types considered p. 177. The obscurities of Scriptures is not such as to be any prejudice to the end and design of them p. 180. CHAP. VIII Of the Places of Scripture which seem to contradict each other NO Reason to expect that the Scriptures should be so penned as to afford no suspicion of Contradiction to injudicious and rash Men p. 184. what Method ought to be taken to make a true Judgment of any Author p. 186. An Objection may imply too much as well as prove too little to be of any force p. 187. Contradictions in Points of Chronology and other things of little moment tho' they should have happened by the fault and negligence of Men would be no Argument against the Authority of the Scriptures p. 190. CHAP. IX Of the Creation of the World and the Preservation of it OF the Time when the World began p. 193. There is no Reason to suppose the World to have been at first made by Mechanical Laws tho' it was preserved according to such Laws p. 194. Sufficient Reasons may be given for the Creation of the World in that manner which we find related in the Book of Genesis p. 196. with respect to the Angels p. 200. with respect to Men p. 203. The Preservation of the World is not performed according to Mechanical Principles p. 208. The Mechanical Hypotheses grounded upon mistake viz. that there is always the same Quantity of Motion p. 208. that there is a Plenum ib. They suppose it move Worthy of God to leave Matter and Motion to perform all by themselves without his immediate Interposition and Assistance p. 210. The Ordinary and Extraordinary or Miraculous Works of God considered p. 211. The Laws of the Material and of the Moral part of the World compared p. 213. The Mechanical Hypotheses inconsistent with our Duty of Prayer to God for deliverance in Sickness and Dangers p. 214. The Mechanical Philosophy proceeds upon a mistaken Notion of God p. 215. CHAP. X. Of other Habitable Worlds besides this Earth ALL things are alike easy to God yet Men are most inclined to admire and Glorify Him for the vastness of his Works p. 218. Wonderful Discoveries lately made upon Earth by Microscopes as well as by Telescopes in the Heavens But Angels who have no need of artificial Helps to discern them glorify God for his Works more than Men p. 219. The use and benefit of the Stars p. ib. The Earth to be considered as the Seat of Mankind in all Ages under which Notion it is no contemptible Place p. 220. The Planets not inhabitable ib. For what uses they may be designed p. 222. CHAP. XI That there is nothing in the Scriptures which contradicts the late Discoveries in Natural Philosophy THe use of popular Expressions implies neither the Affirmation nor the Denial of the Philosophical Truth of them p. 224. How the Sun is said to stand still Jos x. 12. p. 225. The Firmament in the midst of the Waters Gen. 1.6 explained p. 226. The Sun and the Moon how said to be Two great Lights Gen. 1.16 p. 227. The Pillars of the Earth 1 Sam. 11.8 p. 229. The Sky-strong and as a Molten Looking-Glass Job xxxvii 18. ib. The Scripture speaks strictly according to Philosophy p. 230. CHAP. XII Of Man's being Created capable of Sin and Damnation THis repugnant neither to the Justice nor Mercy of God p. 231. The Objection rightly stated p. 233. The Glory of God is more advanced and the Attributes of his Wisdom and his Justice and of his Goodness it self are more displayed by leaving Men to a freedom of Acting than they would have been by Imposing an inevitable Fate upon Mankind p. 234. Freedom of Action conduceth more to the Happiness of the Blessed than a necessity of not Sinning could
If therefore Christ had been born at the beginning of the World how many more pretences would those Men have feigned to themselves for their Infidelity who are now so prone to unbelief and so unwilling to be Christians Men are tempted to suspect that there is something of obscurity and uncertainty in all things long since past and if Christ had been born a thousand or two thousand years sooner those who now think he came too late would then have cavilled that he came too soon and that it was too long ago to be believed and had happened in a dark and fabulous Age. And therefore it seems that Christ came in the very season and centre of time that as the former Ages were not so remote as not to be capable of all the benefits of his Death and Passion to be in due time accomplish'd so the last Ages of the World may have no pretence to question the truth of the Christian Religion upon any account of the long distance of time since the Death of our Saviour and his Apostles This may be the Case for ought any Man can tell or many other Reasons there might be much better and more important than this to deferr the Incarnation of our Saviour and therefore it is an absurd thing to raise Objections about it Many Reason there might be for it which we are uncapable of knowing and it is sufficient for us to know that it was in the fulness of time and that this time was the most proper and expedient and therefore was the time appointed and determined by God from all Eternity 4. God had by the various Methods of his Providence given such signal opportunities to the Gentiles to become acquainted with the Scriptures of the Old Testament as did mightly prepare them for the acknowledgment of Christ at his coming into the World All the Dispensations of the Divine Providence from the Beginning had been as so many several preparations to the Birth of Christ God chose Abraham to be the Father of a peculiar People and when that People had been by the constant manifestation of a miraculous Providence preserv'd and by their Laws and Ceremonies distinguished from all other People they were driven into Captivity as well in mercy to other Nations as by God's just Judgment upon them for their Sins that by this means the Gentiles might be instructed in the Worship of the true God and the Prophecies concerning Christ might become divulged and all Nations might be in a readiness to acknowledge and receive him who was to be the desire of all Nations and the joy of all People First the Ten Tribes were by Shalmaneser carried away Captive and then the two remaining Tribes by Nebuchadnezzar and Cyrus was by Name appointed to restore them Alexander's Conquests made yet way for a farther reception of the Prophecies which were the most considerable about the time of the Captivity And besides the Prophecy of Balaam by which the Wise Men were directed to find out Christ by the guidance of a Star those of Isaiah and Jeremiah and Daniel must be well known in the East The Bible had been about three hundred years before our Saviour's Birth at the Command of a Heathen Prince Translated into the Greek Tongue which was by the Victories of Alexander become the most known Language in the World And we read of no Revolution of Empires no Blessing no Affliction which befell the Jews but it contributed in a remarkable manner to raise an expectation of Christ and to prepare for his Coming It is certain that at the time of his Birth there was among the Jews an Universal expectation of the Messiah and that it was a receiv'd Opinion in that Age all over the East that a great Prince should arise out of Judea this appears both from the Scriptures and from (z) Sueton. in Vespas c. 4. Tacit. Hist lib. v. Heathen Writers the Wise Men came to enquire after him and Herod's Jealousie proceeded to the utmost Rage and Cruelty and could not have failed of success if it had been against any but the true Messiah whom God did by an immediate Revelation deliver out of his hands All the World stood in expectation of some extraordinary Person and it was no unwellcome piece of Flattery to one of the Roman Emperors not long after to have it reported that he was the Prince spoken of and expected in the East but it was esteemed his Glory and his Happiness to be thought the King that was to arise amongst a despised and hated People The expectation of Christ was so great that he could not lie conceal'd in that obscure and mean Condition but was adored in a Manger and receiv'd more than Royal Honours from the remotest parts of the Earth And in this respect it was the fulness of time or the most convenient and proper time for Christ to appear because the Divine Providence had wonderfully disposed and prepared the World for the expectation of him 5. The particular temper and disposition of the Age in which our Saviour was born made it the most fitting and proper Age for him to be born in for there were several things peculiar to that Age which very much conduce to the proof of the certainty of his Religion That Age was so remarkable and the History of it has been delivered down to us by so many eminent Writers that it is more studied and generally better known than any Age of the World besides and it was fit that a thing of this nature and consequence should come to pass in such an Age that it might be fully enquired into in any Age afterwards and that no distance of time might cause such doubts concerning it as should ever render it the less certain to any who are willing to acquaint themselves with the truth of it If it had been an Imposture this surely had been the most unlikely time of any for it to succeed No Prince could be more jealous than Herod who was so enraged at the Report of the Birth of Christ that he too plainly shew'd how much he credited it And no Age perhaps since the Creation could be more unlikely to have a Cheat put upon it than this in which Peace and Learning and all Polite Arts flourish'd which refine Men's Understandings and make them the most unfit and difficult to be imposed upon Policy was in its highest perfection in the Courts of Augustus and Tiberius which have been esteemed the greatest Patterns of it ever since the Scribes and Pharisees were in great Power and Authority at Jerusalem who were a subtle Generation of Men and the worst Enemies any one could have to deal withall Vice which was likely to give the greatest hindrance to a holy Religion was the fashion of the times and that Empire was never so abandoned to wickedness as at the first propagation of the Gospel As Men were then most able to discover any Imposture so they must have been most