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A51319 The two last dialogues treating of the kingdome of God within us and without us, and of his special providence through Christ over his church from the beginning to the end of all things : whereunto is annexed a brief discourse of the true grounds of the certainty of faith in points of religion, together with some few plain songs of divine hymns on the chief holy-days of the year. More, Henry, 1614-1687. 1668 (1668) Wing M2680; ESTC R38873 188,715 558

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many as receive they become the sons of God as being born 2 Cor. 4.16 not of bloud nor of the will of the flesh but of God And this also is that inward man of which Paul professes that though the outward perish is yet in the true Saints of God renewed day by day Wherefore he that is arrived to this Substantiality of life will be fixt in all useful Divine Truths and the Reasons that grow on such a Root will be found solid and permanent by him that has the Root but where they are merely verbal and imaginarie and float onely in the Brain the Heart being animal and brutish they may easily prove very weak fugitive and vanishing Not that they are so in themselves but may appear so to those who have onely the Picture of the Flower in their Brain not the Root in their Heart in which is the Pavilion of Life and inmost Tabernacle of God in the Soul He that lives in this dispensation of life O Hylobares can never be dissettled in his thoughts touching the Existence of God and his Providence or the Immortality of the Soul For he cannot be prone to suspect the Soul's capacity of living separate from the Body whiles he perceives her to live at that distance and defiance with the Body already while she is in it nor at all doubt of the Existence of God whose power spirit impulse and energie he so distinctly perceives in his own Soul For such is the nature of the Divine Life that none that feels it but must confess it not to belong to any creature as such but to be the very Power and Spirit of God actuating the Soul How can he then doubt of Him whose power and presence he so sensibly feels Wherefore this Dispensation of Life Hylobares is all in all to him that desires to philosophize with steddiness and solidity Hyl. These are great and magnificent things which you declare O Philotheus but yet such as seem to me neither incredible nor unimitable And therefore God willing I shall endeavour as well as I can to steer my course according to the Rules you have intimated and make it my main scope to attain to that state which you call the Dispensation of Life For I see all is very vain and shadowy without it But in the mean time I must crave pardon of Philopolis that I have occasioned Philotheus to mis-spend so much of that time that he thought too little for his own design and for the present purpose in hand Philop. Philotheus speaks so favourly and edifyingly of every subject he is put upon that it is ever pitty to interrupt him But sith he has now desisted of himself if he please at length to enter upon the Subject I first of all propounded it will very much gratifie my desires Hyl. It is therefore now Philopolis very seasonable to propound your Quere's to him Philop. My First Quere V Philopolis his Quere's touching the Kingdome of God O Philotheus was What the Kingdome of God is the Second When it began and where it has been or is now to be found the Third What progress it has hitherto made in the world the Fourth and last What success it is likely to have to the end of all things These are the Quere's Philotheus which I at first propounded concerning which if you please to instruct us plainly and intelligibly though not so accurately and scholastically we shall think our selves eternally obliged to you for your pains Philoth. I shall doe my best I can to serve you herein Philopolis and that as briefly and perspicuously as I can with all plainness of speech and without any affectation of Scholastick Scrupulosities being desirous onely to be understood and to convince And the God of Heaven assist us in this our discourse of his heavenly Kingdome that we may so understand the Mysteries of it as that we may faithfully endeavour the promoting the Interest thereof both in our selves and in all men to the Glory of God and Salvation of the World Amen Philop. Amen I pray God Philoth. VI What the Kingdome of God is in the general Nation thereof with a defence of the truth of the Nation Your first Quere O Philopolis though it be very short yet is exceeding comprehensive and by reason of the multisarious signification of the terms involves much matter in it at once which yet I shall endeavour to comprise and take in as well as I can by this brief Definition of the Kingdome of God in general The Kingdome of God is the Power of God enjoyning exciting commissioning or permitting his creatures to act according to certain Laws which considering all circumstances or upon the compute of the whole are for the best Philop. I partly understand you Philotheus and conceive you intend such a Definition of the Kingdome of God as takes in the Kingdome of Nature also and respects those Laws whereby both the brute Animals are guided and the senseless Plants and dead Meteors and Elements according to the extent of your defence hitherto of Divine Providence running from the highest and most Intellectual Order of things even to those Material Beings which are framed and actuated by the Spirit of Nature or Seminal Soul of the World Sophr. Why that is no more then the Scripture it self will warrant him to doe Philopolis The Psalmist is very frequent in such expressions The Lord has prepared his throne in Heaven Psalm 103.19 21 22 and his Kingdome ruleth over all Bless ye the Lord all his Hosts ye Ministers of his that doe his pleasure Bless the Lord all his works in all places of his dominion Bless the Lord O my Soul This in the 103. Psalm And in the 148. Psalm he makes all the several degrees of the Creation from Heaven to Earth from Angels to Brutes Plants and Meteors the Hosts of God and exhorts them all to praise the name of the Lord For he spake the word and they were made he commanded and they were created he hath made them fast for ever and ever he hath given them a Law which shall not be broken And again in the 119. Psalm O Lord thy word endureth for ever in Heaven thy Truth also remaineth from one generation to another Thou hast laid the foundation of the Earth and it abideth they continue this day according to thy ordinance for all things serve thee Whence it is plain that the Dominion of God and his Kingdome reaches as far as the whole comprehension of the Creation Cuph. Why then in some places O Sophron the Kingdome of God will be coincident with the Kingdome of the Devil Bath Why Cuphophron what greater inconvenience is there in that then that the Kingdome of Nature and the Kingdome of God should be coincident which you seem not to gainsay Cuph. Methinks it sounds very odly and besides we may conceive a subordination betwixt the Kingdome of God and the Kingdome of Nature but the
with this Out-world but as part of it To say nothing of the Light world which I must confess I take to be material also Sophr. And so do I Bathynous nor can by any means admit that Heaven and Hell are in the same space forasmuch as the Inhabitants of Heaven are Corporeall For the glorified Saints have Bodies and so have the Angels too according to the Opinion of the best Divines and Philosophers Bath But in the same place or Region Heaven and Hell may be manifested in particular Creatures what is common administring to their property as the Seminal Soul of the World is as busie in forming Toads and poisonous Serpents as in the fairest and most harmless Creatures Euist. What do you think then Bathynous that I. Behmen was not at all inspired that there is so little assurance of any considerable truth he has communicated to the World Bath To declare my conjecture of him freely and impartially XVIII Bathynous his judgement touching J. Behmen with some Cautions how to avoid the being ensnared by Enthusiasts Euistor I will in the first place allow him to be a very serious and well-minded man but of a nature extremely melancholick And in the second place I conjecture that he had been a Reader of H. N. and Paracelsus his Writings Both which being Enthusiasticall Authours fired his Melancholy into the like Enthusiastick elevations of spirit and produced a Philosophy in which we all-over discover the foot-steps of Paracelsianism and Familism Love and Wrath Sulphur and Sal-niter Chymistry and Astrology being scattered through all I do not deny Euistor but that both H. N. and I. Behmen were inspired but I averre withall that their Inspiration was not purely Spiritual Intellectual and Divine but mainly Complexionall Natural and Daemoniall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Aristotle speaks which is best understood by that of Plotinus Ennead 2. lib. 2. c. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This therefore was an Inspiration too far removed from the first pure Fountain to come clear Complexionall Love the noblest Motion impressed upon us by the Spirit of Nature first oppress'd in the Constriction Compunction and Anguish of a down-bearing Melancholy and after burning and flaming out into a joyfull liberty and carrying captive with it those severer Particles that would have smothered it into a glorious Triumph of Light and chearfull Splendour of the Spirits which makes the Soul overflow with all kindness and sweetness this I conceive is all the peculiar Inspiration or Illumination these Theosophists had at the bottom Which yet is not so contemptible but that they justly magnify it above the grim ferocities of the superstitious Factions in the imbittered Churches of the world who have not so good an Inspiration as this but their tongues and hearts are set on fire of Hell Jam. 3.6 This Light of Nature I say is abundantly well appointed both for Right and Skill to chastise and reproch the gross and grievous Immoralities of Hypocriticall Religions and to be subservient to that Truth and Life that is really Divine Euist. But they writ professedly as from the Spirit of God And I. Behmen seems to have had the assistence of a good Angel by that story of an Old man who upon pretence of buying a pair of Shoes of him read him his destiny and gave him holy and pious Instructions Bath Who knows but that it was really a man For he carried the Shoes away with him which he bought nor did he vanish in his sight And suppose he was a good Angel not a Devil does it follow straight that he was infallible The Inhabitants of the other World are good Physiognomists and know very well who are most for their turn in this Cuph. As an Horse-courser knows an Horse by his marks Bath And lastly that Iacob declares what he writes is from God that is but that which is necessary for all Enthusiasts to doe For if they did not think themselves inspired they were not Enthusiasts But there is a very powerfull Magick in this their heightened Confidence for the captivating others to them Hyl. How shall a man doe then Bathynous to keep himself from being ensnared by their Writings and from being hurried away with their Enthusiasms Bath For him that reads them there is onely this one short Remedie and safe To observe the moral and pious Precepts they tumble out with such extraordinary Zeal and fervour and to endeavour to be as really good as they declare themselves and all men ought to be and to make that your first and chief care without any design of engrasping great Mysteries This is the onely way of being assuredly able to judge them and of coming to that state which David blesses God for Psalm 119.99 I have more understanding then my Teachers because I keep thy Commandments Philoth. That is very good advice Hylobares and the most certain way of keeping out of the snares of Enthusiasts and one of the greatest good effects that God intends by the permission of them to inveigle certain Complexions in the ways of Holiness and to exercise the gift of discerning of Spirits in others to whom he has given it for the Safety of his Church and the magnifying the Ministry of the Gospel of his Son Iesus in the true and Apostolick Promoters thereof Sophr. If this way were taken my fears and jealousies O Philotheus were all hush'd nor could I doubt but the pure Apostolick Religion would carry all before it Philoth. And verily as touching those two Sects I must farther confirm to you O Sophron that there is not any such great danger in them no not in that more suspected one for as for the Behmenists I am of Bathynous his minde that they are unjustly suspected For at present by a kinde of oblique stroke God does notable execution upon the dead Formality and Carnality of Christendome by these zealous Evangelists of an internall Saviour and if any of them out of mistake and errour should in a manner antiquate that part of Religion that respects the externall which I hope are not many nor will be yet and mark what I say if they continue sincere I do not doubt but they will be fetched in again at least at the long run as being to be found in that third part of the Cities that are to fall by the sword of him that sitteth on the white Horse at the time of the effusion of the last Vial. Apoc. 19.21 and 16.19 Philop. That is very likely Philotheus nor have I now any doubt but those glorious Times of the Church will come and in such a sense as has been predefined But the next point is concerning the Signs of their coming Philoth. Can you desire a better Sign then the orderly succession of the Vials Philop. But I had in my thoughts the Rumour of Elias his coming first XIX That there is an Elias to come and in what sense as at the first coming of Christ for
Empire in Constantine's time became the Kingdome of God but were no particular members of the Church at that time in any thing reprehensible Whether the Reformation cease to be the Kingdome of God for the wickedness of some of that denomination let our Adversaries be judges who never spared to style themselves Holy Church for all the abhorred ungodliness of the Heads their Holinesses at Rome and universal pollution of the members and that because they took themselves to be the true Christian Church and to hold the right Faith and to retain the Rites and Religious Practices as to the externall Worship of God though they were indeed an Antichristian Church and all overrun with abominable Doctrines and Idolatrous Practices and Diabolical Cruelties against the true Worshippers of God Of how much more right therefore ought the Reformation to be held the holy people of God and his peculiar Kingdome who profess the Apostolick Faith entire without any Idolatrous superadditions who murther no man for his Conscience and make the infallible Word of God it self the Object of their Profession and the platform of their Religion Cuph. The truth is the disparity is infinitely great if the Roman and Reformed Church stood in competition which of them two should be the Kingdome of God Bath But it being so plain that the Reformed Church is the true Externall Kingdome of God forasmuch as they make pure profession of the Gospel of the Kingdome cleared from all the gross Corruptions of men and teach Christ merely according to the Word of Christ and that also in this regard the Church of Rome by their Antichristian Doctrines is really a contrary Kingdome thereunto that is the Kingdome of Antichrist how abominably nauseous O Cuphophron must Indifferency in Religion be amongst Pretenders to Protestantism whenas the Romanists themselves scarce in the worst of times would have laid down their zeal in the behalf of that Christianity against Turcism though Turcism ought not to be more abominable to them then their Antichristianism ought to be to us XVII The Charge of Antinomianism against th Reformation For what can be more contrary then the Kingdome of Christ and of Antichrist Cuph. This would bear more weight with it Bathynous if there were no gross flaws in the externall Profession of the Protestants and that they were right in their declared Opinions For in my judgement Antinomianism and Calvinism I mean that dark Dogma about Predestination are such horrid Errours that they seem the badges of the Kingdome of Darkness rather then of the Kingdome of God Bath What you mean by Antinomianism O Cuphophron I know not But so far as I know there are but these two meanings thereof either a conceit that we are exempted by the liberty of the Gospel from all moral Duties a thing exploded by all the Protestant Churches as you may understand by the Harmony of their Confessions or else it signifies a disclaim of being justified by the doing our Duties and an entire relying on the Satisfaction or Atonement of Christ which rightly understood has no evil at all in it but is an excellent Antidote against Pride For those that profess such an Antinomianism as this and declare they look to be saved by Faith onely without the Works of the Law will not deny but that they are to live as strictly and holily as if they were to be saved by the integrity of their conversations and yet when they have lived as precisely as they can that they are wholly to relie upon the mercy of God in Christ. How lovely how amiable is such a disposition of a Soul as this who taking no notice of her own innocency or righteousness casts her self wholly on the Goodness and Merits of her Saviour and so like an un-self-reflecting and an un-self-valuing childe enters securely and peaceably into the Kingdome of God and into the choicest mansions of his heavenly Paradise Cuph. Nay if that be the worst of it Bathynous I am easily reconciled to Protestantism for all this Bath This is the worst of it O Cuphophron so far as I can understand And you know the orthodox Protestants universally adde their Doctrine of Sanctification or a good life to that of Justification by Faith onely so that I dare say they dealt bonâ fide but by a secret Providence directed so their style and phrase as was most effectual to oppose or undermine the gainful traffick of that City of Merchandises where the good works they ordinarily cry'd up so were nothing else but the good and rich wares those cunning Merchants purchased at cheap rates from abused souls the increase of whose sins were the advance of the Revenues of the Church and their externall good works as they are called an excuse for their want of inward Sanctification and real Regeneration the main things the Protestants stand upon which can be no more without Good works in the best sense so called then the Sun without Light Cuph. But are there then Bathynous no Antinomians in the ill sense amongst the Protestant Bath No otherwise Cuphophron then there were Gnosticks and Carpocratians in the Apostolick times There are but disallowed by general suffrage Cuph. Let that then suffice XVIII The Charge of Calvinism against the Reformation But this dark Opinion of Predestination how dismall does it look Bathynous black as the smoak of the bottomless pit out of which the Locusts came Bath What do you allude to the Turks and Saracens Cuphophron The Turks indeed are held great Fatalists whence some in reproch call this Point of Calvin Calvino-Turcism Who would have thought Cuphophron so Apocalyptical That you take so great offence at Predestination in that rude and crude sense that some hold it I do not at all wonder for it has ever seemed to me an Opinion perfectly repugnant to the nature of God that he should Predestinate any Souls to endless and unspeakable misery for such sins as it was ever impossible for them to avoid This is a great reproch in my apprehension to the Divine Majesty But that there is an effectual Election or Predestination of some to eternall life I must confess I think it not onely an Opinion inoffensive but true which seems to me probably to be intimated from such passages as these Apoc. 13.8 And all that dwell upon the earth shall worship the Beast whose names are not written in the Book of Life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world And again in another place of the Apocalypse And they that are with him are called Apoc. 17.14 and chosen and faithfull And also in the Epistle to the Romans Rom. 8.28 29. And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God to them that are the called according to his purpose For whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate and whom he did predestinate them he also called c. These places considered together want not their force
The-End of the Fourth Dialogue THE FIFTH DIALOGUE Philotheus Bathynous Sophron Philopolis Euistor Hylobares Cuphophron Ocymo Cuph. FOR all your hast I The entrance into the Dialogue Ocymo spread the Carpet on the Table before you goe hence So 't is well If any enquire for me at the house be sure to tell them I am gone out Ocym. I shall observe your command Sir Cuph. We 'll not be interrupted all this afternoon if an harmless Equivocation will help it Hyl. You went out of your house when you came into your Garden O what a marvellous Mercurial Wit is Cuphophron Cuph. It is the gift of Nature Hylobares to them that know how to make a right use of it What 's a clock now Philopolis by your Watch that we may see what a fair share of time we have before us Philop. It is turned of one We have dined in very good time Cuph. But both you and Philotheus ate so sparingly as if either you did not like the Provision or thought your After-dinner's discourse would as well fat the Body as feed the Soul Philop. Your entertainment Cuphophron was very noble and inviting but I must confess my mind was much carried out to the After-delicacies I expected from Philotheus Cuph. And I pray you Philopolis defer not to satisfie your Appetite in that point I know Philotheus is ready for you Philoth. I am alwaies ready to serve Philopolis and the rest of this excellent Company in any thing that lies in my power Philop. II Philopolis his last Quere touching the Success of the Kingdome of God till the end of all things Without any farther Preamble therefore I pray you Philotheus let us fall upon the last Quere I would have propounded yesternight namely What Success the Kingdome of God is likely to have to the end of all things Philoth. The Success of Christ's Kingdome Philopolis will be marvellous both in respect of its farther Victories against the Kingdome of Antichrist whose power will be utterly destroy'd and also in respect of it self For undoubtedly it will be in a more glorious condition both for Quality and Extent then it was ever yet since the Apostles times Philop. What you say touching the destruction of the Kingdome of Antichrist I am abundantly satisfied therein both from the consuming of the little Horn by fire in Daniel Dan. 7.11 and also in that it is said in the Apocalypse Apoc. 19.20 that the Beast and the false Prophet were taken Apoc. 16.19 and were both cast alive into the lake of fire and brimstone and lastly the Effect of the seventh Vial seems to imply so much Philoth. To which you may add the Vision of the Winepress troden without the City Apoc. 14.20 out of which a vast Lake of bloud issued so deep as up to the horse-bridles and so large as that it reached to the space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs Cuph. Iesu God! What a kind of Victory over Antichrist is this O Philotheus I did not think there had been such a bloudy Prophecy in all the Apocalypse Shall Christ enlarge his Kingdom by making all the World swim in bloud Philoth. Be of good courage Cuphophron and look not so pale and affrightfully on it You are scar'd but as Children with a dreadfull Picture This is but a Prophetick Iconism as the putting the Beast and the false Prophet into a Lake of fire and that alive Can their dead bodies swim in bloud and they be cast alive into a Lake of fire and brimstone at once This lake of bloud and lake of fire signifie the same thing but are neither of them the thing which they signifie Philop. Cuphophron's colour comes to him again Philotheus so that you need enter no farther into that Subject before you orderly come at it For I am not content onely to know that the Kingdome of Antichrist will be utterly destroy'd but very desirous at least as far as the remaining Vials wil afford light to understand the gradual process thereof For surely that is couched in the Vision of the Vials Philoth. I doubt not but it is But it is a very great hazard and difficulty to attempt the particular Explication of Prophecies before they be fulfilled For there is a strange unsettled Vibration of the Propheticall expressions that in this tremulous motion seem to touch upon many things but it is very hard to know where they will fix till the Event determines But how-ever I shall with God's assistence endeavour to satisfie your desire as near as I can and in such order as you shall demand Philop. I humbly thank you III The Interpretation of the fourth Vial. Philotheus I shall demand according to the Order of the Vials And therefore I desire you in the first place to instruct me in the meaning of the fourth Vial poured out upon the Sun Apoc. 16.8 whence power was given him to scorch men with fire insomuch that they blasphemed God for the very pain of their burning Philoth. You must understand Philopolis which I tell you at first for all that the Prophetick Iconisms may by an Henopoeia of the second kind as a modern Writer teaches us sometimes comprehend more significata then one Synopsis Prophet lib. 1. c. 3. sect 8. and that intendedly though before the Event whether onely one or more be intended is not to be defined But if but any one be accomplished it is enough And therefore it is the safest pitching upon what is most within our ken It was said of the Church before she fled into the Wilderness that she was clothed with the Sun Apoc. 12.1 as well as had the Moon under her feet Now the Moon is the Law of Moses comprised in the Pentateuch which consists of dark Types and Figures but all the Light it has it borrows from Christ and his Gospel The Truth comprised in the New Testament reflecting on the Mosaicall Law makes it shine like the Moon with this borrowed Light It was rightly therefore said of these two opposite Luminaries that while the one viz. the Sun shone round about the Woman and she was cloathed with the glorious Light and the Truth of the Gospel that the Moon was then as it were with the Antipodes under her feet as he saith of the two Poles Hic vertex nobis semper sublimis at illum Sub pedibus Nox atra videt Manésque profundi Philop. This is something high and Poeticall Philotheus But that which you would have I suppose is this namely That as the Moon and Sun in the Vision of the Woman according to an intimation of Hugo Grotius may signifie the Law of Moses and the Law of Christ so the Sun here may also signifie the Law of Christ comprehended in the New Testament or rather more at large the Word of God which we call the Bible comprising the New Testament and the Old so far forth as it respects Christ and the Old is
repugnant to humane Nature and Vertue and Righteousness so harmoniously agreeable thereunto For this Rectitude of spirit that belongs to the true Israel of God is the possession of so perfect Pleasure and Happiness that the Soul of man feels it to be her peculiar Satisfaction and that the state of Vice and Sin is a state of Diseasement and Unnaturalness not onely plainly and demonstratively repugnant to right Reason but most hideously and harshly grating against that inmost and most Divine and delicious sense of the Soul which is the Repullulation of the pure Love and is the Excitation of the Life of God in the humane Nature whereby we have a natural delight in all the ways of Goodness Purity and Righteousness This is the natural Sanity of the Soul the contrary her Disease this her state of Sobriety the other a mere fit of Drunkenness And therefore methinks the World should not continue in it for ever but that even the Misery and Confusion of this drunken state should forcibly awaken them at length to follow Peace and Righteousness Which time methinks the Prophet Isay may seem to point at Isa. 24.18 c. where he saith The windows from on high are opened and the foundations of the Earth do shake The Earth is utterly broken down the Earth is clean dissolved the Earth is moved exceedingly The Earth shall move to and fro like a Drunkard and shall be removed like a Cottage and the transgression thereof shall be heavy upon it and it shall fall and not rise again And it shall come to pass in that day that the Lord shall punish the Host of the high ones that are on high and the Kings of the Earth upon the Earth This I conceive Philopolis is under the effusion of the last Vial. Then the Moon shall be confounded and the Sun ashamed when the Lord of Hosts shall reign in Mount Sion and in Ierusalem and before his Ancients gloriously that is to say Apoc. 4.4 in the new Ierusalem before the four and twenty Elders in white Raiment and with golden Crowns on their heads And in this Confusion the Earth will be not onely upon the account of their Wickedness but Ignorance also and gross Errours in Religion For mankinde are held down in these things by an hard violence to their own Reason and Nature as well in Popery as Turcism and Paganism those Religions being not onely groundless but foolishly fabulous and contradictious to all sound Reason But when the windows from on high shall be opened upon them and the heavenly Grace and Truth showred down and the pure Light of the Gospel let in upon them the Foundations of the Earth shall shake under them and they will finde the falseness and unstableness of the Fundamental Frauds and Lies of men which shall utterly perish and all those that cleave to them This therefore Philopolis by way of Prudence and Sagacity may be presumed That those days having shone upon us that Daniel has foretold when many shall run to and fro Dan. 12.4 and Knowledge shall be increased this liberty of searching after Truth and the success of finding it will contribute very much to the ruine and subversion of those stately Structures of Lies which Superstition or false Policy has so magnificently built up and would have all men to bow to as to the golden Image Nebuchadnezzar had set up But that Illustrious Heros on the white Horse Apoc. 19.11 13. the Word of God and right Reason will trample this Image under foot And the meaning of the Scripture even in the Propheticall passages thereof will be so plainly understood against Turcism Papism Paganism and Iudaism or what-ever Religion in the world or Irreligion even against Atheism it self that I am persuaded this very Advantage alone will be of infinite consequence for the converting of Souls to Christ. There will be such an assured sense of all the Visions of the Apocalypse besides those of Daniel that this one peculiar Privilege of Christianity in having the whole Scene of Divine Providence and of all the Affairs of the Church of God and indeed of all the World so far forth as they respect the Church so lively set off and prefigured for so many hundreds of years nay for some thousands this I say alone must of necessity drive all the world to a firm belief that Iesus is the Messiah the Saviour of the World and that there is a God whose Providence watches over the Affairs of mankinde and that there is a Life to come and a blessed Immortality for all true Believers I tell you succinctly Philopolis the clear Completion of so many so weighty Prophecies and so many hundred years distant from the Event seems to me to be a more convictive ground of the truth of Christianity then all the Miracles done by Christ and his Apostles to those that liv'd in those days especially to as many as did not see them themselves and observe the Circumstances of them Philop. This is very considerable that you say Philotheus and I should be absolutely of your minde could I persuade my self that the Prophecies would be so vulgarly and universally understood by Christians For this skill added to Sobriety of Life and a sincere Zeal for the Gospel would be a marvellous Engine in their hand to bear down all before them and subdue all Nations under the feet of the Lord Christ. Philoth. Do not doubt of that Philopolis Wisedome is easie to him that understands Pro. 14.6 And the times are coming and will be at hand before the pouring out of the last Vial wherein the understanding of the Divine Prophecies touching the Affairs of the Church will be as common and ordinary as of the Childrens Catechism The ways of God and the faithfulness of his Providence corresponding to the Divine Predictions or Prophecies will be known to all from the greatest to the least And it will be an easier task to their Capacities then many of those things that have been heretofore Catechistically put upon them XV That there is no fear that either Familism or Behmenism will supplant the expected glory of the Apostolick Church Sophr. This Conjecture of yours Philotheus in my judgement is not at all extravagant as to the unhinging of the World from the false Religions they have been so long held captive under But when I have been thinking with my self on these things I have been often cast into a fear that the pure Apostolick Christianity may not then take place for all that but some other mode of Christianity which some pretend to be the Reign of the Spirit but is as errant a Nulling of that Christianity which was taught by the Apostles as that Christianity was of Iudaism if not more or as Mahometism is of both Euist. I believe Sophron has in his eye the Love-service of the Modern Nicolaitans with their more visible Off-spring the Quakers For indeed their Prophet in his Prophecy of
the spirit of Love does expresly promise his Followers the possession of the whole Earth that all Nations will submit unto them For though they will admit that the Service of Christ in the Belief is the Holy of the true Tabernacle yet they boast that the Holy of Holies is their Service of the Love which therefore ought to take place above all Bath In my judgement Euistor this fear of Sophron's is but a groundless fear For besides the many gross impossible and ridiculous Interpretations of Scripture upon which notwithstanding this Prophet would build himself the obvious Evidence from his Writings that he was a mere Sadducee and held neither Angel nor Spirit nor the Immortality of the Soul is a palpable assurance that in so great a Light as God has and is raising in the World this man's Dictates and Doctrines will never pass into any National Religion but it will appear to all that he was a mistaken Enthusiast Methinks it is infinitely more improbable that the World should take him for a true Prophet then that the plain Apostolicall Faith and Doctrine which has such convincing and miraculous Attestations to it and is so suitable to moral Goodness and Reason should not overrun all Euist. This gross Errour of Sadducism might indeed disenable this Prophet from doing any great injurie to the Personal Offices of Christ which he seems to undermine and beat down But the Reign of the Spirit in opposition to the personal Sceptre of the Lord Iesus has fallen into more refined hands that do expresly acknowledge the Immortality of the Soul and consequently the present Subsistency of Christ and his Personality and yet are altogether for the Spirit and Christ within them as if that part of Christianity that respects Christ without us were quite antiquated You know whose Motto that was Our Salvation in the life of Iesus Christ in us Bath Yes I do Euistor It was the Teutonick Philosopher's And do not you know who said That the Mystery hid from Ages and from Generations but then made manifest to the Saints was Christ in us the hope of glory Euist. You say true Bathynous S. Paul writes so to the Colossians Col. 1.26 Bath And therefore Euistor it was Iesus the Son of Mary with his Apostles that first conducted men into the Holy of Holies not H. Nicolas nor I. Behmen Sophr. A very pertinent Observation Bath But admit that I. Behmen drives all inward in his Writings as if he had forgot that Christ without him who suffered at Ierusalem whom yet I am sure he did not forget on his death-bed when he cried out Thou crucified Lord Iesus have mercy on me and take me into thy Kingdome and withall that he has healed Familism of that unsoundness and rottenness of corrupt Sadducism yet for all that the invincible Obscurity of his Writings will prevent his being over-popular and his mistakes in his pretended Inspirations in matters of Philosophy ruine his Authority amongst the more knowing and sagacious sort of persons In a Philosophicall Age they that pretend to Philosophicall Inspirations and have them not must needs be taken tripping Which if they be in any thing their credit falls flat in all and nothing will be believed merely for their saying it is true and inspired Euist. If this were indeed the Teutonick's case there were very little fear of his doing any great harm in that way Sophron's Jealousies did so sadly presage Sophr. It 's likely Bathynous would not speak thus unless he had some certain grounds for it I pray you what are they Bathynous Bath Do not you think XVI J. Behmen 's marvellous pretense to the knowledge of the Language of Nature O Sophron that it is a superlative strain of Melancholy for a man to conceit that he has the knowledge of the Language of Nature communicated to him Sophr. I suppose the skill of the Signatures of Plants and the Presages of Meteors and other such like Phaenomena of Nature Bath No to tell you syllabatim in the words of any Language what they naturally signifie As suppose he would take the word Tetragrammaton to task he would tell you what all the Syllables signifie from Te to Ton. Sophr. That 's marvellous pretty that even the Terminations of words should have their signification also Bath Nay the very Letters as in Tincture and others Sophr. This decides that ancient Controversie amongst Philosophers whether the Imposition of Names be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A. Gell. Noct. Attic lib. 10. cap. 4. Bath Well Sophron you may jest at it as you please But this Philosophick Illumination has taught the Teutonick that the Names of the seven Planets are plainly derived out of the Language of Nature Sophr. Does he mean the Latin Greek or Hebrew Names or Dutch or French or Spanish Bath I suppose he either means all or high-Dutch onely as being his natural Tongue in which alone he was skilled Sophr. It was a great omission that he did not explain himself in that point But I pray you Bathynous why does he think that the Ancients gave Names to the seven Planets from the Language of Nature Bath Because their Names are according to the Properties of Nature viz. Astriction Compunction Anguish Fire Light Sound Body which answer to Saturn Mercury Mars Sol Venus Iupiter Luna Sophr. These are Mysteries above my capacity Nor do I see how the Names of the Planets signifie those Qualities But what does he drive at Bathynous Bath At a Philosophicall account of every Day 's Creation with a respect to the Name of the Day from the Planet which is said to rule the first Hour thereof and which corresponds with such a property of Nature As for example The Ancients called the first day of the week Sunday because God then moved the Sun-property in the Creation the second day Monday because he moved the Moon-property c. And thus the Explication of the six Days-works in Moses is made upon the Astrologicall Names of the Days of the Week Sophr. Is it possible Bathynous I had alwaies thought that the Planetary Names of the Days of the Week had proceeded from the orderly reckoning of the Planets from Saturn downward and so giving every one of them the dominion of an hour one after another through the four and twenty every first hour of the day will have a new Planet and that necessarily in such an order as the Names of the Days of the Week import As suppose let Saturn have the first hour of the Day From Saturn to Luna thrice inclusively there is twenty one hours Then say Saturn twenty two Iupiter twenty three Mars twenty four the next hour which is the first of the day following is Sol. Then again from Sol to Mars thrice is twenty one Then say Sol twenty two Venus twenty three Mercurie twenty four and the next hour which is the first of the day following is Luna And so quite
for a fuller and a more general understanding the obscurest Passages in the Divine Oracles The truth of this Assertion is so clear that it seems little better then Blasphemie to contradict it For to say the Holy Writ is in it self unintelligible is equivalent to the pronouncing it Non-sense or to averre that such and such Books or Passages of it were never to be understood by men is to insinuate as if the Wisedome of God did not onely play with the children of men but even fool with them This is but a Subterfuge of that conscious Church that is afraid of the fulgour of that Light that shines against her out of such places of Scripture as have for a long time seemed obscure The twenty sixth That there are innumerable Passages of Scripture as well Preceptive as Historicall that are as plainly to be understood as the very Articles of the common Faith and which therefore may be very usefull for the clearing those that may seem more obscure This wants no proof but Appeal to Experience and the twentieth Conclusion The twenty seventh That no Miracle though done by such as may seem of an unexceptionable Life and of more singular Sanctity can in reason ratifie any Doctrine or Practice that is repugnant to rightly-circumstantiated Sense or Natural Truths or Science or the common Christian Faith or any plain Doctrine or Assertion in Scripture The Truth of this is manifest from hence That no man can be so certain that such a man is not a crafty and cautious Hypocrite and his Miracle either a Juggle or Delusion of the Devil or if he was not an eye-witness of it a false report of a Miracle as he is certain of the truth of rightly-circumstantiated Sense of Common Notions and Natural Science of the Articles of the Apostolick Faith or of any plain Assertion in the Scripture And therefore that which is most certain in this case ought in all reason to be our Guide The twenty eighth That it is not onely the Right but the Duty of private men to converse with the Scriptures being once but precautioned not to presume to interpret any thing against rightly-circumstantiated Sense Natural Truth common Honesty the Analogie of the Catholick Faith or against other plain Testimonies of Holy Writ The truth of this appears from the Conclusion immediately preceding For why should they be kept from having recourse to so many and so profitable and powerful Instructions from an infallible Spirit when they are so well fore-armed against all Mistake and are so laid-at by so many not onely fallible but fallacious and deceitful persons to seduce them And why is there not more danger of being led into Errour by such as are not onely fallible but false and deceitfull then by those Inspired men that wrote the Scripture who were neither fallible in what they wrote nor had any design to deceive any man Wherefore there being no such safe Guide as the Scripture it self which speaks without any Passion Fraud or Interest it is not onely the Right but the Duty of every one to consult with the Scripture and observe his times of conversing with it as he tenders the Salvation of his own Soul The twenty ninth That even a private man assisted by the Spirit of Life in the new Birth and rightly-circumstantiated Reason being also sufficiently furnish'd with the knowledge of Tongues Historie and Antiquity and sound Philosophy may by the help of these and the Blessing of God upon his industry clear up some of the more obscure Places of Scripture to full satisfaction and certainty both to himself and any unprejudiced Peruser of his Interpretations That this Assertion is true may be proved by manifold Experience there having been sundry persons that have cleared such Places of Scripture as had for a time seemed obscure and intricate with abundant satisfaction and conviction But it is to be evinced also à priori viz. from the seventeenth and eighteenth Conclusions which avouch the Scripture to be the most Authentick Tradition that is as also from the twenty fifth that concludes it not unintelligible in it self nor to mankinde and lastly out of the first that asserts that Certainty of Faith presupposes Certainty of Reason For thus the Object of our Understanding being here certain and we not spending our labour upon a Fiction or Mockery and our Reason rightly-circumstantiated not blinded by Prejudice nor precipitated into Assent before due deliberation and clear comprehension of the matter if after so cautious a Disquisition she be fully satisfied she is certainly satisfied or else there is no certainty in rightly-circumstantiated Reason which yet is presupposed in the Certainty of Faith by the first Conclusion So that the Certainty of Faith it self seems ruinous if no private man have any Certainty of any Interpretation of Scripture that has once been reputed obscure Not to add that all the Scripture that has been once obscure and the Interpretation thereof not yet declared by the Church universal has been hitherto and will be God knows how long utterly useless Which is a very wilde Supposition and such as none would willingly admit unless those that would rather admit any thing then that Light of the Scripture that discovers who they are and what unworthy Impostures they use in their dealings with the children of men The thirtieth That no Tradition can be true that is repugnant to any plain Text of Scripture The Reason is because the Scripture is the most true and the most Authentick Tradition that is and such as the universal Church is agreed in The thirty first That if any one Point grounded upon the Autority of Tradition that has been held by the Church time out of minde prove false there is no Certainty that any Tradition is true unless such as it has not been in the power of the Church to forge corrupt deprave or else their Interest not at all concerned so to doe The Reason is because the Certainty of Tradition as Tradition is placed in this by those that contend so much for it that nothing can be brought into the Church as an Apostolick Practice or Doctrine but what ever was so from the Apostles Wherefore if once a Point be brought into the Church and profest and practised as Apostolicall that may be clearly proved not to be so this Ground for Tradition as Tradition is utterly ruined and considering the Falseness and Imposture that has been so long practised in Christendome can be held no Ground of Certainty at all As not Reason quà Reason nor Sense quà Sense but quatenus rightly-circumstantiated can be any Ground of Certainty of Knowledge so not Tradition quà Tradition can be the Ground of the Certainty of Faith but onely such a Tradition as it was not in the power of the degenerate Church to either forge or adulterate And such were the Records of the Holy Bible onely The thirty second That rightly-circumstantiated Sense and Reason and Holy Writ are
the truest Grounds of the Certainty of Faith This is the common Protestant Doctrine and a great and undeniable Truth and will amount to the greatest Certainty desirable if the Spirit of Life and of God assist For that will seal all firm and close and shut out all Doubts and Waverings In the mean time even in mere Moral men but yet such as use their Sense and Reason rightly-circumstantiated in their Dijudications touching the truth of Holy Writ and Religion it is plain they are upon the truest Grounds of Faith they can goe or apply themselves to forasmuch as the Holy Writ is the truest and most certain Tradition and no Tradition to be discerned true but upon the Certainty of rightly-circumstantiated Sense and Reason as appears by the first Conclusion These Advertisements though something numerous are yet brief enough but very effectual I hope if strictly followed to make thee so wise as neither to impose upon thy self nor be imposed upon by others in matters of Religion and so Orthodox as to become neither Enthusiast nor Romanist but a true Catholick and Primitive Apostolick Christian THE END DIVINE HYMNS DIVINE HYMNS An HYMN Upon the Nativity of CHRIST THe Holy Son of God most High The Historicall Narration For love of Adam's lapsed Race Quit the sweet Pleasures of the Sky To bring us to that happy Place His Robes of Light he laid aside Which did his Majesty adorn And the frail state of Mortals tri'de In Humane Flesh and Figure born Down from above this Day-Star slid Himself in living Earth t' entomb And all his Heav'nly Glory hid In a pure lowly Virgin 's Womb. Whole Quires of Angels loudly sing The Mystery of his Sacred Birth And the blest News to Shepherds bring Filling their watchfull Souls with Mirth The Application to the Emprovement of Life The Son of God thus Man became That Men the sons of God might be And by their second Birth regain A likeness to His Deity Lord give us humble and pure mindes And fill us with thy Heav'nly Love That Christ thus in our Hearts enshrin'd We all may be born from above And being thus Regenerate Into a Life and Sense Divine We all Ungodliness may hate And to thy living Word encline That nourish'd by that Heav'nly Food To manly Stature we may grow And stedfastly pursue what 's good That all our high Descent may know Grant we thy Seed may never yield Our Souls to soil with any Blot But still stand Conquerours in the field To shew his Power who us begot That after this our Warfare's done And travails of a toilsome Stage We may in Heav'n with Christ thy Son Enjoy our promis'd Heritage Amen An HYMN Upon the Passion of CHRIST THe faithfull Shepherd from on high The Historicall Narration Came down to seek his strayed Sheep Which in this Earthly Dale did lie Of Grief and Death the Region deep Those Glories and those Ioys above 'T was much to quit for Sinners sake But yet behold far greater Love Such pains and toils to undertake An abject Life which all despise The Lord of Glory underwent And with the Wicked's worldly guize His righteous Soul for grief was rent His Innocence Contempt attends His Wisedome and his Wonders great Envy on these her poison spends And Pharisaick Rage their Threats At last their Malice boil'd so high As Witnesses false to suborn The Lord of Life to cause to die His Body first with Scourges torn With royal Robes in scorn th' him dight And with a wreath of Thorns him crown A Scepter-Reed in farther spight They adde unto his Purple Gown Then scoffingly they bend the knee And spit upon his Sacred Face And after hang him on a Tree Betwixt two Thieves for more Disgrace With Nails they pierc'd his Hands and Feet The Bloud thence trickled to the ground The Pangs of Death his Countenance sweet And lovely Eyes with Night confound Thus laden with our weight of Sin This spotless Lamb himself bemoans And while for us he Life doth win Quits his own Breath with deep-fetch'd Groans Affrighted Nature shrinketh back To see so direfull dismall sight The Earth doth quake the Mountains crack Th' abashed Sun withdraws his Light The Application to the Emprovement of Life Then can we Men so senseless be As not to melt in flowing Tears Who cause were of his Agonie Who suffer'd thus to cease our Fears To reconcile us to our God By this his precious Sacrifice And shield us from his wrathfull Rod Wherewith he Sinners doth chastise O wicked Sin to be abhorr'd That God's own Son thus forc'd to die O Love profound to be ador'd That found so potent Remedie O Love more strong then Pain and Death To be repaid by nought but Love Whereby we vow our Life and Breath Entire to serve our God above For who for shame durst now complain Of dolorous dying unto Sin While he recounts the hideous Pain His Saviour felt our Souls to win Or who can harbour Anger fell Envy revengefull Spight or Hate If he but once consider well Our Saviour lov'd at such a rate Wherefore Lord since thy Son most just His natural Life for us did spill Grant we our sinful Lives and Lusts May sacrifice unto his Will That to our selves we being dead Henceforth to him may wholly live Who us to free from Dangers dread Himself a Sacrifice did give Grant that the sense of so great Love Our Souls to him may firmly tie And forcibly us all may move To live in mutuall Amity That no pretence to Hate or Strife May rise from any Injurie Since thy dear Son the Lord of Life For love of us when Foes did die An HYMN Upon the Resurrection of CHRIST The Historicall Narration WHo 's this we see from Edom come With bloudy robes from Bosrah Town He whom false Jews to death did doom And Heav'n's fierce Anger had cast down His righteous Soul alone was fain Isa. 63.3 The Wine-press of God's Wrath to tread And all his Garments to distain And sprinkled Cloaths to die bloud-red 'Gainst Hell and Death he stoutly fought Who Captive held him for three days But straight he his own Freedome wrought And from the dead himself did raise The brazen Gates of Death he brake Triumphing over Sin and Hell And made th' Infernall Kingdomes quake With all that in those Shades do dwell His murthered Body he resum'd Maugre the Grave's close grasp and strife And all these Regions thence perfum'd With the sweet hopes of lasting Life O mighty Son of God most High The Application to the Emprovement of Life That conqueredst thus Hell Death and Sin Give us a glorious Victory Over our deadly Sins to win Go on and * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. Iud. Flesh and bloud in the moral sense Edom still subdue And quite cut off his wicked Race And raise in us thine Image true Which sinfull * The old Adam Rom. 6.6 Edom doth